rTmF y? nvfmiw wpii" 'JWTWT :9T8SlftJ MPmLiBLMfA, SAfaAT-, "NOVBMJPJR 4, -1916 "T -iyr,-V' 2& a1 fCBLIC LEDGER COMPANY mU K. JtV COKTIS. PtaetstK- r m IT. Xj-sHMten. Vies. TrtuM.nll John tr B-wretary and Trsaaursri l'hlllp s. John B. Williams, Directors. Pu OMit MDtTORtAIi BOAnOt brans K. K. CCSfll. Chairman. wHAtlfiT. ., .,...,, , . . , .Editor C. MAnTlN..Qnsral tuilwM Manarsr MMhltM dsltr at Prstio T.imorn Pudding, t ". Is-lsrsnnsnca ftquar, rhlladstphla. tnnii.,.,uniu ana unssniui wrests n Citi rr'tt-ffiKn nulMIn MK...,.,,..,.,.O0 Metrrfpolltan Tewsr n. ........ ....... , . .arn fami nutMinv tows,, 409 Olete'Dsmorrnt Dulldlnc ... 1102 Tribune UutlJIu NEWS nunnAust Unus Mm Hulldlur Ymk TlL'lUV .Th T.mrt IliUMInc m HriaiD .....no FrlsriMehstrssss iey llpn-uTt Ms-ronl lions. P-tranJ jsviuv ,. si no ixuu i urtna BunsciurTiON Tcnus errWr. six eenta r imk, Ihr mall, i ouuiot or rniiiaeipnia. ejt wnere posts ca la required, on month, twsntr- (Mita: on year, threa dollar. All mall mpitona nayau in aaranee. io nunscriDers witninc aa-iresa cnanrea giro old aa wall aa naw address. KEYSTONE, MAIN I0M MILL, JWo WALNUT 'ty J(Mnr alt communications ! ffvrnliiff Ledger, Independence Bqnart, Phtlaiilthta. Mius it Tnn rntunatrntA rostorrics s SICOSI-CUS Milt. M1TTZS. THK AVERAGE) NET TA1D DAILY CIIt vMfLAT!ON OF T1IB EVKNINO I.KDQtn rort nitrrKMiiEit was iimsi rta.j,iPt,i., j,iurj.r. N.,.mi.,r . lm. Deliberate as often as you please, but when you decide it ie once for all. Publiue Syras. Mr. Berry seem to think that tho War to havo less Eyro is Ho have more fclr. A business woman has asked tho New. York Sun for the proper terms In Which to address a corporation. If sho had asked Mr. Dry an the reply would fcave been unprintable. There must, bo soma mistake In the announcement that Bevcnty.flve Seetch women have given up their hair to' enter a hospital corps. Who ever knew or heard of tho Scotch "giving up" anything. Plutarch quotes Fhlllp as charao terizlng the Macedonians as' a rude and efownlsh people because they called a -os4o a spade. Our Democratic frlonds aeem to tlilnk Colonel Itoosevolt Is not Bice because ho has tho same habit. The Bryn Mawr student who Is to Win $1(1,000 when she can cook a course dinner for twelvo persons will get a 'worthy prize. Many other girls, however, havo won good husbands who nro worth many times ten thousand dollars by dem. enstratlns their ability to cook a single i -course dinner for two, : i What possible difference could It Kako whether a Varo or a. McNlchol leader Introduced In Councils tho resolu tion for a committee to look after tho eUy'a Interests at Harrlsburg? Tho blck ring botwecn the factions about stealing each other's thunder brings tho business ef the city's legislature to tho lovel of a achoolglrls' quarrel. No more satisfactory system for an- Bouncing tho result of an election has ever been devised than that which the Evhninq Lebokii wllKuso Tuesday night through the cooperation of tho electric light company and tho chief of tho city electrical bureau. Every citizen within lent of an cleotrlc arc .lamp will bo apprised of the result by the blinking of the light aa soon as definite Information la received In this office. Threo persons would not havo been kmrned olive, It appears, if an inspector Bad had time to get around to the 1700 Mock In Norrls street in tlmo to seo that .building was operated as a tenement in afect violation of tho housing laws. If bare wero more Inspectors such build- ''lag's would have proper flro-oscupes. Yet there has been' an insistent demand for these very inspectors. Councils should ' take the matter up Immediately, after wpardonablo neglect The long-predicted civil war in , pne European country as a result of tho general conflict seems to have arrived to -intl at least pne of the many wild BroScles of tho last two years. But it is-r-Orecco and not in Germany that , this new poison has entered the blood of ; .Jfcir.ope, There Is not much doubt of the ' 'stMalt. The Allies could not afford to let v'tM pro-German monarchists turn the kingdom Into a Teutonic provinco threat- . anlng the rear of their armies In Maco- ioala. , By all means let lis havo tho State Osit6t graft skeleton drawn forth from f me, closet again, and after election, as ;Vf, Eyre says, la the time for the in- ', laravatlve libel suit. That the charge HuU the candidate originated the huge graft plan is not specifically answered be- L. ttro election day should 'also suit Mr. rry very well. The grafters have paid fclfh for their loot Death and disgrace have been their portion. The hounding stamping out of the last living mem- of the band, wherever thoy may be la one way of upholding tho honor sat the Commonwealth. There la a better too. That la for the opposition to greater leaders against tho Organlzo- There have been strong fusion par eking constructive State leader- , but they have not had that unity of whleii eould discriminate be- State and national Issues, that 'Which If lasting invltea and evolve ling Manures for executive honors. 'It all that we required of a Pre!. were the ability to make speeches by .hHerary charm Mr. Wll- jMild be Meat. We, have never, had man gifted with better powers n. Colonel RooeeveK aa but fMMtah latO'hia reowrks. Urt they we eaua, eoniewAisuve repose of Jhreaident's aeataaea. As a man o ana a, orwio ox puoue artaira Mr. ean find aoewpaUon after he re- from the Wbete House. It will be eanah aaofe congenial than whaca ht a bow enaed. His aa a ajoaaUletrator ,i to Ukt (act that be to mm vhswa en paper; It he has set forth In strong epigrammatic sentence the duty of the Government to protect the lives of Americans wherever they may be he thinks he lias dono all that la necessary. It Is the mission of those In authority to net according to hi advice. There would be no reason for criticizing Mr. Wilson's "strict accountability" note If It hail been the work of an outside commentator on public affairs. Ills "nonpartisan" speeches during the campaign have been delightful for their enunciation of principles which nobody donles. No better literary expres sion of American Ideals has ever been given. Wo shnll know next Wednesday morning how much or how little the na tion thinks of flno words which havo not been followed by fine deeds. HUGHES THE CAMPAIGNER THIS opposition early In the campaign aet out to create tho Impression that tho Hughes of 1918 was not the Hughes of 100S. It Anew that there are peoplo who can be made to believe that white Is black If they are told so often enough and with emphasis. Perhaps you havo noticed, however, that the Democrats have not been trying to be'lttle tho campaigning ability of Mr. Hughes for nearly two months. Those who have taken tho troublo to read the speeches of the Tnft campaign which mado Mr. Hughes tho admitted leader among thoso who wero defending tho Ilopubllcan Administration and to com pnro them with tho speeches which he has been making for the last two months have been Impressed with the greater virility and tho greater directness of the speeches of this year. Tho thousands who heard him in tho Metropolitan Opera Houso hero wero Impressed with his con summate skill In moving crowds to en thusiasm. All reports agree that he made his points with such clearness and force that at tho climax tho applause burnt out with tho suddenness and sharp ness of a cannon volley. Early In Sep tember the news came from tho West that he had been piling epigram on epi gram with a speed and skill that cap tivated tho people. At tho beginning of October tho news reports Indicated that he was mill swaying the crowds. Tho observer for the New York Evening Post, writing from Lincoln, Neb., said of him: Ills complete mastery of the beat forms of expression and elocutionary art, his remarkable Oatllng-gun de livery of concept after concept In tell ing fashion' and In most excellent e quenco, make you feel like applauding at the end of his sentences. The chargo that Mr. Hughes had lost his skill as a campaigner has given way to the assertion that ho has failed to outline any constructivo policies, but has been content with criticizing tho Admin istration. Yet the facts justify this chargo no mora than tho other. Tho most casual study of his speeches discloses Its falsity. Ho has charged the Democracy with enacting a destructive tariff law. In speaking" of tho necessity for construc tive legislation, ho says: If wo are to havo protection for American Industry It is plain common sense to any you must put In power an Administration that believes In pro tection'. I stand fearlossly and frankly here before you to say that a doctrlno of a tariff for revenue only for this country at this time when we aro en tering upon a period of commercial rivalry Is not an American doctrine. As to the' surrender of American rights on sea and land ho said: We are not a militaristic people, but we propose that our words shall have bock of them the assurance of power. The policy of the enforcement of known rights Is not a policy of war. It Is a policy of security. It Is a policy of self-respect, No party can stand be fore the American people and say that It will not maintain American rights, and I propose that this shall not simply be Bald, but that It shall be done. His Mexican policy is contained In those pregnant sentences: There are certain principles that we can lay. down to which we propose to adhere. They are Important in Mex ico they are Important , throughout the world. The first Is that we will not meddle with things that do not concern us ; the sec ond is that we will not merely talk about rights of small States, but we will observe them, and the third la that It will be understood that at all eventa tho lives and property of American citizens will be protected. Ills determination to maintain the au thority of the Government was set forth in his discussion of the Adamson wage increase law when he raid: We have here a fundamental issue. It In the issue of free government. It Is whether we are a government of laws or a government" by groups who dic tate edicts In the form of laws. We cannot afford to have a terrorized Ad - ministration. We can solve all prob lems If we adhere to the rule of reason, if wo are fair, open-minded and de termined to do Justice to all according to the facta. There Is no other way, and the attempt to turn us over to the rule of force should receive the swift condemnation of the people. It would be easy to fill this page with equally significant and statesmanlike utterances indicating the constructive nature of all his thinking, Mr. Hughes has not been content merely with attack, though he haa attacked so hard and so successfuly aa to make the opposition writhe under his blows. He has de nounced the blunders of the Democracy and haa pointed out the right road to follow, lie has combined construction and deatructton so effectively that he will take rank with the great campaigners. Dankwct Correspondence Sir t don't wish to mm M'Uacioua an4 perhaps this la a qufry for lh tllquctle edi tor but do ladles ever come to a newspaper bank.wet? ' Also. I have a friend on an evenlna- contemn. ,who said yesterday, quite extemporaneously, that eveiroour Knew novr ins nrpnenaica Americans were volnr to vote, but what she Is Interested in Is the slphonatetl ones. tjhe wants to know If she brlnxs a dollar and this contribution If she'll be admitted to the party. R. 8. V. P. M'L. Almost It S. V. P. Just two moro times, making threo In all, and wo'll dust off a chair. WORK OF THE AItT JURY TUB Art Jury, whose fifth annual re port has just been filed with the Mayor, has Justified Its creation by what it haa disapproved as well aa by what It has approved. The erection of many ugly structures haa been prevented by the veto of the gentlemen constituting the Jury, Their activity In preventing the obstruc tion of the sidewalks and the consequent disfigurement of the city by projecting street signs has been particularly whole some. It "la fortunate In this period of city expansion, when several large and monu mental public buildings are to be erected, thai we have the Jury to pa& upon the designe before their adoption.. Their taste tfnd Judgment have been shown in their indoreement of the tentative plans tor the new projected Museum pt Art The Convention Hall and the Free Library will be mere worthy of the, eity beeauee at tM attswtiea wkdoh the Jury will give t tab mm aAnMare for the pw, Tom Daly's Column Tltn VlLhAQIi rOBT Whenever If a Saturday 1 know It lin't right To aik far "panel to the ihow," or maHnee or night, For Balurdav' o holiday, the only time, they say, For mtnttreh an' play-actor folk to gather In their hay; t So only thotc that have the coin, the chcrcuithal to pay, Should hang around the Hippodrome or pott Its doors today. 1 mustn't think of Charlotte now. The only thing to do 1 Jutt to stick fo Chestnut itreet an' tee what newt U new. I try to mtnd the work in hand an' hunt the commonplace, But Charlotte With' her twinkling tkatet an' Charlotte with her grace I round about me everywhere, in every thing I meet, In every tcind-blown wisp o' leaves a whirling down the street, In everything that movct in rhyme an' pulses to the beat Of youth an' Joy an' loveliness! It's hard to make my feet Behave tvith proper dignity as gouty feet should do, .In' hold ma down to Chestnut street to tee what news Is new. The many-hued rcwolflnp- sign before a barber's shop It charms tho eyes xcithln my head an' makes 'cm fairly pop. I know the people passing by are much amazed at me, For none of them can see in it the vision that I sec; 01 there is nothing nolo that spins, re volves, whirls or gyrates But calls a picture up for me of Char. lotto on her skates. An' so you see how hard it it, this job I've got to do. To stick around on Chestnut street an' sec what news is new. What's thatf Eht You're the manager Press agcntl But , you see, Our eldest lad is home from tchool, to I'd be needing three An' three upon a Saturday ' Yott willf Oh, thanks to youl Let some one else stroll Chestnut street to sec what news is ticio. Traveling from Trenton to New York tho other day I noticed several numbered nlgns along tho way. The first I observed read: 81 Children Cry for Castor Oil. Further on another sign says 60 cry for it The number crying for it gets less as on you go. By tho tlmo Newark Is reached tho kids aro done crying. CHAHLIE. Sir Upon the Via Cantanea. where you frequently go upon the day of Saturn to see qua novella est nova, I observe this Blgn: ENGLISH WALKING UMBUELLAS Would you suppose these to be tho sort that hurry after you If you carelessly leave them In the forum or tho wine shop? ACmlCOLA. And without any outsldo assistance whatever, wo ourself, strolling down to our labor yesterday, noticed in the win dow of Dreer's seed store a collection of once lovely but now very tired chrysan themums. Each bloom had its own name-card at Its foot, and directly in the center of the stago was this: 'Tho Glory of Wilts." LITTLE Mary was Bent to tho cigar i store by her father to buy him a cigar. When she returned with tho cigar it looked like a lead pencil, it was so thin. Her father asked her what sho had done to it and sho answered, "I peeled it for you." M. It H. A large Sixteenth street house, showing an attractive window display of scales of va rious kinds and giving the position of honor to a beautiful set of baby scales, sur mounted by a wicker basket for holding the Infant, displayed under It BOY WANTED. CLIFF B. BACHELOR DERKAVEMENTS O, HUE! Qabriella, fair and bright, How I loved your skin so white. But since destiny beyond us Ruled that you have yellow Jaundice, Can you really blame a fellow? I don't, love you Qabrlelln. COLONIAL QBNT. Did you notice how our own dear paper, with its clever scheme for electrically en lightening the city on election night, has put the whole thing on the blink? Why Dear Teacher Gets Married Habeas corpus This Is a warrant taken out by undertakers to find out who has got the corpse they are after. Ratine A female rat B pluribut unum This means that the coin it is stamped on Is one out of a great many. Thespian A man by the name of Luther nailed one on a church door In Ger many, President's Cabinet Abraham Lincoln and his assistants used to go Into the woods where they had a very small cabin, o It came to be called cabinet The canal through which our food passes la called the gully. Diet of worme This la a favorite Ger- ' man dish. Glass is made of old bottles. RON MUTT. Ht C. W. reports a sign at SSI North Fifteenth street) N. SANDOW A Cold Does Depress One IVAen Mature paints the leaves of trees, And from the west a slapping breeze Cfmtt whistling past, and gentle rata J9kf freih the farfaj then at AHh Ts rite at (a the days of yere, ?VWH oelmiiM'.-fafi CM , Mt t 4 if Wet ? sassaV LnWlS " t -.. w '-atsBBBat BBBBat m-TiSd .-iaaa1 ALL READY . .. .iiJL3sr5sal'3a ..ja-"--..-..-."-,. j. ....x-.iiysTWffcMto'rirvS-rcftii ',i 1 !"n--rn-Tr r mirr-nii", , tt " im Tiiin . -a. TwmmmrixtwK TJWSHfflrSALT WZZLi fSIW' I I 5AL.T EtfCUr T" ill 'll.tMslU VI .- - -., wm v 1 ' . THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Unemployment Under Cleveland and Under Wilson Demand That Immigration Be Restricted to Protect American Workingmen Thta Department It trem to all readers tcho wlah to express their opftfon on subjleef 0 rurrntt fntsrrsf. t an open lorum. and the Kvcnino Ledger assumes no responsibility for the views ot its rorrrspondnls. Letttrt must he eltmed hit the Maine and addrtts of the writer. Hot necessorlfi for publication, but 'as a guarantee of good faith. DEMOCRATIC UNEMPLOYMENT To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: sir Allow mo to call attention to the awful business depression owing to threat ened free trade at the time William Mc Klnley was a candidate for Governor of Ohio, and also to a like condition of affairs during tho early part of the present Ad ministration owing to actual free trade con ditions. Free trade would die an Igno minious death on November 7 If every voter would admit to his or her heart the words, first of William McKlnley in 1893 and the words of Governor Glynni of New York, Democrat, In March, 1914. They pro claim twin facts produced from like cause. McKlnley said: My fellow citliens, we cannot bo In different even If we would, nor unmind ful that today many of our fellow citi zens are without work because they cannot find anything to do. There are homes In'the State which less than a year ago were filled with cheer and con tentment that are now haunted with hunger. Our hearts go out in feeling sympathy to these unfortunate ones of our fellow citizens, and our purses should open to them In sweet and sub stantial charity. The present situation affords a great opportunity to all of us to demonstrate that love we bear our fellow men, and If rightly Improved will cause us to realize that It Is more blessed t6 give than receive. Those who have will give to those who have not, and the people of our great State will permit none of our men or women or children to suffer for the necessaries of life. God grant that this scourge to mi. Industrial nrnsnerltv mav anaedllv pass away, and that the time may not 1 be long distant when business conn dence shall again come to every com munity i when Industry shall resume Its former activity, and when men now In enforced Idleness shall have work and wages, and the homes now In poverty shall be blessed In plenty. Governor Glynn, March, 1914, New York, addressed these words to the Legislature: Public attention haa been forcibly turned to the fact that a large number of men are unable to find employment During the last fall and winter the problem of the unemployed has steadily grown more acute. For the man who la not sincerely anxious to secure work the publlo has no sympathy. For the, man who Is anxious to work, but can not find employment the State haa sym pathy and a very real concern. While I do not believe that the present situa tion Is as serious as some would have us believe, I am persuaded that It Is serious enough to demand our consid eration. Whatever the State as a State can do to provide work for the unem ployed, It la morally bound to do. To the man or woman who will think Just a little beyond the cruet war now going on and Us decidedly limited and one-sided Individual prosperity. It would aeem that the testimony of William McKlnley and Governor Olynn need no additions to con vince the workers In this land that free trade is the mortal enemy of work and wages In America. .n .. . ... r MICHAEL J, BIIOWN. Philadelphia, November 1. PROTECTION AND PROFIT SHAR ING To the Editor of The Evening Ledger: Sir The following are, I believe, the fundamental weaknesses of the protective tariff policy as advocated.by the Bepubllcan party: 1. Although claiming to cause higher wages to be paid to employes In protected industries, no tariff fpeasure has ever car ried a provision guaranteeing a fair share of the profits ot the Induttry to the em ployes In that Industry, The Increase pf wagea has rested wholly with the employer, and only too often has been obtained by strikes and the power of labor unions. te The Republican polley. while profess ing to protect. Aamleaa hvber again the "! Jbr pt . has aetuaDy swsi. wwm.jm,, iwsiwi aHMaH UW HBsUrl tected Industries nro foreigners who will never become American citizens. 3. The Republican policy of protection has gone far afield from what it was In the days ot Clay and Webster. No longer do we hear or read of pro tection for "Infant Industries." The policy has gradually changed Into a policy of "perpetual protection." Once an Industry Is granted protection It must be favored ever afterward. This Is a direct contradic tion of the original Idea of a protective tariff. The remedies for the above-mentioned defects In tho Republican policy are self-evident 1. Every Industry to which protection Is granted should be subject to a Federal commission, which would see that the la borers employed In that Industry are given 'a fair and equitable share of the profits due to the protection granted by the Gov ernment 2. Real protection for American labor should prevent the employment of any men of foreign birth except those who have been naturalized. There should be stringent reg ulations as to the Importation of "pauper laborers" to become naturalized and then employed In protected Industries. B. "Perpetual protection" should ba granted to no Industry unless the products of that Industry are of vital necessity to the country's welfare In times of great na tional stress. How many manufacturers would support a tariff measure carrying the provisions mentioned above? Frankly, I do not like all of the second provision, and yet I do not see how It can be avoided If we are to afford true protection to American laborers. (I trust you will protect me against the gentleman who says that there Is nlready a per capita tax on Immigrants and that there Is a law against "contract labor.") S. Philadelphia, October 31, A CHEERFUL CRITIC To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I am a reader pt your valuable edi torials, mostly quotations and other Inter esting "apparently" news, composed by the editor's assistants, I surmise, and am anxious to know It the editor ever gets angry when criticized by a faithful sub scriber' two times at once. Concerning Per kins, may I Inquire, "Did he not have the preliminaries out to dust?" Apparently, and the owl affords the same knowledge. Both work In the dark; neither ever aaw day light And there lies your who's who and a hoot. "He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves and sharpens our wits," but the light ones that sidestep and refuse to hold make us nervous. "Apparently" Who's Who? Tho future holds the facta May I mention your paper la getting more Interest ing dally? S. FREDERICK HALL. Philadelphia, November 1, RADICALISM AND ITS RIGHTS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir May I make a reply to your edi torial of Saturday evening, headed "Propa ganda, Property and Props"? May I say that you do not dispose ot the subject? Those you term radical, being human, have diverse opinions and we know that some of them are not worth the listening to. However, the people who In all seriousness stand behind Socialism, free speech or birth control are a power to be reckoned with., and the movements they represent are deep ones and are not to be Ignored or summarily put aside. No one finds fault with the main conten tion of Socialism. I, a, that every one should share alike in whatever the earth produces. No person familiar with the growth, d velopment and results of tree speech would want to suppress.lt No one, aeelng the numbers of undernourished, poorly clad and defective children of the masses would hesitate to provide a check to the producing of more' than there are means to take proper care of, May I say that because of the actions of a few who wrongfully claim to be socialists, etc, that you have loBt sight of the Justice, the depth and the great seriousness of the movements you mention? DUItAND. Drexel Hill, October 30. CONTRARIWISE If the law were to edict that man and wife should never be together for mere than six months In the year, It would be broken every day and men and worein would stand huacer'aaa etrlses ts euu'is. getaar for twejve. nooUui la twelve; If love s waaiw wmsm sbsssbi h What Do You Know? j Ourtf& of general interett will be answered in tlila column. Ten Questions, the answers to which everv well-informed person should know, are asked dally. O.UIZ nimfthttfi will be one ef the treat rnlera of the world In his time. Who Is lie? Jost what Is the .nature of the work done br tanners? Women did not appear on the atare In the Kngiand of Shnltespeare'e dar. Who took women's parts? When wero tlieko parts nrst played by women? Who waa "fir Iron Keller"? What la a porrlns-er? What Is snow blindness? What In meant by the principle of natural selection? Roslnanle was the name of perhaps the most famous character In the world'a llcllon. xtanie her, What la meant In a parliamentary hodr when a man sara "I rise to a point of order"? We hear of some one "running the samnt or emotions." What Is the real meanlns of ssniut? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz The dimensions of the ordlnarr brick are two lit four br elxtit inches. 10. HlfiflVll 7TiBlsWja3mK.rMfllTM To appoint men to a "bipartisan" eommln- ion www im jo appoint an equal num ber of Hepubllcans and Democrats i a "nonpartisan" commission wonld be made nn pf men of all parties or of no panics, without Inquiring- Into their party affllta tlons. Salllns nn n rreat flrelel nsTltatlnr on n line which It carried on a plane throuzh the earth would exactly bisect It. Mlnle ballt a conical rifle, bullet, with n rasltr In Its base pinned wllh a piece of Iron, which br the explosion of the charze is driren further In, expandlna the sides to tit closely the ;Uh of the barrel, named for Captain Mlnle, of France, the lnrentor. ""JTVJL', nd.."ih,CraPj are both correct, but ''hiccup" la the, older and better spelli Ins. "Illeeensh" Is the result of what Is called "popular etymology," Philadelphia Art Juryi It Is reonlren by law that It pass on any work of art be i!r? .!' .pnoroee the property, of the cltyi but If It does not act for sixty days its tacit approral la presumed. The sUn means "to" or "at"i for eiample. ."the pries was inVsOlOvS. rn."nl..f"",,C,0fl;r)LhMt 9"7'" -- plf.l''K,l he fruit of the uspaw tree. Tho intlky Juice of the nlanfls said to hare the properly of maklnz meat tender. Osier's ace limit! he spoke of "(he eom "T'UTr oselessneas if men above SO" and "the useleasncse of. men nboxe 60 1 " fnleW.rSW:" ""' rUltn' 5 '- A mornlns rainbow Is recarded as a slzn weaffi?.' " ,nUj" rainbow of faff Imbecile Voters J. C. M. Imbeciles have the privilege of voting In the House of Lords. Lunatics are allowed to vote at parliamentary elec tions. A British legal Journal n an arti cle on the matter ahows by numerous In stances that men have lost their reason without losing the franchise. Objections to voters on grounds of Insanity have been very seldom sustained. T Nature of Mead II. p. Mead Is a fermented liquor made from honey. The honey Is mixed with water and malt, and then spices are added and fermentation Is Induced and conl ducted In the usual way. Mead waa In use lee arsassu sataas.lu !&. ta a. " ... ,v. ,.., ""; ii waa Known both among the highly civilized nations of 7""'" K.UIVJW aim among mo barbarous tribes of the north. Morris Plan J. P. The following adltlonal informa tion may be of Interest to you: The Morris plan for making loans to small borrowers' which has been described as "The Helping Hand, Incorporated." recently held Its sec ond convention. Twenty-elght new conv panles operating the Morris plan have been formed within the last year" making ufty" three altogether now In existence, ihe companies have made loans aggrea-atini m.OOO.pOO to m.800 borrow". MaSv f'fi1". ?S 'cu". '" "an sharks were told at the convention. One workman who had been paying J19 a montl, for Interest alone to loan sharks got free from them through the Morris plan, and I. now p,y Ing up both principal and Interest in flftv. two installments at IJ a week. y Crime In New York .B;..D'"h" Population of the death housa at Sing Slag prison dwindled to tin SSS on November t. tho lowest In nearly twenlt? five years. The showing Is cons den !! markable by officials. , view rt Wfaat that under a law enacted two years aio al persons destined for execution must 5. sent to this prison. Frevlou. Tto that time murderers were kept also In Cllaten and Aubvirn prUons. A year ago twiaty.0Bl aeadtasaad wea were occupants ot the death hauee. The laM tlm, that tae naitirtf eeavsetad taarsWasai at su. J.!rT?"5 SRPF ALL ' UJH ." ta t uaT a ICE ;"" M Tin - jjiiCTriii iMiiJwlmiaoJiflBillirgf - .raaff?8" tiAxmtteTsMmetttWmW 'I ' 'm ni'P J ii'MiBiminrT The Northeast Corner 1 Casuals of tho Day's Work TUB average man, taking him by and large, sizes up pretty well with any ota, average man In some respects. Meet tor Instance, nn Average Man on the strtet frlek him for poetry as we Bay In detec tive circles and you will find that he has tucked away somewhere a clipping from a newspaper, a limerick, a couplet or, In rarer Instances, a sonnet which he has kept either for his own enjoyment or te show to some one who may have a point of view that Is appreciative. Sometimes, too, there may be tucked away In hiding places some gems, set like' a diamond from Jnegersfonteln, unex plained, unexpected and altogether beauti ful. It Is one's privilege to display two ot these which may or If they are not they should be carried by the Average Man as food for thought Uoth are cribbed from dedicatory phraslngs of bookn. The first In from Gilbert Chesterton's dedication to Hllalre Delloc of his book, 'The Napoleon ot Nattlng Hill:" And when the pedants bade us mark What strange mechanlo happenings Must come, our souls said In the dark: Ilellke but there are likelier things. And the other, curiously like. Is from the dedication ot William McFee's "Casuals ot the Sea:" To thoso poor casuals of the way-worn earth. The feckless wastage of our cunning schemes. .. This book Is dedicate, their hidden worth And beauty I have seen In vagrant dreams I The things we touch, the things we dimly see. The stiff strange tnpcstrles of human thought, Tho silken curtains ot our fantnsy Are with their somber histories o'er wrought And yet we know them not; our skill is vain to find The mute soul's agony, the visions of the blind! Yet to go otherwhere. If Memory holds her scat, and, ns Dudley Wood says. "We presume she do," It Is from a dedication of K. S. M.'s "A Little Drother to the Illch" that wo quote: To my good friend. Dr. F. D. Norton, to whom I owe All My Good Health, Also A Small Balance ot Seven Dollars and Forty-flvo Cents. SYMPHONIC BANQUET SLIGHTLY TOO LARGE Beethoven and Schumann on One Program Brahms Con certo by Mme. Samaroff Not all concerts can bo as refreshing, as springlike, as compact and lucid, as those which Mr. Stokowski has been giving us at the Academy lately. The drop had to come, and only thanksgiving can bo expressed that It came with ns much comparative mildness as It did yesterday. Tho fault with tho afternoon performance may be laid to a number of facts, but in chief to eleventh-hour substitutions on the program, by which tho Mepdelssohn "Ituy Dlas" over ture and Schumann's "Rhenish" Symphony disappeared, to be duly replaced with the Schumann Fourth and the slow movement from Beethoven's Seventh, tho latter played In memory of Theodore N. Ely,, who In his lifetime was a'membcr, of tho orchestra's executlvo committee and, It Is understood, a warm friend of Mr. Stokowski. No ono could possibly challenge the pro priety of this tribute from tho point of so cial or general artistic taste, but there Is something to be urged against it from tho point of musical, particularly symphonic taste. If works ot this large and cohesive nature are to be disjointed by conductors at will, to establish what Is largely a matter of sentiment, no matter how worthy the latter, Just where docs Beethovon "get off'? Wagner's violent objections to the dl3mcmbcrment of his music dramas for. the concert" stage have done him no, good; hashes of 'Tristan" and "Tannhaeuser" are continually being recooked to make a so prano's holiday-feast But wasn't he right after all? Hardly even Wagner, however, could have been angry at tho divorced "Melste'rslnger" overture as It wa3 given yesterday. Com ing last on the program. It was like a wind In April, for Mr. Stokowski, beside being a thoroughgoing Wagnerlte, under stands the spirit of this most energetic and glowing comic opera. He plays it, there fore, like a comic opera, and the Joyous vehemence of It Is trebled. But the con ductor, with that far-seeing astuteness which Is so keen It Is amusing, put the overture at the last, thus preventing any Bayreuth disciple from "walking out on the show" during Its less Inspired moments. A good many such moments occurred during Mme. Samaroft's playing of tho Brahms concerto. What a concerto I Dis tended, lacking any meaty kernel with all Its arid husk, and dubious as to form, It might be urged as a good example of what not to play at a long concert The fact that the soloist gave It an elegance and poise quite her own, and that she con verted much of Its pompous orchestration Into what resembled therlnsplratlon of com position, only made It the more Irritating. It Is not a work suited primarily to plan Istlo display; one need not have read Mr. Goepp's program note to the effect that It first was designed ns a symphony to re allze that Incidentally, the current passion for Brahms, who only a few seasons ago seemed about to retire Tnto Umbo, Is a curious thing. It Is well for fine artists to remember that Liszt and other big men have written concertos as well. Mme. Samaroff has gained In fluency and ease, and a certain hardness of tone which once marred her playing Is on the de crease. If no other reason could have been adduced for her many recalls and her many bouquets (and there were many others), It might have been found In her charming attire, which In the subdued light ing ot the building reminded one of a French painting. French music would havo suited that gown I Now for the symphony. We have always known that Mr. Stokowski could play Schumann as well as any one hereabout; better than most, maybe. Ills performance waa In the full and fragrant spirit of the composer. There were foaming waters of sound, splendid rushes and ripples of mel ody, all In the lyrlo vein. And his orchestra played, of course, with all Its new 11 coherence and unanimity. It was only a pity that a more artistic grouping of num bers could not have been constituted a splendid whole, for the whole ts equal to the number of Its parts, remember. D, D. AND STILL AT IT A paragrapher on the Philadelphia Evan jno Lsdqbr rose to wonder why It Is patrol wagons are not equipped with Plntsch lights, and at last accounts he was still at liberty. Macon Telegraph. BOB WniTE I heard them greet the peep of dawn From every bush and tree; Blackbird, bluebird, robin, wren, Jay, thrasher, chickadee; Then I heard, from hla retreat Somewhere n the born or wheat, Bob White welcoming the mornlnr . And I thought his song more awtet: "Rob Whltel Bob Whiter. Waa that note of bird or sprit. Bob White? I have listened In the shadows' To the hauntinr whlppoorwlll, I have heard the rapturous mocker. Oh, a wealth ot sweetness ealUiV Yet aet tbaae today I hear! y ui ss,souwi stayed iu mr sir. : Ttu, K n...it. -..,. .- . '-J . . T.'.-ri.. YT " iwu-iaroaiea Just bie double mi, of oaeer: .WaHer'