"i r . ''(((' f ; . "j v" " .Jts ' ".J" ' -,'. ' , ' n , if.. , .1 .' '. ,,-v "-1 i i. . " , . v ' " m r 10 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA) THURSDAY, lAROH 17, 191 wmmr-i ,- r'ti- .- it?t"'. j - , 'flpi'j iwt 4i;ki v mmMf:,. xmmwm mm hi Mmr& mm m m ttfM. i. m.w&4 'iir m m W.ffl Ml "4 iM 1 4 i'f' !Km V. m.i mam IVi Mil UJTK1 ITS' ; h Til ' 1 W if, 'V'. "'i i r l i 1 '' V iE T . .. It 4 mi 1- ' ot, ? $ IS1 WW ' l. $1 K'k Euenf tig tobl ic-liedgec " PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY emus u. k. cunTiB. runoBtiT Qiarlaa It, Ludlncton, Vic Praaldi nti John C. Martin, Trsaaurar; Chartaa A. Tylfr, Sacralaryi Philip S, Collin. John II. Wllllama, John J. Atranttnn, Oaoria F, Ooldamlth, David K. Bmllsy, PI factors. EDITOMAI, DOAIID Ciicr H. K. Curtis, chairman PAVID a. BMII.Br.... Edltol JOHN C. MAHTIN .acnrral'nualnasa'Manarrr Publlahad dally at 1'cbuo Lbthjeb llulldlnr Independence Square, Philadelphia JLtuntio Citt ires-Uixkm llulldlnr Toac .10 Madison Ave. Dtmotr , T01 Ford nulldln T. IO01i OIB UlobfOfmocrat Building- Cmoioo i 11103 Tribune Uulldlne NEWS BUIIEAUS TYaSItWOTON Bnut, N. K, Cor. I'ennsylxanla Ae. and 14th St. Nw ToaK Dl'iuo The Sun llulldlnr IiONDon Boauo London Timtt SUDSCIUPTION TERMS The EfBNiNO 1'cjlio Lkmes Is served to sub scribers' In Philadelphia and aurroundlnc towns at tha rat of twelva (12) cants per wtelc, payabl to the carrier. By malt to polnte outald of Philadelphia In th United Statea. Canada, or United Mates poe aaaalona, postage free, fitly (SO) cent a pr month, la (IS) dollars per year, payable In advance. To all foreign countries one (11) dollar a month. NoTtor Bubscrlbera wishing addreaa chanced roust slva old as well as new addrraa. I I BILL, J0OO WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN J0OO C7 Address all communications to Evening rublle , lldgtr. Independence Square, PMIadflpMa, Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U exclusivelv en titled to the use or republication of all newt dispatches credited to If or not othrnclte credited in thit gaper, and also thg local nnni published therein. Alt riohtl republication of special dispatches herein are aho reserved. rhU.d.lphti. Thnnd.y. M.rch 17, 1M1 COLONEL HARVEY'S NEW ROLE THIS country is filled with good Repub licans who will not loudlj rejoice or burn red Arc or toll glad bells if President Hard ing really decides to send Colonel George B McClcllnn Hnrvoy as ambassador to the Court of Great Britain. The colonel is not ideallv fitted for a job that requires above all thing patience, 'learning, a guarded tongue mid broad human Tision, He has a set of opinions peculiarly his own and a manner of speech inspired by -what was saddest in the traditions of old school American journalism, rancv a for mal speech by the ambassador of the United States In London delivered to the elect of tho empire in the manner of the editorial articles that made Harvey's Weekly a jour nalistic curiosity! A Democrat who wanted to be and actually was, until he broke with Mr. Wil son, a major prophet of bis partv sailing away on the most important of all diplomatic missions as the representative of n Republi can administration and the Republican tra dition would be a spectacle likely to inspire something more than curiosity In the United States. The country will hope that President Harding may change his mind and find some fl! rif " f ft1 . 1 l-r-r'a nnme la now helnir eenernllv nssoeinted. iiii7i '- .. . , , -- ,,-, -. r ought to be sent to Costa Rica or to Rogota or some place where vehement rhetoric can do no particular harm. PATRICK'S DAY ' A MERICANS abroad do not go to endless Xjl. pains to find goldenrod or violets or any other native flower to wear on their great holidays. The Scotch get along comfortably under like circumstances without a sprig of thistle from the highlands. Among all tho I buds and blossoms and leaves of this world there is only one that has been thoroughly internationalized, and that is the shamrock of Ireland. It goes out every year to people verywhere, who on this day hold it more precious than rcflnrd gold. Ireland Is little and it has boon poor and it has had a hard time for centuries a time o hard as to rouse in its people a love so great and so passionate as to be at times almost destructive. Perhaps it is because it has suffered infinitely that it has match less tenderness of heart, restlessness of spirit and a bright humor that is just a shade this side of tears. If Ireland were n groat, a large, a powerful country, rich and independent and reeking with commercial success, it would not be a place that people remember and talk of and cry for in all the far countries of the earth. It would not be n place that millions of people in other lands can see in all its misty grpen by merely closing their eyes. ANOTHER HARD-WON VICTORY rpHE theory of equal rights for citizens, "U. established formally by the suffrage amendment to tho constitution, was not recognized by the members of the state and city Republican committees, who could sec no reason why representatives of the women's vote should have any voice in their deliberations. As every one knows, it is in committees of leaders rather than on the floor of tho ' Legislature or in the open sessions of the City Council that state nnd municipal poli cies of government are initiated, defined and forced to a culmination Without repre sentation on the party committees women 'would be virtuallj without representation in the party. When jesterday, Governor Sproul and Chairman Crow informed a committee of women headed by Mrs. War burton that the rules of the state committee would be at once amended to make room for women they announced a change in front that already has been too long delayed BEHIND THE SCENES YESTERDAY British trade organizations tdgned Important tiude agreements with The Russian Soviet Government which the day before wat, t,uid to he read for a ter rific collapse. Trotzk denied that n revolu tion of any importance was afoot in Russia at a time when the world was readinj run ning accounts of impending disaster to the Moscow ring. In one hour the cables do. escribed Russia as aflame with rebellion. In Another Russia was icjiortid quiet News received in th Tinted States from Russia or the RusNlnn borders comes l cable. It parses through manv foreign countries and through various relnv sta tions. It Is subject to manipulation by people friendly or unfnendlv to ti0 Soviets Tet the whole future political and industrial complexion of the world mny hn profoundly affected by events about which it Is dillicult for the United States to learn the truth The Importance of tho fiirht started by President Wilson for free cables mav be understood by any one who will take tho trouble to read and try to anabzc current uewi relative to Russian nffairs HEALTH AT THE SOURCE IN SEEKING to have the authorit of the Department of Health extended by legislative notion to poriiiit n closer super vision of food markets and fond manufacture in the crowded areas where all common lows of sanitation are openly violated Dr. Fur bush ought to have support. Other directors have tried with little sur ress to deal with the problem of open food stalls and the unclean and even poisonous beverages fed to thirsty children from side wolk fountains The health department now lacks the needed authority and the State Dairy and Pood Department, which Is sup posed to keep a close supervision over tho general food supply is undermanned No one can tell how many deaths and lew much Illness nnd misery follow each summer upon widespread violation of tho food laws Jn crowded and dirty outdoor markets. Wntcr, sweetened with saccharine, colored with mineral dye nnd flavored with coaltar by-products, is sold freely to tho thirsty and called soda water. Pood gathers dust and flics on open stalls. Through a system of municipal licensing such as Dr. Furbush has proposed the health department would bo enabled to aid largely In a work which the Dairy nnd Pood Department seems unable to do ns thor oughly as it should be done. BOOSTING INTEREST RATE IS A DANGEROUS BUSINESS It Would Be Followed by the Calling of Every Second-Mortgage Loan and the Burdening of Every Borrower With Heavier Charges THE evident disposition In Hnrrlsburg to meddle with the Interest laws threatens every householder whoso real estato Is mort gaged. There nrc three separate bills await ing action which either permit the lender to demand any rate of Interest he chooses or permit him by contract to charge 8 per cent, or advance the legal rate - per cent over the present figure. The ordinary citizen will not be seriously affected by one bill. It allows corporations to go Into the open market nnd get money on Its bonds nt whatever price is necessary to float the loan. And it validates all loans made nt a higher amount than the present legal rate of Interest. This bill has been passed by the Senate nnd Is now in the House committee on banks and banking. Something can be said in defense of tho Stndtlander bill, which keeps the lawful rate of Interest nt 0 per cent, but permits an agreement In writing between the bor rower nnd the lender for a. rate not in oxcess of S per cent. But it does not apply the best remedy for existing Ills. Thorc are business conditions under which it is some times profitable for a man to pay 10 or 15 or 20 per cent for a short-time loan. The New York law is admirably adapted to meet such conditions It provides a legal rate of 0 per cent for ordinary loans, but It per mits tho borrower to charge any rnte the market will sustain on loans of $5000 and upward when made on collateral security. When money is scarce this law draws to New York tho capital needed to keep busi ness moving. It drains the resources of other cities in states in which there is no such liberal and intelligent arrangement for enabling n man In financial straits to get the money he needs to tide him over his troubles. Every big business man In this city has suffered from its workings, for Philadelphia money sometimes flows to New York nt just the times when it is most needed here. But the Stndtlander bill comes far short of meeting the needs of the situation. It really opens the way for the money lender to demnnd 8 per cent from tho ordlnnry bor rower without giving the leeway to big business that it needs. The bill was laid over by the nouse committee on banks nnd banking on Tuesdny night In order to permit a similar bill to be Introduced In the Senate and once more test public sentiment on It. There are two bills in the nousc un equivocally increasing tho legal rato of in terest to 8 per cent for which not a good word can be said. If the people of the state can bo aroused so ns to understand their significance they will make such a vigorous protest that the bills will remain where they are, for the banking committee will not dare challenge tho resentment which would fol low n favorable report on either of them. If the Legislature should unqualifiedly raise the legal rate of interest to S per cent eTcry C per cent second mortgage on real estate would be called on the day it was due, and it would not be renewed save at the new rate of interest. There are thousands of men in this city who have bought homes on which they have been com pelled to put n second mortgnge. They are paying thrt mortgage as fast as they aro able, but n great proportion of them find It necessary to renew the loan. Thoy would find it impossible to get money anywhere save at 8 per cent if the bill should be passed. And the more fortunate householders whose 'proper'' encumbered only by a first mortgage would find themselves in similar straits Hundreds if not thousands of such mortgages are allowed to run on from year to year after the term fixed in them has expired. The lender is satisfied with his investment and he prefers to allow tho money to stay whire it Is under the original agreement He knows that he can demand payment at his discretion and Is content with the security. But as soon ns the legal rnte of interest was raised to S per cent every lender who owned such n mortgage would be tempted to call It and demnnd a new contract at n higher rate. In the present state of the money market he would demand the full amount which the law allowed. Under these circumstances a man with n ViOOO house on which there was a $3000 .nortgage would find his interest bill in creased from SlO n year to 210, or $3 n mouth. lie is already feeling the burd"n of an increase in the assessed vnlue of his proi.crty with the corresponding iucrcana In the amount of his tnx bills. As soon as he discovers that there is danger of the Legislature passing a law whirl, will m ciease the carrying ehnrges of nls property hr will make his objection bi.own in most rniphatic terms. But the man who owns the house he lives in is not the only man who would suffer. Every man who pnys rent for n house or nn apartment or an ofiice would feel the effect of the increased price of monej. The land lord in every instance would pass on the extra charge to his tennnt and many would double or treble it every time, just as somo landlords who have been compelled to pny higher taxes have been collecting two or thiee times the nmount from tliolr tennnts But it may be argued that there can be no relief for the tennnts now suffering from n house shortage, so long as builders find it impossible to get mone nt the present rate of interest. If that bo so. then the present conditions must bo endured until they aro cured by tho slow return to normal conditions That would be much better than to attempt to ease the situation by putting up new houses with 8 per cent money. Such property would lie idle be cause tho average man cannot nffoid to rent or own n house built on such extravagant terms. The builders would soon discover this fact nnd would be likely to lose nil the capital of their own that they had put Into their operations The housing shortage cannot he relieved In anv buch way. Normal conditions aro bound to return In tho course of time A real estate mortgage Is not a speculative security. Money lent on Philadelphia prop erty is nb safe as money invested In gov ernment bonds Thero ought to he enough conservative luvestors in tills city to provide all the money needed for housing ns soon as tho prices of labor nnd material make it rea sonably certain thnt tho money put Into the operntlon can be got out of it. But hero we have proposals In Hnrrls burg. at tho moment when there are Indi cations of n decline in the cost of building, looking to nn increase in the price of money needed to finance building operations, nn increase which would mnko n $3000 mort gnge cost as much to carry as it now costa to curry n ?-1000 mortgage. The proposition Is so preposterous that It outbt to bo rejected without a momeut'e hesitation. Six per cent has been the legal rateof Interest In Pennsylvania ever since 1723. It has served well for noarly two hundred years In every financial crisis through which tho country has passed, There arc no conditions today which justify a restoration of tho rate which prevailed prior to 1723, when the country was now and nil values were to a large degro specu lative. Our ancestors worried through much more trying times than we nrc facing and they managed to do It pretty well with money nt 0 per cent. Tho bnnklng com mittee ought to have enough confidence In our ability to do ns well and to allow tho bills to sleep In its files. FROM TRENCHES AT HOME BETTER, perhaps, than nny other man now conspicuously in tho public eye, Samuel Gompcrs, chief of tho American Federation of Labor, knows how it feels when a feller needs a friend. It would be foolish to deny that the strategists directing the campaign for tho open shop have been outmancuverlng tho federation leaders nnd that the advantages of the situation arc, temporarily at least, on their side. Tho strikes and lockouts nnd lay-offs of the lost eight months have been wearing on tho nerves of the unions and destructive to their moral as well ns tholr financial resources. The movement of tho railway companies and other large employers toward n system of arbitration and adjust ment In which federation influence receives slight recognition, when It receives any, has been progressing slowly but steadily. The "plant democracy" and the "American plan," of which so much is being written, represent, ns nny ono familiar with the technique of labor organization knows, ef forts of tho employers and employes to deal directly with each other rather than through boards and Investigators and delegates of federated unions, By such means the power of the A. F. of L. would be vastly diminished, for by col lective bargaining labor does not mean only the collective bargaining of individual unions. It means bargaining In no emer gency by the collective force of allied unions. That Is why lenders like Sir. Gompers and others In the directorate of the federation fight the pin us advanced for what they call "employers' unions " For the moment they are on the defen sive. And it is nt this juncture of affairs that new nnd unexpected troubles have como to the federation leaders. Spokesmen for all the radical and scmiradical labor groups, ns well as the rapidly growing crowd of theorists who write nnd speak in the name of what thoy call economic liberalism, now extend neither nld nor sympathy to tho trades unions. Indeed, they nrc rejoicing openly nt the discomfiture of Gompers nnd his nssocintes. And, oddly enough, they are repenting and stressing charges pre cisely similar to those which the out-and-out enemies of labor never tire of crying from tho housetops. The extremists among "advanced" editors nnd Inbor leaders are even more bitter in their antagonism to the A. F. of L. than tho most active proponents of tho open shop. They hate Gompers because he Is not radical enough. They dislike the trndes unions be cause they seo them as organizations formed solely with a view to self-interest and ex clusive advantages. Thus, whilo the open shop campaign is inspired by the belief that labor has been nsklng too much, a new cam paign against Gompers Is animated by the belief that the unions nskod too little. All radical-minded labor men Insist that tho federation never nimed to be a force for the common good; that it was content to look out for its own welfare and to let the masses nnd the unorganized get along ns best they could. What they mean nnd what they do not say is that the Federation of Labor should have thrown nil its energy into the move ment for internationalized labor and for the thinly veiled dictatorship of the proletariat suggested in some of the recent programs of radical labor conventions. Gompers has resisted every effort made to ally trades union opinion nnd Influence in the United States nnd Canada with any of tho plans of international radicals. So it is he who Is the storm center of nttacks now directed from the front nud the rear. He has other worries of a novel sort. Investigations made recently In tho In terest of organized labor indicate the ex istence of corruption in some of the high places of his organization. Elaborate sys tems of espionage, organized In the interest of n few employers who suspect nnd resent what they call labor domination in industry, have been uncovered In some brnnches of the federation nnd exposed even in the courts. The espionage system has been de nounced repeatedly in the federation jour nals. William Mather Lewis, director of the savings department of the United States Treasury, addressing n local fraternity, said: ''America Is the worst nation of spenders In tho world. Twenty million dol lars are spent annually by the American people for luxuries." And he urged the need of nationnl economy. But why, in henven's name? Amorlca spends more on luxuries than Chinn. Why emulate China? There is less money being spent on luxuries this yenr than last, for there is less money to spend. It wns probably too swift an nccession of thrift that brought about the industrial slump. When John Smith quit buving luxuries Bill Jones, who produced luxuries, had to quit work nnd could no longer buy the necessities produced by John Smith So John Smith quit work. The only time the production of luxuries becomes nn economic crimo is when labor is being used to produce them that Is needed for tho production of necessities There is no present lack of labor. Thrift may bo nn individual virtue, but it is moro frequently a national Indiscretion. Congress is n debating society The subjects for debate nro formulated In com mittees. Committees needing technical in formation hold meetings nnd henr tho opin ions of experts. Somotlmes there nro two sets of experts representing views diametri cally opposed. Both views may be wholly honest. And both may be prejudiced. If n law is eventually passed that you aro con vinced does not represent the popular will do not blame Congiess. Its members prob ablv acted according to their lights. The fault lies with you. Your lobby wns not biiificiently orgnnlzcd. Mrs. Harding has received word from a California Civil War veteran that he and his wlfo voted for her husband nnd that tho lady said if her vote was not lost she would provide him (her husband, not the Presi dent) with mince pics regularly through tho winter. And he Is now getting the pios. No, we don't see the importance of the item, either; but since the news hns been tele graphed nut of Washington, perhaps it has some hidden significance. Do the pies he Is getting, for Instance, havo tho right kind of kick? A plcublng nnd satisfying job in somo respects is that of Miss Kathcriue Coylo, dav matron nt tho Gloucester detention hoiiso of the Bureau of Immigration She was bridesmaid at fifty weddings during the first two weeks in February. But it isn't tho social end that intrigues It means something to a woman to be nblo to super intend the liuj ing of a trousseau and to start girls out with the right idea of what Ameri canism means. Germany's ploa to the League of Na tions that mediation proceedings bo Initiated to see that tho forcible measures taken by the Allies aro immediately stopped should be, accompanied by proof thnt she has met ull the obligations of the treaty of Versailles and that she Is extremely anxious to begin paying the balance of what sho owes. Tho Georgia farmer who insists upon paying his four cents income tax in four quarterly installments hns aensc of huicor tnoi'e valuable than great riches. WITCHCRAFT AT HOME Whero and How Witch Doctors Flour ish In Pennsylvania Charms, Incantations and Queer Cere monies' of tho Craft More Education Needed By GEORGE NOX McOAIN A MAN and his wife, Moyer by name, were shot near Allcntown n fow days ngo becauso the would-be murderer believed they had bewitched him. Within tho kist few months a witch doctor was arrested In Reading for obtaining money under false pretense. There was a fine flutter among some of the best people of Berks county, becauso they feared tho "doctor" would betray their family secrets. Last week Charles Walter, of Chambers burg, one of the leading lnwycrs of Franklin county, told mo that Tic had Just obtained judgment In the Supreme Court In excess of $13,000 for damages for a client in a so called witchcraft case. It wns more properly voodoolsm. The testimony ns to brutality nnd bestiality lu tho ence savored of the Voodoo orgies of its black devotees in Haiti, Incredible as It may seem, such beliefs and conditions prevnll today widespread in Pennsylvania in this twentieth century. It savors of the dark ages. It Is nil the more reason why tho efforts of Dr. Thomas Fincgan, superintendent of public instruction, to increase the influence of the country school should meet with the hearty co-operation of the present Legisla ture. A BELIEF In witches and in the efficacy of which or "hex" doctors Is the faith of tens of thousnnds of pcoplo in Pennsyl vania. The "hex" doctor Is a regular Institution in certain communities. Certain counties nro more Infested with these, individuals than others. They nrc numerous In Berks, Ichlgb, Northumberland, Montgomery In parts Dauphin, Lnncnstcr, York nnd Franklin counties. The "hex" doctor Is usually a half-baked horse leech ; n Sort of self-educated vctcrl nxirlan. Ho says "powwow" over ailing cattlo, hogs and sheep. Where n family has occasion to believe, according to their preposterous faith, that ono of their number hns been "witched," tho "hex" doctor is Bent for posthaste. Ucre is n sample of his method In an In stance with which I happen to bo personally fnmillnr. The Information came to me ut first hand. IT WAS In the case of a young lad who complained of unusual pains nnd nehes. He puffcrcd from loss of appetite. Ho lost weight; took on n pallid cast of coun tenance, moped around the house and finally complained of Impaired vision. The "powwow" doctor was sent for. He was an ignorant horse doctor with only the rudiments of n country school education. Ho was a man past fifty, and whennot powwowing, rnn n small chicken farm, conducted public sales and traded horses for a living. His verdict, of course, was that the lad was under n "spell." Some one in the neighborhood had bewitched him. At a neighboring country store the "doc bought a gallon stonewnre jug thnt had never contained a liquid ; three needles, some muslin nnd a spool of white tliread. With these ho returned to the patient's home and stnrted his performance. I never wns ablo to discover what he did with the jug and the needles. Ho took several hairs from the head of the boy nnd a few feathers from the bed In which he slept. These were tied in n bit of the muslin together with a slip of paper on which somo figures or characters were written. This package was then burled under the eaves of the barn where the wnter dripping from the roof would fall upon It. The fnmlly wns informed that ns tho pack age rotted iwny the ailment of the boy would gradually disappear. But the chnrm didn't work. Tinnlly a physician was called in and, ns lie entered the front gate, he saw tho "hex" doctor driving out of the stableyard. The boy recovered under the pnysiciau's care. ATTORNEY WALTERS says that in the case in which he obtained n verdict the powwow man worked a different "charm." He took some Imir from the heads of two children in the neighborhood, who were called in nnd brutnlly trentcd, nnd, followed bv all the members of the "bewitched household, proceeded to a neighboring wood flero he bored n hole In n tree with a brace and bit, put tho hair, together with a bit of pnper, on which wcro written some hieroglyphics, into the hole and plugged it up. , , Then he made the Bign of the cross, mum bled some words in nn innudible tone, and the ceremony wns complete. lie wns doing powwow In this ense for a sick coldt and some colicky hogs. Another bit of his hocus-pocuB was to make the sign of the cross on the forehead nnd feet of the children with his thumb, all tho time muttering to himself. When put on tho stnnd he confessed he didn't know what it was that he did say. "And why did you bore the hole in the tree?" demanded Attorney Walters. "To make 'cm strong," was the cryptic reply. A GENTLEMAN familiar with the ways of the "hexcrs" informs me that their shibboleth Is "tho seven books of Moses." Once they nnnounce, or let It be known, thnt they have the "seven books," their Im portance Is Increased in the neighborhood ; likewise the fear of them nnd their alleged powers. These "seven books ' is a collection of apocryphal literature of both the Old and New Testaments, nnd a lot of other pseudo sacred writings. They contnln also a mass of gibberish, with hicroghphlca, pentagons, btars. magical formuln nnd inrantntions. It Is a rcnl curiosity of literature, thoush it can be purchased at almost nny book storo that deals in tno dream -hook Kind of stuff. THERE arc thousands in Philadelphia who bclicvo In the same sort of lubblsh. Old residents In the neighborhood may yet recall the ense of George W. Kclpin, a well known painter of this city, who died in tho full belief that ho had been bewitched. It was n quarter of a ccnturv ago. Kc lived at the time at r20 North Fifth street. Ills wlfo consulted n Negress, a Mrs. Weeks. In Camden, oodoo doctrcss, who pre scribed mackerel poultices for his feet nnd nn onion poultice for his head. Kolnln Insisted thnt he was bewitched, nnd the hallucination prevailed until ho starved to death. Inspector Miles O'Reilly, famous Now York policeman, got possession of a great collection of lovo charms, lovo powders, miracle cards and philters for mnlds nnd bachelors from a Brooklyn witch doctrcss. Her name was "Madam" Jones, of 230 Bergen street. She kept u record of her dupes and her prescriptions. She was very rich. Her cash book for a brief period showed receipts of nenrly $1000. Tho remarkable thing Is that In this com monwealth these charlatans pursue their vocntion unmolested. In Massachusetts 250 years ago they burned them. Pennsylvania ought at least jail them for a while. If you are a good citizen you aro In terested In what your representatives nro doing nnd hnve Ideas as to what legislation they should favor. If you let them know your opinions you become a lobbyist. If you join with others In voicing opinions you and they become organized lobbyists. There nro good lobbylsto and had lobbjUts. It Is well to have this fact clear In your mind f ltr..l.lnntAn nrttl in attlfft A Til t s1 . lUfi rWUaUJHWU W.U JATir vwjy4Vb4Ji NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians on Subjects They Know Best MRS. R. R. PORTER BRADFORD On Woman's Voice In Church Affaire THE church is the loser in refusing to grant women rcprescntntion nt the an nual convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvnnin. where they could have u voico in the policies, nccording to Mrs. R. U. Porter Bradford, welfare worker and actively interested in the churchwomeu'a nnd other clubs throughout the city. "Tho church faces the grave danger of wasting n great power for spiritual good and alienating from itself nnd even from Chris tianity many nblo nnd high-minded women,' said Mrs. Bradford. "These women may turn to educational work nnd to other fields where they have greater opportunities for carecis. We go into our colleges nnd urge the young women to take up a life of religious service, but when they look into the matter they find thnt it means all work and no representa tion, no voice. Wo nro doomed to failure before wo begin. Compared Willi Case of Army Nurses "Toko the case of nrmy nurses as an illustration of a similar condition. For years they were nllowcd to do their noblo work, subjected to disrespect from orderlies nnd others not officially recognized as subordi nates. Only during the last war were they given nuthoritv. A commission enables them to do infinitely better work because they hnvo a voice, they nro representative. "Jrtet so, with women In tho churches, they havo been permitted to do the work for 305 days each year, but cannot bo rep resented nt ono meeting in that time, lhere certainly is nothing discussed at tho diocesan convention that is outsido tho realm of woman's Interest or understanding. "Women possess a great evangelical gut, and. I dnre say, many activities would ceae.s if tlio women would stop work. Churches are dependent todny on tho women. "Statistics show more confirmations of women than men, and if we were to have proportional representation, wo would out number tiiem. , , , ., ,i l. "Forming the larger body of tho church What Bo You Know? QUIZ 1 What is a merino?, 2. Who is General BudcnyT 3. Name tho capital of Louisiana. 4. Of what country Is tho shamrock tno floral emblem? ,,,., 6. Namo tho author of "America" ("My Country, "l'ls of Thee"). 6. Who is tho conductor of tho New orlt Symphony Orchestra? 7 Whut Is a biped? 8 Who was the "Old Man nioqucnt"? 9. What Is the essential principle ot tho bungalow nnd where did this type of atructuro originate? 10 What Is a, binnacle? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The Wugnerlan tetralogy Includes tho four operas written by Richard Wni? ner on tho Toutonlo legendB of tho Nlbolungen Ring. They nrc, In tha order of presentation: "Daa Rheln gold," "Die Wnllcuere," "Siegfried" nnd "Die Qoetterduemmerung " 2. The under-secrotary of stain In the Hard ing administration is Henry Prattler Fletcher, of Pennsylvania. 3. A lariat, strictly speaking, is a rope for picketing horses, but tho term Is often used in the western states fur u lasso, 4. Montpeller Is tho capital of Vermont. 6. Arthur Qrirflth, an Irish publicist and political economist, founded Sinn Keln as uti economic doctrlno nnd a society for forwarding Its principles. 6. The Initials "O. B. ll" and "IC 13 I:." after a person's name stand for "Order of the British Umpire" and "Knight of tho British Kmplre," nn order of knighthood or distinction, with Itu decoration conferred for services to the etnplro. It was founded during tho recent war. 7 The head of tho Austrian cabinet is Chan cellor Mayr. 8. Capu Mny Is nt tho southern extremity of New Jersey. It wns named for Its discoverer, a Netherlandish explorer. Cornelius Mny (or Moy). 3. William Denn Howella wrote "The Rlso of Silas Lapham." It waB ono of tho first American novels to present tho business and social development of a self-made man and Is regttrded by critics as a masterpiece of American fiction. " 10. A gargoyle. Is a grotesnuepout, usually with a human or animal mouth, htad . or body, projecting- from tho gutter of ,, a building especially In Clothlo urchl- tectureto carry water clear of the DO IT NOW! "" '- I I nnd bearing the burden aud expense of the mission woik, it seems inconsistent that men should have nil tho say. "I renlly only know of ono reason that has been expounded against, nnd that Is, that it never has been done. "Then n gentleman who has nttended the convention for several years mid It wns so dull ho couldn't understand women's desire to bo present. "Hegnrdlng women's mission work, a story told by Bishop Manning might bo very npropos. "A Japanese Christian nsked n member of the Protestant Episcopal Church how our mission societies nrc supported nnd wns told that the children in the Sunday schools give nn offering ench year and the women's nuxiliary every three years. Remembering suddenly the large donation given by the men recently nt the tercentenary, the informant added that fact. "Whereupon the Jnpnncsc replied: " 'Oil, I see, your children give each year, jour women every threo jcais uud the men every 300 jenrs. Ncetl for Co-operation "We need co-opcrntlon of churchmen nnd churchwomen. A number of clergy and laity hnvo said that they reeognizo tho jus tice of our demands, but so far nothing clso lias come of it. At the Lambeth conven tion last July nnd August, the position of women in council wns consideied nnd tho following resolution udopted : " 'Women should be admitted to those councils of the church to which laymen nro ndmitted. nnd nn cquul terms,' This, jou must understand, is the Church of England. "Women have been given tho ballot, nud if there is equality in politics, why not in this sphere? "It is now generally accepted thnt tho future must bo different from tho past. Women lmvo attiilucd places of responsibil ity heretofore unknown, nnd they arc going Htendily forward. Where a woman does the work bo capably she should havo n voice," HUMANISMS By WILLIAM ATHERTON I)U PUY I WOULD ask you if, under the follow ing clrcumstnnres, you would consider Gilbert Iv. Chesterton in earnest or merely Indulging in n bit of his own brand of humor. Ho had been in Bnltimorc the day before and wns now meeting Washington corre spondents nt the National Press Club. The huge, genial Britisher wns tho center of n gossiping circle when n diminutive, foreign looking, lomewunt shabby Individual broke through nnd Introduced himself. "I tried to get to your reception yester day in Baltimore," this individual ex plained, "but circumstances made it im possible." "Wasn't that fortunate?" replied Ches terton warmly. When William Wnrfield Wilson. M. C from Chicago, wns teaching school in tho llttlo mining town of Nnmpa, Idaho, twenty-five jcars ago, a restaurant-keeper served n tough plcco of steak to a girl named Minnie, Minnie protested nnd the restau rant mnn threw her out bodily. Minnie went nnd got her gun, came. In tho back way nnd began to shoot. The restaurant man fled and she after him down the street. When Minnie's nmmunltlon wus all gone her victim bled freely, but was not seriously hurt. Minnie's feller, n gambler named ,71m mlo Turner, was forty miles away when ho heard of tho fracas. He owned the prettiest pinto ponv lu Idaho nnd dashed nway to Nnmpn. The pony carried him all the way, but fell dead upon his arrival. A young nttorncv named William 13. Borali cnino down fiom Boise to defend Mlnnio nnd secured her acquittal. That night Jlminlo Turner celebrated by "buying tho saloons" and dispensing free drinks to all coiners. Wilson committed the Indiscre tion of declining to drink when Invited by the gambler nnd only the intervention of Hie burtender kept him from being shot. After ward he and Jlnunie Turner beenmo gicut friends. r?. Sp,,ntnr Borah nnd Representative Wilson can hark back when dull mmnnntu toiuo on Cnpltol Hill to moro thrilling time in tho post., SHORT CUTS Stay-nt-homo lovers of balmy airs con tinue to nsk, "Why is Palm Beach?" It must be admitted that the March Hon hasn't had a ghost of a show so far. Not even a home run by Babe Ruth has more value than a home run by Dela ware shad. Tho second easiest thing a man does Is to make excuses for a woman. The first is to blame her. Laddie Boy has it "all over" Brigadier Gonernl Sawyer in one respect : Ho doesn't have to dig up monoy for a uniform. A day's wprk seldom shows definite progression toward ideals. Duty usually takes on the aspect of a belt or a shuttle A chicken's heart Is to be seen beating In a bottle in Now York. Wo are not sur prised. When they began to show their cars we kind o' felt they wouldn't know when to stop. t, .Vn,en thc PossiiB of the fleet to th incific hns made barren the social centers of the Atlantic coast, mayhap society will revive the habits of Colonial times and make much of the captains of our merchant marine. So long ns it is safeguarded by precedent and common sense, there can be no objection to a short-term loan ; but there mny be room for serious objection in the way it is to b spent nnd to thc men who aic to do the spending. There Is n young man In this town a college grnduate, a former nthlete and a war veteran, who has on five separate occasion given his blood for transfusion to save the lives of others. Clean blood, clean llvlni and n life of service! Philadelphia may b proud of such sons! The fact that n Hazleton, Pa., man, seventy-four years old, began to dig hl.i gravo two days beforo his death is note worthy but not particularly startling. Na ture is kindly in thnt ns old ago creeps on n man she makes tho thought of death a commonplace to him. A dispatch from Quebec says that radio message from the schooner Viking tells of -1000 seals bolng killed in three hours This, however, will not bring down the price of sealskins; the prices will probably g' up. With killing reduced to n science, seali are bound to get scarce, d'ye sec? A Mississippi farmer has notified th President that ho is nt present scientifically feedlug tho Whlto Houso Thanksgiving Day turkey. Anybody who has ever raised tur koys will know that guy Is nn optimist Circumstance may knock tho stuffing out of the bird before the summer Is over. President Loch, of tho Reichstag, fear that If a. customs frontier diverts Rhlneland commerce from Germany to Franco, Rhine land sympathy will eventually run lu thc snrao channel. President Locb shares the opinion of somo other economists thnt the business man Is your only true Interna tlonnllst. The ndmlsslon by Dr. Simons that the Allies nrc not nctuated by tho intoxication of victory or lust for power, nnd his realla tion that tho opinion of tho world Is that Germany is In tho wrong and has not done enough to requite that wrong, encourage the hope that sooner or later Germany will ec n light and will truly repent. A recent enso In Boston has demon strated that fioger prints aro not only very UBoful In bringing about the conviction of tho guilty, but thnt they are Invaluable In this matter of freeing tho Innocent. Some day every birth ccrtlflento will bo accom ponied by a finger print nnd a mnn'a Identity will be assured for all time. The cheerful chronicler of unimportant happenings In Wnshlngton hns cumbered the wires with tho story that President Hard Ing, desiring a book containing Information concerning White Houso procedure, went Into tho cellar to look for It. Aud there Isn't a lino In tho ynru to Indlcato tn finish of tho episode. Tho president of the crntlc Club of New' York ration from her husband. Women's Demo te suing for sepa who. Klin alleges, has Interfered forcibly to keeping hor engagements.' prevent her from The, lady Is also for til., Aid 0( president ot tno Bociety Aieutui ucicctlves. who contention that woman's in not well utile? shall say that th nlnx in tllC hUlU 'i-Zl rr .? ,jx ..y f , tii ,. a-. -i ,! iSi.nu'' l,?i, LKri ,.,.