-!! SjMW wrihgVr PUBLIC LEDGE COMPANV CTUffl" It X. CdlTtS, TaBstDcnV tt-f? . ledlnirtm, Vf president i John C. nta. 0wtMnr and Treaaurerl Philip B. CWHna, Jt B. Wllllama, Directors. CDtmiUAb BOAJUJi" - S?$I' c"t Chairman. jtotUT fc AKTIN..Ocneral tlualnesa Manager tafeilefced "tunr at rtuitio ttnotn1 hulldlnf, Independence Square, Philadelphia. " fcewAssi CltVTiiiit,,.., Broad n4 Chestnut 8Vt WiKT, v,'iTT.mt.,, .Fress-lato Building flnvt Tom. ........ ,.,.200 Metropolitan Tower lnwt..i.i.i.i,i,,.. ..s Ford Building mt, J.otls,..,.., .,109 Gteemoerdt llulldlng CBtOiao.. .....,.....,. 120J rrttjune Building NEWS UtniEADsi WAimwuTO! newo.., mK nuiiding ,Bt Tonic DmiltAU,, ,.Th 7tme Ilulldtnr fu Upjiwir... ,.,.,.... bo rrledrlchatrasee XONno Bns.iu..... .Marconi Homo, strand ! Inwii.ir ...... ,3a IttM Louis la arand j flunscniPTioM terms Sy tttrrier, bt cents per wwV, By mall. kottMld outside of Philadelphia, except whera foreign postage la required, ona month, twenty Uta.eenta; no year, three, dollar. All mall ubacrlptlon payable In advance. Nones Subscrlbera wishing address changed tauat slva old aa wall aa n-nr Address. would bo made, but action lifts been de layed for- viitloUB reasons. Tho time may not yet bo ripe for it, but tho agitation will contlnuo until a free collogo Is Created as the apex of tho publta school system bore, as has been done In Now York. ' TRIUMPHANT ENTERPRISE BEtt, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 I VT Xiirtt an communications to Kvrnlno f .Ledger, Iniependmcs Square, Philadelphia. KmtaiD xv Tits rnrticiLniu rosTorrics as 1 SBCOHD-CIUSS MAM. HATTER. TUB AVRRAaE NET PAID DAII.Y CIR- CULATION OP TUB EVENING 1,EDOKR TOR MAT -WAS Mz.OU Phlltlphl, WtJottdiy, June IS, 1911, Nothing !m mo firmly believed as what we Uaat know. Montaigne. Colonel Raosovclt and Mr. Hughes tuo to dine togother today. Thoy will not talk about tho weather. Gcorgo W. Perkins drew a sigh of relief as ho put the plug In tho hung nolo of his barrel and turned his back on tho third party. ' Tho Attorney General has enlisted lor training In tho Flattsburg camp. Tho report that tho Secrotary of War Is to take a course In a summer school of law lacks verification. Tho Civil Service Commission has Just published an ellglblo list of candi dates for, appointment as tlllermcn. Sena tor Vare's name is not on tho list. Neither to Senator McNtchol's. There aro no weasel thoughts In tho Colonel's head. Smashing blows for Hughes Is the program, and tho ex-JustIco Is no mollycoddle himself when It comes to putting a kick Into language. Tha men who were anxious that tho division In tho Republican ranks hould continue aro now busy denouncing Colonel Roosevelt bacause he was unwill ing to nolp them reelect Wilson. Tho crisis must easo up so that tho President can keep his appointment to speak hero tomorrow. Wo should all listen to him as good Americans, and forgot that ho is a candidate for re-election. THE wclcomo guests of tho city this week must have heard long ago that Philadelphia was asleep. It Is an old Joke, but the ad men must bo wondering on "whom tho Joko Is. Apparently Philadel phia can do asleep what most cities have to stay Up nights to do. But thero Is moro than a Joko In the thought of a sleeping Philadelphia. ,Thoro Isruth In it. Tho eternal truth Is that sleeping men havo dreams, and, waking, make those dreams real. There Is tho sleep of sloth and the sleep which pre cedes an outburst of creative' energy. Our guests havo come a little too early to seo for themselves tho tangible results of Philadelphia's slumber. THEY ncod to know what overy Phlla dolphlan knows of tho loans recently authorized and of tho work which Is under way. Last May tho voters of tho city overwhelmingly Instructed their Councils to borrow nearly $115,000,000. Tho greater part of tho loan provides for a network of subways and elevated systoms which will, under a proposed universal transfer system, make tho city a unit, so that thoso who llvo at its farthest confines will bo close to Its con tro in time nnd convenience. The demands of tho port aro met, newer systems nio Improved, grado crossings eliminated, boulevards extended, tho city's institu tions enriched. Boyond this, nppropila tlon was made for completing from City Hall to Falrmbunt Park a generous botilo vard, tho Parkway, around which tho civic and artistic life of tho community is to centre. A municipal Art Museum, liberally designed to house tho collections for which tho city is famous; a new Library and a Convention Hall of Bplcn dld proportions are Included. These aro parts of tho city. The city thinks of them as realities, and tho visitor who Is not In tho city's "traditions must bo made con scious of them. They must know that tho real Philadel phia is hidden under a veil. Beneath tho streets on which they pass and repass thero Is another city which Is slowly but Inevitably pushing Itn way upward. Under tho paving stones there Is the substantial fabric of what was once a dream nnd Is now n reality. Tho street cars which take delegates from City Hall to tho University aro but forerunners of the swift and cer tain carriers which are even now being prepared. Tho dingy and Insufficient buildings are relics of another time, and already their successors aro shaking the old foundations. The whole city Is llko a picturo on the magic screen, fading into a brighter nnd mora beautiful city of tho future. Tom Daly's Column U&yyUL-a , 'tyrVttosnj Di ltoU, jUt T1W POTATO KAOn It tvaa at our Sunday school Picnlo out at Shady Pool ItVierc tea uctit tho other day We had every Mnd and sort Of athtctlc prime and sport Passing happy hours away. All the game were lots of fun Antl I very nearly icon , What they call Potato Race. If 1 would have hurried more 1 Mould win the raco for sure Still J teas In second place And hesldcs the winners prize Did not seem so very nice It was just a tcrtnls latl If to win you must be thin Tall and plain like Bessie Vlynn You don't envy her at all. In our work or In our play If no prizes come our way We can do without it All of t((T must keep our places Some can win potato races Hut they cannot write about it I A LADY of whom wo aro fond, tho very one, In fact, who helped us eclebrato our 20th wedding anniversary on Juno 24, couldn't enjoy tho splendid advertising parade on Mondny night because some spectators dragged little children with them through tho crowded streets. Can't something be dono about this? "What an Indlctmont by tho Ad ministration of Its Mexican policy!" writes Mr.. Hughes to tho secretary of tho Progressive National Commltteo,' after citing tho record of destruction of American llfo and property in Mexico for the Jast three years, which Is con tained In the note to Carranza of Juno 20. Thero 13 plenty more documentary evidence for 3Ir. Hughes to clto as tho campaign progresses. Tho University of Pennsylvania sot thojexamplo of opening lti buildings for tha uso of Its fellow educators, tho ad vertising men. Tho St. Loula boomers aro announcing that Washington Uni versity has agreed to allow the use of Its assembly halls for tho 1917 convention, Jf It goes to tho city on the Mississippi. Whether St, L0UI3 or somo other city Is selected, the Philadelphia convention has tied advertising up with education so e'ffectlvely that there can be no separa tion $t them hereafter In tho popular thinking. There is no constitutional reason why the Vice President should not also be Secretary of State, but unfortunately -tor the Eve-uno LsooEn'a suggestion, the Constitution does place upon the Vice President the duty of presiding ovej the Senate, It would not brffbad Idea.! to have tho Vice Preal. dent "sit in the Cabinet Councils." Neither constitutional amendment nor legislation la necessary for that New York Ilerald. The Constitution has been amended feefore this. To make the vlco presidency attractive to men of ability it is impera tive that tho office be one of real Im portance In tho Government, and that the occupant should not be required to per form such routine and perfunctory func tions as presiding over the Senate. , The charity of Philadelphia proved to be almost Inexhaustible winter before tost when the needs of European peoples and of tho unemployed at home called for quiet relief. It la not charity, but patriotic, which leads the women of this community now to be militant and for Ward Jn preparing to take care of the wounded and the slok when war haa begun to demand Its toiL Not only have buildings for hospitals already been prom ised, -and homes for convalescents, to- Jteiher With, blanketa and hoopltal sup. piles, but some, matrons have agreed to take the wounded Into their own homes. This work of preparedness lias really Just Jjegun, but It la beios carried on with a vim and an enthusiasm which are in spiring. ' jDr. J, Solts-Cehfen'tf advocacy of the development Ot tho Central High School into a college brlflga to freshattentlon an eld plan. The school already gropta the $rea pf bachelor Of arts to Us graduates. It that degree should be withheld from tha h!n school students until they had t$fte a much wpte a js required'from (Hrft4ut of wsfcJWavof collegiate rank, Jt sd. b jwlnftfjiUi iMsnttr and tm )M)-taa. Many arftUfaejU can bo ad, vab9 I JYr 9f Kneading the courses ot Mtai?- iatu ttoa Oaotrai High, la equip MA U fi t tha youth of the Alt? aa 0tm4 toMfter a hy n rtv3 a th ftttistymsatftis ntartei f ruy unl- kjfet4 MMMtOlMiakJkH .frtoww at THE future Is not distant. It is around the corner, and tho city is already at tho ond of the old street. The projects of a quarter of a century were ma'do realities within- two years. The Iron bonds ot ob struction melted In tho fires fed by un sparing publicity. Advertising of tho city's needs, advertising of tho city's op portunities, advertising of purposes, hon est and dishonest; advertising which was eagerly sought and which did not spare those who sought chiefly to avoid it, was tho forco which made tho new city possi ble. x The old city turned toward tho centre. Its life was around City Hall. The new city will radlato from the centre. Its llfo will bo In tho whole circle. At one point thoro Is growing tho new port of Philadelphia. In tho appropria tions triumphantly voted by the city thero Is an Item giving $10,000,000 to this work, but the spirit which has determined that Philadelphia shall have a port worthy of her Industry Is priceless. This year, crowded and huddled as It must be, ships from 20 nations registered at the port in flvo days. Tho city is making such a registry normal. .At anothor point a uholo city will bo Joined to , Philadelphia. Frankford la technically a part of Philadelphia, but it has been separated from tho city by "magnificent dlstancos," Spiritually It dwelt apartfand Its 'comings and goings were barbaric hardships. Today the pil lars and girders for tho Frankford L are rising.' The city's faith is the rock upon which they rest. It Is a faith in progress which has never faltered or failed. Every pillar Is a sign that the city will not deny to any citizen the comj forts of life. It is an advertisement In Iron and steel of Philadelphia's pur pose to mako llfo clean and clear and Joyful for Its people. In South Philadelphia the process of transformation Is visible, but tho traveler who motors down Broad street to League Island can let his Imagination listen to tho rumble of subway trains beneath him, for before he returns the -trains will bo there. No section of the city has been denied Us share. In fact, there have been no sections. THERE is an Idea that material things can bo seen and the "higher" things are Invisible, It Is an answer to that and a striking Indication of the new Philadel phia spirit that the transit and port loan and the loan for civic improvements, for fa Library and a Municipal Art Museum, for the Parkway and Convention Hall, were passed on the same day. They were thought of as two parts of the same thing, each complete in itself. It was as absurd t'-i speak ot a subway without an art museum to yjstt as, a museum with no subway to bring the visitor. The Parkway Is almost completed. The hill over Falrmount Park Is already the site for the Art Museum and the trees and the river beyond are it3 natural background. Onl the debris has to be removed and the new city will bo visible. The next convention of advertising men In. Philadelphia wil meet in. the hall which Philadelphia -has built for them. These who are fortunate enough to coma then wW ses the city which Philadelphia haa built for its peogle. Tha people are living in that city today. They are five years ahead of their building; program bb4 when that prpgram has been car rUi out there. wlj bo another ready for taem. Pf hi city Uvea in a future not TN 1 B One Guess at the Two Some there are who wear short skirts ll'iffc others simply wouldn't, But seems to me that I can sec Two reasons why some shouldn't. YEBCAS. t THE winter of 1885, when Undo Billy Peterson was station ngent at Corson's Inlet, n terrific windstorm camo along and blew tho top off a big sandhill near tho Btolon, utterly ruining tho yln ter quarters of a colony of toads. Most of them perished, but Uncle Billy took one Into his home for a pet. Ho tied n bit of flshllne about its loft leg and anchored It In tho living room. All the following spring nnd summer ho cared for It and fed It flies. Then It disappeared. That was In 188B, remember. Tho other day when Uncle Billy who moved away from Corson's Inlet many years ago was visiting Brother-in-law WIttcamp at the station, a toad mounted tho platform, hopped up to Uncle Billy and opened Us mouth for flics. On its left leg was tho crcaso the flshllne had made. What do you mako of that? F. S. mmmmmwMaF ' ' ;".. MBxaXLwk. 4mm ': flBI .life 11 11 i w !?P) visn DISAPPEARANCE OF JAMES MORGAN It Followed His Book on Free Masons Politicians Seized the Issue and Formed an Anti-Masonic Party Its Candidate for the Presidency Carried Vermont All wo get out of It Is a fillip for the brain-cell that holds reminiscences. It brings back to us Larry Sharkey's story: Tho grandest memory in all the four quar tera o tho world wua mo father's, bo it waa. Wan day It was In the summer ot 1847 me father v. as dl?sln' in a field In Ireland doln' a day's work whin the around opened an" up Jumps the Din II. "Wie llko egga?" sez he "J do," soz ma father. Wld that tho DIvUl pops down acln an' the hole closed, Well, now. It was ahout twlnty )ears later, me father uas worlcln' In the aamo field only now he uas ownln' the p.uce where he was doln' but the day's Job oefore an all of a sudden the around opened as before nil' the Dlvvl! comes up. "How?" sez he. "ll'lled." sez mo father. Think 0" that for a memory I X0XBEX8E YUItSKS Tommy pushed his mother's daughter In a vat of boiling wa-ter. When they found the little girl AH her hair was out of curl. Susie Green quite carelessly Stepped in front of the express. Ot My goodness, gracious met IIow it mussed her Sunday diess. Queer Girls ' A modest slrl Is Dolly Denn. As shy as can be found: She won't take off her classes when There Is a man around Cincinnati ' Enquirer. The modesty of Tanny Tee Leaves Dolly's far behind. For It u man Is looking she , Won't oven change her mind ' Detroit Free Press. A queerer girl Is Dora Dale. You'll know It when we state That even for a bargain sale She does not change her gait. Houston Fost. But listen, lads! Here's Nellie Nice Subscriber to "Tho Etude," But wouldn't tako the paper twice, For then 'twould bo re-nude. Tho Golden Rulo Company, at 11th and South streets, cryptically announces "wo do It for less." By all means let them do your golden ruling. A MAN with a gray mustache and the suspicion of a tear In his eyo caught us, at tho ad convention making a note on the back of an envelope. "Possibly you're a reporter," he ventured. "Possi bly," wo replied. "May I nsk you to Jot down a few names I'll give you?" he asked; and as we seemed compliant he continued; "I'd Just like to see In print he names of the advertising men who loomed large In this town a quarter ot a century ago; Al Taylor of the Times, John Oallagher of tho Record, Tom Mc Namara of the Star, A. Rothwell of the Inquirer, Buck Taylor of the Call, George Rudderow of the North American, Loula Diets of the Telegraph, Jim Hall of the Sunday Dispatch, Harry Taggart of Tag gart's Times, Bill McLean of tha Press. I've lost track of the Bulletin and Ledger men of those days, but, of course, you know, the Bill McLean of Jhe Press then la William L. of the Bulletin now. Most of the others have passed. I'd Just like to see thse old names In type again, that's all." Longwood, the property on. the Island of St. Helena at one time the home of N A- Poleon, will be occupied shortly by A. Kaiser, who will remain thero permanently. London Times. Sot Shortly. ehT How longwood you eajf? V Y and besides we're liable to get ourself dlsHked for it, but there's a hole still to fill here at the bottom of the colyupi, and this from Jhe June Issue will Just about plug it. HU lastructioaa on thu Imoortiot autijact are eatitata! ta a haokut that i nii .!,. -1.-V1 but lovaJuibJa bait ( poaltr TataMa. Itim I SB Effia aa lOAa- a,'tklw.nnnliRf.. -a..- I HFM HERE Is tho story of a stonemason who onco had our nation by tho cars and out of whoso mysterious caso thero grow a strong political party which threatened to elect a President of tho United States. This mechanic's namo was James Mor gan. Ho piled his trodo In Batavia, N, V., but did not gain a very enviable record for steady habits. Ho was wont to look upon tho wlno when it was not only red, but yollow, and ho did not feel deep pangs of conscience when ho failed to pay his bills. Ho worked only whon ho wished to nnd botween employments ho roved about with a carefree heart. Ho was a native of Virginia and had fought with Jackson at New Orleans, an oxperlcnco which gave him much oppor tunity for boasting at tho barrooms, where his score was chalked upon tho shutter. For somo reason he grew to foster a bitter hatred of tho Masonic order, which before and slnco the eplsodo about to bo rolated has been viewed with general esteem. He was a man of 60 when his anti-Masonic bitterness renchod the de gree of throats to publish a book exposing the sccrots of tho society. And although at first regarded' as Idlo bluster, those threats materialized. Tho book was printed at Batavia In 1826, and Immedi ately caused great local excitement. Moat of tho leading citizens there, as else where, were Masons, and they resented Morgan's attack upon their beneficent brotherhood. Jailed for Larceny Shortly afterward, when Morgan was arrested for debt, he made the accusation that he was the victim of persecution at the hands of tho Masons. His troubles then commonced to multiply in rapid order. On September 11 a body of strange men coming from Canandalgua seized him and returned with him to that place, .where he was put In Jail on a charge of larceny. At 9 the next night those who had ar rested him set him free, but he had barely passed out of the Jail door when six mysterious personages seized him and hurried him to a waiting carriage. In this he waa driven hurriedly toward Rochester, but at various points pn tho road his captors were, by prearrango ment, relieved by relays of fast horses, which rushed the prisoner to Fort Niag ara, a deserted military post at tha mouth of the Niagara River Here Morgan was locked up In tho powder magazine. Be yond that point his movements haven never been, traced, although the acumen of tho most shrewd minds of the nation werQ concentrated upon the mystery for a generation. As soon as It bocatno definitely known that Morgan had disappeared, the citizens of Batavia held, a public meeting wherein It was openly charged that, because the Masons had made eager attempts to sup press his book, the finger of suspicion should be pointed at them. Tho meeting appointed a committee and charged It with the duty of solving the mystery.. They unearthed evidences of what they claimed to liave been a well-organized conspiracy, embracing many secret agents and backed by money, Meetings were held also In other places. Public excitement spread throughout tha coun try and agitators who, for ona reason or another, opposed tha Masonic order, en deavored tq Inflamo the multitude to a belief that the brotherhood was responsi ble, for the crime, and all sorts of absurd theories were scattered broadcast. Old friend flew at each other's throats and both religion and politics became Involved in the torrent ot calumny and recrimina tion that resulted. Aa a. eentiel to this excitement a Btrtinir polltloal m0vgMfpk rtarted and there By JOHN ELFRETH WATKINS camo Into being tho anti-Masonic party, first known officially In town meetings In tho spring of 1827. Spellbinders, work ing In this party's Interest, went about tho country preaching that no Mason ivns worthy to receive the votes of free men, and It beenmo the creed of this party that mefribers of tho brotherhood should be everywhere excluded from pub lic office. After flvo years this movement had spread ftom New York Stato Into other Commonwealths, with the result that in 1832 a national antl-Mnsonlc con vention was hold In Philadelphia. Wil liam Wirt, of Virginia, was'nomlnated for President, to run against Androw Jack son nnd Henry Clay. In tho succeeding election Vermont was carried for tho party, which polled a considerable vote elsewhere, but It soon went out of exist enco without avenging or solving the mystorlous fato of Morgan. A corpso dis covered at the mouth of tho Niagara River a year after Morgan's disappear anco was for a while behoved to havo beon his. The Masons claimed that It was the body of one Timothy Munroe, but Thurlow Weed, ono of tho Insti gators of tho antl-Masonlo movement, re marked, "It is a good enough Morgan for us until you bring back the one you car ried off!" According to one sjory, the vamsnea man naa been sent Into Canada and charged to remain there In silent exile tho remainder of his days on pain of death. Others said that he had been turned over to a band of Indians, charged with tho duty of keeping him a prisoner as long a's he lived. Thero is another story that ho hW been taken in a row boafV.it upon Lake Ontario, where, after his throat had been cut, his body was sunk. In 'later years a wanderer from tho Orient claimed that he had mot Mor gan In Smyrna, and his appearance In other foreign States was reported from time to time. After publlo excitement had settled down unbiased persons generally accept ed the belief that If he waa disposed of by Masons the crime rested upon the shoulders of only a few Irresponsible zealots. In all probability the searchlight of truth will never penetrate the cloud which has bo long hidden him from his brother man. ' Copyright. What Do You Know? Queries 0 central interest uillt lie ansuisred in this column. Ten questions, the answers lo which tvery well-informed person should know. arc asked daily. QUIZ 1. Who Is William R. Wilcox? 2. X hat Is a. lesrntee? 3. What Is meant by the expression "In toto"? 4. Where Is the Island ot Walcheren? ' 5. Who are tho Bedouins? 0. What Is meant by "the missing link"? 7. What Is the Ilullltt bill? 8. Mho la Cnplnln Morey? 0. l'rom what level la the height ot mountains measured? 10. Who wns Calvin? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz , An election nnil the Inauguration of the elected officials would rhtinge the Mexican Government from a "do aco'r to a nor mal government. A subcommittee of the Home Jndlclary Committee has Just decided that members on military service must resign tbelr Beits. It Is about 75 miles from Cnrrlzal to the Rio Omnde, northeast, and about 1U0 to the border, due north. Custer's force waa annihilated June 25. 1B70. , Kaffirs; trlhce of negroes of the great Ilantu family. Inhabiting the southeastern coast of Africa. -. If 'to $10 Is ndtlril C00 per cent, ot that sum the total Is (60. s Richard I was called "Llonhcart." "Sub rosa"i In strict confidence. Huguenots) French Protestants. The Iliirenneers were n celebrated associa tion ot pirates who Infested the Caribbean In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. WEAK, VACILLATING Dernocratlo Presidents have been ex pensive for the United States, we paid for Cleveland with the worst pania the nation had aver experienced, and we shall pay for Wilson with the blood of our best cltUenfhln. In war we shall all stand be hind our Government, but now- at the begin ning we may Just as well face the rruth War In Mexico has resulted solely from the weak, vacillating, senseless policies followed by Wilson, which at one tlma he designated as "watchful waiting." Lawrence (Kan.1 Journal. ' ASKING TOO, MUCH Probably there is no more severe test of broad-mindedness than trying- to get tha Mexican point of view. Ohio State Journal 1 REMEMBER ME Remember trie when glows the star of dav Remember me when gleam the stirs of nignt. Remernber me In moments of delight Remember me when shadows glopm 'the Remember me wbn fears and doubts Rmnmlt9, ro when falth "nd h"S Remember me who faltered In llfVn fight, " q Remember me and sometimes for me pray. Remember me when, weary of the bind You hall the voice and splendor of the sea, Whose billows roll uawearyiagly free Remember m when other loves command Your purposeful benlga endeavor. And When I w utterly goae remember tat, jAlawwa Tueker BiihujnAiw u, tt Baaion a- Transcript. IT" Poisonous Gases s Editor of "What Do You Know" What Is known of the nature and use of -pol--sonous gases-used by the Germans? L. O. The gases which have been used from time to time since their Introduction by the .' napmnria In on ogfnrvti- nri ilia T1lftaK KntAA Ypres In May, 1916, have been described as chlorine gas and bromine gas. It Is re ported that the Russians have a new gaB, moro powerful than, any hitherto used, ca pable of overcoming a soldier In spite of his respirator. There aro various ways of using the gas. It may be brought to the front In steel cylinders under enormous, pressure and released when the wind la right. Sir John French reported that In the first attack at Ypres the gas was re leased from pipes laid before the trenches and swept over the British lines In green clouds 40 feet high. In other cases It has been reported that the gas was mtxed In the trenches. The effect of the German gas was to produce acute bronchitis. Tho White House Editor 0 "IVnot Do You Know" When was the first White House, built? Was It ever burned? Why was It called the White House? J2.M. The first Executive Mansion at Washing ton was occupied In 1800, It was built of freestone, and was unpalnted; but In 1811 the British army occupied Washington and burned, with other public buildings, the President's house, leaving It a blackened ruin. The house was rebuilt on the same site, and the same walls were used In Its construction, but they were so discolored by smoke that, on the suggestion ot General Jackson, they were painted white, not only to Improve their appearance, but In tokcn of the successful defiance of British fire by the American Republic- The mansion soon became the 'White House" In the mouths of the people, on account of its dazzling color, and from that day to this it has been repainted white. Suffrage States A, K. The States In which women yote upon equal terms with men at all elections and the date when the franchise was so ex tended are; Wyoming, 1869; Colorado, 1893; Utah, 1896; Idaho. 1890; Washington. 1910; California. 1911; Arizona, Kansas and Oregon. 1912; Nevada and Montana, 18H. In 1913 the Territorial Legislature of Alaska granted full suffrage to women, and the State Legislature oMIllnola extended to1 women an tne rrancmse rights within Its pewer-f-that Is, for all offices not created by the Btata Constitution. Women have school suffrage in Connecticut," Delaware. Ken tucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Jllncaota, Mississippi, Oebraska, New (Hampshire. New Jersey. New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota., Vermont and Wisconsin. In Iowa women vote at all school or municipal election upon any proposition to vote bonds or In crease taxes. k i ' ' Pronunciations O. ILr-Yprea is pronounced "ee'p-r" The Flemish m of the town l Yrarn or Yperen, the "y" pronounced llko long "f in 4 HnUn. -jnere 14 no ecceoi m uie- French spelling of tho word. Wwvre is, divided Into two gyllablsa by tb Fi-ouoh and the pronuacUtigM vvuUl apiriaiat "Vo-vi'V" A Quiet Man Noiso by Nc A Success Hnsn'i NOWADAYS a a big nolso 1 successful man wl mobile. Robert H tho Poor Rlchnrd vlsltlngllclegates to tho advertis ing clubs con vention, manages to bo both of these rarities at ono and tho same time. For It la irno (or nearly true) that ovorj Hmo a man la raised to 125 n, week thero Is a nowllttloautoon Broad street. and It Is moro t than truo that a lot of merely n with It." Tho only pcnali unassuming man is thnt ho doesn't 22 in n job that 1 him to do moro th bin had arrived a foro ho enmo Into head of tho Poor tnlned at their clc nnd ho wns ro-cle Slnco ho took chai big Jumps forward sort of credit that to tako to sny that Improvements In t size of tho membi bo his forto to we "for" others. A (this Is hearsay, f Durbln's lntorestln sptto his ptomlnon Who"), ho worked hard that he was try store when ho fortunately, he go work, and so mis It Is one of the Jt up to him now b himself that he n that would last hi: doesn't even play g But now, at nb pleasuro of watch who is a remarkabl after all It is air walk around in th wield tho tricky good exercise, too who never cleared his rival who dld.v ?( . The Sunda peaking of wn Mr. Durbln's clash a club within a got Into tho - no that a half dozen Richards, among ti tlndale.'who havo spell of the auto, on Sundays and kn miles of hiking. Tl of their activities, boring counties In one of these walk magic 'was perpetm that Is unusual en lng. A young4 so companled tho par lng suspicions mat the main body. P a tree on which w of a certain raeml picturo pinned to inij likeness of tl and Ink. "Wo aro dtecov Poor Richards. "So us." Then another pi landscape, and 1 dawned upon one o waB a traitor In th qf tho calcaturcs Durbln." ' Art of Losii Mr, Durbln has 1 rclf to the Poor Rl tax upon his gem Ihem his hold on out of ten, even at him In this city, si ard Durbln," and know him well en tq "Dick;" His nai but the mistake gr portions througft. Identified with the c mt to the mistake tho rounds beglnnl and being set to Susie's Sewing Shh 16 "Dicky Durbjn," it as,", compllmen' enough for the clul him. Mr. Durbln has re vera I Arms In 1 been with Strawbri about 15 years, ab. advertising managi betth, and has a i Jersey coast, wher vacations. He has acquirer siteaker, and parti and mimic Upder of the Camao stre apace, ADVERTISING 0 v The passion for thing, but probably J commercial Instftict, desire, for advertlsl thaniel Godtaold, an cine manufacturer. churchyard at Goda tombstone appears tl Bt To the ) NATHANIEL Inventor Of that exci The Veget For the Cure of Qo He depart The 17t da Aged ' Hino Cinerei - pu If Austria could Ume Russia captures would it fe befo" haads of tha JUJla rutad eve fey tsa a Hr at b -Ot ISSMmm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers