mas.'iuq MHBHI IT I I Jim i i 7 j' Hi - . a- Iww .1!'. kv S'r. , J" &J W- ,t .' I. i s $vtnn i&ftger , - PUDLtG LEDGER COMPANY v OWtlft Jt. It. GtmTIS, JParI81!r. flttt, W. Oct). 6ertary i John C. Martin, Trttrr CWlst H. tWlntton, rhllip S. Cellini, John D. VTI1- lUnnvt)lrwtr. EDITORIAL-BOARD f Ctau K. K. Coins, Chairman. f.J It WH AMST. EtMutlra Editor , .. if. .iii i i . . . S6JMC MAHTIN.. Central Dttilneaa Manatar P ublllhol dallr at rostra LiDot Dulldlcr, ( Iodtndnee Bquara, Philadelphia. fiat Cittifi, . .. . . .. . .Bread and Chentnut Btretta Atuktio Cm. ....Pref-Vnlon Bulldln Kbit Toox.......i...... . .170-A, Uitropolltan Tower CH10160. .............. .817 Homa Inauranc Dulldlnt L4WMM-. .8 Waterloo rites, Tall Mall, B. W. NiEwsnun-Ausi fliMifitM BotUO. , . .Tho Pot riot nultdlnr WJlantKaToM Demo ...The f'ot Ilulldlng- Katr roi Bdd... ..,..,.,..,. Tha Time Hulldlnr bsMtit lpl0. 60 Prledrlhitraie iwmii iioiuu. . , .z rail Mail Et, B w. ft ilia iicatio... ..02 nut Louia le arana BtreSCRIPTtON TERMS tit. carrier, DltLt Osit, alx centa. Br malt, peetcald amtiMi U teOUll Af Phllarfelnhltt. ftnt whtr. fnr.irn nnfaa r-..r.T. -;'.. .t":7 "r- ".v". --.---" -----.- poeta e leqmrea, ajaili ui.t, one monin, iwenir-nre cenies T-nire ci Dajit Omit, one yntr, three dollara, All mall ub- acriptlene parable In adrane. Bsllt'sooo ALmrr KETSTOriC, MAIN 8000 I JW faret all eommuKlratfon fa Jfeemnf I Ltdttr, tntieindtnf Smiar. FMladtUMa. ig fcknaxs it rna rntUDzu-i ronomci la icoons- etiaa Hilt, march. e PUILAnELrilfA, THURSDAY, DECEMnER 17, 1914. i. i i . -. Cln Error That Breeds Anarchy .TnV.eiVy court or commission having Hie Judicial power must be abovo reproach. Thp storm of. Indignation that has broken over the head of the Pennsylvania Public Service Commission proves that Americans have-tin ultra veneration for Justice. Al though the verdict rendered by the commis sion was unsatisfactory to multitudes of com muters, they acquiesced with scarcely a mur mur. Even today they aro not assailing tho terms: of the decision so much as tho Indis creet and Injudicious attitude of tho commis sion Itself. Even a quasl-Juafclat court soriously com promises itself by holding secret conferences with ono of the parties to a case within Its Jurisdiction, and tho unsealing of its ver dict for tho benefit of tho defendant at any time prior to the publlo and official pro nouncement lays grounds for tho most serious suspicion. The Publlo Service Commission had com mitted a very gmvo error. Its Indiscretion, to use the mildest term available, is of tho tlslnd tliat has glvon ground for tho popular belief that pjir courts aro under the domina tion' Pf the great corporations. Tho recent agitation against tho Judiciary had Its root in Just such suspicions as the commission nas roused. If there was collusion In any degree whatsoever botwoon the railroads and the 'commission, the fact, however It is ex plained away or extenuated on technical grounds, will encourage tho spirit of anarchy thnt,s already .too pronounced In Amorlcan life. TVfthout In the least Impugning tho motives of the commission, it Is obvious that Its ono outstanding duty now is to correct tho error at any cost. The fair name of American Jus tice' must be free'rot only from stain but from the shadow of suspicion. No price lti too 'heavy to pay for unflinching confidence In ttjo Irreproachablllty and impartiality of Justice. j i Prcdatpry inquistion rniTE Federal Commission on Industrial J. Relations has before It a charge that the Rockefeller and other Foundations aro In sidious devices' "to perpetuate the present position of predatory wealth through 'the corruption of sources of public Information." The'kccUsatlon Is not pew nor la there any thing particularly original about It. There are men who maike bogeys of anything big ger '(ban a plnhead, and the mania for In vestigation has riot, yet run Its course. The corruption of the riources of publlo in formation is something utterly impossible. Therji has been no Btrike or other Industrial Agitation in this cqUntry that the newspapers wero; not filled to overflowing with conflict ing kortea. Both sides' have invariably had a hearing. If anybody Is suffering under the delusion that the truth can be concealed it will 'ijay hlra to investigate the news-gathering organizations and the methods of Indi vidual newspapers' in securing facts'. We surmise thafthe different Foundations flo not care whether they are investigated or not. . They doubtless have nothing to con ceal. It may be, however, that donating any of hj funds to charity hereafter will forever ruin a philanthropist. He's damned If he gives and he's damned if he don't. It is the delight of our Government to furnish Its tltlic'ps wth funurement. ; Tests That Do Not Test PIWPSIDBNT 'VTTI'SCW Is right; an educa tional test is no criterion or guarantee of 400o( 'citizenship. If we could subject every immigrant to a. laboratory teat that would register hbi Industry, honesty and capacity to absorb and embody the spirit of our free American Institutions, it would be worth while, Bvery one who baa any knowledge of the immigrants who have come to America within, the -last three decades can give nura fcwlea Instance of Illiterate men who have , lcor)9 .patriotic. Jaw-honoring and produq tlvei 'American cJtixena. Nearly all of the daiurerouu criminals In our penal Institutions eve partly educated. The factors that make to? the demoralization of the Immigrant aro the saloon, the district politician and the venal aldermen with their corrupt police. A literacy test determines nothing that Is vital to a JUgb. grade of manhood or citizenship. Tr Peace "Withia a Year :THIB Bregma Ledger a few days ago pre- J,dt4athat the war would be over before bP - Aatt. fall ' Tr4iA tirtHvttv fhaf ina nfiMvn,Av Jed j II arms in the last week or two Indl-'f-aatea'elearly the restlessness which ha be gun q manifest itself In each of the em Wtthsl nation. The time U past when a Croat! people can be held for on indefinite JHU from the pursuit of Industry. There kmii4 at last a. ary from the masse whleb at! sfvermueat can ignore. Tho sceptre of KtvthtloH begins to appear, omlaqua and ter rtbi. ?fy ftjat to too great, ttga prova.tjQn too nalwportant, t Justify the ruin qt aj Kuise and a yiuh, e8glemerate cataatrophe. ' ilfl,M! tbi amies the djjilamats, who have ikfeered by the Brobdingaagian strug 4 sfter the diplomats piam. The war be er befqr a twJvth posi. I '... I'... 1 n nwn J 0tJ PWIatlelphla HpHjU fflff t ta lo-lng iJwuiU f mm X sAinWr i iBfcwew 9 im umAfktim 4f u w imi r otkr tutat k iHUf $ u BinH ot HiitiMf rJi up, lealte tttf mmt wmtmumA ujarviiit to? wWd '"h i:i v uiiiii r UMfa) pn taeb- a Vj ; - -. . tksTh feVBNING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, TflTJBBPAY. DBOEMBEB ' - I i r i i ' .... i i 1 i i f i i . . I f . the processo? to b Bono through before It cArk be mado effective nrd cumbersome. The municipality, in this as tn other matters, hart been shackled by embarrassing In hibitions which are destructive ot home rule and the proper development ot the city. Authorisation from the State must be ob tained before many functions properly In herent In a municipal corporation can bo per formed. Tncso restrictions, It Is true, have served to save Philadelphia scandal and wasto under reckloss administrations, yet the unexpended loans are In themselves an eloquent reminder of the extravagant and loose procedure which nt different times In the past have characterized local adminis tration. The city's hands should bo untied and freed, The Blankenburg Administration has proved that the metropolis Is able to govern Itself and do It well. The time has come for the Commonwealth to loosen the reins and let Philadelphia go ahead. Give Us Men ol Action OUR men of action, where are they? Tho country Is nauseated by the wishy-washy platltudlnarianlsm which In Washington has been passing for statesmanship these irfany months. Tho Panama episode Is cumulative ovldenco of tho enthusiastic do-nothlnglsm which has become symptomatic of Uryanlsm. Tho Governor of tho Canal Zono wanted shlprf, but Washington appeared to bo afraid to send thorn on the theory that It might bo construed as an unfriendly act by some Iower or other. Thcro was a tlmo when American ships could pass from ono Amor icon port to another without thought of tho views of other nations. Now wo aro so sunk in a fatso pacificism that we hcnltato to enforce even our most fundamental rights. Thero novcr was 60 much bromldlo TTou trallty. Somo Idea of tho absurdity of tho situa tion may bo gathered from the fact that tho Government yesterday was awaiting furthor ndvlces as to whether Colonel Goothals "wanted tho two destroyers ho asked for merely to prevent wireless transmission of unneutral messages or to prevent bel ligerents' vessels from making the Isthmian waters a baso of operations." By tho shades of Molly Pitcher, what difference does It mako what ho wants' them for? It might bo supposed that the oMcer in chargo of tho nation's greatest Investment was a second rate consul Just out of college, to Judgo from the temporizing und quibbling In Wash ington. There has been enough red tape wound about this particular cplsodo to sufllco for all tlmo. Mon who can say yes and no, men with decision in their make-up and spines In tholr bodies, aro needed at the capital. Sec retary Garrison has handled tho Naco Inci dent with some idea of what 1b becoming to the national dignity and prestige. But ho stands In lonely contrast to tho other execu tive officers who surround him. It Is possible to be a pacificist without being a mollycoddle, to 'earn and command peace by Iron pur pose. But thero is nothing but trouble and anxiety ahead of tho Incompetency which is concealing Itself in the cloak of self-restraint and patience. A Truly Wonderful Feat THE consummate daring of the German navy challenges the admiration of the world. The North Sea Is to all Intents and purposes a British lane. It Is mined and English patrols cover It from ono end to tho other. Fog or no fog, it was an achievement of the most spectacular kind for the Ger mans to drive through this very beehive of English ships to tho shores of old England horsolf. When last Britain suffered such humiliation .the American Colonies were en gaged in their struggle for liberty and there was no United StateB. As a military exploit the actual result Is Inferior In Importance to the psychological effects. It has been shown that thero are conditions under which the German fleet can get to the high seas. It remains, therefore, a constant menace, to guard against which will cost tho Allies enormous sums and will require the concentration of the home fleets. On the other hand, the reckless audacity of the raid indicates that publlo opinion in Ger many is reaching the point where the Gov ernment consider even the most extraordi nary risks Justifiable aa an emollient. Not War, But Police Duty THE3 country wants no war with Mexico, and there la no Mexico with which It can wage war. A great country, formerly a na tion overburdened with muckrakers, has fallen Into the clutches ot bushwhackers. To be sure, these gentlemen of pillage have been masquerading as humanitarians bent on agrarian reform, but the looting has been too valuable so far for them to give their atten tion to other matters. The United States cannot war with these Irresponsible chief tains. It would be ridiculous. When Mexicans used to cross the border and commit ravages In Texas, the Texas Bangers became active and the depredations stopped. If Ignorant bands in the neighbor hood of Naco insist on Jeopardizing the lives ot American citizens In American territory, there will be nothing for the American forces to do but cross the border and chase the out laws back Into their innocuous deserts and mountains. That is what General Boott will do if the outrages do not cease. It would not be war- It would be nothing more than the United States performing a police duty for an Impotent neighbor. One way to make good is to be good, but not to be a good thing. The war so far haa conclusively proved tha( churches make the best targets. There la nothing between Pinohot and Smoot except words and more words, in iijui 1 ii What's, the use, buying round-trip ticket if It coats twice aa much as a one-way couponT "Made In America," I quietly but surely supplanting similar designations of foreign flavor. ' ip" " 1 ' "Uncle Jpe" Cannon vs. Champ Clark, even though the latter U In the Speaker' chair, will sound natural to the House, 1 1 j 1 i n .in. The President i going to stand by Iynn no matter what happens. Bnoueh, it seema. is nt umoiit, to the Seaata will da it all over 6"at. , "' "" ' " " ' M larger tit ie ol Uaele Sarfa toaU bag ctaulalBg letters to -?( fSSgm, tjM wh -ru kl. ba tb )( from 'I LI P !-, RtM-matlv BaKiMMt not mm? Nutxwly tbUOw U to MytWaf btrt a loyal Aiwl-.a.n mmm. !i0, Ma cAW wtMM A BM N 4 MW rWi?l tfcttps -tUM-i Sf&m- afegfiSlSr I AMERICA A NATION OL? PUBLIC SPEAKERS Aro "tho Grand Days of Oratory" Gono Forovfir? Changes in tho Form and Style of Eloquence From Emerson to "Billy" Sunday. By WILLIAM HADER "rpHB grand days of oratory are gone for JLovor." Hon. Daniel Dougherty, of Phil adelphia, said this sbout 60 years ago In his lecturo on "Orators and Oratory." Tho silver-tongued orator himself was an argu ment against the statement which ho made. Eloquence, In stylo and form, has under gone great changes since tho days of Daniel Webster and Henry Clay and Charles Sum ner, but It Is still a potent factor In tho affairs of the world, George Herbert defined It as that whloh "Informs and Inflames," and Phillips Brooks said It was "a good man speaking well." Tho prophet of the olden time is conspicu ous by his absence. Usually he has appeared In a crisis, as Patrick Henry did In Virginia, or Savonarola when contending with Lorenzo the Magnificent and Pope Alexander VI, not to mention the Hebrew prophets who were voices of tho Infinite. Prophecy means a "bubbling up," llko a spring gushing up through rock nnd sand and soil, and over flowing Just as Patrick Henry did In his famous outburst of patriotism. Tolstoy was a good dcat of a prophet. Not that he made predictions, but ho Interpreted tho times. A prophet Is a seer, a revcalor of the oventn of tho hour, and Is associated usually with oto quence. Ho has appeared In wars and revo lutions and tumults, and his absence Just now In tho European war Is significant. Modern Eloqucnco Slnco Mr. Dougherty dollvorcd his lecturo on tho lyceum platforms of tho East orators havo spoken with what may bo called real eloquence. Henry Grady mado his famous speech on tho "New South," which for Im agination, diction and thought will live long. Lincoln's Gettysburg address was scarcoly appreciated In tho days of Mr. Dougherty, but now it stands first in cIqbsIo eloquence Mr. Bryan's famous speech before tho Chi cago nominating convention showed some thing ot the old flro which flashed In tho words of our earlier orators. Colonel Robert G. Ingerpoll Illustrated tho best standards of popular oratory In speeches that were not In frequently philippics against his theological opponents. Wendell Phillips, In some ro specls the most perfect orator America has produced, may bo called tho Demosthenes of the Amorlcan platform, unless wo make an exception In favor of Sergeant S. PrentlHs. There has Just been dedicated in Brooklyn, N. Y., a memorial to Henry Ward Bccchor. Bcechcr's name Is reminiscent of a stylo of speech which, as Mr. Dougherty said, has passed away. Beechcr was not tho greatest preacher In the American pulpit, but he was tho greatest orator. His addresses before tho excited crowds of Manchester, Liverpool, London and other English cities In defense of the Union cause, have never been equaled an cither Bide of the Atlantic In the Immediate effect produced. They Involved extraordinary versatility, cool Judgment, great courage and a mastery of situations which would havo de feated most men. His address read at Fort Sumter after thp war, and the memorial oration on Lincoln, are masterpieces of stately eloquence. Speaking of clergymen I am reminded of three of Beechcr'a contemporaries. Tho first was Dr. Richard S. Storrs, of the Church of tho Pilgrims, Brooklyn. Doctor Storrs would havo been at homo In Athens or the Forum of Romo in the old days of Demosthenes nnd Cicero, so graceful w'os his style, and so perfect his diction. Quito In contrast to him was Dr. T. Dewltt Talmage, who for years drew crowds wherever he appeared. Ho was not an orator, but rather a rushing, roaring, sparkling mountain stream of Im agery, vivacity nnd dramatic expression. He answered to the definition of eloquence given by one of the Grecian philosophers, who said that it was action, action, and more action. Phillips Brooks In Philadelphia Phillips Brooks may be set down as tho greatest preacher ot his times, "a spiritual splendor," as somebody called Frederick Den ison Maurice. Phillips Brooks prepared for his brilliant career In two Philadelphia pul pits that of the Church of the Advent and that of Holy Trinity. Both these churches were made famous by his unusual gifts, which soon became recognized throughout the world. "But Phillips Brooks broke nearly all the laws of delivery, speaking at the rate of 200 words a minute- rapidity of utterance that was the despair of shorthand reporters. It is no disparagement of the richness of his thought to say that his personality had much Jo do with his success. He was a mag nificent man physically, and compelled atten tion by that Inscrutable something which we call personality. Perhaps it is this quality, this personal something which best explains the secret of speech, It is the soul quality which finds expression through lips trained in the use of words. Eloquence Is a spiritual matter, an exercise of the highest faculties. It is a fine art. Unfortunately, the grand old style has been supplanted by the conversational mode of address. Today there is familiarity with the audiences. Men of national reputation will stand with their hands thrust in their pockets and speak In the familiar way which the salesman employs in selling goods. Simplicity has taken the place of ornateness; and direct ness, of the rainbow colors of the Imagina tion. George William Curtis and Ralph Waldo Emerson would hardly be popular on the Chautauqua platform. Ragtime is more pop ular with the masses than Wagner. The man who cracks Jokes is sometimes In greater dr mand than the speaker who attains to the Greek ideals of art in expression. Perhaps it U tblB vitiated taste of the multitude that has influenced publlo speaking in recent year. "Billy Sunday" Oratory We are a country of speakers. Both men and women are ambitious to be heard in pub lic. We meet In congresses and conventions, and sit by the hour listening to what others have to y. A great tabernacle la con struoUd In. Philadelphia to accommodate the multitude who will hear "Billy Sunday, the evangelist, talk on the greater things of Ufa and death. He represent another oratorical type which must ba 'considered, is any dlneussWn of American oratory. There la as rouoh differ, ease between Sunday's style and that of Daniel Dougbtrty aa thwe U Utween tbe AmUo Belvedere and a -uajMutst. It Is the riMKcwioe Imhwms two rtu, o4 yet t an tlnHf. Ut there U tM wiw ai u bwu tMt t ia bstrt of auUlvtd ririranT w Men tmtpm4M tu t h)gkat fora of -IiW-?&, It vmat ' emtetM, kvwevr, (bt t -vewi A.MMrtan pmtmt K; t eoljafc. fttet to fcwtsr, SM1 MStftout-vi.tt(- j UNDIGNIFIED, ANYHOW j s I ,3-tl shoulder form of speech to tho more llfoloss art which Is like sounding brass and a tink ling cymbal. That Is why the beautiful ad dress mado by Edward Everett nt Gettys burg Is forgotten, and tho powerful lines read by Lincoln from a pieco of foolscap, after Everett sat down, will llvd forever. GENTLE ART OF "ItESOLUTING" Some Illustrations Showing It at Its Best ana at Its Equally Interesting Worst. IF THERE wcro any way of amassing and presenting to the public gazo all tho reso lutions that have gono Into the discard you could bury Pike's Peak under the pile or erect a mound down in Mexico that would over shadow that mountain you havo to look up In tho dictionary every tlmo you want to spell It. Tho gentle art of resoluting, fortunately, Is mostly harmless in Its effects. (Resolutiilg may not bo a regular word, but tho lexicog raphers havo failed to provide anything to servo the purpose.) Just the other day Senator Kenyon, "bf Iowa, Introduced a resolution In Congress calling upon tho warring nations In Europo to declare a Yulotlde armistice of twenty days. On tho faco ot it this resolution was both timely and of a high moral character. Tho (sentiments It suggosted aro utterly bo yond reproach. Even tho Kaiser and the Czar, If tho resolution ever gets to their nttentlbn, will plouBly Indorse the Iowa statesman's' noble thoughts and then order out a few more army corps. The Secretary of State might offer a resolu tion bidding ail adult Americans to drink no Btronger stimulant than grape Juice, and we all know that Mr. Bryan Is eloquent enough to frame such a resolution on the highest possible moral grounds. Ho need not be merely moral about It. Ho can back up his arguments with mcdjcal dicta, with statistics compiled by the actuarlos of Insurance com panies; yes, .and William Allen Whlto might be persuaded to add a Kansas codicil to the document. Tho newapnpers would print it in full nnd then order their editorial writers to shoot It up with dum-dum diatribes. But think of what a lovely lot of publicity W. J. B. would get out of It If he needed It. And he doesn't seem to. At least not just nt present. Generally those who offer resolutions that are Just resolutions' are seeking public atten tion. This Is nlmost a chronlo condition with politicians. They must not bq, forgotten or they become extinct like the dodo bird. There was once a New Jersey legislator who drew up and presented a bill Imposing a tax on whiskers. This bill contained a graded series of Imposts to take care of any manner or style of whisker or whlskerage that had ever passed under his observation. It was read and recorded Just as officially and at the same cost to the taxpayers of New Jersey as the publlo utilities bill or the corporation tax bill. Of course, It went into the discard, as the young gentleman who drew It knew it would, but he got his Bhort, sweet breath of fame from It. Farmers are pretty free from tne resolut ing mania. It Is to be hoped that Progressiva Agriculture and the Wisconsin. Idea do not bring them to it, else the cost of living will mount higher than ever. The best woy to keep the farmers sitting tlght'on their sulky plows U tor the city folks to maintain: n monopoly of solemnly presented idle persiflage and publicity-seeking gush. If enough of this is aimed at the farmer and based upon the fairly universal ignorance of farming that obtains In the city, tha farmer Is M safe as if he were Inoculated by a potent, antitoxin. When we look closely Into this national foible or ours we cannot find even an ujtra mlcroacoplo solution of it. Up comas the faithful old query, What are we going to do about ltT Plumb nothing", I guess, or wait we might pass a little, resolution of our own against it. ' . I IL, l -W.I.I I GIPSHEART My grandsirevWa a vagabond Who mads the Road his bride. Il left his sou a wanderer's heart And little enough beside; And all his Ufa my father heard The fluting of a hidden bird Tbat lured Mm, pn from hedge to hedge To walk tha world so wide. And now he walks the worlds beyond And drifts o bidder seas UrJdeseoratd by R ehart Blithe drUet at ease. And sometimes whe I halt at night In answer to my tmpifa U&t ills WB upHfta a sfewfMr w4ge Among tho Pleiad- Wow-n are ftvtr, bwt OH tea food; lleaoa botfl a nuw t last: IH ehuee tot Mte fo-a4 pat, And la a 1 s Wt Nu Hgbted window beoko- , Tbs kr MT c-ofw, I'll tain) UFUO Cl-ftfMBf WS A iTi intftrar fav iwt luts. -Aueb ',,;. am turn m wk, 17, 101& ' - " , - .... .zs-g TALES OF WHITBY AND SCARBOROUGH Bonibarded English Towns Have Played Interesting Parts in History, aridl Many Legends Cluster Around Their Names. J - ------- ''fifiS Ti MANY readers of tho startling war news which camo over the cables yester day and told of tho bombardment of towns on the cast coast of England, tho names "Whitby" and "Scarborough" aro suggestlvo of interesting events in past ecclesiastical and literary history. Shortly aftor St. Augustine began to teach tho Christian religion to tho Anglo-Saxons, Cacdmop, who was attached to tho monas tery at Whitby, composod tho first religious song In English literature. Chronologically the "Paraphrase" of Cacdmon is tho second Anglo-Saxon epic. Tho same warlike spirit that filled tho earlier "Beowulf" Is Been In this poem, but Instead of Grendel wo have Satan ns the arch-cnomy against whom tho battle rages. Tho Venerable Bedo, in his famous Eccles iastical History, told tho story of how tho "Paraphrase" camo Into being. "Cacdmon, having lived in a secular habit until ho was woll advanced In years, had never learned anytmng or versirying, for which reason, fce lng sometimes at entertainments where it was agreed for tho sake of mirth that all present should Blng in their turns, when ho saw the Instrument come toward him, he rose up from table and returned home. "Having done so at a certain time, and gone out of th'o house where the entertain ment was, to the stable, where he had to take caro of tho horses that night, ho thero com posed himself to rest at tho Proper time; a person appeared to blm In his sleep, and, saluting blm by hla name Bald, 'Caedmon, sing somo song to me.' Ho answered, 'I can not sing; for that was the reason why I loft tho entertainment, and retired to this place, because I could not sing.' Tho other who talked to him replied, 'However, you shall sing.' 'What shall I sing?' rejoined he. 'Sing tho beginning of created beings,' said tho other. Hereupon he presently began to Blng verses Jo the praise of God." Caedmon remembered the poetry which he had composed in his dreams and repeated It in the morning to tho inmates ot the monas tery. The gift of song was divinely given to him, it was believed, and Caedmon was taken Into the monastla order. Thereafter he de voted his time to poetry. Tho ruins which crown the cliff nt Whitby are not those of the first abbey. It was about 657 that Saint Hilda founded on that site a Benedictine abbey, which, a hundred years after the time of Caedmon, was destroyed by the Danes on their plundering expeditions. In 1078 It was rebuilt, and under the patron age of the Percys grew in wealth and fame. From that date the monastery was for mon only, hence the nuns of Whitby described by Sir Walter Scott In Marmlon ore pure fiction, The ruins present a noble If dilapidated pile. The nave fell after a storm In the 19th century, and a similar cause threw down the central tower in 1830. The choir and northern transept are still standing, extremely beauti ful early English work) only fragments of pther portions of thp abbey remain. Legends of Whitby - Joel Cook, in "England, Picturesque and Descriptive," published by the John C Win ston Company, recites one of the Interesting legends associated with the ancient abbey. "It appears that three gentlemen De Bruce, Do Percy and AUaston- were hunting boars pn the abbey lands In- 11B9, and roused a fine one which their dog pressed hard and chased to the hermitage, where it ran Juto tbe chapel ang dropped dead, The hermit closed the door against the hounds, and the hunters, coming up, were enraged to nnd the dog balked of their prey, and on the hermit's opening tbe door they attacked htm with their boar-spears and mortally wounded him. Jt was not Jong before they founJ that thla was dangerous sport, and tby took sanc tuary at Scarborough. The Church, however, did not protect those who had Insulted it, and they were given up to tha abbot of Whitby, who was about to make an example of them, when the ding hermit suinmonad the abbot and the prisoners t h( Bedside, and granted hem their 11y4 and lands. But it was dona upon a peoullar tenure: upon Ascension Day at sunrise they were to come to the wood, on Vskdals-side, and the aoSet'a. omr w,aa to deliver to aefa 'ten stak.. U steuttewew, and Jl yettters, to b Q$H W you, w of you, with a kntf of eA immy pries': tha they w( to take an IHr baefcs t Wnttby bfo 9 o'olee in tiw morulas- Tfe - tb ttantt 'K it fe fwu w, ytmr ! &4 frvto$ tu ; jul lv ww, a-saof you Mi your ta th brim, eaob t one a:d froi the atk-f, 4 no iBr tb on .h aid jta tewr ibcr. d . DQ ok..,; 1 lt BlLSl yewr stmif ttww. tkM uw iy at4 thereof. You shall faithfully do this In membranco that you did most cruelly 'l&yj me, and that you may the better call to Go for mercy, repent unfelgncdly of your Mr and do good works. Tho ofllcer of Eskda side shall blow, "Out on you, out on you, 1 on you for this heinous crime!" ' Failure . this strango service was to forfeit their lands to the abbot of Whitby." The cliffs at Whitby aro moro prcclptu and tho situation more picturesque than at Scarborough, also a watering place and bet ter known as such. Mr, Cook describe Sc r- borough as it Is today, and tells .f the part It has played In history: "Tho old castle, battered by war nnd the elements, Is a striking ruin, tho precipitous rock on which it stands bolng a natural for J tres3. Tho Northmen when they first inJ vaded Britain mado Its site their strongho d, but the present castle was not built unt I hoi reign of King Stephen, when its builder,! William lo Oros, Earl of Albemarle, was 401 powerful In this pi.rtof Yorkshire that It was! said ho was 'In Stephen's days tho moro real! king.' But Henry II compelled the prOudl Earl to submit to his authority, though "with much searching of heart and choler,' md Scarborough afterward been to ono of tia, royal castles, Edward I In his earlier mraf keeping court there. It was there th-1 Ed-i ward II was besieged, nnd his favqrlte G va-l ston Btnrved Info surrender and thon be-jl headed on Blacklow Hill in violation of th'j terms of his capitulation. Scarborough was- repeatedly attacked by the Scots, but It sub-! sequently enjoyed an Interval of peace until tho Reformation. The "Scarborough Warning" "In Wyatt's rebellion his frlonds eecurod. possession of the castle by stratagem A number of his men, disguised as peasants, on market day strolled one by one Into the cod- tie, nnd then at a given signal overpowered the sentinels- and admitted tho rest of their hand. The castle, however, was soon recan-i tured from tho rebels, and Thomas Stafford! me leaaer in this enterprise, was beheadedJ -rom this event is derived tho proverb or 'Scarborough warning.' a word and a blow, but the blow first. "In Elizabeth's reign Scarborough was nine eiso nut a fishing village, and became so unionunate that It appealed to the Oueen1 for aid. In tho Civil War the castle was held1 by tho Royalists, and was besieged for six! monins. vnue tne guns could not tva,,. iM u.vwon oiq, ana tno Parliamentary nrmv v,u vus"iun xnree years later the Gov-i ernor declared-for the Klnsr. and th rnJ again stood a five months' siege. Anally surl rendering. Since then it has fallen Into de- w UUI. aa a prison-house for George 1. :." -- " ireatea with eever,! ity there. A little way down the hll are the! wh.;nhUbeVSedC,,UrCh f "l Ht?. - V Muth -a,t ,1 ..Ii . . """" inw a beautifully! terraced garden and promenade. Here, am d! ...... . M a.,?nam9 resort th f00tpa,h winding un and flown m,. . - it .?' "" broadening into the gardes where muslo u prov ded and there r -i-ii.. T. rU81e inclined P.ane,wnwa-. --' th " b 3, " with the hotels pn the top or the cliff. ! marine drive protected by I SS I. structed around the base of SSh n ?n which Scarborough .UtaS a watering puo The mring. w.ra M ered In U30 and by theW,J7i . ?leov .,., v. t: touie ot tha last century had become fashtonahi- i Present ornamental Jmi tb4 erected about N years ago m Wera There are two W S? Other. In the season. th ,' 'han. he entire front of thTimr. ?! , wwie b,ra it ar rowTof HtL L on wbeas, be bathing hthlt1"'1ts (MA, however. SlsfftM No. W ef uJwTuVTffi c , i tf . &ffi (2T0 fl rail. mi t"-a -, u.. 'J ?-? 'gfffvssj' "itefe liPg'"w" rc