rc K- l. ic 10 PUBLIC LfeDGEIl COMPANY CYRt'SJI. X. CURTI3, rtiDENT. Charles H. Lwllnston, Vise rreMdsnt I John C. Martin, m?i" W1 Treasurer; Philip S. Collins, John D. yrmiam. Directors. , EnrroniAij BOAnm r. ,Si. u- Wkii, Chairman. r. H. WHALEV .......... . , . .L. , . ... i... Editor JOHN C. MAP.TIN.., Cieneral 'nijni Manager Published dally atPcsxtc T.tMM Building, Independence Square, Philadelphia. T,ttam CESTt...i..nUroad and hpslnut Streets C.Tyx510 Cut.,.,, , Prm-tiifoit Binding York,... i,,,,.., ,,,,,. son Metropolitan Tower &J?i PJ.".' i .... ... . . . .S2fl Ford Building BTi IXc!g,. . i. ...,,.,, ,40S1 OfoBr-Democrnt rtulldlng Cnrcioo....... ....... ....... .1202 tribune Building . NEWS BL'nnAUS! H bi;oto:i Bcsbau. niwa Bulldlnpr g"'',i'" Boreao...... The rimr Building PIJ.y;B,BE4,,' '" 00 FMsdrIehtrBS .ONDoif ncxaiB. . i Marconi Home, strand PitiB Btmtio i. ........ .3-2 nu Louis le Orand SUBSCMCTJO.N TEB.MS PLl'tTiif1; ."J.1" J1" WMk " "" pntpld eutsida of.rhlladelphla, except where, foreign postage Is TKjiiIrt,., one month. tnenty-fne cents; one. year, three dollars. All mall aubscrlptlons payable In advance. .."""(p Subscriber "Minis address changed must lve old ns well m new address BELL, itoO WALXth" KEYSTONE. MAIN 3009 C7 .tiVre i oil romMMiifealloni to Evening ledger, ludtptndence Square, rMladi.plita. xxtMed At TnBrnttnntpntA roTorncrj is second ...ASS MAIL MATTES. THE AVErUOE SKT PAID DAHVT CinCUlA TION OV THE EVENING t.EUOEn roii Kvncit was iio.:2t. PHILADELPHIA, WEim.SIAY. MAY 3, 19IS. Sweet day, so cool, so culm, io bright, The bridal of the earth and ski). (Icoryc Herbert, New triple play! Porter to Penrose to Smith. The remarks on the passing of Harper's Weekly are belated. It passed several years ago. Our Idea of an exciting event Is a straw vote for candidate conducted by a Dcmociatlc paper. Mr. Roosevelt will hao only 230 delegates atv the Republican convention, say reports Look what Bryan did when he had only one! The men who did not buy gasoline and store It when It wns cheap are damning the Standard Oil Company for Its foresight. But who Is to blame Ifor the other fellows' neglect to look ahead? Daniels Will Fhone to Warships at Sea. Headline. It Is not considered likely that ho will In corporate In his conversation the remarks of Bradley FIske. If It constitutes a hi each of the peace to make a speech on the City Hall plaza In oppo-sltion-to the transit loan, what Is the nature of the olfense when It Is committed In "Dave" Lane's ofllco? The editor who advises women to eat regu larly during the housocleaning season does not go far enough. They should eat regularly at all other seasons. If they did the nerve specialists would have less work to do. Emperor Francis Joseph has expressed his opinion of war to a talking machine, the rec ords of which ore not to be made public until after his death. General Sherman was not afraid to any what ho thought of war while he was alive. Captain .Russell, commandant at League Island, has reminded thoso who doubt the possibility of developing this port that Lon don, with a foreign commerco unsurpassed by that of any other port In the world, Is 50 miles from the sea. But every ono but the pessi mists knew this already. Every year wo are confronted by a photo graph labeled "Atlantic City Easter Throng." Same old Boardwalk, tame old throng, same old photograph. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Our Cleveland contemporary evidently did not see the new full-page picture of the At lantic City Boardwalk which tho Evening Ledoeii printed on Easter Monday. If It wants to know what the great resort looks like this year It would better hunt up tho paper and look at tho picture. Following the report that a Harvard physi cian had succeeded In isolating tho scarlet fever bacillus comes the report that some Russian physicians, working with the army, have found the bacillus of typhus. The de tails of neither investigation havo yet been published, but it is known that a New York physician clahr.ed about a year and a half ago that he had found the typhus bacillus. Tho Russian physicians may have verified his experiments, but even if they hava not, some Investigator will Bucceed. and one more dread plague will lose Its terrors. Those men who are saying that the wage In crease granted to the anthracite mlr.e workers will be followed by a necessary Increase of SO cents a ton In the price of coal would better do a little figuring. Mr. Warriner, of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, says that the wage Increase will add from $10,000,. 000 to $12,000,000 a year to the cost of mining, and that at least 10 per cent, of this sum will have to be paid by the consumer. For con venience of computation call it 10 per cent, of $10,000,000, or $1,000,000. Pennsylvania pro duces 81,000,000 long tons of coal in a year. If the people have to pay 11,000,000 more for this, the Increase in the price would amount to not more than a cent and a half a ton. If the people have to pay the total wage increase, the extra cost of coal would be only 12 H cents a ton. The retailer will have to do a lot of explaining before he can convince the con sumer that an Increase of 60 cents a ton In the price Is fair. Irony plied on tragedy for Great Britain with the modest reports from Petrograd that the '-Russian army has hacked its course over 240 miles half way through the empire of Turkey-In-Asia, The Russians are making their -way toward Bagdad and Aleppo In two separate forces, and- their progress In either direction Is steady. The satisfying feature of their advance is that, unlike the fatal British attack, on Bagdad, it Is being met at every etep by the Turks, but not halted. The British swept-forward to within 10 miles of Bagdad virtually unopposed, and then were thrown back 100 miles. Whether the release of Turk fan. forces at Kut-el-Amara will provide men for a superior resistance now Is questionable, for there la still a British expedition in Meso potamia that will engage the Ottoman forces fop many 'weeks to come. So Russia,, the dasplsed, under the demoted Grand Duke, be comes a force when the heroic British fall back Into dlsgraca. A year ago today the Lusltania was on . the h!.;,-h gea Slia sald despite the official jmrsks jmblli-hftd by tfc German Embassy,. mi4 o-a r w mut-y Aawtcrnu who wzaftetf ft nniBg. ttiftpwSitj; mat; thm it ffVENIfrG has been held that the one Unforgivable fault of the Administration was that, on May 1, 1915, It did not hold the German Embassy to strict accountability for the Impudent publication over lis signature, delaying meanwhile the salting of the Lusltania. That Is easy enough to say today, after bitter experience has taught the wot Id that nothing Is too barbarous for German ftlghtfulness. At the time no atrocity on the high seas' had occurred for a darning and the Ottlfllght alono of American ships had been sunk, Neither Mr. Roosevelt nor the editors of the New Republic were quite prescient enough to foresee the seventh of May from the moderate warning. The feeling of utter Incredutlty, the thought that a nasty Joke was being played, dominated those who sailed and those who watched them go. A horrible year has passed since then, but the greatest tragedy of all Is that the world will never be so confident of humanity again. The diplomatic Interchanges between Wash lngton and Berlin may glvo us safeguards, but they will never restore our faith. DO NOT BE SOLD OUT! The factions nre preparing In sell out tlia Interests of Philadelphia. They nre massing exctises wherewith to defend themseUes ngnlnst public Indignation, bill of their pur pose there enn lie nn doubt. AN ATTEMPT Is under way to bunco the " hundreds of thousands of people who con stitute the city of Philadelphia. Thrro are mealy-mouthed politicians run ning about and crying that they cannot sup port the transit loan because, forsooth. It may cuuso a higher tax rate. They know that It will not, but what Is misrepresentation among friends? The m.iln object Is to fool and cheat the people, so why not use deception? There nre men yet living whoso pocketbooks bulge with the lccelpts from former fran chise stenls. They see a chance now to throttle the city a second time, to their own very great advantage. They are loud In their warnings, but in their hearts they have but ono object, nnd that Is to defeat nt any cost tho purpose of the people to have the kind of transit they ought to hnvo. The factions are lined up. One, through the Mayor, devises ways and means to goad tho other Into opposition to the loan. Yes, It is good strategy for the Mayor, who a few weeks ago lost his fight to kill transit, to switch his tactics and accomplish hln pur poses more subtly by nominally supporting tho project while at tho same time acting officially In such a way as to Invite opposi tion nnd encourage It. It may be good poll tics from the factional viewpoint, but It is not good morals and It Is a base betraynl of the public Interest. So, too, It may be good politics for tho other faction, grasping at the opportunity of fered by the Mayor, to sacrifice the welfare of the city to the Idol ot factional glory and pap. But American energy and enterprise have sunk to a mighty low level If such activity can find support In this great me tropolis, and mcntul paralysis has surely fastened Itself on the community If any con siderable number of peoplo can be found In favor of such treason to Philadelphia. Tho abolition of the intolerable exchange ticket, tho inauguration of universal trans fers, tho right to ride from any part of tho city to any other part of the city for one five-cent fare, the substitution of express service for the slow and tedious service now offered by the surface lines, the right to a seat instead of tho right to a strap when a ride Is paid for these are somo of the things the peoplo have within their grasp If they will but vote for them. Tho alternative is the present transit system. A vote against the transit loan Is a voto of satisfaction with present conditions, a vote in favor of slow traffic, a vote to Indorse the Juggling tof franchises and the subordination of the Interests of the city to tho Interests of the few. Never has a fairer transit system been of fered to a people. Never before has a city had the opportunity to obtain rapid transit under such favorable conditions, with so little burden to Itself, and never before under similar conditions has so splendid an under taking been in Jeopardy through the mall clous activity of little politicians. Franchises have been stolen and cities sold out, but never by the people themselves. A vote against the transit loan Is a vote to sell out Philadelphia. The little fellow, the man In the street, who has no limousine at his disposal, who must ride to and from his work on a public carrier, he Is the one to whom this transit Issue Is a vital Issue; In fact, the overpowering Issue. The comprehensive system is to be his auto mobile, and all that he has to do to get it 13 to vote right. It may be that the ward leaders are right when they boast over bubbling glasses that the great mass of men will obey their orders and go willingly to the polls to repudiate their own Interests. It may be that these ward leaders are right when they laugh and say that the people are fools, made to be fooled and mllkfd by men of trickier brains. It may be that these ward leaders and little poli ticians are right when they aver that the higher tax bogey will be enough to frighten citizens Into line. But are they right? We think not. It Is more likely that on May 16 the politicians will receive the biggest surprise of their lives. The public la like a tortoise, slow of move, ment, butan aroused public la the mightiest force knqwn In the world of human action and there is no withstanding it. We be lieve that before May 18 the public will understand the outrage which the factions hope on that day to perpetrate, and we believe that public Indignation will manifest itself In giving to these factions the severest rebuke they have ever encountered. .Wake, up, you men of Philadelphia.! Wake UP as ert yourselvta! fi..; ijt ife tryta t$ nil you out. LfeDGfeR.PHILA'DELPHJAt WEPKBBAY, Tom Daly's Column ALL FOlt rilU CHILD. MV folks an tnc are goino Io see The circus this here iceefc, AlU Paw he'lt do, an' mv Aunt Plot An' Maw an' Vucie Zeke. Mi) Vaio last night allowed he might Take me to see the show. "It's on'v Just," scz he; "tec must Amuse the child, ye know. Of course, I've got an awful lot O' work on hand," scz he, "But 1 suppose I'll fix It so's 'Twon't Interfere 'with me." Then Maw scs: "Jake, for xioodncss' sakel Arc iou cxpcclln' mc To set home while loU take that chile Whet all thou wild things bet Whu, I'd fist set an' fret, an' fret, I.cst somcthln' might go wrong; So if you go I'll have ye know ( That I'm a-goln' along." Then Uncle Zeke, who come last week Along o''my Aunt Vlo To board with 1'aw an' mc an' Maio, Allowed that they would go. "I'm sure," scz he, "that Flo an' me Would feet .itch loneliness, Left here alone When you wdrc gone, We'd best yo, too, I guess." Xow, ain't my Paw an' dear old MaW As ktnd ns they kin ha To plan so much, piavldin' sucJi A splendid ticat fur met Life-lines for Orators WITH a presidential election, commence ment, Docoiatlon Day and the Fourth of July all stnilng us In tho face, "now Is the time," I think, "for nil good men and true to como to tho aid of" the orator. Let's all got together and throw out llfc-llnes to the Com plete Orator. Here's a starter: g "Wo are living- (pause and frown) In mo mentous days!" W. L. VOSTSPIirPT TO IWKllY, U. OV P. I icad those tines to you, Kerry, lint still some moic lira dewberry. Old I'cnn bclicx-cs she has. Berry, In you her ripest 'inhs-brrry; And long as you bedeck her, Berry, Thcie's nothin' goln' to chcekcrbcrry. SOP1. ) The Golfisherman (Not1 to proofreiul.T: AW know how It pain ou to pa3H bnd tllilitt, ami tills Is winner Hleluml nor I.oliind. but It u.is wrllti-n by n kuoiI friend of oura ami. besides, tho arntlmrnt'a nil rlKhl su lot It fiu. How do sou llko the hi ml uu put on It? "The Oolllah crman." l'rcttj cl!er. ch?) DU YE remember, Tammle, how It rained the nlcht o' Oood Friday? Wcel, every worum big and little came up So when 1 was plnyln' for air the Saturday. Uawf wl Sir. ye Uln him, a short stocky mon, han'some wl a Charley Chaplin muntnelc, there was a fine fat worum an' sometimes a dozen on every squere fut nv tho links. Now mo han'some friend was raised on a fnrum and overy Satur day afternoon he'd gae a-flsliin', so when he saw .sae muteh halt a-layln' about the auld longlu' came back tne him. Comln' to the fourteenth green there was a hole as hae been cut for a winter green an' 'twas full tae oterllowln' wl' most han'some worumx, ami mo friend bays 'tis a frae waste o" fine material, an' I see a dreamy look een his eye. An' that cvenln' on me way hame I seo a fig ure on the wee bridge o'er Culms Crick, a-holdln' a driver bo the head, wl" the wrappln' unwound nnd tied tn the grip, an' be the other end a bit o' pin bint llko a nuke and tho cup full o" woruron be his side, n-flHhln' fpr mlnnles un longer than ye thumb nail An" I raid na wunl tao him, but left him there a'dreamln' o" his byhood. Tin: a as MLTin: (Snlmims to A. Tennson.) make, In cellars of the rich. My predatory sallies; I also joost in houses which Arc built on courts and alleys; And whether you arc well or sick I gulp your silver pieces, My little wheels with case would click Away the wealth of Croesus. While somewhat "thick," I'm never "slow," I'll get you though you're clever; Inspectors come, inspectors go, Hut I click on forever. T. UXG. As to the Cistern, Brethren The following ready-made table may be use ful to you 1." Circular cistern 5 ft. diameter, holds , .in barrels tl ft. diameter, holds u.Ol " T ft. diameter, hold! v.Vi " 2. Squaro cistern 8 ft. by .1 ft., holds fl.p" ' B ft. by (I ft., holds s.5t T ft. by 7 ft., holds 11.73 From a contemporary. What is it a circular cistern? We dunno, unless lt"s shott for a cylindrical one. Has the depth anything to do with how many barrels it holds? And'. In passing, Isn't a 5 ft. so. cistein usually 5 ft. by 5 ft., or Is It sometimes 5 ft. by 5.10? H. H, If. CEDAR BLUFF ANTHOLOGY 3, The Plain Man, I am the Plain Man, The bulwark of the nation, The ultimate hope of the ages. Scientists may theorize. Poets rant and rave, ' ' Philosophers may argue, And Society waste itself In riotous living; But I, and my time-honored maxims, My homely words of wisdom continually re peated, My instinctive common-sense, I shall endure to eternity; ' For I am the salt of the earth. Vox popull, vox Del; As our Congressman said last November, WILL LOU. THE seventh point about that gum is that the agent who Introduces It always gives a pretty customer more samples than the chief clerk gets. p. Villain. THE DEVIL'S POOL (On the Upper W(ssahlckon Creek.) Here thirsty deer once drank their fill, And squirrels In sylvan shadows played. With rapid thrust of darting bill Here once on frogs great herons preyed. Now derbltd "kid" and high-heeled 'chick" A-plcnlcklng play round this pool, While ancient carp midst egg shells thick Lie dreaming In Jts shadows cooL Q- Gent; , Do guys vsrite for your Col yum ' Without any emolum , entt Quite, Wrpht. Wright 11 -i amm..! THE REAL "JPINCH-BACK NORFOLK BUJTB. Poesa't the, ihove, fron a clothing ad, sound a W pradoatlcal when Aurriedjy read j J. ' - jiK';ii(dt,W''Wr ' -- ,, "" gf HUNTING LOST GOLD ON OCEAN'S FLOOR Sunken Treasure Must Have the Gleam of Yellow in It or Men Won't Seek It A Duke's Quest for Spanish Coins SPANISH doubloons, pieces of eight, coins that have not seen the light of day slnco men in plumed hats fought over them with tnpiera ot tossed them down to Innkeepers for beakers of wine of tho Canaries these are the spoils of ocean that it will bo the business of a company that hns been formed In Wall street capital, $123,000; slut tea, 7 per cent, cumula tive pteferred, with common Issued as a bonus to bring to tho surface of wntrn seas and pay out a.sj dividends to stockholdcts. . Thete really is lots of gold lying at the bottom of the ocean tons of it. It is In rot ting hulks of galleons that Drake and his friends sent to tho bottom. Not that they ever tried to sink a gold ship, for Queen Eliza beth needed eveiy Spanish ploco of money her authorized pirates could lay their hands on. But onco In a while a gold ship got sunk by nccldent or the pi out! Spaniards touched a match to the magazlno when they saw all wns lost sdvo honor! And tho gold bars Ho In HO fathoms of translucent green Caribbean. Tho 'water ate away tho old Spanish cannon, pcriHhable ns tho flesh on tho bones of tho cavaliers that sank gently with the shattered vessel, and whom tho stary-eyed fish at first suspiciously nibbled and then devoured. All peiishcd. cannon, ship and men; but the gold did not perish. The bars and tho coins are ns good today as ever they were, and In the cicvlces of many a rock among tho seaweed at the bottom of tho Atlantic lie the coun tenances of Philip II, of Henry VIII, of nil the Georges, as clear-cut in the gold as the day tho coins camo from tho mint. Gold in the Lusitania Not only tho engiaved likenesses of the flibt four Georges lie down there. The piescnt King George, still in his prime and smiling as he loviews his troops for the movie man, Is theie In the depths, many times drowned. For thete was $2,000,000 in gold in tho Lusl tanla'B cargo. Gold coins that wero minted hero In Philadelphia not much mors than a year ago He, futile, In that pitiful hull that sprawls, huge and tilted at a hideous angle, with bow buiied in tho sand. Tho gold in tho Lusltania will bo balvaged by the Wall streot company If they can get at It. There Is lots of new gold In tho wreck of tho Titanic, too, but that is forever beyond men's fingers. The Titanic Is 1700 feet under the surface. But the Lusl tania Is In only -100 feet of water and her loca tion Is well known. The Luslta'nla, now that tho tears and tragedy of her are the better to be borne for the flight of time, Is really a tempting morsel. The tragedy of sunken ships of old was just as much a tragedy for the mothers of men as was that of the Lusltania. Only it was so long ago It can be spoken of lightly now. Take tho wreck of the treasure ship of the Armada, which the Dukes of Argyll have tried to raise from the sands of Tobermory Bay. When the King of Spain sent 1000 ships to conquer England, the fleet was scat tered. Only 51 ships ever got back $0 Spain, by going all the way around the British Isles. Now one of the hundred ships that attempted that long trip was the treasure ship, with some millions in gold aboard. When she was off the coast of Argyllshire, Scotland, storms sent her Into Tobermory Bay. The admiral asked the Scotch for food and water. One of the Campbell lairds dickered with the Spaniards, .and while he was on board it struck him that they were willing to pay rather high for what they wanted, So it was that his Scotch nose Bmelled the gold on boards He claimed the vessel for King James of Scotland. The Spanish admiral's answer was a lighted match to the magazine, and Spaniards, spars, deck, Scottish laird and all went up into the air, as the powder went off with a noise that sounded like "bvurnp" to the astonished natives of Tobermory Bay, Argyll's Quest for Treasure Not many years after the lords of Argyll started to recover the gold. Men were sent down in diving bells. From time to time skull? and rusted cannon balls were raised, but no gold. The sand creeps In so quickly, It has already put most of the galleons out of reach, by the way, but it's a mean thing to say. for It only discourages men, and, who knows, thee may be Invented some day soon a plow that will turn u.p the hidden sands as easily as if they were Kansas loam. Two centuries passed. In recent years the Puke of Argyll set to work in earnest to re cover the goJd. New appliances and processes were used, and after hU death, two years ago, bis nephew, the present Duke, kept Rt it and confidently expects to, recover alL In tht days of Benjamin Franklin, it was all the, crj to. hunt for feurjed treasure ajong MAT 3, 1916. BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY the banks of tho Schuylkill River; up which stream pliatcs used to bring their ships. Men would bond over gieasy and well-thumbed charts at tnbles In tho back parlors of coffee houses and wine shops near Dock Creek and then go out by moonlight across tho woods and fields that were on the site of the ptesent City Hall nnd vicinity to the river, where they would dig for piiato gold. This practice get on Franklin's nerves. Franklin Didn't Like Jt ; "Fed with a vain hope of suddenly grow ing tlch, they neglect their business wander thiough the woods and bushes by day to discover marks nnd signs; at midnight they repair to tho hopeful spots with spades. At length a mighty hole Is dug; but, alas! no keg or Iron pot Is found. No seaman's chest crammed with Spanish pistoles or weighty pieces of eight. But how absurd it is to neglect n certain ptofit for such a ridiculous whlmsey." This nnd other foolish things wrote Franklin about these fine tomantlc peo pie and ended up with nn unusually trite quo tation, which in this caso was, "Never dig more than plow deep." The men who love gold and hunt It nre never misers. It Is the beauty nnd romance of It that lures them. And this Is proved by tho facts of MO. For there never hns been more hard work done by nn equal number of men than was done In California between 1849 and 1S53 If they had given half the amount of skill, thought, Ingenuity and elbow grease to work In tho cities of tho East they would have pioduced more gold than ever they got in California. And when they got tho gold they squandered It; they made bullets of It nnd more than ono died with a golden bullet in his heart. But mbst of them prpbably thought It was finer to die with n golden bullet In his heart In Eldorado with a chance of hav ing been rich than to live in assured wealth without any heart at all. CONGRESS IS BUSY Should any good Aniqrlcnn -have doubts con cerning the activity of Congress in his behalf he .should turn to Vol. 63, No. 106, of the Con gressional Record, which Is the official designa tion of tho Record for Saturday, April Tl. It will be recalled that three days earlier the President called both houses together and warned them of the solemn dangers before the country In relation to tho German crisis. The response of the Congress was quick. In the Senate Mr. Smith, of Michigan, pre sented 11 petition from citizens of SebewalneT his home State, protesting against the shipment of arms to any belligerent. Mr. Weeks, of Massachusetts, presented a pe tition from sundry citizens of Worcester, Mass., praying for an increase In the dental corps of the army. Senator Owen, of Oklahoma, spoke feelingly on the sugar repeal. Senator Smoot, of Utah, also spoke feelingly on the sugar repeal and Bald that the high cos't of sugar was' due to conditions brought about by the world war. Let us turn to the House. With tome veiled reference to International complications, a spirited debate on the ravages of the Hessian fly was engaged in by several members. The Russian thistle and the grasshopper were discussed by Messrs. Mondell and Hawley. Mr. Raker said: "You can defend yourself against a robber; you can defend yourself against a bear; you can defend yourself against a 1 oaring lion or a tiger" Mr. Raker is of the opinion that, you cannot defend yourself against the bite ot a coyote. THE NEW YORK IDEA Philadelphia's subway will be comparatively short, but it has afforded a full-sized scandal already. New York Evening Sun. DAVIS" LAST MANUSCRIPT An author rushed Into a stenographic bureau ana said; "Here Is a manuscript which I must have typed In exactly ten hours. Can you do It?" The manageress looked it over and s,ald, "It is a hard Job, but we will do It." Ten hours latt-r the author called up the bureau on the telephone from his country house to give In structions regarding where to send the manu. bcrlpt. A moment later he died of heart failure. Thfc author vas Richard Harding Davis. New York Globe. NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW New Kngland will go for Hughes with the exception of several delegates Jn New Hamp shire and a few In Connecticut Boston Tran script Mj Roosevelt's Republican convention strength is a myth, but the mirage he has projected be fore the eyes ot the American people Is a mar velous evidence of his genius for publicity . Cincinnati Times-Star. " Those who are shocked at the big sums of money "Billy" Sunday is accumulating should not forget that the money comes out of the pockets of those who are entirely willing to give it Kansas City Journal, Americans are not thinking of preparedness in terms of political parties. They are thinking of it in termp of Americanism. They are not concerned with the fact that a. national elect it,, impends. Cleveland plain Dealer. wn What our shipping needs Is not help, certainlv bo Government, cjS3rtPtlUoa, but freedom, ir it cannot have that ther d?s nof Mtm to ba any reason, why, -under a, Democrats ,,,,. tratton, it fhovM not bf apart fr0TO fritZ. I -induliaSsii. N7T v-ucumbj - What Do You KnowL .ii Queries of general interest will (e 6c ansv tn this column. Teh questions, the aiiij to which every well-informed person tfd know, arc asked dally, QUIZ 1, Are the trrnrhes on the Kuroptsa biH rrontd uiir in straight lines? wi.11 meiint bj- 11 "rnmrnunlrnllnn trmrh"!il 2. What Is innint by "rloseil shon" and "ijjj shop" In trade union pnrlnncr? ' aj . .. .-,...,.. ,. .........,,,,. . ,rl uiiucr nn l ii niunnry union he Tore the Amuln jhrwiiuimii-. imi huh ills narrittt esmpe from ilontli In nrtlnn? lit i. jin i, nun, hip nunc in iienr arms npd Em In Marl I nn- without xrrnrtnc a anlfon! s. n lint nro Hip iiipnnliiRs of the Irlah onli "lip" unit "SI" In nnme nucli ; MpSIiph" nml "Knthlrrn XI Ifoollhii"; ii. lint 1h ink ninilp ni? 7. Mlirn the Siiiirpinc Court linn dftlarid , nrt mironstltiitloiml, ilors that prertitbl iTPiiiiPiti from pnntlntilUK to enforctb 8. Whnt In meant by "Conimunlnm"? S i. ti nat ih iiip riipnurni rommisltlon of batt I 10. Where In Xew Zenlnnil? y?3l Answers to Yesterday's Quiz '1 1. "flinc-rulo" In Cnnfrrean U to limit iptrk mnhlnsr Hint leKlslntlon majr' bt'irjt lilted. -' S. "DajllRht-Hmlnc" IcrIkIii tlon netki ti forward the elnplt no that hutlneii r) Htnrt cnrllrr In the morning. M 3. The principle of perlneipen Is the nliclirn an iiprIp of 4S ileerecH mirrors at Mn nil! of 11 tube. M 4. "Ilaxnnr" Is the Oriental word formiiW nml U the ilhtrlrt In rltles of Ite III Chen up tn xhopK. S. The UnUermil llrothrrhnoil of Man.j 0. "Klinkl" Ih the Hindu for "ilnnty" or "ttm coloreil," unci thus cne n name frt cloth uneil In mllltnry uniforms. 7. Thl Ii! the llrst linn of Kentn "Knd;ml H. I.eiiRthrn the pendulum to make the dtitil more Monly. yl 0. VlrKlnln U the "Old Dominion State." ) 10. The maximum weight cnrrleil by parrel i Ih HO pound uttlilu the first and Imm zonen, or not farther than 1.10 ralln,"l 30 pounds beyond that. Nature of the "Blood Orange" 4 Kdltor ot "What Do You Know" Will 1 kindly Inform me what Is the commonly ol "blood oranco ? Is It naturally crown, or 1 produced by a blend? C. ALLESJ The "blood orange" Is a blend of the pwj granate ana the orange. Measuring Contents of a Balloon Editor of "What Do You Know" KIdHtM me how many cubic feet . 25-foot spher tm tains. I am about to but' a captive bafeB which Ib to measure IS feet In diameter JI ANTHONY PBTKBSMI Tho contents nf a snhere are found by XS plying the cube nf fhe' diameter by .SSSfL3! cube of 26 Is 15.62S. and. inultinlvins tint .B'36, we get 8181.35 cubic feet. fl What Aliens Need to Know Editor of "What Do You Know" VUSjm klr.dly tell me what questions should be tsjB ar alien In the Naturalization Court won becomes a citizen of the United States? AJl There are no set questions which the l&W askB aliens. They differ In every case. m what is necessary that ho should hav is MJ matlon as to the elementary principle? cv Government nf the United States and P knowledge of the Constitution, If h UM clear knowledge of these things he will ci 1 to face the court without anxiety 4 Career of Olga Petrova Editor of "What Do You A"oio"t-'WllljrJ give me BQme tlata as to tne ineaire '"U1 "movie" career of Olga Tetrova? S J V. NOItTI Altrti Purrrtvn waa hnrn tn TVllfind. JiCf career began at the age of 20, and eh pgj in nnaaespearean rotes in whiuoh, ran, --rj anrt Petrmrrnt! Her American debut Wal H.l Folles-Bergeres, New York, under the y?M ment of Henry B, Harris. She played im tured dramatic act in -vaudeville and "IJ "Panthea," under the management ol 1'a berts. Her movlng-plcture career has ""LTJ the Metro and she has Btarred In "ThPrB of a Painted Woman." "The Vampire. sM Madonna "What Will People Say!" etftijj Is the wife of Dr. John Stewart, of InaiMHW Tn IttvA lia-mirvli Tfnlta w uui iiiiungii ., nrpj Editor of "What Do You tfnoto" Can yoOW me now to tore tnrougn a cnoif iI To bor a hole easily through a hidt other knot, wet your auger In turpnn 1 i 1 Origin of Ambulances Editor of "What Do You Know" W"HI kindly tell me something of the origin ttfil Dltal ambulances, when and where u!Sil started? L. H. Owl At Bellevue Hospital, New York city lftjj JS?s, tne nrst puoitc amouiance , .n,U -da Do,a Wau, Vnrlr and KOvit Hospitals followed n 1877, St Vincent's MS and tha Presbyterian a vear later all WJSa York. Paris, London and a few other M cities tried the Bystem later, out " f years ago the ambulance service wm "i fancy ouulda of this country ' 'iVnnvsnm Reneflts Himself Editor of "What Do You, En0W"-ZpM lorm me how many times me iuw"- . tton, "The. fPW wr ctjangetn, yieisuu -? t4.i ,, j v - -- rWtiJfi Th passags haj bi. found t&g once iacii m, -jaorif Q.',aruiur - Arthur" an "Tn Xismiaa of Mm-