Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 26, 1916, Night Extra, Page 10, Image 10

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cTHinji Jf. K. cutr
V.Jnnfp, Becretarr anl
QMEm. Jehn t. Williams,
rOBUC UtDGER COMPANY
envy m. k. cuwiB, rwHii
viee rreetentt
Treasureri rniup B.
IMrectora.
I. John
fa, i
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RD1T0KIAL BOARD I
Criti H. K. Ctnmi, Chairman.
WHALKT.. ,
Editor
General Madness lltnsrer
fOttK C. MART1K.
ftrMfefc4 taltr mt rcmo T.rtxma liutldlnc,
Ifiaeeienaenca mjuere, imianeipm
Uroad and Chestnut Streets
K
. PresefMlm rtulMIne?
.204 Metropolitan Tower
.czo tvra iiuiiiinc
CxrL
axnn Citt
TOtK.i ...
KTi ..........
Locn....... 400 Globe-Democrat llull.tlnc
kmomi i. Z02 rrltmne uulldinc
NEWS DimEAUSt
WiiBiKflfoH DCD...., nine Uulldinc
Ifxr Tot Itmiv The rimn llulljlne
jsmuk Hracio ... 00 Frledrlchetrasee
Lewo llramo Mirronl House. Ptrsnd
fiitt Driutr, . . . 32 flue Louie U Orand
sunacntPTioN tekms
Br carrier, alx eente per week Tlr mall,
entr-ald outside of Philadelphia, except where
(ratcn posters la required, one month, twentr
flea emsi ona year, threa dollara. All mall
tafcevrlptlons parable In advance.
Konca 8ubecrlbera wishing addreee chanted
Htet (Ira old aa well aa new addreaa.
BELL, M00 WALKUT
KEYSTONE, MAIN 1004
7 AAtrrss nit cemmunlcnfloas to Evtntng
Stiver, tndeftndeno S Quart, Philadelphia.
bktchd it Tna rnifiDrtrnit marornci n
accoND-cLiia uiil uinu.
THE AVEItAOB NBT PAID DAIIT CIR-
CULATION OP THE EVENINO LEDGER
FOR HKI'TF.MllEH WAS llt.OBS
rhltsdtlphls. Thor).T. Oclebv M. lt.
Soft it the music that would charm
forever ,
The flower of tweeletl tmell it thy and
lowly. Wordsworth.
The announcement that Colonel
Bouse Is for Wilson Is about duo. The
other prominent Democrats havo alrfcady
been quoted.
Senator OUlo James, ot Kentucky,
ays he believes Ohio will glo Wilson a
majority of. 100,000. Captain Sweeney,
of the murines, being In tho audience,
Senator James had ono believer.
One Is Impressed by the great
number of political skits seen on the
Vaudeville stage. It's a poor sort of rule
that Isn't counteractive. Vaudeville has
been seen In politics for a considerable
pell.
Democratic enthusiasm for Wilson
la simply rampant In Charleston, S. C,
whero after many days of solicitation
among business men almost a thousand
dollars has been -promised for tho cam
p.. gn fund. '
Pennsylvania is ono of the twelve
great wheat growing States. Tho crop
this year, which is estimated at 25,070,000
bushels. Is greater than In any pre
vious year since 1907, when a record
making crop of 30,000,000 bushels was
raised.
Mr. Bryan Is preaching pacifism
and Wilson In New Mexico, Arizona,
Utah, Wyoming, Montana, North Dakota
and Colorado, but the campaign man
agers do not allow him to como Kast.
They are willing to bo all things to all
men if thereby they can win votes.
w
A. man writes to tho New York
Sun from North Carolina that Doctor
Eliot, of Harvard, should como "back to
the Republican party where ho belongs."
Doctor Eliot 'could not come back to Re
publicanism because he has always been
ft Democrat. And he does not belong In
the party of protection because he Is a
free trader, and so convinced a free
trader that he Is willing to stomuch all
the Wilson blunders, which ho does not
tiesltato to name, rather than assist In
the election of a protectionist.
, The purpose ot tho nonpartisan act
was to get nonpartisan Judges, not in
experienced Judges. It was not, indeed,
to deprive Judges of political afllllutlon,
but It was to have them considered nol
en their merits as party men but on their
records as able and fatr-mlndcd men. It
is hard to see how the election of Mr.
Palmer of Chester over Supreme Court
Justice Walling could spring from any
thing but what amounts to partisan feel
ing. The Justlco served nearly a score
ef years on the subordinate bench and
was virtually never overruled. For his
' ability and fairness the lawyers of the
State urge his election. The people should
put their O. K. on his candidacy.
For the first time since the advance
en Verdun was halted last summer tho
German arms have accomplished a pro
gressive forward movement. That tho
great effort is being made in the Bal
kans shows how perilous the hostility of
.Rumania appeared to Berlin. That hos-
tlllty threatened nothing less than the
uttlng off of Bulgaria and Turkey from
their allies. It would have been as seri
ous to Germahy as 'the capture of Phila
delphia by Lee would have been to the
North. How much the western line was
thinned to provide men for Falken
hayn's arft Mackensen'a armies cannot
tea known 'until the Allies' drive on Ba
paume has developed. Even the capture
of that town cannot offset the blow at
Rumania. Germany has received new
prestige and, evldenco of staying power
at the moment when the tide seemed
permanentfy set against her.
-r "" ' ' ' ' ' ' " T ..-.'- ... ... .
Department e Commerce to exert all
the power of the Government to protect
In foreign ports the trd which this new
line Is entitled to and which It can get
if foreign shippers are free to use what
line they please.
REVOLUTION BY BALLOT
T'
JIB country Is facing a political
revolution. For the first time since
the period of 18G0-18GO two vitally opposed
Interpretations of our system come to the
death grip. Is the one to take lasting
hold of the Imagination of the people or
the other?
The ono conceives the central govern
ment as driving toward free trade and
mnklng up for the ensuing dislocations
and losses to labor by enforcing higher
uage at the exponse of wealth stored up
for production. . The other conceives
the central government as committed,
by the known facts concerning the dif
ferent standards of living In tho nations,
to a protection which shall nicely de
termine tho flux of trade so that din
locations nnd losses will bo avoided; and
1 looks to co-operation between all classes
of workors lind work leaders to retain
both high wages and the Integrity of
storod-up wealth.
These definitions do not sound so thrill
ingly emDattled as the cries of "Slavery"
and "No Slavery." which we fondly
Imagine wcro tho essenco of tho toll
ing days In tho decade preceding tho
Civil War. There were no such battlo
crles beforo the catastrophe. Tho I.ln-coin-Douglas
debates were a web ot the
most complex nrgumrnts on matters
which only touchod slavery Indirectly.
Neither side for a long tlmo dared to
come out openly for or against slavery.
Douglas wns not pro slavery enough to
suit tho South; Lincoln was too moderate
to suit tho North entirely. The leaders
always havo to split hairs. It takes a
keen nose to detect the atmosphero of
great coming changes.
In any caso wo approach a new era.
Tho war nnd Its unknown results, the
portentous realignment of our parties In
1912, agricultural as well as industrial up
heaval and dissension, bringing wheat,
cotton and milk Into politics as well as
steel and leather, mark the steps toward
a crisis to fix tho color of the new po
litical thought that Is to be. Already
wo can see tho combinations attempted;
the non-manufacturing sections aro Reek
ing an alliance with the organized Indus
trials of the great cities for a give-and-take.
Tho former would get cheap Im
ports and seek to allay tho alarm of the
latter over what cheap Imports mean by
hinting' at cheap and quick labor vic
tories through crisis-legislation such as
the Adamson law.
A Republican Ictory would prevent
this unnatural alliance unnatural bee
cause it could only mean an extension
of agriculture at tho expense- of Indus
try, which Is not our natural course. It
would bo natural In lagging 'Russia, but
not In Inventive America. The whole
history of our country is a change of sec
,tion by section from an agricultural
regime to a regime ot agriculture and
Industry combined. With tho symptoms
i
of protection growing in one wing of
tho Democratic party, a Republican vic
tory would clinch Its hold on that wing
as well as on the Progressives. Tho
Democratic party as it is today would be
dead It would not matter whether tho
namo survived or not, whether tho two
new parties were called Republican and
Progressive, or Republican nnd Demo
cratic. They would both be for protec
tion and they would differ only as to
method and not as to principle.
On the other hand, a Democratic vic
tory, meaning eight consecutive years of
control, might fix for a generation tho
decreasing ot duties on Imports, should
accidental causes, like the present wa
or masterful personalities, blur the real
Issue. What form the Inevitable po
litical battle-crisis would take, when the
technicalities were cleared away, one can
not prophely. It might be "Socialism"
or "No Socialism." It might be "Exports"
or "No Exports." But in any event, when
the disillusioned ahd impoverished in
dustrials awoke, and when the web of
complex argument was rent, the meat of
those battlecrtes would be the same as
those of half a century ago, "Slavery" or
"No Slavery."
If there is any red blood in the
Vtna of Philadelphia business men Brit-
Mt or other shipping interests will not
W permitted to prevent the development
f the foreign trade of this port. British
' waremacy on the. seas lias been secured
Ity the use of methods of competition
O Trtiloh would bring into the courts on
-fcarwea-ef conspiring to restrain trade
'W Amertean business men wfto adopted
taani. The cutthroat competition which
kM kn Mt up to prevent the new Phi la-
jisjMiw8owO American line from getting
i is Mt oft of the methods employed.
mHa4. has ten to blacklist
1 Hrtign porta 'from, which
freight Hivm bopad to get re-
K uwe shippers used
Mill. A lew rate offered' now
aatroy to, m Phlladelh,la line
amy until the Hn waaKiiia.
the old rata wouls) be raatorad and
British maoaaeiy ,wmM conUaue.
la aaistoaaa atiofjgfc Jaare and witfe-
M m, aUrfc Om
FACTIONS AND TAXES
Tom Daly's Column
nm and MAaaiB
Bavl It's, pleasant In October, when
things gtts so dull an' sober,
To be think In' of the sunshine of a cer
tain day In May,
Wen me an' Mag Moloney took a little
trip to Coney
A hang-up little outln' fur a summer's
holiday.
You kin bet since I teat treatln' Aey was
plenty o' good catln'.
An' dVj wasn't any side-show where we
didn't have a look;
But do day's tupremest pleasure what me
memory'll treasure
11'oj ic'cn mo an' pretty Maggie had our
tintypes took.
Bhe teas slch a pretty plxter when the
pttotypraphcr fired 'er
Where de light brung out do beauty of
'er sassy little face, ,
With its dimples all a-btinkln', dat he
must 'a' been a-thinkin'
lie had never had so sweet a little klddo
in his place.
An' me grin grcio wide an' wider w'en he
stood me up betlda 'er,
An' the hand h6madc me lean upon her
chair jlst shook an' shook:
Never feller's heart beat louder than yours
truly's did, or prouder,
Wen meself an' pretty Maggie tad our
tintypes took. e
t was tookln' jlst dls mornln' at some
photygraphs ndornlu'
The showcase of a photygrapher down
the Avenoo.
Dere was ono dot's got me gucssln'; jlst
a girl in pure white drcssln',
With a bridal veil an' bridal wreath an'
satin slippers, too,
An' beside 'er was 'er cltapple, tookln'
proud an' spruce an' happy
01 I wonder trill it ever be me luck to
see the day,
Bucctcit day in all creation, full o' joy
an' Jubilation,
Wen me an' pretty Maggie gits ourn
took that wayt
PERMIT mo to present a dear llttlo
friend of mine? Thanks! This llttlo
girl recently received a birthday present
from her aunt, and, wishing to write n
note announcing that tho gift had arrived
O. K she evolved this:
Dear Aunt Florence Many thanks for
your lovoly present. It arrived C. O. D.
M. U. II.
WE WERE talking about dictionaries
to our Ed Roddon tho other day nnd
o learned a lot, because Ed knows a lot
about such things. "Did you know," said
ho, "that I had helped to compile a dic
tionary made up exclusively of nlno-lettcr
words? Well, It's a fact, and we got to
gether a total ot moro than 200,000 words.
You see, tho Jook was designed for tho
uso of puzzlers; fellows who have tho
passion for making nlno-letter squares
nnd the llko of that. Thero is also a dic
tionary composed of eight-letter words.
Few ppoplo have any notion of the
amount of tlmo
and tho pains a
great many stu
dents take in
tho building of
what profes
sional puzzlers
call 'forms.'
Thore are
squares, dia
monds, half
squares, pyra
mids and all
OADAWAUA
ANEIjACES
DETASTE8
ALANTINE
WASTINOS
ACTINIA8
REENQAQE
A88ESSES
Jlr C. V nioua and Will
Dexter In
Henry (III.) Republi
can. July 31, 1H94.
sorts of geometrical figures, but tho most
popular are the square and the diamond.
Some months ago you ran a thlrteen
letter diamond In your column. Why not
print a square now, by way of sample.
The first six-letter square was published
In Godey's Lady's Hook In October, 1862;
the first seven-letter In 'Oats to Sift,' of
Juno 27, 1877, and tho flrst elghtMotter
(the Joint work of C. U. Hlous nnd Will
Dexter) In tho Henry (111.) Republican of
July 31, 1884."
Sir A sign on Fourth street between
Walnut and Chestnut streets reveals this
to our gaze:
PREFERRED ACCIDENT INS. CO.
What would be your preferred accident,
If you had to .have one? r
MACASAWA.
Bachelor Bereavements
TO DORA
Oh I Dora, dear.
You get, I fear,
Full many a guy's Angora.
Though scores there be.
In me you see
Your only True, ah I Dora.
TRUMAN.
TO PHYLLIS
Dear Phyllis, cease to make me rue,
And favor domesticity.
Could I but sup and live with you,
I'd bo In sweet felicity. ANDY.
AS MIGHT have been expected, Mr,
xxGaffney's tax suggestions Immediately
ara made to pivot on factionalism. Presi
dent Lennon, of Select Council, -favors
them, President Gleason, of Common
Council, opposes them. The former is a
Vara man, the latter a McNlchol man.
The McNlchol faction will oppose it
whether the plan Is good or not, in order
to embarrass the Vare administration.
Little can be learned from such opposi
tions The Vare president is for control
of the tax system by Councils; the Mc
Nlchol president for control by the Board
ot Revision of Taxes. The arguments
present the board aa an expert body,
though not quickly responsive to popular
opinion, and Councils as the medium of
popular opinion though not expert. It
should not be hard for Councils to sub.
mlt to 'expert leadership; but it appar
ently is Just as hard for It to submit
to public opinion, Meanwhile, it is In
formative to note upon what the faction
'agree. Both are willing to tax autoa. Be
yon4 that and a sweeping objection to
"metnod" Doctor Gleason la not specific.
It wMt W very helpful If he will express
arMleUm ot the plan io readjust sKate
Hd eUr taUMa. and the othar features ot
ajr, OMFMana rtjMa. d tU wtei
"ACH, A DOG'S LIFE ISS POLITICS!"
-A -.t '
.,:W . 'h
.'"
BMWcP
xs-rMafNpV I
CcPBB
T DLH - -l : " 'n "TH
The Northeast CorWj
Tho Camtniii,.. t. .
-"- "UBllJit !,
II
Before the Dreams of Early unr.,
"thought Voice out Inr
"below" th BrtkfMl '
And "Will you Ime your Pre,
boiled or tried r tn
Lawrence Sperry's feats with u.
Inir hnat or. !.. ..... .. u "
..- . .,... oi r summer
with supers and subs In ,. L
ships. Somo day some of the narT
may be able to tell Just how th
- " uwes oesiroTtra hu 1
stand Mr nnrf ... ., .. ""Ml
,, .;;. -; :"':." " u o
...- ...H niucKBi. It mutt
.. . Bwuu ucui ime standing
while a bulldog kills a kitten.
If Vance McCormlck hatn't
tntieh fn tVin 1nv . ,
.w ... rf A vilo nrMani - .
hna t I. ... i.i s. Mw'l
which trmilrl mnl a .iMni .. . . '
.. .....w w iiuvuminniMi ...
In a speech yesterday he r.muA T
question put by one ot his hearer,' A
couldn't get O'Lcary on the lr. J
T-Im TYa1Ih I- , ... .. ,
....... ,., 13 , me aualen.ee ha
""" oip lorwaru and get bur
It's a particularly short Ua,
aocsn i icaa anywhere.
1M4
THE VOICE OF'THE PEOPLE
A Republican Makes a Plea for Mercy for President Wilson and
Doubts if Hughes Could Have Done Better What
. the Clergy Might Do
These verses came to us some weeks
ago, neatly written uppn a square of
birch bark:
fflRCH-BARIC REFLECTIONS
The bark of the birch tree sweet odors
creates,
When burning, fresh-kindled. In wide,
cpen grates.
And Its warmth Is right cheerful at cool
eventide
Ot the bright summer days, when the
shadows abide
O'er the lee of the rocks which majes
tically tower
By the turbulent sea in the moon's early
hour.
The lamp In the lighthouse awakens Us
ray,
And sllontly guides, through the shoals
to the bay,
The ships which depend for their harbors
to make
Upon that faithful signal, which tells
them to take
The. one road to safety along the stem
coast
Of this beautiful cape of whose grandeur
wo boast.
The night deeper, softer, dellghtfuler
grows,
Wooing pleasure-tired hearts to refresh'
Ing repose;
The memory of 'sunset we witnessed with
vim. a i
By the wltcjiory of starlight grows ever
mere dim,
And thoughts follow- the path of the moon
o'er the sea
To the galas beyond which Uaa tha Great
Myaaaay, 4- P. L
a i ai Biflii - it.J4
TM Department U Jre to aU readert who
iotKh to rj-preaa their opinion on subjects of
current interest. It la an opch forum, rind 1h
Itvenlna Ledger aetunire no reepoHeitiillty tor
the views of its correspondents. Letters mmf
tie stoned bu the name and address of ttie
writer, not nectssarltu for publication, out as a
Buarantce ot good faith.
WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE DONE?
To the Editor of ihe flvcnlng Ledger:
Sir Although a Republican nnd with no
dcslro to cast any reflections upon tho sin
cerity of Mr Hughes, It appears to mo that
his assertion ns to what ho would hae
done had ho been Trcsldcnt beforo the sink
ing of tho I.usltanla must bo taken with a
grain of salt. For I bclloo that, with tho
ast majority of the American people, ho
would not hae taken tho threat seriously,
and. hence, would hao paid but llttlo at
tention to It. In fact I do not belloo there
Is an American citizen today who can say
with nny degree of certainty Just what ho
would h.-ne done In that emergency, clthor
beforo or after the sinking, unless It bo
ex-rresldent Roosevelt. It Is human nature
to think after n thing has happened what
might hao bctfn done to proent It. and
then to Imagine that that Is the thing we
would havo done.
Such being the case. It seems fair to
neither President Wilson nor to Mr. Hughes
to force the Issue at this time.
That we, as n nation, were not In a po
sition to uso force ngalnst Germany we
well know, so what was there for cither
President Wilson or any ono else to do and
do It effectUcly than what ho did? Is It not
probable that In furnishing tho Allies with
the sinews ot war this country Is doing
moro to tho detriment of the Central
Powers than we could posBlbly hao done
In open hostility to them? Suppose wo
had severed diplomatic relations, that would
have ghen Germany a free hand In her
submarine warfare, and what then might
have been tho result?
Again, President Wilson Is being fiercely
assailed on the eight-hour proposition
without previous Investigation, when the
great trouble, with his Administration has
been. If anything, too much lnestlgatton.
He sent John Llnd to Mexico and Colonel
IIouso to Europe to Investigate. Wo well
know the disastrous results ot tho Llnd in
vestigation In Mexico, but little do we
know about the House Investigation In
Europe. Then there Ib the tariff agita
tion. The people at large Just now are
not worrying as to the effects of any tariff
after the close of the war. The war has
not ended yet, and there are no Indications
as to when It will end, and when It does
end It will require several years to read
just affairs upon a sound commercial basis.
So why waste time and energy upon these
things?
Equally useless Is It for the Democratlo
party to try to make people believe that
the prosperity In this country Is not due
to tho war In Europe, but Is the result ot
the legislation and policies of that party,
for those persons who possess any degree of
Intelligence know better- Then, too, they tell
us that It Is Wilson and the people on one
side and Hughes and Wall street on the
other; Invisible government and what not
to play upon the credulity ot the people.
Why not be honest and let both sides say
they want me oinces, ana u eiecieu win uu
the best they can. or the best they know,
and then let tho issue rest with the people,
who, after all, will be the final arbiters In
tho controversy? Quoting In part tire
words ot that noble character, James A.
Garfield, when he placed In nomination
John Sherman for tho presidency, "Not
here in this brilliant circle Is the destiny ot
the Republic to be decreed, but by four mil
lion Republican firesides. Here by thought
ful fathers, with their wives and children,
about them, with the calm thoughts In
spired by the love of home and the love
of country, with the history of the paat
and the hopes of the future, will the cr
dlct be prepared." And so It Is. Not In
the noise and tumult.' or even in tho en
thusiasm of the political meeting, but la
the quiet home will the verdict be ren
dered. K- H. W.
Alentown, Pa., October 24.
A CLERGYMAN'S OPINION.
To the Editor of the Kvtnlng Ledger
Blr I read with much Interest the tetters
which appear In your columns dally, good,
bad and Indifferent. The letter signed "A
True Republican," though written by a
political opponent, is certainly fine Ha
lias the right Ideas. My only dlsagre
mRt with him Is in his tolerance. It has
baoome a menace to our great country that
a "revolutionists" are aitowaa nut oniy
hoad tha nraaHaalall aaaaUaU. "but
riftHP.
ajajpapp, Willi .wpr
said that Wilson's only Idea In signing the
eight-hour bill was to delude wotklngmen
Into thinking he was their friend and that
In reality tho President's only Idea was to
get otes for himself. I certainly did hccklo
him on that proposition. Ho had the nerve
to tell mo not to Interrupt him that he
had n right to free speech.
They have, too. Our Government has
been so lenient that they can say such
things publicly; can oven Inculcate (their
blasphemous ideas Into tho minds of chll
drcn, molding their plastic brains.
Well-meaning people, who have no reali
zation of what this really means, object to
hnlng religion taught In the schools even
don't want the lllblo read there bdt It will
only ho religion that will successfully com
bat these lunatics. When tho churi.li had
contiol of learning such Ideas wo e not
flaunted from street corners In the faces
of God-fearing folk and tho works of such
wretches ns Thomas I'uino wcro not pub
l'cly advertised at ton cents per copy.
What Is needed Isrfhe strong arm of tho
law. They fear nothing else. Let us ngaln
havo a clergy empowered to conduct i-xaml-natlons
and Impose proper corrective meas
ures, nnd you may be sure no more heckling
of great men such as Wilson, Hughes, Jamea
P. McNlchol, Big Tim Sullivan and Flngy
Conners, of Buffalo, will he permitted.
(RIJV.) WALTKR OSBORN.
Philadelphia, October 23.
What Do You Know?
j
Labpr ; W. C. Rcdfleld, Commerce : Josephus
Daniels, Navy; N. D. Baker, War; D. F.
Houston, Agriculture; T. W. Gregory, Jus
tice. (2) Chief Justice Edward Douglass
White was appointed Associate Justice In
1S94 nnd Chief Justice of the United States
December 12, 1810. (3) The Sixteenth
Amendment allows Congress to lay and
collect Incomes tax and tho Seventeenth pro
vides for tho popular election of United
States Senators.
AS TO BILL JONES
Tho Spanish language papers from the
Philippines In recent months have had
much to say about "El Bill Jones." The
Jones bill was meant, that's all. Spring
field Republican.
VIOLATING HIS OWN LAW
President Wilson will have to work six
teen hours a day from now on defending
tho eight-hour law. New York livening
Sun.
BROAD-Last 3 Evgs.
RIO GRANDE M-tarr,.
NEXT WEEK SEATS TODAT
OTIS IN MISTER
SKINNER ANTONIO
SPECIAL MAT. TODAY " "
Queries of otneral interent will t antctre&
in this column. Ten Question th antxotrt to
oncn evrrv toei.-inormfa person tnouia Know
an asked daitu
QUIZ
wut i the capture or nounuraont pern
iiunr
Th
rnrnuriietnaT i-lrlnrv for tliA YVirlif
Confederate Ntntoai h nil n ronktltntlnn.
rnm two or lurre interrounc leunirea
. ' '
8. What U a baroque pearl? ,
4 Wlmt U ihe corona of the tun or of 'The
moon?
n. Mhat U discount?
0. Kxncttr what kind of coodt- are produced
liy iHitterleii?
7 A bride In to ucer "a costume of roan to
ft.
D.
nnil a. I ll lint la mamaf i
IVhut - that llarhiPv klaia.
1IH
llO went the Htrltt "antilriirllAnUf rnl
inn ijoobo i;onMrtiriioniMT
10. What tero the Draft Uloti?
Answers to Yesterday's Quiz
linict toe lnretllratlon and teacmns
facte nbODt a patient conducted at bed-
Mian or ontmnnr laiiif.
"Mushroprn ronecrni"t thote which eprlnr
e or operatlnr table.
khroom runrerm"i th(
up quickly und enjny rapid rrowthi uu-
nnj- wiin in inifiiwniion mat
llklr tn hat btiAi- Ilvaat.
8. RaxHcrdi n coramuu American composite
veed with flnelr divided leave alto called
nvinrnii
4." tlelleawMtreat writing!
nature.
roinr
payment In Llnd
of a purely literary
rlnr "In kind
but In ft eommodl
VTOUUI 1
paying, not In inone:
i in n rommoaii;
arment In kind vr
rnermum n qunl
n. na rtUilnul)
r-il nn llnd'
ind unaeen below
era In clear we
ilte nnd Eraduallj
ind. Tha land up
lie eea. und till.
t lipnt.
lilbllcul span of llfe"i threeeeore and tent
mAnftv.
wheat were titled,
Iia mnns In uhaal
0. Journermum n qunlUied. mechanic or aril
.. n. ua niiiinauifnea ironi nn apprenUra
7. "To r-ilw nn Uland"! aa a ehln annroaehea
land unseen below the horlcun. the tuarl-
nrra 111 . near reamer nret aee n thin
cruriuullr more nnd more of the
nn apprentice.
imp
t below the nor
nm. wa.lh. fi,
edre nnd ci
land. The land . uppeara thue to rle from
the ecu. und thla was the orlllu of the
I ii rase.
MAUD ALLAN
And Her Symphony Orchestra of 40 .
Presenting- Her Wonderful Dances,
Including tha
VISION OF SALOME
That Startled the World and Packed the Palace
Thetcr. tendon, for Two Years.
ntlCES 2 00. IX CO, 1 00. 78c. BOo.
Forrest Last 3 Evgs. LBur-
JULIA SANDEIISON In the QVDTT
DONALD DIIIAN Muslcaf O X XSl-L)
JOSEril CAWTHOnN .Comedy ,
NEXT WEEK Seats'Today
10th Anniversary Production
rLLI!ES
n A TTrmr This & Next WeeK.
VJXXJLVXViVXi-Matlntu Wed ft Sat.. 2il8
Eves. 8 SIS
Bat.. 2 tin
JANE COWL in COMMON CbAY
Pop. Wed. Mat.., With Jleat Beats tl BO
UAltKUT Jlelow 1TTU
Dally. 15o ; Evgs , 2&a
c?j( "uzmcoj,
Market Above tnth
11,15 ftll'Sii. ". JMe, u.
J.KW1S J. 8ELZNICK preleau0" J
Clara Kimball Youne
TttK rHOTO-UnAUXTloms",,
"THE COMMON M
STANLEY CO.NXEttT onCHEaTRy
PAT. APT? " MARKET ST.
-L XiJUiJli 10 A. M. to U IS T.Ln
Prlcea. loc. jo, i 3
MARIE DORQ US1
ARCADIA c"SfT,Sp5'lr,Ha
untlj, AOC. ATfm.. ;
KUIIJIA IAL.1IAUUE
In First Showing 'FIFTr-TOTT
METROPOLITAN 0I1?
Slat. Today Best Seats ?1
TONlQItT AT 8:10
?oTK HIPPODROME gs
in "HIP, HIP HOORAY"
SOUSA
and Ilia
BAND
Nat. Willi.
CHARLOTTE
and The Marvelous
B ALLE T ON I CI
. iuwicn, awu ouiri.
Chaa,
LYRIO TONIGHT AT 8:1
icejrular Matlr.ee 81M
THE MUBICAL COMCDT DELCH
The Girl From Brazil-
"A Show That Has Not Been JW.i
passed in a Lonff Time." Evp TeLn
aee this uin Tonight
A TtTiT "DXJT Mat. Today. Beit ftt I
r.XJJJl. AiJ. LAST THREE "WBaH J
&wui 4ioi iiA..c.a iu Baa
The Host Wonderful Play tn America
"EXPERIENCE"!
Special Matinee .Election Day, Nov'
VICTORIA """""SffrB
1 1VS.9AM J--
EXCLUSIVE FinST PRKSEIMTATIOV ftl
Francis X. Bushman & Beverly Jkyia
in jvieiro opeciai xroaucuon i Luxt
"ROMEO AND JULIET"
8280,000 Offering-. 000 Plilira
ainhp Theater ?$
1VWW VAVDKVILLE Omiimms-,
IOC loc 25o 35o
11 A. M. to 11 P. It
T5ATTT TVP. Tha Funniest and Meet
mjxji.i.iu Mysterious Act la VtoenWj
AROUND THE GLOBE .
n .-. TnTrn MAniCET Delow WO,
VjIUBB iS-CyO DslIr.2ilJ.I0s
Evits. 7 i l 10. IJ.
THE CABARET GIRLS"
B. F.
Keith's
BUI SparUss Wits,
Brilliant asms I
The Age of Re
JaVlc Wilson A Co.:
Naudaln. aoeoonaalM
Charles Kelloffi Wlneorl
REGENT
METItO Presents
Francis X. llurhman A Ilaverljr Bayna
"IN THE UirLOMATiq 8EnVlCEf'
TllItATER
Anatol Krledlandi
TodaV'at 2, 2Se a 60c Tonlfht at 8, J5o t 1
ifinrat OF MDSIC 1
T -r -I. Mon. Evrs. Dee. i. its. I
leV X Ullv Feb. o. ,
XX CW J-vi. yaiter Dararoach. I
n 1. RnlAtatS
sympiiuny IIaroM Biu.r; i
navViPsfm SffSErki
K...nn ssla now at Ileppe's. Prices K, I
t3"H 60- "' 30' so 2i u '
XHTnlntiT Mats. Today &Tomor, 8H
Walnut "tf A a.r Mt.. m. to
"The Girl Without a Chancfl
Next -Week "wniie v -"7 """
. . ', i MARKET a 0
KniekerDOCKer M..,Tuea..Ti.iir.
"FOR THE MAN SHE L0V1
.. HT;f ! th a ",
XJUiuuiib a iiiicn.i.u iirewsrrti
ketentr year
v. t Biroonsi own
manorial nrl1
ernme
ownera of landed slate with
al nrltllecea under the Dutch (Inv
ent of Aew lnrL und Vur J.ru.i
abolished about 1850.
10. rrlnters' pit a confused mass of trpa.
The Cabinet
C. V, I Robert Lanitnc. State, W. O.
McAdoo. Treasury; A. S. llurlesoh. Pott
oflicel F. K. Lane, Interior; W. 11, Wllion,
2:18
and
6.18
CHESTNUT ST. Twice
OPERA HOUSE Dy
BARGAIN MATINEES
EVERY DAY EXCEPT SAT.
25c, 60c, T&o
Evenlnxs and Saturda Matinee, So to tl
WILLIAM rOX rraaeaU
A' DAUGHTER
OP THE GODS
TUB PICTOItB BEAUTIKUL. WITH
ANNETTE
KELLERMANN
aVAM4Ml
'T9fu
VAMsWi
An ADDeal to the Public :
Tho undcrsicned respectfully submit tho followiag.
facts to the public of Philadelphia: xt.ei.i
Broad Street, the most wonderful play in Amerie,,i
"Experience," by Georgo V. Hobart. ;
This play has been enthusiastically approved a
rronnf mwol frwna li.r winfn elinn nSrrVlf Vllinflrfid ClrKy"
0IVUH ItlU&tti AUiVU UJ UIUIU bliUtS V.JjV .m.- - p
men of Philadelphia, by His Honor Mayor Thomas W
Smith, and by prominent city and State umciaia.
Tf. Vina nlnvoH in n oorloa nf onnrmOUS CaPSCll
audiences since its first performance, August Slst, hu
areas 01 peopie naving Deen turnea away wcciv -
Now, because of prior contracts made months nffol
"Experience" is forced to vacate the Adelphl Theawr
and depart from Philadelphia on November inn.
TTnlfqq
Unless the public-spirited citizens of Philadelp
If you, who have seen the play, believe with w
clergymen ot i'miaaeiphia, and with your Mayor, m-jj
is a crreat drama hound to pvert a tremendous force w
,., righteousness in this city, and that it' should not be p
mitted to depart, then write a letter, or send a teleprawi
to Mr. tee Shubert, Adelphi Theater, Philadelphia, (mJH
ing mm to arrange somehow, spme way, b j-
If sufilcient pressure of public opinion can m,
brdught to bear, Mr. Shubert may yield to public 5
munq ana xep "experience" in i'hiUuJelpWa.
But it must ba the Unanimous Voice of the
lfoa;wiijVA JSWaIUTT, Fi RAX CUUSi
t-
r
VJU
4P