J gz? "SV e1 t51Mfc- isfSa EVENING LEDGER-PHILADBLPHIA, WEDNESDAY, TsmvEMBEB 25 lOjji. iamifc.fii il in li "f"-'1 ' 'it"'Tr.' " TT,'r'm- n " -' i1"'. '.' fc-A rt ill H lalliill..-..rtliiiit iHiiup i m a uln'- ii M , , ' - n unit fi . i.ifati n i in - ii n ' ' ' " ' ''' - l ' fl,.".'J ' J '' - ' "" " " 3 mr I I t i A fefc- tr '. - t: f I Utai t;- .i" Jo 1 to XI J it J .-. J" iS". Hk- 3 W rf t Hi his tl filP rUBLtC tEDOfctt COMfrANY CtTlWS It It CUtlTIS. raeanttrr. Gee. W. Oehs. Secretary; John C Martin. Treasurers Chf1 It Ludlngten. frhlllp S Collins, John B, Wll Hams, Directors. 'II n . KlMT0ntA!,IKUnD! Ciiti il, k. tttkrli, Chairman. R Jr. WMAtttT.r. ..,..,,.l!ifeut!v. Bdttor 5 II! Ill II ! II I M.. ! ! Ml IXij C. MATtTlN f . .General Duslnt Manager j 'FnbiUhad daily at Fcstto LtDOEU Bulldlnc, , Independence, Square, Fhllailelphla. Lxmek CbitdIL Broad and Chestnut Street AtUfcno Cirr.. rrntj-tnrott BulMlnr Nxw YoK 170-A. Metropolitan Tower Cmcioo ,.. .817 Home insurant nulldlnc Ujxpon ....s 'Waterloo Pise, rail Mill, s. TV. NEWsmmKAUS! ttAxnuacao tlodmc... Th ralHaf T!u!ldlin WAsntioTov nostiu...,,., The rott Bulldlnn Nr.w Yonic Buaiuu. ....... The Ttmn Hulldlnx ufcttUN ncaiuu ............. .....00 Frfedrlehatraos Uiscdo IiuxeiD. 3 TVI1 Mall Haul, 0. W, Faaia JBcnsio ..33 Ilua Louis le Grand t siroscnirrio.v terms Ttr ,tarrlr, DAIlt Oslt, lx cents, ny mall, postpaid eutalds of Philadelphia, except where foreign potiace la required, Uiilt (jilt, one month, twenty-five cental XMR-t, Omit, one year, three dellara. All malt nub arlptlona payable In advance beix, 3000 WAUnrr KEYSTortE, mai.i sooo I ET" Address all communication to Evening ' Ltdaer, Independent Square, Philadelphia "'- - t X.STUED At TUB rillUDELTIIlA rOSTOrrlCS A8 8IC0VD. CLS MAIL UATTXa. -' ' ' ' - rlllLAUCLTIllA, WEUMESDAY, .OVWinnil 25, 191 BMt Transit Syslcm In the World "rPHE best system for tho transportation of JLpnasongcrs enjoyed by any city of tho world,'' to follow tho description of Director Taylor, is what tho achievement of his plans will glvo Philadelphia, toy tho alchemy of finance It will bo procured for nothing. Im provement of this sort Is so subtle. In Its ramified influences that It pays for lUelf. The city will rccctvo mora than a million a year In additional taxes; J800.000 will bo saved by tho abolition of oxchango tickets; $570,000 annually will como from the ono-mlll personal tax. This total of $2,370,000 alone Will be almost truRlclont to meet tho annual fixed charge of 2,090,000, which provides In terest and also a sinking fund that will wlpo out tho debt entirely In 30 years. In addition, if tlmo Is capitalized at 16 cents tho hour, $1,039,000 will be saved to passengers yearly, and to tho asset column also must bo added whatever profits accrue to tho city out of tho earning of the property, profits which year by year will Increaso In valuo. Tho best transit facilities In tho world is tho gift Philadelphia is asked to take. Energy la tho solo price for It, energy and determi nation. Tho preliminary mass-meetings now being held offer an opportunity for a display of both. Later, if necessary, tho wholo of Philadelphia may speak its mind In a mon ster gathering. The building program and the operating program aro two different things. Tho first need not wait on tho other. Tho city Is going to haro the now system. It can afford to build it oven if no agreements whatever for operation have been reached. It behooves Councils therefore promptly to glvo meaning to the people's purpose by official acceptanco of tho plans and the ordering of an election to authorize the necessary loans. Stand Up for the Mayor SPEAKERS who addressed tho Women's League for Good Government referred to tho Administration of Mayor Blankonburg as (1ths bost this city has over had. It Is nlto , gether too early to pass Judgment on its place In the history of Philadelphia, but It is not too early to glvo credit to Mayor Blankonburg- and the members of his Cabinet for tho accomplishment which has been theirs. Cltl rens recognize tho heavy handicap under which theso men have labored and in spite of which they have succeeded. Tho achieve ment of the Administration would be ten times as great as It is but for the obstruc tionist activities and Inactivities of Coun cils. Co-ordinating Legislature and Executive RUMOR ! comes from Washington that President Wilson may exercise his consti tutional prerogative of sitting with tho Sen ati In executive session. Further, he may rec ommend a change in tho rules' of tho House to permit members of the Cabinet to Join its deliberations. In England, the head of the Govern ment and all the members of hla official family are voting members of Parliament In France, the President stands apart from legislative strife, rather in the present posi tion of England's King and our own Chief Executive, while the Ministry takes an active part in the work of legislation. Obviously, America has something to learn from experience abroad. It Is doubtful if the President would gain enough from sitting in the Senate to compensate for loss in dignity. On the other hand, It is the plainest common cense that the heada of departments should come into much closer touch than they now do with the men who vote tho funds for 'their work. The appropriations for the National Gov ernment should be based on a. yearly budget. The Cabinet officers should take their places In either house, to present their recommenda tions, to answer interrogations and to make uch defense of their work as seems neces sary. Such co-ordination of executive and legislative effort should make for economy and better government. Inaction While the People Perish TUDGB PATTERSON declares that very tlmany of the cases that come dally to the courts of Philadelphia would never he heard of but for existing insanitary housing cond itions. Filth in the "Hying graves" of the slumb reeds not only disease but crime. It drives the women of the airless, healthless, cheer less tenements Into despair and rebellion; it turns men Into ill-tempered brutes and Sends them off to the corner saloon; it gives boys and girl to the education and life of the streets. Where decent homes aro impossible the pepplo perish. What tho slums ore costinar Philadelphia, in disease and vice and crime, as well as in dollars and cents, cannot be reckoned. But all Philadelphia knows that this do tnietlon of ambition and hope and oharaoter nnd life, this social and economic waste, is going oa every day. Councils knows It, and Cuneiis has a duty to perform. For a year and a half it has refused to make eJteoUYe fct housing law p&Med by the Legislature. Tfri delay is an offense against the Stat .4. agwlast the city, taking tall bf th.e wel fare and self-repeat of Philadelphia. Publta MfeUauat will not much laager endure it Hope ia Human Kindness WHBX the retfef ship Maseapea.ua reached BeKeMftJfi with one oi tlw my mrgot of o4 tiwu America Is efley to frwtfebiag Agfe LikAH JR Mtm JadsW JttuUefi tkd aui - ., ,- -.'-, . .,.'. ,.t , - t , n; in n iiTT lij 1 1 iiii y i x i "1,,T jir r ' '-,u,m. .liLL"' 'JXil "JjL. " !, iH,uMuJ j -J1 qjjiUiO'lJlLir .'ITlgWflrfP n'ip" i -n if zttg-f work. The spirit which bade tho ship good by on one side of the Atlantic received It on tho other. It Is Just this whole-hearted response to tho appeal of suffering humanity which casts tho ono bright gleam of hope across tho bat tling World. Philadelphia showed it unmis takably In the splendid way sho leaped to tho task Set for her. She tilled the Thetrrra In record time, and then called for more wortf to do. It Is such evidence of tho deep springs of human kindness that gives ono iiopa In the coming seme day of a world of men nl pence. Work for Live Men to Do rnitE nation at last 1ms a fluid currency. Tho medium of exchango can readily bo accommodated to the necessities of commerce and Industry, We havo organized and co ordinated our reserve, strengthening In this way enormously oUf financial strength. Tho skilled labor of Europe has been turned from tho factories Into the trenches. Tho capital of tho old world Is flowing Into tho insatiate maw of war. Tho smoko abovo tho hillsides Is from guns or factories making guns. Produetlvo Industry has been con verted Into carnage. The people arc Unable to procuro enough for their own wants; they havo lost all their ability to supply tho rest of tho world. Tho trade for which they are fighting thny havo turned looso, and there Is but ono nation In tho world vast enough In its resources of men, monoy and machinery to tako It. Events have overruled tho Underwood tariff and clamped tho equivalent of a protective tariff firmly down on our frontiers. They havo thrust every competitor out of tho do mestic fleld. They havo not only given us back our own markets, but they have oponcd up tho vnBt nrcas hcretoforo denied us. It Is an ill wind that bears no poestbto good In It, and not in tho history of tho world, cer tainly not since tho Napoleonic wars gavo us Louisiana and tho basts for extraordinary prosperity, has such a remarkable and truly magnificent opportunity been offered any nation. American genius has most emphatically manifested Itself heretoforo In Its quick analysis of situations and prompt recognition of tho psychological moment. Tho character of the citizenship has been opposed to hesi tation or doubt. There must bo nono now. It is a time for men and capital to venturo boldly, to reach out into tho far marts of tho world, to unlvcrsallzo our trade activities and throw tho vanguard of our salesmen across the very frontiers of civilization. Thcro is no sign of contraction in tho vision of tho future. Not a boom, but a very real and big logical field of development Is ahead. Wo must accept the new responsibility whether we wish to or not. We have on our shoulders tho white man's burden, tho wholo trade bur den of the world. We cannot leave It, wo must take It. That means go ahead, not dubiously but mastarfully, confidently. Let the croakers drop out; there is work for live men to do. Villa Military Meteor MEXICO may bo always In what the mili tary strategists describe as "a state of evolution"; but Just for the moment It seems to present a pretty clear picture of the end. Villa comes out of the heap of struggling figures, decidedly on top. How long he can stay there depends on "the strong man" streak in him of which America has heard so much, and on whether he makes a slncero attempt to carry out the program of land and military reform to which he committed him self in opposing Carranza. Meantlmo, Villa is a picturesque figure. It is many a decade since anything HUo this military meteor has flashed across tho busy world's vision. A year ago he was borrow ing money in El Paso to buy a horse and a revolver. Within a few months, his Innate power, his keen military sense, ills personal magnetism, something that even Madero and his millions lacked, was driving a horde of "pick-up" soldiers to victory over the Huer tlstas. Now tho "Indian" and "bandit" looms up as the man who can mans Mexico a nation if any man can. It is no insignificant spectacle that America has watched. Chasing Out the "Daredevil Dicks" PIFTT years ago children were still outside the literary world. Perhaps they didn't read books In those days; or, perhaps, they waited for their elders to read aloud to them. Anyway, it Is only of late years that debate has arisen over what the child should read, and how to mako him read It. Philadelphia organizations are now con fronting the problem. The Public Education Association, with tho public libraries and the Y. M. C. A., Is trying to do something to stem the tide of "Daredevil Dicks'' in sub limated, 76-cent form that, It thinks, makes too much of tho bulk of childhood's amuse ment today. Tho problem la there fast enough. It does an Immature boy no good to read of murder and deviltry; it may do him harm. The answer, of course, is to lead him up to the really good things, through libraries, reading rooms and parental guidance. There are plenty of splendid stories in the literary world that are Just as wholesome as they are entertaining. Stevenson, Mayne Reld, old Defoe, they still live. And some of the moderns, like Walter Prlchard Eaton, are turning out mighty good Juvenile entertain ment. AH the boy needs Is to find It. Anybody can talk with the dead after the election. Wilson is, of course, the man that put the cruise in Vera Crus. Exiling the "Cherokee prophetesses," the police, seem about, to hit the happy medium. The woman tax: collector of Dobbs Ferry ought to test out a few old Jokes about money and the fair sex. It's rather mean of the President to tell his offlalal family to keep down their expenses this year, particularly as there are only two years left- The temperature yesterday was a bit un der normal, but the promise of the weather man today, "Fair and warmer," should bring: tho mercury up a few degrees above freezing. The State Oasae Wardens rwsrt that there Is an WBuauaJ scarcity ef bull moose In the HaAm 3Mds ijcj veax-MMMl the cmt? -fapgfipetty well U vr he WMtry Vt Vm JU ettfe say fc ti e JnfltimtiMw ROMANCE OF PSYCHIC RESEARCH -- -- - '- - - i Remarkable Case of Mrs. Pepper and Ettsapia Palladtao--Cottjurcr8' Tricks Often Used by Mediums Lcvitation Freely Practiced. The Search for the Unknowable. CONTRIBUTED BY E. M. THE deslro for immortality, over latent In tho human breast tho longing to meet again tho dear ones gono before tho striving to solve tho puszto of tho after life all that has received a new lmpotus by tho declaration of Sir Oliver Lodge, Britain's great electro-physicist, that he has conversed with tho spiritual world. Not that Sir Oliver's announcement is novel, for similar assertions havo been mado times Innumerable. But tho very fact that he, a hard-headed scientist, whoso Imagination has been moro or less atrophied by serious! study, stated publicly and with emphasis that there was a llfo after death, has mado tho world tako a renewed Interest In this field of research. Tlmo was when America was literally overrun with mediums who could Induce spirits to play banjos, write unlntelllglblo nothings on slates and do other absurd things. Tlmo and again these frauds wefo exposed. Tho Fox sisters produced "spirit" rapplngs by wriggling their toes; others less known did tricks worthy of Hermann tho Great, and perchance, TrlBmcglstus himself. But ono aftor another these mediums fell by tho wnysldo, exposed as rank Impostors. Ann O'Dolla Dls Do Bar worked on the religious feelings of old Luther Marsh sufilclontly to lnduco the mllllonalro to buy hundreds and thousands of dollars of "spirit paintings." But those days havo gono by. An agnostic public, tho doubting Thomases among tho press, the disbelievers a combination of them, havo mado tho path or tho medium a rocky ono, Indeed. And yet, indications seem to point to tho fact that tho psychic Investi gators aro on tho track of what? They havo delved deep Into tho lore of the psychic; they havo striven for knowledge; thoy havo proved and Investigated. Two Famous Mediums So far as is knownk there aro only two In stances of mcdlumlstlc what shall It bo called ability? Tho first of those Is that of Mrs. Pepper, whoso "psychic" powers wore wholly mental, consisting of receiving messages while In a trance state and' repro ducing them on paper. Tho second Is that of Mrs. Eusapla Palladlno, an Italian of lowly orldn, whoso manifestations wero all physical. Mrs. Pepper's caso was fully Investigated by Andrew Lang, Professor W. R. Nowbold, Mrs. Henry Sedgwick, Sir Oliver Lodgo, him self; Dr. Walter Leaf, Professor William James, Professor Hyslop, Professor Rlchet and others. Without reservation, it may bo stated that so far as IS known these inves tigators found nothing on which to build tho hypothesis of fraud as applicable to Mrs. Popper. Tho woman was taken to England, literally placed In confinement In tho homes of the Investigators and subjected to tests which wero exhaustive in themselves and exhaust ing to the medium. Negatively, they proved that while In tho tranco stato Mrs. Pepper wrote messages apparently dictated by un seen existences. For years controversy raged; arguments waxed warm; every known and many unknown theories wero ad vanced to explain tho peculiar gift of tho medium. As a matter of fact, Mrs. Pepper succeeded in puzzling tho investigators. Several of them admitted frankly that they wero convinced; others qualified their opinions with "If and "but." Still others ascribed It to hypnotism. They recalled tho amazing performances of the Hindu fakirs In India. Positive evidence has been at hand theso many years that ono of these fakirs, completely surrounded by English soldiers, threw a rope Into tho air, where it remained suspended, apparently at tached to nothing. Then tho fakir climbed upward, dlsappcatcd Into tho azure abovo and drew tho rope up after him. Then, when tho company was utterly dumfounded, tho fakir would appear outside tho circle of soldiers. Investigators, sorely puzzled, finally decided that tho fakir had hypnotized his auditors into the belief that he had actually done tho Impossible. Mrs. Pepper's "spirit writing." as It has been termed, may bo. laid at the door of mental telepathy, thought reading the powerful longing of the subject to hear from the departed transferring Its desire to tho CRISES IN GREAT LIVES The greatest man of the Renaissance, which is often called tho greatest period In tho history of tho world, was without doubt Michelangelo Buonarroti. Accustomed as people aro to think of htm as painter or as sculptor, they forget that he was one of the foremost engineers of his time, an expert in military construction and a great poet. He was also a great-Bouled man, and it Is Interesting to note that he made himself great through facing a. crisis which seemed interminable. It was when he was commissioned by Pope Julius II to make the frescoes on the vaulted celling of the Slstine Chapel. This colossal task, which In its nnal accomplishment pic tures the history of mankind, contains scores of figures, each of them a masterpiece, nnd embodies the most remarkable conceptions of tho human mind, was not. In spite of Its glgantlo proportions, the sort of, undertaking which appealed to Michelangelo. He was primarily a sculptor and preferred that Raphael should do the work. But tho Papal command was not to be gainsaid and he addressed himself to his labor. High up on a scaffold, lying flat on his back, wetting the piaster laid down for him, Michelangelo worked day by day for four years. Beset by the importunities of Pope Julius, harassed by personal affairs and de testing his work, both for itself and because it kept him from the work In marble which ho loved, this great man fought a dally bat tle and won it afresh each day. There Is perhaps no greater example of fortitude, no more perfect example of the saying that great crises come to great lives at every mo ment of their lives. To Michelangelo they came for four years. This Ions conquest of adversity fitted him to conquer the world. CURIOSITY SHOP Ootpber 29 was the CCth anniversary of the introduction of kerosene lamps into Bangaft Mo. Tho first one was used by Josiah H. Rlcker, a storekeeper, who received a ship ment of five lamps.' The lamps sold for $1.80 and the kerosene fer $1,40 a gallon. There is a postofflce whieh Btands in two countries and belongs to the postal ser vices of these two countries. It la on the boundary line between the United States and Canada, In the town of Beebe Plain, in Ver mont, and the province of Quebec, Canada, it was built about 1830. The cellar con nects the two countries. The posteffioe was formerly used s.a a genefeu store 1b Juration with the postal DualUM. W Has been fcaojys ie o u tr 8Ad intfi n icaflavft trwm, , subconscious Intellect of tho medium. In tho caso of Palladlno nil theso assumptions ot propositions arc swept rtsldo. Case of IVilladino Palladlno was born January 21, 1834, In tho village of La Poullle, Italy. Her first bus bond was a conjurer which may account tor some of the thing she does. But leaving aside any suspicion, she must be credited with tho peculiar ability to control the physical actions of material things. It was at the ago of 14 that she first realized her glftrt, A tablo at which sho was sitting first tipped over, then raised Itself completely frOm tho floor, performing a feat known as lovltatlon. Eventually, sho ovolved a spirit control which sho chose to calt John King. It was King who helped her perform her magic; It was King whom sho blamed for all that happened or failed to happen. It Is not noccssnry to recount nil of Pnllo dlno's many and weird adventures with com moners and roynlty. For years sho was ac claimed n wonder of wonders, and then her fame reached America. In tho meantime, however, Professor Chlala, o Naples, Induced Professor Lombroso to Investigate, and that savant was converted. As a result, another Investigating committee, consisting of Pro fessors Schlaparclll, tho astronomer; Erma cora, Aksakof, Charles du Prcl and Charles Rlchet, tho latter of tho Soruonno, Paris, held a number of tests and reported favor ably on Palladlno. Then followed a number of other tests, ono ovcry few months, In fact. Sir Oliver Lodge, among many others, attested the stranga powers of Palladlno. They acknowledged her uncanny ability, but failed to assign a cause. Ono of tho most interesting of tho seances was held in Rome, In 1S9 1. Among tho In vestigators wero Professor Schrenck-Notzlng, of Munich, considered the greatest of alien ists in Europo; Professor Lombroso, Profes sor Danllcwskl, of tho University of St. Petersburg, and Doctor Dobrzyckl, director of tho Medical aazette, of Warsaw. What thoy found is related In their report: Hoping to obtain tho movement of an object without contact, wo placed a llttlo piece of paper folded In tho form of tho letter A under a glass, and upon a disk of light pasteboard Not being successful In this, wo did not wish to fatlguo tho medium, and wo left the ap paratus upon tho largo table; then wo took our places around the llttlo tabic, after having carefully shut all the doors, tho keys of which I begged my guests to put in their pockets, In order that wo might not bo accused of not having taken necessary precautions. Tho light was extinguished. Soon we heard tho glass resound on our table, and, having obtained a light, wo found It In the midst of us, In tho same position, up sldo down nnd covering tho llttlo picco of paper, only tho cardboard disk wns wanting. Wo sought for It In vain. Tho seance ended. I conducted my guests onco moro to tho antechamber. M. Rlchet was the flrst to open tho door well boltod on tho Inside. What was not his surprlso when ho perceived near to tho threshold of tho door, on tho other sldo of It, upon the staircase, the disk that wo had sought for so long. Ho picked It up, and It was Identified by all as tho card placed under tho glass. Then, having been Investigated and in dorsed by most of Europe, Palladlno camo here at the suggestion of Heroward Carrlng ton, a noted spiritualistic investigator. Mr. Carrington believed implicitly In tho genuine ness of his "And." Ho had written a compre hensive book on tho subject of her occult "powers." Palladlno came to New York, waB' seen, hold a scanco or two and camo to grief. American psychical Investigators and reporters probed Into her doings, and one fino day a Now York newspaper printed many columns showing Just how tables roso Into the air, how lights appeared and disappeared; how the "spirit" world aided and abetted Palladlno. Then she went back to her Italy and was forgotten. So now, thero remains tho positive assertion of Sir Oliver Lodgo, that he has held con verso with the spirits of tho physically dead, together with his promise that soon lie will let an expectant world know all about his peregrinations Into the land of. the hereafter. HUM OF HUMAN CITIES The small bits of progress that cities here nnd there aro making are apt to slip by the eyes of tho average newspaper reader; but thoy bulk largo In the Improvement of com munal life. A writer in the Independent has gathered together more than a score of such items. The Parle Department of Brooklyn, N. Y.. has offered to plant free and tako care of street trees for any property owner who desires them. Baltimore. Md.. city officials claim that they are breaking all records In road build ing. Tho city is improving: streets at the rate of a mile a day. The city of Newark, N, J., Is spending $2. 000,000 on reclaiming Its marshes and build ing a ship chnnnel, docks, piers and a rail road distributing system. Salt Lake City, in connection with the University of Utah and tho United States Bureau of Mines, is to make a systematic investigation of the smoke nuisance in that city. Wilmington, Del., is considering tho es tablishment of a municipal coal yard to sell fuel to the poor at cost during the winter. Coal has been distributed by the city for some years past. San Francisco lias filed plans for Us pro posed 28 new municipal street railroads, which are to cost J.000,000. Approximately 8? m".?8 ot 1,nes are t0 ba bu'lt' The mu nicipally owned roads already in operation nre proving to be very profitable. ' .... . .w York clty ' hav8 the flrst real ex hibition of modern street cleaning and refuse disposal methods Every phase and method of cleaning, collection and disposal Will ba demonstrated to tho citizens in order to explain the possibilities of the recent ap propriation of J250.000 by the city for mod ern cleaning of a "model district." Pittsburgh, with 160.000, and Philadelphia, w!,t.hJ1'8,,00?.'..ar? araon8: the cities which will begin public Improvements this winter In order to give work to the unemployed. Jowa has now nine commission gov erned and four general manager oUies. Tho latter operate under a stretching of the powers ox the City Councils so that the city clerks become purchasing agents. Puehlo, Col., has completed its first levy under single tax methods. This year vacant lots, rights of way and franchisee are as sessed at full value and improvements at only 60 per cent. Three loaves of bread for five cents were offered to attract customers to Chicago's new municipal market. Boston is to put the gurbasfe cams which dUttgure Copley Sftigre in YRlt built wi der the sldewOlw ifcte witer. w wyMS.iUl WMiMS tdSMt is actively qmbj WrsJtoI u ...,.c ii.il nrlvalO tlon to iv six-cent rate, wim -". ,ur. ton to t six-cent rate, """"". fur plant has not yet met, it announces a- ther cut tor five cents. ruis had The municipal "movies" ot St. "lslx a season Of unqualified BUMeSS. ' J8 entertainments were given In w oy nt a cost only of 2000, and It l fjn,ne th0 continue them through the winter school buildings. i VIEWS OF READERS OiN TIMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Onin ion on Subjects Important to City, State and Nation. To the miter of thi Ritnta Uiotrt , Slr-H-liat a hullflballoo to make over tr u . . .-.. f (lift rUnts ot jaws ana ataiuiory aeciarnuuuo - -- rt labor! Longer ago than Mnsna Charts Ml wn one of the great principles of Ans,?;Sa" ,)h doin, Indeed, It has always been the Inw win English-speaking peoples, "that not only nas a mnn tho right to labor and to trade,' to quote the language of Professor Stlmson, ,0,' ""?" "but no man or Bet of men can combine ,n him. and that thero shall be no comntoatlon In restraint of trade, no agreement to "'" tho output, to nx a prlco or to Incrensfl i Pc or to Injure a competitor by unfair Hietnas' It Is almost certain that not a caso has Mn decided against a truet which might not " been decided on common law principles, a no story of the English common law, which is our common law, Is In large part tho ory ' tho liberties of labor and trade. In th8a" of lllelnage and guilds labor was tho way w freedom, and the rights thus gained have never been successfully combated since. ANj.By Philadelphia, November 24, THE REPUBLICAN PARTY'S TERIL To tht Editor ot the Svtntnff ttdgtrl Slr-Meksrs rilnn and Perkins are planning to keep the Progressive pnrly alive by the r financial support. Something elso will keep it alive If the ltcpubllcnns don't watch out. That is, the possibility that tho Q. O. P. will slip back Into its old habits, from sheer confidence that the prodigals havo returned home anil that four years of tho Democratic party win be all thu country will want. Neither expecta tion Is a certain thing. Tho Progressives who voted with tho 'J O P. this fall will never ac cept a Penroso or a Cannon leadership, onu there are two moro years of tho present Ad ministration yet It H too bad that tho plat form pledge of economy was not kept from the etarl, but news from Washington tells us that retrenchment and oconomy Is the program from now on. That will help Bomc. HENRY T. SABIN. Philadelphia, Novombcr 21. PHILADELPHIA'S OLD BUILDINGS To tht Editor o lie Eienlna Ledatrt Sir I wonder If renders ot the Evbn1.no Lkiiock nave ever noticed what really present ablo old business buildings we havo down Chestnut street. The marble Is pretty faded with il?c. Orly occasionally has tho enterprise of some landlord been great enough to bring tho stono back to Its old whiteness by a sand polish. But, whatever tho color, the structure Is still there to admire. A great deal of It Is, of course, over-ornamental and rather out of tho spirit of our age. But somo Is really sur prising severe, anl one or two examples, whero tho Gothic effect of long, thin columns from top to bottom has been used, seem almost of tho new German type which handles tall build ings so admirably. Clean up our old lofts nnd offices and give ua a look at tho glories of 1S60. K. N. B. Philadelphia, November 23. AGAINST THE VARES To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I feel like lipping out something sarcas tic on "Citizen's" preposterous letter adulating tho Vares. But I guess I don't havo to. "Citi zen" did the buslnees himself for anybody who reads tho letter with halt an oyo to re cent events and Just a little bit of a sense of humor. D. L. SALE. Philadelphia, November S3. The President and the Railroads From tha New York Evenlnc Post. Apart from general felicitation on what has been accomplished for the country's welfare, and on the outlook opened up by tho bettet spirit pervading the nation, the most note vorthy fcatuie of tho President's letter Is what he says about the situation confronting the railroads. Special point Is given to his remarks on this subject by the circumstance that thoy follow immediately upon his reference to the extraordinary difficulties with which tho cotton-growers have been confronted on ac count of the war. "The railroads of tho coun tiy," says the President, "are almost as much affected, not so. much because their business Is curtailed as because their credit Is called In question by doubt as to their earning capacity. Thero Is no other interest so central to the business welfare of the country as this." When he cxpretscs his confidence that, "In tho light of the new da," the railroads will "bo met and dealt with In a spirit of candor and Jus tice," he goes as near as official propriety per mits to expressing the conviction that, in tho determination of tho pending rate qucitlon, the Interstate Commerce Commission should take fully Into account the necessity, under existing circumstances, of furnishing to tho railroads that dtgree of encouragement which Is neces sary to the maintenance of their enterprise and the sustaining of buslnees confidence generally. This has, according to common report, been all along the President's view; but his emphatic though guarded, expression of it In the letter to Secretary McAdoo will do much to Impress It upon the country. Wilson for President From the Savannah Kewa. There Is no reason for thinking that because the Republicans made large gains in the elec tions tho outlook for another term for President Wilson Is any less promising than It wns. The confidence of the people In him Is mora likely to increase than to decrease. Ills purposes are right and belief In his ability to guide the country aright In these rather troublous times Is llk&y to grow stronger. The Democrats party still has control of Congress, which assures the Administration of support for its policies. Some Good Effects From tho Indianapolis tfovra. It would have been unfortunate had the Ad ministration party lost control of Congress. But It Is well that the Democrats must face a Btrone opposition in the next Congress, not only for the Democrats, but for all tha people. For th next two j ears we may expect to see less ex travagance, less party polltlos. and more con. sclentlous attention to tha splendid program which the Administration outlined on entering office. LOVE IN TOE CALENDAR When chinks In April's windy dome Let through a day or June, And foot and thought incline to roam And every sound's a tune; ' When Nature Alls a fuller cup, And hides with green tho gray. Then, lover, pluck your courage un To try your fate In May. Tho proud she was as sunset clad In autumn's fruity shades. Love, too, is proud, and brings (gay hln Humility to maids. r "ia' Scorn not from Nature's mood to learn Take counsel of tho day: " Since haughty skies to tender turn Co try your fate In May. Tho cold she seemed as pearly light Adown December eves. And stern as night when Mareh winds ami. The beech's lingering leaves. lto Yet Love hath seasons like the year And grave will turn to gay- Then, lover, barken not to fear But try your fate In May. And you whose art it Is to hide The constant love you fealt Beware, lest overmuch ot pride Your happiness stall steal. No hmgtr pout, fer May Is here And, bearts will have thai way Love's Ib Ute caUadr. my aar ' St yMd to fue-oed Steyi i 3 SCRAPPLE Onr Foreijrn Trade) While European nations- are engaged! n" blowing each other Into distressing remain the United States is gathering In the com merce of ths world. She Is grabbing up English business in China nnd her drummers aro presenting obituary notices of German competitors to Bouth America with n pollto request for the trade of the deceased In tho same envelopL. Several millions of Europeans aro killing i each other, and as thoy fight a thousand American newspapers aro exclaiming.' "Hurv! rah, boys, hero's a dead man Lot's take hlsS This sounds as unpleasant to sane, fastldi ous Americans ns tho call of tho vulture tSl hh mato as ho spies a dead horse. But 'It! must sound far moro villainous and InflarnW mntory to tho nations who aro doing the righting and losing the above-mentioned! Every editorial chucklo on this sldo of the! ocean over tho hnparnlloled markets left li this country by tho great war acquires eJ ghoulish and hyonn-llko tone by tho time It has crossed tho Atlantic. Ana thoso papers t which piously tleploro tho snld war In ths first paragraph and hop nimbly to the pleas'-' urea of trado-grabblnu in tho rest of tha editorial probably sound a llttlo more noxs. lous than tho others to tho frosptng fighters, f In 20 years Germans will havo forgiven' Englishmen, and Frenchmen will inflict kisses' of purest friendship on Austrians. ButS tho American who walks abroad will noli; bask In cordiality and esteem. Thore is g0-l llttlo heroic nbout trado-grabblng and to 1 much less tasty In gloating over tho some In tlmo of war that tho American will bi,1 adorned with bristles in tho European mind for a century to coma , Tho world needs our goods, but ought to supply it sueniiy ana wiiu aa muo grab? . -.. .......ilf.f.. Tf let l.nfrni- tr, IA.. m3 orders for cheese knives from Bouth AmerlcS nnn.mt mid tn irnt oursolvca jrcncrnllv i..i . ... t. nnH.nn r9 tfin ...Ik1 tcstcu nniuiiB iiiu ,iu.i.u.,o vt. .. ttHia, Gcorgo Fitch. Hermetically Spieled Tho Drltlsh havo occupied tho Island ot Ilind formerly leaaeu " '"-0 wt .rc. - nflV, "We'll take for a term, Tho Islo of Hcrm," Said tho English firm. "No, you don't, you worm," Camo back from tho Germ An arms, "you'll squirm, For a Doutsche firm Owns tho lslo of Herm.' And there's tho germ Of tho Joko oa Hcrm. At Last Tho studious looking man walked Into tli? drug storo with tho circulating library. "Havo you Shakespeare s works?" h "Sorry, sir," said tho clerk, conscious ot tho fact that ho was upsetting an oia es tablished precedent, "and wo havo nothing 4., nh nnl " IH Inconsiderate Pud "Great cats! That's a nervol Somfl body has put up a building right whereJ buried a boncl" .fuck. No New Ones ''After all." said tho editor's assistant, "the old Jokes aro tho best." '9 "Why shouldn't they bo?" demanded thfl editor; "tnero's no competition." Thoughts on the War I never saw a Belgian fort I never hope to see one; But get mo right when I report: I'd rather seo than bo one. A Subtle Plea A humorist Is a person who capitalize! poverty and misfortune, if tho humoral wero endowed ho would bo robbed ofJbr material. Hero Is a real opportunity 11 some statesman with tho interests of S pcoplo at heart. ! Fixing the Blame "See here, Milkman, I don't think the you aro giving mo Is nuro." "Madam, to tho puro all things aro purJ Life. Clerical Snobs I confess, though, if I had by me thl names of thoso soven or eight Irish bishops, the probates of whoso wills wero mcntlonei in lust year's Journals, and who died leavi Intr behind them some 200.000 apiece. 1 would like to put them up as patrons of rav Clerical Snobs and ocernto unon them as successfully ns I see from tho nowsp&ll pors, Mr. Elsenberg, Chiropodist, has latelyil done upon "His Grace thq Right ReverendlS Lord Bishop of Tapioca." Mi And I confess that when the Right Reyjl von,1 Tirnlntlu pnwn 1 tr Mir. c-ntn Ml "PnrftipH dlse with their probates of wlllj in thejrJ hands, I think their chance Is . Buy tno gntcs or 1'araaiso is a far way to rouow their Lordships; so let us trip down again? lest awkward questions bo asked thero nboufl our own favorite vices, too. William Make peace Thackeray, in "The Boole of Snobs.' Why tho Hurry? Prepartnc for Snow Removal Headline In a Nj iotK papr. Manhattan grows progressive and, ere snovr. 1 4 begins to fall. Of snow removal plans It starts to sin! In former years Manhattan never made plan at nil .: Till the bijow gavo way before the sun of spring. i Just a Ilint f' It Is only by being perfectly square tbit you can prevent people from getting onj your curves, 1 A Bit Tired A somewhat weatherbeaten tramp, bejris asked what was the matter with his coa replied, "Insomnia: It hasn't had a nap it) years." christian Register. DeGned at Last "Mulligan, phwat'B a Nihilist?" "O'Brien, it's a Russian Fenian." Sad. Isn't It? With tha outbreak of tha war tha conaumptlon't' hAP In fh- TTntrAr) fl.ci,-. r.11 ab. in nf cntJS July, Auxuit and September, aa compared with (Hfj cvrreepvouing' penoq tan year, rwa uem, Now wo know what the einerta mean When they talk of the horrors of wari uarKeeps growing wan and lean, l "Under new management" over the dow Why comes this catastrophe ? Echo obligingly answers, "It's clear. You can't eat cake and have It see? You can't talk war and drink your beerf Mr. Grabb Freshmen at the University? Pennsylvania are forbidden to smoke cls ettes. Fond Mother Ob. dear me! Now Osvr won't get a bit of exercise. Buffalo EP' From the Cub's Notebook Thfh wnra Midi- 1aftnri mrflfnflf. the W of a Chestnut street store and puffed at sjl uniigniea cigar end. was growing " Those who pushed their way past the nar witn heads bent against the com stenned faster as thev ea.vr the atrs eye them. At last ho walked out front wall and swung into & halting step a thin man. He started to snsak. "No!- said the man. hastening Ms m and tha straeatar lrmnc-erl back into V shelter ot the wall. Three times he hindered hurrying ersbv and threa tlmo- thoir eruff X3 drove aim beck to the shelter of the He tried a fourth time. "Ho!" shouted the youth he p before a ward wo nukH The StriLBsfiar fetualtt him way bick tbi dt etea ud. t, t, mtkr he lufewl tUasM pIPgp ?jl TPl ijja -gtesl t af lirtrf'AlS-l-'foWfe .5i '"' "-fa" "-"..'"'.""--m" ,jBnijCTiwftii3itiWKgagiMias.w.mEH.MBiiiiniiiii nii,aiMni.iiiii iii i ii,iii 1 3a?..B,y gsagfcagiL wa .sBgs&.fe3fflySi!A f-Tif. Ff -i T...'l'irTg5inll" H n 1 fl I il jm -gaFa mg a. w ! n mwgw...1MPlgMgww,fniiwlllfl I TO!"' ill HI n I ill 4 AM "i7 n -Mjr jib, . -..j.awwsafcSfifcai a .&,- HJSt siafertiMSSS35mS8Ssw -. i - -wa. sta-By rar -q. asmr'-