U At M EVENING PtJBLIO LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1019 21 1 WHY ipt i J ""fr?'i',1i I fl 1 m I W I mJ I & 1-J 1L m I I Li I 1 1L y m F m I v v I m 1 m m I m 1 I If v. iBx jST jfl Vr (H w m. w HI Hi SV HI IH lam HI 11 Hk HI HI jS HI HI aPr fl" H Ls' 4 '& EVERY worker employed in industries which use coal, every householder who must shield his family from the rigors of the coming winter, every farmer who depends upon the railroads for the transportation of his products, is concerned in the outcome of the coal strike. For that reason THE LITERARY DIGEST telegraphed the editors of the leading newspapers in the principal soft-coal dis tricts of Illinois, central and western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia and Tennessee for their predictions of what the end of the coal strike Mall be. Because these men are in close contact with actual conditions in their respective localities and can be assumed to have a definite knowledge of local public opinion regarding the strike, their views should be authoritative. Their answers to THE DIGEST'S request for information are in corporated in the leading article of this publication, dated November 15th, and it is sure to enlighten the American public. The article is well illustrated with an original photograph and several pertinent cartoons. Some of the other articles of more than ordinary interest in THE DIGEST for November 15th are: u M assachusetts There he is I P? How the Bay State, Led by Governor Coolidge Sounding the Battle Cry "Americanism Against Anarchy," Dealt a Smashing Blow at the Forces of Unrest and Radicalism., What the Labor Conference May Do Our Allies as Our Trade Competitors When Hearst and Murphy Fall Out Japan's Dilemma in Siberia Rampageous Afghanistan Prince Kropotkin Criticises Allies in How Human Power Is Gained and To Stop Race Suicide in France Starving the Insane in War-Time Britain How Snipers Worked in the Big War Young English and American Writers The First Man to Play Hamlet How High Flying Affected a Groundling Explaining How the "Digest" Is Printed a la Typewriter The World's Costliest Book Beating the War Idea in Social Service Britain's Partiality to Islam Ukrainians in America Where They fc Are Settled Immigration Social Organization Ukraini ans in Canada Production of Cereals in 1919 What Man Did to Booze and Booze to Man Told by a Bartender Krause'' and the German galomania A Cowboy Who Roped the Art of Being Funny The Best of the Current Poetry Many Striking Illustrations, Including Humorous Cartoons "The Digest" Appeals to All Sorts and Conditions of "There are as many view-points," says the Roman pot, "as there are men," and our modern civilization has not tended to alter the essential truth of this old-world epi gram. In this country particularly has libe rty of thought been fostered, so that every man and woman has an individual opinion upon the burning questionsof the day in politics, art, religion, science, social matters, and so forth. Is there, then, in the mul- ! $ en tiplicity of periodicals published continually all over the land one upon which they, can all combine as representative and unbiased? Yes THE LITERARY DIGEST. This foremost of all news-magazines gives all sides of all the great issues in every de partment of life, quoting from newspapers and magazines of every shade of belief with absolute impartiality. It expresses no opinions of its own, leaving you to form your own conclusions. Try reading a copy today and test this for yourself. Send 10 Cents for a Copy If You Can Not Buy It On the News-Stand ' V(, A. V . ' t For a Singlo Dime at the News -Stands Each Week FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary) NEW YORK l ,, K TA & ' fr 3 Affi. h Wn L- r i ..a i i , Vf- UwVi- U 5 j, 'ijd -J. J ft.. ... ,fis il&Ss $ fol J1 f i.! G " ,