jaVr -.gt-v jr g-JfW 3" R:. BVEOTNG kEDGER-PmUADELPfilA, MONDAY, JTOY 24, 1916. gj. jaE&tiBSlljUaUBK I Cftwrttfhg 2 falser sy-y fei?- 3SI b-iaie IPWIUC M5DC.ER COMPANY fWll H. it. fcUimS, Psasmieift. fbi Jf, t,dinfton. Vice Frenldentt Jofch .tttteratatV and Treasureri Philip 8. i, John M. Williams, Directors, Wirmnii. tomim? b"Wj, .JWlwl. Id Coma, Chairman. ! wHAtdST.sw .,.. ....... .,,.., .Editor rv-MftK & MARTIN, , General- Business Manarer nWUfcM any at Poatia teMra tlulldJnt. -JMfodanc Square, JPMIadelphta. (MniUiitiBiMi end Cneottut Strata Jpe Cm. ,,,,,,.. free-tttton Bulldlnr To:.,.,,...,,,a09 Metropolitan Tower V.. .......,.,,,,,., ,.828 ford Bulldlflg Eli, ,,..,. ,409 Ofooe-Uemocrat Itulldlnr .......... ...liv j-notitr umiainx KBWB BUnBAtlSf tfwroM Bontj.,.,.... ....Weirs Bulldlnr 'Tots IltniKiD. ,,...., .The Times Building- i-tlf BciBAtt-... ....... ..SO Frldrlchatranff DMOO.f KOKltin. ....... Mrrnnl HollM. Stnnd Pi Bnittn. ...... .,..32 Hu Louis l Grand . atJBSCntPTIOK TEBM8 ,r essttW, he cent per.wwk. Br mll, fetp!4 outside of Philadelphia, eieept wher lns?(rn oeatar 1" required, on month, twenty t centaf on year, three dollare. All mall mbw.rlpUona payable In advance. , Nortce ISubeorlpers wtshlna; addreaa chanjed must sir old a mil aa new address. MICJO ifeS wtt, mh vAtmrr KEYSTOrtK, MAW W 1 etT'Xddrw all eemnvunlcaHoMJi to Evening I latetr, Indtpendrno Smart, rhlladtlphta. ( kKinio r ins ritiLiDtirnti rosromos as trcpHB-tutt Mill, mitim. HB AVERAOB NET PAID UAftT Cm- CUIaATION OP THE EVENING LEDdER FOR JUNE WAS 183,80s Sri Ihosa p.pera? And, alnca they passed between allies, will the world be able to bellovs In them implicitly when they art published? Thosn questions can be asked how that the madness and the futility of Austria's demands have beon proved; now that Serbia, dominated by Austria, Is more Independent than ever now that Europe Is looking hopefully and con fidently to the day wherf the rivers of blood shall be cleansed of their stain. For tho outcome may not be a defeat for the Teutonic; Empires, but it can no longer bea Victory for them, and Austria, tyrant or tool, has already paid the price for her folly. The week that Is to come contains tho most momentous anniversary of mod ern times. The Serbs, who for centuries celebrated Kossovo Day, will In time have reason to celebrate this second and more disastrous day. It may bo the true day of liberation. Tom Daly's Column -p MIDSUMMER RAINBOW CHASING ThtUddpUa, Hands. Jul 34. Ml. 7"m best of thine beyond their mtatnrm cloy.- Pop. , Sid any one expeot the du Fonts to favor a Federal tax on explosives? Tho next best thins; to going Into the country la to visit Falrmount Park on Sunday, as tens of thousands of Phila delphia have discovered. Asbury Park is going to have the President as an attraction, and Ocean Grovo la doing Its best to indues ths next President to make It a visit All Swedenborglana are now won dering what provision John Pltcalrn made In his will for continuing the work on the splendid church at Bryn Athyn. Does poetry pay? "Wey, of all her citizens Indiana loved James Whltcomb Riley best, and In' the hour of his death renders In sorrow the trlbuto that to him living she did not fall to pay. Director Datesman says that the average per capita consumption of water Is 180 gallons dally. When wo think how Uttlo water some Phlladelphlans drink, we wonder at the capacity of tho rest of us. Detective "Wlater, new head of the vice squad, is said to hp an order man, meaning that ho does idbat ha is told to do. Is that disposition so "rare" In tho police department aa to causo comment? Tho editor of tho American Archl tact protests against putting all the or nament on the street front of residences and neglecting tho rear wall. What Phil adelphia builder will set the fashion of making tho rear of his houses architec turally attractive? William Sulzer, the effervescent ex Governor of New York, has at last found a party which is not too particular. It Is called tho American party, but If It expects to poll many votes on jts name it Will not go far. Tho Issue Is pre-empted. And the supply limited. Mayor Smith played Haroun al Raschld tho other night. All unknown, he passed through his city. He" was not recognized. It looked to him, he said, "as If everything were closed up to night." Ah. well! Not even the great Caliph saw all things tho .first time. A quarter of their million-dollar campaign fund has already been raised by tho Prohibitionists. If they can con vince the Democratic) National Commit tee that ex-Governor Hanly can draw 200,000 Indiana Republicans to his sup port, they may be able to wheedle another quarter of a million from the treasure ehest of ths donkey. The garment workers', strike In KercV Tork Is virtually settled. It lasted twelve weeks and resulted in a compro i mlso with whldh neither side Is wholly satisfied. It has done little to prevent further friction. It brought untold misery to the strikers, threatened the manufac turers with ruin and New York with the Joss of a great industry. While our eco nomic system produces such a phenome non - are hardly entitled to a great de gree af self-satisfaction. The desperate and despicable crime which brought murder to the prepared Ksa parade In Ban Francisco Saturday was apparently the work of those who ara such enthusiasts for freedom that they are willing to murder others whose fr4om Is displeasing to them. To pro test against the slaughter of war, they conceived and executed a slaughter of laceful citizens. A sinister phrase. "itrct action," occurred In the threap nt to newspapers before the crjme was eMlttd. and the police, who should tm fasriftar with the moat, frequent advo- cafeM of the method ao described, will not MA a due. In New York socialists and ajtarcbista both, use4 every propej- means to fWerdit the parade, and it would seem ggeltefc, to accuse either organization of thU crime. But wa shall still wonder what iSjtMlM were sa weak as to become un blnsd by arguments against the little jMparanes entered late by this coun- Up and what hysterical persuasion mag. aind It into militarism. n fm yar ago today Srb!a waa CMMittetfix tb most outrageous demands w wmia hr m pUoa upon another. V?MV?tr waiting" more than threa waalta,, b4 tinliwd to aveng the MtpjMUp at the Arenas by a dras. ArtM tfcl Ut all tisa deftaafl pu V t-tr tm. fmhmtu Sarw not 'oat int. tft MttmQtnMaa tmiwom Bar VlBW frsa Jhpm it ta Attgroat immmM v 4r hmm TT MAY be true, as Vance McCormlek has sold, that if President Wilson can poll tho vote which he received In 1912, plus 25 per oent of the Progressive voto of that year, he will be elected. It Is cer tainly truo that unless he can poll his 1912 voto and 25 per cent of the Pro gressive voto ho cannot bo olected. The Progressives cast 4,119,000 votes four years ago. Mr. Wilson received 8,393,000 votes. A quarter of tho Pro gressive voto would give him this year a total of 7,300,000. But no Democratic candidate for the presidency has ever received tho support of that number of electors. The highest Democratic voto on record was cast for Mr. Bryan In 1896, and that was 800,000 short of tho total which Mr. McCormlok In these midsum mer days professes to bo expecting for Mr. Wilson. The highest vote which Grovor Cleveland polled In the three cam paigns when he was a candtdato was only 5,556,000. Alton B. Parker received a little moro than 6,000,000, and tho last tlmo that Mr. Bryan ran he polled 116,000 moro than Mr. Wilson received in 1912. One will search the election figures in vain for ovidenco that there are 7,000,000 voting Democrats In tho country. Tho Democratla opposition, however, that Is, tho Republican or the combined Republican and Progressive vote, has not been less than 7,000,000 slnco 1892. Mo Klnley was supported by 7,104,000 voters in 1896, and four years later he polled 103,000 moro votes. In 1904 Roosevelt received 7,623,000, and was elected by the largest popular majority slnco tho be ginning of the Republic. But Mr. Taft, In 1908, polled 65,000 moro votes than were cost for Mr. Roosevelt and moro than, doubled tho voto over Bryan by which McTClnley defeated the free-silver advo cate In 1896. Coming down to the last presidential election, we find that tho com bined Taft and Roosevelt vote was 7,go,ogo and tho wuson vote was 6,293,000. Here Is an adverse majority voto of 1,311,000. Mr. McCormlok assumes that many Democrats voted for Roosevelt, and he Is doubtless correal. He must bo aware, also, that many Republicans voted for Wilson. The fact that for four suc cessive campaigns the Republican voto passed the 7,000,000 mark and that the combined Taft-Roosevelt voto was about what the Republicans were entitled to expect in 1912, while tho Wilson vote was less than ths Bryan voto at Its lowest, seems to justify the assumption that ths Republican vote for Wilson would offset tho Democratla vote for Roosevelt. The fair inferonce to draw from the figures and tho facts Is that Mr. Wilson will poll the nornjpJ Democratla vote this year, and that the normal Republican vote will bo cast for Mr. Hughes. That is, this would be a fair inference If Mr. Wilson had not alienated thousands of Democrats by his course In office and had not made It im possible for any Republican with respect for his country to fill the depleted Dem ocratla ranks by voting for the con tinuance of an Administration that has been actuated by economio purposes con ceived for the benefit of foreigners and moved by foreign policies that have made many red-blooded citizens hang their heads with $hame. lit LOCKERBIE STREET Jamta Whltcomb niley.tha poet, died lata Sat- Srdajr nlaht at hie homo In Lockerbie street, In lasapolla. " In the quaint Uttte ttreet, far rom noise of tho town, Soft at petals of rotes the Babbatht come down, But never before have ihote whispering trees Taken Sabbath Uke this front the dattm risen breetet Sorrow's telf lavs' a finger to Up when thev meet, For there's crape on a dooroelt in Locker bie street And the tun that was wont, for this manv a year, To peep into a window flung wide to its cheer, Finds the casement ciote-shuttered and blank at the wallt; And the gold of the momlnc dejectedly falls On tho streamer of gloom and of tnortal defeat, For there's crape on a doorSel! In Lockerbie street. Ahl the dear, tender tplrtt, so gentle and mild, That had given but jolt to the heart of the child, , Uere at last wrings the tears from tho innocent eves: For each fond little neighbor's awed glance of surprise Melts to grief for the friend whom no more thev shall meet For there's crape on a doorbell tn Lockerbie street. Ahl but Lockerbto street, you are fixed and secure And for ages of sunshine vour name shall endure. Through yju shall como shining the jay of the morn, And musio to oheer generations un born, For tho song of the singer Death cannot defeat, Though there's crape on a doorbell In Lockerbie street. .TiV"ttAVT0 PUY .THIS AMERICAN PfRM ON- . MV" -. ."... .-.f uurcit!..)! THE BRITISH BLACKLIST saAHflsar iff atial H-lfa BflRl arV I PUUW JWtflBhk'ikjW Mil ffltlrvl -. -" BVUaataataMhBCW BUW 1 -Wll IlliaL' IWl jWTB 1 liKhf sHk I LaVaaVaaVaaVaaffaafel JsSaKlTmllM I Vs.WaJeaRTTT JaVaaffaHala I effaaVaaVaaHaVaaVaHaBRaljaaalaaVaaVa vJIr4HJH yBKKmswsmln&M THE blacklistbd AMERICAN FIRM HAS TO BEAR HEAVY DOUBLE CROSS. "Good-by, Jim: Take keer of yourso'f.' qr. The Anxious Letter Writer (Received by a local ooal dealer) IR MISTER CONER what Is tho rls- son for that 1 ant cum by my cole3 yet it lss a mlstak or somelng worso agon. 1 pado you toosday sloven dolor and 1 anCgot no recite and my wife sho think 1 plays fool with her and the money, maybo you meek mlstak with the nura mer. for 1 mooved and maybe you sont it where 1 ant no moro. if so plecso dont but sent It where 1 am now and obllggo. Wmm a e rlTiiaUPilMiMiiM IT f iWlWaWli jjWiii 1 CP - ? :r'S?-i5. 17, ' ZZZ&' "-"aaamcy. -- --.;1 MILE ,J- ''t?s?5riwL-,-' !. T. i." . . 1 " . P,??LZti - w rj TVlE 6RIT. SHI FLAG- AS THE BLACKLISTED AMERICAN FIRM SEES, IT. sV WW? U'-:rvt A Wo hope tho gentleman In tho Routo 42 car on Saturday who relieved our journollstlo sister across tho way of her purse, containing J4.98, twenty-four two cent stamps, receipt for & rug loft at the cleaner's and check for a skirt to be plaited, was benefited by the book of fn.ee powder papers hg also acquired. Boyhood Reminiscences HIS name was Jock Frasar, but they called hlra "Hlllney" because he was the tenant of the farm of Hillside. Ha had gone through the bankruptcy court three times and came to be a kind of a Joke among the neighbors. Finally this hnp pened the fourth tlmo and there were loud guffaws from near and far, as well as walls from the too couCdlnr. A neighbor met him coming along the road one day after this. Sez he, "Hillvn. Hlllney, I hear ye'vo gaen broke agin." "Aye, man," Hlllney answered, " It's verra true. I'm sopry to say." "An' how muclilo d'ye think ye qrm pay this time?" "Weell," sez Hlllney, "I canna see how I could pay malr than a shlllln" in the poun' an' keep mysel' safe," He was some thrifty man was Maister Hlllney. McNABB. ? -. ;? v - Copyrlrht. 1010. John T. McCutcheon. WHO IS MARIE CORELLI? Gossip Says She Is Mary Cody, Daughter of an English Artisan. Her Biographies Make Count Corelli Her Father By JOHN ELPRETH WATKINS INDIANAFOI.I3. Ind.. July SO. The Pro creeilv party In convention here today adopted a platform and nominated a complete State ticket. Thomas A. Dally vri nominated for aovernor. Newa Item. Without butting into politics, of which we know little, we yet rise to our feet to say that this gentleman should have his "1" knocked out. TUB GOOD OOODT ONE Boyt know good mothers by tho score. But more than all they prize Those mothers who are noted for The goodness of their pits. MADAMS X SPACE IS STILL CHEAP The Deutschland'a Deck Passengers If it Isn't too late, Judd Lewis, of the Houston Post, wishes to contribute the world's okra crop for the Deutschiand, which, sez 'e, "ought to help her to give her enemies, the slip.',' For musio, A. L. T, nominates the Frankford Accordion Band. Why not e. staff artist? Well, there's R, F, Out cault, says J. S. II., and Lex Talionis suggests A. B, WenzelL WHAT Philadelphia needs more than a City Planning Commission is a commission to carry out some of the ad mirable plans that have already been made. Yet If the proposed commission does its work well now there will be less for the next generation to undo. The suggestion that open space be pro vided about all new houses built in the outlying wards Is excellent. The pride of this city. is Its individual homes for mnE new Ledger Building-speed its families of moderate means; but builders X coming! will be one of the wonders nave gone a uiue too xar in ineir errorts to crowd a great numbe? of small house Eavesdropped on the Border "I always understood Captain B had quite a fighting record." "So he has. He always fights fiercely against any attempt to have him assigned to duty In the field." In a small space In soma sections the back yards are so little that a good-sized tablecloth is almost big enough to cover them. Land Is not so expensive as to niake such niggardly use of it neces sary. It la customary In Brooklyn to cut the land up so as to get sixteen lots, twenty by one hundred feet, out of an acre. With land worth only ?1000 an acre. It would seem as If it were cheap enough to make it possible to build houses with alda yards on lots one hundred feet deep without making tha cost too -great for the average raecbanlo who buys a small dwell ing. After tha regulations for light and air have beeq agreed upon, consideration can ba given to plans for small parks and park-like streets, well payed and lighted. 7ho householder would much rather pay for these things in his tax Uli than go without them and be com- jl ta pay thr or four times a mum, to tea fleeter when fete family fails m;Waa;ii'i! at uwfciwiajj' styrreundjEss. of the world. In the making of it, wa are reasonably assured, there will be no egregiouj architectural errors. When ths present Ledger Building was erected n 1868 it was tha talk of tha town, and tha printers employed on uther papers, so old Dan McKamara used to tell, fell all pver themselves for a chance: to ''sub" for a Ledger compositor, merely for the privilege of enjoying for a night tho modern conveniences to be found in the new building. That was CO years ago, How the world has advanced since) The room In thlch we are sitting Is probably Sfj feet long by 20 wide and it has 10 win dows In it Also, it catches mora beat on a July day than any other spot we know of, We never realized when wa first came into the room what tha elaborate flre-esgpea outside tho windows were for, but now wa have some notion. Peer ing from the -window it does seem to us that tha alley at the bottom of the fire- escape s cooler, some day we may go down ther and tit In a puddle and write aa imaginative) bit about a inormfn la tha cool sea waya, rpHE quaint English town of Stratford-Xon-Avon has been the home of two literary enigmas. One of these stilt lives there today, and of her the British "Who's Who" states that sho Is "of mingle Ital ian and Scotch (Highland) parentage and connections"; that sho was "adopted in Venice by Charles Mackay, the well known Bong writer nnd litterateur, and brought up during childhood in' Eng land"; that she was "afterwards brought UP in France and educated in a qon- vent. So relates the authorized Biography of Marie Corelli, author of "A Romance of Two Worlds," "Vendetta," "Thelma" and other popular novels. Fuller biog raphies state that she was the daughter of Count Corelli. an Italian. On tho present site of Wallack's Thea tre, New Tork, there used to stand a tobacco shop and factory, conducted by one Henry Cody, Ten years ago, when this industrious man died, certain news paper reporters got a clue that he had possessed a deep secret, In search of which they are alleged to have ransacked his rooms and to have purloined his pri vate correspondence. At any rate, they obtained evidence Indicating that he was a brother of ths genius who has long wielded her facile pen under ths name Marie Corelli. But that novelist, when appealed to, dented tho relationship. However, tho search was continued and mora recently has led to an English achoolhouse at Elm Grove, Southsea, Hants, where has been discovered a mod est schoolmaster, Sidney Cody, Esq., brother of the lata New York tobacconist. The school of this unobtrusive British teacher was, found to bear the namo "Corelli House." Testimony of ner "Brother" The New York' tobacconist, Henry Cody, had a friend, James Brier, whose intimacy with the Cody family extended bfcck a generation ago when ho visited that humble family In England. At ths tlmo of the tobacconist's death Brier wrote to the former's brother, the school master, in England, and received In reply a letter which ho kept wscret until tho recent death or the mother of tho little family an old lady whose alleged loyalty to the daughter, who, It is claimed, repudiated her, was such that she Jeal ously guarded the family secret and will ingly deprived herself of tha honor of having given to the world a popular novelist According tq James Brier's statement, he visited the Cody family in London In 1877, bearing two letters of Introduction. Tha home was that of a modest London mechanic. He met among others tha sister of his New York friend, Miss Elinor Cody, and distinctly remembers his sur prise at being introduced to a very in. teresting young woman, whom Mlsa Cody presented as "Marie Mackay, my sister." According to his statement, when a few years later he heard this name mentioned in connection with tha authorship of a successful novel, he was assured by his friend, Henry Cody of New York, that the novelist was his sister. According to tha story as written by Sidney Cody ten years ago, bis father land hst of Marie Corelli) was "aa hard work&st a mart as you could find In & long day's Journey." But this poor arti san's family soon outgrow his purse. "So," related the schoolmaster, "I sup pose in a time of distress, or crisis, our sister was adopted by Mrs. Mackay. Thus her environment changed and sho lived, as it were. In a literary atmos phere which fostered and doveloped a fine intelligence." Speaking of his mother, he stated: Mother's Pride In Her Daughter "Sho dotes on our famous sister. I be lieve the dear old soul would declare her self that she was not her daughter If Marie desired it. So we all long to let It rest. I foolishly named my house after her, but I see where she was a sufferer from 'mauvtse honte, and you may bo euro she was little pleased at my natural desire to honor her. But I have let the name stand, seeing that Coreltl was an old Italian musician. The name was good enougli for an educational establishment. Her nom do plume was, no doubt, borrowed from the same source, only poor old Corelli was not an Italian count or very probably he would not have been a musician." Commenting upon tha purloining of his dead brother's "family secrets," Sidney Cody added: 'You had better oonslgn this letter to the flames or some day like fate may befall It and Marie Corelli may suffer in consequence." But Marie Corelli has persistently re pudiated all of these claims of relation ship. Snobbishness is very seldom an accompaniment of literary genius. Her authorized biographies are all noticeably vague concerning her origin. They omit any statement aa to dato or place of her birth. What is the truth as to her parentage and why should she conceal itf (Copyright.) PROGRESS Those who believed Secretary of tho Navy Daniels Incapable of learning any thing wlJJ kindly take notice tha?. he ha,s asked a navy expert for advice and has published It Six months ago a navy expert who offered him advice narrowly escaped a court-martial, had his advice pigeonholed and would have been driven out of the navy if the country had stood for it Salt Lake Herald-Republican. What Do You Know? i Ouerlti o central intiml wilt be antwrtd In Sfll column. Tin cues Horn. Ine aneuere I which every uelMnormerf certen ihould dM, cr atktd datlu. QUIZ 1. Wlmt I' the Ilonrd of Mediation and Con ciliation? 3. ror how tone nro liquor licensee lsiued In riillmlrlplim? 8. mint la the Xeiallita Junta? 4. What nro trawler, the Drltlth reetels that nppenr 10 oflcn in tho newa? 5. What 1 mrnnt by "hackney horees'r 0. What la "Indian Hie"? 7. To what da doea the expression "elided youth " refer? s. What la the Iberian penlmnla? D. What li the.Kohlnoor? 10. What la u ruope? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. "rarbolled" : abbreviation for "partly boiled." 3. Dlaclc Foreat I In eouthweatem flermany. In aouhern Unden and western Wnrttemberi. 8, Senllkirn floods wrre ranted by orerAowlns of etreame swollen by torrential ralna, 4. J. Frank Hanly i Prohibition candidate for 1'resUent. fl. Mqpltlona rerenoo . bill t Administration raeaauro to tax the output of munitions factories. 8. "Owl" cars and train I thooe Tannine be tween about midnight and 0 a, m. 7. Gounod wrote tho opera "Faust." 8. Ilurklnr stool i a chair on the end of a beam In which common acolds were ducked In a pond. O. Immtrratlnn rfra in mn Immln-.p. , Ine a country ne ndoptsi cmff rullon to an emliramt.'a leavlnx his natlre land. 10. Oarrotlnr i a Hpantih form of execution, a cord oeUir tied In the neck and twitted with a atkk till strangulation ensues. NURSERY REFORM RHYMES Riddl want to recall whole Atlantic City oommUtlon. Newspaper headline. Hey, diddle, diddle, ex.Mayor Riddle, the voters Jumped over ths moon. The little town laughed when the talk was of graft the commish ran away with the spoon. New York Sun. BEING HIS MOTHER Being his motherwhen he goes away I would not hold him ovsrlong, and so Sometimes by yielding sight of him grow oh, SoauIck of tears, I Joy he did not stay To catch the faintest rumor of them I Nay. Leave always his eyes clear and glad, although Mine own. dear Lord, do fill to overflow j Let his remembered features, as I pray, Smile ever on roe! Ahl what stress of love Wiou giveat ma to guard with The this wlset Its fullest speech aver to bs denledl Mina own being his mother I AH there of Thou knoweat only, looking from the kia A when not Christ akwe was crucified, Junta Whltcomb Riley, Copyright by Bobb-JTsrrUl Corasmy Denmark's war With Prussia fldtfor of "TVhat Do You Know" Will you please give me an account of the war between Germany and Denmark? When was It? s. A. This war occurred In 18i. On the death of Frederick VII, Christian of Schleswlg. Holateln-Sonderpurg-Glucksburg ascended the throne under the title of Christian IX, in conformity with the act known as the Treaty of London (1862). by which the European Powers had settled the succession to the Danish throne on him and his de scendants by nis wife, Princess Louise of Hease-Cassel, nleca of King Christian VIII of Denmark, With Frederick VII tho di rect Oldenburg line had expired, and at his death tho question of the succession to the duchies acquired an Importance which It had never before possessed. Schleswlg and Holsteln declared for Prince Frederick of Augustenburg. a scion of a branch of ths Otdonburg line, and appealed to the Qer. mania Federation for support The Ger man Diet sent an army into Holsteln. Prus sia and Austria had in the meantime con certed with 'each other to take the settle, mant of the Schleswig.Holsteln affair Into their own hands. Christian IX. reflecting upon tho way In which the cause of the duchies had beer) betrayed by the German Powers In ths war of 18481891, and relying upon the support of England, allowed him self to be dragged Into a war single-handed with Prussia and Austria, whose forces advanced Into Schleswlg In February, 1861. After a brave but utterly futile, attempt at resistance, ths Danes saw their country overrun by tho troops of Prussia' and Austria, and by the treaty of Vienna (Oc- toner ay, isoi were lorcea to submit to the terms exacted by their powerful foes, and resign not .only Holsteln and Lauenburg. but tha ancient Crown appanage, of Schleswlg into the hands of the two Powers. Grant'a Tomb R. L. M. 'Nsw York city formally took into its keeping, on April 17, 1887, the memorial tomb and monument of General Grant, erected by the subscriptions of 80, 000 persons. The Age of London Editor of "What Do You Know" Was London settled by tha Romans? About how old Js the city? K. H. T- There was probably an, ancient llrltlah town on the site of ths present city when ths Romans visited England. It appears to have bean resettled by the Romans about 43 A D. and Ludlnium, or Londlnum. called also Augusta, was the capital In the last part of ths Roman occupation. After the Romans departed, about IllA, p., and In ths early Saxon period ths history ot Lon don is obscure, though there weia bishops of London from ths seventh century. It was Plun4&4 by the Danti asd rsUHH by Al Irtd ,ii Athtiatan. OPTIMIST WHO NEED OPTICIANS' Survey of Remarkable Instances of War Foresight Manifested by Some Astigmatic Prophets ' PSYCHOLOGISTS of the future will have a chapter that does not appear In contemporary works. They must tell about the rlotabto outbreak of "optl mania" that accompanied the Great War. That will sound vsry much like some thing to do with the eyes, and won't bs far wrong at that, for It is the misfor tune of many of the contemporary super optimists that they cannot see clearly what Is In front, of their noses. The optl- lists referred to are those who spread re jorts of a prompt end of the war because of well, a varied assortment of bo causes. One of these is that the Allies have ordered from American firms a number of eteel brldffes to be put over the Rhine to facilitate the invasion of Germany. This must be cheerful reading for men In tha trenches, who know the cost of every ad vance. The correspondent In his pleasant room in Paris breezily strides into Ger many with seven-league boots; but the sol dier counts his progress by the yard. Paris Itself, tho disillusioned, has little time for such optimism, as a recent car toon In Lo Rlro shows two grimy and wounded soldiers are lurking In tho black pit of a deep trench with she'.Is bursting overhead, cynically grinning over n news paper which tells of dashing heroism at tho front In the same vein of fancy as tho vision ary bridges over the Rhine la another story In which thero Is probably mora truth that the Belgian Cablnot Is busy nt Havre drawing up plans for the recon struction and government of Belgium, in anticipation of thr "speedy wlthdtawal of the Germans," In view of tho tremendous task ahead of those who actually havo to undortake tho dislodging of tho Germans from Delglum, this "now3" comes as a grim Joke. It would seem that thero would bo plenty of time to consider tho reconstruction of Belgium after there was some assurance of tho construction on Belgian soil of a native government. Equaled only by their faith In tha starvation of Germany Is tho touching confidence of the superoptlmlsts In "tha German revolution." So persistent have been the predictions of a general rev olution In the Fatherland to stop tho war that there nro actually a large number of rcasonors who take that revolution as an accomplished fact, rating tho sporadlo bread riots as tho first events In the great revolt. Yet If tho lesson of history teaches anything It is that there Js very little of the revolutionary spirit in tho Gorman blood. The only tlmj the Gor mans roe ngalnst their rulers was In 1848, when revolt was In the air all over Europe, but tho Teutons' uprising was feeble. It Is only In military nations like France that revolutions are bred; the Germans are not a military people; they are only a militaristic people. A Pipe Dream From Greece , In the way of dreams a la pipe few equal for fantastic detail the story which a professional writer conceived In tho days when the isles of Greece wero Just beginning to show what the wiles of Greece could be. Venizelos had been re turned by tho election, but Constantino refused to grant him the premlerKjjijv thereby denying tho democratic character of the Greek constitution. Regardless of the animosity which this writer knew to exist between the Greek Crown Prince and Venizelos, he told the story of an Impending revolution, in which tho Crown Prince was to march upon the Imperial Palaco, capture and dethrone the King, make himself King, with Venizelos as ' Premier, and throw the Greek army in with the Entente. Thero wasn't a reason In tho world why this shouldn't have hap pened, except that It couldn't havo hap pened. But it made one pro-Ally happy for two days nnd he never prlntod the story. In anotner vein was tha story of a French bombardment of Nuremberg two days before war m-as actually declared. Official reports have come, recently, from German sources, denying that this hap pened, and a German publicist has mads public apology to France. That was a pretty serious dream, because It was made part of the official reason for tha war. Less serious Is the notion of a cer tain widely known Phlladelphian, even now abroad, who reported emphatically, several months ago, that the windows on the Champs Elysees wero already being sold at a premium for watchers of tha grand triumphant parade of the Allies at the end of, the war, Apparently, this story has been heard in Germany, because a recent, Issue of' a humorous periodical showed a renter insisting that even if the parade didn't coma off, the Germans might be watched in their entry over the same ground. "Well, Hungary was supposed to revolt against Austria the very moment the war was declared, and that was taken In all sobriety as part ot the weakness of the Central Empires, The corresponding weakness ot Britain, with Its Irish ques tion, was a little more realistic. But we have still to hear of Albert being crowned King of France and Belgium, a heroic bit of Imaginative work which was reported long ago, He was to hava been King as a sop to Belgium, and to be without power aa a sop to French democraoy, It was Ideal, but it hasn't happened, and there was no billion dollar paid to Germany for evacuating Belgium, and the boys weren't out of the trenches by Christmas. They were unhatched chickens, these Ideas, and ever-receding horizons, and pots of gold at rainbow's end, but some how they' made life easier. Each eld had its favorite sport. Each took con solation from things known to be Im possible. Anxious for the Germans to Win, your pelghbor read the wild story, Which h.e didn't believe, of Italy's ad herence to the Alliance. Eager for an Entente victory, you read that Rumania, was already In the war. You felt a cer tain gush of feeling for "that great leader and democrat," Take Jonescu, of whom you had never heard before, and your neighbor was suddenly taken with ad miration, for RadWayoff, s-lthough, he momentarily forgot who he was. And neither of you read far enough to Jtara, ib truth wbea it came. G. S. Y, M m Vi' m :. .' wj