ISBjpfTwwS"'1''' y ' C''MgnyygiwyryywgyWtSYTewpiaiUM ' ')''wisytjMji jwmniwjj ytwnu HWH'MWUIWiW"' tJ 1""WW.l H" ' '! "IH'Imli li WW EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY JULY 14, 1916. i I. ' ' i i 1 ?- e I fattening gjii Ic&sw PUBLIC LEDGF.H COMPANY Cntffl II K CUimS. rMinnXT. ClkrtiS U LtHlrorto-i. Vice President : John C. Msrtln,, yecrttjiry iin.t Treasurer: Philip S. Cnllinr, John B. WlllUm. Directors EDITOIlf.uT tlOAilD: Crttis II. K. Curim, Chirmnn. P. IT. WUA1.KY. Editor JOim g MAP.T1M .Oenetia Duslnn Mannirer Pnoltahed dully nt fcKtia l.rvntn fcuUdlng, lndepender.ce Square, Philadelphia. t-KPom Cnxnut.... Broad nnd Chedtnut Street Arttrmo Cnr rre-lnto Building Nrw Yoc... aJC Metropolitan Tower Dktkoit ..820 ronl Building KT. IiOCI 409 aifibe-Dtmocrnl ImlMlne; CUICJOO.... ..... 1202 Tribune Building Mews ntrnnAust WAItBtiroTOrt, BC!r0.... Ill(tK Building Nw York nroiuo The Times tlulldlnic BTCt.i BntKic HI rrledrlchstMMo 1.0.1BO BuxKtD Msrrenl Ilmiite, Strand Fjl3 Bdscad US Ru9 Louis la Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS By mtrler, si cents per week. By mall, rottpald Outsldo of PnllAdelphla, except where orelgn poatnga Is required, on month, twenty fl eente; one year, threo dollar. All mall subscriptions paynMe In advance. Notics Sulixcrlbera wishing address changed must give old an well as new address. BEtX. 3000 TjlAlT KEYSTONE. MAIN 3000 i E7" Addrrsi all communication to Evening ' Ledger, Independence Square, DiUadelphla. I cxTcaio at Ttti ritttiPKLFitiA rostornca AS r SBCO.fD-CLASS Mill. l t1Tl.lt. THIS AVBItAOB NET TAIO DAILY CIB- CULATION' OF THE EVENING LEDGER FOR JUNE WAS 123.80S riilljdrlpMi, FrlJtr. July 14, 1916. NOTICE, Readers tnay have the Kvenlng Ledger malted to them to any out-of-toicn address for any veriMl of time. Addtcss may be changed as often as desired, but tctth each change both the otd and new addresses must be given. Subscription rales are printed above. FRANCE OVERSEAS today our greeting and our wonder and our faith go out to France. A second time Castillo Day finds her struggling for her hfo and for our faith. A second time tho fires of war . burn purer and tho world'n heart leaps with an unaccountable Joy. France haa held. It has been Mild, with purposo to In Volvo this country In tho war, that .tho Allied nation? are fighting tho battlo of democracy. If that is so, it is because they fight with France. She is the ex emplar and the Justification of democracy, tho good omen of our own power to hold whon tho crisis comes. Balked at every rjtrldo by European militarism and bureaucracy, she has maintained superbly tho true dcmocracys,of her spirit, and she emerges from this war, whatever tho out come, nobler of stature, moro grand In spirit, magnificent and proud, a challenge and an inspiration to tho world. Perhaps there Is not, in all tho lino list of her institutions, anything moro sym 'bollcal of France than her military medal. For tho medallle mllltalre may bo won either by a prlvato or by a general in command of armies who has already worn the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor. Joffrc, after the battlo of tho Marne, rose to tho level of the common soldier when ho received the medal. Tho potlu, granted the precious medal for bravery, stands beside tho Commander-in-Chief. Last and first, they drink from the same cup of their common and glori fied humanity. WE MUST return, in order to under stand what that humanity means to us, to; the hot summer of torrlblo days When tho war broke out. For days Franco knew that war was imminent. Quixotic to tho end, while Germany massed her troops nt the border, France ordered her guards drawn ten miles within her own frontier. She threw up the earthworks of her faith before the advancing peril, and when tho war came she sent her armies forward to fight behind that defense. Over it trampled the greatest army of modern times, and the French, troops, retreating through the terrible fields of northern France, drew closer and closer to Paris. Ih-vlho Ave black week3 of that retreat the world had time to foresee the end. It had time to realize that democracy was beaten at last, that free men had proved themselves incapablo of discipline, that liberty, equality, fraternity had come to the end of their long road. Franco was fighting with her standing army, but the world knew that the soldiers who fought were those 'who had taken the Bastille, wero the peasants of the Vendee and the ragged boys of Valmy. The world knew that France, dreamer of a romantic dream, had come to a narrow place, and tho walls were falling down upon her. This we saw and trembled. Jt was not that the same enemy might be moved to attack us. It was pot physical fear or pressing danger. But with the ruin of France must, come the ruin of our faith, that a democracy can survive In the family of nations. And each day the gray armies were completing heV ruin. But France held. The miracle of tho Marne took place. The giant blue wings pf. Foch. and Manoury settled slowly down op the German armies, and as they rose again they showed the invaders swept back tq the banks of the Alsne. The explanation Is easy to give of strategy, , q! Von Kluck's error, of surprises and ar tillery but the miracle remains. And be hind t there Is another mystery, more wonderful stllL THAT mystery Is tho soul of France since the war settled down In Its deadly- grip of the trenches. Jluijy nations are at wtr, but apart from the huge and HHuutlDgleas tracts of Russia, the land of France has suffered moat- For her territory, the vers soil nww flowed by 4i-llg niwj tWB bj- Irnrnu-liiutiua i,j,a a s'fiutftomee ti iter. Hir j-utity u, Ha- filed by war and by the fttlen's touch. Her wealth Is held; her armies, from every corner of tho Republic and from every class of her citizens, have borne always tho first shock of battle nnd have paid the highest price. Yet she has not murmured. She has not de nounced lis for not fighting her battles. She ha not pleaded for special favors. She lias not tried to corrupt our Govern ment, nor has Bho been torn by lnternat dissensions while the onemy shook tho gates of her citadel. She hns been self sufficient and loyal, and sho has looked so clearly Into the eyes of death that life can have no terrors for her again. What was weak In her has been burned out. What was strong now knows how to bo tender. The Franco which, more than a century ago today, told the world that God was tired of kings tells tho world today that humanity has Its place nnd Its powers and that, In the Divine Order, thero 'is room for liberty. Sho tells It In a passion of sanity. Sho Is logical In her war as In her pcaca, and rises to tho height of beauty In tho ugljest hour of the world's history. It Is hardly to be wondered at that Germany herRelf has bcert loudest In her pralso, for moro than ever Is It true that every man has two countries his own and Franco. Sho has done what Ger many ardently desired to do, has been both human nnd divine. For this Is tho secret of Franco, that In her tho passions tor tho highest and for tho lowest, for nrlstocracy nnd democracy, burn with tho samo forvor. She erected tho Bastlllo whon sho carried tho cult of aristocracy to Its extreme, and sho tore It down. Sho won, then, her Grand Cross. Today sho carries democracy to tho same limits and wins tho medallle mllltalre. Sho has borno her cross. Sho wins her salvation. Substitution may be all right, but vnen a man buys mutton ho does not do It to get his neighbor's goat. The man who wrote "I Didn't Pi?.t My Boy to Be a Soldier" announces that his boy Is ready to Join tho army. It Isn't what wo sing that counts; It's what wo do. What would a free vote on tho con tinuation of tho war hy all tho soldiers on both sides show? What's tho uso asking? Their Governments would never lot them havo it. Tho captain of tho Doutschland is an able seaman, but hi? historical Ideas aro singular. Wo had been under tho Impression that It was chiefly Fiance, not Prussia, which aided tho United States In tho Revolution. Doubtless peoplo who were accus tomed to sitting on red-hot stoves would not complain of n heat wave; but In this matter-of-fact world there's nothing quite so satisfying as being the Ice man. In tho Interests of "harmony," If there aro going 'to bo statues wherever thero Is" u triangle along the Parkway, let tho distribution bo fair and Impartial. Tho McNIcholltes arc entitled to repre sentation, as tho "Captain" has an nounced, . nnd there must not bo moro ashcarts than statesmen along tho great avenue. A baby an hour continues to bo the mortality In New York from tho Infantile paraly&is plague. If thero Is a German submarine under way with a preventive or a cure, It cannot arrlvo too soon and thero would not be many questions asked. Peoplo are inclined, however, to remem ber that turtlo tuberculosis euro which was so widely heralded a few years ago. It Is to be regretted if the Presi dent has definitely decided not to appoint William A. Glasgow to succeed Mr. Hushes In the Supreme Court. Tho very obvious fitness of tho man nnd tho very geniral commendation with which tho suggestion was received caused many to hope that tho President would honor himself nnd his Administration by mak ing the appointment. Down In South Carolina they have managed to drive most of the Are Insur ance companies out of the State by ap propriate legislation. After a long doso of Bleaselsm some of the people down there have It In their heads that capital is oppressing them. The less capital there li In a community the more certain an antl-capltallst Is to ride Into office by mouthy denunciation of what capital thero Is. The shlp-purchaso bill is now noth ing but an orphan, supported by none who loves It and sanctioned at all only because political exigencies seem to coun sel such a course. It is very much like the kind of protection which It is pro- j-posed to give the dye industry a pio- tectlon which carries with it a threat and encourages Investors by telling them that they better make good pretty d quick or the Government will adopt measures to assure the loss of all their money. It Is equivalent to a father say ing to his Infant, "If you are not four feet tall when you're five years old I'll murder you, and don't you forget It" In the first place, the necessity for Government merchantmen, if there ever was any, has long Blqce passed. In the second place, under the umended bill the Government would be dplng little more than forcing its financing down the throats of men who don't want It. It Is not the kind of medjclne they are after. "Pa not give us crutehoH with which to stumble along," they ery. "Just cut loose the chains that bind us and we'll get along all right." But no! The Adminis tration is going to cling; to thoe absurd navigation laws no matter what happens and this In spite of the fact that the President himself has said that these jUw-s are inexcusably bad. And, in the Ujira place, wie uuvcrijiuuitt biiip4 wouiu never correct any trouble became the board to manage them has been so for mulated aa to be a reuse for "lame UurKji" luiteud of business statesmen. V idKjno Uvnht) legislates Why does be itiw&'uo i A3 iiecutr Tom Daly's Column (f&nou? 'tyrM&rv LAXQUAOn. f Language Is what people use When thev wish to give their views In a book or speech So tva have to learn it voting Starting telth the Mother Tongue That our teachers teach. 1'lrst It's L'ngllsh that von pel French you do not study yet Xot unless you're rich And you have a Govcrnorcst Who idll tell you 7ioto to guest Which of them is which. Mixing language breaks Gods laws And yott know that was the cause Tower of llahbet fell For the workmen got confused from the different tongues they Used As the Scriptures tell. "Babhcl" Is our word for such Xowadayi that talk so much We don't understand So Its alwayi best for each To be learning just the speech Of his native land. The Dcutschlanil's Deck Passengers FURTHER nominations for steamer chairs on tho deck of tho Iromc-bound submarine have been made, ns follows: Lillian Glsh, Boles Penrose, Dusttn Fnrnuin, J. Hani Lewis, several anony mous sextons who ring church bells at G a. m., Benny Knuff, Charles W. Morse nnd Harry K. Thaw. Among tho books nnd periodicals suit able for submarine-deck reading there have been mentioned: "The Cosmopoli tan," "Poems' by Amy Lowell, "Tho Menace," "Smull's Handbook," "The Con gicsslonal Record," "Hill's Manual of Business and Social Forms," "Thrco Weeks." Mr. F. P. Adams, who Is on vacation In tho West, wires us: "Will gladly con tribute my sluiro of the world's parsnip crop" (10 words, collect). "Bum voyngo" bas'ncts nnd boxes containing other dain ties Iiavo been promised, ns follows: A. J. Drexcl Blddle, $10 worth of prunes; Al Warren, two cans condensed milk; Brit ish Consul, one can Irish stew. Person ally, wo'll provldo gooseberries. T1W WELSH WIZARD. Lloyd-George is a peacemaker Of quite consummate art; He gets the Celts together By keeping them apart, RATIO. Famous Movie Movers PAULING FREDERICK moves tho au dience. Charllo Chaplin moves a load on pay day. Douglas Fairbanks moves his fellow actors roughly about. Mary Plckford moves gracefully from smiles to tears. John Darrymore moves tho feminine to ndoratlon. Marguerite Clark moves from hovel to mansion. R. E. R. "Can't someth'ng bo done." 51. asks Uf, "about these pests who chatter at tho movies? We confess that wo are thor oughly addicted to that most popular In door sport; and now that wc liac con fessed, can't wo enjoy the thrills In peace? What can you do about If?" ws. E USED to fume about this, too, but o weren't long In discovering that tho occasional gleeful earful wo got mado It about 50-30. For Instance: Just after tho storm scene In the "Ne'er-do-Well," when tho skies cleared, "at one strldo came the dark" and the stars rushed out, a woman behind us a mother or a trained nurse, we'll bet exclaimed: "Oo, looka tho stars! They camo out Just like a rash." Feeble-minded Show Will Be Placed on Pier. Headline. THIS news from Atlantic City reminds us that tho height of tho fcoclal season there is at hand. Sir I taw this on a window of a Market street meat shop: "Fiesh brains. Be." How about it; are you brain weary? Have a brain, and Washington papers plense copy. " 51. HOW now, sirrah! Isn't this extortion ate? As long as we can remember, after ycahs an' yeahs In the buslne'ss, we've been told there's nothing cheaper than brains. "Until tho hoft drink gets Itself a mono syllabic name It never can live In verse." F. P. A. What Is more monosyllabic or explosive than "pop"? How about; "Fifteen men on the dead man's chest, Yo-ho-ho! nnd a bottle of pop!" B. L. T. Wf HY not Invent a drink to fit? Here's hint for some wide-awake bottler: Fifteen men on the dead man's chest, Yo-ho-ho! and a bottle of ZEST! WANTED One diy laborer: nood wul-o. Ap ply to U. 8 SCHATZ. ColleieUII. fa. WE THINK we know the man for you, if we can catch him. He played that rolo for us once. But maybe his day won't suit you. We caught him on a Friday, but made the mistake of not holding his pood wages until Friday week. Do you eat him or does he have to eat himself? Never mind the drink. I HERE'S the day; this is your last chance to speak up If you're a rela tive or friend of this One Barrel of Food Product. Your Uncle Sam has spent hun dreds of dollars on this notice In the Dela ware papers, 14 insertions In this one alone. MONITION IN, THEt UNITED STATES DIS lrlc Coast for lh district of Ixlaware United States . One Barrel of Jaod uroduet, purporting U be around bltek Pppr No 916 in Admiralty, la oNmUsws to a warrant or wliuro to mo dlrcctsd. In tho a bow en tltll cau I bavs wlwJ and taken Into in custody on barrslof food product, purpartins contain srouu, tcw or ino cause .... HA(M. I, ctiUd Uirr! of feed product knowing or bvlne aimblBS te "D th. sJuW not b? ?i? thS's-vs "c'Suit to- u h.M rrrr:n;rr & district ef Delaware t the United States Court Room In the city of Wllmlnston. the 14th day of trie nam t ft day ot lurUdlclkm othtrwU (ynutoW CS un4 there to lu'trpos tlu.i tar (he same, ajj tJtnaVe their lieatlun lu that beh.Uf , "-" MARTIN 1? KAHltY ' I nlt4 States Marshal DlsiiUt ut Delavtre lu. 29730-Jy J. 3, 4 i. fl. I. 8. 10. 11. 13. w.j,). 4 pa tuft dmxi uiy ot jurievji.-uan hmd aicer . ttxea THE MAN-EATERS IN NORTHERN ATLANTIC WATERS SHATTER ALL TRADITIONS Attacks by Sharks on Bathers Along the New Jersey Coast Puzzle Scientists, Who Say Monsters Which Caused Several Deaths Belong to Blue or Whjte Varieties ALL scientific accounts nnd records are jt"X blown to the four winds by attacks bv sharks upon four bathers on tho North Atlantic coast within a fortnight. Two of the victims wero killed In open tributaries 15 mllc3 from tho tra. Tho dying statement of W. Stnnlej rishcr, who lost his Ilfo In Matnwnn Crook In a futllo nttoiunt to aid 14-year-old Lester Htlllwell. that tho shark which caused their deaths was eltjht feet long, classifies tho fish as being either a blun or white shark, nlthnutjh there are to other man eating varieties. These, the tlRcr fchtirk nnd tho brown shark, aro bcltloin caught less than 13 feet In length, and aro oftt-n In their full adult growth 30 feet long. It is therefore certain, nccoidlng to an as sistant curator of the Philadelphia Acad emy of Natural Sciences, that Jhc typo which has caused alarm on the New Jer sey coast Is either n blue or whlto Mtatk, tlm lnttpr most llkelv. nsMt Is by prefer ence a man-eater, even when other food Is easily piocurablo. Among Earliest of Fishes Sharklike forms not unlike those ot to day wero among the very earliest of fishes found li tho scen teas. It Is. therefore, natural to find ihark structuro simple nnd primitive, as crmpared with other flt-h. which have l cached their present anatomi cal form and habits thiouRh evolution Sharks are of tuo types or general group, the more or less cylindrical or compressed form, which Is tho truo shall;, and the relatively harmless, broad, Hat. depressed Epecles. mnny of which specialize by lying uwn the bottom. The true species. Including the man-eater, l'i a laigo fish with a curved transverse i-iouth on the upper side of tho bend and an asymmctilcal caudal fin, the upper lobu of which Is longer than tho lower. Tin fish has no overlapping platelike scales, and the more or less tough skin extends oer the flapper-like fins. The latter are lery different from fins of most fishes, In which a framewnr'. of spines or rays Is connected by d-tlcHle membiane. The shark's gill cavities open to the ex terior by characteristic parallel silts on tho side of the neck. The nasal apparatus is well doveloped, for sharks depend much upon the sense of bmell lu finding food As a rule the shaik is sluggish, but Is capable of great speed when excitfd. Tho man eating varieties are knowi In group as mackerel sharks. Th-y eonerally turn on side or back In taking food from the surface, although they have been known to selza floating objects while maintaining an upr ght position, but In so doing they aro compelled to push the snout out of water. The mackerel shark, be It white, blue. THE RHETORIC OF WAR Of all the rhetoric produced by this war. In the best Eense of the word rhetoric, by the way. It la not likely that much will surpass In effectiveness the closing words of O K. Chesterton's 'The Crimes of Rng land," which, as may be Imagined, Is a record of the crimes of Prussia: The English went forward through the wood that is called Crecy, and stamped it with their seal for he second time, in the highest moment of all tho seular history of men. But It was not now the Crecy in which English and French knights had met In a more colord age, in a battle that was rather a tournament. It was a league of knights for the remains of all knighthood, of all brotherhood In arms or in arts, aealnst that which is and has been radi cally unknlghtly and radically unbrotherly from the beainn.ng. Much was to happen ater murder and flaming folly and mad ness In earth and sea and sky; but all men knew In their hearts that the third Prussian thrust had failed, and Christendom was de livered once more. The empire of blood and iron rolled slowly back toward the darkness of the northern forests, and the great nations of the West went forward, where side by side, as after a long lover's quarrel, went the ensigns of St. Denys and St. George." COUNTRY-HOUSE LITERATURE Tht literary by-product of pretentious country life In tht North l tflener the output ot tuuekrakers toan of rumanUcists. FOURTEENTH OF brown or tiger, has been found In Isolated Instances ns far north as Capo Cod during July and August. All are pat Ocularly sin ister In m.ilic-iip, and the sight of their dark, loan fin lazily cutting zigzags on tho quiet, spaikllrig surface of a summer sea and then slipping out of sight, not to appear again. Is suggestive of an evil spirit. When Koeii nt close range they strlko tenor, show ing n leering, chlnless faco and rows of kiilfc-llku teeth. They have a brutal, nerve less vitality and Insensibility to physical In jury. In tho blue variety tho teeth aro strong ly serrate, thoso of the upper jaw some what oblique, those of tho lower narrower ami erect. In color this fish is steel blue, light bluish or grayish above, nnd paler be low. Its greatost known length Is 10 feet. The white vnnoty Is of a leaden gray color, with white lit-llv. and the upper edges nnd pector.il fins black. This shark Is known sclontlfli-ully ns C'nrcharndon carchorias, or "biter with jagged teeth." A specimen 15 foot long was raptured In a net off Wood's Hole, Mass., In June, 1903. Tho tiger shurk Is particularly dreaded In West Indian waters. Stragglers have been taken in strong nets as far north as Catlo Cod, nnd one was caught near Islip, L. I.. September 1. 1915. by Cnptaln John lioxsell. tho monster being 1!0 foot in length. Tho brnwn shaik has never been caught In northern waters, nnd there Is no absolutely authenticated recoul of one being seen on the northern coast, although tradition cites a number of Instances. Dluc Shark Hard to Kill There Is a scientific record of a blue shark caught off Cuba In 1910 that was hooked and aftcruaitl hauled to a vessel's deck, whom It was pumped full of lead from a magazlno liHe, partly disemboweled and harpooned, ft remaining alert and alive fur hours, during which time It threshed Its tail vn-iiusly and opened and closed repeat edly lis welid, expressionless eyes. This va riety of shaik has the faculty of everting its Ntonia'li. so that the whole organ, Inside out. trails a foot or more from the mouth while 'It's flsh swims swiftly on The natural food of all sharks, even the nian-i-ating varieties, consists of whelks, cunohes and squid or devilfish, the latter a natural enemy, which has had. from the evi dence of sailors, terrifying battles with Its moro swiftly moving adversaries. Pilot fish aro often constant companions of sharks, clinging to the upper side of the fish's dorsal flit and seldom leaving even for food Mnny sharks have been taken from which, being dUiodged as tho monster was heaved over a vessel's side, tho parasite wandered aimlessly about for tome tlmo btfore swimming away. Tho owners of great estafWvJjre pictured nftener as members of a SmoWavS't than members of an urlKtrun-nm, mi i " , i"' XM..".1"1 ""ir ho.Se? ... ..... - -.,wi4ins omun .were slmniA farmhouses, offering a SdWcorrwts, .reir convpniences and no Jiufuiles, havefailed to Inspire a sympatic! 'literature of manners, such as that protbud i,y ife n rural Fng land, in the I,at(if-European countries and in the antebellum South, is a question to which a student of social .conditions In America might address himself with Inspira tion and with Interesting results Louis, vllle Courier-Journal. RED, WHITE AND BLUE What will be the color of the book tho State Department will Issue on the Mexi can rulxun? Not yellow, let us hope. Louisville Herald. AND IF YOU CAME And If you came Oh, I would smile And sit quite slll to hide My throat that something clutched while. the My heart that struck my side. And you would hear my slow words fall (Men do not know!) and say, "Sbe does not love me now at all," And rise and go away. And I would watch, as quietly Your footsteps crossed the sill. The whole, world dyiug out from me And speak on smiling stUL Margaret Wlddemer, In Tj9. JULY What Do You Know? QutiUa of general into est xutll bo answered in tiiia column Ten questions tho answers to which et.tr u tvctl-in funned rcnon should Know are usktd tiattu. QUIZ lirro l tho II In llt-itil iIMrlrt, to wltlrlt I'oiintvhnttli ffii-irilimrn Ii.no been fent for jmtrnl tbtl? Mint tiro Thpil.in? Mlirro In liillnilrlpltlii U nn equestrian Miitne of .In.ui of ,rf? Mlut N Hip so-rnlleil "full rrfw U"? A Mrrot In t'nrln l nllrtl "the 4tlt of Pei- tcntlii-r street." M'lty It Unit tlate incmo- rnlilr? In what imrt of nermunx U Il.ivnrln7 To wltnt flinrrli tlo tttc majority of the In Inililt nils inlhrrc? M'ltitt Ih ninittl by "fittiircH" In nown re ports tilintit tlip wheat market? Mlmt Is n Rlurier? Mlnit Is "tho Jletl.il of Honor Lenlon"? Mlmt N mortmain? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz The Herman Clianrrllnr Is nnpnuetl by n Ptirtj which srrkH to renew the Ktilimn rlne policy ilenotinretl by tho I'nlted Mates. "Ornnaemeii" tlerho their nntne from Will. lam III. who wiib Prlnro of llranne. "Tho J.nju! Oriiiik-o Institution" was formed by IrlMi Protestants. Tho rail or lite ll.mtllle. 1789, is celebrated nn .Inly II. Tho nrlre of ens to consumers hero Is $1 n loot) rithle fret. "tintiiltil-i" pplleil o cnnl-carrjlnc frelslit ram of u bn.illlko shape. The percent iko of mnlstiiro In llio nlr to what it Hiinlil hnhl If Miturntcil Is railed tho "rrlitlio humidity." IMnte wrote "Tho Illilne Comedy." Aladdin nnd III iimkIo lamp occur In "Ara bian MrIiIh." "llllllncsE.itr" A district of London lone Klieu otir to tlsliiniiticrrsi the uord lias heroine tlesrrlptho of vultur nnd roams l.tiiKii.ik'r. Tho lsiil.it lin; of the serm of u disease Is Iho dlMlnKiishlnic of Its clrirnrterlsllts from those of others for the purpose af ldciitlf)hn: mill rumliutlnc Its effects. To Iicttertoh, Mel. AV. T. C Thl3 is a detailed route to netterton. with some of tho markings City Hall to Broad and Walnut, to Woodland avenue and 34th street, west to Darby. West to Chester pike, following trolley through .Sharon Hill (7 1 miles), Olenolden (8.2 miles), Norwood. Moore, Illdley Park ,to Eddystono (12.5 miles). Enter Chestor, turn to left with trolley at 9th attest, thn right with tiolley to Morton avenue, left with trolloy to 7th. Turn on 7th street with trolley to first street beyond Chester Creek (Penn street), then left tri 3d street, trolloy to end of 3d street, then right with trolley to Marcus Hook (18 6). Here the trolley turns right, but keep straight on and meet it Hi miles on Keep through Claymont (20.1) and through Holly Oak, -Bellevue, to Wilmington. After crossing steel hrldee trn Lrlght to Market street, to Court House at Jltn street, on lltn to monument, then right to Delaware avenue, to fork and drinking fountain, then left to Tonn avenue and left to Broome street to 4th street, then right to Union street and on Union half mll to end. Itlght on macadam road to Klsmere Junction (29 5). Cross two railroad tracks to Price's Corner. Left at trolley station to MarslulUnn (32 miles). Cross railroad aim hu -ou yarns iu ueait enil. Jfignt, frldge, left Into Marshalltan village, (Iffmacadam. hulf mile to St. James' C ftlist before church, left and for 114 and so 200 yards to dead end. Right, cross right '' Church 'A miles. Cross railroad sharp right, 14 milts through rsowarK (! miles). At fork by railroad take left direct to dead end, then left half mile across railroad to Elktou. At Court House to Main and Bridge streets, south of bridge and across to road, right to fork, bear left, cross canal bridge, turn right into Chesapeake City at postottice. Right at stone church, then left to end and right to Cayots Corner At store cross bridge to Cecllton Through to Krederlcks town. At postoflice cross bridge Into George town. Into Galena, right at store, fork. Locust Grove, left at store, cross, turn Into Betterton road; fork; turn right. At out skirts of Still Pond bear right, avoiding town, to a turn, sharp left J thr'tAj miles be yond turn sharp into Betterton. Total dis tance, 81.4 miles. Election Day Editor of "What Do You Knout"- Who arbitrarily fixed election day as the first Tuesday following the first Monday, and why the provision of the -'first Monday"? What would be the harm In having it the hrst Tuesday, even If It falls on the first of the month? UNSIGNED. ' Congress Is responsible for tbe day. The reason is not mentioned by any author It but Is generally supposed to be that the Hist of tea month was unavailable oq umuxiercui groucua. t HOW THEY TOOK THE BASTILLE Storming of the Fortress Gave World Its Second "Glorious Fourth' America's Share in It JULY, 1789, saw President Washing ton nnd tho American Constitution In tho third month of their great experiment In liberty. The first of tho Presldonta was governing under tho provisions of nn accomplished Constitution when tho representatives of tho Krcnch peoplo wero declaring nt Versailles that they would nover ndjourn until they hat! given Prance a constitutional government. The American Revolution had proclaimed tho sovereignty of tho people; the French weto about to complete that revolution by tintlcrmlnlng tho throno of the last king. America fought for tho lndc pendonco of the peoplo of America. France fought for tho Independence of tho people of Europe. Sho Is still fight ing for that today, when she cele brates -her national holiday, commem orating tho Ball of tho Bastille, tho first great blow struck in her eternal revolu tion. Several weeks beforo that blow was stiuck tho first meeting of tho French Parliament In two centuries was called nt Versailles, twelve miles from Paris. It had been called becnuso tho court was bankrupt, nnd the only way to get money was by nppenllng to tho estates of tho realm. , Thero was a gorgeous procession from tho palace (that palnco whero now on Sundays the laborer and his family can squat on tho green lawn nnd munch bread and drink wlno from tho bottlo and call tho King's fountains nnd statues their own) to tho hall of tho estates. In that hall wero ranked on cither stdo of tho throno the clergy of all orders and tho nobles In their blazo of r.llk and Jewels nnd gemmod swotds, and in tho rear tho COO commoners, In black nnd without Bworda, a Mttlo awed, but determined. Far nbovo them all sat tho King on his throno, nn enormous diamond In tho feather of his hat; njiovo him tho vast canopy of purplo velvet upon which shone tho golden threads of the lilies of Franco, Tho black-garbed commoncrn know what was expected of them; they wero merely to ratify tho wishes ot tho great. Thoy did noti dream of tho great events that wero to follow and sweep away In a delugo of blood nil this array of pomp and splendor; that thoy so soon wero to bo tho sole and undisputed rulers of France. Troops Threaten Legislators It was soon plain in thl3 strango Par liament that tho will of tho crown was that tho three estates nobles, clergy nnd commons wero to sit separately; nn ar rangement llko tho Lords and Commono of England, by which It would bo easy for tho privileged orders to nullify tho legislation of the Third Estate, tho peo pie. Tho King announced that thoy wero to dlsperso nnd meet tho next day In sep arate halls. But tho commons did not disperse. They sat on In silence until tho Master of Ceremonies, little moro than a boy, covered with cloth of gold, his fingers studded with diamonds, entered to tell them In his well-bred drawl that thoy wero not to linger, but go home. Still thoy would not go. "Wo aro hero by tho will of tho peoplo!" cried Mlrabcau, "and only death can dismiss us," Thirty regiments moved, for tho most part German-speaking mercenaries, upon whom the court depended In tho last ro sort, to dismiss tho commons and capturo nnd disarm seething Paris, twclvo mlleo down tho vnllty. Tho court saw the commons wore determined to have n real volco in affairs, thoreforo tho commons must go. Troops filled the streets of Ver sailles, new guns rattled along tho roads. Would Paris rise? Tho citizens were without ammunition, and the plans worn complete to crush any uprising that' might follow tho dismissal of tho Na tional Assembly and Its demands for a constitution. But Paris did rise to piotect the rights pf its representatives at Versailles. On July 12, a Sunday, tho peoplo hurried to tho Palais Royal. A young man' mounted n Mble, held up a pair of pis tols and shouting, "To arms!' plucked a leaf from a Uee, of which ho made a cockndo and stuck it In his hat. The peoplo followed hla example. In the great square beforo Town Hall a. Jolly Parisian priest, sitting astride a barrel, saw to tho serving out of powder nnd ball. Arms and ammunition, even cannon, were demanded at tho Invalldes, and obtained. The mob moved on tho Bastille on the 14th. Attack on the Bastille , This fortress had been used for cen-. turles as a State plrson and was a sym-J bol of arrogant privilege. Besides, it, contained most ot the ammunition In1 Paris. There was a demand foe its sur lender, which was refused. Two men mounted the roof of the guardhouse and broke with axes the chains of the draw bridge, which fell down. Tho mob rushed upon It and ran to a second bridge, to take It In like manner. At this moment a discharge of musketry from the garri son brought the besiegers to a stand; they fell back, but filing at tho same .line. Thero was an attempt to set fire to the building. The French Guards brought up cannon, and the assault wentv forward In military f-rm. The garrison replied with volleys ot grape. De Launay, In command of the garri son, selzetj a torch to blow up the fort iebs. The garrison prevented him and obliged him to surrender, The entrances were thrown open. The people rushed in. A young woman, beautiful and trem bling, came forward; she was seized and about to be burned, when a brave soldier wiested her from the hands of the mob and conducted her to a place of safety, At that moment a bloody hand raised above the head3 a bunch of hair. It was the queue of De Laun.y, whose head had bean Just struck off. This was the answer of Paris io the threat of armed force to dismiss the As sembly. The court was beaten, and sur- rendered. The next day the King walked to the Parliament House and announced the withdrawal of the mercenaries. The French Revolution had begun. 'WINNING BRITAIN i Baseball has at last obtained a f.rm foot ing In Unsland, having been popularized by the Canadian soldiers. The great American game ought to serve the good put pose in Great Hrltuin of beiu its' the people t forget their troubles. Newburgb, Journal. WHTJufTiiiriirifinn