11 r t pmm$ aSifti $ PITBUG LEDGER COMPANY I- CSRBff If. jt CURTIS, FasBttssr. UPITORIAD BOAJlDl , P. H.HALBT....... ........ ....., .Editor jfeW C. JCAItTINt. General Business Jtahster MMMwd dtlr at Pcstio Lkxim. nutldlnr. cbnwal.,,, Broad and Chestnut Sireeta vuKfttHtHtMlTHfUflim uuiiamc ...........200 Mttfopolltan Tower .......,.... B2n Elnrri rtnlMIn. e. ...... ,,109 Gloee-Ormocrnl: Bolldlns S. .,.,... ..,,, ,1203 Trltmiw Bulldlna; NEWS DOllEAtJS! ffWort Dofan....,,....,nlt Hulldlnr F1 To Brewc ...... .The Time Hulldlnr fJMX Bwiuo... ,60 FrledMebstrsaa. I"" Bctti.0...,,,. Marconi House, strand PM Bcu.. ....... . .sa Hue Louis U Grand BUBScntPTIOM TETtMS f riarrter, .sut""enta r weelc Br mall. jtlJ outalda of Fhilauelnhla, except where Jerelsni poauca la required, ona month, twenty M wntat one rear, three ntollara. All mall aeeertptlons parable fn advance. Kmksb SubaerlWa wlahlnie Addreea chanted t tl old aa well aa new addresa. Wtt. WW WALNUT KET3TONB. MAlH 30Oe k tT Aidreat all communications' to Evening r Ledger, Indtpendenc Square, Philadelphia. Isamsa it Tna rmuDzirim rosrorrica ai f BBCOSD-CUSS nut, umiL few Tea Hil remain three or four xreat appro priation bills to be whipped Into shape and passed, and several extremely con troversial measures, Including the ohlp purchase bill, wilt take up considerable time, fortunately for the country, the longer this Congress remains In session the more certain It becomes that a more capable Congress will be elected In No vomber. Tho country has had about enough of Democratic Inefficiency, and Is ready for a ohange and a return to Republican rule, which, with all its faults, Is directed by men with experience In government and with a realization of tho proper functions of tho State. EVEHlNa LEDGEIPHJXABMJPHIA; TUESDAY, JULY 25, Iflita t- , ., . i . II,,. , ! Tom Daly's Column TUB AVERAGE NfiT PAID DAILT Clrf- CtTLATION OP TUB EVBNINO LEDQEIl FOR JUNE WAS 123,808 PMtaJatpUa, TnMlir, Jotr SJ, Hit. HetHe you not heard it told full oft, A woman t nay doth ttand for nought? Marlowe, War has been declared on all the little gamblers. "What does a child labor bill amount to,, anyway, If tho Southern Senators don't want It? Holland has Issued an orange book, and Belgium remarked somo tlmo ago that Germany had handed her a lemon. Tho ordinance appropriating $9,000, , 00 for completing tho Parkway has been signed. Now let the Parkway bo com pleted. ' Loyal Phlladelphlans aro sure that Mack will get thoro after a whllo, but they welcome tho chance nevertheless to aeo .tome basobalLr Tho -Phillies aro back In 'town. Tho Bremen Is long ovorduo and tho Deutschlond delays her departure. Is It possible that these two subs failed 'to get tho Berlin report of tho Jutland battle? NIBBLING FOR MOUTHPULS TT WAS pointed out, boforo tho war had run a year, that the grave peril to Germany lay In the adaptability of her enemies. Every German success of method becamo a sourco of danger, be cause tho Pledged Allies were swift to learn tho trick and managed, before long, to turn It on their teachers. Examples of this lronlo truth are not far to seek. The armies of Franco and Germany met as exemplars of two dis tinct theories of open warfare, and In a measure tho French triumphed. The open squaro was able to resist tho mass formation. But boyond that Germany had thoroughly and Franco had Insufficiently and England hod not at all developed trench warfare Yet so rapid was tho ab sorption of German tactics that before tho first winter had closed In the Allies had mastered the rudiments of that stylo, and by this tlmo aro equal to the Ger mans: Tho French, at the beginning of tho war, still hold somo confidence In the old-stylo fortress, although on tho great retreat Maubouge was shunned as the pestilence by tho English. Germany had placed her faith In tho big gun as an Instrument of attack. Today Franco holds out In a fort rebuilt against such guns, and England drives forward with Frnnco through tho terrlblo efficacy of monstrous ordnance. N HEUE'S orto of those things that no body can qulte classify. On July 14, commenting In this column upon F. P. A.'s remark that "until tho soft drink gets Itself n monosyllabic namo It never can llvo In verse," and quoting B. I T.'a re joinder, hurrahing for "pop," wo Bald! "Why not invent a drink to fit? Hore's n hint for somo wideawake bottler.' Fifteen men on the dead man's chest, Yo-ho-hot and n bottle of ZEST. Saturday morning's mall brought a letter from'Now York, dated July 21, on closing a number of lithographed labels, which must liavo been printed or In process of printing when our paragraph was penned. Hero It ono of themt AN OLD WAR BONO My pretty tittle pink X once did think That you and I W6uld marry (mar-ar-rle), But now I've lost all hopes of you, I can no longer,tarry (tar-ar-rle). I'll take my knapsack on my back My musket on my Bhoulder And down to Mexico I will go To be a valiant soldlor. , Whore money'grows on white oak trees, And the rivers flow with branded The hills are lined with ginger bread And the girls are sweet as enndcet From a lettor to the Itlchmond News Leader. BLAVATSKY THE VOICE OP THE PEOPLE a in i in ii a Conditions . in Philadelphia's Chinatown as Found by a Stranger Suggestions for Treatment of "Drunks" V J "It Is a rather strango coincidence," tho letter concludes, "but I must glvo you credit, as I bcllove your Idea was original, as we have not yet marketed our product, but expect to In four to five weeks. J. II. H." TOO MUOIT OF A. GOOD TIIIXO "I want to le an angel" That We heard a fat man sav. "I'm growing wearv of this fat; I would not Uva all weigh." The nation Is as unprepared to re sist the armies led by General What's-Hls-Natno of somo other country as to repel the attacks of General Humidity for tho last two weeks. And now they are charging In Con gress that tho National Guard was mobilized under false pretenses. Well, if it was mobilized to catch Villa the movo was futile, whatever else It may have teen. San Francisco has offered a reward ef 15000 for tho capture of tho man who fired the bomb In the preparedness pa rade. Ho may give himself up with de light at tho discovery that ho Is thought to bo worth so much. Sweetest girl in Pennsylvania be trothed. Headline. It Is not necessary to tell her name, for she lives Irv every community In the Commonwealth, and tho man who Is to marry her know? It very well. Now that Utah's "original Wilson man" has declared for Hughes tho cam paign is well on and the speeches of ac ceptance will bo merely formulae with out any effect on tho situation. But where is tho original Hughes man standing to ay.r A gallant deed, fuU of imagination and courage, comes to light weeks aftor It was conceived and executed. Equal in udaclty to tho voyage of the Deutsch tend was tho alr-crulse of Sub-Lieutenant A. Marchal, of tho French aviation corps, who flew from Nancy to within 60 miles of tho Russian front, cast sweet Impudent nothings over the city of Ber lin and was captured because of a faulty aparlc plug. Let It bo noted that, like tlp Deutschland. this messenger was also ot peace, not of war. "THER things tho Entente has learned '"' from Germany. Tho dotalls of trench warfare, mining, sanitation wero all learned from observation of tho enemy's perfection. These aro Instances which point the moral of tho lesson now" being taught to Germany, tho lesson sho taught slnco February to Franco at Verdun. It was Joffro who spoke first of "nibbling," and tho Fronch and English tried, out that system, only to provo that It was In capablo of great results. Tho offensives of last year, thoso herolo and futile movements which left the enemy unhurt, which caused no change of positions and worked no transformation of strategy, wero all nibbles. It remained for tho strategists of tho Meuso to show to what extent nibbling could bo carried. In essence the battle at Verdun and tho offensive in Plcardy are tho same. The work consists of leveling enemy posi tions, of simply destroying by shell fire all that stands In tho way of an Infantry attack. Ths cost at Verdun Is enormous to tho attacking force, and reports of casualties from England Indicate that this condition prevails In tho struggle for Bapaume no less. But at Verdun the strategy of attack, so far fruitless except for .tho outer lines, lncludod the same succession of bombardment, infantry at tack.fconsolldatlon, renewed bombard ment, -which aro In uso by tho Allies. Tho nibble Is becoming a bite, the bite a mouthful. That Is becauso Germany has shown England and Franco what mag nificent teeth artillery possesses. Flo the Food-Flln&cr OLD GRAY HAIRS, one day last week, lured us from our customary path to luncneon to a certain popular-priced place. "Tho food Is good and the prices are In proportion to the purees of you young Bapllngs," ho said. Entering, tho Old Qcn. tleman hobbled to a certain table. "'Lo. Cuteyl 'lo. Sweetheart! 'lo. Dearie!" It was Flo tho Food-Fllnger who had approached, deftly balancing three glasses of water on her forearm. In due tlmo wo wero served and tho luncheon progressed to dessert without mishap. Something among tho dregs of tho now emptied cofteo cup of Tho Decrepit Ono caught his attention. With an expression of much misgiving, he Inserted a spoon Into the depths of tho cup and camo to the sur face with n full-grown, man's size cuff link. Calling Flo, ho said: "Flo, do I get n rebate for returning this or had I better keep It?" '"Afs all right, Cutey," gurgled Flo, "keep It tomorrow you may get a shirt." W. S. B. Tho hot-weather hints of th'o Child Federation will add to the comfort of dults as well aa of children, if they are acted upon. Every ono knows that you Blight aa well Are a shotgun into the stomach of a baby as to give it sour milk. St la known, also, that filthy streets and alleys are breeders of disease. If the alleys aro kept clean and all decaying matter burned or carried away, and If ths bathtub la used frequently, both comfort and health will bo improved. If ribars !? na bathtub tbero certainly la plenty of water available ton the 'house holder or lodger even In tho humblest surroundings. And mosquito, netting is cheaper than a doctor's bill that must tea paid U a disease carried by fllea Is eontracted. As bad as making political capital ufc of the difficulties at El Paso Is the attempt to .shirk aU honest Inquiry by asrtlng that all the inquiries are no- TitlcaX" The official reports of General JSUs are not hymns of praise, bu they iiiJlcate that conditions are satisfactory. EetUrs from privates, however, are dl. Vt4d on tha subject, testimony being t&eut eo.uaL It would clarify the matter - it the soldiers who complain would tell 4auUly what hardships they are ready ta, wr, what difficulties they are wlll 1mm to assume as part of a Job which is mt Intended, to bo a pleasure Jaunt. The jf trinity for a quick Investigation re satjM, and it Is one which ahoula not, bo ida branny officers alone. Nor by poll- H Mther peraumtoav, TW SeiaacrawFCMMreasmen srho waiUad to git bask homo to fight for re- . fcuscttea are (tfceou rased at tha prospect at beviMT t Way h Washington trotll MMf t They opd to get away by It. Tfaay muU Uav done It U hd sUaM f baiinMr,, but they mufjjy m- -4Ps5FF"fc w w& ppp s" FTIHE mouthful for which tho Allies are now reaching is nothing less than tho retirement of tho Germans to a line far to tho east of their present front. The third defenses are now under fire. There may be a fourth and a fifth. Field forts may spot the entire terrain back to the frontier, and this means nothing but r shells. If munitions hold out the offen sive can go on indefinitely until bad weather sets In. Men, apparently, are not lacking. If munitions fall, the offen sive falls, and with it the prestige of Eng land, tho hope of a definite victory, tho chance to strike a final blow. In no sense should that be taken to mean that If the present offensive suc ceeds, even beyond Entente expectations, Germany will be done. Not even If on three sides her armies were rolled back Into the Fatherland would she be at the end of her rope. The sense In which the blow may be final, more particularly If tho Russian movements into Austria and Germany are carried out, is more psy chological than military. At the end of the first year Germany's morale was In tact. At the end of the second, still un defeated, her spirit is noticeably weaken ing. Wo do not know what the extent of Germany's preparations for a defensive war may be. But the world of human be ings does not offer a race apart, capable of a strain surpassing that of all others. The suffering of internal Germany passes beyond shortage of food. It la the suffer, lag of those who wake from dreams to awful realities. Those who have lived only In tha belief of an Invincible Ger many will not be able to bear for long the spectacle of Germany slowly de feated, withdrawing upon herself, staving off the actual Invasion of her soil. For a year and a half Germany was a united nation in tha war, She la at last sub ject to diasensions aa bitter as thoso of England. Driving those diasensions and their disillusions home will be more effective titan driving the soldiers to the THIS Is reprlntod from "Canzonl" for Mrs. Carollno Robinson Rudolph, who loves a good dog: DA SESTA FRAUD ' A'o kecck mv dogl Hal don'ta dare! For iua' so quceck ioy do, You Mecstcr 'itcrlcan, I swear I brack vour face for jou Ehf Watt Wal, den, dot's alia right, But let mv Carlo be. Cscusa vie for gat excite'; Com' lookt I smlla, sect I want be frand weeth you, cef dat You toanta be my frand, But Carlo cea 6cs frand 1 gat Een all dees blgga land, An' lie ccs flrsta 'Mcrlcan For com' w'en I am blue An' mak' mc fccla Uka man tal cet all to you. "W'en I am com' from Italy, Jus' landa from da sheep, Bom' thief he tak' my mon' from me An' presto he ccs skecp. An' w'en I find ccs gon', Ol myt I scream, I pull my hair, An' justa run aroun' an' cry Like crazy man an' swear. Wen com'sa bceg polcecaman, I ask, I beg dat he Wcell catcha thicfa cef he can He Justa laugh at met I sect een street I am so blue An' justa hold my head An' theenk "lo'at am I gona'dot" An' weesh dat 1 am dead. Bom' pcopla com' an' look, but dey Jus' smile an' notta care; So prctta soon dey gon' away An' leave me scctttn' dere. How long I sect I no can al; I pray, I cry, I curse I bat you eof 1 go to hal J no could feel more worset But while J sect eessom'theeng sof Dat touch my cheek, an' w'en I leeft my hand for brush eet off Ect touch my cheek agen. I look. Ecs justa leetla cur Dat wag hees yellow tall I An' blood ees on hees yellow fur, An' dere ees old teen pall Tied on bayhlnd. Poor JeeHa pupt But steell he leeck my hand. As eef he say to me: "Ohcer up I I gona be your frand." hug heem upt I am ashame" For lat heem see dat he Ees justa dog, but alia same Ees better man dan me. Bol dees ees Carlo, Zleester Man: I Introduce to you. Da true, da ktnda. 'ilerlcan; Da, first I evva knewt Hobgoblins That Scared Us NOBOD5T could ever Induce mo to go down a sliding board Into a swimming tank. I had to dig deep Into the past to locate the reason. In a cor ner of my brain, almost burled under the accumulations of years, I found an old fear. When I was a very small boy I used to frequent the old "bathy," the canvas-covered forerunner of the mod ern public baths, which was anchored un der Callowhill street bridge in the Schuyl kill. On one of my early visits to the place, perhaps my earliest, another youngster told me a horrible tala of how a black man had once forced a razor up through the sliding board and you can imagine the rest. As a matter of fact, tho whole thing was of "imagination alt compact," but I believed it, F,B. Slory of tho Mystic Who Founded Theo sophical Society A cloud of lnccnso smoko rising from the Syrian desert on a night In 1870 assumed tho shapo of an old man with a long, white beard. "I am Illero, one of tho priests of a great temple erected to tho gods that Btood upon this spot," quoth the grim spectre. "This monu ment was tho altar. Behold I" ' Thereupon so tho story goes "a phan tasmagoria vision of a glgantlo temple appeared, 'supported by ponderous col umns, and a great city was seen covering tho distant plain, but all soon faded Into thin air." Two caravans had met In the desert. One had contained tho alleged performer of this miracle, tho first modern woman to gain world-wldo fame In tho rote of tho Great Unknown. Llko tho master of tho mediums, this Bphlt.x boasted of a childhood reploto with abnormal occur rences. Sho was born In southern Russia, amid tho plled-up colling of victims of tho awful cholera epidemic of 1831, and, whllo they wero baptizing her In tho Greek Church, sho snatched a lighted taper from tho altar and set flro to the flowing robe3 of tho priest. Early In her childhood It was claimed that while asleep sho could glvo correct answers to questions asked by persons who would take her hand. Thus would sho reveal tho hiding places of lost proporty and 'twas said Impart other mcdlumlstlc In formation. This uncanny child was Helena Po trovna Ilahn, daughter of General Alexis Ilahn, a noble German who onco settled In southern Russia. When sho was 7 her mother died and sho was sent to Itvo with her grandfather, tho Governor of Saratow. But aftor sho took up her abode In his palaco her govorncss dis covered that sho was possessed of the dovll. Sho went Into trances, scaring tho old Governor into gooscflesh. At tho ngo of 17 Holena married Gen eral Count Blavatsky, a gouty Russian of 70, from whom sho separated after a brief period of domestto unhapplncss. Next sho attempted to penotrato tho for bidden 'boundaries of Tibet, but was turned back by tho fanatical natives. After wandering In India and elscwhcro In tho Orient, bIio returned to Russia, where, at tho gloomy and grucsomo chateau of a certain prince, sho frightened tho noc turnal guests with weird demonstrations of table-tlpptngs, spirit mpplngs, thought readings, lovltatlon and tho opposite phe nomenon making light articles heavy. Returning again to tho Orient, sho visited Egypt and Syria, and finally camo to America, where sho was exploited as a spirit medium undor tho alleged control of "John King," a dead pirate, and much as Cagllostro had founded his Egyptian freo masonry for tho regeneration of man kind, so Madamo Blavatsky, In 1875, es tablished tho famous Theosophlcal So ciety. V Sho now declared hersolf to be a dis ciple of a mysterious brotherhood of mahatmas, whom sho had met In Tibet and who had tho power of causing appari tions of themselves to appear where their bodies wero not. Visitors to her sanctum wero amazed to receive mysterious letters dropped beforo them as from the celling, and to hear alleged communications from tho Tibetan mahatmas. It was said to bo a common ocurronco for a visitor to ask her a questl6n and tho samo day have tho postman hand him a letter under a for eign postmark bearing a direct reply to that question. Blavatsky died May 8, 1801. Sho was cremated and her ashes wero divided into thrco equal parts, buried respectively In London, New York and Adyar, India. Shortly afterward Solovyoff, a Russian Journalist and litterateur, published her "confession," which ho alleged she made to him after he had caught her In trick ery and confronted her at a prlvato seance. This man declared that she not only confessed that her phenomena were fraudulent, but was prevailed upon to show to him the apparatus with which she produced It. But her disciples have always denounced Solovyoff not only as a liar, but as a coward, Inasmuch as he dldnot dare publish the "confession" dur ing the priestess's lifetime. Copyright. Thta department fa tree to oil readirt tcha toin to txprt their opinions en aublrcta of ctirrenf Interest, it It on oucn Jorum, and th6 Ryenlno Ledger imnmfi no reapanalblllty of tna vtewt of itt torre$pondentt. CHINATOWNS COMPARED To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir Like tho Pharisee, "I thank the Lord" New York Is not llko Philadelphia, at least In some respects. For more than a year I have been teach ing In an East Side annex of a New York high school and have frequently gone to n Chinese restaurant at the corner of Pell street and tho Bowery. Sometimes my wife meets mo to go there, and my three-year-old daughter has nlso been thoro with us. It Is perfectly safe nnd respectable. Tho Chinese restaurants of New York havo re cently been found notably clean In a general Inspection by the Board of Health of all eating places. Here for two or three days on business, I thought I would try a Philadelphia Chi nese restaurant For better direction, 1 asked a policeman on 8th street what was tho best ono to go to. Ho told me. "They'll treat you right there," ho Bald. Well, I had my chow main, but I want no more at that place. There were a dozen or 16 girls nnd half as many men. There was tudeal of profanity, mostly by tho girls. Ono sat down at my table nnd offered mo n match for my clgaretto, which I did not havo. As I camo back to my hotel I Baw more girls In tho streets than I havo seen In New York In somo years. What's tho matter with Philadelphia? Brooklyn, July 10. R. C. B. TREATMENT OF "DRUNKS" To tho Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir I read Mr. Glbbonoy's letter nnd your editorial headed "No Purchaso of Lo cal Option." Between you and him It seems about a draw, or. In othor words, both aro right In somo particulars. But tho way I look at It, the Idea Is to find a way to prevent pcoplo drinking to excess and still not hnvo actuat prohibition. This Is purely a question of moral suasion, Jurjt tho samo as persuading pcoplo to eschew coffee drink ing or Bmoklng, by showing them that In many canes It Bhortcns life and makes for a wholo lot of misery. To begin with, no person under tho Influence of IntoxIcantB should bo treated ns a criminal and locked up with a thief or a fighter, ns Is usual nowadays. I think a long step forward would bo mado If people arrested for being drunk and disorderly wero detained only until thoy wero thoroughly sober, Instead of being Bent to prison nnd then allowed to go on the promise to report overy three dnys for a "once-over," ns we say In slang. I think It is about tlmo wo practiced n llttlo hu manity In dealing with such cases, becauso It Is not tho Individual who sutlers tho most for his weakness, but all who know htm, and particularly .those who may bo de pendent on him or doing business with him. This rum question Is probably the most Important In tho world, and because It Is so wo aro In duty bound to settle It rea sonably and Justly. Some of us that are so strong ought to remembor our brothers that aro weak and not bo so hot to con demn them. Wo n'll havo a weakness. If It Is not In ono sense, It mny bo In another. If It docs not trouble us now, how do wo know when it may appear cither In our selves or thoso "near and dear to us"? JOHN J. FLEMING. Philadelphia, July 22. them cut nnd sent, and also sent the fillings which kept a number of women closely con fined making them. I still have one whlcn I treasure. Dr, J. Leonard Levy, now of Pittsburgh, was Instrumental In helping me to have them distributed. I would advocate such a movement, and If there Is any support I will gladly aid to" the utmost. NETTIfi B. ARMHOLD. Atlantic City, N. J July 22. THE LAWS OF THE LAND The field secretary of the Chamber of Commerce of "the United States, Mr. Ed ward Tref, has been counting the laws passed by Congress nnd by tho State Legis latures in me mat live years. Ho reports a grand total of 62.2BO. The contrast with the number of laws pnssed by tho British Parliament In 10 years, 1B00 In nil, Is cither painful or magnificent, ns you choose to view It. To Mr. Trefs It Is painful. Ho suggests that we, the people, nre "law crasy." Perhaps ho has not taken Into account tho fact thnt an American legis lator measures his statesmanship by -tho number of bills ho gets passed. "At last this district tins come Into Its .own," tho hero tells tho voters. "I havo secured the passage of the bill permitting the talcing of Boven-lnch porglcs In Buttermilk Brook on rainy Tmxadnys In Mny. In splto of tho opposition of the bosses I havo put on tne books n statute nllowlng nolBelcss bou quet holders to be placed on motor cars costing less thnn $883. Send mo back nnd I plodgo you thnt I shall not rest until I have passed a law abolishing sharp corners on dog biscuit" What would happen to h. legislator who went homo nt the end of a session nnd Bald to his constituents: "I did not mako a new law, but I voted for tho repeal of C3 Idlotlo ones, and I hope next year to prevent our nugUBt body from passing any laws nt nil'? lie-would be stoned ns n-stand.pnttcr nnd obliterated as nn obstructionist. Life will not bo porfect until each citizen has n code of lawyer-mado law npplylng to himself mono. New YorK Bun. OUR WESTERING LITERARY CENTER Riley and the Indiana School Have Broken tho Tradition of New England Supremacy riTHERE was a time TOhen Now TCncrtnnrt reproduced not only'tho shoes and stock ings, but nlso tho poetry nnd philosophy of all America. Long after tha center of popula tion moved across the Atleghenles nnd Into Indiana, there still throvo tho old tradition that nothing that was really great could como from the pen of men who did not llvs within tho liter nry shadow of Longfellow, Emerson, Holmes, Thoreau, Whtttlor EjF'laP' Wzfyi jffm1 1 sssW VIM7 J M&WIm THE COMING WRIST WATCH Now, howover, slnco preparedness has become tho watchword nnd timepieces havo become a necessary part of tho equipment of soldiers, tho wrist watch Is changing. Tho objectors aro now willing to concedo the value of' a bracelet watch for general outdoor life, but havo not quite reached tho point where, after poking fun at It, they can consistently adopt It for-all occasions. New York Times. DEMOCRATIC STUFF One evil which tho Republican party's calamity experts will not fall to fasten on tho Dcmocratlo Administration Is tho np- pcaranco of man-eaters In northern wntors. Whether this Irruption Is duo to tho low tariff or to tho President's Ineptitude nnd vnolllatlon or to the general cussedness of Democracy wo cannot sayj but certainly It Is something horrifying, and even Wall Btreet views It with alarm. Now York World. What Do You Know? Queries of enteral ntreal will 6 antwtrti In liii column. Ten Questions, A aniwm which every well-informed person thould knots, art atkti dally. RED TAPE It takes some such emergency as the mo bilization of the mllltla to bring out the extent to which "red tape" may bind up men and property. In the early hours of Tuesday morning, practically two entire regiments of men with their rifles, blanket rolls and other equipment were waiting for the trains in Framlngham. Worn out with the long day of breaking camp, these boys were on lawns, porches everywhere. Grace Congregational Church and the State Arm ory stand side by side on Union street, Framlngham. Though built by the Com monwealth for the mllltla, the custodian kept the Armory locked up "no authority to open It ;" while Pastor Forest opened the church and his home, and won the lasting gratitude of the weary soldiers. 'Red taps has no terrors for the man of God. Boston Transcript Honorable Mention May I call your attention to Conductor 903 on Route 13, for all-round polite ness? Thanks. if. Dear Tom That fellow who writes to yoa once In a whila and has so much to say about "thrift" ought to saunter along down by the Franklin Library at Juniper and Locust There he -will see a bed of it la bloom. What? "Thrift" It looks fine. Maybe it he talks nice to Jim Douglas, the superintendent he may get a sprig or two for his buttonhole. This Is the only bed I know of nearby. I used to collect It on the rocky upland of the seashore when I was a kid. botanizing, between Aberdeen and Stonehaven. 49 years ago, Tha Latin rmme s ArmerU vulrris. Johnny Glbb, AFTER THE WAR Whole cities will have to be rebuilt, stores will have to be stocked, railroads con structed, agriculture resumed. There will, of course, be a readjustment of labor con ditions. Women have entered the industrial field speedily and successfully In the war ring countries. But the hope and necessity, the unquenchable human entemrlse aro all here. The unlimited resources of Mother Earth are still with us and will be after the war. After all, Isn't the aggressively opti mistic man nearer right than the people who waste their energy anticipating calam ity and doing nothing to prevent it? Hard work always accomplishes more than loud walling. Tacoma Tribune. GOOD TIMES IN TEXAS To the Editor of Evening Ledge: St Wo arrived here July 6, after five days and flvo nights of tiresome train riding, but nevertheless a fine trip. All of opr boys arrived hale nnd hearty. Just as they were tho day they left Broad and Washing ton avenue. The climato down hero Is very hot, but wo havo a cool breczo nt times. The nights wo can't complain of, becauso somo nights are very cold. Some of our boys have been sick, but not seriously. Wo havo In our company Frank Daley, a very fine tenor, who keeps the spirits of tho boys up. Wo nre going to glvo a minstrel show under tho direction of "Butch" Rodgers, who Is well known on tho stage. Thero will bo boxing and other amusing feats. Kid Roche, of South Philadelphia, Is going to entertain the boys, and his part ner, Young O'Donnell. is going to help. Both boys are very fast and aro known In tho tournament class. Frank Ganonln, known In the boxing rfng ns Pat Riley, who halls from tho United Stages Navy, Is also going to be thero strong with the cloves. Most of theso boys are from 19th nnd Dudley. John Shonert Is going to play tho muslo with his accordion, and John Munco is also going to sing. There Is going to be a wrestling match between Sergeant Seidell nnd Fred Krumm, which promises to bo very exciting, as these are our huskies. Our company Is proud of Its three ofllcers. Captain W. Fantom, First Lieutenant Wes ley Long and Second Lieutenant James Fow ler. Wo also have a very fine top soldier In the person of Sergeant William Boyd. We can speak very highly of all our non commissioned officers. Manuel Green, the company's young poet, tried to spring a raw one and almost got murdered. We also have a baldheaded squad in our tent, which consists of Walter Schaeffer, known as "Baldy from Darby," and also Joe Long, who Is nlso from Darby; Harry Buchanan and Joseph McKay, from Sharon Hill. These boys send their best regards to their many friends In Darby, Sharon Hill and vicinity. We all will be glad to get back once more In P.hllly, especially Jimmy McDermott, who expects to get mar rled. We feel sorry for Jim. HAnRY BUCHANAN. ' JAMES McDERMOTT, JOSEPH LONG, JOHN MUNCH, MANUEL GREEN. WALTER SCHAEFFER, JOHN SHONERT, FRED KRUMM, JOHN ROACHE. Company M, 3d Regiment, N, G. P, El Paso, Tex., July 19. QUIZ 1. What is the Ornnro IJookT 2. What la the IVnol n'rlth? 3. Name some of tbo States in ths American "irnln belt." 4. What Is the "Latin Union" In finance? B. What Is meant br camaraderie? 0. On salllnc veela, what Is the function of tlie "jrnrdV'? 7. What la meant br the (xln "to ro to Cnnonaa"? 8. What are Immortelles? D. What la the Aucabnrc Confeailon? 10. What la meant br "Golden Ate"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Hoard of Mediation nnd Conciliation! n Fed eral board designed to settle disputes be tween labor and capital. 2. Liquor llrfn.es aro laaued fo'r one jenr In Philadelphia. 3. The Lrzallata Jnnta Is an orxanliatton In 101 I'aao orcanlzjnt n new part? In Mex ico, called the Leiallata partr. 4. Traulrr are flahlnc reaaelai the method of eatrliliic llih which thrr rmplor la that of jan intra 10 wiucii milieu anort lines are attached nt Intervals. S. Hacklier horse! not tboroatbbred, bat nearly so. 0. Indian lllei ono br one. 7. "Glided youth": tho rich and fashionable 3'ounc Unmarried men. 8. The Iberian peninsula! Spain and portaral. 0. The Kohlnoon one of the larcest known dia monds, now ono of the llrltlsli crown Jenela. 10. Itupee! an East Indian cola north about S3 cents. SUBMARINED Our new battleships ought to be modeled after Mr. Daniels. The projectiles of the navy never penetrate his armor. Charles, ton News and Courier. WASTE -Probably nothing els so saddens the practical politician's heart as the thought of Henry Ford's money lying Idle in tbla epochal campaign, Ohio State Journal HELP AT HOME To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir During the Spanish-American War It was my privilege to have taken a double course of lectures on first aid, and after receiving my diploma I was ready to go to the front, but my family persuaded me ,not to go. Being eager to do some work, 'the I thought occurred to me to do convalescent work In Philadelphia under the Emergency Aid Committee, of which I was"n organiz ing member, We opened a convalescent shelter on 4th street near Callowhill. The work we did was to take the boys from the various hospitals after suffering from ty phoid and otner levers upon tnelr return and keep them until they were ready to be furthered to their own homes, and then we returned them to the hospital whence they came. Mrs. wary uarr, a nurse, assisted me in taking charge of the shelter for three months or more. There were 360 boys cared for. The work was wonderful and, to my mind, we did better work than had we gone to the front One benefac tor among very many others was J. D Lit, who each day Bent us as many new, crisp dollar bills as boys were leaving that day, and Mrs. Barr and myself Invariably slipped Into the dormitories of the boys during the night and placed a bill In their pants pocket. It is needless to say that they all came in penniless. Dr. Justin Schwerln and Dr. Slg. Cans also assisted us. If such a shelter could bo operated In Atlantic City It would be marvelous, aa there Is not a spot on earth equal to it Ground owners, I am sure, would donate their ground a put up tents, eta Then, in the full sense, could we do prepared work. Our energy then would net be misplaced. Durlag that time the lata J. J. Snellen- burg donated thousands of housewives, had More About Ice Cream .Editor of "What Do You Know" Ona of your readers recently wanted td know about the origin of Ice cream, and you pub lished one correspondent's Btory about Dolly Madison's (or was It Martha Wash ington's?) cook leaving cream out In the cold nnd having It frozen. I should like to add this to your symposium: Many persons think thnt Dollv Mnrllann Invented Ice cream, but Thyrn Samtcr Wlnslow, writing In the Illustrated World, declares that Dolly Madison was merely the first person to servo It in America. This was at n White House reception dur ing the administration of President Mnrtl. son. Tho guests, liked Ice cream so well that they asked how It was made, and from this small beginning the Ice cream business has grown until, according to a creamery expert who has followed the de velopment of tho business In America, thS American people last year consumed 250, 000,000 gallons, which, figured at 80 cents a gallon, means a business of 1200,000,000. The first Ice cream was made by a London confectioner named Gunton, and from him others learned to make It, and It was Intro, duced to America by Dolly Madison. But his methods of freezing were crude and uncertain. It remained for Nancy Johnson, the wife of an American naval officer, to Invent the Ice cream freezer. Today tho Ice cream business has outgrown the small freezer. Vast quantities are frozen bv . clal machinery. The Industry has become sa great that fortunes have been made out of it And every year It Increases, During mo moi icu yeurs wio consumption of ice cream in the United States doubled. In the northeastern States there has been a steady growth for jnany years. Tho southern nnd western States like Ice cream, especially In the Bummer, but iri tho northeastern States it has become a winter as well as a summer dish, although, of course, much more Is consumed In the summer. When ice cream became the national dish the manufacturers demanded better dairy prod ucts, and they have done much in the cam paign for clean milk. The rise of the in dustry also created a large demand for flavorings, soda-fountain equipment, etc., and It Introduced a new And profitable fea ture Into the drug business. It is estimated that the average consumption In the United States Is 60 dishes a year for each person. L. J. July 4 T. K. L. -The reason tha auniinn .. asked at all Is because there seems to be a general Impression that the Declaration of Independence was signed on the th of July, 1776. The Declaration was promul gated on that day, but was signed later that summer. Municipal Pier G. J. At the Municipal Pier In Chicago, recently opened, the orchestra Is paid by the city. For each danca the officials col lect 10 cents, and this entitles the dancer to the two encores which custom allows. Chevalier d'Eon C. X. The Chevalier d'Eon was a famous French spy who assumed woman's clothes for purposes of disguise and be cause, paradoxically, be desired to be con spicuous. He died In 1310 at about 83, having kept up the elaborate pretense of being a woman to the end, partly, It is said, because the King of France ordered him to do so. Louis had been giving him a pension of several thousand pounds yearly, but did not want him back in France. In England his Intrigues had to do with the attempted restoration of the Stuarts. J. W. 1ULEV nnd Lowell. As Into aa tho 80a nml nn. tho average American parlor was not completo without two beautiful gilt-edged and exactly similar volumes, Inscribed wun tho magic words "Longfellow" and "Tennyson." That summed It up. It waa orthodox to bollevo that thoso two wero tho master slngors of Now England and Old England, nnd Now England meant tho United States. Tho Boston school tool: itself very soriously. It patronized Walt Whitman and took Bret Harto lightly. How pon dorously self-Impressed it was with tho grave responsibility of being tho solo ropresentatlvo of tho Muses In America Is illustrated In an anecdote of Mark Twain's youth. Ho told at a dinner, whero all tho great men wero assembled, of throo tramps he had mot In tho Far West Tho tramps, said Mark, had do scribed themselves as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Theso three worthies, instead of laughing heartily at this llttlo Joko on themselves, sat in mournful ollonco and nover cracked a smllo, whllo tho other guests wero stun, ncd by Mark's lrrovorenco. But when thoy wero all dead tho Joko turned on them all tho moro. Just as Tennyson ceased to bo read In England, sO( thoy ceased to bo read by tho pcoplo of Amer ica; no great school took Its Inspiration from their work, and tho famo of a lot of fine, Ignorant, Intelligent fellows from tho West thickened tho dust upon their Bholved volumes. Poo (who In England's opinion shares with Whitman tho Amorl. can poetic lnurels) resented tho New England primacy, and used to remark of contemporary poots that "If ho had boon born In Now England ho would bo considered a great poet." James Whltcomb Riley, whoso passing brings a real sorrow to all America, was ono of thoso who broke tho tradition. Llko Whitman ho had no cultured sur roundings tho wandering' slgn-palntor and minstrel had nono of the college man's viewpoint which was distinctly of tho Concord atmosphere. But right horo It is nmuslng to noto that tho poet of tho soil In his waning years got tha motion that his fame would rest upon his "pure English" verso nnd not on his dialect poetry; so deep-seated Is tho aca demic superstition. Robert Burns had tho samo Idea about his solemn English verso. Riley, In recent years, used to rectto to his friends with evident prldo his poem "Moon-Drowned," which ho seemed to bo llevo waa one of the richest things ho had done. Hero Is a stanza: The far away Hit of the waltz rippled to us, And through us tho exquisite thrill of the air; Like the scent of bruised bloom wns her breath, and Its dew was Not honoycr-swect than her warm kisses were. Wo Btood thero enchanted. And oh, tho de light of Tho sight of the stars and tho moon and tho sea, And tho Infinite skies of that opulent night of t Purple and gold and Ivory I Of course, no one observed to Mr. Riley that this sort of thing was far inferior to his homely verse. In 1013 he Issued a volume of his "straight English" poems, frankly copying tho stylo of the Oxford book of verse. This Is called the "Lockor blo Book." There was another strange dlffidencd In his nature which made him long believe that tho namo "Riley" was too common place for a pen name. Of the many pseu donyms that he adopted beforo his fame was assured, "Edyrn" was the most ambi tious and fanciful. There were many merry meters signed "Jay Whit," and "John C. Walker" and "Benjamin F. John son" are other noms de plume. But as a matter of fact no namo but a common place one could have gone so well with tha great poet of the commonplace. Shadow Over nis Last Years It was poignant for the friends of the poet that he who had expressed so keenly the sharp merriments and bitternesses of life should have been destined to a lamed and lingering retirement from therru Death, whose shadow ho beautified and softened, did not play fair with him. For the last seven years of his life he was gradually losing the use of his right arm and leg. But he was a most cheerful suf ferer and kept always his Jovial note of camaraderie with his friends, who on vis its to his home in Indianapolis went with him on long rides in his auto, Riley, who ' never married, was particularly dependent upon the society of friends, It waa a source of regret to the poet of child life that he had no child of his own. A re markable story he used to tell in connec tion with the death of one of Bill Nye'tf children emphasized the pathos of this lack In his life. One night he could not sleep and was Impelled, he knew not why, to get up and write the poem which contains this stanza: - Fain would. I be of service say something Between the tears that would be comfort ing But ah I so sadder than yourselves am I, Who have no child to die. Later he learned that at the very mo ment when he waa writing the lines Nye waa writing to him about the death of the child. ' MINES The statistics say California baa 658 mining properties, of which 277 are gold. Iiuo diners an wa aunu wc .customers In vest In. no doubt Cleveland Plain Dealer