aTrl 'T 10 tenettfhg Ueiigitf Public ledger company f- crnus ii. it culms, rawioKti. ' tJmfl If. Ludlnitton, Vice Frenldentt John ft Martin. Bimtnty nd Treurerj rnlllp B. Colllrn, John n. Williams, Director. rbiTontAtj noAnut 5Tts H. K. Ccetii, Chairman. t It. WlIAL.Kr... ............... ......Kdltor OIU a MARTIN. .General Hiutneaa Mann re r I rubllihM dtlljr nt Pen to Lrrce nuttdlnr, r ' Independence Square, Philadelphia. Lirjoin CrtTiut... .Broad iind Chenlnut Street ATLANTTO C1TI. .......... .TrM-UIHon Bulldlnr Nw Toik........ .....200 Metropolitan Tower Dmtorr. .tl.ltl.lllll.ini .82n Ford Itulidln nulldlnc HulMIng St. Lome. ...... ..400 Olooe-Demoeraf llulldlnc Cntaiao. ........ 1202 Tribune NEWS BUREAUS: TVAanttorojt HcmcAD.,.....t....nitit Jlulldlnir NRir TOKK BcctAU.t ..... .The Time Building JIMUN Hdhab... ......... .00 FrledrlcMtrae IONDOt Horiau.. ...... Marronl Itoiiso. Btrand Fjbm Ecr,i0...........32 Hue. Louis la Qrend v , subscription TEnMs iij currrer. mix. crmi rrr wkr. ij iiihii, noattAld outnlde of Phlladelohla. aueir. except whero fortltn postnee Is required, one month, twenty; . iwemy All mall rl cents; one year, three dollars. subscription payable In advance. NoTien Subscribers wlahlne address chanted must five old as well as new address. BEtL. 1000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 I CT Aidrtss oil csmmnnlcnllons fo J?rln7 r Ledger, independence Square, Philadelphia. I , ,....-. I iiimcD at ins riiiMcrtrulA rmorr!ci is f BCC0ND-CUI9 MAIL MATTIS. TIIH AVERAGE NET PAID DAItT Ctn- CUI.ATION OP THE! EVENING LEDCJEn FOR JUND WAS 115,80 PhlliJdphla, Wcdntidaj, Atoit 2, 1918, If all the year were playing holidays, To sport would be a tedious at to work. Shakespeare. The Now Torlc Trlbuno's article on "Tho Dccllno of tho Lawyer" docs not refer to fees. When Mr. Hughes breaks tho sl lonco ho makes a nolso that can bo heard from tho Atlantic to tho Pacific. Thero Is a widespread opinion that tho reason for tho removal of tho Stato Entomologist lies beneath tho surface. Tho President's acccptnnco speech will not bo as long as Mr. Hughes's. In th"o words bf tho dlmo novel, llttlo ro mains to bo Bald. Tho ladles who play golf on the Cobb's Creek courso ought to know that high heels oro as much out of placo thero as sport shoes In a ballroom. Provost Smith evidently struck flro when ho said tho Unlvorslty needed $20,000,000. Tho Alumni Association Is planning to ralso a quarter of It, Philadelphia Is building ono new garogo for every ten now houses. Now that a touring car can bo bought for $360 It Is likely that wo shall build ten new garages for every slnglo now house. 'A Spanish woman crops up In tho news as tho villain In a bandit raid. It 1b only a few days slnco tho Spanish undo fraud worked right hero in Phila delphia. Roland Morris admits that the his torical Democratic tariff position was wrong. Tho country had condemned It so many times that tho wonder Is that ho did not discover this long ago. A phenomenon to which we are not qulto reconciled Is tho unanimity of opinion among the Allies that they will Win tho war. Tho only thing which gives us the same hopeless feeling is tho unanimity of opinion among tho Central Allies that they will win the war. Are thero any storage houses for munitions In or near Philadelphia? Aro they properly guarded against accident or intention to destroy? Is every safe guard for tho city being taken? Is tho law being scrupulously observed? These aro questions to which an answer may be given now. Otherwlso a very definite answer may come later on. Tho Deutschland starts on her hazardous voyago homo with nothing but good wishes. She has stayed long onough In our port to make us feel friendly toward her. We wish to'seo hor again, and many of hor fellows. We cannot forget, on command, that her stepsisters havo strewn the scaa with our dead. But we are willing to wish her bon voyago and to wonder how much longer Ger many will hold out In the war which drives her commerce undersea. By a, singular oversight nothing appeared In the papers concerning the fall of Verdun, which took place yester day. The American press Is so dominated by the Entente that It refused to take the Crown Prince's word for it. It ia true that the Crown Prince missed it on April 1, and on several dates since. But he Is a gentleman and a member of the Infallible, dlvlne-rlght Hohenzollerns. The "Fatherland" ought to look into this serious case of lese majeste. The Senate caucus did well to cut off all extraneous amendments from the child labor bill. The fate of that bill must be decided definitely on its own merits, and skilful as politicians may be they are not justified In placing the Immigration bill with its Intolerable literacy test In the same offering for the President's signature. A Republican and a. Democratic President have vetoed the literacy test. It has no standing. And the certainty that President Wilson would veto It again was the motive for attaching It as a rider to, the child labor MIL The trick Is a bit too low, evert for such a time. The explosion In Jersey City on Saturday night has been followed "by the usual demand that a law be passed to make such things Impossible in the future, as though explosions could be prevented by a few words printed on a piece of paper. There Is doubtless law enough already to compel the exercise ot jumper caro In the handling of explosives. What Is needed, more than new statutes. It a proper realization, of the risk In the business and the exercise of constant vliiance. They say that the explosion Via caused by a Are In a barge tied up to th pier where It had no right, and tfcat the barge was there because Itr tntr M H wt to pay a fee of ?$ tcr IMkttnm or $ ee soswrtWRr of t wH navir? kb tavst!aH3 1 to discover tho truth; but, assuming that there was no plot, there was carelessness and neglect somewhere- or the thing could not havo happened. Tho punishment of those responsible) for- tho neglect will do moro to prevent a repetition of tho dis aster than can bo dono by tho passago of a wholo volume of new laws. Every ono familiar with the subject knows that ex plosives can bo handled with safety If proper caro Is exercised. Tho explosions In tho munitions factories hereabouts havo been caused not by careless handling of tho completed product, but by some accident In tho process of manu facture The armies abroad havo handled millions of pounds of explosives without accident. Thero Is no need of any city working Itself Into n panic of fear. SIDE-SWIPING THE COASTAL TRADE THE Administration ship purchase bill, conceived by Mr. McAdoo under con ditions which no longer exist, If they ever did exist, has been amended Into a hybrid eort of thing which has fangs without vonom and is likely to provo as useloss as It Is unnecessary. It has offered tho Democrats, howovcr, an opportunity to nchlovo by cunning a thing which thoy havo been endeavoring for years, directly or Indirectly, to accom plish. Thero Is a law which prohibits any ships oxcept thoso built In America from engaging In tho coastal trade. For generations that law has stood on tho statuto books, its inspiration originally having been ho oxpcrlonco of Great Brit ain and other marltlmo nations. Although this Inhibition has prevented no man or sot of men from engaging In tho trado by conforming to tho requirements of tho statuto, tho Democrats havo boon pleased to bellevo that a monopoly existed nnd that It behooved tho party, In pursuance of Its wrecking policy, to drive this mo nopoly out of business. Thero was ono sure way of doing It, and that was by substituting a foreign monopoly, for it was apparent that opening tho trado to any ships, no matter whero built, would drive natlvo American Industry off tho coast, Just as American shipping was driven off tho high seas by tho fatuous policy of administrations, Republican and Democratic, which wcro fooled Into be lieving that tho way to rovlvo and nour ish shipping was to hobblo It. But tho American peoplo wore too shrewd to bo decelvod. If everything else was lost, they still did havo their coastal ships, and thoy Intended to keep them. So they re fused to sanction legislation devised to dony tho coastal trado that protection which for decades it had enjoyed and under which it had flourished. But now tho cunning of tho Democrats asserts Itself. They havo seen in tho shipping bill an opportunity to attain their purpose They have Inserted a seemingly innocent clause authorizing tho Government to purchase foreign ships not only for tho foreign trade, but also for tho coastal trade. Tho plan Is so simple An Amorlcan citizen cannot buy a for eign ship and use it in tho coast trado, but under tho proposed law tho Govern ment could buy such ships, lease them to tho private citizen and so accomplish the ono thing against which American senti ment and policy havo been set for a cen tury. The President has declared that tho re habilitation of the American merchant marine is a prime necessity. Leading members of his party havo so expressed themselves. There Is not, wo believe, any American opinion which Indorses an op posite course. Yet hero we havo a scheme to strlko at the very heart of what marino we have, to drive it from the seas and destroy the nucleus around which must bo formed the new marino wo are so anxious to get. The ship purchase- bill, tho very thing which is supposed to have as its purpose the restoration of tho flag on the oceans, is being used as tho instru ment for the prevention of that identical purpose. If It is not trickery, it ap proaches it very closely, Unless the Democratic party Is to con vict itself of bod faith, or even of double dealing, it must Join with the Republi cans In excising from the pending bill this wholly indefensible and inexcusable clause. The President could not, wo be lieve, knowingly indorse it otherwise. Nor should our local trade bodies be backward In forwarding their prompt protests against this legislation, for its text is a cipher that spells ruin for the American marine and for American ship yards which havo only Just begun to thrive. HUGIIES IS FOR EQUAL SUFFRAGE TUTR. HUQIIE3 has placed himself 1VJ. squarely in favor of woman suffrage. He has not dodged the issue as Mr, Wilson has done by Baying that it is a matter for the States to settle. He has raid that the Federal constitutional amendment should be passed by Con gfitpB, submitted to the States and rati fied by them promptly. This declaration will doubtless bring to his support all the ardent women voters In the Commonwealths where the right of suffrage has already been granted, and It should lead all the male voters who favor the reform to unite In his support In the States where women do not vote. The declaration of Mr. Hughes In his telegram to Senator Sutherland Is the kind of a statement that was expected from him. He does not believe In dodg ing the Issues. He dodged none In his aUmlrable speech of acceptance, and he Will face the muslo when he begins his campaign on the stump. If the country doea not know now where ho stands on All the vital questions it will know before Ua VQUajr besta EVENING ;LEDGERPHILA013LPHIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST1 . . .- , i -- - 1 1 - ' Tom Daly's Column HEIMWAERTS Good luck to you, Deutschlandt May your journey's end bo all your gallantry dcservcsl But It's too bad you didn't havo' room aboard for nil your friends hero who do ungrdlant things In tho dark. WHEN wo wcro in Portland, Me., tho Dthcr day wo saw 4ind heard ono of tho great organs of tho world. It Is tho Kotzschmnr Memorial Organ, installed In tho auditorium of tho new Portland City Hall by a promlnont Phlladelphlan whom wo shall not mention by name, Blnco wo do not wish to bo called down by tho business department for advertis ing htm; nnd wo might easily bo con victed of such a desire, being, as wo are, tinder obligation to hint for a very pleas ant bontrldo recently. Wo may say, however, that after listen ing to the organ for an hour wo wero convinced that It beats tho Wlster Park Accordion Band all hollow. H. Shanor endeavors to nmnago tho Ledger Athletic Association. Ho hat his own troubles. Bill Cooper Is ono of his pitchers. Bill Is n graduate of the Penn sylvania Institution for tho Deaf nnd Dumb. Shanor Is not, but ho has to know tho sign languago In order to tell Bill how rotten ho Is and how often. Shancr Is rapidly learning tho language Tho other day Bill was particularly 11m burgor. Sltnncr told him. But Bill Hashed this nllbl on his weary lingers. "Say, I know I'm somo bad today, but It's llko this: My arm's dead becauso I had to address a deaf and dumb mnss-mcet-lng last night." Editorials In tho T. R. newspapers on tho speech of nccoptanco yesterday morn ing reminded us somehow of dear old Jim Riley and his poem about tho "Squldgy cumsquccs 'at swallor thclrsclvcs." OUR most distinguished contrlb abroad. Dr. Maurlco Francis Egan, Mlnistor to Denmark, sends us thl3 sonnot written on tho occasion of tho Shakespeare cclo bratlon at tho Castlo of Kronborg, Elsl- noro. Fine I Come again, Doc. Vrcdcrlk haa gone, strong Christian and the brave And hardy soldiers that kept well this place, Sons ot the Vikings! facing that proud race. The icarUKe Stccdest No longer on the icat'e Ships fear thts fortress; peaceful rip- pies lava The strand where English James was wont to pace; Here young Prince Hamlet showed his morning face Uefora he saw the Shadow from the grave. This house is Hamlet's though he never trod , Its stairs, or saio Its figured tapestry; Sect here's Ophelia's violet, that sad flower She loved so well, and from the tender sod It springs, u7icrc. fair and unpolluted, she Immortal lives through the great rod's power. MAURICE FRANCIS EGAN. Handing It to the Neighbors (Ad In Hulmevlllo Delaware Valley Advance ) I, Leonard K. Cox. a citizen of tho norough of Ynrdley, wish tonotlfy tho residents of said borough that I am at tending to my oun business, and that It keeps mo busy, nnd when I rcqulro tho services of any resident to attend to any of my personal affairs I will so notify them. This nottco Is published In response to a persistent rumor that I am to be married on July 20. I nlso wish to ndvlse tho gen eral public that If I do get married It Is none of their business and that I am per fectly capable of managing my own affairs without assistance from tho residents of the boroUBh. LEONARD IC COX. Yardley, Pa, July 19. 1916. EDUCATION INCOMPLETE The fellow xcho brags of his college And all his great learning's a bore. The man xcho Is proud of his "knowledge" Is badly in need of some more. A avouch. Next to reading the efforts of n "for eigner" to write Irish dialogue, the thing that wearies us most Is the stock story of the Irish soldier who "surroundered" twenty or more Germans single-handed. Go Down Amonjj the Flowers Will you not go down among them? Among those sweet living things whoso new courage, sprung from the earth with the deep color of heaen upon It, Is start ing up In strength of goodly spire; and whose purity, washed from the dust, Is opening, bud by bud, Into the flower of promise; and still they turn to you and for you, 'The Larkspur listens I hear, I hear! And the Lily whispers I wait," John Buskin (Sesame and Lilies) 1819. The devil is mortally afraid of roses and larkspurs and lilies given to us for joy and tho healthy love of the out-of-doors. Go down among the flowers, my children. McTAVISIL I work and sweat, my clothes all wet; For goodness sake It's hot I I cannot wo whero cool winds blow Such Joy Is not my lot. My winter's dope was full of hope Of summer at tho shore. But many bills and sundry tils Took all I'd saved and more. So still I slave and try to save WUh tbrl(tlness and ears Front every pay to send away The sneclcols 1 can spare, Far from the heat of city street Tho wife and ktd have fled: When they set back, alas, alackl x tear msy-ii una mo aeaa. Vf L. Bacrey, TOUNQ MAN -wanted for outside work, who can row a boat and make himself aenerally useful on sentleman'M summer residence on Toms lliver N 1. APDly this evenlnz. etc Where Is the young man to row the boat on the gentleman's residence? In the gutters? Q. W. D. Amputate Ankles Close to Ears Sir One pf our children came in the other day, craxy with the heat, and asked me if I wouldn't please prepare for dinner: oiled bunions, pawed sUars, petnon He chewed etlcken, - cozen frusUrd. , - . What would you do? i ? AUXIOOa MOTHER. mm ,k rtMmxM. JlP I ik 0f wMmm9 MILLIONAIRE FOUND DEAD IN BED Although His Lawyer Was Convicted of Murdering William Marsh Rice and Then Pardoned, the Cause of His Death Is Still Unexplained By JOHN ELFRETH WATKINS THC autumn of 1000 William Marsh 1 R Rico, a millionaire Texnn, 83 years of age, lay 111 In New York city. IIo was attended by his regular physician, Dr. Walker Curry, a practitioner In high htnndlng. Rico died nnd Doctor Curry Issued a death certificate, giving bron chitis and senile decline as the causes of death. Tho body was embalmed In tho usual manner with a fluid containing formaldehyde. Thero was no hasty burial. Indeed, tho corpse was held for 45 hours after tho embalming. Rico left about J8.000.000. Two wills wore found. Ono had left tho estate In trust to a man In Houston, Tex., for tho founding of an Institution In that city for tho education of negroes. But Just before Rico's death ho drew a new will in tho presenco of two witnesses, both of whom havo slnco sworn that they saw him sign it. This Inter will changed the trustee ship of tho estate, giving It to Albert T. Patrick, a young ' New York lawyer, whoso father had been freight manager of a railroad In Texas owned by Rice, at whoso advice the young man had como to New York. The Valet in the Case Tho morning of the old millionaire's death Patrick appeared at tho bank of S. M. Swlnson & Sons, New York, and -pre-sented several largo checks purporting to have been signed by Rice. A defect In one of the checks caused suspicion, and Rice's home was called upon tho tele phone. Charles P. Jones, Rice's old valet, answered nnd stated that the check was genuine, but the bank Insisted that Mr, Rico should give his verbal approval. Then tho bank was Informed that Rice was dead, and an Investigation followed. Tho trustee under the first will came to New York and interrogated the valet, Jones, a weakling, whose contradictory answers caused grave suspicion. Jone3 was arrested, given a third degree, and under that ordeal stated that Patrick had killed Rice by the administration of corrosive sublimate and other poisons. The case was called before William Trov ers Jerome, then a Magistrate and after ward District Attorney, Patrick was held and an autopsy on the body of Rice was ordered. This autopsy was conducted at the morgue by Dr. Edward J. Don nelly, Coroner's physician, and the well known poison expert, Professor Wltthaus, later examined the viscera. Nothing un usual was noted in the body except two small patches of "consolidation' at the back of one lung. According to sworn testimony, the Coroner's physician, after examining these patches, stated: "The old man must have had a cold," and Doc tor Wltthaus, on being offered the lungs, stated, "They are of no use to me." After Professor Wltthaus had taken the'vlscera, all the other remains were cremated. Ac cording to the testimony of Robert Au rich, the attendant at the morgue, a phy sician connected with the prosecution had remarked: "I wish I knew more of micro scopy. Then I could make a pot ot money out of the Rico case," After bis examination. Professor Wltt haus reported an absence of poison In the viscera and a few days later the story of Valet Jqt.es was changed. He now swore that Patrick had not poisoned Rice, but bad smothered the old man with a FINDING THE RANGE I ,1 ri X pillow, but when cross examined tho valet again changed his story, stating this time that ho had, at Patrick's Instigation, placed over tho faco of the sleeping Rice a towel containing a sponge saturated with chloroform. Medical Experts Disagree Patrick was brought to trial for tho murder. Coroner's Physician Donnelly and Dr. Hnmllton K. Williams, who had nsslsted with tho autopsy, went on tho stand and sworo that only tho vapor of chloroform could havo produced the ef fects noted In tho lungs. They wero backed by the testimony of two other physicians, but wero contradicted by that of a dozen medical men. Patrick was sentenced to death. Four and a half years ho languished in the death houso at Sing Sing, nnd 17 times during this terrible period ho saw fellow convicts pass tho grating of hl3 cell to entor tho death chamber. At the time of Rice's death tho young Inwryer had been engaged to a woman whoso confidence In his Innocence Induced her to marry him in the Tombs Prison after he had been sentenced to death. Thenceforward this devoted wlfo waged an untiring battle for his freedom. Like a veteran criminal lawyor, she sifted all of tho evidence and presented the facts to specialists. One of these, Dr. William Smith, of KIrksvllle, Mo., a stranger, who had not known Pat rick, volunteered to help her and circu lated In Patrick's behalf a petition, which was signed by 250.000 persons. Mrs. Pat rick charged that $2,000,000 of the fund left by Rice for the founding ot the negro Institution in Texas had been spent In the endeavor to send -her husband to the electric chair. As the result of her fight, Patrick's sentence was commuted to llfo Imprisonment on December 20, 1906, and six years later he was pardoned by Gov ernor Dlx", of New York. Valet Jones mysteriously disappeared and remained in hiding for three years after the commutation of Patrick's sen tence. Copyrlrht. "FUTURES" Pity the schoolboys of I960, who will have to learn by heart the history of the present decade. The 196 drastic notes alone would stump a regent. Albany Knlcker bocker Press. SOLITUDE Happy the man whose wish and care A teif paternal acres bound, Content to breathe his native air In his own ground. Whose herd with mik, whose fields with bread. Whose flocks supply hint with attire; Whose trees in summer yield him shade. In winter, Are. Blest, who can unconcem'dly And Hours, days and years, slide soft away ' In health of body, peace ot mind. Quiet by day, Sound sleep by night ; study and ease, Together mixed, sweet recreation. And innocence, which most does pleai With meditation. Thus let me live, unseen, unknown; Thus unlaojented let me dies' Steal from the world, and not a stone Tell where I He. e-Alexander Pope. 1916- What Do You Know? Queries of acneral interest xcill he answered (ii this column. Ten questions, the answers to xchich every well-informed person should Know, are ashed daily, QUIZ 1. Mint Is a enssonnr)? 2. Vmler tliore rlinrcn Is the Washlneton Na- tlonnl Monument 3. Who Is the I'ulillc Prlnler? 1. Is AiU-lln.i I'll HI still nlheT B. Vilmt Is u trliet? 0. Whnt l beclinniel anuce and whj U It eo nillril? Wlnl Is tlie "Murder Inrne of Ilrlton"f About lion lone ago did Goethe live? Who I lliji .Chief Secretory for Ireland In tho llrKKIi Cnblnrt? Vtlio wild "(lle me liberty or elve me death"? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Cantor oil In o rnllrd from Its rcnemblance to ctstnrriim. n secretion of the bearer, the t.rrrrf mime for vihlcli In kastor. 2. A cutnrart or u waterfall la n chlcnon nnd n chlcnon Is larse, bun-slmped mass of nilr urrjncrd In n net ut the buck of the hciul. 3. Sir Villllam Itumnny, who died last week, is one of the most dlntlnculshed British chemists. 4. Mnrndum imtement Is named from John I Mnruiliini i hcotcli hlKliuy enclneer, who Imrntcd It. 5. Theodore llooevelt nnd William II. Toft lire the only lltlnc American ei-I'resl-dents. 0. Andrew Jackson Is Kenerally charted with Introducing the fcpolls njstcm. 7. The l'rlo Canal was. completed In 1823. 8. I'aul s. Ilelnsch. of X Isconiln, It American Ambassador to Chin , 0. The Concessional Club, Incorporated by net of Concros In 1008. Is un organisation rnmnoiril of the wlten of men In official ...V ... ,, ,.B.....KIU, 10, The.0rnenl,,r..'ht?,n.ut "" Theater etood nt C0o-3 Chestnut street. Exercise for Doxers J?ifltor of "What Do You Know"! am a boy 15 years of age and am very tall for my age and I would like to bo in the best of condition about two weeks from today. As one of my exercises will be boxing I would greatly appreciate If you would tell me what time of the day I should box and what other exercise I should do and what foods I should eat. I work from 7 o'clock In the morning until 6 at night. H. R. Eat wholesome food, molding pork, veal and pastry of all kinds. Milk and toast are very good with meals. If you are thinking of taking up boxing It Is necessary to have good wind and this can be done by long walks with occasional sprints. Keep outdoors as much as possible and when you breathe fill your lungs and exhale slowly. It would be a good Idea to get a punching bag for exercise and also light dumbbells, about one-halt pound each, to use both morning and night. Population of Japan Editor o "What Do You Know" What Is the present population of Japan? PACIFIC COAST. The total population of Japan proper and her possessions, Formosa, Korea and Saghallen, Is 75.476,000, according to figures In Financial and Economic Annual of Japan for last year. Japan proper has a popu lation of 51,283.898, or about 1000 to the square mile. The increase has been mora than 6.000,000 In the last 10 years; Korea has gained 1.000,000 In the same period and 600 000 has been added to the total POnU. latlon of Formosa. There Is a large nre ponderanco of males over females in all parts of the empire. ' Who Said It? Udlfor of "What Do You Know" Can you tell me who said this: "Maidens, like moths, aro ever caueht hv glare, " ' And Mammon wins his way where'seraon might despair." seraphs t, i. . CYNICUS. Perhaps some reader may be able to help this correspondent v Tagore in America Editor oj "What Do You KnoWHaa Rablndranath Tagore ever been In AmVr lcaT POBTlCug. Tagore was in America four years wo. He Is now en his way here from Japan and ia expected to arrive la San FrSn. ohtco la September, whence he will make Wa way leisurely to the Atlantic coast. FIRST THRILD 1 OF GREAT "WATS' The Tourii 6f Steel on August 2,1 iyj.4, uave us a Tingle Which Has Since Died Out AP TUB two years of war's omotlonijf y which we now enn pass In reviewY no sense Is moro difficult to recaptur:l than the very nrst the swift, sudden thrill or nuveniuro wmen camo over us two years ago today. Tho later phases. wo can reconstruct. Actually, in all the lltcraturo of. tho war, nothing finer has' been dono than Just this work, published a year ago by tho subtle American hu manist, Simeon Strunsky. Tho days of tho Uhlans, tho phases of Von Kluek nnd tho Marno, tho shifting passions and confidences of tho world after tho middle of August wo enn remember nnd record. Rut tho earliest days aro hard. They aro hard becauso after thotnld. night misery of theso two years we are not willing to confess how Joyously 'wo met tho first onset of arms. Tho seem ingly Imposslblo has happened in Amer ica, for our wholo huge advantage frora tho war has been vicariously taken. TV havo not suffered, yet wo have beea purified. Wo havo not fought, not died.) yet wo havo been ennobled. From th first wo undorstood our odd role which was to bo not that of a spectator at a ploy but of tho living prizo for which knights engaged in battle. We shrank from war, but it hold our eyes. Unaware of tho vast forces which wero readv spiritually unprepared for tho horron which wero to come, wo breathed fast at tho now excitement in tho world. The Joy of Battle Tho tlmo wns to como whon the air wo breathed was stifling with gun. powder, and later still was acrid with tho seas which swept over tho Lusltanla's dead. Of that wo wcro innocent. We knew only that tho hcavcnB wero burst lng Into gorgeous colors of fire, that the hand of man had leapt to his sword and tho bright blado shono In tho wild light Wo read of American tourists hurrying pell-mell out of Europe, and wo wished .that wo might bo there. Wo should not hurry. Wo should stay and see tho most' magnificent spectacle of our tlmo. The world had been full of n million little things In which wo took a posslvo In terest. A great wind camo up nnd swcpl them away and our nostrils extended to' tho blast. 1 Wo had been prepared for complica tions tho mlnuto Germany and Russia9 camo In. and it was on tho second of Au gust that wo know for fair that they wcro In. Patrol engagements wero re ported, Ambassadors had departed and la tho west Franco was mobilizing her armies. Thero was tho rub. With Rus sia, It may bo said, wo had no sympathy, Wo had had too much to do with her revolutionaries, had sent contribution! and protests for too many Klshlncffs, had seen our only treaties cast nslde became' Russia would not recognize American citizenship complete. But Franco! We could hardly forgive her alllanco with Russia. Wo felt, In splto of many dls agreeable things, that her proper alliance was with us. And there camo back ifi memory of Versailles In 1871, of that day, whon William I was proclaimed Gorman Emperor In tho palaco sacred to everj; tradition of imperial and republican Franco. 71 Wo did not order our sympathies, but wo can separate them now. They were with Germany against Russia and wltli Franco against tho world. They might havo remained so to this day. Our First Sure Things Ot two things wo were firmly con; vlnced. That Russia would be snapped back, broken and defeated as she was, ot seemed to be, by Japan, and that Francj would tight gallantly but unavailing! n gains t the superior German arms. Ger man efficiency was already beginning t be a bit of a tradition. It was in the air. In our vague speculations we turned to England for assistance. We knew thai England had the habit of fighting on tb winning side. And this is what she gave us on this day: (Official) Tho policy of Great Brit ain will not bo affected In anv wav by the announcement that Italy jhas de- I elded to remain neutral. i Italy will have to settle later on with her own partners as to the Justifies- 3 tlon or her action. Tne, French Government has never been di rectly or Indirectly led to believe that Great Britain was pledged to any par ticular method ot discharging her ob ligations to France, and although she will remain (adhere?) strictly to the spirit ana letter ot tne understandings 1 his Majesty's Government have not da- M elded If they will Interfere. They have always reserved to them selves the right of determining hovr they Bhall play their part in the Triple Entente. From that day dates the distrust of I England, which can be discovered under! any number of layers of Entente synvl pathy. It was the time before rainbow colored hooks appeared justifying this orj that. It was the time when wo had hoped greatly that Sir Edward Grey might stop the whole thing. At that serious moment of secular history, when a nation had to announce Itself to the world, we saw Eng land weighing her chances, almost heardj her counting coin. We know now that she did come In, with a fine inthuslasrAJ with high moral purposes which she care fully explained to the world and to hert self. But our trust was never hers, and may never be. 1 A Joyous terror was our supreme emoj Hon then, and we listened half-heartedly to those who spoke of the awful sacri fices, the carnage and the brutality which must ensue. We laughed at agitators of peace and at the Socialists. We flouted danger to ourselves.' We felt, ir fact, that this war was not the destruction. but the saving, of civilization. It meant that men could and would fight agaitufl " "" uuttriin m our uiooa answeieu still vicariously, tho calL It was not noble feeling, but It was that on whlc the spectacular glory of the earth's lonj life was based. " We look back at It now. Is it shameful .u wuicu nisi we ata not carer re; haps it Is, but our Indifference, to th disasters or others was not altogetbe that of self-certainty. We did feel thaj if it were put up to us we should bav done at least as much. 32?T?ft wKeJi dfal viith tin Kfi Si iff arca f aid with Jkf timt pc- CSr- Isa AnnaatdilQu.