ISi -ia-eni'i ' nn w it i m I iw i .j 1 ie ' w.iz' MWw,?,?m3cxrt!-& "var v.. P1r-a7IfT-r, .1.1 i'.JV'i mmmw.-r AWSSff J"" SSfcK ' 12 F fflSMau. M$MpitBtmi KlitKftf ?TtfS T?ftf PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY JArrl emits if. i. nttiTtR. pinv ll.irf Jehji C. Mai tin, Vice I'rtaldtnt and Treasurer: KC Cntrlfr A. Tylr. 8rcrtaryi Churlen II. l.udlnif. i ion. miup n. c.tinni. join n. wuum, Jehn J. '3j r ' ururuu uuiuaiiuiii. jhTiu ., einucr. Iv .jpAVffl g. BMir.nT rMitnr Ji ,Jfm?J P. XIAHTIV r!inral Tin. In... M.ni.e EiiA'l'' fuMlahad dally at Pcblie LtwjM BullJlnr ''aW..' Independencl, Squar. l'hltaillprila. VMiK'T,C ClTT..... rrit'nien null.ltne wuSKnr Ynn nni t.,i.nn u. jtnlkA.w fni ..... .... ..-J 5iL.U9. I-nrtN filfl flfth.nMfiMt n.,it.ii,. LV,5,"!ClUC10O. ...1302 Tribune lliill.l!n SfptSb. krtvs burcaCs: k&SjrASmSOTOM BlBUU, PVViy.J..-. - 4. '.-"' . thiipjiiii sw, ana mu pi. ISJw"1 eK JlcntAU Th uu llulMlns '3'VV4,B0N B"," Trafalgar UulMIng r?' i. sunscRirneN terms ,vf Th Ert.si.Mi t'liiuc L.kiniKii In mnel te iub- , , scriMr In rhlladelphla and mji rounding tewna f te tha rui-rlT. fiv mall A nntnta A.it.M. . nt.lf..lnt.1. IH I1" th tTnlfAd MIAt.. I'.naHtt t...... u.... .. ST,,te' fre. fllty (80) ctnta pr month. "' dollars pr mr, rayahlc in adance. Te all ferln rntintrlr one (II) dollar a month. Notieb Pubct1brs wishing addraa chaneil tnunt slve old ui vrtll an new addreia. BEtL. iOOa VAI.XLT KEYSTONT. MAIN HOI tAddrttt all communication te Evrntne PubUe ltdatr. Indfptndcnei Square, DiUadttpMa. I Member of the Associated Press THE ASSOCtATED rRESS J txclusivtlu en- J titled te the m or rrpuollfetlon of all nui t?atche credited te If or net othrneite credited i tart paper, and alto the local newt published therein. XII riehta of republication el a. eclat dispatchet mtrUn ar alto reterved, PhUtdrlphli. Wrdnedt;. lane 7, 1923 THE FAIR MOVES FORWARD THE unanimous approval of the Swqul Centennlat by the Heuse of Hepresenta tlves mnj- legitimately lie construed ns emethtng mere than u mere formal ex pression of ceed will. While it Is true that the sanctioning resolution contained no prevision for ap propriations a point upon which Uepre sentatlvc Mendell laid stress the ltfpuli lican fleer leader was particular te point out that Congress "will lie expected at the proper time te make whatever appropria tions may be necessary for n Government building at this very splendid e.thlbltlon-te-be." There Is net the least doubt that this t. thought Is In the minds of the Knlr Asso ciation and that It Is rightfully entertained. , Congressional Indersement Is a prelimi nary step, but without being importunate It may be stated that its moral If net Us technical obligations de net end here. The Heuse and the Sennte cannot afford te withheld substantial aid for the celebra tion of ICO years of American Independence, nor is there reason te believe that they will be lax when the moment for financial as sistance arrives. Philadelphians nre entitled te be pleased t the outlook and grateful for the promi nence already accorded in Washington te a magnificent undertaking, te the significance of which the entire Natien will be eventually aroused. LILLIAN RUSSELL fpIIE exceptional position se long occupied X by Lillian Hussell with relation te her Inflexibly loyal admirer, the American public, Is first of all attributable te u radi ance of personality as Indefinable ns It was potent. Minds and sensibilities that art! dazzled de net lend themselves readily te the demands of analysis, which perhaps ex- A.Blalns why "the Queen of Americnn Light Opera" wns mere sumptuously and steadily served with banquets of praise than ether tars of her type nud period. In one respect this was Lillian Russell's feed fortune. It was her unique privilege - te be accepted as a resplendent Institution and as a symbol of beauty and gracious charm. It was unimaginable that she should erer grew old, and new the legend of her command ever the fount of .eiith Is pre served in her sudden and premature passing. ' What has sometimes been overlooked and la signally worthy of emphusis Is, however, -that Lillian Hussell at the height of her stage career was something mere than u gorgeous creature. Stage annals will make much of her physical loveliness. Psycholo gists will discover u mine of interest In the somewhat random marriages of her earlier days and of the varied distinctions wen by ftwr In public and happy domestic life after her retirement from the footlights. There is uncommon piquancy In the realization that she was nn earnest and able empleye of the Department of Laber, a commissioned investigator of the immigra tion problem, when the accident which closed her life occurred. But what patrons of the theatre will recall with ardent enthusiasm is her admirable f,U qualities as un artist, apart from advertise- ment, apart from what then passed for sen sen .satlennlism, apart from the glamour attach ing te her spectacular udventures. Fer Lillian Unwell was Indeed an artist of no mean gifts. In the heyday of light opera she irradiated with her authentic tal ents the delicious products df Sullivan, of Offenbach, of Audrnn and the sparkling Parisian school, new extinct. The Indian summer of her professional career found her a lustrous interpreter of the bright music and light-hearted drollery of the Webertield travesties also vanished. Vocally, her gifts might easily have jus tified her entrance in the grand opera field. As It was, she elevated operetta te a plane which seemingly cannot be rigulned. And through all the many seasons of her 'eminence, through nil the years in which she was the recipient of such abundant public adulation, It may be said that Lillian Xussell retained the saving grace of sephis ticated humor and the most udmlrablu vi y. Qualities of geed sense, ceneresltv ami T wholesome zcstfulness of life, which constl censtl "i ' ttited a triumphant armor ucninxt tl... rv. PV?J-$ et affectation and pose. An engaging Awyand stimulating public character, a sincere, fitf ncuiy euuunt'u mm iiuuiiigcni artist is lest ' iv ine country in ner ueatu alter sixty-one iti-years of jeuth. ;ViV - ii' lasicc TunmiAet pnrr Anr. MVWiiww mvmrw untnl UrlrtttK & iiflSS M. CAKE THOMAS, who retires xAf.iUl. from the nrcsldencv of rtrvn m,... . &$Ji'CWlege this week, will rank in the history v .....v-,. uuUWuu uiiiuiik me great women college presidents. There are these who will Insist that she will rank among the great college presidents. It is better . . "w "' vr ,j """ uiumatc lame 1 t err en the side of moderation in pralslnc ner than te attempt te give her all her just deserts. The future will sift the words of .commendation when it becomes possible te , knew with greater certainty whether what ht did rested en a firm foundation. i But this much is admitted: She bes lifted ' Ka. Srvn Mawr Cnllese Intn tli lint .,. . ,&' iistltutiens devoted te the education of .!:WW women. Her standards have always 'Will blb' "e "as cens'8tentIy Insisted Wtnere is no bcx m intellect and that n can roaster wnnicver subjects can be rea ey men. auc nas gathered In the y a group of experts, none nf u-im,n a by cempariwn with experts in the lines in ether colleges, And th mi. has turned out as line a company of a women as nas come irem any ether lean institution, the wayef social service, the opening t doers of the college in the summer a)tli working girls and the arrange AJnkkW' awm tot 'them in the . swt'Sisasyi . TwmWWml ,W"4F?W 1UV ,v" v 'f- -w ""-- ' the benefit of these who arc unable te spend four cnrs In study. On the material side Miss Themas has added tit the number of buildings nud has Increased the endowment se that the col lege Is equipped te carry en Its work and te accommodate an Increasing number of stu dents. These results could net have been accom plished If Miss Themas had net been n woman of vision and Initiative and great driving power, equipped with a readiness te profit by the lessens of experience. She would probably tell her successor te avoid the mistake of Imitation and te keep her mind -en the future with n firm purpose te meet each problem in the light of the facts as they develop. THE ELECTION OF BAKER WOULD BE A CRAVE FOLLY Repudiation of Mr. Plnchet's Desires by the State Committee a Toothsome Issue for the Democrats New Without One rpHE Old Gang In Pennsylvania never learns and never forgets. The bosses cannot change their spots. Net satisfied with the well-deserved beat ing administered te them by the party voters through Clifferd Pinchot en May 10, they nre despcrntely preparing for another escapade which will again arouse the dis gust and Indignation of the majority of Republicans. Ullndly disregarding the plain slsns of danger from the awakened electorate, they are planning, with the aid of the candidates for United States Senater, Messrs. Pepper end Reed, te force the election of W. llnrry Raker as State chairman at the meeting of the Stute Committee en Saturday. As a count of heads will reveal, the bosses who unsuccessfully tried te put ever Alter ns their candidate for Governer undoubtedly control enough votes in the Stnte Committee te elect Raker. Rut the members of the committee will de se at their own peril. Raker stands for nil that Is bad In the old organization. He is a representative of the discredited machine, of Crewism, of Reldlemnnlsm, of the Capitel Hill ring, of assessments en State officeholders, of the free and unlimited use of boodle te carry elections and of nil the sins of emission and commission chargeable against the worst elements in the pnrty. These arc the sins which the majority of Republican voters In the Stnte decided at the primary election that they wanted ex tirpated. There was no mistaking the man date. The message was clear. These sins of which Raker Is a typical representative nre also the sins which Pinchot pledged himself te eliminate and purge nwny and put the party organization back en the plane where he and every ether self-respecting Republican man and woman wants te see it. Rut net se Messrs. Pepper and Reed, net se the Capitel Hill gang, net se the repudiated Contractors' Combine. They nre satisfied with things as rrey were ; they want the old order te remain. Hew fatuous they must have thought Pinchot when they believed they could per suade him te sanction the continuation et the old stuff which he Instinctively and in honor bound must oppose ! Messrs. Pepper and Reed arc new In this game of politics and perhaps they did net renllze what they were asking when they tried te get Pinchot te stand for Raker at the Monday conference in Washington. Maybe they will cut their political ee-teeth later and learn mere nbeut the convolutions of the machine's coils. Rut at any rate, Pinchot came out of the conference as best man because he did net betray the faith that made him the new real leader of the Re publican Party In Pennsylvania, even though the Old Gang does net yet acknowl edge that latter fact. Se if the gang bosses insist upon retain ing their held upon the party organization by putting ever Raker's election next Sat urday there is only one wise course open te Mr. Pinchot, and that is te have nothing te de with them nnd their works. He can not consistently de otherwise. He will be fully justified under all the clrcumstnnccs In conducting his own cnmpnlgn for Gov Gov ereor quite separately nnd apart from the State Committee Raker management. He cannot nfferd te accept any favors at such hands, because they have a habit of de manding payment with heavy interest. As we see this fight, the principle is net different from that before the primary. The situation has merely changed se as te give Mr. Pinchot the power and prestige which comes with the party nomination for the highest office in the State. He should net hesitate te use that power and prestige te the limit In order te protect the party from the repudiated bes.p.s, tven though the candidates for United States Senater, Messrs. Pepper and Reed, prefer the old outfit. Pinchot ewes nothing te either of these gentlemen; in fact, Mr. Reed was openly fnvernble te Alter. Rut the State Committee election Is net ever. It Is barely possible that some of the wiser members will have something te say about the Issues supposed te have been settled at the primary, but which the bosses Beem te have Ignored. Are the members ready as a vbedy te go en record against the next Governer, the candidate of the party and its standard bearer, at the first showing of hands en a vital point? De they think it geed strategy te give the Democrats new qulte without n real issue the opportunity of pointing out that Pinchot ns Governer will be utterly unable te bring about the reforms he premises be cause he cannot even get the State Com mittee of the party te go nleng with hlra in his entirely proper and progressive de sires? The Old Gang has done many foolish things lately. Rut It will top them ull off with a sublime piece of felly If the election of Raker Is forced en Saturday. AWAY FROM NORMALCY? IT OUGHT te be vividly apparent te the Old Guard In the Republican Purty, and te the New Guurd for that matter, thnt m xtreuwly strMg undercurrent of insurgent iJR55K !! '.Mil- wm .f 8VW,'-' n i EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER try nnd that political normalcy, if it is the smug normalcy et the Ledges and the Mo Me Cumbers, will net de. The tide that carried Rcvcrdge nnd Pin chet te victory in the recent Republican primaries in ' Indiana and Pennsylvania seems te be even stronger in Iowa. There several old-line candidates for the United Stutes Senate have been swept under nnd Smith W. llroekhart, bnwler-eut of organ ized capital, shouter for the oppressed nnd professing political radical, walked off with the Republican nomination. The farmers, who in Iowa nre said te be politically Insurgent te a man, gave the victory te Mr. Rroekhart. And news from the field of war Indicates that It wns In tense dislike of the State political machine nnd all Its works rather than any particu lar admiration for Rroekhart t,het animated the majority nt the polls In Iowa". The Democratic propagandists who saw signs of party disintegration in the Rcvcr Idge nnd Pinchot victories will, of course, be deeply moved by the news from Iowa. The fact Is that the present Insurgent move ment proves the Republican Pnrty te be anything but devitalized. What the country needs Is n sort of pnrty feeling thnt will tend te force a general cleaning up In Con gress. Intellectually the Heuse nnd the Senate are at the lowest mark of their his tory. Even it mnn like Rroekhart can be of mere use In Washington than any standard iz?d politician of the back-country ma chines. He can be nn Irritation te the tee complacent nnd tee contented party pa trlarchs, if nothing mere. SNYDER NOW LOVES THE LAW By GEORGE NOX McCAIN rpHE Attorney General's investigation Inte the peculiar system of bookkeeping In the State Treasury under former Treasurer Harmen M. Kcphurt has already begun te produce results. It will be recalled that when former Auditor General new the present State Treasurer Charles A. Snyder's books were exnmlned by Main & Ce.. certified public accountants, they discovered that a most remarkable system of accounting had been carried en during Mr. Snyder's tenure of office. One of the sensational results of the Snyder system wns the discovery that the $5000 Reldleman check had been ordered paid from a fund thut wns available only for "Advertising and the Escheat of Moneys." In following up ether payments and vouchers the abceuntunts disclosed the fur ther fact thnt thousands of dollars had been paid by Snyder from ether funds thnt had no connection whatever with the character of service rendered. In ether words, the funds were juggled ns it suited the convenience of that official. It is net te be wondered that in following the dear line of his sworn duty Auditor General Samuel S. Lewis has incurred the dlsplensure, net te use a mere cmphntlc word, of State Treasurer Snyder nnd his predecessor, Mr. Kephnrt. It was net te be expected, therefore, that the bill of Main & Ce. for their services in uncovering the odorous mess en Cnpltel Hill would pass unquestioned. There had been hints that it would be disputed : that payment might be refused. The cahlcr of the State Treasury, Themas A. Crichton, as anticipated, brought the matter of its payment te the attention of Attorney General Alter en a technicality. It was whether or net Main & Ce.'s bill could be paid out of a deficiency appropriation of IOL'1. After all his experience In switching funds, paying attorneys and ethers out of funds thnt had nothing te de with their work, State Treasurer Snyder suddenly found it necessary in a remarkable recrudescence of zeal te nppenl, through his cahlcr, te the long ignored Attorney General for advice. Attorney General Alter's decision was that the bill should be paid out of the deficiency appropriation. State Treasurer Snyder's discovery of the existence of nn Attorney GenernI, after jears in which he had disregarded his power and nutherlty, is the one prominent nnd visible result of the present investigation. And new that Mr. Snjder has come te his senses Attorney General Alter should by no means Ignore the fact thnt he, as the repre sentntivc legal officer of the Commonwealth, ewes a duty te the people with respect te Mr. Snyder as former Auditor General that should net be overlooked or neglected. The money disbursed by the former Audi tor General te his self-appointed attorneys, in flagrant and boastful violation of the direct mandate of the Act of 1015 prohibiting such appointments, still remains te be recov ered from Mr. Snyder or his bondsmen. It Is lu excess of $100,000 and it belongs te the people. Mere vividly should this duty be impressed upon the mind of Attorney General Alter because of the fact that the present Auditor General, Mr. Lewis, hns mode no such ap pointments without tuC fun concurrence and advice of Mr. Alter. The decision as te the payment of the bill of Main & Ce. for auditing Mr. Snyder's books and unraveling their sinuous Intrica cies has also a wider significance. On his own responsibility, just as when he appointed attorneys illegally, State Treasurer Snyder ordered an examination and auditing of State Treasurer Kcphart's books. A firm of accountants completed the work months age. Net n word has been heard with reference te the result. . Will Mr. Snyder, through his cashier, demand that the bill for this work ordered by him en his own responsibility be paid out of the deficiency appropriation of 1021? DEFLATING THE RAILROADS RAILWAY corporations with stupendous sums of money Invested In equipment and subnormal bend values and earning power rigidly fixed below conventional In terest rates by the authority of the Govern ment cannot be said te be rolling in milk und honey. Neither can railway empleyes, who still must pay war prices for feed and shelter, be elated at the prospect cf further general reductions in their pay. In .n time of inflntlen the way te deflate is te deflate, and since this essential work must begin somewhere, borne one huu te be the first te suffer. It Is useless te deny that wage cuts will mean actual hardship te many railroad men. Rut It is worth remembering that people who had their money invested in railway securities have been doing their suffering for n number of years. In the course of time lowered shipping costs will force mere general reductions of the costs of living. Meanwhile the Railroad Laber Heard, in ordering wage cuts follow fellow Ing the reduction In freight rates, took the only open way out of u great eiucr cency by attacking the problem of nl. normal costs of living at or ut least near the seurcethat is, in tat. transportation I llmaa-'th teuatlT. wm'iW! ':..r J m TTT U PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Men Leve te De Funny Formal 8tunts W.hen Left te Their Own Foolish Ways, Which Explains Parades and Minstrel 8hews By SARAH D. LOWR1B THE theory thnt men abhor the trammels of nnncMllntm rnnvnntlnns nnd escape formalities of nil sorts, from dress coals te duty calls, oilce their wemenklnd have taken wlnge for the summer. Is se deeply rooted In most women's minds thnt It Is always n perplexed surprise te'them te see the lengths of fennalitv te which men. left te their own devices, will go when they nre really embarked en a ceremony. I cannot imagine women celebrating any event or nnnlvcrsnry, no inntter hew patri otic or religious or social, keeping their faces straight while performing the drilled genu flections which their husbands and brothers and fnthers lend themselves te with a gravity that is unflinching. Even the funny stunts thnt men de for one another's applause have n kind of prena ration nnd n program nnd balance that blights any passing frivolity which inter rupts the prescribed ritual. I watched the Pen nnd Pencil Club celebrities net long age perform In their admirable and agreeable manner en the public stage. Of course, a minstrel show Is ns bnlanced nnd conven tional In Its way ns a minuet, but I realized why men Invented minstrel shows nnd still cling te them with levnl devotion. The center mnn, called the Interlocutor, and the end men, who conscientiously produce the stories, and the in-between men, who leugh nt the stories, are as wedded te their con ventional pregrnm ns though it came out of n prayer book. If one man departed ever se little from the rubrics, the whole service would go te smash nnd the actors' wide mouth grins would turn te frozen disappro bation. TT JUST happened that n day or se be A fore that show I had sat for n whole Sunday morning nt the open window of my sitting room watching the gathering of n fraternal order for their nnnunl march with bands tuid banners through our ijnrt of the town. It took them nbeut two hours te get ready for that march, nnd ns each brother strode mnnfullv forth from the club hell pulling en n pair of spotless white gloves and settling his plumed pith helmet te the exnet crease above his eyebrows, I realized thnt in the ceremony of the day nil the pent-up desires for grandeur nnd kingly observances were given leeway bv these narticlpnting. r.ach man, being dressed like a here, treated himself ns one, and there wns nn nir of condescension nnd yet of benevolence with which he greeted these ns geed bv nature ns himself, but certainly net se fortunate who were In the somber nether nnd upper garments of everyday. Even these in high silk hats and long frock coats and white vests were lesser mortals in their own esteem tnaii the paragons in creased white trousers nnd belted, bright-hued coats nnd glit ter ng swords. The salute with these glit tering swords en the slightest passing nod, the meticulous inspection by these higher l!p' i .t,ic. ,pontlnueus testing of nutherlty by him highest up In rnpid-fire commands te siicntli i and unsheath, point, nnd shoulder these glittering swords, nnd finally, the mo ment of perfection reached and almost overreached, for It was a very het day wnen the reviewing potentates in Turkish trousers nnd fezes passed down that line, nil were se many glorious proofs thnt men are highly ceremonious creatures when left te their own devices. TF I HAD needed nny further proof of this, I had only te go back n few days mere te the afternoon I had spent as one of nn In cited group nt the Franklin Institute, when the two degrees of the year were bestowed en the two scientists who had done most during the Inst twelve months te benefit the .i yi 'elr nPl,"cl knowledge Thomp son, the laboratory nutherlty en ntems and molecules, and Medjeskl. the architect, engineer nnd constructor of the great bridges of the country. The president of the Institute, Walten Clark, the presenters of the two men te receive the medals of honor, the secretary or the beard who produced the awards, the donors of the portrait of the president which eMI.?rZm ,1C lnrtI,,,t0 durln " ceuwS 3L ,i " "" ,l0-'i' thc r,t,-sP'""! "f the prcsl-clniln.i-'0 hiI!,l,nnnns " "escribed the re eiplents achievements, nnd the recipients or their proxies who returned thanks, were nil se exnet in their parts, se word perfect nnd se leg perfect nnd se hand perfect that no eighteenth century duel could have been begun or carried out with mere punctilio. It was as different from well, snv every day life in a trolley cnr. ns the shrlli buz, of n women's luncheon Is different from a vestry meeting. It suddenly struck me then that giving medals, after school days are once ever and investitures of all kinds, as well as "the' high ''""W orders and the processiening and title bestowals are all masculine "vavs of enjoyment, just as the jostle and reach of bargain counters, and the bustle and bar gaining of fairs, and the excitement of church suppers nre all feminine ways of ex pressing a sense of Importance. WOMEN like te parade, but when they de It they Insist en a plainer nnd less In conspicuous dress than they walk erdlnnrlly abroad in : but when their husbands parade they have Solemon In all his glory ns their sartorial model. When women fratcrnfre 1 H.h Vmy, ,!cnr" ,,r "wreK" rlc!" Rut when men crown themselves or one another they add "Sir" before the names of their been companions and spenk of their familiar friends us "High Poten- (Hi 6flt If women have te act or speak in nubile they put their clever best into getting ahead of their fellow women by staging a surprise. If men give themselves ever te succcedine with their fellow men they make it a point te come up te their sponsor's expectations. All of which accounts for the almost monumental longevity of the minstrel show t u I "'"'""- KJeiy, tneir perfection of method ns degree givers nnd Inkers, nnd their holy war aspect when en parade Mv only perplexity hovers round the fact that they speak of themselves and we women sneak of them te themselves n. ..,.... . form nnd ceremony nnd ritual, as bcllttlcrs of "gewgaws' and as desplsers of hid., sounding encomiums thnt lire only cenven tiens of politeness! ' THE truth of the rantter Is, if you drcg, clergyman in black nil the vear he will snatch nt a red necktie during his vacation, nnd if one s habit is te be ceremonious one's relaxation will be te be offhand, and vice versa, lhere Is still enough Puritanism sticking about in our interiors te make us divide pleasure and duty into two unequal parts. The man who Is generally dressed un the actor, for Instance-Is fondest of dressing down out of school, while the man who dresses down all day the day lnberer for instance Is fondest of dressing un for n holiday, which is why the wildest spree of kings is te go "inceg" about public places and he cnlled Mister by bellhops and told "te hurry along there" by pelicemen: nnd why the wildest spree of a miner Is te pre tend he is king for a day and have all the flunkies in the hotel bowing low ever his tips. I Riippose the reason, tee. that men nre se full of sentiment In their pleasures Is because their buslnesu Ik se matter of fact I was commenting en this te a woman net long age, nnd she nodded wisely ever her knitting. "Manners nre symbols of senti ment," she sold, "and sentiment is net con fined te one sex or the ether. "There is a little boy In every man and he comes Inte his own when the mun is strcnu. eusly gracing nn occasion," The United States Steel Points te Corporation has a legltl- Old Stuff mate grievance against the Rethlrhem-Lnckn- wanna nnd Mldvnle - Republic Inland mergers. The consolidations drnw attention te the fact (hat United States Steel In nrettv nearly Ilia whole tlilnir nnd that Him competition new alleged te bauhrjataasd la HfWB ffiwymm. ." j - i1!. WlUlW Hrl. mmlWr of SBHUHKbqbIbBSKbVSsShvBHIsPS" IiPHiaL f wBWBJI , . jtViMVWtwfUmmUUUUUUUUmlfwJuUUWIUUUUUUUUUm3umUUUMUm' j'Ju.y BuMKl I JL.l)mlLnJIuJKmmmwmmwmmMtiJuiammtmmmmmmmmm3WMKmmmKmr ef u?f I mm.. 2BsJ 1 l4HFULfliBIIHwfl3flD9HPHIID 9 NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphians en Subjects They Knew Best SIMEON van T. JESTER On Training Industrial Executives THE human problem in industry and its correct solution Is one of the funda mentals of business today, says Simeon vnn T. .Tester, superintendent of the department of mechanical instruction nt Glrnrd College. "There are two great types of American business executives," said Mr. Jester. "One, admitting thnt he does net knew it nil, is seeking lu every way te improve his product, te give his workers a square deal, te deal fairly with its competitors and te render the highest service te the public; the ether, complacently content te fellow old methods, blinded by past successes te the great changes thnt are sweeping through in dustry, taking ndvnntnge of the ignorance and the necessities of its workers nnd hnving ns its Ideal maximum profits, re gardless of quality. "Of all the valuable by-products of the great war, the open mind of the modern executlve stands out ns the one of first im portance. The incident of the college prefes- a.A I.a n it aUIa tn liifinnnun tlin tniisiA ef our field artillery by nbeut 30 per cent by , a slight change in tne shape ei tne sacu Is typical of what is going en in industry. Mnny plnns which were once considered visionary are new being accepted ns sound business policies, nnd everywhere the forward-looking employer Is laying his cards en the toble nnd taking his workmen into his confidence. Breader Knowledge Desired "Everywhere groups of shop executives are analyzing and studying their jobs nnd finding ways of cutting costs and making the shop llfe of (he workers mere pleasant. During the last winter lfiOO shop executives In Milwaukee have been taking u course te enable them te become mere efficient : In Flint. Mich., executives from all the auto mobile plants liavc combined in nutting ever an cducntiennl program which compares quite favorably with thnt of some of the best technical schools; a Pittsburgh con cern has for several years offered exceptional educational opportunities te its apprentices nnd jeunger empleyes; In Rochester, Ilnr rlsburg. Bosten, Cincinnati and ether great Industrial centers some of the keenest minds lu industry nre focused en the cducutieu nnd upgrading of workmen "The most notable advances In the train ing of Industrial executives has been made in Philadelphia under the direction of the Philadelphia Association for the Discussion of Employment Problems, with the as sistance of the Beard of Education nnd the department of industry of the University of Pennsylvania. Tills co-eperatlvo move ment for the improvement of industrial conditions in Philadelphia stands out us the big industrial advance since the wnr and one of which this city may well be proud. "At some of the meetings of this asso ciation mere than liOOO shop executives hove been present und vital manufacturing problems nnd questions of Industrial rela tions have been discussed by specialists iu each field. Courses have been maintained for foremen, textile workers, time study men. works mnnngers and superintendents. Mnny conferences of employment and plant managers have been held nnd borne splendid rescurch work hns been done. During the Inst year the scope of the association Iiiih been broadened nnd the talent und training which hns been brought te bear upon the common difficulties have produced some ex tremely beneficial results. Ignorance Breeds Suspicion "Many thousands of dollars have been expended in perfecting machines, in iin. proving plants und In developing better methods of manufacturing, hut until quite recently the employer has given but little attention te a solution of the. human prob lems in industry. As a result there hnve been many misunderstandings nnd net n little suspicion en the part of the workmen "This was strikingly shown In a nliint recently when the works mnnngcr overheard a foreman criticizing the company for the 'raw deal' which It was giving the men and the iarga profits' the management was taking out of the business. The manager returned te his elficc. brought out the com cem pany books, sent for the foreman and showed him what the company did with each dollar received for the finished Product "He showed him thy cost of material', labor, the various burden charges, ndver. Using, marketing, Interest, war tax ami the cost of supervision, In which was Included Ihe foreman's pay. At the conclusion the foreman, with gcnulne regret for his hasty judgment, said: 'If we had kneucd what you wus up ugulust lu .keeping the ulant going, we would have Ukeu.ths cut In par MUMMftA aTSh.ask-i--Lr T'ssMSfsssi stun- -si i a srtf. Vm-'lW ; V1 mw. fi T"t 1922 giving us n square deal and. believe me, every mnn in the plant will knew it before quitting time. "The solution of many troublesome prob lems, both material and human, is In the hands of the foreman, nnd his is the key position of all Industry. Therefore the most fnr-slghtcd policy of management becomes tin unread statement If the foreman is un able or unwilling te sell it te his men. The ingenuity of the management In devising plans for cutting costs nre but theories if tne foreman's support Is lacking. Ne matter hew big-hearted the general mnnngcr mny be in the treatment of men. if the miner executives nre incapable of transmitting this human touch en down the line, the men will never knew what the com pany really wanted te de for them. The foreman b ideals, attitude and methods be come, in the eyes of the workmen, the ideals, attltude and methods of the cem-Pinin-I" .. ,1C 'Ofemnn stands squarely between nil betterment plnnn and their nccompllsh nccempllsh mi1..i!l!,nl he. hns the blScst Individual re S'n?i i S in proportion te his education and abilities of any man in Industry. Training the Foremen "If the educational plans which arc being followed in many plants nre successful, the i.r craaVvl,u b" Biven the opportunity te 5 J , .f rainlnB that will make him a mere respected, mere efficient und u mere human executive. Instead of being n bufier 5S ,r ",cn "'"I .management, he will be come the source of information nnd inspira ., LHuLl1"5 lnp" nml a ,ruste(' adviser and ment. e-perater with the manage- ''I'ne Pareful analyses that have been mnd1 .f,, tl(l '"'-n'an's job indicate very closely hat he must be teacher, mechanic diplomatist and leader, and with a 1 the expert attention that is being given e the qualifications for this strategic position It will net be nt all surprising te find in en. tlrely different type of executive taking th &E-? SSL fe!0. '?"?& .n. bass voice nd his strong h? n'r'w JJj find himself the iinnnn..i.. ."l .V'1 find himself the unpopular wpreMntn live of u once nrosnereii , riprestntathe What De Yeu Kneiv? j QUIZ 1. 'Where was Old Sarum? 2. Who was Zenebla? 3. "What fs a carom? 4. Date Delia Rebbia. 6. What is quinquina? 6. Where Is Eurasia? 7. Who was Faustina? 8. What is aphasia? ie' Whv I. he 'et.t,er "s" t8 ln Imbroglio? 10. Ahy Is tt mcuiey described as nn olio? Answers te Yesterday's Quiz '? p"" M"cre Is the nam ........ 1. Th nevoute,rTnTffChlnthe American under Wayne w e ,UrnHS?tll,e.'Uals feated by a Buntrter ? fnP-r,-laecl.and de troops en Sep f ember "0 1?' eiW In Chester Count v ' e7JJi ty0" Is ter. ..c"n.'y. twenty miles west hV f,nnAylvnJa. aeiphia. ' " u niia. 3 3W8!tt1,ta " th 3' TheeauRtes MS fereV1," istrntlen of Jehn Aitam H n?mln. largely by the itaslre of A-iSc2"len'l Party te June the .mere I rulen? tSHiM of political opposition then -' "P"8 nml te check' the actlvlttS, Pn7 vfJent who sympathised with KrnnSe th"0 nllen act cave the Pi'mihIK""6, The order the remeva, from thPWer te i.t aliens Judged ti lie d2n?.ceu,,tr' sedition act imposed penaiuVsTT"8 prlsennient for censnlriiiB i.-8 and lm lm JJevernment and ltBPm?asuSS,l"t lhe Interfering with the S'e" or, fr Government. The acts wiena of the 17D8. Their severity hlV. "Bsci1 'n overthrew of the Federalists "ea tne 4. The word farthing Is der?i-.,i . "feurth-ng" of u nennv !i '' .trer quarter of a PenV. fVI?? nF make a penny. r rarthliigs 5. The Mackenzie, River In rv.,,,t almost due north fetsPKt? & a'tcu'e Cl fefente""".'''' S'". In Blver of nndlcnt ?thcns meU3 ,aw 7. A mavis Is a seng.thruHh WZSn flSSi SLIPPING . rfj wwmm .1 SHORT CUTS The million-dollar rain evidently la tends te make It two millions or bust. What the country passively hopes for U somebody te knock the tar out of tariff. " """"- , The desire of the producers for cleaner pictures is a great light seen through I' Hays. Erin might well say te De Vslirt,, And new gee what you've been an' gm an done!" Majer Malcolm Wheeler- Nichols having been fined fifty files may new put em en parade. Taking ene politlcal-gambllng-heuM-protector with another, a policeman's let is net a happy one. "Man is n fighting animal, worse tiu the beast," says a Y. M. C. A. speaker. Thnt guy is trying te pick a fight. Brown is new the fashionable color la raris. Perhaps because it wag In every body s mouth following war's jamboree. The Chilean lady who wants the namM of the twelve greatest American women hit started something that nobody can finish. ? hel2rty approval of the Sesqul-Cea-tennlal indubitably demonstrates that net even Congress can be wrong all the time. ' The Supreme Court decision that labor organizations may be sued mny prow I blessing in disguise te these it appeari tl discipline. All the fine points of the fight for tb chairmanship of the Republican State Com Cem Com mlttee nre being expertly noted by hopeful Democrats. Leaking ammonia tank in a New Yerk snusage factory drove people out of til neighborhood. "Het deg!" cried the kids as they belted. Dublin professor seys tannin in tea causes cancer. As coffee has already been cussed, it is plainly somebody's turn te traduce the buttermilk habit. Nese prints of prize cattle are being taken en St. Paul, Minn., farm for pur poses of identification. Doubtless a geed scheme and ene net te be sniffed at. Bosten corset maker says weman'i waist iu Increnslnff In mIva fn thla nnnntrr. Te a short-arm man this may prove an ob- 'j siacie, nut neii ueuDtiess find a way te gn . around it. It Is feared in some quarters that caia altles in the Heuse sector will mere than ' wipe out the re-enfercements received by the Army Appropriation Bill In the Depart ment of the Senate. . The country mny get some satisfaction from the fact that McCumber has been juugneu ei i. ei permuting tee ioei ""j menlals planned for the entry into m' Senate of the Benus BUI. ) As the captain of a sea-going hoodt heodt hoedt laden tug tells it, there are again pirates the hli-h wnM. nnii hnntlecffera nrfl tbelf. victims. IIew this would have appealed te I the old-tlme pirate crews! Piping all nane for grog wns the easiest thing they did. Th mnnnffnr nf iha Xntlnnnl Conven tien of Hairdressers in Decatur, III., aag I girls are tired of bobbed hair and plana ". nelnff flnvlKA.l fnc tha irnttlnrt nt "lnnff. fraCO ful roll effects," especially for evenlnl j gowns, j.eng green roll effects, we suriaw There was strong reason for the beM' Lillian Russell had en her public. She wu mere than n stage favorite. She bad t leve end respect of the men end women wiw whom she worked. This will be testified , net only by actors of prominence, but SJi many old-timers of the rank und file O. Henry ell th -, net inn is story of two runen"-. , Justified who met and fell In l.fJ ) while rubbering a J, then delayed their own wedding by r"bl)lLv! iiir at tne crown anil lergening ne.rai principals. Pure farce, of course, eui It liml ii hntttu In tnut lu ail.lftnpnrl llV S'StS from Yerk,. Pa,, of n ceup'e who teriA get a umrrlBge lleenssv through wss iM$6$m8imt& :,. j r n -- --- vaBBHBUV bla 1 smammfswi kj;... 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