K-:mvmMmuimni.t;im-"li' ' muwnvn wmMwwmmmiwwnyiimiwwvw' itfw ., gtffit ' , -- VmwA :i EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1916. , U i l&tilQtt PUBLtC LEDGER COMPANY p- CTRtJfl . K. CCRTIS, FaBJiBBT. CharW If. liudlnetorl, . Vies President; John C, Martin, Secretary una Treasurer j Philip B. Collins, John D, Williams, Directors fiDlTOJlIAt, DOAJlOl Ctats H. K. Ccans, Chairman. H. whalet. ..Editor JOHN C. MARTIN. .General Business Manager lit in .. i it . 1. 1 , i i i Published dally at Pcnua TtErxittt tlulldlnr, ' Independence Square, Philadelphia. Lraqen CxntIal,,,. Broad and Chestnut Streets .ATUXTto Cm....... PrtM-Unlon Dulldlng New Toss:... ...200 Metropolitan Tower Dmorr...,,,..,,.... . . . , SM fiord Building 6r. Louis ..... j, 400 OlobfVrmocrat Ilulldlng CDIOiOO... .1202 Tribune Uulldlns ncws nuncAUst VfltttWOTOH BtfXtiUt... TURKS Rutldlns; Ninr ToftK BnuDi.tiKiuTlia Timet Iljlldlng BsauN Dcssah........... . CO Frledrlchstrasso Lokdo Dcano. ...... .Marconi House, Btrantl Pixis DrisEic... .,82 rtus Iioula Is Urand BUDSCntPTION TEIIM3 Br rnrrler, six cents per week Br mall, postpaid outside of Philadelphia, except where foreign postage la required, ono month, twenty flvs cents; one year, thres dollars. All mall subscriptions payable In advance. Nonc Subscribers wishing address changed Must give old as well as new address. BELL, 1004 WALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN SOW W S3' Aidrrat nil communications fo Svfntio P X-sdper, Indepondrnco Btuarv. Philadelphia. kxiuraso ai tn rnaiDrxruu rosTOrnos is P tsooND-ouss nut. ma. f'tXIB AVERAOB NET PAID DA1LT Cin- CULwVTION OF TUB UVENINQ LBDOEIt FOR JUNB WAS 125,808 Fh0dlphl. ThnttJir, July II, 1916. NOTWn, Reader may have the Evening Ledger mailed to them to any out-of-town address for any period of time. Address may be changed as often as desired, but with each tiaangtr'botluthe old and new addresses must b given, Subscription rates art printed above. is.. . III I 1 1 I I High stations, tumult, not bliss create, None think the great unhappy but the great. Young. ThlevwNear CltyHnll. Headllno. Near? Thank goodness! Ught without heat has boon dls jSoTeretf by a French savant. Vice versa baa bean much employed by American politicians for many years. , All' tho military experts havo to do ft describing tho Russian advanco Is to btoto to their flies of last summor, ro- yorso-tho maps, and repeat. Japan will build four superdrcad- Noughts. From our own experience wo Jodgo that Japan must recently havo suf fered from a violent outbreak of pacifism. The Virginia Dill of nights may be all right for Virginia, but It won't do for Mexico, where thero Is no gov ernment Joo Cannon. Never mlndl Didn't Mr. Bryan havo usr almost to tho point where wo had so Government olthor? Tell all those persons who ask you If tho movies havo not seen their best days that tho child Is Just off a milk diet and Is beginning to eat meat. President Herrlngton, of tho Motion Picture Exhibitors' League. Milk? Nonsense; champagne! It would be a pleasant thing If any ono woro naive enough to say: ''What does It signify that tho Mayor will recognize forty-eight men In tho city as ward load ers? Havo these forty-eight bcon distin guished or perhaps elected by their fellow citizens as specially worthy of consulta tion or as representative of their desires? And why do they bear such strange names as "Varomen, McNlcholmcn and so on? Aren't they Phlladelphlans?" But no. In Philadelphia there Is no one quite so naive. Deplorable as Is the sudden activity fef man-eating sharks along tho upper AsTsey coast, thero Is little occasion for at panic, and certainly none for avoid toco of surf bathing altogether. It Is not fmprobablo that one shark Is responsible ftnf nil tho tragedies. In waters known l to the habitat of the tiger shark, along-the South Atlantic and Gulf coasts, (fcath'nir In tho surf Is Just as popular a Aversion as It Is north of Hatteras, yet Hhoro are seldom any accidents. The shark Is, In fact, reputed to be a coward, leasflyto be frightened off by mere noise. (While every caro should bo taken by fathers, particularly not to go too far trom shore, the danger at tho great bath-fag- beaches, where large crowds congre fc&te'may boponsldered as fairly re X&eta. But fhi swimmer who insists )0n gohiff far out In tho water to shqw ff. Ilka the fool who rocks the boat, Is (Imply flirting with death. Senator Penrose might have been ft "Washington when tho navy bill was feeing formulated, but ho wasn't. In fact, bo has not been In his seat for two months, and bo was not there often before that. There are some Senators who stick Iosa to the Job. Their constituents ore thereby protected. As tho naval bill now Stands It Instructs the Secretary of the Navy to haye the yards at Puget Sound, Norfolk and Boston equipped to build capital ships. "There was no one there to apeak for Philadelphia," said Senator Polndexter, "otherwise I presume Phila delphia would havo been Included." "Has Pennsylvania seceded from tho Union?" asked a newspaper recently, referring to absenteeism on the part of our Congress men. No, but It Is apparent that Mr. Pen rose has seceded from the Senate and Is treating that august body with the neglect and disdain which he no doubt thinks It deserves. But one Senator on the Job is worth two In the bushes, as the major leaguers Bay, One of the great pleasures of walk lnjj about In Falrmount Park is comlnf suddenly and with the effect of discovery upon ts statues. The equestrian Jeanne dPArc la almost bidden from view until ess turns & corner. The quiet bust of Verdi Is in a woody niche, like a benevo lent satyr. Statuary In parks, a strangt development. Is successful, and the pro posal of the. Mayor to take those arounc City Hall and places them In tho Sne set ting of tho Parkway- Is commendable. In grlln little children are taken to the EUst-3 Allec and compelled to learn th Barney dated und histories of all the Characters, represented In marbla and toatt therJ. Perhaps that Is why all. t$o& Sermons hasten to agree .vith the rt at iM crid that tha Sieges Alleo U tlut mmt monstrous ctfensa agattut art tpd ft Sir lbs pr&xmgf of education. JJm tfca Vsvrtmiy motorcars will speed Ittftttiitrj t3ii2? None) the less, caro should bo taken that not all the city's statues iiro placed there. Fop one, tho Pilgrim Father needs a more hoblo setting than a triangle anywhere along the way. . "PRACTICAL MEN" cmciiuij, oxter an tno cruet ana JLYX bitter thrusts that ho aimed at tho h'sxd of tho Mayor, opens tho sllty season by "amazingly' and "totally unexpectedly" appenrlng with Mr. Varo In the executive reception room for harmony. It was to have been war to tho knlfo between the Ponrose-McNlchol faction and the Smith Varo faction. McNIchot would never, no never well, hardly ever soek harmony With the Administration. His attitude, until tho election of tho now City Com mittee, was that of tho New England mate who told tho offensive captain that ho wanted "nono of his whisky, nor yet nono of his see-gars, but only a leetlo com mon soo-vlllty, and damned leetle of that." But now "Uncle Jim" Is on tho Job with a Hatful of choice Havanai of his own and smiles that are as convincingly benign as those of the sun himself. It Is never too warm and sticky for affection In tho political family. Tho point Is an arrangement for "pro portional representation" In tho way of Jobs. It seems that Varo holds tho ward leaderships by a two to ono majority. Tho question was whother Varo was to got all the patronage or whether McNlchol was to get a one-third share. If ho did not got his one-third sharo thero woro evi dently Intimations that thore might bo a movement at Harrlsburg to "rip" Mayor Smith out of offlco or Impeach tho Gov ernor, varo surveyed tno ruturo's aire possibilities and thought bettor of any Idea ho may havo had of measuring swords with tho Penroso Organization In the State. Thoro Is, of courso, tho hint that this being o, presidential year It Is tho tlmo for all good men to como to tho old of tholr party. "I will do anything I can to build up tho Republican party," says tho Mayor. Luckily, no matter what Bteps to build up tho Republican party Mr. Smith may toko, tho city Is euro to go for Mr. Hughes. No help ho could glvo Mr. Hughes would sorlously hurt Mr. Hughes, no moro than Mr. Penroso's most ardont efforts with his State Organization havo over shaken Pennsylvania's belief In protection and Republicanism. Tho fao tlonal leaders have so much majority pie that thoy can afford to uso pieces of it as missiles. But thoy reckon without their host if they oxpoct to carry their two to ono division of spoils to tho Whtto House. Mr. Hughes as Governor gave amplo proof that ho Is deaf to the pleadings of bosses, and as ho did not listen to tho advlco of President Roosovolt about ap pointments, It is scarcely llkoly that ho will listen to Penrose or Vnro. Where this petty factionalism, which shows its head at Washington as well as hero and at Harrlsburg, really hurts tho Stato is in provontlng tho appointment to Federal offlcos of Pennsylvanlans of tho highest abilities. Too many eminont reputations that for tho sako of party regularity wear tho Penroso unlforrh aro (In a num ber of cases unjustly) also clad In tho Penrose othtcs, In tho vlow of Republican Presidents. Occasionally a Knox emerges from our Stato organization to receive national recognition; but that Is an ex ception that proves tho rulo. Philadelphia's position as part of tho fabric of national political llfo was aptly defined by Ellhu Root whon as Secretary of Stato In Roosevelt's Cabinet ho char acterized tho city Organization that was fighting tho roformers of 1905 as a com bination "masquerading as Republicans." It Is possible for tho city to throw off this stigma by acquiring a municipal con sciousness distinct from tho rest of tho Stato. A start In that direction could bo made by carrying tho present proportional representation Idea of tho bosses In divid ing up tho plums according to ward lead erships to an entirely different phase of proportional representation. Ward boun daries aro puroly artificial. It Is absurd to call tho north sido of Chestnut street the 8th Ward nnd tho south side the 8th, The only purpose theso lines servo now Is to parcel out the shares of activity expected from ward leaders. A board of flvo well-paid city managers elected from the city at largo would be one way of erasing theso lines and would concen trate tho responsibility of government upon a few men. A system of minority representation, through permitting each voter to vote for only ono candidate, would produce a board of, say, threo Or ganization managers and two Independ ents. This would make tho protests that aro now voiced by a few independent Councilman appear as Bhurp divisions in the board, tho publicity given to protests of minority ofllclals who wero of equal rank with the majority officials would bo very great, nnd decisions on matters of great moment would not "get by" so easily by votes of three to two. Tho man with tho deciding vote would be under sharp fire. The committee considering the revision of the municipal charter was told yester day by Mr. Burnham that every one was agreed the city should havo a smaller Council, that cities where the commission form of government is In force are gov erned, as a rule, by not more than flvo or seven men, but that this number would be' too small for a municipality of this size. A Council of not 'more than 21 members would be better, he said, with tho present Mayor and elected ad ministrative ofllclals undisturbed. He urged tlto employment of a city man ager "who would havo sole charge of all departments now under the Mayor," This Is evidently an attempt to compromise between the present system and the com mission form, to separate legislative from administrative functions. But in the other meetings the committee will hold this summer It will be well If the point is strongly advanced that "legislation" In a city Is a misnomer, being usually fused with administration, for a city is not a State-r-Jt Uj rather a corporation In which the rulers aro a board of managers and the citizens stockholders. There la much to bs said far a board far smaller than one of 21 members and for tho elimina tion of the Inexpert and sectional Coun cllmen. Under any system we would still have the "practical men" who try to run the city by clandestine methods; there Is no salvation In any outward form of govern ment But H Is well to keep In mind the ameliorating features that obtain In a stem that seems to have worked well many cities In this country and abroad. Tom Daly's Column A JIEAT BTROKB. The mercurv tcithin the class Was tlzzMnO at mine ear. The day was hot. Avt lv the mass, Mv oriln was broiled and sere; Mv tongue was like the silly grass That Withered icsterjcar. Dut I had work and here must stall Though bones and gristle melt. I longed to strip my flesh away, And 1 am far from svelte But why go ont 'Twos yesterday, And you know how that felt I Well, to mv den of toll thero came A thing In human guise, A creature whom I shall not name. And laid before mine eyes An ancient bill that, to my shame, I oiocd for home supplies. gaze upon that billet-doux, I mark htm where ho sits. Quick Anger's blood-congested hue Across my features flits I leap the space between us two And slay him with my mitts I Ayol come and take his corpse away, But never mind his soul; I know hat hat where that uHll stay Until it pays the toll, For bringing mo on such a day My bill for last year's coal Deutscliland's Deck Passengers Wn NOMINATE for dock passengers (chairs and rugs frco) on tho Deutscliland's return trip; Michael Francis Doylo W. J. B. Tho Athletics' Jinx Colonel Bogle General Carranza Villa " Humidity - Gcorgo Sylvester Vlereck P2RHAPS our gontlo readers might caro to mako a few nominations 01 send "bum voyago" packages containing such suttablo dainties as parsnips, N. Y. Camambert cheese, brldo biscuits, bread pudding (B. L. T. brand) and such like. Mako hasto, please. DEAR Tom You woro epeaklng the other day about Albert Ross and his bolng the Harold Bell Wright of tho early 80s. I maintain that I am tho Silas Wcgg of 1916, Inasmuch as I am liable to bust Into song, oven In tho prcsenco of Mrs. Boflln, at tho slightest provoca tion. Listen: Things aro never so bad but they might havo been worse. And as Stevenson said in his excellent verso: "The world is so full of a number of things I'm sure wo should all be as happy as kings." And I am as lwppy as happy can be, Thero is so much to do and there's so much to see. Yet sometimes in terror I wake in tho night, Saving dreamed of a novel by Harold Bell Wright. TAB. I. M. Daft reports this sign of a largo contract on Gth street WANTED GIRLS TO SEW BUTTONS ON THE THIRD FLOOR. ANEW contrlb., who signs himself Big Bill, wants to know why wo don't run a diary like F. P. A.'s In tho N. Y. Tribune. Well, Big Bill, years ago when wo flrst began writing Italian dialect stuff and tho editors cocked up their cars and bocamo Interested In us, Frank Adams was tho watch-dog who barked at every Imitator who tried to horn In on our now lead; and well, you know how It Is, Big Bill we're grateful, that's all. Besides, wo couldn't do It as well. CAIUIANZA TllOOrS SEIZE HEARST BANCII Headline. Ah! Now they'vo gono too far! EVEN If an evening contemporary did speak of us last night as "the Untied States" we may contemplate with equa nimity even tho worst that may eventuate upon tho first Tuesday of November. Meantime there's a tableful of books deal Ing with the lives of the Presidents out side Jerry Cullen's book storo on 9th street, and over tho table, In Jerry's own hand, the sign: PRESIDENTS 25c The Asst. Funeral Director's Holiday Samuel Roas Van Allmnn, assistant to Funeral Director T. B. McFarland, and family of Spruce street are spending tho week among friends at Holsnlger Cemetery. Altoona paper. Folk Out o' Focus This pictured woe You used to know. Forgotten now, sirs? Can't you recall Those pangs at oil? I'll tell you how, sirs 1 Live o'er once more The day you wore Your flrst long trousers Our Congrats to the Kaiser ANTICIPATING your cablegram ask A Ing how we think Captain Koenlg performed his mission and also what liquor would be most appropriate to drink his health In, wo answer both queries (to eavo expense) In one word: AUSZEnORDENT-LICHER. Our Own Quiz Department ANSWERING QUESTION NO. S. A new-born babe Is minus teeth. And somewhat shy of 'hair; To keep these charms as they appear Requires endlesa care. So. as we age and hear folks talk Of lotions and consolers, Our tongues are prone to creep about Our swiftly passing molars. If most of you will stop and think You'll cease this foolish custom. The teeth you wear are cheap, not rare, So go ahead and bust 'em! Mrs. C. Y. FRAZIER. A 155 license fee. $7.50 water rent and 30 complimentary tickets hardly paid for the damage done to Phoentxville streets by (be h4vy waons of a circus. -rCoJlertvul? (Pa,) lodspsa&eat Goth! how old. some editors grow to bej fUA kSl AN UNSOLVED MURDER MYSTERY Unsigned Confessions Were Received by the Police in the Dr. V. H. Wilson Case, but Man Who Sent Poisoned Ale Was Never Apprehended By JOHN ELFRETH WATKINS "TT'S POISONED! Savo the bottlol' X With this cry of terror Dr. William II. Wilson, a Philadelphia physician, fell Into a convulsion during which, a quarter of an hour lator, ho died In great agony. Doctor Wilson 'had beon enjoying a very profltablo practice. On Tuesday, Juno 23, 1908, ho received by express a small wooden box containing a bottle of ale, and accompanied by a letter type written upon stationery bearing tho head of a Philadelphia browing concern. Tho letter requested tho physician to samplo tho product and Inclosed a blank form of testimonial for his signature. Doctor Wilson put tho alo In his refrigerator and went to his bungalow at Cornwells, Pa., where- ho was In tho habit of treating some of his wealthiest suburban patients. Returning homo on tho night of June 20 he looked about him for a cooling drink, opened tho icebox, noticed tho alo and poured out a glassful, which ho pro ceeded to drink. But ho had no sooner swallowed tho boverago than ho uttered tho alarm quoted. Analysis disclosed that tho ale had been saturated with cyanide of potassium, a deadly poison, now common In our criminal annals, but very little known nt that time. The cork of the bottle had been secured with red wax, into which, at either side of tho neck, had been Impressed a seal bearing the letter S. Upon tho letterhead the name of tho brewery firm was flanked on either side by another largo S of a different design. The letter explained that the bottle was one of a number sent to physicians and stated that tho brew ers would appreclato tho doctor's signa ture to tho Inclosed blank. There was nothing about tho package, tl?o bottle or tho letter to excite suspicion. Everything was neatly prepared and bore evldenco that hundreds of other such samples had been sent out with Identical letters to physicians. The Mysterious Letter The following day the Coroner received a letter postmarked Bristol. Pa., signed "An Injured Husband and Father," and purporting to be from Doctor Wilson's murderer. The alleged confession stated: "This letter 13 true In every detail, and It proves I am the person who attended to this matter. I will tell you that the ale contained cyanide of potassium and there were two seals with tho letter capi tal 8 on tho bottle." Police and detectives left no stone un turned In their search for the criminal. The letterhead of the brewery Arm was proved to be a forgery, and a Phlladel phla printer, suspected of the crime, was arreBted but succeeded fn proving his in nocence. Tho authorities were at their wits' end when there was received at the Philadelphia office of the Associated Press a note written on the same typewriter as THE ANDEAN MONUMENT The hlgh-splrlted and long-continued friendship of Canada and the United States. which, unenforced by armament and dspend- ent upon no armies, has continued for oer a century, may have a parallel Sn the lower continent of this hemisphere. Like Canada and the United States, Argentina and Chill have a long boundary Like them, the two countries had fears of warfare. .Like them, they have solved their questions by ami cable agreement. Fifteen years ago the two countries were pn the brink of war over a matter f some 80,000 square miles of territory, A commission, sat on the question, rendered decision and since then disarmament has virtually occurred In both republics. To symbolize the peace which had been established, a statue has been erected on the Andes. Its history follows: The suggestion of Bishop Benavente as to the erection of a statue of Christ at Puente del Tnca was quickly carried Into execution. As early as 1901, on the initia tive of Senora de Costa, president of the Christian Mothers' Association of Buenos Aires, one of the largest women's organiza tions In the world, the women of Buenos Aires, who had already manifested the deepest Interest in the new movement, un dertook the task of securing funds aryl hav ing a statue created The work was In trusted to the young Argentina sculptor. Mateo Alonso. When his design was com pleted and accepted, the statue was cast at tho arsenal of Bueuoa Aires from eld can "AND YOU'RE NOT ORNAMENTAL, EITHER 1" that which had produced tho letter to tho Coroner. In this communication tho alleged murderer offered to sell r. com ploto confession of tho crltno and glvo tho profits to tho C-year-old daughter of Doctor Wilson. But tho detectives, nftor futile efforts to trap him, camo to regard this mysterious correspondent ns an In nocent person who was hoaxing them. A year after tho crlmo a newspaper writer who had been active upon tho case received in tho mall a long com- municatlon signed, "Tho Executioner." It stated: "I am tho person who killed Dr. Wil liam H. Wilson Just ono year ago today. For purposes which you will later under stand, I havo prepared an article upon tho subject for which I wish an audience. I snail take tho liberty of expressing you a small box containing tho cntlro matter and everything pertaining to It that I have." The Documents in the Case The box was received. It contained tho "confession," copies of letters used In correspondence with Doctor Wilson's widow, and certain articles which caused a commotion at police headquarters. Ono was a steel die marked with tho Initial S and blaring a tag which stated, "Seal used on .wo Impressions on wax scaling bottlo at neck;" a typo Initial letter S of 38-poInt Ituyvesant, labeled, "Tho Initial used on each side of tho letterhead of tho decoy lotti r;" several lines of type, set up, bound together nnd tagged, "Typo used In prlntlni decoy return blank;" also a small bit a' wood bearing tho Impiesslon of a hamm-r. Concerning this last tho alleged murlorer wrote: "I send you nn Impression tf the same hammer with which I nalbd tho box containing tho poisoned ale. Tho wood Is of tho samo used In the tox, this merely to prove authenticity." When these articles were compared with those held In evidence by tho pollco microscopic examination failed to show any dtscrepanclis. Tho seal exactly fit tho Impression u',-on tho wax, tho Initial S in typo boro a nick reproduced upon tho letterhead, and tho typo coincided exactly with tha used upon tho decoy testimonial; also, he wood boro hammer prints of tho sar.io sUo as those upon tho poison pack&g, "Now this evetv closes for me a year of extraordinary vents," wrote the al leged murderer. "My grief has been 'more than words -an wield tho matter a grief 'that mikes breath poor and speech unable,'" The Identity of he alleged murderer was never dlscoverol, and the murder of Doctor Wilson remains today a mystery even blacker than It was at the moment when he gasped out his dying breath. (Coturliht.) non taken from the ancient fortress outside of the city. Tho base of the status Is In granite. On this Is a granite sphers weighing some 14 tons, on which the outlines of the world aro sketched, renting upon a granite col umn 22 feet high. The figure of Christ above. In bronze, Is 2G feet In height The cross supported In Hif left hand is five feet higher. The r'ghl hand is stretched out in blessing. On tie granite base aro two bronze tablets, on of them given by the Worklngmen's Unlcn of Buenos Aires, the other by the Wording Women. One of them gles the record of the creation and erection ot the stttue; on the other are Inscribed the words; "Sooner shall these qiountalns crumble Into dust than Argentines and Chilians break the peace to whlct they have pledged themsahes at the feet 'of Christ the Jte deemer." OR BAGDAD NOW! The chances are that Bgdad, even In the days of the caliphs anil Aladdjn and All Baba and the rest of them, was a dull town as compared wth wlat Buffalo is Just now Buffalo Courier, OMAHA'S TROUBLES Railroad rate discrimination against Oma ha' must not be tamely tolerated Omaha is entitled to treatment from every railroad equal p that accorded the most favored city, Omaha Bee. What Do You Know? Oucrlts o central Interest will It answered in this column. Ten Questions, Ins answers to u.Atct every uell-tnormed tenon should knaw, are atked dally. QUIZ 3. lVIint Is thn purpnso of the opposition to tho leadership ot the (termini Chancellor? 2. Explain the term "OrniiEcmrn." 3. Alnt event Is celebrated on July H? 4. Wlint Is the prlco ot ens to consumers In Philadelphia? 0, It lint Is meant by a "nomloln," In railroad inrlnncc? 0. Ulrnt Is mennt by "relitlro humidity"? 7. Mho wrote "The Illilno Comedy"? 8. In "lint famous tnles does the story of Alad din nnil his innitlo lamp occur? 0. H'hat Is mennt by "nilllnsscnto"? 10. Hliat Is meant by "lsolatlnc" a ccrm? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. The "nltrntes" Hint iiro bo frequently men tioned In the nous at this time nro chtetly used for explosives nnd fertilizers. S. The Contention Hall Is to stand nt Slst street and the Parknay. 3. ".Moonshiners": men who Illicitly distil uhlnliy. 4. The snsh of n window Is that part nhlcli motes up nnd dann In tho irroaics. 5. Proof spirit t n mixture of equal parts (by nelcht) ot alcohol nnd water. Utien It hns more alcohol than inter It Is "over proof"! when less, "under proof." 0. A prlinn fncle ruse Is one which without minute examination teems plausible und correct 7. To, mask n fleet Is to lock It un so that It cannot put to sea. 8. Tho "Iron lluko"! The treat Duke of YVell- Incton. 0. No (lerman Emperor has officially visited 1 ranee slnco tho Prnncn-Prusstun War. but It Is understood that the Kaiser made setrrul Incognito trips to Purls before the fircsent war broke nut. Hlnee the war he ins seternl times visited German bend quarters In Prune. 10. John Ktirlejeorn: a personification of mall liquor. Monuments in the Park .Editor of "What Do You Know" Please Clvo a list of somo monuments nnd monu mental features In Falrmount Park. P. B. Tho Washington group, Green street en trance; Lincoln Monument, Lemon mil; Morton McMlchncl, Lemon Hill; Robert Burns group. East Itlver Drive near boat houses; Garfield, East River Drlvo below GIraril avenue; Joan of Arc, east end of Otrnrd ntenue bridge; Grant equestrian monument, Ea.t River Drlvo above Glrard avenue bridge; John Welsh memorial, on rtta ot the main building ot the Centennial Exhibition; Civil War memorial, Centennial Concourse; Anthony Drexcl, Lanffdowno Drlvo; General Menda equestrian monu ment, Lansdowno Drhc; Soldier of the Civil War, near George's Hill, Catholic foun tain, west of Belmont Drive, Columbus atntue, Belmont Drive; "Religious Liberty," Horticultural Hall; German monuments, Horticultural Hall ; 88th Regiment, Penn syUanla Volunteers, camp site, Falls of Schuylkill. Age of Animals Editor of "What Do You Know" Can you recall for mo an old verse which com pares the ages of animals; something about three times tho age of a dog is that of a horse? M. IC You probably refer to tho old Celtic rhyme, which, In modern English, is as fallows: Thrice th ago of a dog Is that of a horse; Thrice tho ago of a horse is that of a man ; Thrice the age of a man is that of a deer; Thrice the age of a deer Is that of an eagle. Agony Column G. F C. By the "agony column" Is meant that part ot a newspaper containing advertisements for missing relatives and friends, appeals for reconciliations, etc. African States R. R. The Union of South Africa Is com posed of the Cape Province, Natal, Trans vaal and Orange Free State. The Bourgeoisie Editor of "What Do You Know" Will you please tell ma what bourgeois and bou geolsia mean? Can such terms be applied to the proletariat? R. T, They cannot be applied to what Is some times called the proletariat. The terms can hardly be applied to any class In America, and the application of them to all persons who are not ot gentle manners Is absurd. The bourgeoisie In Franco meant the mer chants, manufacturers and master-tradesmen: In England the term. Is some'lmes ap plied to the great middle class. When thi word bourgeois Is used by Socialist and Anarchist writers and speakers In this coun try it is usually contemptuously descriptive of wealthy men's conservatism against which the proletariat is supposed to be pro testing "Bourgeois ideas" are, according to the usage of (he best authors, ideas of utilitarianism, involving ignorant suspicions of the arts and Puritanism. New York City to Buffalo Editor o "What Do You Know" Can you tell me If there is a possible way that I can go from New York city to Buffalo by trolley line? If there is such a line, kindly tell me how and where I can start from. J P There Is no direct tins from New York city to Buffalo. Most of the distance i covered, but thero are breaks. It would be necessary to B to Yoakers for a start. RUINED SEERS OF BANKRUPTCY Prophets of Evil Times Havo Turned Out Evil Prophets of the World's Decline Gilbert K. Chestorton, tho English writer, onco wroto that tho favorite In door and outdoor sport of tho world was "fooling tho prophot3." The game Is childishly elmplo nnd Is played by two characters humanity nnd tho prophots. Tho human race sits lillo whllo the prophets foretell what tho world Is going to do.- Then humanity goes and does tho exact opposlto. It Is very exhilarating nnd can bo recommended for every occa sion, from a surprlso party (which It really Is) to a church sociable. The Inner Joko of tho game Is that thero aro always two sots of prophets, defining diametrically opposlto plans, so that tho world really has to follow ono of them, or both of them part way. Ono thinks of this in connccolon with prophe cies of what Is coming after tho war Tho nblest of English economists, Fran els W. Hirst, whoso analyses and predic tions havo dellghtod readers of th Evcnino LRDfiEH theso many months, has Just resigned as editor of tho London Economist, nnd In a sort of valedictory has forotold disaster and ruin for Europe If tho war docs not soon end. Tho great nations, ho fears, will bo bankrupt, Whllo It Is truo that others liavo held tho oppo slto view, Mr. Hirst's background do servos study. Ho Is an economist, nnd ho is appalled by tho terrible figure of Eng land's debt. At tho end of this year, at tho present rate, England's national debt will amount to $13,000,000,000, and besides theso thirteen thoro will ho four moro billions which havo been lent to her Al lies. It is useless to try to understand theso figures. Let us tako them for grnnted. It is a llttlo too easy to say that this war Is so unprecedented In magnitude) that comparisons nro ridiculous. Let thoso who feel this consult a most en gaging chapter in Macaulny's "History of England," from which tho following is summarized: Tho national debt, says Macaulay, has becomo tho greatest prodigy that ovor perplexed tho sagacity nnd confounded tho prldo of statesmen and philosophers. When tho Pcaco of Utrecht was con cluded In 1713 England owod $200,000,000, about IC per cent, of its present dobt, and thnt lncumbranco was considered by pro found thinkers as a permanent crippling of tho body politic. Unhappily for thorn, England prospered. At, 400 million tho caso was pronounced desperate. Aftor tho wars under tho elder Pitt, with a debt of 700 million dollars, David Hume declared that England's madness had ex ceeded tho madness of tho Crusaders. It was all over. Better to havo been con quered by Prussia and Austria, ho cried, than to bo saddled with such an enormity of debt. Macaulay thon mentions Adam Smith, whoso exact words nro worth In serting hero. "Tho progress of tho enor mous debts which at present oppress and will In tho long run probably ruin all tho great nations of Europe has been protty uniform." For a hundred years that prediction has bcon as antlquatod as the long "s's" UEcd in its printing. In 1798, says another historian, the "atnggoring burdon" of a two-bllllon-dollar debt was tho determining factor In pcaco negotiations. Earlier, Gcorgo Grenvllle tried to relievo England's debt by putting a part of It on tho American Colonics, causing a war which rolled up tho Indebtedness still higher. After the Napoleonic wars England was dono for ever her finest statesmen nnd econo mists wore suro of it, for England owod over four billion dollars. Yet h? tho next century England prospered beyond all earthly expectation. A sum exceeding tho cntlro dobt nt tho end of tho A"ierl" can wars was willingly expended oJ In ternal Improvement and taxation actually became lighter. Mentioning these things, Macaulay Indicates that thero Is a dif ference between personal dobt and what a society owes In great part to itself. Ho ends with thl3 extraordinary prophecy: A long experience Justifies us In be lieving that England may. In tho twen tieth century, be better able to bear a debt of 4,600,000,000 than she Is at the present time to benr her present load. But, be this as It may, thoso who so confidently predicted that she must sink, first under a dobt of SO millions, then under a debt of 80 millions, then under a debt of 140 millions, then un der a debt ot 240 millions, and laBtly under a debt of 800 millions, were be yond doubt, under a twofold mistake. They greatly overrated tho pressure of the burden; they greatly underrated tho strength by which the burden was to be borne. A hundred Instances might be men. tloned for every one referred to above. and the depths of decline, the demnitlon bow-wows predicted would make amusing reading. But there Is meat for a long meal of thought In Macaulny's last words. It may be that we do not overrate th burden of the present time when we add In Germany's debt, and France's, and that of all the other unhappy belligerents. All that monoy has gone Into destruction, Nothing has been made, nothing built, by a sum too powerful for mortal Imagina tion. Money has, indeed, gone trjto circu lation. Certain classes havo become won derfully rich and a new creditor nation, the United States, has come to share with England. It may be that the bankruptcy now predicted may not come for a hun dred years. It may be that the burden of taxation will prove too heavy to be borne. But between Macaulay and Hirst one of the two prophets must be fooled. It Is In the second part of Macaulay'a phrase that hope for the world really lies. The strength by which the burdens of the world have been borne Is only a feeble promise of the strength which the world can develop. It Is a pity, to bo Buro, that it should be for war and destruction, not for happiness and creation, that tho world should pay Its heaviest debt. But out of chaos creation may come. And the world can still square Its shoulders of faith to pay the debt. What has been destroyed is material made by man's hands. And man's hands have not lost the cunning to mako their work over again. In two years France Paid an itidemnltv or . billion dollars and flourishcit The world has only to pay an Indemnsy to the god of war, an indemnity for ti-ing defeated by hot passions and uncontrollable de sires. It, too, has a chanceof survival. a v. o, I i Ml