Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 31, 1916, Night Extra, Page 8, Image 8

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    EVENING LftD0EE-l?HItt)ELPHlA, TUEaDAlV OCTOBER :.. 1&16
19 fgBt. imager
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.Bailor
th WJt tr
Wl vw nntiniiiiiii
I II ' I "l ".II lHl Oil ! !
jtSTM ft MArVry.,,irl Bmtnr Mntr
VbltHM ll t tVKHO
mt)Wiaw nquara,
kin ItallAlnff.
niiaatipnia.
tnn Ct-rru.. llroad on J t,Mntnul 8trt
HiTin Crrr .11 , rT-ltio DilMin
mv loan.,,.,.,,,,,, 300 Mtrorolltrt sowir
Mnoif, .... .. ... ......azo Kurd nuiMin
T. Lovi. ,.,,, .409 oJolw-mocraf HulMInc
Cnicioo.. ,...,..... 1703 TrlliuH Uulldlns
NKW8 BUREAUS
WtnMri HtarJn..,,..... . ntfct nulldlns
Sir Yo PCHHII., Th Ttmtt llulldlnr
Vwun flntntc ,, ,.v.... nrt rlitrtchtr
lHi litp., . ..Marronl Haunt. 81m ml
Pis miwcr. . m ill ni lunula U Grand
BUBscniPTioN tetims
By carrier, ill rnl rr k Br mall,
mimM outld of I'hlrtlrhl. ept whr
lamtKn mhiUu l rmulrad. on month, twntr
thr dollar. All null
n adranr.
'TICS Subacrlbtr within artitr thane!
1 ttiftaerlptron rmrabt in adanr
f ' totic Subacrlbtr wlthlnr af
..- .-. .1. ... - ......
t mvwt r v mn aa wu a nw kuuitmi
j ,MCt U TALTtUT KtVaTQitE. MAIM IW
CZT Aitdrtu alt rnmmmilmtlaiK to 7ftntlii0
,Lter, Jadfjvad'fHO flgwirr, rhilaattpM.
trrncD it th rmuwcunu roarorrici a
C0!tD-Ctll Will. UiTTB.
THB AVERAGE NET TAID DAM.T CIR
CULATION OP TIII9 EVENING LKDOEn
FOR SEPTEMBER WAS lli,sl
riuaiphii. T.tJir, orttr 11, iit.
rVAsn I wat at horn I wat in a batter
placet
But travalart mutt ha content.
Shahttpeare.
The planting of tulip bulbs In the
grounds of tho White Jtlouso by Mm. Wll
on for Mrs. Hughes looks as If "The
flowers that bloom In the spring; tra-la"
havo something to do with the caso, after
Jl.
Steel car plant wrecked by Are ; 3000
Idle Headline.
"Wo havo seen more than three
thousand steel workers Idle wnen there
hadn't been a (Ire In their plant tor
months, but there was a low tariff law.
If you want to know whether the
labor voto can bo swung from one party
to another by labor leaders ask your Re
publican neighbor who Is a member of
a labor union If he Intends to vote for
Wilson. This form of argumentum ad
homlnem Is moro convincing than any
amount of mero campaign yawp.
Unless the railroads had expected
to make some material concessions In
commutation rates, they would not have
attempted to settle the Issue outside of
court. Tho family ticket seems to be
essentia If the suburbs are to develop
as they should. Some means for Its res
toratlon should be found. In any event,
It will be greatly to the advantage of all
concerned If tho final settlement Is by
general consent.
Statistician Cattell will have to get
a now set of figures If lie doesn't want
Detroit to get ahead of Philadelphia with
Its record of a now building every fifty
minutes. Of course, Mr. Cattell could
complete that building In flvo minutes
and weave lace curtains for It In six
tenths of a second, to say nothing of pro
viding hosiery for Its Inmates In half of
tho time. Cattoll and Philadelphia are
still a few laps nhead.
The Mayor's address at tho Cham
ber of Commerce luncheon sounded very
much like tho sentiments ho was ac
customed to express at this time a year
ago, In tho heat of tho mayoralty cam
paign. Ho promised then to havo but
a slnge object in view, namely, the
progress and prosperity of Philadelphia.
Yesterday he doclared.that "tho welfare
of Philadelphia, presont and future, de
pends upon tho nblllty of the municipal
administration to have and to hold tho
confldenco of the people." That is to be
wedded to the interests of the people,
Ve agree with him, within limitations.
Tho initiative and energy of Individuals,
engaged in other work than government,
Is the true measuro of progress. Dut
bad administration of tho public inter
ests can drive such enterprising citizens
away, or discourage them in their pur
suits, wherefore capable conduct of pub
lic affairs is essential to the kind of prog
ress that is worth while. A progressive
people will not. In fact, tolerate any
ether kind of administration.
No fitter place for a statue of Henry
Melcholr Muhlenberg could be found than
tho new Tarkway, where It can be seen
by the thousands who will use that splen
did thoroughfare in the years to come.
This man, born in Germany, who migrated
to America to look after the destitute
Lutherans in Pennsylvania in the mid
ale of the eighteenth century, became
one of tho most patriotic colonists when
the break with OreatBrltain came. Jit
'was a fine type of the man who changed
hie allegiance from his native country
"to that of the country of his adoption.
The qualifies of mind and heart that
Mwde him Intensely American are mani
fested by hundreds of thousands of citi
mi of German descent who will vote
for America and Americanism next week.
He still ov Garmany aa the citizens
of German stock jww here Jove the home of
tlwir ancestors, but h understood his
Auty to be Joyal t bit new eountry. There
was no hyphen vote in Ms day because
TtrtualJy all America was filled wHh a
hyphenated eftlsenry. The city autlierl-
'ties are expeetja to grant porinUwtefl to
Cermet tlie sUthe ef this great AwertoaH
w that It can be dedicated when the
Lutherans pompleto tfc eeteferatfon of fh
luur hundredth siblvys'lhpfro thi'Pr
stunt Itcformatlon'a ysar frons today.
There is d &pTi ilUprWU'n
it "Wall MMMt eart k knew.'
abewi
knew." Its
IMBMMklll
JMm
of wHMl
waraasMSAE
CHiffcs as s mo MNHWR fkftt
Soanciai asea aspect a eioer elaaO .
in MM was a strong favorite.
th odds fluctuated sharply in
6vn S40e prevailed in 1M4
, day, and the fight was too
ht MM CWvelaad was
L & ww". but
M$ ftUWMM
"Per
the Democratic landslide year, the t44
were moderately on Cleveland, and wl
deried in the ektefng week as s4gn of his
eemfof vtetery Mereesed. It is sU that
ryfi was fer a ehert-MiM the favorite
in im, tmt after, his New York speech
f Auguet 12 the oM turned against him
three to one. .In the elections since then
the results were never in doubt. It Is a
popular error that the men who leave
,helr money with the brokers to be
placed fix the odds. The broker is re
sponslblo to his customer to pay bts,
but if he thinks his customer's Judg
ment l bad h can place tM money
on the other side, or at more advanta
geous odds. Conslstont hedging redus
the odds equation to the ordinary affair
of supply and demand.
THE SITUATION
milH world will not end late In the
evening of November 7. The most
Important problems In half a century
will face America on the morning of
November 8, no matter who is elected,
and will continue to face us for four
years, and doubtless for forty years
more.
We have been living for the five
months of the campaign almost entirely
on retrospect. Doth parties have been
looking backward, the Democrats to de
fend their record, tho ncpubllcnns to nt
tack It. Prophecies have been mado by
both sides, but they have been prophecies
scon through the experiences of the past
in tho light of general facts, rnther than
prophecies based on tho actual present
In tho light of the special facts that
must guido the turn of affairs. Let us
set out what tho lmmedlato future
nctually threatens:
First. A tightening of the strain upon
tho b'ockaded Central Empires, result
ing In a sharpening of the struggle bo
tween tho slnklng-wlth-warnlng party
nnd the slnklng-wlthout-warnlng party
In Germany.
Second. The possibility of war with
Germany If the slnklng-wlthout-warnlng
pnrty wins in the Reichstag and In gain
ing the Kaiser's ear and the ensuing
necessity of conducting tho first vital
foreign war In our history since 1812.
Third. If we are not drawn into the
war, the reorganization of our Industry
and trade to meet an unprecedented con
dition not only in tho activoly bolllgerent
European countries, but In Japan, China,
Canada, India, South America, Scandi
navia, Holland and Spain.
How are the Democratlo and Repub
lican parties equipped to meet these
Issues?
First. The Democratlo majority is not
taken seriously by the slnklng-wlthout-warnlng
party in Germany. Von Tlrpltz
and his followers would like to crush
"our Anglo-American enemies," as their
leader expresses It They bollove that Mr.
Bryan's assurances to Austria that our
protests are not to be taken seriously
express a peace-at-any-prlce spirit in this
country. They believe America will fear
to resent a pitiless submarine campaign
to starve England by putting 200 tor
pedoboats In the seas west of the British
Isles, even though that fear deprive us
of most of our commerce.
Tho Republican party is .traditionally
the party of able Secretaries of State
who mako no statement that Is not backed
up by action. John Hay, Elihu Root
and Philander C Knox rank with the
great American statesmen of the past
Such leaders In this party have con
demned tho foreign policy of the Dem
ocrats as shifty and dangerous. Tho only
answer to them is, "What will you do in
our place?" The obvious rejoinder is that
they could have no say in the Govern
ment for four months and four days,
during which time the situation will, per
forco, change hourly, and that they can
only vigorously urge the Administration
to profit by their criticism to avoid fur
ther abdications of American rights.
Second. For the emergency of war the
Democrats would offer to the country a
President who told the country In De
cember, 1914, that there was "no need
to discuss" the national defense, assisted
by Secretary Baker and Secretary
Daniels.
The Republicans would offer a fearless
Executive, a Secretary of War on the
plane of Goethals and a Secretary of the
Navy on tho plane of Admiral Flake.
Third. For tho Industrial emergency
the Democrats offer a Congress that
would interpret tbn findings of the Tariff
Board to suit the nonmanufacturlng sec
tions of the country.
Tho Republicans offer a Congress that
would Interpret the findings of the Tariff
Board to suit both the nonmanufacturlng
and the manufacturing sections of the
country.
ELBCT WALDIIfG
THB first duty of Pennsylvania voters,
apart from the presidential issue, is
to assure the election of Justice Walling
to the (Mate Supreme Court In nearly
a score ef years' service In the Common
Pleas Courts his reeerd was flawless, and
his apenWent to (he highest court in
the Commonwealth was a logical ad.
vapeement Ills opponent, whose nom
fetation must be considered as something
ef a stoke, to without Judicial expertesM
etteh ait even a eHy w4UU aenulws.
Mr, falling's hurt v4e k the iwyaHl
sa Hnrr was aeeeeiaUd ilkt m
wtilwir ef eriUetom against' JtieUee
WaUlng. It U euBtieeea by seeaa te
liave been ct by tellewera of A. UltoheH
Palmer, NMter the impression that the
aa-Comrra inen was the man named on
the ballot. In any1 event, tbe State
ksMB JveUet Walling as an honest aj4
Jfaftjl a. Mr Kaiaaer as aa
Tom Daly's Column
THB JOVHNET
Yoh are to brave, to loyal and to true I
You bring tuch tuntMne to the hut
farewell
When tome far duty call tn forth from
you,
What feart consume iour heart I can
not tell;
Yo mtno to know what pravert or tear
dropt pour
From your pent heart, when jou have
doted the dqor.
But thit I know: How long, how far 1
roam,
Mil honor and mv babet are tafe with
you
And light and txceetnett shall illume our
home;
You are to brave, to truel
You arc to brave, to loyal and to true,
I thouUl be worte than craven did 1 fall
To make the latt long Uti 1 had from you
My knightly tword and thletd and triple
mail.
You cannot tee, through leaguet of space
that par',
If pattlon or if peaca be in my heart,
But thit believe: How long, hoto far J
roam,
Whate'er my mind may plan or handt
' may do, '
I would be worthy to be welcomed home
By you, to brave, to truel
Our Bankwet
Our bankwet will bo held positively on
the evening of Wednesday, November 15,
at a placo yet to be determined upon and
the cost wilt bo $1 per plato.
Precocious
ACCOMPANYING a new pupil to a
room In an uptown school was this card
addressed to the teacher:
"Florence Qulgley. Try out In 5B. Fin
ished fifth grade at Nativity." I 1C
Bowling along Jefferson avenue, St.
Louts, In a luxurious taxi, wo took a hor
rified eye pff the mounting rtgUter long
enough to lamp this sign over a shop:
"Mrs. L. Hatmaker, milliner."
THE EVE OF Ahh BA1XTB
'Tit hard for modcrnt to belieib
That thit wat once All-Uallowt' Eve.
To thoaa who riot at your door
It's "Holler-e'en" and nothing mure.
Dear Tom Praise Ir due the considerate
druggist on Eait Qlrard avenue for a serv
ice to the suffering public. Observing that
the telephone operator was cross at the
world, he warned tho patrons:
OPERATOR OUT OF ORDER
USE OTHER BOOTH.
There Is one savings bank In Philadel
phia for every family In the city and 60,000
more to boot. TJIrard In P. L.
Dear T. D. I note that you sometimes
guess. riddles. What does Glrard mean
by the above? I would like to find my
bank and not worry about the odd ones
over. H.
It would seem, says C Y. P., that
bombs, like poets, are not merely made.
This, head and all, appeared In the Lynn
(Mass.) Item.
BIRTHS
LONDON. Oct. 33. 1016 (10 BB I. it.) A hoi
til afroplana appeared today ovar llarsate, on
tha aoutbtaatcrn coaat of Enstand. and dropped
three bomlii. Two peraona wera Injured,
TOUNO MEN
Wa have aeveral poaltlona
for ambitious and ntarorlalnr
younr men and bora ortr IB yarda.
A iplendtd opportunity to learn stock aalea-
mansulp of variety ot rooda In manufao-
turlns and wnoleaala Ilnea.
P. I,, claealfled ad.
Good height for a stockroom boy, eh?
What? H. A L.
Bachelor Bereavement
I love a slrl named Isabel.
I love her and 1 love her welli
tell.
And to the world this truth
T11EH1S la a alrl who Iaabel.
COLONIAL CENT.
Art Note
W. C. S. reports this sign before some
crude canvases displayed In a window at
Fifty-third and Lanadowne avenue:
For Hal
these ilcturee la
ralntrd nil by Hand
In line oil
Coller.
Can This Be True
"ONLY," I eeo, means "this and no
moro." r'
It Is a word I havo turned down before.
It, as a word, is unique and is lonely.
No other word in tho world rhymes with
only.
SIMPLE SIMON.
BEWAItE THE BUNKHOUND1
Serving tho City Beautiful He Bitea
All Unlovely Things
The Bunkhound fairly leaped upon us
when we walked Into our sanctum the
other day after our long absence.
At first we were
quite touched by his
show of affection,
but very shortly we
found that wasn't
what ailed him at
all. He was after
something In our
pockets and he near
ly tore our clothes off to'get it. It was
a begging letter from the campaign com
mittee of one (ft the great parties. When
he hod had his will with It this was the
only legible shred of it;
a your contribution is our due.
therefore, since our party alone is com
petent to solve the great questions sure
to follow tho war
Censoring the Movies
A Paramount Picture states; "Grand
mother used o spin wool on a splnnet,"
Very likely she also was in the habit
of making music on her wheel,
W. B.
There has been Introduced into the
seheol curriculum recently a course in civics.
Oae teacher asked )(er class the meaning
of the letters "D, P. W." that graeed the
contractor's garbage wagons. A painful
silence ensued; then one youngster rose
and announeed. "Damn Poor Wages!"
K. A M.
ii ' - t
"8'fimny." says a new semrlb, "that this
woapad your attention en Brit aveniiji, east
1 yi n ' ' f
There la so Xwm reports, a man
named Baral la tha barrel bueinass la Vint
a' N. J.
And Q. A. J. rtafcfl upTn a LewletowH
(Ps.) hotel this buemeaw card:
el th
HALLOWEEN
tlUrCrjJVfA! BMy KflBaV K k. A- 1 - at. Jit .."T-UJUU.,N;:nHaMi" . Ti! .Zl i:.?i-Prlitir'
..iK'WnnrrasRCTtra,.- A' j jf .. fcreLWiWW.i;r. Bawws.l..1K-,'' . law-eauawtff
KlSmKJ
.rii!'.rausEir HEtt .'f;.ir.' rjrww Jf)&afif'v.M rw.w.-i:.- -r L ..'"tv
ft..
$MpK
SHiiiQ: si.; x
ANDREE'S FATAL GAS BAG
f the Swedish Scientist Had Started to Fly Over the North Pole
in a Dirigible Balloon He Might Have Succeeded Stories
of His Wreck in Upper Canada-
", S-
By JOHN ELFRETH WATKINS
rpiIE most daring aeronautical scheme
over conceived by man was that of
the eminent Swedish savant, Solomon
Andree. He planned to travel In a bal
loon to the North Polo Itself, then undis
covered. Oscar It, King of the Swedes, was
his patron In the venture, and I1I3 father
land's academy of science Indorse! tho
scheme. Nobel, donor' of prizes, started
the subscription list with a gift of $17,600,
and men of note ralsod tho purso to a
snug fortune of $35,000. Small wonder,
then, that all Sweden was Imbued with
hope that this son of their soil might
nail their national banner to the tip-top
of earth.
Andree was chief examiner of tho Swed
ish Patent Office and was In his early
forties when ho supervised the completion
of tho Eagle, a balloon that towered 100
feet from Its basket floor to the top of
Its bulging envelope. In the summer of
1897 he had It pumped full of gas upon
the shoro of Dane Island, Spltzbergen,
where a group of scientists gathered
round to admire the ingenious equip
ment. The dirigible balloon had not then
been perfected.
There was a closed canvas car, with
windows, through which Andree and his
two companions were to peer out over
the poar landscape. Everything inside
was snug, even to a sleeping compart
ment with warm nlght-bags of reindeer
skin, and In cleverly provided places were
textbooks, charts, ammunition, guns, sex
tants, thermometers, cameras and sur
veying instruments.
In canvas sacks were stored all sorts
of preserved food chocolate, compressed
bread, concentrated milk, even the best
Bordeaux wines and champagne. There
were also anchors, buoys and carrier
pigeons to bring back news; while be
hind was a long tall, whose function was
to troll over the Ice and assist in gliding
tho balloon whther the aeronaut willed.
Four hundred miles a day were to be
told off as the good ship sailed pver the
Arctlo wastes, nnd the North Pole was
to be reached in forty-three hours, while
at the end of the sixth day Bering Sea
was to be crossed, on the other side of
the Arctlo Circle. As forty to fifty days'
supply of gas and food was taken along,
It would surely be an easy matter to sail
down Into some civilized region of the
American or Aslatio Continent.
Andree called for volunteers, and a
goodly list of adventure-loving young
Swedes applied for a share of the honors
of the ro08t daring cruise yet attempted
by man. From among these he selected
two athletic fellows. Nils Btrlndberg,
twenty-five years old, a meteorologist,
aeronaut, photographer and devotee of
outdoor sports, and Knut Frankel, twenty-seven
years old, a civil engineer, Arctlo
hunter, champion skater and snowshoe
runner.
Small trial bajloons wero sent up on
the morning of July II, 1807, and they
sailed rapidly to the north, thus setting
the poleward pace. Prayers were next
said upon the deck of, a supply vessel in
the harbor, and then the balloon aa In
flated and Its shed unroofed to let It
out,
It was restless to get under way when
the three adventurers climbed in at 2:30
In the afternoon, and, when the line
was out, it leaped Impatiently Jto the
alr After It had w pan njr out
over the harbor a contrary wt drove It
back for a while, hu,t after barely miss
ing seme high ollffs it found a friendly
current, whleh, eatehUg It Just hj tin,
wafted ft out ever the eea. Then the
wind pr4 It down until the 04- dipped
heto the water; but 'it w again,
risuejL flae t an sate aamw the
tesaMsVvattatd down te a tey rHfies
IM vaaunea trwm sigui at 1
p. m., when traveling about a half mile
above tho sea.
Since then the world has waited over
nineteen years for somo news of Andree
and his Eagle. It has been a terrible
vigil for the loved ones left behind by
Andree and his little crew.
All sorts of conflicting rumors have ac
counted for the fate of the three aero
nauts. One of these was brought down
from the Arctlo regions of upper Canada
by a yeteran of tho frozen North, Wil
liam Irvine, who had served tho Hudson
Bay Company for fifty-seven years.
Touching at Prince Albert, Saskatchewan,
1100 miles below his trading post, ho
there told a strange story to the Canadian
authorities, who dispatched it over to
Sweden.
Shortly before leaving his frigid station
this aged man had been visited by an
Indian from the Mackenzie River region.
Tho red man told of having met. in the
previous winter, a band of Eskimos laden
with strange goods, of a quality and kind
unknown to their parts. Among these
articles wero Instruments and fittings of
brass, cooking utensils of ingenious work
manship and a generous supply of cord
age, also of waterproof cloth. The In
dian, upon questioning the Eskimos,
heard from thejr lips this strango tale:
Once when hunting upon tho shores of
the Arctlo Sea they had beheld In tho
sky a wondrous apparition, resembling
a vast "oomiak," or woman's boat It
came down to earth nnd there dropped
out of It three whlto-faced beings.
For a while the people so feared the
great "oomiak" that they would not go
near it, but at length they gathered their
courage and entered it, securing theso
strange things which the Indian after
ward saw, besides much provisions, guns
and ammunition.
According to one story, heard by Irylne,
the Indians killed the three occupants of
tho big balloon, but the evidence as to
this was rather vague.
The real fate of Andree and his com
panions Is likely to remain a mystery un
til the end of time.
(Copyrlsht.)
POLITICAL COLOR BLINDNESS
It Is probably the fact that Miss Jeannette
Tlankln, Montana's candidate for Repre
sentative In Conrreu, has light brown or
auburn, or, possibly, what Is called Titian
colored hair, and that only looks red to
her Democratlo opponents, Rochester Post-Express.
MY TOWN
I know my town, and I iqve my town
And I want to help It be
As great a town to every one
As It seems to be to me,
I praise my town and I cheer my town,
And I try to spread Its fame;
And I know what a splendid thing 'twould
vi
If you would do the same.
I trust my town and I boost my town
And I want to do my part
Tc make It a town that all may praise
From tha depths of every heart!
I like my town and I sing my town,
And I want my town to grow;
Jf I knocked my town or hlocked my town
That wouldn't be fair, yeu know.
I think my town Is the very best town
In all tne world to me;
Or It It's not. I wast te gat out
And try -to make It be I
I talk wiy tewnani pre)! ray town,
As I tMftk a fellow sfceuld A
Who has tnore at stake than te whuer
Hksbe
For the hve ef the eemman geed)
I Wat en my town, a4 I baak w w twa,
Attd I think It Jtae to feel
Wbest yeu know yew tewn awl you lew
yeur jtowa
That' It's nart of your hoMest jaalt
.. - . i . .
I'm provia 01 my town. 1 tove mt
And 1 waat w tteio u r
And thara the mu ,
What Do Yoir Know?
rei
unnale.
t. StKlalliU
Htate for
QUIZ
iilrnt In llritUh natal
117,
1- The fate of Admiral Urne la nn oft-aaet4
KI
What uaa
ilal-lri
preildentla
re declarlnr theT will rarrr one
thflr nreililfintliil nflmlnMt. iVhat
ncate la inaiT
S. What U the William lnn niihwajf
4. What la the "waltrlnc of atack"?
8. What wat the turnout "RP.OOO.OOO One"?
5. Inme two Important books written br Sir
Jamea Uarrla. ,
7. When wrre tha flrot autceasf at aeroplane ex
periments made?
S. What ronntiiea are In Crest Britain? In
the United KlncdomT
D. What la a recelTcrsblpT
10. What mm the orUtnat purpniie ef Madame
.iionietkor. a inveiuanuoDaT
nal p
tlxat
Answers to yesterdava Quiz
Ilondle of roda and battlr-ax on new dlmear
tn.itnelrnt Rome the llctora rarrled the
"rairea" before the BlacUtratea In pra
fCMlona aa enalana of aiithorltri the rod
to flos prlaouera and the ax to behead
them.
aa it I new
n orui
2. "Jlountr on vrhelt"! offered.
nunnwi wi no jn r ranee
tier to
encournre nlantlnc In a countrr.
3. Cord of wood: four br four br elfht feet.
"Vera llbre"j free mei free from formal
rules of meter una rlurrae.
S. Riot net! officially read In England to
tlw ,T l,crt lno iQrrnai reaauiir or
jumiiiniio inoee wno uo not
are cullty of felonr.
0. Acndlr erUIni in. the summer of 1011 a
uerman nip, tne rantner. went to Mo-
dlapene
nrtDnred far
wur.
prucer ' iMace led. to a conlllct between
the townafolk of Zabern and the mllltnrr
in 11)13, The Gcrrunn ruulrel used it
weapon asalnat tfc.e
aa n political
autocracy.
Our ilommtlo tnrker la bellerrd to hare
rome rtonn from the wild epeclea wlthoot
unr croas-breedlnc.
"StUYracItt." n man or woman ad
wpninn anrrrace la a ulcnUled
VHun"rartte." a woman of the m
lant auffrace type,
rocatlnc
manner.
more mul
ls. Liquidation! In modern financial parlann
iue wore 1 ubcu 10 aeirriDe tne eclllni
U asreerocnta
the word la used to deirrlbe the aeli
an pecururi it la appiiea
of BiuounU of I
ndcbteui
ic ef
mora ktrfrflv
lrxal tettlementa
Ineaa.
Monroe Doctrine
A C. S. The doctrine Is based on Pies
Ident Monroe's message to Congress In 182J,
The flrut passage referred to the boundary
dispute of the Northweet, then In issue be
tween Russia. Great Ilrltaln and the United
States, Russia having assumed to exclude
foreigners from disputed territory extending
to the fifty-first parallel of latitude. The
second passage referred to the proposed
action of the loy Alliance as announced
by the resolutions of the Congress of Verona
in 1B22, directed against the system of rep
resentative government In Europe and aim
ing at the relmposltlon of the Spanish yoke
upon the South American colonies.
METROPOLITAN op,fgAaE
Mat. Today Best Seats $1
LANT TWO WKRKH nn
SSR HIPPODROME Orsan-
in "Hip, Hip, Hooray"
BOUSA I CHARLOTTE
and Ilia I and Th JUrvtlcua
BAND IBALLET ON ICE
Nat Willi, Chta T Aldrlch 300 Other.
Tlcketa at Metropolitan Opera lloui and
Weymanu'e, 1108 Chiitnut Utreot.
ELECTION JC1MIT NOVKMUEn T-IUturne
Will B .TUaa From th gtar by Nat Will!
DOORS OPEN AT 7 P. M,
ACADEMY OF MUSIC
Saturday Afternoon, Nov. 11, at 2:30
KREISLER
MWuiafVywtJ&!
"VICTORIA "M Mftn
TRIANGLE Pmeata
WM. S, HART
"Tho Jteturn of 'Draw' Euan''
Adod Kajrataoa Oegitdr Bwrnodr!' Toll
Thur . rrV. at The Brand ef cSJmiSL
Globe Theater ufms
and
IRSTg.
IBnB;"T"''
11 a. m7i u v. m;
The Cabaret Girls ""SfSBSft
.FIVB SATSUDAS; OthSrT
Cross KeysfflS.,S2 g
3
AJLS2SSSI
METROPOLITAN cojS5n r
WatKitwo tMWi fwraaMtt 1 0
VJAk JV.Bf'a!Lf"M' .rE.
P-flBaJ.1 !
mt&&&
The Northeast Cornw
Canaal W the Day's yf
One neeJ not be an Amy Lowhl
Nor vat an t'J... t ..'.. .Tc"
5?..?SS!..am!W.i..,
1.: .r:r:."' "",.enoun with . i
1 lip iniuiTiia nnarsiaa a a 1
si.. , " r". ""'uii bob mil --i
The stuff up Into bits and maka r ul,
Ihe trses of William Dean Hotr!?f,
Good old Edward sAndford iunuL.
somewhere ""(
That one may not be a dying , ,
Hut on pan rli. - -. " 7as. M
a.T-".. '"" '" "i Wt M
Of Walt Whitman or StephCra,,
. .., i wis nnir snares-.
To say nothing of the flats (
One can thlnlr nf ... '1
n-.. " "C "7' -"""'IS WOrtB Whm.'
m wiiii Kgoui, ra
Ana a
Can wrlt
The answer Is not so remota as K ttuit
tf..i..M.. . . .
nMiuinwn 1 10 probe tha -'-"
the Marina," says n Sn.L.nJTi
rllapatch. Not. the accent on pftZ
If the poor old probe isn't oarafcn?
ret Itaalf all unrn ... w"1" K
- -... vuw
A Chester girt who cloptd tdttra.
mother that she "couldn't reiia,
!?!!:: wh"Lh wMtort.5,
and it lent ssfe for auiceptlbl
be abroad.
We may coma to realUe that ft I ,
want PrM8nt 0t mon ve9rwJa7
Ajiere is an ancient provtrb whui cLiM
ably: The d.mcu.ty. Tow. Tfl
fact that so few persons Vnw! ASl
With flr artlatlrallv """ I
Women have married men bfe J
under tha acaumntlnn it... .w. "T.fS
form tham Th. .i. "TJ.. qe !
cap reform a man is to bora him tT
limit, nf .-rM,..!.- '" ols " I
"What becomes of the saucers in 1
cuni era hrnltfnt" !.. n '" '
Chlcag-o Tribune. -
Our own lmoreaalnn la . .v. ' .
as blue rocks for Cap'n BUI SlmoSLir
shoot at. "At" Is right I
Twice tml
n.tt. aata
MJUJ
CHESTNUT ST.
hpp.p a trnTTQin
. ."" .
UAKGAIN MATINEES ,!
EVERY DAY EXCEPT SAT
, m JBc BOc. TB
Evrnlnra and Saturday Matin, M'u ft
WILLIAM FOX PrftnU
A DAUGHTER i
OF THE GODS V
TUB PICTURE BBADTITOL, WITH
' ANNETTE
KELLERMANN
'A R AMOUNT PnOORAU
Market ab 10th. llilBtollils Ie,lBe.Hg,h4
and ANITA KINO In
"THE HEIR TO THE HOORAY
. ADAPTATION FIIOM TUB PLAT
T1IUHBDAY. FHIDAY and 8ATUHBAT
SESSUE HAYAKAWA?
and MYRTLE 8TEDMAN la . 4 1
"THE BUUI, OF KURA-aAN"
COMING ALL NEXT WEEt
M a p v P t n v t? n p n
In "LE38 THAN THE OUST'
"DATA Ti "l MAP.KET STRWBf
Xjt.XjIXJllj PRICKS lOe, Ja
ALL THIS KM
CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG 1
"THE COMMON LAW"
Ada pta from Novel by Robtrt W. Chaartwa
ARCADIA To'TSTeffiSl
In "A BISTER OF BIX" J ,
Thurn., Frl.. Bat . 11ESS1E BARRlftCAUl
In "A CORNER IN COLLEENS"
"P TTPTPXPTt MARKET BELOW ITT ,1
XVJllljJlilN X Dallr. IBci EvsaJK.
WORLD Prtt '
ALICE HRADY In Caors BroaahBrrt
"BOUGHT AND PAID FOR"
Thur..Frl.. Sat.,
BRAND OF CO WARM 1
T VUTP LAST T TIMES
JJXlViU Laat tl
z
I
no Matlnc TomarM.
T.Mt A 1Tvnfnva mt StlS.
THE IRRESISTIBLE MUSICAL COWWfs
TTITJ' ilTTJT. T?T?mr '
XXAA-I UUkU AHV; Ji
BRAZIL" H
"A mudcal hit full of pp." ltcH.
m tl II a. . 1" T1.A A- 0.. laV
xonignvs tno mg ixignt w n,-,
NEXT WEEK "Si SSSiS
The PASSING.
SHOW of 191
A rT7T TJTJT LAST 2 WEEKS i ?
jn.XJVJXJl. AAA Popular 1 1 Mat '
Tha Uott Wenitrtuf riot) i
E'XPERIEN-C
SPECIAL MAT. ELECTION DAT, NOft T
B. F. KEITH!'
THEATER
Philadelphia map have sm i
good a ahotv as tnis o
nr
l""!" 1 j
nenrna WnshmntOYl COM- Ji
1 - . .Anmrr
HARRY OIIEEN P PLAY3iR?l.pMHBFI
(CHIC) BALK: jARVIS A 2l Wfl
HEATH and SONaBIBDS, 0THV- J9i
1 ' 1 . 1
FORREST KSSTm '
Popular Matinee TomorWr
50c to i,ou
POPULAR MAT1KM KMWttWM
Vtv.A A . V.l.r. l. Waaaalr. BVtU '
UKUAU PstfHUa2
wii n UTSTB
aTrTXTvrTn.T? w
r MtUMjss
HISTEX
Br BOOTH TARKINW"
fis vriVV Lt 6 Evga...1
JANEC0WHC0jmpNJ
Mast Wk t Thar, W& "
K1 " SOCI
AlniCrTCgra r -Jt.
Walnut jSSfe Si
"WHILE THE CITY SLJH
TrTT"--.! L,- UA 55f I
JVmCWrWIr Mau 'turn ;
MtS4 wsaa wm sjsasa w