af.- Ki S.iF aFWi . t aV aP lls 0 ' cAMb HHgrr FOTLIC LtDCU COMPANY rrnvm x. x. ctnma, ra-wawi wfB3flKBr" MTORIAL OAHD Cnn X. K. Oaaiea. Chat una a. 9, at. WHAIJtT.,. ....... v... ......... MAMTH. , J1 faapBJaaaBjBjB af JLAJa.aaaJP WP '? aW."". neaTeeeieo; ffV . BillilIISie 904 mi. Loin CnoiMi paeMMld -hlniit MrMfa rM-cHlm RulliMnir iNfMitan Tower M FM4 smHdlnc Cam Tut...,. Bread WTr a ..... , ... ..... ....... a ltTia..,.,.,. 0lkOmocral ull4tn ...... ..........I3f Trttunt Kulldiiur JOTWS HUBKAUgl IT4HUWW5 .... Mm JhrlWI Inpr Tone Pue.c.........Th Trmr Uulldlntr paauaj nmvi ....... 00 Frledrlchatrase. Loftee-tnt-eM-., ,,,.,, Warrant Houae, Htrand Paw mnratv.,,,,,,,,,88 J-,w Lout M Grand DMCKIFTIOy TERMS r aarrlr. ,ht .ceate rr weefc. By mall. -) m ruiiaoeifihi, mm brt aan.MeUr M rwtttlmt, on month, twenty. aefiiar ati fMr. ltir 6alle.r. All mlt aahtertptlena perete hi advance. iwnc- aueecrreere- wieninc adores cnancM it i a ni a new lurm BKLL. MM XPAUiUT KEYSTONE, MAM MM Cr JLMtrtt alt ro-n-mrafeettfe-u to Kvrnlng -teener, lutepffldeno Mvtan, PMtadtXfhia. so at tbs rmumrmt roirornci ii ssooi-o-otjia ltub uirraa. Will AVBRAQB NET PAID DAILT CTJU OOLATION OP THE BVBN1NO LEDdER SX)R 8EPTHMBJEB WAS 1II.MJ rUtadeleWa. TkanJtf, October It, 111, Trma frttnJthlp'i lawt arm by thlt ruU exprtit Watcoma the coming, tpotd tha parting fil, omr, As we looked over the market re ports yesterday wo could find no record ef ft drop In anything but the tempera-turn. The Mexican Joint Commission nan arrived at a "common understanding," but what is needed in Mexico Is an un common one. No wonder milk Is high when they sell a cow for 16150 In Now England. It some one would Ond a way to Ret milk from fllwors tho babies would not hare to co supperless to bed. The soldier who has been made premier of Japan assures us that ho does not bite. Ho won't close the Chlneso door, because, he says, "non possumus," which Is Latin for "wo can't." lie may be play, lne 'possum at that. Mr. Hughes did not need to deny the charge that he had been making agree ments with Germans as to what he would do when ho became President. His record has placed, him as a man who docs not make deals with any one; The Civil Henrico Reform League wants to know whether the Vice Presi dent calls It "snivel service." Here Is Tom Marshall's opportunity to distinguish himself "by saying Just what he thinks, and win tho applause of every spoils man regardless of parties. There has been a lot of fun In the Democratlo press because Mr. Hughes called himself a "100 per cent candidate" Tho assumption is that followers of the New Freodom like a man to hit soft. Mr. Wilson, it seems, Is only a twenty per cent candidate. Four-fifths of the rail road men are outside the favored Broth erhoods and they have formed tho Em ployes' Eighty Per Cent Movement to wrest from Congress an extension of wage-Increase legislation. To checker or not to checker, that's the question agitating tho Mtllbourne firemen. WhoHier 'tis better to play the game on Sundays In the flrehouse and dare the anger of tho Burgess or to submit and feel the gibes and stings of outrageous neighbors, ahl there's the rub. The order of the Burgess Is said to bo based on an old blue law, but It Is so long since the blue law's wore passed rthat most of us had concluded that ex posure to the bright light of liberty had faded them Into an Invisible white. Many worse things can bo dono In a flrehouse on Sunday than playing checkers. We Bather from tho reports from the Hold ef conflict that tho firemen hold that checkers have the sanction of society and . the right to play Is not arbitrable. The failure of Germany to con- tJnue sinking British-merchantmen caused drop of- war risk Insurance to four per cent from tho five per cent that was v ,4ueted In the panicky hours of Monday. Bho British ships which load and clear, bwt await developments beforo sailing, are sot so eager for tho gamble as the Insur anee men. Tho latter, betting at odds of twenty-four to one, may feel reasonably lire that twenty-four out of twenty-five hips will get to Bngland safely. But the thing has a different look from the other Ide. Eaoh ship sunk is a tragedy to ngjand, because each cargo la meant to ,ll seme great need not to be expreseed tn Urms of money. The brokers see the Mercantile fleet as a lump sum In a bank la whloh twenty-four clerks art honest and only one a Otl-Jf, JBrwtaikL threh Premier Asqulth, jutts a ellneher to the es4a! that peace far In tba air, and the hint ef a compro cbsm, whloh have been debated ver since AKUMuaaor uerara deeMed to vilt Astatic at last vanish In thin air. The ' . mman vfmtnmr n. pan move closes to ft , tat disadvantage of Germany, for while fey mm arni ttovemmeflt. Hd mt author- rat; a. preiMttatloa of Urms, It permitted :?. vJ snassstUix of Its rad4Baa tn An u af lta eensof ,, Baoh suooeessng o peaoe rumors ww beea tte In ". tsBfrHn.whUft France and Engtead wtw chssra 'VarUamt heam '"a ceaarisua, mabotwrin- . m imtwakaWe,, aad aat th MUeei mm m sfejaj air smjm vatal ". m m mammmmg ajaaa mmmrOmit UmAiUwam uunitiu Sh mtmajaawr asawmt ai at MiMlia imit aaaaammsmmaamam ataai osiiiiiiHIso of looal .Uwyera, r Hrr Mi a. Johnson, to work far of Jtd Emory A- WalUng OMnrt mjfJM 10 m KMWMN)bV aAsaaMaaiBaaBlBBaaaBSatk.JBRBBlBh al ajjagat b -alalakMakjaHaadgaiaBBsaJkk aak A. mM aWHM Jt. tea wtQ be aatiotiiKiil m other part of tho eHato to advance the Interests f Jad WaltliHr. tho Judge now H on the bench, having been appointed by the Governor to All a vacancy. His record In tho Common Pleas Court for seventeen years hi not aurpassed by that of any other Judicial officer in the State. He ought to be supported on election day by all voter, whatever their party affilia tions, who are Interested In honest and fair-minded Interpretation of the law. IS THIS A PEACE-AT-ANY-PRICE COUNTRY? TEMOCRATlC nawspapers, campaign speakers and writers of campaign literature, following the leadof tho Pres ident, are charging that Republican suc cess means war. Mr. Wilson, In his speech to the Toung Men's Democratlo Cluba, said, "There la only one choice as against peace and that Is war," and he did his best .to convince his hearers that the policy which his Ad ministration has pursued could not havo been changed without precipitating war.' His conclusion, therefore, was that If the Republicans are put In power they must continue to do as he has done or tight. This la the cheapest kind of pettifog ging logic. In the first place the premises are unsound. Wo have not been at peace with Mexico and we are not now at peace. We invaded tho country with an armed force and fought a pitched battlo, killing scores of Mexicans and suffering losses ourselves. We havo an armed force in Mexico now and are Just withdrawing from the border a hundred thousand mili tiamen sent there to prevent an armed Invasion of our territory. The Republican answer to Democratlo mouthlnga about Mexico It has been made by Mr. Hughes a score of times Is that If the Administration had observed the principles of International law from the beginning no conditions would have arisen to excuse or provoke such war as we have waged on that country. The kind of President Mexico Is to havo Is for Mexico to decide In her own way. All wo need to know Is whether he Is backed by power enough to perform tho ordi nary functions of government. The Republican position on tho Euro pean war, explained by Mr. Hughes time after time, Is that It we had pursued a firm and consistent policy of Insisting on respect for American right to the pro tection of life and property wo should not have been brought to the brink of war. We have the authority of Mr. Wil son himself that we wero liable last win ter to be drawn into the conflict any day. By his own admission tho course of events carried us so close to war that he had to leave Washington to urge tho country to uso Its Influence with Con gress to do something to prepare us for the Imminent breaking out of hostilities. As a matter of fact, by the record and by their own admissions, the country Is In greater danger of war through a con tinuance of the Democrats In power than through Republican success; that Is, un less the Democracy Is committed Irrev ocably to peace at any price. There Is no mistaking the purpose behind the words of Mr. Hughes In the Metropolitan Opera House Monday night, when he said: We all desire peace, but we desire peace to be honorably maintained by correct policies, by firm Insistence on known rights, by deserving and holding the esteem of the world. We have not been kept out of war; we have not en forced our rights; we have sacrificed our honor. Tho Republican pary Is the party of peace, that peace which Is walled In and buttressed and bombproofed by adequate preparedness tp protect and defend the national rights. It believes with Thomas Jefferson, on whom the modern Democ racy has turned Its back, that "whatever enables us to go to war secures our peace." Mr. Wilson's policy or events over which his policy was powerless took us to the brink of war last winter, and Its splnelessness Is largely responslblo for the presence on this sldo of the ocean of a German submarine, whose activities are liable any day to bring about a sit uation which cannot be tolerated If we would maintain our self-respect as a nation. Nobody wants war, but what Is Mr. Wllon going to do If Germany treats as though they had not been made our emphatic protests against frlghtfulness In submarine warfare and our declara tions that wo shall omit no" word or deed to make our protests effective? LET THE DIRT FLY THE publlo statement of A. Merrltt Tavlor to the effect thnf (ho nn.n.ii. contract proposed by the Mayor Is In substantial accord wlfh the co-operative agreement of 1914 Is Intensely gratifying to the great body of cltisena who for so long a time have devoted their efforts to the achievement of rapid transit. The ptiblie la quite ready to aeeept Mr. Tay lor's eeneluslona and his assurance that ths, rights of the city are properly pro teeted. "Wo ) not profess to understand the Mayer's attitude, staaa only a few ejaya aha he seemed to be to grave doubt aa to the xWtfnoe of any 1814 agreement, al tfcMWNhJs pre eontraat la based sasnHHr 'ow Ma agreement. We do et parttoulaHy by wfeat prooeaa of reaaewar he mm to t poeUtya he ww oooupi, W w d wish to congratulate Mm net heartily on his present stand, and thai newaprwUl support him vlg- u Mr wiioie-baarted efforts be to M the thia tiwetm to a Tom Daly's Column McArenl Ballads LXIV MR, HAIL, COLOKB' Irtth, An plaice, Dootchman, Jev, IVol'sa tnolfer wtetha vout Why vou no keep hofolov, Wave da flag an' thout "nooraiTf ' Whu vou laugh an' iecenk pour eye Wen da beco parade go byt Ain't vou oUtd for anytheeng Wen da leetta cJieeldren teengt JAka me vou oughta be alad far granda liberty Dat ice all are gattln' from Hall Oolomb'. Can eet be you are to domb You don't know dee 'Hall ColomVt He ee'$ Dago tallorman " Dat teat ftrtt to find dee Ian'. Poor he tea, but com' ravJolce, Takf vour hat off, leeft your voice, Maka prayer of thank bayeause Dere' no EcmlgratloLacs, Dere'a no Elllt Itland to'en Wecth Hee ragged tallormen Ftrit to deeia Ian' ee com' Hall Oolomb'. BEFORE us Is a beautifully colored post card labeled "Paris Vue Generale." It la from our own Henri Baxln, whose chapeau always bid his bare dome when he sat at work In this office. He says, writing from Parts under date of Sep tember 22: I remember with a tmfle your pub licly noticing me with my hat oft for the first time. I have It very much off now. There Is so much that Is wonderful and beautiful, that touches the heart with pride, to salut). Ahl cher ami Henri, most of the won derful and the beautiful In the residuum that Clio's alemblo shall finally evtolve from all theso terrible days her records must credit to tho glory of France. BVBB 'Tt true, In Hit Columbu tailed the ocean blue, But If Oolumbu lived today He'd have to come tome other icay. F. B. Millennial Menus These meals will be served every, day In Caledonian neighborhoods: BREAKFAST Oatmeal Scones Buttermlk DINNER Oatmeal Parrltch Hagpjts Iltimln' Mslr Oatmeal Swtta Malr Parrltch Soones SUPPER Qcones Malr Par-r-r-rltch Haggle Oatmeal . Nappy Otva m tha cttyl Th notiy buatle ot tha traat thoroushfaraa, Thq maer hurrying throng-a. Tha bulldlnca Ilka tall aatawara axalnat tha Icy, Tha lurid slow of aunxet on tha rtrar, Tha srern, airft-amallln parka, Where many children atnn and play Tha paverm-nta aultry. odoroua, The rllUerlnir lltrhta at duak alpnr tha arenuea. The llvlna thunder of the multitude The nant and slow of lire I,lfo, ceaaelena, multicolored, ehanalnr, Vera llbrlat, In New Tork Evening- Sun. But, toy, have you thought of thedangert Won't Ufa have to tcramble and hustle To hope to be much of a "changer" WKa only one pant and a buttlct ofvav Nit!--- NS :r-M AaatfaW- POETRY, a magazine of verse, pub lished In Chicago and edited by Harriet Monroe, sends us a circular letter, solicit ing renewal of our subscription and say ing, among other things: Wa are aura that at leaat you have never read a alnale number without belns obliged to think, and lan't that aomethlnsT It .surely Is, and It would be something else again If we were nblo to express the thoughts aroused In us as brightly and as llmpldly as the Rev. Samuel McChord Crothers does In his essay upon "The Grcgarlousness of the Minor Poets," In the current Atlantlo Monthly: The new poet Is at his best before ha has been sophisticated by too much Intercourse with men of his own craft It Is a sad day for the new poet when he hears the call of his kind and becomes conscious that he has a duty to perform for his fellow poets in ex plaining and defending their Innova tions. e a e I once had a lesson which I took to heart I had two friends, both of whom happened to be blind. It unluckily oc curred to me that It would bo a pleas ure to thera to be made acquainted. But when I suggested this to one of them he drew himself up with dignity and said, "I decline to make acquaint ances on the basis of my Infirmity." I think of this when I see the attempts to bring together poets on the ground of what seem to the prosato mind com mon Interests and conditions. The poetry society which seeks to bring the songsters together In one cage at stated Intervals Is aa tuneful as the aviary at the zoo. The nightingale perches aloof. In a spirit of self-abasement, there fore, wo shall renew our subscription to Poetry, a Magazine of Verso. IT SEEMS a certain Mr. Wlldbeck, an artist, who has a house among the sand dunes of Beach Haven, recently enter tained 'a week-end party. There ap pears to have been some haste In tho departure of the guests at least enough to havo caused three and one-half persons to forget their pajamas and to have given birth tn the host's mind to this Idea, which should be not without Interest to others who are In the habit of giving week-end parties: Dear I lneloaed. And photoaraphlo exhibit ot apparel wblcb. waa round at Houaa uciooer J, irlnx Houaa Monday, j. ., 1 1 j .I MgaaM 'rry"7 aaaa ' r -T1' t aa f IF HJm'-BrfVpsjHBjsJjBCj2w Tbeaa artloU are now In tar poaaeaatsa and 01 IBem batons to you. pleaae put your If i iay mark oo your te sa km i Tow irUeuUr property and return It m do Ike teat. 'ours vary, traur, a4c. Here's a couplet, or hear a couplet, authorship unknown, written to dsaerlba the shlldren at a parly; "gome had snub noses and aoma had And they all had rtMtM around their ab domea. G. L, Joseph Paaata ImHfc. iwanty-twa months M. east at Mr. and Mrs. Leo A. Smith, re Minx at HI .Worth mew street, had a vajaaMCmajia eaoaje from lata!, at uot asttons eeUaarp ate AND THEN "DING, DING!" COLUMBUS DEAD AND TURNED TO DUST Still Provokes Controversy Amonjf Antiquarians Santo Domingo and Seville Each Claims the Honor of Guarding His Bones Dispute Began in 1877 . 1. The eipreiolon i. wh':Fi 3, Thle la Celnmhua Day, 4. AVhnt , ! . meant by urn!,-" O, erli insn'a 11 I.. .... S JJ.P0ilf Thomaa Matt OeborneT . "hat la tha .principle of the iurblm v, nn-i wn me name or ine srrat 10. what la a elearlnc hauler Utt nBitf. A IHrrarr batkt om wh By JOHN ELFRETH WATKINS rnilE wealth of fact given to tho world -by Christopher Columbus Is oxcecded only by tho plothora of doubt which he left to posterity. Somo say that his father was an honest, Industrious sheepcomber, others that this paternal parent waa an Itinerant peddler, a vagrant, a cheat nnd a Juggler. We were taught In school that Christopher was a genius far ahead of his Ume, whose superhuman perspicuity penetrated the secrets of physics and geography. But his fellow-Italian, Ccsare Lombroso, tho most famous anthropologist of modern times, branded him as a lunatic, who suf fered from congenital paranoia, fixed Ideas and religious Illusions, who showed pro nounced stigmata of degeneration; a "liar and boaster," who waa "glvon to cruelty," a "profound Ignoramus," whose "overwhelming conceit" caused him "to draw comparisons between himself nnd the Saviour," to announce himself as the Lord's representative under divine com mission to discover David's treasure and with those sinews of war recover tho Holy Sepulchre, then rebuild tho Temple at Jerusalem. s The deepest of tho many mysteries that veil this remarkable man rotate to the final resting place, ot his bones. Onco when their profanation was threatened, they wero hidden away so very carefully that no one has since been able to locato them exactly. It was all on account of that bold rover of the seas, BIr Francis Drake, that they got mislaid. When he came sweeping down upon Santo Domin go, In whose cathedral they lay, the arch bishop of that city ordered that all of tho tombs be covered with earth. Those wero days of ease and Indolence and no one troubled himself about uncovering Co lumbus's tomb until after the last ono who knew the secret of Its location had sought his own final resting place. So the remains of the discoverer re mained forgotten untlj Spain ceded Santo Domingo to France. Then the Duk,of Veragua, a descendant of Columbus, sent to the cathedral for his Illustrious an cestor's ashes. After considerable search ing about among musty tombs, a small vault was opened and some pieces of bone and dust found Inside were placed In n case of gold and load. A High Mass was said over them and they Were trans ferred to the Cathedral of Havana that they might still repose on Spanish soil. No one doubted that these transplanted re mains wero those of Columbus unUl 1877, when, In the course of -repairs back at their 'former resting place, the old Santo Domingo Cathedral, -a- vault was opened In the space adjoining that from which they had been taken by the Spaniards, eighty-one years before. The new archbishop, poking his arm into the. dark, moldy hole and finding there a well-preserved .leaden case, sum moned the President and Cabinet of Santo Domingo, as well aa all of the other local dignitaries and foreign consuls. In their presence he had tha leaden, casket re moved and Inside were. 'discovered dust, human bones and a bullet of lead, while' upon the. casket were found certain let ters, Interpreted as abbreviations ar ranged to denote that Christopher Colum bus and no other lay within. Bo It waa Immediately announced that the remains taken to Havana In 17 M had not been those of Christopher, but of Diego Colum hue, and that the great admiral's bones had, after all, remain m Ranto Domin go", lr. conformity wfm Ma deathbed re- Vhoro Immediately arose an Internation al hubbub, tho $tp9.urm aoowing tho aurajgwetiirni aad othv' mgnlUrlos of tho 'im3k 16TH S , its: fraud," and the archbishop replying with great heat that ho could prove his claims. Next came a flood of pamphlets, and writers have not yet finished arguing the mooted question. Tourists through the West Indies saw two separate tombs of Columbus, one In Havana and ono In Santo Domingo, un til the evacuation ot Havana, In 1898, when our authorities allowed the Span- lards to. take their alleged bones of the discoverer to Seville. So pilgrims must now go to both 'Seville and Santo Domin go before being sure that they have vis ited the hallowed spot where lies burled the discoverer of America, . (Copyrltht) What Do You Know? Ouerte ot antral (ntrrrit mill te aaeuere thl column. Ten ourilloiii, tht aneioere la which every well-tiiormed person nourf knew, ore aifccd dally. QUIZ eiprein on "Uklnr.the. etnrap" has a ry, alninle erlaln. What la It? tie it fetl.hT What la celebrated tha "Camden tab What, are, tha tvrelra Ian eat fltatta In tha I nlon. tn point of ponulntlonr joe wora --mcemtrianr- la taken Irom gemlneT ecretary Answers to Yesterday's Quiz renVnlteet uard to. make nrna out af oolite Then theaa vera In irneral nee, and there AM mn h.mwI onio uoirtni a, real word ar Di-lnelale af be. havlor or opinion, the ue of or Inability W !b,tn. btrmya enera'iarty, nation nlllr. ete.t alaa. an aU-faehloned and ten erallr abandoned doctrine one held ee a ..Li- .. . . !.rui mmw BimcK a neniral Ttuel whan it la earning contraband of war to the 8. Vnl mailer for pay,.riardleea ot or the ane or. hi work, ilearrned bread i leaven la tl added to dooin to produca f rrlnda eat written wrltt. plnlo deaveneat .rraet. ittr hit opinions the obataoto iern.enn.iii bread U bread wfthooi "f.rj?1!,.Urnk!,Jnd?n,'.1P,d " W" ' 7. Bhylock. In the roort arena In The Mer. "luaSwaff ' " A DnW a .wedie-ahaped ins s. rn f the eon dUll a nxea nriDi v.. ssjsj".'"rir.i" jf.v in "Mleelnr link", according to the etalotlon- nor man. inii l,rT.l,..i.-.i ""'"."? u.milm. miilA .V- ...1" lr.Hra la 10. "Cutllna malani aldlnV nuaalLr lane profile among ahareholilMe. tf Salarypf Justices C. I Ij. The salary of the Chief Justice of the United States la 115,000 and of the Associate Justices 114,500 each. Theau thor of tho poem In which occurs the line, "Sunset and evening star," waa Tennyson and the title of the'poera la "Crosslna- tha Bar," Mr. Hughes's Address ' . 9" MC7Mr- "Ua'hes's addreaa la tha Hotel Astor, Jfew York olty. The Hepubllcan camps gn manager Is William R. WlUeox. "publican Campaign Headruartera. New Cadet Brigade CONSTANT READER. The National Guard of Pamiaylvaala has no eadet brlg- George B. McCIoIUh J, B. R. Qeorge Brlnton Madallan wan born in Dresden, Haxr. wherTfcta wria" were on a vtalt, Novembw u, msvS was Mayor of New York eKy from JaauaVv I.IJOS. to Deoember ii. waa ii2SS2 Wllaoa'a mother 'was , born la amglaaeL I amaao Ooaaaoaw CaUaaaabaal at bolna tka ajaMfftftmOMav 'MrOMI '4 mcmmgfl - ! f j ) Che-taut St , Ckmra HettM Mm LASTWJ1JBK MARKET- 11:13 A. M. TO HUB P. it. 10c, BTANCET CONCE11T onCHESTRA. But Theattr Orchtra Antnohert OVEnTUItB "Sybil" JacoM Select lone During , Thotoplay "Qatr da Luna," ... . . Thome "Andante Contlblle." ... .. Teehalkowaky "Au Matin" ..Uodard Ilarmond Overture." Thomas 25fl. 83e VIVIAN MARTIN IN FIRST TOESENTATIOV HER FATHER'S SON "DATA TTt 1!a Market St lOe. SOo i LLiiOJcLi Pauline Frederick in "ASHES OF EMBERS" A "P"1 A TiT A CHESTNUT Below 1STH Xi.XvV-AUlA 10 A. M. to litis P. M. LAST TIIREB OATS E. H. SOTHERN InPhn.,.pr,t "THE CHATTEL" CAST INCLUDES PEOOT IITLAND TTi J. -. MATtKET ABOVE 9TH Victoria fimfirasii "DIANE OF THE FOLLIES" Added, Kejetone Comedy, "French Milliner" ALL NEXT WEEK DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS In "MANHATTAN MADNESS'' ACADEMY OP MUSIC Saturday Afternoon, October 21, at 1-30 PADEREWSKI Tlcketa now on Sale at lUppe'a.lllsCheatnutSt. II. tl.SO. 12. 12.80. Hoxea 113 and tit Walnut Mats. ", 25, 50c "THENATORArLAW789 Nait Week "Brlnalnr, Up Father In Politico" Regent MAIIKET DELOW ltTH a At Al. ID IIIIQ PlI. NANCE O'NEIL "THE IRON WOMAN1 In. vi.Vin0J'Ji"r "' 'r Wonderplay J Knickerbocker &Sx 2i Sfe "THE PATH OF FOLLY" WHAT TiftX DBMOC1UT8 Dm To rM or of rN Jfreiiliia ttltt,,. rantlen "Ineenalatmt awuii STS. v" letter from Mr. John J. Plerai-.1 !?ti nele ernuM take h ll. . '. It,- ut.Ow.t tu winU KA ... ..lw ' Ai-nttv Vane Ma m.. ute I U..l Ur ritann .. - ...w(r in Ihe matter after he reecZJ ? proteat of the Socialist party, baTaLe by the American Federation o tIZ? here and there Is a pacifist. TtuTawJ hare been, are and always wllLkT, to capitalist wars, and It Mr. tJ.; well posted he would undoubtdi that tha Socialists of rhir. " '. and fooled Into war and now is v J ln war with all their nerfr--that iTl ones who ara not In the trench. n ' WILLIAM KAMrna. Philadelphia, October 10. uwr0. , nUGHES HAS ANSWERED ' To Bdllor o tho Kvmlnj eW. sir i ran 10 sea in Mr. ir-v. marks Monday evenlna; any antweratl ?: ,;: r. .;." " :n .,n "w i Ul iuuim., uiiiiivvii. DIIII right V to criticise the worklncs ot ypw or business without belnc able i L. explain to you where the diftiwZ ond what remedy should be apoilai" chanse tha conditions? I eont.njiTrT. principle appllea to forernment boil Phllaelnhla. OMa,. 1ft' ' PA0UXi3 Answers to all the questions eu tWM.av. ..a ..w -aywM.va aKl iT, Hft bui.or oi iiiq Caivsnipfo JUhdoir, AND EVERYTHING ELSE And after the price ot bread ta ui.u why not retulato. by law. th. JTT shoes and sngarT Los Ancales Exprtea. Metropolitan First Time Sat., Oct 14 Scats Now on Salo at Met. Opera Houaa (open until 0:10 P. It.): Downtown ofrtce, 1108 Cheatnnt 8L (Werraann'a), and Branch Box OHcee. ClIARLKS DILLINQHAM Preieutt new TTTPPfiT.PfiTVrm oroai toiik "" - viU ixnri in "HIP, HIP HOORAY oiarea uj- iu jta uuiiisaiUQ 0Ply H0U T SOUSA and ma BAND NAT WILLS 'Tha Happy Hobo" CHARLOTTE inflfll and -M.rr.lou. I WUV ICE BALLET CHAS. T. ALD 'Soma DetecUrt' MalHn, Bart & Mallla Boganny Tr Lou Anrer: Tha Amarantha; Soltl Lei1la--Clsh. Beth Smaller, Howard Harnr Weetford. Leonora Slmoneon. Haner. Harry Orlffltha, Nellie Doner; Thoe, 1 nernolda. Dlppr mere ana Hundreds ot ( Dally Mate. Tsf 0Rflt- ft Ngtl. tA, Except Sat. . 50o to I1M . T VDTfl TONIGHT AT 8:15 u x avavj nno. mat. SATtmnAT. i TUB ENTIinALLINQ MUSICAL PUT CLI'FTON CRAWF0R ,in "Her Soldier Boy" With u. Brilliant Caat of Slnren JOHN CHARLES THOMAS MAROAnCT ROMAINH A TRULY WONDCnyUL HITl jti-LxuLnrm. tonight, b :ib. boo to r The Most Wonderful Play tn Amerka EXPERIENGJ b. r. Keith's TUEATEU Brlmral of Mnekt. and nurnrtasaf DAISY JEAN CICCOLiNT n Iaabell D'Armand a narry Cooper ft Co.; Stiili Rempet a uiner Jeaxure. ( Today at S, 25o fc E0e. Tonlaht at 8. tit ta I World's Series Returns n"'4 'i3 1819-17 Boston Symphony Orchestra Dr. Karl Muck. lnaucior ACADEMT OB- MUSIC ,.MUi n Jan, 1. J bW 12. Siar.al eubuisia ricsunn arte Gabrilowitach Kreisler Mil Season Bale NOW, at H ii iv unesmui l v fe.i Prtcea. t. 17.80. 15. 13. BO. Boxea. 179. t: Globe Theater "iSSSA, U1UUC VJ.VDBVILLB ContSiie! lOo 1 no 22a 3& 11 A. M. to 11 P. U. , "THE BANKS HALF MILLIONS" BIXLET A LERNEnj Others. rr, Vtte, MARKET Below MT JlUaa 1VC70 Dally. SH5, " Evas.. 7 i Oj 10, A TA V nTTrTTa TOU'LL XXtlXXX JXJJK SCR GARRICK Holiday Mat. To "Ltat a Nlshta. Loot Matinee SeturJir,'1 nVtn UMlnnln-F lllnrtc m. xuc iiuuoc'UA ujaoo MARltl NEXT WEEK SKATS TODAT A. H. WOODS Preaanta Jane Cowl in Common' CI TrORIlFST Limited Encasement PUXVlVLiOl ng,f g!lB MUl w4,oi ln Mu J Co BROAD Pop. Mat. Today MARIE TEMPEST lfliJESSS' A Ladv's N with W. ORAHAM BROWNE and H'T. Best Beau Sl.&o at Holiday Mil. tw JUUA SANDERSON DONALD BRIAN JOSEPH CAWTIIORN the 0" Musical O i comedy WHJJAM FOX Presents A DAUGHTER , . OF THE GODS i The Picture Beautiful with ANlvnBTTE KELLERMANN CHESTNUT STREET OPERA HOUJ SSUanc TUESDAY EVE., OCTOBER AND TWICE-DAILY THEREAFTJE3R PRICES, MATS., EXCEPT SAT, LoVw Floor. ,..,-. ... . . .soc, 7Sc 1st "Bakony..,........Me, 78c 2d Betfejoay.r,. l.Ve.aV..'. .,.aSe NIGHTS AND SAT. MAl .Lowajr KtKW, . . . ... .71 ltrBloiiy..; M BalMiiy,,. ,i. ;3Bs NOW mw r;vyv i" T r I mMiiim3m' .,,ZmM -MmM, , f