V ilS Jfeftifit$ gM xtogit PUBLIC LIDCCX COOT ANY OHHW ., K, CVMTM, Hwrtwi i BMTOfKAl BOARD TO X. X. Cvittt, ClMlmaiu I. X. WMAr.WT. . imittmitMum . .Bdltof C MAJtTK..,Oeerl Business Mtiuttr Biie misWih heuar. rffiaiielphi. ma CMiUiiiRtMil and Chtetuot Street "KfrtMt 791 inypniiiiij i ow BP? OlMiMti 'I EtMuL..i.MrMd find ChtvtuQt fHtwU n nKfirHt JViropoiufttviTowtr "is rora Huuain iMf Dmoerat Molldlo ,,. . VM03 Tribune Uulldln NKTT8 BURKAUSl -i.-Mwt BMQ ,....i.niri n.lldlnc iiuuainr UlriKH ir Btu....... .MJrronl nous, ptrana rM Bas... ,.,,.. 3nu Louis 1 Grand ' BtJWICRirTJO.V TEIIM8 Br aarrter. 'at n( rr week. TJr mall, mmmw Outside of Phll.delphl. .xcept whtr. refta peaia. 1 required, on month, twentr-fl- aM: aim rear, three dollars. All null MrtptloM eytl. In advance. NOTtcrt Hubscrrucrs wlihtn .ail Irese chanted awwt ftr old a. wilMiiw addre.a. BELL. WM VALNCr KEYSTONE, MAIN JMO tw tmk mnm,,.yi,...n S'n". l,u.' MUi rto . j 00 Frledrlcnsl tjimmr ltitu.....,..Mirconl House, pi f i ii CT Address all fomimmffntlont M nelii(; Avtfiwr. fndeptndtnos Square, Philadelphia. uxmm t tub rniunxrrm rorornc n . sacoxo-cuM suit, uirru. Ti , i i . -' THH AVERAOB NET PAID XMILT Ctn- CatATlON Or TIIB EVENING LHDOEn FOR BRTTIOIHK WAS UI.S s rviii.ifhu, Meeds?, 'eeieber u. mi, lm (p fcy iltiiit fm ft-fan, I cA steady f gem of man. IVAitf-. c Aa thoiBtudents say, Pcnn Borry-ud Pnn State. According to Mr. lClplIng-, "we will confine ouraelv to something qutto sano anfi aimtlo." Ho, doe not mean, we may surmise, our Mexican policy. If Doctor Eliot keeps on amending' niaorene or Wilson It will not look so much like damning with faint praise as It will look like praising with faint damns. r - " Democrats will admit, we bellovo, that the war Is a protective tariff and under (t we" ire enjoying exceptional prosperity. Let's keep It up by electing Hughes. We may respectfully suggest to tho Judges that the enormous per capita con sumption of water In Jft'est Philadelphia Indicates that there Is no need for addi tional saloons. r .v It Is Interesting to qbscrve that W. B, Vare Is tho Washington party can didate for Coiyjrcs from the First Dis trict. Why the, wings don't 'sprout Is more than we Joan; guess. The BufiKCommerdal, 'in a head line condemnnV,!fe circulation of knowl edge regarding: "Berth Control." Tho question may bo left for solution to that able cltlien. the Pullman porter. There ought to.bo jio additional Jax on any two-etory house In Philadelphia until every other resource has been ex hausted. Bit-the man who dooftnot vote right need, not expect io bo, taxed right. Why make moving pictures tho goat? If we must have censors, lot's have them, for everything. There are, however, a number of basic principles on which- this nation has thrived, and cen sorship Is not one of them. V ' The Miyor was 'astounded by the feats' done at the Police. Carnival. 'Ho , had never knpwn thero were bo many athlete on the force, he Bald. It might, be added that It Is surprising how many of these athletic. and manly fellows let themselves be bulldozed Into ha'ndlnp 4ut MS campaign contributions to Itttlo hench men whose muscles are cowardly threats and whose manhood, Is a minus quantity. The remarkable revelations by WI1-' llam C. Bullitt, in the Public Lodgor, of the secret rfnd tentatlvo treaties entered Into by Great Britain and Germany Just previous to the outbreak of the war, constitute a most Important 'contribution to current information. It appears tun' all Germapy had to do to be ftire of a plac In "the sun was to be peaceful a little longer.. Somebody pushed tho but ton too quickly, P. i Perhaps no moro powerful speech has been delivered during the campaign than that of Philander G. Knox nt Cin cinnati Saturday. fHe dwelfon the over throw by the Wilson Administration of the United States policy in the Orient. "This," he said, "was ho position of pres tige, Influence and advantage enjoyed by the -United States In Chinese affairs when bur present Administration entered upon its dutle. Immediately, however, mem bers of the Incoming regime declared war on all this, and tp It destruction they addressed the mighty processes of their vlrgl" minds." DoubHess their mind were decidedly moro virgin than their irocesaef were mighty. Or, as somebody remarked when told that Mr. Bryan had solved the Japanese question by going to California and talking about I", "Why In k U didn't he goon to China?" It was to be expected that the move. fc tnent ta ihm the city's charter would 4evetsp jockeying by the hostile faction. p- THm th,McNlcho! camp comes a ug. w vttKi for a ftingle-chambor Council ,, Vrftti a member from eacfc ward,vth.e theory evidently being that J t might thu Wrest control fro the Vare through tomlnatW the smalUr ward, Jut a i Um miH feHatea omUmM,,hav eon- troUg tj UiMted Mat Stmtt, wlire Mkf piaia it equally pnwsnted, though ?:.:S $ ttrg J!Uten held control ii the House, 3BWMrUa iHUMen fer mm future will Mi b attrtut4 My uh a ,Ur. ( It 1 wruun utat im Mr M khur tor aauiMMmanle tBt at all 90 y W to 'wm UMa4wajrM j!"" "er WB""! T""''f W "9 9WtnV W AwnaaM tn members. aa?tUM .fMrlam snh m tot fair mlnerity run. 14kinc iiM b wtVJer tten ;. " 1 ". f wrpMM from ail ro smm la thl 4vrtn th wk bimr ( wut wr "T"" ' r ; yf. Mev, tt Mm bmfltM of the d ynp kavei btt Jre4 by th cttt. wHer the toncrtabltahed heltal and line practice draw the more skillful phrte4. The country eMatrlcts, the preventable tragedlea of lonely farm houses, must ndt be forgotten In the ad vance of Mtncef It would be harder to tart a movement to give first-claw med ical treatment to our rural communities than bne to give the same thing In cen tral China. The great majority of the 18,000 womon who die In childbirth each 1 year In the United States live In the country, Doctors In Isolated places aro usually middle-aged men, who would Te failures In the towns, and few aro equipped 'to perform' operations. Great surgeons could perform a service In urging upon State governments the need for establishing small rural hospitals at the points where they would do most good, and In "an overstocked profession It should not be hard to find young sur geons willing to serve part of their ap prenticeship at these stations. mfiNIN0 -MI)ftll-PHILAXlWU. MONDAY. 0OT0B8 Jfc & THE !LAN TO ENCOURAGE SOUP HOUSES Th present lMidors of tho party are slncore opponmts or pro tectlonlam In all its form. America cannot keep htr pcoplo and their ma chinery buiy without world-wide trade : and she cannot win world-wide trad; without abandoning protectionism. In All probability, tho eravest of all His Issues to be determined Is this: Shall tho country relapse Into th- delusive policy misnamed protec tion, or continue to advance toward a tariff for revenue only? Charles W. r.llot. In defense of Wilson. TTNLK8S nil signs fall this great '-' dividing Issue of protection versus froo trade is likely to absorb tho atten tion of tho political speakers for tho re mainder of (the campaign. Republican leaders were Baying last week th.it tho Issues growing out of tho war, while Im portant, were not thoso on which tho election was to bo decided, and that pro tection was the question which would loom largo for the next fortnight. The Democrat liavo been trying to lildo their frcoTtrado sentiments. They have been following the President's lead In saying that tho Republicans wero so hard put to It that they were compelled to fall back on tbolr "outworn and thread bare arguments" In support of a protec tive tarlffw We liavo been told that wo should support Mr, Wilson becauso ho ha kept us out of war, because he can make charming addresses, becauso he lias tho courage to roycrso himself iwhen ho discovers ho Is wrong, and because he ha been able to lead Congress about at If It were a tame poodle ready to Jump through the circus hoop at his command. But hardlj a whlspor has been hitherto uttered about a tariff for rovonuo" and tho unconstitutionality of the protective policy. Doctor Eliot has torn all this pretenso asldo and has boldly proclaimed tho primacy of the free trade Issue, Ho ad mit that Mr, Wilson has made grievous blunders In Mexico and In dealing with tho railroad crisis. Yet in spite of theso blunder ho would have us think that Mr. Wl'son should be re-elected because the Importance of destroying tho protec tive tariff Is so great tfiat all other ques tions must be regarded a secondary. He would have us believe that the only vay to keep our people employed and our factories running Is to reduce tho duties in tho Underwood law still further, to ejilargs the freo list, and to open our markets to tho products of tho rest of the world. Ho Is only a little bdlder than his follow Democrats In proclaim ing his opinions. The rest of them agree with him. Mr. WHion Is tho samo kind of an academic theorist and Is committed to the same economlo heresies that are popular wltli men who, like Doctor Eliot, have had.no business experience of a com petltlvo sort. If they have their way tho conditions thatproduced business stagnation follow ing the "passage of the Underwood law will bo restored as soon as the war ends and the wall of protection accidentally reared around us Is removed. Indeed, the probabilities are that the stagnation would) bo worse because ot tho threat to do away with every protective duty as fast a possible. It Is Inconceivable that the voters can be deluded into approving any such de structive doctrine. The workers who wero idle or employed on part time two years ago, before tho war prosperity began, are not likely to bo attracted1 to the party which promises to strike a still heavier blow at American Industry If it Is re turned t5 power. Tom Daly's Colunn TUB JOYB OF TRA7Xh When tMi paper eott to prcut We'll e near ntttlurgh, toe1 nueit; But ifc'H bet the morning wall On our roll-fop irill not all Tq confnln tlx qulpt or etpht HulU on "V, 1'. Oerrved State," IIKWARE THE UUNKHOUND! Serving tho City Beautiful Ho Cites All Unlovely Things Tor two whole days tho Bunkhound mas missing from it kennel. We were beginning to grow nnxlous when a gray Uniformed boy from the postoftlce lianded vis thli upoclal delivery letter: nr Sir Whll on mr wy to th olt link trrily, ntttlnc In the mokim car of th 130 Chmtnut Mill nccnrnmodttlorr O. unci It. (. I hrtnl fuftouo barkln The train hud atoppM at ChrltMi avnu t the tlmo 1 lookf J out ot the wlndofr, Mpl there nn the platform waft your bunkhound. I'm iura It we he, beoauee lie wore ' h lllite litanket mark- w "Kor rmiiy" ana O aleo hla roller katea. He elrln and enapplnr at three nr four men who were un lonainir rreicnt I mm the bairgaro car. Tor k Inna tlma 1 cnnldn t understand what It waa all about, but after a while, when I eaw by my watch that we had !een hlnir there for tweluo mlmilea. I realized what It waa that disturbed )our Ul tra pec. i nave learneu THE GOMPERS BQOMERANG UNION labor is called upon by Mr. Gomper to cast its Independence to tho winds once and for all and commit Itself to the Democratic! party. The American, Federation of Labor leaders, In asking organized labor to vote taj block for Wilson, nave bunded themselves to the history of such movements In non political bodies. Once an association labels Itself as Republican or Democratla it can exer clso persuasion over neither Republicans nor Democrats, The one party is made frankly hostile, the other fears no threat from men suro to, vote for Jt. It is also a well-established fact In this He publio that any bloalc vote IrrltateH -all citizen not in that block. Men who would vote the Democratic ticket, but who happen to be suspicious of the mo tive of labor lenders, will be estranged by the Gomper call. The padded-oell section of the "Democratic press under stands this -t&ll In trying to show that the hyphen vote Is for Hughes. It ex pected that such support would prove a boomerang The belief" that the organized labor voto Is all for Wilson would be just the same kind ot boomerang. For there 1 us much foolish prejudice against organised labor voters as a class as there 1 against American' voters pf German (tecaent a a clas. Any grewpimr of pwnons as a otesa or a Hi MHotleq l "one party 1 net y wsalnalng tf) thtr power, but also to 'He afty IMr ji. guk a eempaet uroufrW e Hfs mwi the fir of an UmnaifcitT'Ti ajrf that wvuM not b dniwi) aatent a party t-amhf ltta that weave aa4 ejit among alt !, The StoHd gaiata that t-oMkt soUetarity U a weak imm la tb (kfcsocratlo party,. A li1 utk ktvMM Jolid North, X solkl or, BttiHti Vmrtminti roukl be a aiMlku wsakaatl tt ta1t a aU4 iiiwMi- Maaaatlaa). K3 M upon Inquiry that that train le orten ued rnr nanaim xrcivnt i waa o deltthted with your bunkhound'a Intelligence that I picked hlra up and will take htm over to fogan tomorrow mornlna: to pay hli reapecta to the l SS train at that elation. It'a never on time If thta la not aattafactory to )ou, pteaae telephone (letmantown 2027 W, and I'll return him at once, John Henry, Oh, very wtjll; s ipposo you tako caro of him this wrok vthllo wo'ro out ot town. 300 KIXCTOKAtu VOTI AI.ItK.nV WON ran HUGHES Headline In N. T. Bun. lias he realty bridged the chaamt Or thin a mere phantasm; Or a partisan orgasm That should near a cataplasmt To be brief ami end this spasm Of pedantlo pleonasm Docs the Sun's cnthuaheslasm Hake iou reallu think ha has'mt , TALK OK flAT-ARY RAI8R roil KTATIHTICIAN , Newi head. Tit'O thousand dollars for Cattcllf Lord bless his heard he earns it well, t ll'i should a statistician count Or bother with a less amount Mil. niMWX TO HKB I-AhMNO O.V U-I10AT8 Headline In Kve, Contemp. Deck passenger? Not a bad Idea. 1IUGHDY. COOKll'.S 1TII JO mJTTtlt Oft KOOS JIlx, together one cup of eour milk, one cup of iilr, one teaipoon of hot water, aprlnkle with augar when rolled out and bake tery quickly, a pa eon with grated cocoanut, lemon or vanilla. , 0. d. p. Dear-Tom-r-Thls Is cheaper than appears In the hcadl'ne. I'm norry f spent J9.G0 for a barrel of flour last wcrk when you caKfmako 'em without. LAMBERT. IN a letter to tho editor 6f the Now York Sun this helpful hint to Persian cat owners Is glcn: To prescrvo his fur from moths, as well ns provldo'for his proper self-amusement, I give my Persian kitten camphor balls to play with. o lUft'llo HobcrU. 1nrv Marl, n V& ttr...J,.i. SX" .I.,0?;' f ' elxty-three jcara of lffo epent without the knowledge of the comfort of an nfter-dlnner amokej began uelng tobucco yeeter- ''Ho many political rhrara." he explained to hla four torn and three, hrothen "were thrum at me-ech day I could no longer reel.t." . Kaneaa City Tlmea, , And after election "perhaps trio four sons and threo brothers, $111 club to gether and buy him a non-polltioal cigar. Millennial Menus These meals will bo Bcrvcd every day (lncl. Frl.) in certain neighborhoods: IJItGAKPABT Mountain Stirabout DevrO Goat'' Milk DINNBM. Crutakeen Corn Deef ,and Lawn Murphya Connaught Apples aulneaa'a Spuds Praties suprisn Mountain A Wettln o' Toy .Uew Spuds D. L. Q, may or may not have Aeen In Ireland recontly, but nt any rate he de Clares that a clergyman there, having ad vertised for an organist, received the fol lowing: "Dear Blr I noticed you have a vacancy for an organlat and muelo teacher, either lady or Kentleman, Having been both for aeveral .rare, I beg to offer my acrvlcea." Sir Probably you have quite a number of mouths to feed. Are you.pald by check? None o' my business Yes, but lU'.en: In a reataurant at Water rind South streets I noticed the following sign: ONE MAN ONLY PERMITTED TO EAT ON A CHECK S. A a. And In the N. Y, Sun appeared this head: ; TWP WOMEN HURT BY 'MOTOR And ' directly under the story an ad beginning; ARE YOU RUN DOWNT THERE'S'A RSA0ON From a letter to the treaaurer of a military reboot i I was greatly surprised to receive a bill for books, etc It seems to me I have paid for mllltar and art and library quite often during the six months. What' the ussT I am not running a bank. I won't pay for things he will never make use of and no good to hltn and lets to me. I want to Know more about this business than to sit still and cash up,- I don't want a dun ning bill svery week, etc I ain't raising him for the army, neither do I wan;, him to wear his eyes out on novels or library, so please give me a correct answer. When It comes to this sort of swing-. Ing melody Ted Robinson, of the Clevje land Plain Dealer, need hush hi lyre An no rival: , OCTOBER SONO ,' Across the heaven white clouds are saving, And winds are walling among the trees; All southward Hying the birds aro calling. And leaves are falling with every breeze. The dry reeds rattle, the dead leaf niilvers. The hoar frost shivers aerps th awn ; ThS thrush and catbird that erst made riot Now sadly quiet await the dawn1 1 Deep In the woodland In polsy caucus, With voices raucous convene tile crows j Across the meadow, like parting: lovers. tv-Th. kllldeer plovers Wall out IMIr wo Here where the flicker, of heme enamored, All summer hammered, at last Intruda The graol sparrow, who fights and chat . tew Of rlbaki matters, and use! brood A ad yet my outlook la not unehaerful, Kor wholly taarfal.ar. aWumn darn Tbavffc ftewer we faded and bird ars'l jy gfeg ,1aart gkwlng ean sing their feral 3 WfetU in my haart, dear, your voJo i riaglng. iTtt kiraa are slaflag all winter tiueeiokw Ana to your taaa, ky, , aartk'a towmat - WMkW WvtaVUlM V -GROSS I ft&'Sm r , x i - I... - , j : 1 , f a t t ' I m. . J!IiL,0N03p mi tsfTHcl w: .?"? en Colonel M.iJlT,,, irftlpt T"", Market at letti ALL THIS WE. Courtetr of PartmouBt tTctn Lwl J. Belmlck " rreaente CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG In Kxclntlr Flfit Treeentatlon of th l'hoto-Drama 8enea- tlon ot Beaton THE COMMON LAW Adapted from KoTtl by nobtrt W, p A t : a nv s" jiaiikct t. , a "VialVI jauAiNunuj SWEET THOMAS MEIOHAN -"-iliOOlOl ThUra., Frl.. Bat.. Maria Doro la "n, 8TA C0 08CKI m THEAT ORCH1 A THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE 'Free Trade in Labor Denounced by a Workingmarr Differences Between Hypnotism and Magnetism Said to Be Fun damental Cattoll's Salary TMi Department U frtt fo all reodfra tefco U)ll lo cj"rc their opinions on tubiectn ot current Interett, It is an opeu orum. rind the Evening Ledger atmumet tio rctponjlbilitv tor th tlrtc of )l corrrepoadotla. .etler miiet be alonril bv the name and nMres or ine toHIrr, not nrcenarllu or subllcallon, out oe a ffuarantce of good faith, , CATTELL DESERVES $5000 To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Perhaps the most startling thing hi regard to the announcement of a movement to Increase the salary of Hdward J. Cattell. City Statistician. hurfiVrlst, orator, enrerj talner and walking advertisement par ex cellence for rhllndclphla nnd everytMpg worth while pertaining to the city arjO I Its welfnre. was that ho Is getting only ,2400 a year, and It Is only proposed to pnftr him f 3000 a year. You would have hard ork to convlnco most of tho thousands who hao enjoyed his eloquence and come urfder his Infectious geniality that he dldn'f get at least $5000 a year, and earn Uylce that amount. Mr. Cattell Is Just one of the hardest worked men to be found anywhere, nnd at seventy years ofnge ho asks no odds, but sets a pace for the best of tUem' among tho youngej- men in years because Cattell la as young In spirit and geniality ns any body could be, and that Is tho only way to reckon ages, at any rate. ' By all means, make -it $3000 1 You couldn't find a voto In Philadelphia against it. The Evenino LKiwKn docs him plain lusttce when It voices tl;se sentiments editorially, wnlleat the Bathe time showing the proper spirit of falrnes toward a man who Is far too modest to 'ask anything for himself except the prlllgo ot serving his city and hit) fellow men y YlDWARD KUWTON HAAO. Philadelphia, October 21. HYPNOTISM VS. MAGNETISM To the rdlter 0 Oi nvenlng htdaer; Sir Mr. John Elfreth Walking Is hu morous caustic Wis "article on Mesmer Is diverting, but nevr'heleB8 misleading. Magnetism is not an Invention of the modern scholars y it has been known for all ages. Wa can find trace of its knowl edge and of ltB use in every countrg nnd every religion. Furthermore, It Is, undoubt edly, that Which was the basis ot all deeds and cure recognlxed years gone by under the generic name of miracles, and which wo find easier nowadays to simply deny. The priests ot the apclent temples of Egypt, the prleits of all myetto religions, ns well as tho great imitators and the great conquirors who have msde history, knew or at least feuspected his foroe, and, ot course, used It. Healers, thaumaturgl, nronllets and all those who through centu ries have left behind them an enigmatical tnlst (and not excepting our sympatheto Jlllty Bunday) used more or less directly, with or without knowledge of cause, this fsclnatlpg force which Doctor Mesraer has slot Invented, . But it Is to Poctor Mesmer that wo owe the renovation of physiological magnetism, 'which avas called nt that time "animal magnetism." and known today as "mes merism." It Is hs who, In a few aphorisms and propositions, exposed all the theory on which he hasjbullt his fame and this science of today. .. Doctor Mesmer has been repeatedly re proached, not only with hvlng invented nothing, but with liavlng used the works ot his predecessors to obtain an easy glory It might be poifflble. but nevertheless we must give" him credit for having cleaned magne tism from a snjdley of Ineomprehenalble oooult formula, from sfilm we take th starting, point of tile, actual evolution of magnetism: but w know tpat Mesmer, did not even have tuo -honor of the nam., and that Paracelsus, who was considered lnjils time as the father of The.magietUm, gave it that name. But Paraaeteus, thoug he was a great savant, a flxu-clia physician, one of th deepest and 'wast learned "pe. eultlats," waa wrong la uniting ,h "pceult scleBO." aueh a alehemy, astrology, etc.. with magnetlwi. Jle dd ijot apeclalUe.j a Mesmer dW, and. He oould not tatablWi yn tlvetloally a theory of the magnetism as the former did. This l true that the n)olrn "Hiaitn.tl8ta't start magnetlam, establUaad m rational bais, torn Doctor Mesmer, Dootor Wwnr. in hi Jlme, had lot of Bartasaaa aM felwa,but also many d. ,trae"tora'nd hB)Ua. It U worth meatlon Ing that Wa toUawara oqtclaily dlsoev4 the "magnetic omoaJnbullstn'' and U "eondltlonVf oaUWpy, af oaUiaptlo f4y or trance among th,raagntld subje4.- It I only In th tnidaH of tb nln.teU oentury thai Jama wtmo Kvra m ! m 4 Wi bfoduced from a particular force ema nating from the organism, as It was claim ed by the partisans of the magnetism, but through tho Indirect Influence of the ope rator on the brain of a more or lessl sensitive subject, or then, through a fatigue ot the nerves, resulting from a. sus tained and prolonged attention. JYom this started "Braidlsm," which later on became hypnotism, which was mode known In about 1880 through the emi nent French physician and alienist Charcot, who definitely established Its laws. Consequently, when Mr. John E. Wat kins states that Doctor Mesmer "gave to tho world mesmerism, that mysterious force now generally called hypnotism," It proves that ho Is 'not very well nossesaed of tlia .subject ho Is writing about. Hypnotism differs from magnetism by the manner of considering the phenomena and by the difference of the process UBed. Two utterly different schools are represent ed by the hypnotlzers and the magnetlzers; the hypnotlzers see in the phenomena, pro duced by them only the effect of suggestion and uto-suggestlon, taking as a basis the moro or less great sensitiveness of the sub jects. The msgnctlzera, on the other hand, admit tho existence 6f a special force acting upon the organism by Inhibition, whlfti Is, for them, the real factor of the phenomena. ilypnotlsm has received official recogni tion by the very fact that In France the practice of It Is strictly prohibited to any one but physkclnns. Under therapeutlo form, hypnotism has done wonders. A similar law In this country would be very beneficial: If would hinder considerably luvicio uiiu quacjtp. Philadelphia, October 2 anonaK dorsay. 1. 9 What JDo You Know? Queries of general intercut tolll o. aneteered jn ttiit column. Ten auejtjont, the anawrra to which tverv welt-Informed person thouldknow, art askett dally. QUIZ 1, Mllrhell Tar will he obaerred on Oetober 30 la l'ennejlianla. In nhoee liooor? z. Why doe. popcorn "pot"f 3. What la meant br "a poller of aruttle"? . What bona In tb. bodx. la called the ecutum, and wtij? , S. What la "Dollar Diplomat!"? . What la "aelllnr ahorf'T 3. What are desiccated apple? 8. What l the ameltlnc of metals? S. Who waa l'arnell? 10. What Ii "acrlp" In financial parlance? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. A Mj In th the aea vi nnrhorlue (round m nfflnrt ATM In thnt tinrt tf the. aea vfilhle from ahore Ur beyond S. rial. ilat thick data of line qualltr rati In plaice for r.i wlndoive, rte. it luia the earn, cnrapoiiltlon aa alieet and crown alaM, but la melted In vat open leaaela reellnc upon framea behind fire-clay doore. S. Grand Vlxleri prim, mlnlater to the ruler In Mohammedan countrlee. 4. "Annnlaa Club"i a 'Jocular docrlptlon-'of thoe whom Blr, Knoeevelt liaa accuned of prevarication. The allutlon la to th. etorjr In the llfth chapter ot Arta. 5. Tlilmlilcrlrclnti plavlnt a ,,lclcht-of-han(l trick with three tulniMe-eHaped runa and a pea, bratandrra beltln which cup rotrra the poa. . Thy l'ep. rare Henrr VIII the, title "De fender of the Ka th" for writlpr. a bosk attacklnr I.uther'a bellefa. 7. Xlllareei ornamental work of fine cold, all rer or copper wire formed Into delicate tracer?. S. "Balnt" mean. "hlj"i m that "It. Rcpul chre" mrnna "llolr rjepulrhre." It can lie upplled to object us well as to per- . The prefix form n i uniim urouznt uu to aale to u nrauTla.a f lia m 10. Knltht errant i "errant" meaiu "wander, lux," or roumlnc In oue of adienture Ii "neo" means "new." or " new of"t "nco-riatonlum" would be ilim brouibt uu to date to suit mora FREE TRADE IN LABOR To the Edl(or of the Evening Ledger: Sir I read the letter of Mr. Frazler and big to say he Is rather sparing with the truth when ha says the Underwood law Is a free-trade measure. It simply lowered the duty on some commodities, that's ait. Furthermore, there never can be a free trade tarlO, as the word tariff Is denned as ixlng a duty on certain commodities, and iree traae means the Importation of good free of charge. Now the principal commodi ties Imported free of charge' up to 1914 were undesirable alien labor and dyestuff. Why dyes were left on the free list by the Republicans who exacted a high tariff orf every other foreign article can be best .explained by tlyse. who used It The He oubllcan party persistently advocates high tariff on manufactured goods to prevent being flooded wltht the foreign article, but not a word as to- a tariff or head tax in the same ratio as the manufacturer's tariff lo prevent the American working people being flooded with aliens, Blxty per cent ot whom have no Idea of making this thel? permanent home, live contented In the most congested and Insanitary manner, expend the least possible amount ot their earnings and carry the remainder out ot the country. Under our present grand Republican scheme this class -do.in't pay the Government one dollar for The privilege of competing jlth our loyal American work people This Is the class of high tariff that Mr. Hughes says goes hand In hand with prosperity. Now, no one know better than he-that there la not a particle ot truth In that as sertion, as I know from my personal, mid experience It Is also a matter of his tory that every panic or business depre. tlon from 1873 to 1(11 originated under Republican administration and high tariff on lndur.tres and unrestricted Immigration. Th 1S93 panlo under a Republican Cen gresa and an exceptionally high tariff on Iron virtually ajaVted In July.' 1US, at Carnegie' Homestead mllU4y a strike and riot, culminating in the panic by rea son ot surplus labor eausd by' unrwtrWad Immigration. The, prosperity during the Mnlo et 1501-0 J under flepubtlean, aelrala rMratrenand th highest tarUt 'on mumi. faured good everlknown in this coun try arvdfr trade labor beat alt reeerd With million out a work. " ' PhliadaipMa, Oater o, " NQT X PARTY QUESTION What bat Prtl to do 'with a sHua. tlon lib, that which .new eeafroat the .American, electorate Thar- raaUr 1 no 194 jar that- to tr InW it at ait, fr. - - - - iltliAiu nr. m.ii i - WtbMa not UW bW. 1b w hv aa OMtortiwHy to oooi- aarvMas of a mm 4MjBaHitofl tt iwftwr CHESTNUT ST. OPERA HOUSE TWICE DAILY 3:1B and SllS THE OllEATEHT AMl'SEilENTt ETENT IN A CKNTUItV 1 WILLIAM TOX Present. A DAUGHTER OF THE GODS witH ANNETTE KELLERMANN THE PWTVltB BBXVTIFOL Matinee- Except Baturday .., 25c to 76o Evenings and Saturday Matinee, 250 to II. ACADEMY OF" MUSIC PHILADELPHIA ' ORCHESTRA LEOPOLD 8T0K0W8KI, Conductor Symphony I Friday Aft., Oct. 27, nt 3:00 Conaerta Sat. Evo'ne, Oct. 28, at 8:1B Soloist I rilANIt; OITTELSON, Violinist Overture. "Anacrton'1 .... ,. ,t,CIIKllLiJlNi Violin Concerto In U ............... jjtli ii.VJ Bn. 8uM, "Bcheh.ratad.." MH HIMSKY.KOHSAKOW Beats Now en Bsl. at Hepp.'., 1U9 Chestnut METROPOLITAN , Mai. ouay e oeata si TONiaitT A8tl0 Jgw HIPPODROME gJK jn "HIP, HIP HOORAY" BOUSA I CHARLOTTE and III. I -and The Marvelous BAND 'BALLET om Jfat. Wills.. Ca..T. Aldrlcb. BW Others 8e.tjt MttropojIUn Oparl llos, n" VrWH. 110S Clut eMr.it; I CE Boston Symphony .Orchestra ftSfljffP' ACADEMY OE MUSIC Me. vs.. Oct. Mf at 8:lj FRITZ KKBISLE TlCKtTMl AT UWVWH AjiroaS. ' , j, mi t -Trill i '77 '" '"in utn -Tvunout a utiancn" ;ftc A - eaMMPjiBp "ie; 4' iiteBOTraiKsL "irWaSKS DuaonTf UtoMm CU., Kt ARCADE A "WS II. B. Warner '" Vagabond Thura , Frt.. Sat NORMA TAtOttoaii --- - ACADEMY OF MUSI0 SEItlEa OF S AFTERNOyX H8CTfcMj j josef HOFMANN'r Thurada- Afternoon. November I, at I of SAMAROFFf Thursdar Atternoon, November 11 at 1 nr TT-iTr JJ.MB. AU1A Vji-UOlV Friday Afternoon, December 1, tt fcajp KFREM ZIMBALIST TnOrsJay Afternoon, Januarj It) at i MISCU4 HiLilVliiiN v Thursday Af tarnooa. Februarr 11 t I Tickets 13.75. H CO, 11,00, UN, Boxes iuO.UU and 1S 00. New . Hepp.'. HIS Chestnut Street UDHAn Tnn.rrlif at I Mi ijj..vyxx' ""o"vg IS I Wei uiiAi(L,t.s munjiAN rrtseat. RIO GRANDJ; Th. New nay or Army Ute on tb. H Border, by AUQU8TUS THOaUS , popular wn, aiat.. wun utn Heat, i NEXT WEEK SEATS TlinUBar OTIS ... MiaTTO . rTrrTXTXTTir. " Vm5rT ii DJtVliNiNiU .rUNlUruU TlirtEK PI'KCIKL, MJlTrVH TOMOnitOW, THima. and ria, at i MAUD ALLAj And Iter 8ymphony Orchestra ot f V rreeentfna; Her Wonderful Dumt T ,'S Seats renting; Her wonderful DtnMs TM THVtnd All London for 1 Tew. i NOW. 12.00, 1 1. B0. 11.06. fk, Forrfest- JULIA HANDERSON DONALD UntAN joacra cawthoiin T net- R P-fm IfttHMM """""'o"' Wetl ln r M th. D1 Muilcst O. Corned NEXT. WEEK Seats Thur 'lpth Anniversary Product rLOHS GAsRRICK "ktr.ZlM JANE COWL 1N Common Top. Wed. Mat.. With Best Seat. 11.' T.VRTP Beeinninjr Tonijt Th. MEKOIIH. D11UBE.IH rree q w"ej"i. Th. I'rlw-Wlnnlnf Musical "THE GIRI FROM BRAZIL" JHfWf tP'P'y ' X(r TrfMt- . anew. A Great Slnglnc Cast of Tai A ileal ueauur vnorvs i Wonderful Ensemble, ana Tf'n ftnlrirr to.Rft Somo ii Frolic at tho Lyric Toajg 1). Among Those Present aM Be ADELPHI10"?! TODA'Y From 6 A. M. taMidrfl 31.000 SEATS t For the Most Wonderful Play la At EXEERIEN Are on Sale for Last 8 W ' u..i. vnr All Remalnln PerteeM Up to and IncluJtng 8aturlrA..iJ TWO BOX OFrlCEH OPKN DfULM IlOtmB 12 to 1 and 8 to JJfrj ntrr 1 LINE AT O.NCK OB 10B WBarJ eXperiic: ACADEMY OF MUSIC MONDAT jsvu' JAN ". OaJI Harold Bwf. Clausaen, jom Tvinnn. Season sale now at Heppe's, Prtai I S3. 13 CO. Boxes $3, 130, W, " New York Symphony Orchestra VICTORIA MABKKT Ab AUU TMI ... mr . n-j.--? -cTit winof tmmwrNTAl Francis X. Bushman & BW In Metro' .Special Product m ".ROMEO AND JU 1230,000 Offerln. W B. F, Keith's 7rcmrAr . aVaTOlltM i "The Age of JACK WILSON i MAY naudam TIIRATEIt ln.nlJ bv A.SISI fh.ri.. Kelloaa1: Wlnsor McCl VKlTO'fiiliJM wwfttvnavcXiX HALL -..-.------ . s 44 " uiffn .vvTKtlNOON. NOV 1 6s,'dWo I Eminwt AwarJcj" M its at Met, a 111 v"1" by Tickets rlU 'Theater' . lc ltop . .. .- -k- ViUU-Mt I i-AyiUriali -- juiurlM IM THE GLOBE TR0TTBM1 . T :'.'.' MARKXT I '.vrtOM K AVH '.Dally. vA.vs-a - w. .j,,,, t THE LAWN P .l, r ... T- ' v ifiimtUY OF Ml SWrdy Aftwwo" Nov. U.j KRE1. issau,rii-rs.w- fHiiVsrarilOCker 1ii -FOB tm UA