Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 305, 7 October 1919 — Page 6
' PAGE SIX
Tiifci riiCtiiv.LO.iMJ i-ALi-AiJiUiU Aii .a Uii-liuL.LUxLAM, TUEbDAi, UCI. Y, lUiv. '
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
AMD SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday-, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Bull ding,. North Ninth and Sailor Street Entered at the Post Office st Richmond, Indiana, aa Seo ond Class Mall Matter.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th AssocUUd Prena U relatively entitled to th tr rpnbUcatlon of all new dlcpatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In thl paper and alio the local i-s published herein. All rights of republication of ''la! dispatches herein are also reserved. ' Work or Starve The conviction is gradually becoming fixed in the minds of Americans that if continued strikes and lockouts cut down production much more this country is going to face hard days. We are all inclining more to the belief that if we do not work now while we have the opportunity, our disinclination to work may produce a situation in which there will be no work. The era of restlessness through which we are passing has had one noticeable effect in the last few weeks. The sober minded, clear thinking Americans are beginning to understand that interruption of our industrial system is forcing prices higher and higher, and that the only way to bring about a reduction in the cost of living is by speeding up the wheels of production. It has taken the American people some time to see this fact, but its importance is beginning to influence decisions now. The cessation of work in one industry affects all of them. If the coal miners, to use an example, quit working or will work only part of the time, there will be no coal for the railroads, shops and homes. If the roads and shops have no coal, they will close down, throwing their employes out of work. Or, if the railroad men strike, transportation ceases, and shops are forced to close because raw material cannot be obtained and the finished product cannot be delivered. Or take an other instance. Suppose the farmers should decide to go on a strike for three weeks
during spring or fall. What would be the result ? i The whole country would starve, for cessation of i work in that industry during the three weeks of! sowing in spring and the harvesting in fall, would '
entail absolute crop failure. We cannot escape the fact that all classes in this country are dependent upon each other. The worker, for instance, cannot exist without the farmer, and the latter must have the services of the former. All efforts of one class to obtain absolute control for the selfish advancement of its interests to the detriment of others are foolish. The iniquity of class or group control is beginning to be seen by the American worker. At first he hailed it as a cure for all industrial diseases. Today he is learning that no one class can exalt itself at the expense of others. The British railmen have just been taught a salutory lesson. They believed the whole country industrial workers, clerks, merchants, capitalists were at their mercy. But the country as a whole rose against the effort of a group to rule, and the strike was defeated. Group control will never appeal to the American people. No set of American workers is going to permit another set to dictate rates and service, knowing that it is done out of a selfish spirit to promote group benefits. The majority of American workers are not going to pay for the purchase of the railroads and then hand them over to the railroad workers to operate for their own advantage and benefit. Neither is the majority of American workers going to support a plan to buy the mines out of the public funds to let the miners operate them for their own benefit. Intelligent and thinking Americans believe that the differences between capital and labor can be solved without recourse to anarchistic methods. Capital has learned that labor is entitled to justice and fair play. Honest and righteous employers of labor are accepting a hu
manitarian standard in dealing with their employes, the result being that prejudice and distrust, entertained by both sides, is disappearing as both begin to realize that they have a common cause at stake. One can hardly read an issue of a magazine these days without finding an article that shows how intelligent capitalists and workers are solving their problems hand in hand, and with mutual satisfaction and profit to themselves. Out of this new spirit will emerge the final solution of the problem. It will not come through strikes and the reduction in the quantity of our manufactured output. The world never needed commodities so badly as it does today. Every hour of idleness, every effort to decrease production is aggravating an acute situation, for which in the end all of us will have to pay.
Condensed Classics of Famous Authors
Ex-Soldiers Speak Out The soldier journalists who edited The Stars and Stripes in France are now getting out a
weekly periodical in New York, which they call;
The Home Sector. It will be interesting to watch this paper, because it will doubtless proceed with a great deal of promptness, now that all restraints are off, to tell us some of the doughboys' grievances. These could only be hinted at in The Stars and Stripes. The feature of the first issue was a long and able resume of the case against "Hard-boiled" Smith, and other persecutors of men held in
prison camps
the offenders were charged with being
AUERBACH Berthold Auerbach, Gorman novelist, was born on the 2Sth oi February, 1S12, at Nordstetten in the Wurttemberg Black Forest. His parents were Jews, and intended their son
for the ministry; but after studyingphilosophy at Tubingen, Munich ami Heidelberg:, and becoming estranged from the Jewish orthodoxy by the study of Spinoza, he devoted himself to literature. Auerbach's beginning- was a most fortunate one, as he wrote a romance on the life of Spinoza (1837) so interesting in Itself, and so close in its adherence to fact," that it may bo read with equal advantage as a novel, or as a biography. He also translated the works of Spinoza. The author won his fame chiefly through his stories of the Black Forest, in which he depic ts the life of t lie South German peasant, aa Albrecht Bitznls painted the peasantry of Switzerland. After writing many stories of this order, Auerbach later returned to his first phase as a novelist, and wrote "'On the Heights," and other romances 3f a more speculative and philosophical tendency, turning upon plots invented by himself; but with the exception of -On the Heights," which has always been a great favorite, these romances were not very popular. Auerbach died at Cannes", France, on the Sth of February, 1SS2. A list of his works contains "Dichter uml Kaufman," Schwa rzwaldfr Dorfgeschlcten.' Borf usele," Edelweiss," "Das I.andh.aus am Rhein" and a number of others.
Berthold Auerbach, 1S13-1S82
THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK
ON tub heights BY BERTHOLD AUERBACH Condensat.no by the Rev. R. Perry Bush, D. D
NOT A FAIRY TALE Less than 23 years ago, a boy came out of Canada and secured a job with a coal dealpr in Detroit, Michigan. He worked loyally and his employer liked him. About this time, a man by the name of Henry Ford, started to make a small automobile. Folks laughed at the little concern and Its product. But the coal dealer believed in Ford and his ideas. So he invested a few thousand dollars and sent the young man from Canada over to look after his investment. The young man who took that job was James Couzens, now mayor of Detroit. The other day Mr. Couzens received a check for approximately $29,500,000, for his entire interest in the Ford concern, where many years before he had gene as a book-keeper. His original investment consisted of but a few thousand dollars most of which was borrowed. I am not informed as to what the coal dealer reaped. The important thing is that vision, dogged faith, loyalty, day-in-and-day-out work always count and bring reward. A very important point to bear in mind, in this connection, is that a surprisingly small per cent cf the wealthy men of America inherited their wea'th. Most of them were poor boys. Schwab. Carnegie, Rockefeller, Wanamaker, Field, Armour, Swift. Edison, Ford. Westinghouse. Pullman, Palmer thes are a few of the names of men who were poor boys, but a few decades ago. Opportunity is always around and always will be! The only road to fame and f ortune is the one traveled by every successful man during rha past the road of Ideas and WORK." The present mayor of Detroit came over to the United States as a poor boy, and his greatest contribution to posterity is what he did with his chance.
ranged in degree from truancy to desertion. The soldier-writer voices the opinion of the A. E. F. that Smith and his superiors were guilty of coldblooded cruelty in their treatment of prisoners. Another number of The Home Sector features
These, with Countess Brinkinstein,
the high-priestess of etiquette and de-
A German Court. A King stately of bearing and of good report. A Queer, sweet and beautiful, but abhorring those who in the least digress from the straight and narrow path, and intPnt flhnVO oil CiIca in t T o - i i r-i "Krt.i
Apparently the great majority of I own immaculate purity.
absent ! Lady of the Bedchamber, Ccun- ! tSS Irmn VOn V.MMotinrt rl-mcrhlor nl
without leave," and the seriousness Of their Cases a nable sire, who spent liis life in im
proving his domains and serving his neighbors, but who lived alone and self-centered, leaving his children to grow up with little of his advice and not too much expression of his atlection. Dr. Gunther, Physician to the Queen, a man straightforward and truthful, whose wife and daushters
an article which emphasizes again the charge never appeared at court
that by good publicity methods the two regi
ments of marines in the second division got more corum: Bruno, countess irma's bro- - ,, , , , . ther, and others v ho appear less promthan their Share of the glory for stopping the , inently, were the characters, the inGermans at Chateau-Thierry. There were as teriing!ing of whose lives furnishes a .... . . story of the expiating of sin, full of many regular infantrymen as marines m this warning to those who are cn the brink campaign, and very sore indeed are all the dough-! GJ y;ronsdoing and replete with sug i i. i- ui ui- i.- , , . gesnon to the self-sanctified. boys over the slight public notice which they re- The story opens with the birth of -eived 'a Prince in 'the royal household. A " i nurse from the Highland is found in Another article intimates that the govern-; Waipurgo, wife of Hansai, an humble ment is not active and interested enough in tak- a?l S contTn" ing care of men who lost arms or legs in the war. to the etiquette of the court, is taken
Applications for admission to vocational classes do not receive prompt attention, we are told. Then the boys assigned to the Paris sector
are very sore over being obliged to wear shoulder cial Psi"on, has access at ail times ,,, , t , , . , . . to the young prince's apartments and insignia, (the French fleur de lys) showing their it is soon apparent that she is fast atconnection with troops in the capital. It was well ?.inin ro'al favor- ae iav hp , , j t. i , , , KlnK lays his hand upon hers and enough to go to Pans On leave, but men Out ill looks at her in such a manner that the muddy, ruined villages were apt to scoff at waUiu-ga teiis her it is improper, but . , . . , is advised to attend to her own afsoldiers in the Pans sector. An article tells how ; fairs, and the countess writing to a the lads in Paris wore raincoats wherever pos-; EwJv?!? Jhat Kins prefers her r aboe all others and that he has givsible, in order to hide the hated fleur de lys. They en her a feather from an eagle that didn't like this insignia, we read, because of the beL; when they are a0!ie t0(?etbei, fact that it was branded on the left shoulder of King asks the countess, if when thev a lady of easy virtue in Dumas' story, "The , S? TaUs "remark
Three Muskateers."
up by the scandal-mongers and recorded in the newspapers, offending the King and awakening liis thought that the Queen is weak and sentimental. Countess Irma, because of her offi-
i alone. She alone." Her Majesty
I takes out an amulet, which she has wishes of all their old friends go with I wron next to her heart. It is the betnem to their new abode. At this junc trothal rine thp King had givn her turn, some one at court writes to Ir- ; and he put's it again upon her finger ma s father, informing him that she and clasps her in his arms, is "the King's mistress" and at the ; The countess was laid at rest at news he is fatally stricken, but before earlv dawn. Down in the valley the he passes away he presses his hami to King and Queen were reading her his daughter's brow and she interprets, journal. "Th-v gazed at the rosv the act as setting there the marl: of dawn and lifted their eyes to the Ciim and wears a bandage over it for-; mountains to where Irma had been evir after. j buried. On the Heights." Irma is now in a terrible state of j Copyright. 1&19. by th Post PuMishmind and when the King writes to'irls' Company, (The Boston Post). her: "I alone can kiss awav th shad- i C.y'-ifrht th rni.te1 Kinom. the .-. 1 1 , 1 Dominions, its Colonics and dependen ces that cloud your brow,' it only j oie?, un.lr the copyright act, bv the increases her desperation and she re- Post Publishing Co.. iio?ton, Mass., solves upon suicide i L- s- A- A!1 rights resprve.1. ?vo wi-itou .v it (Published by sppi-ial arranyment MKtes thus to the Queen: I with the U-Clure Newspaper Syndiexpiat8 my crime in death." And to cate. All rights reserved.; the King: "We are treading the wrong path. You belong not to yourselt j "The Three Musketeers," by Alexalone but to your people Death is i ander Dumas, as condensed by Captain my expiation for sin. Life must be ! Andre Morize cf Harvard, will .be
POLES TAKE DIVNSK.
COPEXHAGEX, Oct. 6 Polsh forces have carried the fortifications of Dvinsk, between old Russia and Poland, after two days of. hard fighting, according to Berlin advices. All the city except a portion south of the Duna river now is held by the Poles, it is said.
REINSCH GETS 52C.CC0 JOB COUNSELLING CHINESE
PEKING. Sunday, Oct. 7. Paul S. Reinsch, former United States minister to China, has been appointed counselor of the Chinese governmpnt at a salary of ?C0C0 per year, the agreement dating from Aug. 1. according to cn official statement Issued here.
yours. God knows we did not mean to do wrong." 1 On the way to end her life, the j counter meets a pitiable woman who. had been ruined by h"r brother Bruno. I This woman drowns herself in the lake and Irma stumbles on, bruised and Lewildc-red, and is found by Wal-, purga and Hansai cn their journey to
tneir newly purchased freehold. Concealing her identity from all but Wal-
printed tomprrow.
I Memories of Old Days I In This Paper Ten Years I A(i9 Today
One hundred and fifty richly decorated floats participated in the industrial mrfiHp fivon a a a rnrt cf b,i
purga, she accompanies the party to ; Richmond Fall Festival, their mountain home.
A quip on the joke page gives us a sidelight on the chances of a soldier in politics to secure
Report of the countess' death soon 1 spreads abroad and search is made for her body, but no trace of it. is found, yet a taMet is erected by the lake bearing this inscription: "Here! perished Irma, Countess of Wildenort, I in the twenty-first year of her life. 1 Traveller, prayrfor and honor her! memory." ! Rack at court, the King upon receiv- ; ing Irma's letter is deeply repentant i and saddened by the reflection that j "there is no greatness without mor- ' ality" He goes to the Queen's room ! to ask her forgiveness, but she is full ; of bitterness and feigns to be asleep and later she vents her epite and vituperation upon him. The King think? that Dr Gunther is responsible for this, and the phvsic.ian is discharged and goes back to live in his old home in the Highlands. For three years Irma lives with Wa!rurga, supposedly dead, but really ex-
Governor Thomas R. Marshall and Mrs. Marshall were guests of the citv Governor Marshall spoke at a meei'.ng of the Fall Festival backers.
Captain George L. Brumbaugh, of Indianapolis, broke the world's record for 12.OQ0 cubic foot dirigibles here, when he stayed in the air for tweny minutes at a height of about "00 feet
A battalion of the Tenth U. S. Infantry, from Ft. Benjamin Harrison, spent the night, at Glen Miller park The battalion was on a practice march
PARIS IS CONCERNED.
Implying that the Queen and he are not in closest harmony.
iiie aevotton or h:s wife, however, i pi.it ing her sins and so growing in is abundantly attested by a mighty j sweetnessand purity, that all who en-
the soldier vote. "I see Lieutenant So-and-so is she a" PrctUtant anthe" King nai ar are mted 2r insp" 3E
running for Office, says one ex-doughbov. a tatholic and out of love to him she At length on a day when the King
"What's he running for?" inquires his friend, "a
captaincy?"
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
nui.rs i.u nr uu ucr lensiun. ijul 1 ai:u ijiieeii ana tne court an af n
instead of pleasing his Majesty, this nearby village. Irma fatally ill, sends only makes him angry because he for Dr. Gunther, who has'ens to her takes it to be anotlior token of her side and placing his hand upon her weakness, and he gets Dr. Gunther forehead pronounces this benediction : to dissuade hfr from such a course "lu your father's name I bless von and
PARIS, Oct. C The downfall of the Turkish cabinet following the occupation by Turkish nationalist, troops of Kokish, an important c:v of Asia Minor connected by railroad lines with Soutard and Smyrna, is considered in French circles ;:s creating a grave situation in Asia miner and the development of another difficult problem for the peace conference. The young Turks are thought to be regaining the upper hand in Turkey.
215 FOOT CANADIAN VICTORY STAFF PLACED IN LONDON
CAT AND CANARY BRAND Or PEACE? Chicago News. Japan declares its earnest desire for peace China rather than a piece of China.
with
with this kiss I kiss away your burdens. Yon are free." Wa'.purga hastens to the Queen who is now stricken with self-condemnation for her hateful spirit and her unjust pride in her own virtue. She realizes that Irma's penar.ee is one
asKs uie iJr.eeu , uirougn wnicn sne nerscir oueht to
to have the countess write to him 1 pass and when she reaches the rV
WILLIAM MUST BE SICK Columbia State. Hasn't William Jennings Bryan a plan for adjusting the strike?
What Other Editors Say
FOSTER'S TESTIMONY From the Indianapolis News. IF Mr. V. Z. Foster had desired to prevent "misrepresentation" by "a lot of prejudiced, lying newspapers," he would have answered frankly and without equivocation the questions propounded to him by members of the senate committee. Instead of doing this he left the situation so doubtful and confused as to make it difficult to tell just where he stands. It may be said, however, that such denials as he made were so weak as to justify the inference that the man's views on fundamentals have not greatly changed. When confronted with the now famous pamphlet he said that he had "repudiated" it, but added that his "own views" had not been used in the steel strike. What those views were he did not say. He had, he said, "become a little less radical, possibly," and certainly was "a believer in American and English trades unionism." One denial, however, was categorical. Senator McKellar read the following from Foster's book on "Syndicalism": The wage earner proposes to ignore the code of ethics and wrest from the capitalists the industries they have stolen and bring about the revolution by the general strike. When asked whether he today held those opinions lie said: "111 say I do not." He said that he was not now a syndicalist. Mr. Foster declared that he had his "own ideas of government," but did not say what they were. Perhaps It would be fair to draw them from his writings at least from such as he did not repudiate before the renate committee. The theory on which he proceeded was that the attacks on him were designed to weaken the steel strikers. If that is so, the best way to break the force of the attacks and to strengthen the strike would fhave been to make his position perfectly clear. This he Idid not do. Rather he left the impression that there had Ibeen no great change in his views. Even his withdrawal
from the I. W. W., which took place five years ago, may have been brought about by his belief that it would bo better and more effective to work through labor unions. In a letter to Solidarity, the organ of the I. W. W., written in 1911 after he had gone abroad as a representative of that organization, he said that it was the true duty of a revolutionary to work through existing trades unions rather than to build up new organizations. A man may
He also sends flowers every day to Countess Irma. who is flattered, but away clown in her heart the is off end ed. and she writes her friend that she feels herself altogether alone iu the world. Soon after this the King goes on a
huntins trin and be nsl
n.m ;iui-h au'i wueu sne re-acnes ine s ;en-
anout. tne nab" pt inf. e. 1 he Queen be- i nera s lm' there is mutual forgiveness, gins to be suspicious of her husband I The Kinr has been hunting in the and the scandal concerning the rla- j vicinity. Since receiving Irma's letter tions of the King and Irma increases. 1 ho has lived a manly life, ond in peniIa the midst of the turmoil, the conn- j tence has sought to promote the wc-1-tess is called home to her father, but f:'re cf all his people. Word is conhe and she did not understand each veyrd to him of what is taking place, other, and when after a while a. and he rides with all haste but arrives letter signed by the King and thr- on the scene only to find that the ladies of the. court requests that eh- j countess has passed away: but his return to them, Irma after some hesi- heart leaps with joy when the Queen tation complies, and one day neat a I turns to him with the cry: "Forgive statue of liberty for which the conn.- j nie. Kurt. You have expiated. You
tess was the model, the King clasps! her in his srras and imprints the "in.-.-- 1
LONDON, Oct.
-Canada's victory
flaeptaff has been erected on victory mound at the entrance to Krw Garden a straight Oregon pir.p 217 feet high and almost, three feet in diameter at the base. It. is the gift, of the people cf British Columbia to London and ranks with the tallest structure in London.
i - . m im urn jjikjbm b a 1 When
a.
of eternity" upon hr bps. !.-.ier at a tall he tells her that she is beiuiiful and that he loves her, and she con soles herself with the thought that "the priest, gave him to the Queen but Nature gave him to her.
M"
At an onnortune moment her hr-.;h.
very easily be an I. W. W. without being a member of er Bruno tells Irma that her actions that organization. It was in 1911, it may be remembered, ore the talk of the town and the res-. that Foster was repudiated by the American Federation uay fu of x, ma'tr is for her to get .T, . , j j ,v. married. ( olonel von Dronnen, of Labor, and excluded, as labors representative, from noble courtier, proposes to her bu', ithe Budapest meeting. The whole effect of his testimony rejected, and the counters besins to
I
your brain works like
dog with three les walks
you need
A Stubborn Cough Loosens Right Up
Tills home-read remw!y in a wonder tor quick rreultA. Kaily aud chtviply made.
is to leave things pretty much as they were. If such a conclusion is unjust to Foster, he has only himself to blame. He might have cleared things up; but he did not do so.
realize that: "It is hell to be conscious of guilt and yet remain beside a pure and happy creature." In the meantime, Walpurga completes her term of service, and before leaving for home calls upon Irma. wh-j gives her a bag of gold won at the gaming table the night before. In the littlo village in the Highlands, everyone at first patronized Walpurga and Hansai, but receiving no favors
at their hands, the people show that
THEIR VACATION From the Wisconsin State Journal. Two prominenet merchants, a doctor, and a lawyer, went fishing together way up in the Canadian woods.
What do you suppose they took with them in addition to human nature is the same there as
the usual camping paraphernalia? Two books. Two:at court, for they circulate all sorts
dime novels. And they read them out loud. One of the merchants, 55 years of age, apparently enjoyed the books as much as the lawyer in his early 40s. No, these men weren't freaks or "lowbrows" or fanatics. Just human beings, and nothing proves their hu-
of scandalous tales concerning them.
cut wnen the happy couple purchase an extensive "freehold" the good
FORERl'XXrRS OF SICKXEPS Medical authorities aero that inrli-
manness more than the above incident. They went to gestion and constipation am the fore- . . . , ...... . . runners of half the ills of mankind. the woods to get away from civilization. A copy of Don't let a mass of partly digested. deShakespeare would have kept them too close to what 1 pmro?ingr food poison your whole system. hen your food is being- properihey wished to avoid. The 10 cent novels appealed to the , ly digested, vou are free from hUioussavage part of their nature that took them into the woods Stomafh8' bad b?fith.Ck cc'on for rest and recreation. Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome , . , : physic, thoroug-hly cleanse the bowels e re all savage, with only a thin coat of the varnish : without griping or nausea, sweeten ,vr t fcMino- U ; thp -""tomar-h and Invigorate the liver.
v. 1. u."o 1. ; i.-or -p.,, .... a n 1 ,.!,. .... ,-v,
Here is a home-made syrup which millious of people have found to be the most dependable means of breaking- up stubborn coughs. It is cheap and simple, but very prompt in action. Under its healing soothing influence, chest Boreness tros, phh"rm loosens, breathinjj becomes asier, ticklinrj in throat ftops and vou pet a good night's restful sleep. The isual tiiroat and chest cold are confjui rcd by it in 24 hours or less. Nothing better for bronchitis, hoarseness, croup, whoopinjr cough, bronchial asthma or winter coughs. To make thi9 splendid couzh, synlp, pour 2','j ounoes of Pinex into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain pranulated sugar syrup and shake thoroughly. It you "prefer, use clarified molasses, honey, cr corn eyrup, instead of sugar syrup. Either way, you pet a full pint a family supply of much better cough syrup than you could buy ready-made for three times tlio money. Keeps perfectly and children love' its pleasant taste. Pines is a special- and hizhly concentrated compound of fcunuine Norway pine extract, known the world over for Its prompt healing effect upon tho membranes. To avoirl dipappoinfment ask your druggist for ounces of Pinex" with full directions, "and don't accept anythingelse. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or monev promptly. refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, led.
An active brain mushave pure blood, not poisoned with products of indigestion or liver and kidney laziness. Largest Sato of Any rr'ociiciao in Uae World. Sold Trywure. Ia bon, 10c, 2 Sc.
-Adv. 4
THE OCTOBER LIST of EDISON RE-CREATIONS Maggie Teyte, "The Favorite of Two Continents," heads the list of artists featured ia the all worthwhile numbers on the October List of RE-CREATIONS for the New Elison. Miss Teyte chose for RE-CREATION two simple, but beautiful melodies, "Believe Me If All Tiiose Endearing Young Charms" and "My Ain Folk." Her limpid soprano voice. cares.-ingly beautiful, makes these songs the dearer and the memories they bring the mere vivid and appealing. Albert Spalding. "America's Greatest Violinist," recently released from fighting service overseas, delightfully plays Schumann's lovable "Romance in A" and the effervescent "ScherzoValse" by Chabrier-Loeffler. Good dance numbers now-a-days are hard to find, but. the October lh-t. serves to introduce sfvtrl r ally worthy. dance:ble tur.es. There's "The Vamp." an Infectious, tabasco flavored jazz one-step, and "My Cairo Love," a rhythmically magic Egyptian-perfumed fox trot. p'.ued by a mister melody aggre
gation, the Green Uros. Novelty Onheftra. "Ruspana." the irresistible one-step that kept Broadway dancing overtime, and "Gypsy Girl." a "peppy" fox trot, are contributed by New York's popular singing instrumer.'a'.ists, the Tuxedo Dance Orchestra. The big musical hit. written for therRed Lantern moving picture in which Nazimova starred, occupies a prominent place on the list. "Shine On. Red Lantern." a3 sung by the admirable Metropolitan Quartet, has wonderful musical effects and a weird flavor of the Orient. Helen Clark and George Wilron Ballard, the popular cor.tral'o and tenor, charmingly harmonize In 'When You Hold Me in Your Arms." Among the instrumental numbers are the tuneful "llrnry VIII Dances," remarkably well played by the Ani'-rican Symphony Orchestra; "The Elephane and the Fly," an unique musical composition played by Weyert A. Moor, piccolo, and Benjamin Kohon. bassoon; and "Nadine" a waltz caprice, wi'h H. Benne Henton, the world famous saxophonist as the soloist. A number of beautiful ballads are offered: Betsy Lane Shepherd sings "I'll Remember You Lova In My Prayers"; the well known tenor. Arthur S. Dibble follows with "Roses at Twilight"; Rachael Grant sings the sentimental number. "You're Malting a Mi3er of Me," and Lewis James, a gif;ed tenor new to Edison owners, renders "Why Did Yen Come Into Mv Life." Helen Clark and Geore'p
Wilton Ballard's voices blond beautifully in "When I Met Ycu" and Rachiel Grant and the inimitable Billy Murray make a hit in their conversational duet. "I'm No; Jealous." There's a snappy, novel, syncopated duet by Murray and Smalle. "I Aint-en Gor-en No Time to Have the Blues." A selection that will be cnMed for again and again is "Characteristic Negro Medley." a revelation In close harmony by the Premier Quartet. Harlan E. Knight and Company cause an eruption of laughter with "The Trial of Josiah Brown." Thf-re are two sacred selections. "In the Secret of His Presence." an old hymn, is splendidly Eung by Hart and Shaw. The Metropolitan Quartet impressively renders the appealing "Valley of Peace." The testis inspired by the phrase "My peace I give unto you," John 14:27. The same quartet sings with perfect sympathy a lovable little home song, the sweetly sentimental "Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane."
