1
Mrs. Elisha Dyer still continues to nhnw improvement, and her frienrts and phys;-. clans f»el ereatfv enconracd. Mr. and Sir?. F. '#. D'HanteviU- »r» <«x« pertert to-morrow to make nn Irsp^'ttern of their estate. They have b*»n abroad for Bin Pembroke Jones, whose health has irreativ improved, will start, together \u25a0?. : » h»»r family, for l^nnx tr».morrow. Mrs. J. .1. Mason nan returned fmm t% visit in New York. I Pajpc.Col. ' rtt^r- HM«m»r-« ...14 *"— \u25a0Ma-riar < and AmomobilMi ... 5 4—71 7'-iTh« ... 7 7 E•nK fr » and iNotl^p of Fum- T*rok*ns 12 1^ boh . . 11 c, B^»rd &\u25a0 Roomi 11 7'Piannn a. -ear.= 11 7 Book* and Pub- jPolitical Notice*. 2 fi-T llcatlonf X 1-7' Real EFtat»> for Carper Clear.lng.U M Sal#> rr to Let. 10 7 <~lratiTji<; 11 fl'R^sl EdatP City Hotels - 10 7! TVar>t«*i 1O 7 T>anrtn« Ac*&v~ ' R-;ic!ous !C o - roles II 5] tipff? O fi- 7 IVEk» ».vA Ctfftr* Rr-m»>ili«s 11 7 Furniture ii 7 P.escrra . 11 4-5 "Dividend Sn- Kpfrtaurants 11 R *'"•' 12 l'Srhcl A Rentes. ii n TV)ra»*Uc Pltua- l^r^rlal Not !<•»».. 7 7 rionF Wanted. ll \u25a0+!^tora=* Notices 11 R European Afl- tSurrrieatef Xo- v«rt i»4»m»r.'r .IS 6-71 -'-^ \u25a0\u25a0 7 Y\nMT)"-.a.] ...12 "iTirr* TaM<* 11 «7 T»r ?s> ...11 7!Trii"]r.* Pubs;rip- r«rn)fli»l I tion Rat»(t 7 7 Boom» .11 7'Trust Companies. ll « ; r """antes. .: 4! Typewritlnc -.8 7 In»rruction . 11 R'T'nfuri ieh »d l«*ryer« I 4\\ Apartm-nte ...in 7 I^wt Bankbook*. 11 6 1 Wort Wan* 1 ! .. . 11 4 MI*~«>ll»r>«/vHi -.11 «! Sfrw-UnTk &rihunt. RATTTRDAT, VOVKMBER " 1010 This ttotexpappr is owned and pub- lished hv The Tribune Association^ a Xeic York crtrporai inn ; nffi<r (i»rf prin- cipal pit'\u25a0•' of business. Tribune Bttild- tn.c Xn. tr.4 \'ii<-in. afreet:. Xeic York; Opdrn Mitt*, prcsidrnt :Ogden M. Reid, secretary: Jams* }[. Borrett, treasurer. The addrrun nf ihr officers Is thr office cf this newspaper. IHI SEWS \u25a0' 7/ / a.\FORM\G FOREIGN*.—The Spanish Senate, by a \u25a0vote of 14y to nS. jiassed the "padlock hill," but the Premier showed a con- ciliatory attitude toward the Vatican; the government has decided to suppress a labor demonstration in Barcelona. .-- Many lives were believed lost in Th*- destruction by fire of the Manitoba Insane Asylum at Brandon. = Nine- teen cases of cholera and six deaths were reported from Italy. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Willows, the "Welsh aeronaut, started to fly to Paris in a machine of his own construction. : It was reported from San Salvador that CJeneral Valladares had insulted the United States Consular Agent. Oeorprr> Sc-hmuck. and th;it the grunhoat Prince- ton had her puns train* r^ady for ac- tion. «.<n th^ Governor's residence, at Amapala. occupied l>y th* Honduran in- surgrent t.-hfef. : An Imperial decree issued in Pekinc ordered tho convoca- tion of Parliament in lit].'!. ... Prince si Hatzfeldt-WildeuburK. who mar- Cbed a daughter of the late C. P. unt- If'iß'ton. dlfii in London. / r>'»ME?Tir.— Ex- President Roosevelt i \u25a0 n\ I «-s Moines and Davenport, I lowa, in h^haif of Charles GrilkJ ;i Pro- j gTesstve Republican candidate for Con- gress. z== H^niT- I 2 Stimson continued j hif= cair.paigrij tour in thr- Hudson Valley, j Kj^akinsr at Catskill nnii Pouehke^r>F:i<- , ! X. Y. ===== John A. Dix fifrured in Jin i automobile acr-jderst while jroine fmm J Albany t<» Troy, licinc badly shaken u\>. I - \u25a0 \u25a0 .. Eighteen inches <•! nnnw wrre ro- p<irted in the <^atßkill Mountains and at { Blnghamtbn, N. Y. \u25a0 r— - It was reported j at Bnltimore that the aeroplanes! dam- j ap°d in the recent storm would he re- paired in time to resume the programme ! of thf aviation m<=-«n Monday. =z=. The j hearing at Chicago of witnesses in the j H". called Bathtu!> Trust Inquiry was | practically finished; further testimony will h* heard tn the East. '"* Arthur' A. Punphy era* arrested in Philadelphia I f»n charts ernw-Jnc out of complaints ! of eonsi to defraud by New York bnnk.«. CITY. Stocks declined after early strencth. . == After Justice O'Gorman had reduced the charg-»- against him from mtir*er in th*- first deerrc-p to man- Blaughter in the second detrre. Edward T. RoK^nheim^r was acquitted by the i'jry of criminal responsibility for the i killir.jr of Grace Houfrh by his automo- bile. =====: T-h.-.nrlnrr Roosevelt addressed a third l^ttf-r tr. Judge Baldwin, ampli- fying his previous statements. = In spite of the Mayor's efforts striking ox- prcs= drivers and helpers voted to ?nay out until the companies recognized the union. - - LJoyd C. Oris^om. presi- dent of the Republican County Commit- tee, estimated that Dixy plurality in tin- county trould h>* ]e?»; than 40,000. _ THE WEATHER— for to- r^ay: Pair. Thf- frnp^rature yesterday: i Highest, 40 degrees; lowest; 39. | Appeal Sent to the Clergy cf All Chris- tian Churches. Boston. Nov. 4. -The American Teace So- ciety Issued to-nisht an appeal to the clergy or all Christian Churches at the country and to the leaden of Hll other rcli = ioua organtsaUona to observe the third Sontlay in December of this and succeedms years as Peace Sunday, and <-n that Uate to c.rg-» by prayer, sons Jind sermon "the abolition of war and ii>e substitution m: lmp«rct)T« u^:r;:;n^;™:;; „.„_,. secretary of the American Board of ••om- mtssloneni for Forrt-n Mission*. RoStt>n; Arthur .1. Barton, secretary of the Presby* terian Foreign Mission Doard. Nen A'ork; Earl Cranston. Cardinal tJihbor.s, of Balti- more; Bishop Mallalieu of the U«thodist Episcopal Church, Benjamin Trueblo^ni. stecretary of the American Peace Society, and many others. SIAMESE PUMPKINS. From The Philadelphia Record. An agricultural curiosity rarely seen, even m the blssest county f«i:rs. was exhibited at the last matins: «>f the Ormantcnvn Horticultural - in the form of Sia- mese twin pumpkins. Two pumpkins mir* than a toot lons were attached ti» «mc!i other for about half their length. Abraham Gruff brought the pumpkins to the me**ttng. \u25a0 at-it the oldest members of the society i»*»itt they Mi never betore seen anything at tk« kind. ANNUAL PEACE SUNDAY URGED Junior Festivities This Season Promise Unusual Interest. The juniors of Columbia University hjrra just annoimced their plans for the annual junior prom, celebration, which Is con- sidered the most active social week on ths» campus durins the whole year, as t- ia devoted entirely to cay e ties an.l yaTrsea, dances, dinners, theatre parties, teas, con- certs and the like, instead of the u*':?l tedious grind of the study and recitation The wePk will open tvith a hockey ganr* against Cornell Tmversity. on February Tl. in the Sc. Nicholas Rink, followed on' tba next Monday by a 'varsity basketball cam-» in the gymnasium against an alumni nve. with a special dance afterward On Tuesday the regular university t-% will be held in Earl Hall, while m :fc» evening the man !o!in and s!^ club concert will tain place. Wednesday ana Thursday afternoons will be devoted entirely to the The junior ball, the affair of tbm week, is scheduled for Wednesday crating-, and-witl be held in the srrand ballroom 6S the Hotel Tlaza. as heretofore. Thursday nlsht win be "Columbia night" at some local theatre. Where Columbia sonsrs are sunpr and faculty "hit*" mad» from the. stage. The festivities win end en Friday night, when the 'varsity basketball t-am clashes w^th Ya'.e. COLUMBIA PROM. WEEK PLANS Sovereigns Kiss at Potsdam— Guest Staying at the New Palace. Potsdam. Nov. 4—Emperor Nicholas n* Russia, attended by Serjaua Sazonoff th" 9 Russian Minister of Forefcm Affairs, arvi a suite of fifty persons, arrived her* m- day for a visit tr> Emperor William. Ha was received at the station by the Empero- nnri Princes. Chancellor yo n Bethmann- HoDweg and the members of the Cabinet. Thr-ir majesties kissed rep^atfd!y. Em- peror Nicholas wil! have apartments a: ttui New Palae«\ to-ntsrht. many prominent personages frora both Russia and Germany beir.s; present. There wen no speecri^. as the visit ~o£ Emperor Nicholas la regarded as non-poim- A number of Socialist demonstrations heldl to-night In protest asain?* the \"isit of thf» Russian ruler passed off without incident. KAISER WELCOMES CZAR NOW IN COMPETITIVE CLASS Governor Approves Resolutions of Civil Service Commission. Albany. Nov. \u2666.— Governor White to-<J*^ approved resolutions adnprmi hv th» Sta?<» Civil Service Commission transferring from the exempt to th<> competitive class tha offices of clerk and assistant '-l-'-k at "arh. state prison and two office of «?forn«y hi the State Forest. Fish and Game Depart- He also approved resolutions rlaapi^j^n^ in th- exempt class an additional position of superintendent of f<?r««?TS in rh* Fores**. Fish and Game D^parttnen!. and an addi- tional position of speoiai depot? register in the office '\u25a0\u25a0 the Renter of Now York. In a memorandum announcing MS ap- proval Governor "WJut« says_ that tn* chants in the prison employes were t*c- omm^nd^d by fortrcl!«»r Williams. foSUvw- ins: a r»-orsamzation of the methods and the establishment of a uniform accountlns; system in all the prisons. Th* classifica- tion of the two attorneys in the For*?:. Fish and Game Department, say? the Gov- ernor, is thf rpsult of Commissioner Aus- tin's work Jn roorznnizir.^ the departmer.- and in harmony with th* policy of thi Civil S»»rvir« Commission, alreativ applied ta the Attorney General's office, and the New York City Public Service Commission, irs placing in The competitive class all at- torneys receiving salaries up to $3,f>*> pc? annum. . . . TBEX AX I) HOW Tbe death of Hugh .7. Grant who was twi . Mayor and Twice an unsuecespful candidate f<>r Mayor <>f New York City iv the j>eriod before consolidation, re- calls memories of a regime in local poli- tics to which the voters of t<Mluy eim well look back with curiosity and amaze- ment Mr. Grant was in his time the t**t vote getter in Tammany Hal], be- cause. ibouzh accepting TanimHny'K bt«- teiu of soveninient he stood in personal character and rcjnit*- fj;r above tun ma- jority of his co-workers under Kelly and <:roker. The "business*' motive in I»<>liii<-s at ihat time was emphasized by the fjicr that th*> Democratic ]i;<riy di- vider] itself into two and often three or four factions, each intent «.n enjoying the «jioils of office. The County I)e- moeraey way ili«- chief rival of Tam- many Hall, and the Irving Hall in- nnwracy was a good type of the smaller factions, which were over willingto bar- gain their support of any local ticket for a shar»* in the nominations. Konie- tmi«*s in days of stress Uk« those of Henry George's first eainjmisrn for the mayoralty the Democratic factionlsts united out of a sense of H:lf .preservation. But usually there were not enough «>fh'ces to go around, iOl'J Tammany and the Cotmty Democracy bntii entered Into a three-cornered campaign with the Re- j»ui«l><-Hns for the control of the city. it is hard to realize now the littleness «ud narrowness of those struggles for what there was iv h l»K*a! election for the professional politicians. Hardly any- body thought of administering tiV city srov«*rnnieut for the .K-iK'ijr of the citi- zens as citizens. The motive and pur- pose were the benefit of the halls nnd organizations to which the voters werv «uii".'-'-.j ty owe •allegiance. Indeperi-, WHAT THE RESULT WILL MEAN, i From The Watertown Times. Whether Republican or Democratic ad- ministration results from the election the cost of living will not be affected one rent What will be affected is something of the comfort of livingunder the. uplifted policies 'of Governor Hughes or th» down Dull'n^ policies of Tammany Hall. What will be V'~ fected will be the firm establishment of civic righteousness, which Governor Huch»>s worked for and which the Republican can- didate. Mr. Stimson. Is pledged to continue or the throwing of the grand word "noli ties." in Its true significant -e. buck acatn Into the mire of selfish and greedy trading. I DEGRADING ALLIANCE From The Louisville Evening Post. We ask the so-called business interest* of the country outside of New Ynrk "h»t they think of property owners, nion r>mi neiu in the church, men eminent in ll! churches, bankers, whose wholf binlima rests upon the confidence of men in ri. At fellow man-what they think of thlsfde- crading alliance between the nnan.-iai .VT terests of New York, the corpora?* ?L"r" ests of New York, on the one h-mrl wirh Tammany Hal! and Murphy and Dfcc You are called to Murphy's Room _.. : „„„ " ir America— business men of AmerivJ \re \u25a0ins" THE MAN ON THE BOX." From The Washington Star. The recognized master of the situation [at Rochester 1 was Charles F. Murphy The leader of Tammany Hall sat enthroned in "Room 212." "and the whole procession one by one. knocked at his door Every- body knew that Mr. Murphy would make the nomination, and so everybody submit- ted suggestions to him. In the end he named Mr. r>ix. and might have done so even without the knowledge that the selec- tion would be agreeable to Mr. Gaynor. And. for that matter. Mr. Gaynor had confessed Mr. Murphy's power by address- ing to him his two letters bearing on the nomination. He did not think of Shepanl or Dix. or Sulzer. but of Murphy, the man on the box. DIX AND .HI? TVALL-FAPER. From The Portland Oregonian. "Whatever the tariff sins of the Repub- licans may be, the party leaders cannot be accused of hypocrisy. It they ask for high duties in practice, they also defend them in theory. They belong: to a party which thinks a high tariff essential to the welfare or' the country, and in bestowing Its favors upon any given industry they are merely carrying their principles out in practice. But a man who calls himself a Democrat and at the same time lobbies and votes for a ht|(h tariff cannot possibly he sincere in both professions. THE CONSTITUTIONAL. AMENDMENT. From The Syracuse Journal. N The constitutional amendment provides for the election of two additional associate judges of the Court of Appeals. This will end the practice of designating Supreme Court justices to serve a,> associate judges <,r" the Court of Appeals. This amendment increases the salary of the chief judg« of the Court of Appeals from J10.500 and $3.7"» for expenses to Sl&^OO. It also increases the salary of the associate judges of the court from $!•'."<>• and expenses to Slo.f-00. This amendment should be adopted. It was proposed after careful consideration by men be are familiar with the situation and is a great improvement on the present arrangement. AUSTRIA'S INCOME TAX. From Pally Consular Reports. It is officially stated that there are i««»> fanners iGrossbaurem in Austria th* nret of whose estates range trom l*\ lo *a.^ and 18.0»entW>m#n farmers LvlthTsUU larger property, altogether l^OooT^kSt- ural holdings >\u25a0 some magnitude ?\i - 166.000 land owners only &y^ *-{. tl )vjr sonal Income tax. the rest, via «r n ll\ «»*t- inc that they do not enrn th* taxable in- come of CSO a y«*r- Of the ttf^wanners 2.3L>» ray taxes on an in.>o me ;,' * r l,i> and 1.9 Mon one above fc.;»V H v l"r Th* entire jjersonal income rax \u25a0« \u25a0 V.,»Hi amounts to 05.010.000 for »& JJain«£ am«ain« <H - IfiO.CCO in 190». ' B ealnst $!*• CAMPAIGN COMMENT. CHINESE WIN DEMAND Imperial Decree Convokes Par- liament in 1913. Peklnc. Nov. 4—An official datras was issupd to-day, announcing that an imperial parliament, the first in the. history r>f China, would b<> convoked in 1313. This is a concession on the part of the throne to the demands of the recently con- stituted *-rate - nd delegations of the pro- vincial assemblies, which recently memo- rialized th» fjovernment. ureing the early constitution of a reneral representative legislative body. Thp programme fixed by th* late Em- press Dowager provided for the assembling Of an imperial parliament in IVZ. t'ntil recently the thrnne had refused to enter- tain petitions prayin? that the date be ad- vanepd. Recently th<» rand Council was ordered to consider the matter, and last Monday Prince Yu T^»ne. one of th« Grand Councillors, announced In th» senate that the entire ration was a.i_ni>'<l on the neces- sity nt th» early establishment of a gen- eral parliament. To-days decree yet forth that the par- liament would \u25a0• convened in three years. The police went from bouse to boose, in- forming the occupants of the edict. Pres- ently the bracea banner and paper lanterns appeared above every door. Beyond this there waa no public demonstration. The importance of: the throne's conces- sion is appreciated when it is recalled that the provincial assemblies, the ttrst step toward modern and popular government tn China, are still in their infancy, and that the senate, the first preneral body approach- ing: anything: like popular representation, met for the first time on October 3 last. As constituted, the senate did not promise important popular legislation, a? one-half of Its two hundred members were appoint- ed by the throne. Nevertheless, it took a stand in favor of an imperial parliament at an early date. Tin COXTEBT ix xrw JERSEY. The doKing days of the political cam- paign in New jersey make it sufficiently clear that there is no convincing reason why any Republican should holt his party's ticket. <)ji purely personal grounds Mr Lewis's iappeal tcfthe electors is certainly as strong as that of his op- ponent. Both are in«>!i of lii^i)character; of dignity and of culture That is uni- versally conceded, it might seem narrow to urge Mr. Lewis's superiority on the ground of his being a Dative and life- long resident \u25a0\u25a0• the state, but at lea it i- legitimate to argue that his many years of highly efttcienl and Irreproach- able public Bervice in various important office* have given him a practical famil- iarity "jth the business of the state which in opponent cannot be mid •<• possess. Granting their personal equality in other respects, thai on.- consideration sliouid give Mr Lewis h vviuning .id vantage. There is certainly no disadvantage for Mr. I/'wiv in a comparison of the re- spective policies of the two candidates. 1)1 A AND MURPHY. If. those who say that Dix would not ! be a Murphy Governor would point to a i single act of his in opposition to Mur- i phy the state might listen to their ad- ! vocacy. Bui where is the single in stance <»f opposition? His whole politi- cal record is one of subserviency and usefulness. His political record is brief, hut what there is of it Is all Murphy. He was tir.-;t heard of when he was nominated for Lieutenant Govern \u25a0 two years ago In a convention dominated by Murphy and < .inner . He next appears in political life as one of the organizers of the Democratic League, whose osten- sible purpose was to rehabilitate the Democratic party and rid it of its dis- credited bosses, '"vi whose real aim was to eliminate Conners, who stood in the way of Murphy's ambition to be the sole and undisputed master of the Demo- cratic party. Murphy's Mount Clemens correspondence shows this sham reform organization to have been in regular communication with him, to have been under the control of his agents and to have been acting in his Interests. Not a finger did Party Reformer Dix or his league lift to rid the party of Murphy's mercenary management When Conners was ousted Murphy made Dix his state chairman. In that capacity has he ever indicated the slight. opposition to his creator? On the contrary, all hi« efforts have been devoted i<» smoothing the way to Mur- phy's undisputed mastery. The soreness that was left by Murphy's thugs at Buffalo and in Carnegie Hal! Mr. Dix addressed himself to healing, and so well did he do his part that he harmonized the whole Democratic party of the stare into Murphy's hands. Could any one expect his serviceability to Murphy in public office fii be any different from hi* serviceability to Murphy In his party office? Did your company, through Mr. Hup- [puch. your present campaign manager, make false statements when it unreel that bankruptcy stared the wallpaper business in the face if the present tariff rates not merely were not retained, but were not actually raised? 7 believe such a revision ran be made. and should be made. in such manner as not to destroy, or even much disturb, any large industry throughout the coun- try, and s^> ns to take Into account at all times the right of the American workingman.— John A. Dix ;tt Carnegie Hall. Was your company, through Mr. Hup pro trying to deceive Congress when it asked higher duties to met. the needs of American workingmeu, pointing out thai \u25a0'the wages paid machine printers In "Enjrland «re 25 shillings, or $6. per "we<>k. as against an average of $2250 "per week for the same class of help in "this country, and it is fair to :issume "that the wages of the other laboring "help are in proportion"? I am r,n record in a letter to the Ways and Means Committee as askine: for a reduction of the tariff on lumber of 10 per cent a y«=ar for ten year?, by which time lumber would be free. Iam on record in a letter to the Ways and Means Committee ns asking for a reduction of the tariff on paper of 2ft p<=r cent a year for five years, by which time paper would l>f on •\u25a0. free list. John A. Dix, in Staten Island. QUESTTOXS FOR A HrPPTrHIiITE. 1 believe in the necessity for B down- ward and honest revision of the tariff, and that has always been my view.— John A. Dix at Carnegie Hall. Did you hold that view when your Standard Wall Paper Company asked Congress to raise the wallpaper tariff from 25 per cent to :;.*. and 4." per cent? I believe that such a revision can be. mnde with slight disturbance of busi- ness, and to the great relief of the con- s-:imer. who is/after .all; the average man throughout th» entire country.—John A. Dix at Carnegie Hall. Do you think thai this belated state- meht just at the end of the campaign-^ j which, when explained, was that a rela- tive, with your'approval; wrote sujree^t- ins the gradual luction of the tariff on paper and lumber, the raw material!' of wallpaper— relieves you from respon- sibility for the petition of your company at the same time for increased duties on the finished wallpaper, which, If your relative's K.u£2esrion. had bee; adopted, could have been manufactured more cheaply than before? dent voting was difficult, because the ballot was neither official nor set-ret, and party feeling ran so high that most citi- zens put party success above the real advantage of the community. Consoli- dation nnd the spread of Intelligence ::n<l independent thinking have changed all that. The Democratic party, as sailed by public opinion, has had to drop such nonsense as maintaining two or three rival local organizations, all sup- porting the same state and national tickets, and lias had to tijrlit to show a bare majority -when united. It has lost the mayoralty twice since consolidation and has saved it twice only because of a division in the ranks of its opponents. In the days of Mayor Grant's political prominence the voters had not yet waked up to the idea that the city should be governed primarily for their benefit Hie political middleman was intrenched in power. and his right to exact any commission which he sought to collect for his services war- too seldom disputed. Now the middleman is being elbowed out and the. standard is being raised of government for the people as well as by the people. Mr. Grant was far better than the system which be served and deserves credit for having riser in his personal ideals above the level of his political associations. But it is more to the credit of the public here that in the short space of ten or fifteen years it has reached a point from which it can look back on the pre-conso!ida- tion regime as a kindergarten era in politics. HONEST FREE TRADER We gladly publish to-day an appeal made iV the tariff reform committee of the Reform Club for the election i trade Democratic rundldates for Con- 11 ihe Ist and 17th Congress dis- \u25a0 >t' this st:itf. because that appeal reveals the animus liehind the r»emo- cratic party's tariff revision programme, so far as thai programme is genuine and not "Huppuchritical." The Reform Club revisionists apparently want to have the tariff schedules given to the Barnes and the custom houses razed They do ii"' favor even a revenue tariff, tor a revenue tariff cannot help affording In ridental protection They are eager to set- Martin W. Littleton elected in the Ist Congress District and Henry <;«»<>r£:e, \u25a0 \u25a0•ted in the 17th District, because both "stand for the speediest possible tion of ail tariff privileges." Hut it alt tariff privileges must t:o. all duties musi go wen the duties on so Band a commodity its wallpapei The Reform Club does not Rhiily shall\ It makes no pretence that the i| i;i hoi sii"iii«i be cared for In a revision <if the tariff, as the Demo -rati' Ktato platform does. It hoWfl pro- tectlon, which, according to the deflnl ?i..ri of Ms friends, mean an equalization Of til*' COtt "f labor in the pfOdttCtioil tit THE LEGISLATURE. The importance of returning a Repub- lican Legislature 'his year is unusually srreat. in the first place, the Legislature to be elected will doubtless redis- trict the state in accordance with rh.' new census, and a Democratic majority would probably leave the Republican voters of this city entirely, or almost en- tirely, unrepresented in Congress, besides _• rrymandering the Republican sec tions of the state as to reduce for te*i ill** Republican representation Lii Washington. Republicans who. In a pique at their c our reason \u25a0\u25a0]• [ another, vote ihn Democratic ticket take the risk of wrongfully injuring i r not for this one year bur for a whole •\u25a0 Furthermore, the coming Legis- ,i United stares Senator Tim, aside from these considerations, a Grady controHed Legislature would be a ftch !•\u25a0 th»- state. In recent years has been steady progress toward specially toward standards of public life. Is it to end in a Senate of which Grady will !>c the leader and Frawley, the Sullivans Cullen and McManus chairmen of ail tbe leading committees? A Tammany orgy in tiie Legislature would be one of the consequences of a Demo . and if the Democratic ticket is successful ; hen- would be no escape fr#in It, Who will stop irv Certainly not Mr. I »ix. whose Saratoga league chose Grady as its spokesman and who has not lurage to >:iy a word against ih>' Allds supporters on The ticket with him. Grady has returned to public life aft r hifl last farewell in rln- belief thai the next Senate will be Democratic and ne will be its leader. In his ambition lit 1 lave the support of Murphy, and if the Democratic ticket la successful he will not be disappointed. Moreover, on their own merits the Re- publican leirislntive candidates to !\u25a0•• elected, i'ear inter year the 'nun- many members ar Albany are a scandal, and the only decent representation the city has is fronj the few Republican Senators and Assemblymen who are sent to Albany. They are the men who figut grabs and jrraft. who vote for hills in the public interest and who steadily look after the city's welfare Several Repub- lican Senators and Assemblymen of proved usefulness as legislators, met] who have won tbe commendation of the Citi- zens Union- which maintains an agent at Albany to keep track "f tho work of the Legislature— are candidates for re- election and thoroughly deserve to be re- . iected The city could ill spari services ai Albany of such useful meai- - Senators Agnew, Brough, Sew- <oiu!, and Travis and Assemblymen Dana, Murray. Bates, Higginß and Ward. We mention a few of the most conspicu- ously useful Llejnibli ians In order to give some idea of wlmt the Legislature would be like with en dropped ..in and faithful followers of Gradj and. the Sullivan* occupying their places. Mr. Wilson has been expressing tine pria- cipies and making fine promises, in all i>l which we have do doubt thai he hi en- tirely sincere, but the best part of which In simply taken, consciously or uncon- sciously, from the principles and policies of the Republican party which that party has been gradually putting into effect against Democratic opposition. Mr. Lewis is certainly every whit as progres- sive and enlightened in his programme, and he has probably on the whole com- mitted himself to it ilittle more di- rectly and explicitly than has his opponent Mr. Martin, the brilliant •Troirro.ssive" leader, who was Mr. Lewis"* chief Republican competitor for the nomination, truly says that. Mr.Lewis is progressive enough for him and that all Republicans are progressive now. We cannot concede that there is any reason for not supporting Mr Lewis in the complaint that, the Republican party has not fulfilled all its promises. it is true that if has not yet done so. .-is some of the foremost Republican leaders as well as Democratic critics have frankly said. But. its record is vastly better than thai of the Democrats, and its title to public confidence far stronger. For it his done nor merely something but much. It is undeniable that .-in Immense change for the better has come over the state in the !:ist fifteen years, in legislation and in administration, and it is equally un- deniable that it has all been effected by t!io Republican party. Tax reform, in- creased state aid for Hie schools, con- trol <>f corporations, employers' liability. Civil Service reform, increased facilities for caring for the insane, for epileptics ami tuberculous patients, forest and water conservation, improvement of in- land waterways, good roads and a great many other measures of enlightenment and progress for the welfare of the pec pie have all been adopted by ihe Repub- [leans, or by the majority of the Repu!>- limns. reinforced by a minority of the Democrats. Certainly it is more reasonable to vote for a party which has done much than for "no whi.-h hnv finite nothing; for the party of affirmation than for that of ne- gation it Is not even prrtended that the Democratic party hai undergo™ Change of heart Mr. Wilson h;is 00l ventured to To Jl when or qow it was re- organized into a party of progress. But citizens are asked to vote for him h cause he in bo mnch hetter than his party. Doubtless he Is far better than H< partj T'.ut when tijp two candidates ted, person reasonable to vote for the out- whose parry hns done much real u-o."i rather than for the one whose party h-is ik.no no good boi mn<-h harm a- The 1 nnounocs th< »dlron< \u25a0•\u25a0! hui-.tn which closed on !••.) in Rvs >ieutt.s of hunt- ers Hnd the aarlotu ui.jurv of half i Tiit Uttea ODSsnrar." published .it ons of the gateways •<• the bi^ woods, doasa t r-«:m to think tht "gams was wortli "What's the matter with you?" "I f«-.-l \u25a0 tittle iiM»asy " '1^ \u25a0 Inter underweai land Plain l >esier "Ar»> you at istied with your n*»w maid?" "Very. She's too old to gel married und too fat to wear my tlilnKs. Bo ! think we'll be able to keep her." I Detroit Fret' Press. England expects to have a good hunting seasoti. A "splendid" show of foxes is re- ported by "M. F. H.s" from all parts of the country. notwithstanding Indiscriminate trapping and th« prevalence of mange in the last few year?. The cutting up of the country into Email holding! and the accom- panying increase of cultivation will, it Is expected, gradually affect the sport most seriously. A^ is well known, Woodrow Wilson lias a clean shaven face. But it was not always thus. Once, when Dr. Wilson was a young lawyer, pleading a cause in a North >' l;na court. Ived that hts most at- tentiv.- listen.' was the Sheriff of the who sat witt his :- and with aa the attorney. The advocate was greatly encouraj manifested by so dtotinj; .in officer, and was encouraged to ln< i <!iii further to enchain th*> at- tention of thai auditor. When he had fin- ished his address with a rounded period of glowing eloquence, he stepped toward th*- Sheriff to receive ln.s encomiums, it w;is a dreadful shock to him when that official drawled out: "Say, Wilson, 'i fi you know Be of jour sidi !',i;ui the other?" Tin \u25a0 president ol Princeton vu m disgust d thai he -t i a\ «-._i off his beard. THE TALK OF THE DAY nations' airy navies may not yet grappling In the rentral blue, but aeronautic enthusiasts seem to be doing Itiabbling on terra firma. It was William McKinley who declared that "reciprocity is the handmaiden of Moii." It was William Howard Taft. another son of Ohio, wl "the broadest measure of practical reci- procity" ever enacted. Tin- quotation is from Philander < '. Kimx, Secretary of State, who onducted the negotiations under the maximum and minimum tariff and who knows what he is talk- jiie: about. i reneral Va lladares ap] I as what he would probably call in choice Honduran Spanish "a bigger man than old Davila." But there used !'ien of the name of Davila in those parts who would nor lone: brook such aess. The superstition ahout thirteen is poinc ' Ither confirmed or ended when Thirteen Hour Dix tries his fate with the voters next Tuesday. McCurdy's plan for a flitrht from a steamship fifty miles from -shore to Gov- ernor's Island is interesting, chiefly from a military point of view. There la no reason to think that, even if it should succeed, it. would lead to a change in methods of mail transportation. But. on the other hand, both army and navy officers are alert to the feasibility of scouting with the aeroplane, and have .speculated on the chance that such an airship can be launched from a war ves- sel bis: enough to furnish a stable plat- form. How much pleasure patriotic Americans would take in a demonstra- tion of the ease with which an enemy could study the weaknesses in the coast defence system of the country is a ques- tion which need not now be discussed. but it may be remarked that the foreign aviator who asked for the privilege of landing on Governor's Island hail the good sense not to seek permission to use a camera over the fortifications. Readers of The Tribune who have boen in th» habit of studying the weather map every morning have Just had h chance to notice on* 3 of those exceptions to the rule whi<-h bother the forecasters. •us cross the country from west to \u2666ast. -md when they have once developed their movements '"an b^ fore- seen with some deereo of accuracy. Bui the disturbance which has ravaged the 4tlantlo Coast for two dayß came In from the ocean, and has followed a pen- erally northward path for forTy-eiecht hours or more. When the existence of these mischief makers while still at sea can be discovered with <-ertainty. a wel- come advance in meteorology will be ef- fected. V\'o notice that Mr. Pix did noi venture to denounce th<- "public enemy" to his East Sid" audiences. TRAXSIT XEGOTIATIOXB. The pending agreement with the in- terborouch Rapid Transit Company in- dicated by the terms of the letter from the Public Service Commission to the Board of Estimate and Apportionment regarding the Belmont tunnel is much the most satisfactory that baa yet l>een suggested. The company abandons its contention that the city should pay the cost, of thf Helmr.m tunnel, about $S,- 000.000, and offers to operate the tunnel in conjunction with the subway, provid- ing >i single fare to Queens by this route and also by \u25a0\u25a0•. connection with the Sec- ond Avenue Elevated Railroad over the Queensboro Bridge, Part of the bargain has to do with the third tracking of the elevated lines in Manhattan. The details of the pro- spective apreement are iv>t made public. Perhaps they are not fully settled. How far if will be satisfactory depends, of course, largely upon the terms ar- ranged with respect, to the elevated third fraekmc. The Tnterborouch com- pany has made concessions in regard to the tunnel to Queens, and perhaps it will show an equally reasonable spirit regarding tbe length of the elevated franchises and the compensation to the public for them. .•in article- in this country with the cost of labor in the production of ft nili r article abroad, to ho "n cursp i (> ll> "country and especially to this city, "whoso prosperity is measured by -^ ••commerce.^ The industrial district ot New York is by far the most important in the United States in waffes P- 1'"- capital invested and volume of prodn** tion. Yet the Reform Club wants to make every laborer in Industry » pre pf impel e on an equal footinc with labot abroad, so that domestic production ni:lV be checked and the volume of the '"»\u25a0 port trade througti this port may ! correspond incrly increased. That hi ' he old-fashioned Democracy of Hurd. Mor- rison and Wntterson.' Most modern Democratic tariff revisionists shy at it nowadays as at a frhost from the irrave- yarrl. We are triad to see there are some free traders left who are not afraid to speak out honestly or n v-nst disruption of business and for Old World wages. AND SANE AFTER ACQUITTAL. From The Spokane Spokesman- K«* vl<>w - No "lit- Is Bur|. n^ (1 to ,^ ini that the de- fence of M A aynr .WmSilSSwrt 1s to be Insanity According to the lawyer* .ill the mm who .-hoot (o km ait- crazyUfier they NOR THE BREED OF MEN. From The Pittsburg Disp at eh By the way, that N ew York investigation does not tend ! " -•\u25a0•--••!! the thesi.-* that horßeracJng was conducted In that state solely to improve Uu> , d of hoffaes and to indulge in royal sport. "NO CAUSE OF ACTION" From The Philadelphia ledger A Chicago man has sueil for cj-ei be- cause \u25a0'' an Injury a* a ..Milt of «hlch he rays he cannot r i a y »,.olf without pain. >«' acoidei 5a ,,.,i nim con- iatUTo^ver thin * <•• .. mon# y And .. \u0084,( \u0084- th- temp- tation to Hwe.ir ' m CREEDS AND FORMS. To the Editor of The Tribune. Sir: While Bolton Hall is not a Servetus to ho burned, It is most interesting to an outsider to note the outcropping of the old spirit of Calvin in the letter of your clerical correspondent, the Rev. J. Walter .Jordan, His argument in behalf of religious dogma la somewhat refreshing in its naive uncon- sciousness of the intellectual progress which has taken place in the world since the sixteenth century. To the humble mind of th« layman, the distinction between a programme for action in practical affairs, whether in politics or otherwise, and a crystallization of hy- potheses in matters purely speculative, is so clear that it scarcely needs pointing out. Bolton Hall would be the last man to ob- ject to the mapping out. by churches or by any other bodies, of a well defined line of work to be done to accomplish ethical, philanthropic or other needs. Belief, how- ever, in personalities, forces or laws uncon- trollable by human beings, and invisibly governing the processes which may be ob- served, is an individual matter, and must constantly vary in detail to any broad and candid mind. It is the one thing which cannot, without fatal results to veritable truth seeking, be chained clown to a set form of words and fixed once, for all in an inflexible creed. Dogma is a folly and a madness, because it is daily confuted by the ever expanding vision of science. It Is \u25a0 curse to man. be- cause it stunts the best activities of the human mind and seeks to make intellectual processes mechanical rather than spontane- ous and organic. The gag law so fervently advocated by Mr. Jordan forms another proof that the clerical mind is somewhat tardy In appre- hending the lessons of history That the, advocates " outworn o,,t nions ' Bhould pre . fer to suppress fre,. Bp^. h h nQt at _,„ amazing. JAMES P. MORTON. JK. New York, Oct. 25). 1910. The force and power, latent in every man. which conquers continents, navigates the air. penetrates the bowels of the earth, ar- ticulates the ether— lf this dynamic human energy could be applied to th» most im- portant things instead, the world would l>e moral and Christian (politics even regen- erated) in a generation. Mr. Gaynor 'and hosts of others) has dis- covered, at the crucial moment, as the hu- man gaze becomes focussed aright, what is really worth while; that men are living and dying, struggling for secondary Instead of primary things; and, in the sloughs of the badlands, are leaving unexplored a bet- ter country. LINCOLN C. CT'MMINGS. Brookline. .Mas.-.. \u25a0 \u25a0•: 27. 1910. THE RICHER REALMS. •;.iiro- of The Trihlin". ? : '- Th^re Is a regioi of rhhaul country ying Btreaks which remain? lars^iy \u25a1nexplored and unknown to-day Mayor Gaynor, faring death, saw that tprp.Tioral honors and tilings looked Insigniffeant thereafter. Unexplored ir>ften degplseu*) by the average man. the rich regtona of mor- ality and Christianity (of panunount Jm- o humanity) are nefjlm. led f poorer l?inrls. What is needed to rid "\u25a0" country of pro- fane language to to start in our schools and colleges an education in clean speech, which is fast being driven out by blas- phemy, and the lav. - made to protect us against blasphemy anrl other forms of low language should be vigorously enforced. GEORGE WRIGHT. Halifax. N. S.. Oct. SI. 1010. At no time in our history were the oppor- tunities greater for education and culture than now. On the other hand. there is no period of civilization when the use of pro- fane and bad language has existed to any greater extent than hi the present time. It has permeated among the parents, even in their own homes, and the children can- not avoid learning it. I fully indorse the professor's remarks as to profanity b«»ing a brain test, and that It can show but a mental weakness among those who allow themselves to fall into the habit, but I beg to differ with him as to its diminishing with modern culture and education "P'-ofanlty is \u25a0 brain teat; the habit is in consequence subject to the general laws governinc intensitivenc?:*:. To a very great extent the practice of swearing is specially characteristic of a rude and imperfect civ- ilization. with the advance of culture pro- fanity .Inline'! Tt declines not en much h^caus*" m n become peculiarly sensitive to Its viclousness. but they "1" to its ineffec- tiveness. .. . Exceptions ar*» too numer- ous to lay down any positive rule, still, it is safe to say in ceneral that a man's in- tellectual development is largely deter- mined by the extent of his indulgence In profanity." PROFANITY. To the Editor of The Tribune. Sir: Owing to the extensive use of pro- lane and blasphemous lanEruasre ha vine be- come so common se«»mins:lv among people in all walks of life, many people have been trying to solve the problem why this should he in our advanced stage of civilization. Some time neo 1 noticed an explanation coming from Professor Thomas R. Loans- burg, which is as follows: HARRY S. MYERS. New York. Nov. 4. 1910. CONGRATULATIONS ON CARTOON. \u25a0 Editor of The Trthuno. Sir: C*on*ratttlatk>na on toe teal page picture thia roorninc LETTERS TO TEE EDITOR. the candle." i t points out that th * numb er SL li! killed as comparntively small an 1 asKB lf the regults and tho sport justify'! the riFk. adding: "The fact that everj- yrar hunters in the Adirondack are killed in mistake or deer, and that all those go , into the woods to hunt are aware of this fact does not seem to make any difference with the annual fatality list." dtaj? 1 PrWnS.'**" 111 * Uml ° f BlVlnS Wed ' receu"^' l^;}!^ 11 ' «*\u25a0 hotter to lye than to rereUe Philadelphia Record. "The toy world has kept parA with sci- ence nnd invention." said a dealer in play- things. Rpeakinj; r>f the approaching holl- flay display, " nd many of the modern wonder contrivances will be seer, in nur- series and playrooms after the Christmas pifts have h«>en distributed. The phono- Rraph and electrical toys have been on the market for several years. Airships of all designs bavc been the chief additions this y»ar. A Paris toy for which a larse de- mr rid la expected is a group of animals, in the centre of which stands i smiling hunt- or, raaauibllnc Colonel Roosevelt, whose pun brings down every animal." "Hello, Grimes! Neighbor of yours pot a new dog, eh?" "Don't know. Why?" ' Saw that boy Bobbie of yours Eoin? home v with an old tin can and a string."— Brownings Magazine. NEW-YORK DAILI TRIBUNE, SATIHDAV. NovkmbKH 5, 101". People and Social Incidents NEW YP»K SOCIETY. Amusements. SOCIAL NOTES FROM NEWPORT. fßy T<»l*sranh to Th* Tribun*. 1 Newport. Nov. *.— Mr. and Mr«. T. sha-» Safe, who have been automoblllnsr throng^ th» Berkahlres, have returr.ed to th«lr hos»« here. T^lFpenard Stewart has arrived tn to-wr; for th« season from Newport. W. Rhinelander Stewart. Jr., T. O^«tl»y Richardson, jr.. Frederick T. F"r<» rush sen. Allen Wright. Theodore P. Dixon. AU I red. Mary and Gurnee Minn will thi ushers and Roderic Wellman the hest n.ni of A. --neur "Wellman on the err-as!oa of hi*marriage to Mis* Frances Alexander. in the Church of the Heavenly Rest, aj November ZX. Mrs. Stephen IT. Brown haa Issued ta-rf* tations for a dance at her house, in East 7*>th street, on December 2«. for he? daughter. Miss Caro Brown. Mr. and Mr*. Aueuste Vatable return To* day from Earnpe. and will F^nti the wia. ter at the. Buckingham, in Fifth avenue. Laa> Maxwell,dauch.ter of John Boiryn^^ of San Francisco, and wife of Major Gen- eral Sir John Maxw»l'.. commanding th«j British military forces in Esrpt. i 3 staying at the FV-lmout. ACADEMY OF MUSIC—B:IS—If 1 Were King. AUiAMiJKA-2-*- Vaudeville. AIIKRIc'AX— !• ss Vaudeville ASTOR— .-. The Girl in the Taxi. BKLAS. •"> 2:3o— The Concert. BIJOI— ;:i:>— *:ls— The Other Fellow. BBC A AT i:- > i.\ .1,,.-,- Forjan. CASINO 2:13 8:15 h«* Came from - mik**. . <-in<'LK— 2:ir. K;ir. Th* Khpptu-nd Kins- CITY THEATRE 2:15—8:15 Is Matrimony a Failure? COLONIAL—2 -S— Vaudeville OOMBDY—2:3O—£:3ft— The Cub. CRITERION—2:IS— 8:2»i_ The I -ommutws. DAI.YF 2:30 S:3ft Baby Mine EMPIRE—2:IS—R:I!t— SmUb. CAIETY— 2:IS— h:iZ—Get Rich Quick Walllnfr- ford. GAJJDEX-2:U' 8:1.%— t> Rosary. tSARRiCK— 2:I5 8:20 Raffles. GLOBE—2:ir— K;ro— Tlm» nixi in the Train. HACK rrrr—2:l5 8:20— Mother. HAMMKRSTEIJC'S— 2—«<:1S Vaudeville. HERALD syr.VRE- 2:l.*.— SOs— Time's Night- mare. HIPPODROME—2— R— ThP International Cup— Ba!!^- of Ni»irßT-;> Th«» Earthquake. HI'DPON 2:2<> -*:3n—Th» D^^rtfrs. IRVING PLACE 2:ir>— Boci-acio—K:ir>—Flachs- ma \u25a0 als Erzi«»her JOE WERETrS— 2:I3 K : ir.—Alma. 'Where Do You Live? KXtCKERBOCKEB—2— 6:l*— The Scarlet Pim- r*rn«>l. LIBERTY— .; : i:,_K:ir»— The country Boy. I.TrEt-\i_2:is-S:2O— Electricity. LYRTi'— 2:i:.— B35 M*rtam<= Tr.-uhadmir. MANHATTAN orERA HOUSE—2:I8 S:15 Wai th* Flut* Play«i MAXINE ELLIOTTS 3:30 S:T,O— The Gam- blers. MENDELSSOHN HALL— 2:Srt_T«>llo Recital. N'AZrMOVA'S— 2:IR— R:3O—The Little Damozel. XHV AMSTERDAM 2:ir. S:lTt Madam* 1 Shrrry. NETV TTTTATRE— 2:lS— fi^jrt— The Blu* Bird. ECKW rOßK— a—«:lA— The Dollar Prin<-oss. nEPI'RUC- 2:ir.—S:ir»— Rch»cra of funnybronk Farm. FT. NICHOLAS RIKK-Ic. Pkatinc. - P—2:1.%— f-:ir, Alias Jimmy Valen- tine TVEST END—2:ir.—»lS Th* M»rrr Widow. Index to Advertisements. Italy'! new ambassador. th» Marquis Cusani Confalionieri. has arrived in town from Washington. to await the arrival ..: the marquise and h««r two children on Tues- day next from Europe. Marshall R. Kernochan baa arrived hi town from Pittsfield, Mass.. for the seasin. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Whitney have re- turned to town from Bernardsvllle, N. .1.. and are at the Plaza. Mr. and Mrs. Georce Grant Mason have arrived in the city from Tuxedo and are staying at the Hotel Gotham. Miss Elizabeth Morris Mordaunt will Join her aunt. Miss Elizabeth Marshall, at No II East 60th street, next week, for the season. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Rhinelander have returned to town from Washington, where they were the guests of Mr«. Rhine- lander"s mother, Mrs. Henry Yates Sat- tcrlee. Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Bahcock left town yesterday for Hot Springs. Ya . where they will remain several weeks. J. Blake Baker, who was booked to sail to-day for Europe, has postponed his de- parture ant! liMaytag at the Gotham. Mrs Henry Addlsrtn Alexander i* th» guest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Koosevelt. jr., in San Francisco. Bishop r>Tii H. Greer, a? jested by the Rev. Dr. I^lchton Parks, will officiate. «t the marriaße tMi afternoon of HIM Marie Vernon Brown to John Henry Mori'* 1 at the. house of the- bride's brother. Stephen Pf. Brown. In East 70th :.tr»et. Miss Marie Brown, who ik the daughter of. Mr. and Mrs. V>rnon H. Brown, will have Miss Caro .>uar?l«»y Brown for her only attend- ant. William Morice will be his brother's best man, and there will he no ushers. The ceremony, to which cnljr a few relatives have been asked, will be followed by a email reception. - «'imm«"- r »-- r

DAILI SL Social Incidents · Mrs. Elisha Dyer still continues to nhnw improvement, and her frienrts and phys;-. clans f»el ereatfv enconracd. Mr. and Sir?. F. '#. D'HanteviU-»r»

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Page 1: DAILI SL Social Incidents · Mrs. Elisha Dyer still continues to nhnw improvement, and her frienrts and phys;-. clans f»el ereatfv enconracd. Mr. and Sir?. F. '#. D'HanteviU-»r»

Mrs. Elisha Dyer still continues to nhnwimprovement, and her frienrts and phys;-.clans f»el ereatfv enconracd.

Mr. and Sir?. F. '#. D'HanteviU- »r» <«x«pertert to-morrow to make nn Irsp^'ttern oftheir estate. They have b*»n abroad for

Bin Pembroke Jones, whose health hasirreativ improved, will start, together \u25a0?. :»h»»r family, for l^nnx tr».morrow.

Mrs. J. .1. Mason nan returned fmm t%visit in New York.

I

Pajpc.Col.'

rtt^r-HM«m»r-« ...14 *"— \u25a0Ma-riar < andAmomobilMi ... 5 4—71 7'-iTh« ... 7 7E•nK fr» and iNotl^p of Fum-

T*rok*ns 12 1^ boh . . 11 c,B^»rd &\u25a0 Roomi 11 7'Piannn a. -ear.= 11 7Book* and Pub- jPolitical Notice*. 2 fi-T

llcatlonf X 1-7'Real EFtat»> forCarper Clear.lng.U M Sal#> rr to Let.10 7<~lratiTji<; 11 fl'R^sl EdatPCity Hotels - 10 7! TVar>t«*i 1O 7T>anrtn« Ac*&v~

'R-;ic!ous !Co

-roles II 5] tipff? O fi-7

IVEk» ».vA Ctfftr* Rr-m»>ili«s 11 7Furniture ii 7 P.escrra . 11 4-5

"Dividend Sn- Kpfrtaurants 11 R*'"•' 12 l'Srhcl A Rentes. ii nTV)ra»*Uc Pltua- l^r^rlal Not!<•»».. 7 7

rionF Wanted. ll \u25a0+!^tora=* Notices 11 REuropean Afl- tSurrrieatef Xo-

v«rt i»4»m»r.'r .IS 6-71 -'-^ \u25a0\u25a0 7Y\nMT)"-.a.] ...12 "iTirr* TaM<* 11 «7T»r ?s> ...11 7!Trii"]r.* Pubs;rip-r«rn)fli»l I tion Rat»(t 7 7

Boom» .11 7'Trust Companies. ll «H»;r """antes. .: 4! Typewritlnc -.8 7In»rruction . 11 R'T'nfuri ieh»dl«*ryer« I 4\\ Apartm-nte ...in 7I^wt Bankbook*. 11 6 1Wort Wan* 1!...11 4MI*~«>ll»r>«/vHi -.11 «!

Sfrw-UnTk &rihunt.RATTTRDAT, VOVKMBER

"1010

This ttotexpappr is owned and pub-lished hv The Tribune Association^ aXeic York crtrporai inn;nffi<r (i»rf prin-cipal pit' \u25a0•' of business. Tribune Bttild-tn.c Xn. tr.4 \'ii<-in. afreet:. Xeic York;Opdrn Mitt*, prcsidrnt :Ogden M. Reid,secretary: Jams* }[.Borrett, treasurer.The addrrun nf ihr officers Is thr officecf this newspaper.

IHI SEWS \u25a0'7/ / a.\FORM\G

FOREIGN*.—The Spanish Senate, by a\u25a0vote of 14y to nS. jiassed the "padlockhill," but the Premier showed a con-ciliatory attitude toward the Vatican;the government has decided to suppressa labor demonstration in Barcelona.— .-- Many lives were believed lost inTh*- destruction by fire of the ManitobaInsane Asylum at Brandon. = Nine-teen cases of cholera and six deaths werereported from Italy. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Willows, the"Welsh aeronaut, started to fly to Paris ina machine of his own construction. :It was reported from San Salvador thatCJeneral Valladares had insulted theUnited States Consular Agent. Oeorprr>Sc-hmuck. and th;it the grunhoat Prince-ton had her puns train* r^ady for ac-tion. «.<n th^ Governor's residence, atAmapala. occupied l>y th* Honduran in-surgrent t.-hfef. : An Imperial decreeissued in Pekinc ordered tho convoca-tion of Parliament in lit].'!. ... Prince

si Hatzfeldt-WildeuburK. who mar-Cbed a daughter of the late C. P. unt-If'iß'ton. dlfii in London./ r>'»ME?Tir.— Ex-President Roosevelt i

\u25a0 n\ I«-s Moines and Davenport, Ilowa, in h^haif of Charles GrilkJ ;i Pro- jgTesstve Republican candidate for Con-gress. z== H^niT-I2Stimson continued jhif= cair.paigrij tour in thr- Hudson Valley, jKj^akinsr at Catskill nnii Pouehke^r>F:i<- ,!X. Y. ===== John A. Dix fifrured in Jiniautomobile acr-jderst while jroine fmm JAlbany t<» Troy, licinc badly shaken u\>.I-

\u25a0 \u25a0 .. Eighteen inches <•! nnnw wrre ro-p<irted in the <^atßkill Mountains and at {Blnghamtbn, N. Y. \u25a0

—r—

-It was reported j

at Bnltimore that the aeroplanes! dam- jap°d in the recent storm would he re-paired in time to resume the programme !of thf aviation m<=-«n Monday. =z=. The jhearing at Chicago of witnesses in the jH".called Bathtu!> Trust Inquiry was |practically finished; further testimonywill h* heard tn the East.

'"*Arthur'

A. Punphy era* arrested in Philadelphia If»n charts ernw-Jnc out of complaints !of eonsi

• to defraud by New Yorkbnnk.«.CITY.

—Stocks declined after early

strencth. . == After Justice O'Gormanhad reduced the charg-»- against him frommtir*er in th*- first deerrc-p to man-Blaughter in the second detrre. EdwardT. RoK^nheim^r was acquitted by thei'jry of criminal responsibility for the ikillir.jrof Grace Houfrh by his automo-bile. =====: T-h.-.nrlnrr Roosevelt addresseda third l^ttf-r tr. Judge Baldwin, ampli-fying his previous statements. = Inspite of the Mayor's efforts striking ox-prcs= drivers and helpers voted to ?nayout until the companies recognized theunion.

- -LJoyd C. Oris^om. presi-

dent of the Republican County Commit-tee, estimated that Dixy plurality intin- county trould h>* ]e?»; than 40,000._ THE WEATHER— for to-r^ay: Pair. Thf- frnp^rature yesterday: iHighest, 40 degrees; lowest; 39.

|Appeal Sent to the Clergy cf AllChris-tian Churches.

Boston. Nov. 4.-The American Teace So-ciety Issued to-nisht an appeal to the clergyor all Christian Churches at the countryand to the leaden of Hll other rcli=iouaorgantsaUona to observe the third Sontlayin December of this and succeedms yearsas Peace Sunday, and <-n that Uate to c.rg-»by prayer, sons Jind sermon "the abolitionof war and ii>e substitution m: lmp«rct)T«

u^:r;:;n^;™:;; „.„_,.secretary of the American Board of ••om-mtssloneni for Forrt-n Mission*. RoStt>n;Arthur .1. Barton, secretary of the Presby*terian Foreign Mission Doard. Nen A'ork;Earl Cranston. Cardinal tJihbor.s, of Balti-more; Bishop Mallalieu of the U«thodistEpiscopal Church, Benjamin Trueblo^ni.stecretary of the American Peace Society,and many others.

SIAMESE PUMPKINS.From The Philadelphia Record.

An agricultural curiosity rarely seen, evenm the blssest county f«i:rs. was exhibitedat the last matins: «>f the OrmantcnvnHorticultural

-in the form of Sia-mese twin pumpkins. Two pumpkins mir*

than a toot lons were attached ti» «mc!iother for about half their length. AbrahamGruff brought the pumpkins to the me**ttng. \u25a0

at-it the oldest members of the society i»*»ittthey Minever betore seen anything at tk«kind.

ANNUAL PEACE SUNDAY URGED

Junior Festivities This Season PromiseUnusual Interest.

The juniors of Columbia University hjrrajust annoimced their plans for the annualjunior prom, celebration, which Is con-sidered the most active social week on ths»campus durins the whole year, as t- iadevoted entirely to cay eties an.l yaTrsea,dances, dinners, theatre parties, teas, con-certs and the like, instead of the u*':?ltedious grind of the study and recitation

The wePk will open tvith a hockey ganr*against Cornell Tmversity. on February Tl.in the Sc. Nicholas Rink, followed on' tbanext Monday by a 'varsity basketball cam-»in the gymnasium against an alumni nve.with a special dance afterward

On Tuesday the regular university t-%will be held in Earl Hall, while m :fc»evening the man !o!in and s!^ club concertwill tain place. Wednesday ana Thursdayafternoons will be devoted entirely to the

The junior ball, the affair of tbmweek, is scheduled for Wednesday crating-,and-witl be held in the srrand ballroom 6Sthe Hotel Tlaza. as heretofore.

Thursday nlsht win be "Columbia night"at some local theatre. Where Columbiasonsrs are sunpr and faculty "hit*" mad»from the. stage. The festivities win end enFriday night, when the 'varsity basketballt-am clashes w^th Ya'.e.

COLUMBIA PROM. WEEK PLANS

Sovereigns Kiss at Potsdam— GuestStaying at the New Palace.

Potsdam. Nov. 4—Emperor Nicholas n*Russia, attended by Serjaua Sazonoff th"9Russian Minister of Forefcm Affairs, arvia suite of fifty persons, arrived her* m-day for a visit tr> Emperor William. Hawas received at the station by the Empero-nnri Princes. Chancellor yon Bethmann-HoDweg and the members of the Cabinet.Thr-ir majesties kissed rep^atfd!y. Em-peror Nicholas wil! have apartments a: ttuiNew Palae«\to-ntsrht. many prominent personages froraboth Russia and Germany beir.s; present.There wen no speecri^. as the visit ~o£Emperor Nicholas la regarded as non-poim-

A number of Socialist demonstrations heldlto-night In protest asain?* the \"isit of thf»Russian ruler passed off without incident.

KAISER WELCOMES CZAR

NOW IN COMPETITIVE CLASSGovernor Approves Resolutionsof Civil Service Commission.Albany. Nov. \u2666.— Governor White to-<J*^

approved resolutions adnprmi hv th» Sta?<»Civil Service Commission transferring fromthe exempt to th<> competitive class thaoffices of clerk and assistant '-l-'-k at "arh.state prison and two office of «?forn«y hithe State Forest. Fish and Game Depart-

He also approved resolutions rlaapi^j^n^in th- exempt class an additional positionof superintendent of f<?r««?TS in rh* Fores**.Fish and Game D^parttnen!. and an addi-tional position of speoiai depot? register inthe office '\u25a0\u25a0 the Renter of Now York.

In a memorandum announcing MS ap-proval Governor "WJut« says_ that tn*chants in the prison employes were t*c-omm^nd^d by fortrcl!«»r Williams. foSUvw-ins: a r»-orsamzation of the methods andthe establishment of a uniform accountlns;system in all the prisons. Th* classifica-tion of the two attorneys in the For*?:.Fish and Game Department, say? the Gov-ernor, is thf rpsult of Commissioner Aus-tin's work Jn roorznnizir.^ the departmer.-and in harmony with th* policy of thiCivilS»»rvir« Commission, alreativ applied tathe Attorney General's office, and the NewYork City Public Service Commission, irsplacing in The competitive class all at-torneys receiving salaries up to $3,f>*> pc?annum. . . .

TBEX AXI) HOWTbe death of Hugh .7. Grant who was

twi. Mayor and Twice an unsuecespful

candidate f<>r Mayor <>f New York Cityiv the j>eriod before consolidation, re-calls memories of a regime in local poli-tics to which the voters of t<Mluy eimwell look back with curiosity and amaze-ment Mr. Grant was in his time thet**tvote getter in Tammany Hal], be-cause. ibouzh accepting TanimHny'K bt«-teiu of soveninient he stood in personalcharacter and rcjnit*- fj;r above tun ma-jority of his co-workers under Kellyand <:roker. The "business*' motive inI»<>liii<-s at ihat time was emphasized bythe fjicr that th*> Democratic ]i;<riy di-vider] itself into two and often three orfour factions, each intent «.n enjoyingthe «jioils of office. The County I)e-moeraey way ili«- chief rival of Tam-many Hall, and the Irving Hall in-nnwracy was a good type of the smallerfactions, which were over willingto bar-gain their support of any local ticketfor a shar»* in the nominations. Konie-tmi«*s in days of stress Uk« those ofHenry George's first eainjmisrn for themayoralty the Democratic factionlstsunited out of a sense of H:lf.preservation.But usually there were not enough

«>fh'ces to go around, iOl'J Tammany andthe Cotmty Democracy bntii entered Intoa three-cornered campaign with the Re-j»ui«l><-Hns for the control of the city.

it is hard to realize now the littleness«ud narrowness of those struggles forwhat there was iv h l»K*a! election forthe professional politicians. Hardly any-body thought of administering tiV citysrov«*rnnieut for the .K-iK'ijr of the citi-zens as citizens. The motive and pur-pose were the benefit of the halls nndorganizations to which the voters werv«uii".'-'-.j ty owe•allegiance. Indeperi-,

WHAT THE RESULT WILL MEAN,iFrom The Watertown Times.

Whether Republican or Democratic ad-ministration results from the election thecost of livingwillnot be affected one rentWhat will be affected is something of thecomfort of livingunder the. uplifted policies'of Governor Hughes or th» down Dull'n^policies ofTammany Hall. What will be V'~fected willbe the firm establishment of civicrighteousness, which Governor Huch»>sworked for and which the Republican can-didate. Mr. Stimson. Is pledged to continueor the throwing of the grand word "nolities." in Its true significant-e. buck acatnInto the mire of selfish and greedy trading.

I DEGRADING ALLIANCEFrom The Louisville Evening Post.

We ask the so-called business interest*of the country outside of New Ynrk"h»tthey think of property owners, nion r>mineiu in the church, men eminent in ll!churches, bankers, whose wholf binlimarests upon the confidence of men in ri. Atfellow man-what they think of thlsfde-crading alliance between the nnan.-iai .VTterests of New York, the corpora?* ?L"r"ests of New York, on the one h-mrl wirhTammany Hal! and Murphy and Dfcc Youare called to Murphy's Room _..:„„„"

irAmerica— business men of AmerivJ \re\u25a0ins"

THE MAN ON THE BOX."From The Washington Star.

The recognized master of the situation[at Rochester 1 was Charles F. MurphyThe leader of Tammany Hall sat enthronedin "Room 212." "and the whole processionone by one. knocked at his door Every-body knew that Mr. Murphy would makethe nomination, and so everybody submit-ted suggestions to him. In the end henamed Mr. r>ix. and might have done soeven without the knowledge that the selec-tion would be agreeable to Mr. Gaynor.

And. for that matter. Mr. Gaynor hadconfessed Mr. Murphy's power by address-ing to him his two letters bearing on thenomination. He did not think of Shepanlor Dix. or Sulzer. but of Murphy, the manon the box.

DIX AND .HI? TVALL-FAPER.

From The Portland Oregonian."Whatever the tariff sins of the Repub-

licans may be, the party leaders cannotbe accused of hypocrisy. It they ask forhigh duties in practice, they also defendthem in theory. They belong: to a partywhich thinks a high tariff essential to thewelfare or' the country, and in bestowingIts favors upon any given industry theyare merely carrying their principles out inpractice. But a man who calls himself aDemocrat and at the same time lobbiesand votes for a ht|(h tariff cannot possiblyhe sincere in both professions.

THE CONSTITUTIONAL. AMENDMENT.From The Syracuse Journal. N

The constitutional amendment providesfor the election of two additional associatejudges of the Court of Appeals. This willend the practice of designating SupremeCourt justices to serve a,> associate judges<,r" the Court of Appeals. This amendmentincreases the salary of the chief judg« ofthe Court of Appeals from J10.500 and $3.7"»for expenses to Sl&^OO. It also increasesthe salary of the associate judges of thecourt from $!•'."<>• and expenses to Slo.f-00.This amendment should be adopted. Itwasproposed after careful consideration bymen be are familiar with the situationand is a great improvement on the presentarrangement.

AUSTRIA'S INCOME TAX.From Pally Consular Reports.

It is officially stated that there are i««»>fanners iGrossbaurem in Austria th* nretof whose estates range trom l*\ lo*a.^and 18.0l» »entW>m#n farmers LvlthTsUUlarger property, altogether l^OooT^kSt-ural holdings >\u25a0 some magnitude ?\i

- —166.000 land owners only &y^ *-{.tl)vjrsonal Income tax. the rest, via «r nll\ «»*t-inc that they do not enrn th* taxable in-come of CSO a y«*r- Of the ttf^wanners2.3L>» ray taxes on an in.>ome ;,' *rl,i>and 1.9Mon one above fc.;»V H vl"r Th*entire jjersonal income rax \u25a0«

\u25a0 V.,»Hiamounts to 05.010.000 for »& JJain«£ am«ain« <H

-IfiO.CCO in 190».

'Bealnst $!*•

CAMPAIGN COMMENT.

CHINESE WIN DEMANDImperial Decree Convokes Par-

liament in 1913.Peklnc. Nov. 4—An official datras was

issupd to-day, announcing that an imperialparliament, the first in the. history r>fChina, would b<> convoked in 1313.

This is a concession on the part of thethrone to the demands of the recently con-stituted *-rate

-nd delegations of the pro-

vincial assemblies, which recently memo-rialized th» fjovernment. ureing the earlyconstitution of a reneral representativelegislative body.

Thp programme fixed by th* late Em-press Dowager provided for the assemblingOf an imperial parliament in IVZ. t'ntilrecently the thrnne had refused to enter-tain petitions prayin? that the date be ad-vanepd. Recently th<» rand Council wasordered to consider the matter, and lastMonday Prince Yu T^»ne. one of th« GrandCouncillors, announced In th» senate thatthe entire ration was a.i_ni>'<l on the neces-sity nt th» early establishment of a gen-eral parliament.

To-days decree yet forth that the par-liament would \u25a0• convened in three years.The police went from bouse to boose, in-forming the occupants of the edict. Pres-ently the bracea banner and paper lanternsappeared above every door. Beyond thisthere waa no public demonstration.

The importance of: the throne's conces-sion is appreciated when it is recalled thatthe provincial assemblies, the ttrst step

toward modern and popular government tnChina, are still in their infancy, and thatthe senate, the first preneral body approach-ing: anything: like popular representation,met for the first time on October 3 last.As constituted, the senate did not promiseimportant popular legislation, a? one-halfof Its two hundred members were appoint-ed by the throne. Nevertheless, it took astand in favor of an imperial parliamentat an early date.

Tin COXTEBT ix xrw JERSEY.The doKing days of the political cam-

paign in New jersey make it sufficientlyclear that there is no convincing reasonwhy any Republican should holt hisparty's ticket. <)ji purely personalgrounds Mr Lewis'siappeal tcfthe electorsis certainly as strong as that of his op-ponent. Both are in«>!i of lii^i)character;of dignity and of culture That is uni-versally conceded, it might seem narrowto urge Mr. Lewis's superiority on theground of his being a Dative and life-long resident \u25a0\u25a0• the state, but at leait i- legitimate to argue that his manyyears of highly efttcienl and Irreproach-able public Bervice in various importantoffice* have given him a practical famil-iarity "jth the business of the statewhich in opponent cannot be mid •<•possess. Granting their personal equalityin other respects, thai on.- considerationsliouid give Mr Lewis h vviuning .idvantage.

There is certainly no disadvantage forMr. I/'wiv in a comparison of the re-spective policies of the two candidates.

1)1A AND MURPHY.If. those who say that Dix would not

!be a Murphy Governor would point to aisingle act of his in opposition to Mur-iphy the state might listen to their ad-!vocacy. Bui where is the single instance <»f opposition? His whole politi-cal record is one of subserviency andusefulness. His political record is brief,hut what there is of it Is all Murphy.He was tir.-;t heard of when he wasnominated for Lieutenant Govern \u25a0 twoyears ago In a convention dominated byMurphy and < .inner . He next appearsin political life as one of the organizersof the Democratic League, whose osten-sible purpose was to rehabilitate theDemocratic party and rid it of its dis-credited bosses, '"vi whose real aim wasto eliminate Conners, who stood in theway of Murphy's ambition to be the soleand undisputed master of the Demo-cratic party. Murphy's Mount Clemenscorrespondence shows this sham reformorganization to have been in regularcommunication with him, to have beenunder the control of his agents and tohave been acting in his Interests. Nota finger did Party Reformer Dix or hisleague lift to rid the party of Murphy'smercenary management

When Conners was ousted Murphymade Dix his state chairman. In thatcapacity has he ever indicated theslight. opposition to his creator? Onthe contrary, all hi« efforts have beendevoted i<» smoothing the way to Mur-phy's undisputed mastery. The sorenessthat was left by Murphy's thugs atBuffalo and in Carnegie Hal! Mr. Dixaddressed himself to healing, and so welldid he do his part that he harmonizedthe whole Democratic party of the stareinto Murphy's hands. Could any oneexpect his serviceability to Murphy inpublic office fii be any different fromhi* serviceability to Murphy In his partyoffice?

Did your company, through Mr. Hup-[puch. your present campaign manager,make false statements when it unreelthat bankruptcy stared the wallpaperbusiness in the face if the present tariffrates not merely were not retained, butwere not actually raised?

7 believe such a revision ran be made.and should be made. in such manner asnot to destroy, or even much disturb,any large industry throughout the coun-try, and s^> ns to take Into account atall times the right of the Americanworkingman.— John A. Dix ;tt CarnegieHall.

Was your company, through Mr. Huppro trying to deceive Congress when itasked higher duties to met. the needs ofAmerican workingmeu, pointing out thai\u25a0'the wages paid machine printers In"Enjrland «re 25 shillings, or $6. per"we<>k. as against an average of $2250"per week for the same class of help in"this country, and it is fair to :issume

"that the wages of the other laboring"help are in proportion"?

Iam r,n record in a letter to the Waysand Means Committee as askine: for areduction of the tariff on lumber of 10per cent a y«=ar for ten year?, by whichtime lumber would be free. Iam onrecord in a letter to the Ways and MeansCommittee ns asking for a reduction ofthe tariff on paper of 2ft p<=r cent ayear for fiveyears, by which time paperwould l>f on •\u25a0. free list.

—John A. Dix,

in Staten Island.

QUESTTOXS FOR A HrPPTrHIiITE.1 believe in the necessity for B down-

ward and honest revision of the tariff,and that has always been my view.—John A. Dix at Carnegie Hall.

Did you hold that view when yourStandard Wall Paper Company askedCongress to raise the wallpaper tarifffrom 25 per cent to :;.*. and 4." per cent?Ibelieve that such a revision can be.

mnde with slight disturbance of busi-ness, and to the great relief of the con-s-:imer. who is/after.all; the average manthroughout th» entire country.—John A.Dix at Carnegie Hall.

Do you think thai this belated state-meht just at the end of the campaign-^jwhich, when explained, was that a rela-tive, with your'approval; wrote sujree^t-

ins the gradual luction of the tariffon paper and lumber, the raw material!'of wallpaper— relieves you from respon-sibility for the petition of your companyat the same time for increased duties onthe finished wallpaper, which, If yourrelative's K.u£2esrion. had bee; adopted,could have been manufactured morecheaply than before?

dent voting was difficult, because theballot was neither official nor set-ret, andparty feeling ran so high that most citi-zens put party success above the realadvantage of the community. Consoli-dation nnd the spread of Intelligence::n<l independent thinking have changedall that. The Democratic party, assailed by public opinion, has had to dropsuch nonsense as maintaining two orthree rival local organizations, all sup-porting the same state and nationaltickets, and lias had to tijrlitto show abare majority -when united. Ithas lostthe mayoralty twice since consolidationand has saved it twice only because ofa division in the ranks of its opponents.

In the days of Mayor Grant's politicalprominence the voters had not yetwaked up to the idea that the cityshould be governed primarily for theirbenefit Hie political middleman wasintrenched in power. and his right toexact any commission which he soughtto collect for his services war- too seldomdisputed. Now the middleman is beingelbowed out and the. standard is beingraised of government for the people aswell as by the people. Mr. Grant wasfar better than the system which beserved and deserves credit for havingriser in his personal ideals above thelevel of his political associations. But itis more to the credit of the public herethat in the short space of ten or fifteenyears ithas reached a point from whichit can look back on the pre-conso!ida-tion regime as a kindergarten era inpolitics.

HONEST FREE TRADERWe gladly publish to-day an appeal

made iV the tariff reform committee ofthe Reform Club for the election i

trade Democratic rundldates for Con-11 ihe Ist and 17th Congress dis-

\u25a0 >t' this st:itf. because that appealreveals the animus liehind the r»emo-cratic party's tariff revision programme,so far as thai programme is genuine andnot "Huppuchritical." The Reform Clubrevisionists apparently want to have

the tariff schedules given to the Barnesand the custom houses razed They doii"' favor even a revenue tariff, tor arevenue tariff cannot help affording Inridental protection They are eager toset- Martin W. Littleton elected in theIst Congress District and Henry <;«»<>r£:e,

\u25a0 \u25a0•ted in the 17th District, becauseboth "stand for the speediest possible

tion of ail tariff privileges." Hutit alt tariff privileges must t:o. all dutiesmusi go wen the duties on soBand a commodity its wallpapei

The Reform Club does not Rhiilyshall\ It makes no pretence that the

i| i;ihoi sii"iii«i be cared for Ina revision <if the tariff, as the Demo-rati' Ktato platform does. It hoWfl pro-tectlon, which, according to the deflnl?i..ri of Ms friends, mean an equalizationOf til*'COtt "flabor in the pfOdttCtioil tit

THE LEGISLATURE.The importance of returning a Repub-

lican Legislature 'his year is unusuallysrreat. in the first place, the Legislature

to be elected will doubtless redis-trict the state in accordance with rh.'new census, and a Democratic majoritywould probably leave the Republicanvoters of this city entirely, or almost en-tirely, unrepresented in Congress, besides

_• rrymandering the Republican sections of the state as to reduce for te*i

ill** Republican representation LiiWashington. Republicans who. In apique at their c our reason \u25a0\u25a0]•

[another, vote ihn Democratic tickettake the risk of wrongfully injuring

ir not for this one year bur for a whole•\u25a0 Furthermore, the coming Legis-

,i United stares SenatorTim, aside from these considerations, a

Grady controHed Legislature would be aftch !•\u25a0 th»- state. In recent years

has been steady progress towardspecially toward

standards of public life. Is it toend in a Senate of which Grady will !>cthe leader and Frawley, the SullivansCullen and McManus chairmen of ail tbeleading committees? A Tammany orgy intiie Legislature would be one of the• consequences of a Demo

. and if the Democratic ticket is

successful ;hen- would be no escape fr#inIt, Who will stop irv Certainly not Mr.I»ix. whose Saratoga league chose Gradyas its spokesman and who has not

lurage to >:iy a word against ih>'Allds supporters on The ticket with him.Grady has returned to public life aft rhifl last farewell in rln- belief thai thenext Senate will be Democratic and newill be its leader. In his ambition lit1

lave the support of Murphy, and ifthe Democratic ticket la successful hewill not be disappointed.

Moreover, on their own merits the Re-publican leirislntive candidates •

to !\u25a0•• elected, i'ear inter year the 'nun-many members ar Albany are a scandal,and the only decent representation thecity has is fronj the few RepublicanSenators and Assemblymen who are sentto Albany. They are the men who figutgrabs and jrraft. who vote for hills in thepublic interest and who steadily lookafter the city's welfare Several Repub-lican Senators and Assemblymen ofproved usefulness as legislators, met] whohave won tbe commendation of the Citi-zens Union- which maintains an agent

at Albany to keep track "f tho work ofthe Legislature— are candidates for re-election and thoroughly deserve to be re-.iected The city could ill spari

services ai Albany of such useful meai--Senators Agnew, Brough, Sew-

<oiu!, and Travis and AssemblymenDana, Murray. Bates, Higginß and Ward.We mention a few of the most conspicu-ously useful Llejnibli ians In order togive some idea of wlmt the Legislaturewould be like with en dropped..in and faithful followers of Gradj and.the Sullivan* occupying their places.

Mr. Wilson has been expressing tine pria-cipies and making fine promises, in all i>lwhich we have do doubt thai he hi en-tirely sincere, but the best part of whichIn simply taken, consciously or uncon-sciously, from the principles and policiesof the Republican party which that partyhas been gradually putting into effectagainst Democratic opposition. Mr.Lewis is certainly every whit as progres-sive and enlightened in his programme,and he has probably on the whole com-mitted himself to it ilittle more di-rectly and explicitly than has hisopponent Mr. Martin, the brilliant•Troirro.ssive" leader, who was Mr.Lewis"* chief Republican competitor forthe nomination, truly says that. Mr.Lewisis progressive enough for him and thatall Republicans are progressive now.

We cannot concede that there is anyreason for not supporting Mr Lewis inthe complaint that, the Republican partyhas not fulfilledall its promises. it istrue that if has not yet done so. .-is someof the foremost Republican leaders aswell as Democratic critics have franklysaid. But. its record is vastly better thanthai of the Democrats, and its title topublic confidence far stronger. For it hisdone nor merely something but much. Itis undeniable that .-in Immense changefor the better has come over the state inthe !:ist fifteen years, in legislation andin administration, and it is equally un-deniable that it has all been effected byt!io Republican party. Tax reform, in-creased state aid for Hie schools, con-trol <>f corporations, employers' liability.Civil Service reform, increased facilitiesfor caring for the insane, for epilepticsami tuberculous patients, forest andwater conservation, improvement of in-land waterways, good roads and a greatmany other measures of enlightenmentand progress for the welfare of the pecpie have all been adopted by ihe Repub-[leans, or by the majority of the Repu!>-limns. reinforced by a minority of theDemocrats.

Certainly it is more reasonable to vote

for a party which has done much thanfor "no whi.-h hnv finite nothing; for theparty of affirmation than for that of ne-gation it Is not even prrtended that theDemocratic party hai undergo™Change of heart Mr. Wilson h;is 00lventured to ToJl when or qow it was re-organized into a party of progress. Butcitizens are asked to vote for him hcause he in bo mnch hetter than hisparty. Doubtless he Is far better thanH< partj T'.ut when tijp two candidates

ted, personreasonable to vote for the out- whoseparry hns done much real u-o."i ratherthan for the one whose party h-is ik.nono good boi mn<-h harm

a- The 1 nnounocs th< »dlron<\u25a0•\u25a0! hui-.tn which closed on

!••.) in Rvs >ieutt.s of hunt-ers Hnd the aarlotu ui.jurv of half i

Tiit Uttea ODSsnrar." published.it ons of the gateways •<• the bi^ woods,doasa t r-«:m to think tht "gams was wortli

"What's the matter with you?""I f«-.-l \u25a0 tittle iiM»asy

"'1^ \u25a0 Inter underweai

land Plain l>esier

"Ar»> you atistied with your n*»w maid?""Very. She's too old to gel married und

too fat to wear my tlilnKs. Bo ! think we'llbe able to keep her."

—IDetroit Fret' Press.

England expects to have a good huntingseasoti. A "splendid" show of foxes is re-ported by "M.F. H.s" from all parts of thecountry. notwithstanding Indiscriminatetrapping and th« prevalence of mange inthe last few year?. The cutting up of thecountry into Email holding! and the accom-panying increase of cultivation will, it Isexpected, gradually affect the sport mostseriously.

A^ is well known, Woodrow Wilson lias aclean shaven face. But it was not always

thus. Once, when Dr. Wilson was a younglawyer, pleading a cause in a North >'l;na court. Ived that hts most at-tentiv.- listen.' was the Sheriff of the

who sat witt his :-and with aa the attorney. The

advocate was greatly encouraj

manifested by so dtotinj;.in officer, and was encouraged to ln<

i <!iii further to enchain th*> at-tention of thai auditor. When he had fin-ished his address with a rounded period ofglowing eloquence, he stepped toward th*-Sheriff to receive ln.s encomiums, it w;is adreadful shock to him when that officialdrawled out: "Say, Wilson, 'ifi you know

Be of jour sidi!',i;ui the other?" Tin \u25a0 president olPrinceton vu m disgust d thai he -tia\ «-._ioff his beard.

THE TALK OF THE DAY

nations' airy navies may not yet• grappling In the rentral blue, but

aeronautic enthusiasts seem to be doingItiabbling on terra firma.

It was William McKinley who declaredthat "reciprocity is the handmaiden of

Moii." It was William HowardTaft. another son of Ohio, wl"the broadest measure of practical reci-procity" ever enacted. Tin- quotation isfrom Philander < '. Kimx, Secretary ofState, who onducted the negotiationsunder the maximum and minimum tariff

and who knows what he is talk-jiie: about.

ireneral Va lladares ap]

Ias what he would probably callin choice Honduran Spanish "a biggerman than old Davila." But there used

!'ien of the name of Davila in thoseparts who would nor lone: brook such

aess.

The superstition ahout thirteen ispoinc ' Ither confirmed or endedwhen Thirteen Hour Dix tries his fatewith the voters next Tuesday.

McCurdy's plan for a flitrht from asteamship fifty miles from -shore to Gov-

ernor's Island is interesting, chiefly froma military point of view. There la no

reason to think that, even if it shouldsucceed, it. would lead to a change inmethods of mail transportation. But. onthe other hand, both army and navy

officers are alert to the feasibility ofscouting with the aeroplane, and have.speculated on the chance that such anairship can be launched from a war ves-sel bis: enough to furnish a stable plat-

form. How much pleasure patriotic

Americans would take in a demonstra-tion of the ease with which an enemy

could study the weaknesses in the coast

defence system of the country is a ques-tion which need not now be discussed.but it may be remarked that the foreign

aviator who asked for the privilege of

landing on Governor's Island hail thegood sense not to seek permission to usea camera over the fortifications.

Readers of The Tribune who have boen

in th» habit of studying the weathermap every morning have Just had h

chance to notice on*3 of those exceptions

to the rule whi<-h bother the forecasters.

•us cross the country fromwest to \u2666ast. -md when they have oncedeveloped their movements '"an b^ fore-seen with some deereo of accuracy. Buithe disturbance which has ravaged the4tlantlo Coast for two dayß came Infrom the ocean, and has followed a pen-erally northward path for forTy-eiecht

hours or more. When the existence of

these mischief makers while still at seacan be discovered with <-ertainty. a wel-

come advance in meteorology willbe ef-fected.

V\'o notice that Mr. Pix did noi ventureto denounce th<- "public enemy" to hisEast Sid" audiences.

TRAXSIT XEGOTIATIOXB.The pending agreement with the in-

terborouch Rapid Transit Company in-

dicated by the terms of the letter fromthe Public Service Commission to the

Board of Estimate and Apportionmentregarding the Belmont tunnel is muchthe most satisfactory that baa yet l>eensuggested. The company abandons itscontention that the city should pay thecost, of thf Helmr.m tunnel, about $S,-000.000, and offers to operate the tunnelin conjunction with the subway, provid-ing >i single fare to Queens by this routeand also by \u25a0\u25a0•. connection with the Sec-ond Avenue Elevated Railroad over the

Queensboro Bridge,Part of the bargain has to do with the

third tracking of the elevated lines inManhattan. The details of the pro-spective apreement are iv>t made public.Perhaps they are not fully settled. Howfar if will be satisfactory depends,of course, largely upon the terms ar-ranged with respect, to the elevatedthird fraekmc. The Tnterborouch com-pany has made concessions in regard tothe tunnel to Queens, and perhaps itwill show an equally reasonable spirit

regarding tbe length of the elevatedfranchises and the compensation to thepublic for them.

.•in article- in this country with the costof labor in the production of ft nilirarticle abroad, to ho "n cursp i(> ll>

"country and especially to this city,

"whoso prosperity is measured by -^••commerce.^ The industrial district otNew York is by far the most importantin the United States in waffes P-1'"-

capital invested and volume of prodn**tion. Yet the Reform Club wants to

make every laborer in Industry »pre

pfimpele on an equal footinc with labotabroad, so that domestic production ni:lV

be checked and the volume of the '"»\u25a0

port trade througti this port may !'°correspond incrly increased. That hi

'he

old-fashioned Democracy of Hurd. Mor-rison and Wntterson.' Most modernDemocratic tariff revisionists shy at itnowadays as at a frhost from the irrave-yarrl. We are triad to see there are somefree traders left who are not afraid tospeak out honestly or n v-nst disruptionof business and for Old World wages.

AND SANE AFTER ACQUITTAL.From The Spokane Spokesman- K«*vl<>w

-No "lit-Is Bur|.n^(1 to , ini that the de-

fence of MAaynr .WmSilSSwrt 1s to be

Insanity According to the lawyer* .ill the

mm who .-hoot (o km ait- crazyUfier they

NOR THE BREED OF MEN.From The Pittsburg Dispat ehBy the way, that New York investigationdoes not tend !" -•\u25a0•--••!! the thesi.-* thathorßeracJng was conducted In that statesolely to improve Uu>, • d of hoffaes andto indulge in royal sport.

"NO CAUSE OF ACTION"From The Philadelphia ledger

A Chicago man has sueil for cj-ei be-cause \u25a0'' an Injury a* a ..Milt of «hlch herays he cannot ria y »,.olf without pain.

>«' acoidei 5a ,,.,i nim con-

iatUTo^ver thin* <••.. mon#y And.. \u0084,( \u0084- th- temp-

tation to Hwe.ir'm

CREEDS AND FORMS.To the Editor of The Tribune.

Sir: While Bolton Hall is not a Servetusto ho burned, It is most interesting to anoutsider to note the outcropping of the oldspirit of Calvin in the letter of your clericalcorrespondent, the Rev. J. Walter .Jordan,His argument in behalf of religious dogmala somewhat refreshing in its naive uncon-sciousness of the intellectual progresswhich has taken place in the world sincethe sixteenth century.

To the humble mind of th« layman, thedistinction between a programme for actionin practical affairs, whether in politics orotherwise, and a crystallization of hy-potheses in matters purely speculative, isso clear that it scarcely needs pointing out.Bolton Hall would be the last man to ob-ject to the mapping out. by churches or byany other bodies, of a well defined line ofwork to be done to accomplish ethical,philanthropic or other needs. Belief, how-ever, in personalities, forces or laws uncon-trollable by human beings, and invisiblygoverning the processes which may be ob-served, is an individual matter, and mustconstantly vary in detail to any broad andcandid mind. It is the one thing whichcannot, without fatal results to veritabletruth seeking, be chained clown to a setform of words and fixed once, for all in aninflexible creed.

Dogma is a folly and a madness, becauseit is daily confuted by the ever expandingvision of science. It Is \u25a0 curse to man. be-cause it stunts the best activities of thehuman mind and seeks to make intellectualprocesses mechanical rather than spontane-ous and organic.

The gag law so fervently advocated byMr. Jordan forms another proof that theclerical mind is somewhat tardy In appre-hending the lessons of history That the,advocates " outworn o,,tnions

'

Bhould pre.fer to suppress fre,. Bp^.h h nQt at _,„amazing. JAMES P. MORTON. JK.

New York, Oct. 25). 1910.

The force and power, latent inevery man.which conquers continents, navigates theair. penetrates the bowels of the earth, ar-ticulates the ether— lf this dynamic humanenergy could be applied to th» most im-portant things instead, the world would l>emoral and Christian (politics even regen-erated) in a generation.

Mr. Gaynor 'and hosts of others) has dis-covered, at the crucial moment, as the hu-man gaze becomes focussed aright, whatis really worth while; that men are livingand dying, struggling for secondary Insteadof primary things; and, in the sloughs ofthe badlands, are leaving unexplored a bet-ter country. LINCOLN C. CT'MMINGS.

Brookline. .Mas.-.. •\u25a0 \u25a0•: 27. 1910.

THE RICHER REALMS.•;.iiro- of The Trihlin".

? :'- Th^re Is a regioi of rhhaul country

ying Btreaks which remain? lars^iy\u25a1nexplored and unknown to-day MayorGaynor, faring death, saw that tprp.Tioral

honors and tilings looked Insigniffeant

thereafter. Unexplored ir>ften degplseu*) bythe average man. the rich regtona of mor-ality and Christianity (of panunount Jm-

o humanity) are nefjlm.led fpoorer l?inrls.

What is needed to rid "\u25a0" country of pro-fane language to to start in our schoolsand colleges an education in clean speech,which is fast being driven out by blas-phemy, and the lav.

-made to protect us

against blasphemy anrl other forms of lowlanguage should be vigorously enforced.

GEORGE WRIGHT.Halifax. N. S.. Oct. SI. 1010.

At no time in our history were the oppor-tunities greater for education and culturethan now. On the other hand. there is noperiod of civilization when the use of pro-fane and bad language has existed to anygreater extent than hi the present time.It has permeated among the parents, evenin their own homes, and the children can-not avoid learning it.

Ifully indorse the professor's remarksas to profanity b«»ing a brain test, andthat It can show but a mental weaknessamong those who allow themselves to fallinto the habit, but Ibeg to differ with himas to its diminishing with modern cultureand education

"P'-ofanlty is \u25a0 brain teat; the habit isin consequence subject to the general lawsgoverninc intensitivenc?:*:. To a very great

extent the practice of swearing is specially

characteristic of a rude and imperfect civ-ilization. with the advance of culture pro-fanity .Inline'! Tt declines not en muchh^caus*" m n become peculiarly sensitive to

Its viclousness. but they "1" to its ineffec-tiveness. . . . Exceptions ar*» too numer-ous to lay down any positive rule, still, itis safe to say in ceneral that a man's in-tellectual development is largely deter-mined by the extent of his indulgence Inprofanity."

PROFANITY.To the Editor of The Tribune.

Sir: Owing to the extensive use of pro-lane and blasphemous lanEruasre ha vine be-come so common se«»mins:lv among people

in all walks of life, many people have beentrying to solve the problem why this shouldhe in our advanced stage of civilization.Some time neo 1 noticed an explanationcoming from Professor Thomas R. Loans-burg, which is as follows:

HARRY S. MYERS.New York. Nov. 4. 1910.

CONGRATULATIONS ON CARTOON.\u25a0 Editor of The Trthuno.

Sir: C*on*ratttlatk>na on toe teal pagepicture thia roorninc

LETTERS TO TEE EDITOR.

the candle." it points out that th* numberSLli!killed as comparntively small an 1asKB lf the regults and tho sport justify'!the riFk. adding: "The fact that everj- yrarhunters in the Adirondack are killed inmistake or deer, and that all those go

,into the woods to hunt are aware of thisfact does not seem to make any differencewith the annual fatality list."

dtaj? 1PrWnS.'**" 111*Uml °f BlVlnS Wed'

receu"^' l^;}! 11' «*\u25a0 hotter to lye than torereUe

—Philadelphia Record.

"The toy world has kept parA with sci-ence nnd invention." said a dealer in play-things. Rpeakinj; r>f the approaching holl-flay display, "

nd many of the modernwonder contrivances will be seer, in nur-series and playrooms after the Christmaspifts have h«>en distributed. The phono-Rraph and electrical toys have been on themarket for several years. Airships of alldesigns bavc been the chief additions thisy»ar. A Paris toy for which a larse de-mr rid la expected is a group of animals, inthe centre of which stands ismiling hunt-or, raaauibllnc Colonel Roosevelt, whosepun brings down every animal."

"Hello, Grimes! Neighbor of yours pot anew dog, eh?"

"Don't know. Why?"'Saw that boy Bobbie of yours Eoin?

home v with an old tin can and a string."—Brownings Magazine.

NEW-YORK DAILI TRIBUNE, SATIHDAV. NovkmbKH 5, 101".

People and Social IncidentsNEW YP»K SOCIETY.

Amusements.

SOCIAL NOTES FROM NEWPORT.fßy T<»l*sranh to Th* Tribun*.1

Newport. Nov. *.—Mr. and Mr«. T. sha-»Safe, who have been automoblllnsr throng^th» Berkahlres, have returr.ed to th«lr hos»«here.

T^lFpenard Stewart has arrived tn to-wr;

for th« season from Newport.

W. Rhinelander Stewart. Jr., T. O^«tl»yRichardson, jr.. Frederick T. F"r<» rushsen. Allen Wright. Theodore P. Dixon. AUIred. Mary and Gurnee Minn will b« thiushers and Roderic Wellman the hest n.niof A. --neur "Wellman on the err-as!oaof hi*marriage to Mis* Frances Alexander.in the Church of the Heavenly Rest, aj

November ZX.

Mrs. Stephen IT. Brown haa Issued ta-rf*tations for a dance at her house, in East7*>th street, on December 2«. for he?daughter. Miss Caro Brown.

Mr. and Mr*. Aueuste Vatable return To*day from Earnpe. and will F^nti the wia.ter at the. Buckingham, in Fifth avenue.

Laa> Maxwell,dauch.ter of John Boiryn^^of San Francisco, and wife of Major Gen-eral Sir John Maxw»l'.. commanding th«j

British military forces in Esrpt.i3stayingat the FV-lmout.

ACADEMY OF MUSIC—B:IS—If 1 WereKing.

AUiAMiJKA-2-*-Vaudeville.AIIKRIc'AX—!•

—ss—

VaudevilleASTOR—.-. The Girl in the Taxi.BKLAS. •"> 2:3o— The Concert.BIJOI—;:i:>—*:ls—The Other Fellow.BBCA AT i:- > i.\ .1,,.-,- Forjan.CASINO

—2:13

—8:15

—h«* Came from

-mik**..

<-in<'LK—2:ir.—

K;ir.—

Th* Khpptu-nd Kins-CITY THEATRE

—2:15—8:15

—Is Matrimony a

Failure?COLONIAL—2-S— VaudevilleOOMBDY—2:3O—£:3ft— The Cub.CRITERION—2:IS—8:2»i_ The I-ommutws.DAI.YF

—2:30

—S:3ft

—Baby Mine

EMPIRE— 2:IS—R:I!t—SmUb.CAIETY—2:IS—h:iZ—Get Rich Quick

• Walllnfr-ford.

GAJJDEX-2:U'—

8:1.%— t> • Rosary.tSARRiCK— 2:I5

—8:20

—Raffles.

GLOBE—2:ir—K;ro—Tlm» nixi in the Train.HACKrrrr—2:l5

—8:20—Mother.

HAMMKRSTEIJC'S—2—«<:1S—

Vaudeville.HERALD syr.VRE- 2:l.*.—SOs— Time's Night-

mare.HIPPODROME—2— R—ThP International Cup—

Ba!!^- of Ni»irßT-;>—

Th«» Earthquake.HI'DPON

—2:2<> -*:3n—Th» D^^rtfrs.

IRVING PLACE—

2:ir>—Boci-acio—K:ir>—Flachs-ma \u25a0 als Erzi«»her

JOE WERETrS— 2:I3—

K:ir.—Alma. 'Where DoYou Live?

KXtCKERBOCKEB—2—6:l*—The Scarlet Pim-r*rn«>l.

LIBERTY—.;:i:,_K:ir»—The country Boy.I.TrEt-\i_2:is-S:2O— Electricity.LYRTi'—2:i:.—B35

—M*rtam<= Tr.-uhadmir.

MANHATTAN orERA HOUSE—2:I8—

S:15—

Wai th*Flut* Play«iMAXINE ELLIOTTS

—3:30

—S:T,O—The Gam-

blers.MENDELSSOHN HALL—2:Srt_T«>llo Recital.N'AZrMOVA'S—2:IR—R:3O— The Little Damozel.XHV AMSTERDAM

—2:ir.

—S:lTt

—Madam* 1

Shrrry.NETV TTTTATRE—2:lS—fi^jrt—The Blu* Bird.ECKW rOßK—a—«:lA—The Dollar Prin<-oss.nEPI'RUC- 2:ir.—S:ir»—Rch»cra of funnybronk

Farm.FT. NICHOLAS RIKK-Ic.Pkatinc.-

P—2:1.%— f-:ir,—

Alias Jimmy Valen-tine

TVEST END—2:ir.—»lS—

Th* M»rrr Widow.

Index to Advertisements.

Italy'! new ambassador. th» Marquis

Cusani Confalionieri. has arrived in townfrom Washington. to await the arrival ..:the marquise and h««r two children on Tues-day next from Europe.

Marshall R. Kernochan baa arrived hitown from Pittsfield, Mass.. for the seasin.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Whitney have re-turned to town from Bernardsvllle, N. .1..and are at the Plaza.

Mr. and Mrs. Georce Grant Mason havearrived in the city from Tuxedo and arestaying at the Hotel Gotham.

Miss Elizabeth Morris Mordaunt will Joinher aunt. Miss Elizabeth Marshall, at NoIIEast 60th street, next week, for theseason.

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Rhinelanderhave returned to town from Washington,where they were the guests of Mr«. Rhine-lander"s mother, Mrs. Henry Yates Sat-tcrlee.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Bahcock left townyesterday for Hot Springs. Ya . where they

willremain several weeks.

J. Blake Baker, who was booked to sailto-day for Europe, has postponed his de-parture ant! liMaytag at the Gotham.

Mrs Henry Addlsrtn Alexander i* th»guest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Mrs. Theodore Koosevelt. jr., in SanFrancisco.

Bishop r>Tii H. Greer, a?jested by the

Rev. Dr. I^lchton Parks, will officiate. «t

the marriaße tMi afternoon of HIM MarieVernon Brown to John Henry Mori'*1 at

the. house of the- bride's brother. Stephen

Pf. Brown. In East 70th :.tr»et. Miss MarieBrown, who ik the daughter of. Mr. and

Mrs. V>rnon H. Brown, will have MissCaro .>uar?l«»y Brown for her only attend-ant. William Morice will be his brother'sbest man, and there will he no ushers. Theceremony, to which cnljr a few relativeshave been asked, will be followed by aemail reception.

-

«'imm«"-

r »--

r