Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 03, 1916, Night Extra, Image 12

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EVENING IiEBOER-PHltADEIiPHIA; B&tDAY, OTVEMBBR 3, 1916
tewrifttf gJlftfc 9cr
W11LIC LEDCER COMPANY
CTMUS K. X. CURTIS, rxMtesNt
xMrnflew. Ttew President
t ana Treasurer!
Ills ma. Directors,
OWlM H. I
eseB3nTU.Bff,'AHf..M Treasureri rhllttt H,
.V. Villi
Town
aorroRUti bo audi
Cte M. K. Ccmi. Chairman.
1 sX. VHALBTmiiu -. hi . . nKdltor
a XAHTtM.,.Otaral Business Minuir
sMlsly tfatty at Pcatta t.raM Budding-.
IsJertsidanca Vauara, Philadelphia.
.lJroad anil Chtatitut fllreta
17.. i.-;:. fc:."..v
. . ixres.i.ioit iiuiiaine;
$00 -Wetrerolltan Tower
nzo mora jiuiiamr
CKxrul.
WITT iii . . i
OVKc ...........
1T.
LOUts. .11.11409 0IoNt.nerat ltnlldln
KUM. ., 1302 rnsiisf'lJulkUas
NEWS BUREAUS!
WitHiiwroN Bvniitr ..Itlrrs Ttolldlnr
7 1
Tom Ilusr-iu.
Ilmil llulldln.
H HrtD 0a Frledrlchstrasts
The.
wvon nnuui..ii.
riMs Maun,
.Marconi llmrse. fttrsnd
z nm umis i urana
BUB3CRIPTI0N TERMS
rrrlr, sit cents per week,
twMMta ootslde of Philadelphia,
Ilr mat!.
except srher
wmn roiltn la reaulred. on month, twenty.
tin omlii on year, thrti dollars. All mall
vfcaertptlona payetila In advance.
Notics flubscrlbers wishing address chanted
Burt gl old aa will u nw addraaa.
BELI, MM TAI.NUT KETST0s"fi, MAW loM
E Xddress all eonmvntoattrms fo JCvfntng
tgtr, Indepinttnct Square, rhitadtlphla.
MtBa at Tna MtrunrLritu rosTorrtcs is
ssco.id-ouss suit, lurrts.
THE AVERAGE NET TAID DAILY CIR
CULATION OK Tim EVKNINfl LEDOKn
rort sr.rTn3iiir.it was iij.ms
rhllsdrlpMs, FrWst, N.t nrb.f t, 1I.
7"o o 6u uji'A fie crowded hour to fear
to we or die. Emerson.
It's (any to talk llko a statesman.
It's easy to took llko a statesman. Mr.
Wilson at Buffalo.
But, olasl It Is not easy to act llko
a statesman.
A Bcventeon-cont egg drink at a
aoda fountain Is the latest appalling; blow,
but we talto It lylnsr down. Such apathy
U enough to convlnco one that tho Ger
man food riots were greatly exaggerated.
Heavy buying of Rapid Transit
trust certificates docs not look like belief
in the minds of Investors that the straight
flvo-cent fare Is going to send the com
pany to the souphouse.
It Is posslblo also that tolonel B. M.
House Is matching his -well-known silence
gainst that of -Wlnthrop Murray Crane.
They can koep stiller In more languages
than any pair of political advlnors In re
cent history.
Now that the New York Evening
Post has come out for Wilson there Is
no longer any doubt of the election of
-, Hughes. The Tost has been noted for
1 years for Its unerring skill in picking the
loser and finding excuses for It,
Tho Convention Hall, at Broad
street and Allegheny avenue, where the
words "too proud to fight" were uttered,
Is to be torn down. The phrase has 1een
variously Interpreted. Tuesday" will de
cide whether that street corner Is to be
holy ground for tho Democracy or the
taunt of melancholy ghosts of regrets.
Every man who wishes to Insure
the election of JUdgo Emory A. Walling
to the Supremo Court bench should fix
firmly In his mind that a cross In the
party column of the ballot does not mean
s, vote for Walling. Tho candidates for
the Supreme Court are to appear In a
column b,y themselves on tho ballot and
a mark must be mado after tho name of
the candidate favored, to have the vote
counted.
Vice President Marshall's predic
tion of a landslide for Wilson or a land
slide for Hughes Is moro enlightening
that It at first glance seems. It shows
that, the Democratic leaders are In the
fark as to the spcclfla results of their
various organizations In the States. The
registrations In all the doubtful States
heavily favor the Republicans. The Ad
ministration is counting on, ballot
splitting by Republican voters on an un
precedented scale.
That list of names of local firms
which have agreed to make their1 ship
ments to South America by the new
steamship line is very properly called a
ft "Philadelphia Roll of Honor." There is
1 tesiness enough commanded by Phlla
MphU business men to double the
fereign trade from the Delaware piers if
they will only patronize the chips which
;n be induced to sail from here. All
;, that is needed is a determination to stand
by the city. Thero must be spunk
sough to resent the attempts to prevent
us from doing our own business In our
own way.
' 0
Q
, The raising of the single-tax Issue
1m "the New York campaign lias lntorest
tag ramifications. Judge. Seabury, who
Is dubbed a Henry Qeorgelte by tils op
yetteats, was most heartily welcomed to
tmndidacy for high office by Mr. Wilson,
whose Assistant Secretary of Tabor,
Louis I. Post, is one of the leading sin
gWUxers of the country. At the time
ot Mr. Poet's appointment the question
af Mr. Wilson's views on land taxation
was debated. Mr. Post, through the
Jut)tc, a Chicago weekly of which ho
was for years the editor, expressed hlra
.mK unfalteringly for free trade and a
ajradual shifting of all taxation to the
load. His followers kwkjupoti him as a
Tefcjir.nrwUon of Henry Cleorge, in whose
wkirwln4 campaigns for Mayor of New
Tawk Mr, Poet was a' !eady-,
j, aa imsj,,,, n; -
' The reeaptura of the last Verdun
held by the Germans and the evident
i of the great alaye U a bitter cup
Vm TirpWa SaaUoa and almost
k jwod as a victory fer ChaneeJlar von
liwag. The iltwkers, whose
ta tfee Grow ,1'Haee, have tried te
r ta tha Kaiser that acreae(on
Praaee, MnsHnwl ana even Arcer-
wm a hatiar peUae" tbao war to the
r'iCMtlt wtUi, HubiiU. Thay waatea to
"nb Kranae and annex part at her
sjeii, walla TJelhroann has stoad for de-
In the, wast with aa-greeeion in the
The capture of Verdun would
jarobeJjiy have swerved the Kaiser, It Is
sm wonder that tew tjaytoa" gone
atwwat. "W4U. tjsaaa Um Ohmi
' heart."
sasissiisfBiaaasst
Iaiwl-a4 Xremen; net Mne any sort of
mvJfaMoft thelgh seas was in Itself
a Hfe and death gamble. The Bremen
is gone, sunk possibly by nccldent The
admission, which ojnclal Berlin would not
make, Is made by Captain Koenlg. who
has more right to talk of danger than
gentlemen at Government desks, Theso
men of tho merchant submarine seem
more like gallant ghosts of the gray
sens than mortals, as they bob up in our
ports. The size of their treasure Is as
tounding, at least ton millions this time,
a cargo of much-needed drugs and dyes,
and even of precious stones and securities.
But Jowcls and securities are the imo
thing now In Europe, whoso go'd we ore
draining off. Many millions can be car
ried In a little plush box. What fab
ulously precious gems that shone on the
fair persons of princesses at Potsdnm
may be In the rough seaman's pocket?
We have become tho world's pawnshop.
"ITS YOUR VOTE WE WAIT;
NOT YOUR IDEAS"
TT IS posslblo to provo too much. Tho
two chlof Democrat la counter-offen-slvo
to tho Republican attack provo
much too much. It Is assorted:
That the Republican party was split In
two in 1912, and that it would return to
power with divided counsels.
That tho Republican party would enact
a monopoly tariff.
It Is true that the party was split In
two In 1912. Any almanac will toll you
so. It Is too big a fact to conceal and
nobody ever wanted to conceal It. But
In what conceivable way would It return
to power with divided counsels? In It pos
slblo that tho Progressiva pacifist farmers
of Kansas and Iowa aro returning to tho
old party to force It Into war with somo
Power, or that the Republican pa'clflst
manufacturers of Massachusetts and
Pennsylvania will try to mako tho re
turned Progressives help them mako war
on some other Power? Inconceivable.
But suppose It wcro true. If tho Demo
cratic party Is so much more pacifist than
any other body of mon, how easy would
It be for a pacifist wing of the otherwise
reunited Republicans to combine with
the Democrats In Congress to keep the
peace!
If In, that direction theso dangerously
"divided counsels" do not exist, tho alter
native Is that the "danger" lies In a dif
ference between Progressives and Re
publicans on the tariff. Vory well. What
could that difference be? Only that one
wing of, tho rounlted Republicans wanted
a high tariff and that tho other wing
wanted a much lower tariff., But Isn't
that tho situation which would exactly
suit tho Democrats?
How could a Republican majority pass
a monopoly tariff if half Its members did
not want a monopoly tariff?
That is where the Democrats provo too
mucin They are saying on tho one hand
that tho Progressive movemont In 1912
was a great reform wave, which they
believe Is now swelling tho Democratic
ranks. They are saying, on tho other
hand, that If this great reform wave
swells the Republican ranks there will
result a monopoly majority. What sort
of reformers can theso Progressives bo
that they can be mado to blow both hot
and cold, that they can turn angel by
voting "D" and devil by voting "R"?
What party could flirt with such spine
less fellows? , v
The plain truth of tho matter is that
the Democrats want the votes of tho
Progressives, but not their counsels. The
truth Is that tho Republicans want the
votes of the Progressives because they
also want their counsols. The unpal
atable truth for tho Democrats to swal
low Is that the Republican party does not
want a monopoly tariff, and that Hughes
Is precisely tho kind of man who will
combat monopoly Ideas In both the Dem
ocratic and Republican parties.
HOW A BOSS LOOKS TO HIMSELF
No small body of men was ever com
petent to take care of any other large
body of men. They do not know
enough. They get the spirit of privi
lege. They get the thing which so
easily goes to the head, the feeling of
guardianship and condescending be
nevolence. Mr, Wilson at Cleveland.
rpHE President was nlludlng to tho Ro-J-publican
party In those prognant words,
and he would have us bellevo that it Is
controlled by a small group of reaction
aries who nominated Mr. Hughes, Every
one willing to accept the evidence knows
that Mr. Hughes was not nominated by
the bosses, but by the demand of a ma
jority of the rank and file of the party.
Likewise, every one knows that Mr. Wil
son was nominated -for Governor of New
Jersey by the bosses, and that the in
fluence of Mr. Bryan, the biggest political
boss the country had at tho time, nom.
inated htm for the presidency. Since
then Mr. Wilson himself has become the
controlling and dictating power In tho
Democraoy. He has toward his asso
ciates anjl the country at large that
"feeling of guardianship and condescend
ing benevolence" which he so well de
scribes. The weakness of his party for
thirty-two .years has been. Its dependence
on one man. G rover Cleveland was its
candidate for, the tnreaidency three times,
and hit, Bryan, wjth tho party In his
vest packet, headed its national ticket
thriee and eonaentad to another candi
date cmee and nam! Wilaon, wlto has
uaeeaaad' him In seising the rein of
power. He holds them more tightly than
Bryan aver held thaw heeauae he has
patraaatn and favor at his dJepoeal, The
man' who dUagrevs with him nnds him
self an outcast from the party opunclls,
a Colonel Harvey discovered long a?
and aa Mr. Bryan and Mr. Oarrieaa have
lea ratal nws rusoatly. It Is an atsttrtek
to diatrsnt sttaattao from yourself by
ebirptsw your opponent, with the os-
i jsMsssj sp arsasca yesa nm 0?jifsr. av. Wtl-
IIsfRiMHe1sMemtk M asa
Tom Daly's Column
TJIU KITCHEN
Though thev may call It a dltgrace
In fine toclcty
The Kitchen f the flncit place
In all tho tcorJcl fo tnc.
1 know there are some folks who think
It U not nice to play
Around the range and kitchen sink
Or tchere the servants stay
But ichcit the cook has set to rights
Each illsh and pan and pot
Especially on frosty nights
It is a cheerful spot.
i
And If the eook Is Irish too
Like one that tec employ
Bhc tells somo fairy talcs to you
That fill you full of Joy.
Upon the stove the kettle sings
The clock ticks on the wall
And there arc tots of other things
That's nowhercs else at all.
HVicnet'cr am 'fitting thero
I almost always dread
To hear my mother call "3Iy dear
It's time to go to bed."
So though they call It a dtsgraca
In fine society
The Kitchen Is the grandest place
In all tha house to me.
bs ssp ePBjssBspp l aaasssMB apsBjni
"-mm
fefc. . , s
Wo might never hnvo been Impelled to
commont upon tho beauty of the now
dlmo If ,n morning contomp. hadn't given
us tho notion that good workmanship
among Uncle Sam's designers and Mint
employes was somewhat uncommon. It
says:
A wll fifcutrd S sold piece has bn found
In circulation by eecrsl aorvlca operatives.
Our Rankwel
I'd llko t' know
It I can so
io mat mers refd.
An' If t ran
Will T. D. pan
Ma for lhr paca
I set f font
Th' lana an' pork
Into ma face?
ItCINIB.
Bless your heart! tho table manners
will bo qulto cosmopolitan.
Sir I noticed a sign In the subway cars
which raid, among other things.
" 'TIs never too late to mend."
So I took my old slioen to tha nddrcss In
dicated, whero I arrived at 6:15 p. m., only
to bo told that I would have to bring them
In before 6 p. m. T. II, R.
On TMdge avenue Is a man who answers to
tho namo of W. It. Kceno : he deals In cut
lery. A Blgn on the window reads "We
close nt 8 p. m. sharp." JAC.
AND McICAY brings this to us from
Washington, where ho saw It In tho Book
Dept. of a Dopt. Store:
THE WOMAN GIVES
OWEN JOHNSON
$1.50
cui.i.un rtii.it siio is kkf.rt.khh
Soveral days ngo E. S. S. pointed this
out to us:
J.OST Larire black phrslelan's bag with many
surslral Instruments. Largo reward and no
questions asked, etc.
And, Bakes alive! this (called to our at
tention by E. T. M.) may bo his wife:
LO?,TT.I',,,h,w.'.lrht L,f.c,c l""lY' cost, dull check.
silk llnlnic: Metropolitan Opera llouso, Satur
day, Oct, 21. Iteward, etc.
8TARB
The blazing stars lead on the morn.
And day doth march with flaming ray;
Those stars and rays my flag adorn
That flag of freedom's golden day.
Advance, O soul, salute the dawn
Aiei follow, follow, follow onl
Ye silver stars that souls have led
Across cold seas, through desert plain,
March on with glowing light ahead.
And guide my way, In joy or pain;
I seek the route by pilgrims gone,
To follow, follow, follow onl
SHON REA.
It Got By Us
Sir Have you noticed that the Philadel
phia Electric Company's horse-drawn
wagons do not bear tho slogan, "If It Isn't
electric It Isn't modern"? C. V, L.
APROPOS our reference to L. Cotton,
the dry goods merchant, nt least half a
dozen renders have offered to introduce
us to
P. E. SILK
DnY GOODS
NINTH AND ERIE AVE.
Bachelors' Bereavements
TO LOUISE
Say, Lou, do I lose my best suit?
Did you ory, with my soul on your boot,
"You would fain steal my heart
With piratical art, - ,
But you can't make this gal a galoot"?
ASCUM.
AS TO NANCY
I mot a girl whose name was Nancy,
And for a while she struck my fancy,
But she fell for a guy named Clancy;
Now not a thing can I In Nancy.
COLONIAL GENT.
Til!" fin YOO 1.3 O' TIIK WAT
I wanna git In on yer bankwet. Does
this do It? A copper plate announces the
following at 130 Bouth Fifteenth street:
BOURGEOIS
HAIRDRESSINO
W. B. P.
The Only Answer
With head bent down, quite melancholy
I walked Into a moving trolley;
And then, to me reclining pronely.
There came another rhyme for "only."
' . HOMO.
CI.KItK Youna man. 18 to SO, for clerical worlii
must t oo3. quick wrlUri Perman.nt nXi
lion, with ehanca for advancement, ate, Bva
nlns containporarr. '
i -w
H. J. M. in reporting u uer 0f 3z
Bouth Third street, as proprietor of a sa
loon, wonders ir the first name a "in char.
Oeeaslanally in our haste to open the
morning mall, which Is always an exqur
ton into the Upusual, we forget to pin
together the creation and the creator.
AH this is "by way of apologlsina; for our
luablUty to give credit far tha contribu
tion that tonowe;
WtOH enlosW m IVa-' Saturday
vaataf tnfcete Mo a ov1a" Wt FUy.
mm nt snr ayae
"GOSH, I WISH THEY WERE SOUR!"
f '1 f'T
1 Veals JN Je!2Ttr!IrT
..'Wtosa
- .nBII'jyflB'.T'at agsWas"rl:-ri II Ulsmmii T rlrUiTl r.JJitY ..ainUl' i Sill 3 ,.;ftl--lrfH WTX,ITJl"f ,.m.W-"
IW R BJ'iVJfjr.tssrrtifJflTftLJCHIA2tf rj,klhs1kKjCn''riJitwj7.. "L& JtfiWKL jUutT.tl.Wb-
VsWMKHBBLWB0&
Ap
irfr-'VsU- """;;
in
IpJSWc
THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE
A Fighting Tariff Indorsed Charles P. Donnelly's Place in the
Democracy Hughes Equal to Meeting the Crisis
Confronting the Country
the railroads out of New York politics and
This Dffwirfmi-itt in tre tn nit emATH who'
iclsh to crpreta thrir opinions on tubiectn of
ctirrsnl Inferrat. It la an open forum, and tht
hvenlna J.tilarr assumes no responsibility for
tho views o in correspondents. Letters must
be stoned bv tho name and address of the
toriter. not nrrrssarllv for publication, tut as a
euorantee of good faith.
A FIGHTING TARIFF
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Sir I 'extend to you my hearty con
gratulation. Your editorial, "The Way
That Leads to War," contains the first
ray of Intelligent understanding of the
tariff question that I have ever seen In your
editorial columns. "A fighting tariff," that
Is the point, and It Is tha kind of a tariff
that the Republican party has never given
the country nnd probably never will, un
less driven to do so by public opinion. If
you and other editorial writers would only
shed your partisan bigotry, study tho ques
tion tn an honest way and put the facts
before tho people, such a public opinion
might be formed that would force the poli
ticians and tariff-grafters to agree to the
enactment of a tariff law that would en
able tho United States to take her rightful
position of Industrial supremacy. But such
a stand can hardly be expected In a city
where the standard of intelligent has
steadily gone down during the last fifty
years. JAMES WILLIAMS.
Philadelphia, No ember 1.
DONNELLY SURVIVED THE SNUBS
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Sir Four years ago at this particular
time Charles P. Donnelly was a? political
nonentity as far as the Democratic Club
was concerned. I was an Insider then and
have knowledge and a good momory of
what was going on. He was snubbed on
every occasion where a snub could be ad
ministered. He now Is deputized to meet
the President at Uroad Street Btatlon. and
on Wednesday night he escorted Vice Presl
dent Marshall to the stage at the Academy
meeting. This Is not written to criticize
Mr. Donnelly, but what Is happening now
should have happened four years ago, for
he was tho first Democrat lii an official
capacity as the head of the Democratlo
City Committee to urge the nomination of
Woodrow Wilson. At Baltimore his friends
Stood as a man for Wilson under circum
stances that must havo been humiliating
to him as well as them. Again I was an
Insider and my memory la fresh. I do,
however, feel nothing but contempt for the
reorganised wing of what Is left of the
Democratlo party In the City as well as the
State. They are "eating crow" and stultify
ing themselves as no other political faction
has done in this city, and they deserve Just
what they are going to get on November 7.
RVERSON W. JENNINGS.
Philadelphia, November 3,
HUGHES BIG ENOUGH FOR JOB
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger:
Sir The amattng thing to me about the
.political situation Is the remark you fre
quently hear that "both are good men, and
there Is not much to choose."
You might as well say there IS not much
to choose between a learned diagnostician
and a skillful surgeon, when a major opera
tlon Is tq be performed,
This country Is up against the biggest
crisis since the Civil War. The best part
of our. national existence depends on what
we do In the next four years. We need a
President big enough to realize this sltua.
tlon and practical snough to, act on It now.
We need the blcgest American we can get.
We need pot only a hl.h-mlnded Idealist
but a high-minded, clear-sighted practl.
tloner. That is the essential difference be.
twoen tho two men. And it (s all the dlf.
ferenee In the world,
r,U,r,vt,Ke electing an orator-tn-ohlef,
Mr. Hughes would not have a look-in be
side Mr. Wilson. And Mr. Bryan would
talk them both to a standstill. But we
don't need a talker. We need a doer. And
that Is where Mr. Hughe etnide out su,
prema. The whole country today feete the
beiwnt of the good work which' be has been
dolag meaeeUy and aU uaadveHtaed fot
years.
Trffr f " " Tot IMW.
EJSi s. var..m lw
; i m sm
ja ifusvtrsa-
urove the "Black Horse Cavalry" of his
own party out of Albany each time he
rcgisiercu a victory- for honest men and
decent government everywhere.
Ho does what he sets out to do. The
various labor lawB enacted during his ad
ministration as Governor of New York
have actually secured for labor the benefits
Intended.
He Is a man who digs laboriously for the
real facts. He goes down to the solid bed
rock of principle nhd reason. And because
he dips deep ho builds high, and his work
stands.
We need such a master builder at the
head of our national Government during
the next four years.
After the great war, when the huge tidal
wavo of tnido competition from Europe
comes rolling upon our shores, we need a
well-built Industrial breakwater to pre
vent our being commercially swamped
Wo need honest, consistent, protective
legislation framed by those who believe
In It, and guided by n man like Mr. Hughes,
who has shown himself not only a master
of Intricate Industrial problems, but a fear
less, unflinching friend of all the people
What other national perils ore before us
no man can foretell, but unless we are pre
pared for the worst wo are not prepared at
all.
We need a President who will recognize
trouble before It Is on top of him, and grap
ple with it whllo It is small; not wait for
trouble, full-grown, to come after him and
drive him Into a belated panic.
Good Intentions without practical, com
mon sense won't save this country In the
next four years. We do not need a Presi
dent gifted with magnetic eloquence and
magnificent "hindsight." But we do need
one who dares to act as ho speaks, and
whose word we can take at a hundred per
cent We needHughes.
WOLSTAN DIVi.rv
Philadelphia, November 1.
TOO MUCH FREE LABOR
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger-
Sir I frequently get the Evenino
LKDaan as well aa the Record, as I am not
much of a partisan, although I voted the
Republican presidential ticket from 1864
to the present (barring Cleveland and Wil
son), as I like to look at both sides of the
picture. I simply wish to point out where
you ore mistaken, aa I do not think you
would make vindictive misstatements. You
say Wilson was catapulted Into oiflce which
Is true; but If you had gone back nfty-Blx
years and forty years you would have
found that Lincoln got In that way; also
,Hi!2e,.1(,or wh0" I voted), because eight
Republicans voted for him and seven voted
Tor TUden, who had a popular majority of
nearly SOO.OOO. in reference to Mr, Bryan
In my opinion, you are right ; and I voted
against him principally on the free sliver
question. When, however, you assert that
thp low tariff on Industries Is our principal
trouble you are away off. Neither a high nor
low tariff, with unrestricted Immigration
will ever prevent our periodical business
depressions. j t.
Philadelphia, October 11.
CHAMBERLAIN'S TARIFF
ATTITUDE
To the Editor of the Evening Ledger
Sir One cannot help noting the political
effort In your editorial of today which re
lates to Joseph Chamberlain. It la common
knowledge to the voter In England that
Joseph Chamberlain made his tariff fight
for one thing only, 1. e., to be Premier of
Lngland ; and one only has to remembeJ Mr
T. aibton Bowles's remark that he was like
the hlndermost wheel of a chariot, vet so
near, never to be first, If one cores to look
up records It will be found that tho greatest
prosperity Oreat Britain had ever enjoyed
was for the four years prior to the war, and
Joseph's efforts had not been used.
It might not be out of the way to oolnt
?vut. th ;'Joe" U party made tart"
their platform on the occasion of three gen.
era! elections, but upon none of lhaee could
they Impress the working classes ' It .
upon this that I pug to question your state.
meat that be was oiie of the meat faraiiu
m . generation. WhtUt he aa4 Uatontet
of Che eppaeiaU. fee SritlsVtk
7teM W
A. XBDWAsUX.
a.
NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW
With La Follette refusing to support
Hughes and Governor Phillip attacking La
Follette and most of tho La Follette men
lined up for Wilson, the Badger State de
serves Its title more than ever, but Is less
a doubtful State every day. Brooklyn
Eagle.
In the closing days of a campaign men
resemble children In their readiness to pick
flaws and make faces. The disposition to
distort what a rival advocate may Bay on
the stump Is seldom resisted, and tho sav
ing grace In such a situation lies In tho
common sense of the people. Springfield
Republican,
Despite President Wilson's assertion that
the United States has not been at war with
Mexico, the drifting back of disabled men
from General Pershing's army Indicates
that the situation is fully as trying to tha
men at the front as though we were at
war. Indianapolis News.
W. J. Bryan says that for twenty years
he tried to get tho country to let the
Democratic party try Us hand at running
things. It may be remembered, too, that
after the country had very foolishly
granted tho request, William was the first
member of the party to throw up the Job
as too difficult to do. St. Joseph Gazette
2 :1S
and
8:15
CHESTNUT ST. Twice
OPERA HOUSE Dy
BARGAIN MATINEES
EVERY DAY EXCEPT SAT.
, 23c. r.Oc. TBe
Evenlnxs and eaturday Matinee, I5o to II
WILLIAM FOX Trerenta
A DAUGHTER
OP THE GODS
THE PICTUItE DEAUTIFUL. WITH
ANNETTE
KELLERMANN
ACADEMY OF MUSIC
BURTON HOLMES
FRI. EVGS. and SAT MATS.
Canada & Nov. 17 & 18
Canadian Rockies, Notf. 24 & 25
Imperial Britain, Dec. 1 & 2
German Fatherland, Dec. 8 & 9
La Belle France, Dec. 15 & lfi
HALK .
12.60 MrtM vnT,
atlleppa'a "W.t 1NUV. U
METROPnT.TTAM opera
net rr-j-L. r,. . HQUBEi
"u iiiuf " cents si
LABT TWO WEKKR OS"
S HIPPODROMlf 0.
in "Hip, Hip, Hooray" "
SUUHA CHARLOTTE
and Ills and The Marvelous
BAND iBALLET ON lev
Nat Wills. Chss T iM-i... ". . ti t,
b.. . ." . " . -'-. "Wll. Hill, .!.
House and
ELECTION MOIIT, NOVKMBER T n-.
Will Us Read From the Star, i.v vT.n,,l.u.r.n
"MIS.
"?, wf irwi'oiusn upera
Weymann's. 1108 Chtstnui
ECTI05J NIOIIT. NOVKMBE
I Us Resd From the Star
DOOItS OPEN 1TVV'"'
a v
Keith's
THEATER
The Best Show Htr, Tbl
Jack Norworth
HARRV QnEKV rn.iL
Heath fc Bon,b.rd.iC,rn,,r,,Chl! U, Uobby
""""" ". oineui Mldn fht Show
Today at 2. Mo fc a6o. Tonl,h. ..'.'
VTCTORTA MARKET ADOVBUTH
V IKJ 1 V JXUi 0 A. V. to II ,15 K it
LIONEL BARRYMORiT
"The Brand of Cowardice"
Added-"SHE LOVED A al, A
cVFSffiH&WTAN OMHU M0tl
4f.j0v unAflU UfJHVLA. lain tiTi
METROPOUTANJaKB.'
Mary Perry King '
I-
What Do You Kno
Onerlts nt ventral Interest cUl h.
f fht rnluiflH. Ten auttinn II... -.
chieh every welt-Wormed person saoai"1
art asked iailv. w
QUIZ
1. What ore the dimensions of hrlfltf
X. ine iresinrn, nrswi nisiinrllon I
nnnnartUan" anil "Mn..,t'" "..'
the illtferrnra betnrn lh iJ:L!
in the two words ther wonli ,
tho nature of appointments to
mission,
S. What Is meant by "salllnc en a imu
t ls"T " i
4. What Is a "minis Ml" and w,t u
orhtln of the term? '
8. Mhleh Is eorrert. "hiccup" er "M..
6. What Is the l'hllndelphla Art Jnrjf
7. What does the slxn 9 mean?
. Indiana produces patrpani
JlWi"? "'i ,"X.n '" "r R
..id , nana .,. n ODUID
they?
WhVT
. What was "Doctor Osier's nee limit"'
i. llhyt Is n morning-rainbow retarded
sltn of. rain or fair weather? A"
nine rainbow?
r? a,"
Answers lo Yesterday's Qufe
1. "Old army fam"j nfter the Cltll
mnny mrnoicnnia pretended lo hats I
Injnred In the war nnd the tiliraM
in urnnir nnr lorm ni tricky bcdlne.'
J..Jtel and while on barbers' potest hr ,
days of modern siirxery minor VLvU
Mf.T.Pr"".""'? J V- barWrs, . thV g
hr;"ih.,A'. Th. r"i ffi.: mi
referred to this, and has SSiSS,
Srist! from the Lnlln word meanlna
II be doie"i command! In leiJI ,
in lieu of n formal order.
J tlYkA n.n I. M.I.I.II.- ,1
from J-rd Lytton'a "Klthrlleif."
S. "Washerwoman," not "waihwomso,'t
0. Jonas Ilanway. born 1712, rets th. .
for ntrodnclnE h. umbrella to U
use In I.ondon. Horn. .-, .1 .. "f1
hon-Mer, wna used as early ns inoj
7. Bryan did not start Ihe, "free 1lr.-
latlnn. Tho I'mnle'a party nnd many
publicans and Democrats had adnL
It for yeara. 1
8. rojncnret President of tho French
lie.
o. jtounn-ciass. postmasters r In th.
Klitlve rlassmrntlon of the cltllseMK
klnr Mimnilnn, n.t L V! Wl!
principles. First, second and IhiKI.
tMiatmaat.ra nr. nn In !! ... :
lloni It U ursed by Sir. Hu.hes thsti
10. Nicholas Murray Butler r.c.tr.4 it..
loral voles, for the Tnf tlrUet btV,
Vice President Sherman, who hsTfc
renominated, died before election, iw
Ituttjaas tar (asa nnmlnnl.,1 t.u n. (.."TV
iJlll- """ "' "" aMH
felJ
AB. 1CTH fy 1
MARKET
11:18 to 11:15 10c. Kc.Sc. ase
SESSUE HAYAKAWA
With MYRTLE STEDMAN In
"THE SOUL OF KURA-SAN"
BrA.VJ.El- CONCERT OnCBESTRA.
COMING ALL NEXT WERir
"MARY P I C K F 0 R D-l
in -uaa than the DUST"
PALACE 1214 Si-M?1
LAST 2 pATS
(JL.AKA KIMBALL YOUNG
"THE COMMON LAW"
ARCADIA .Tol
.,-,- .fja"t "Wi C'VB., 3M1
In "A CORNER IN COLLEENS''
REGENT "A52,f ,2!,
, .METRO Presents
Lionel rtarrj-more and draco Valentin
In "THE URAND OK COWARDICE-'
T.VRTH Tool- 3 TIMES
w AJciou Matinee Tomorrows
. , , .,.., .. .2 Elns at 8:M!
a iiiuui Aiusicai uomeay
"THE GIRL FROM
BRAZIL"
"A musical hit full ot neo." necord.
TOO BIG A DELIGHT, TO MISS
NEXT WEEK SEATS NOW
uuOB Jfes 3
Porl A i
i4ay&aAiJaab&l
w,tb ED. WYNN
and N. Y. Winter rtnrii.n rA ne mn
ELECTION UETUIIN3 TUE8DAY N10HT
ATi'P.TDTJT TONIGHT AT. 8:15
ST,1- x Heantlar Mat. Tomorr
"w iosi wonaerful Vlav in America
EXPERIENCE
Bl'KCIAL MAT. ELECTION DAY. NOV. I
Monday, Qj A. M., Seats Go on Sale lor
THREE FAREWELL WEEKS
Engagement I'osltUely Ends Saturday, Deo. ,8,1
MFrrnnpnr.TTAW nnciu untTnp
Boston National Grand Opera Co.i
ONE WKEIf OVI.V HOV IS i
Seats Xmie nn H.l. il
M"- Andrea Chenier Y''h"''J'nal,u3
Tues. Trja Tamakt Mlura, Chalmers,
Eva-. -o 1..rl
jyd; Hansel & Gretol & Cavalleri
Rusticana ", un,'m"' J"'"
, . -. , . Wlnlftskaja, Martin, Balllsti
iy Amore aei Tre Ke v"'ai,1''
... 4,"110' Baklanoff, Mardonea.
Thurs. Faust Tcyte, Clement. Martin. CI
""rl. TlriVinmn Teyta. Illeaslm'an. aaude'l
Phalmaea T .
Evi,
Bat,
Mat
Madama Butterfly $""" Mcu
mers.
. Andrea Chenier g.11tlhl,
Otnco, 1108 Chestnut Bt. Prices II to' $3.
FORREST L!m'd Enjasemont. Ev-s..8:15
tniinw iDmorrow bi vm
;ZM5iFiEyi
rLLflES
POPULAH MAT. ELECTION DAY WED.
Rrnnrt ThU iJ"t wsk. Evgs. at
ajx uu Mattnea Tomorrow at 2
OTIS SKINNER " '''?.1 ..
POPULAIl MAT. ELECTION DAY A WED,
iXnwcAr Lfinf. 9. 'Rvrrn Last Mai
V W. '"' TOMORROW
. ANN Wr. in
w,,u COMMON CLAIM
Next Week. Seata NOW. motion Day
plm'eu m S 0 C I E T n
. . -. . va.t iiwum wgr JliUinKl V&W
Globe Theater
MARKET -and
JtlK'IPKH 81
VA VDBVILLB Continuous
100 1 D0-i26 050
11 A. M. to 11 P. M.
The Cabaret Girls Mu?K
i?iVSATbUDAS; Others
Cross Keys MABkMow Z'
Evil , 7 Oi 10, IS,
"THE LINGERIE skOP'
LITTLE 7T"hElTEr2
BEATal
n. T.hmaw atfT.T.U
t. ,- .: "!.-". m..?r "Z71
j.omwi.ncnia nsxi Honaay, November
The Washington Square Play
in uwai-ACT PLAYB
''WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS
Neat Wrtt- "THE WOMAN WHO PAl
Knickerbocker JSrSVS".1
"LITTLE PEGGY O'MOORE"
-WhIi "Tha Horn. Without 'Ciilldrstr,
ACADslllY Beata al u.w-. mu r,,rmia.
rliiE?PHIAriftr Tomi
gsgimmbm
wp
its , ILJuM.--1?