ZS T - jjlM !Euefitjj Hciige rUllLIC LEDGER COMPANY f crnua it k cuims, rsnxT. CMrtta If t.udlnitton,. Vice rrfitd(nt! John C. Martin. Secretary and Trfturr( Philip 8. Colllni. John B. William, Directors. EDiToniAlj noAnoj CJrsrs II. K. Cdrtih, Chairman. f. II. TVHAL.ET Wllor JOHN C. ilAUTlN. .0nf ral Buslnem Manager fubllahed dally at I'CMIO t.moEn Biilldlnfr, Independence Square, l'hlladtlphlA. Vvrxitu Crint At, .,.. Broad and Chentntit 8trta Athrtio ClTXttti.t rrMj.tnloM Bulldlnr Nkw York........ . .,,.2011 .Metropolitan Tower DmroiT., . ... .. ,,,.820 rorrt RulMlnr BT. Lama,, ...... .409 Globr-Dffflocrnl Building Cmciao ....,..,. ,.11:02 rrfoun BullJIng NEWS BUBEAUSt VtaniNOTo ncnrAO..., nirns Building tittr Yorx DinriD.., The Timet Building rtrsLIN llrnr.ltj,..,,,, .... no Frledrlclnlre lAjnnot Bi-itRAtJ Marconi Home. Ptrnnd Plats Bcciu.. ... . 32 ltu5 Louis le Urn ml SUDSCntPTlOK TERMS Br mrrler. alx cent per week Br mall, toatpnll omsldc of Philadelphia, except where foreign postage I required, one month, twenty five cental onn rear, three dollars. All mall aubnerlpttom parablo In advance. Norton Subscribers wlhlwr nddreaa changed must sle old aa well a new address. BELL. 3000 WALMJT KFYSTONK. MA1V 3000 ICT Arldrrn all rommiinfrnftoii to T:rrnno Ledger, Independence Square, 1'hlladetplila. ZKTtntD t ntr rntrAPrtMin rnTorncB is SECOND-CUBS MAIL IIATTUI THE AVERAGE NET PAIR- DAILY Cltt. CULATION OV THE EVENING ljEDOEIl FOlt JULY WAS 121.009. rhlliilrlphla, TuMtliy, Auuit IS, 1916, Fame is the thade of immortality, And in itself a shadow. Young' When Bulgaria gets thioufih with the Allies thoto tton't bo any Mulgaiin left. Credit where credit Is due. The Democrats arc the Rrcntest tax-Imposcrs In the history of the nation The August Grand Jury has boon sworn In, and if it docs Its duty it will bo sworn nt by men whoso condemnation la better than their praise. Who was it who said that the op proachlng battle between the Admlnlstin tlon and the vice district would bo char acterized by "stench warfaro"? Mr. Hushes ndvocated n protective tariff nnd sound Americanism Spo kane dispatch. Why this pleonasm? They are Identical. The people of Philadelphia pay a tax of 23 per cent every time they pay a gas bill. This will be increased to 33 1-3 per cent in 1918, unless the present policy la changed. The Idea seems to be that to talto the police out of politics Is merely to take the police out of political clubs. Such optimism reflects credit on the lnnocvnco of the proponents. Senator Penrose is becoming almost rabid In his denunciation of absentees. The zeal of this convert Indicates that ho expects to remain on the Job all tho rest -it)t tho session, If necessary. In complaining because tho Even ing IiEDanrt Is hostile to the magistrate system, a gloomy pessimist declares that tho Municipal Court "ain't no paragon, neither." Quite so. But its furniture Is paid for In a regular way. Tho policemen who obeyed orders have been reinstated, and are to be tried by their superior for doing what they were told to do. And the man higher up Is still known as Mr. Anon, tho most fre quently quoted author In every dictionary of gems of thought. It may bo taken for granted, we trust, that the city will not sell any bonds In tho Immediate future without at least n part of them being apportioned to transit. The Mayor announced recently that additional contracts would bo let In the immediate future. Tho Mayor seems to think that ho can clean up tho city with Director Wilson aa tho executlvo oillcer in tho enterprise. By the way, aro those gambling machines which were returned to their original owners with the apptoval of the Director still rusty or running? "Qhe "long-rango weather predlc tlonswhlch theEvEMxo I.EDann has been printing on Monday for some months foretold tho cool wave of Sunday and Monday, although tho official predlcters did not see any signs of It until Satur day night, Moore and Carothers promise cool weather for next week, with showers and very low temperatures for Friday und Saturday. Their forecast ought to be verified by the events, for we have had hot and wet weather enough for one summer. The Intervention of tho President Jn the railroad strike situation Is extra constitutional, but It la none the less Wise. Ho speaks for the whole nation when he says that tho public will not eanctlon a strike, and that the railroad managers are equally responsible with the labor leaders for the continued opera tion of the trains. The public la not " particularly interested In the, merits of the controversy, and it will not attempt to decide between the disputants, It ia Intensely Interested, however, In the preservation of order and In preventing a stoppage of the trains. The rights of 100,000,000 citizens are greater than the rights of 400,000, even though the 400,000 , ba railroad employes. "Tom" Taggart's financial pro posals ought to make him the Idol of hla party. 'Ha has discovered a way to avoid a deficit and at the same time build all the ships the navy needs. His solution I3 so simple that It Is surprising no one had thought of It befo.re. It la Blmply to borrow (he money. Jt tho revenue laws do not produce enough for the current ex penses, do not Increase the taxes and make yourselves unpopular. Just Issue . bonds and let some ona else pay then When they all due In the remote future. Thli Is the way "bfcjf business" does, he Wis us, and It Is the way the Government hould do, Capitalize the credit of the jjatlon and go ahead. With a surprising maslf aUatioa of subtlety, for no one had jiWMwtetf the genial Indiana boss of 1 .4.- 1 UlJfa l.; .. ? 1.1. - P wm ww Fnaw Mf utteKa- I WW 4 nunA-U(MJ f tM SS5iSSe5a extravagance of Congress. He would havo the Government live on .borrowed money In tho Interest of economy. Many crimes havd been done In tho name of retrench ment and reform, but none which sur passes 'in Its ramifications through the morasses of financial ruin nnd repudiation this one proposed by tho man whoso latest title to fame rests on tho haste with which he went to the relief of the politi cal crooks In Indianapolis when they were Indicted for election crlmei. ON THE ROAD TO VICTORY milEnE Is no such thing as n sex vote. J-and there never will be. Tho hlstoty of woman suffrage In tho political organ Isms whore It has been at work h a rec ord of soul and heart rend Into legislation, n history of opportunities for social Im provements embraced, and nn evidence of new Inspiration and new put poses In government. Wo may run the gamut of social legislation, and wo shall find everywhere In It the influence of woman's optimism nnd soman's ideals. Until cront tmltlrs utc now ticmcmeu to support of woman suffrage lti ptln clple. Tho Individual candidates ttlffor as to the mode of wcfuilng lf HiiRhes Is for taking O'C bull by the horns nnd reaching n quick, llnal decision by menns of n constitutional nnipndtnont. Mr. Wilson, still Impiegnnted with tlio doc trine of Stntc 1 tights, holds that that ex tension of suffrage must bo by action of tlio Individual Status. But both profess to bo nrdent advocates of the cause, and Into lino behind them fall nil that Ics-er hordo of politicians, the little lenders who must be clubbed Into progress nnd driven Into the acceptance of anything now. Wo find In Philadelphia, for Instance, that Mr. Vare thinks that Mr. Hughes Is altogether right. Tine! Was It not In the Varo wards that the surtrago amendment was defeated last November? Pennsyl vania, outside of South Philadelphia, was In favor of giving the women a fair deal. It was In the Vare territory that enough ballots were dumped Into tho boxes and enough other ballots thrown out to as sure the backwardness of Pennsylvania for another four years. But If tho Vnrcs now are to follow the leader nnd hew straight to tho line, there Is no reason to anticipate anything but nn enormous ma jority for suffrage In 1019, provided wom en have not been emancipated before that time by Federal action. .May It not be that oven Mr. Penrose will see tho light and (ling Into tho bal ance his tremendous Influence with tho liquor and other people? Wc trust so, for obviously, with women suffrage n future certainty, no politician who behoves In getting votes can afford to antagonize hundreds of thousands of potential ballots. There Is not, we believe, any student of public affairs who Is In any doubt as to tho ultimate place of woman In American government. Our Institu tions and our modes of thought aro a sufllclent augury of tho outcome. It Is unfortunate that so many voters have failed to Inform themselves of the history of the movement for the political emancipation of women. They think of It as an Innovation, an experiment, whereas, In truth, women havo been taking part in government, In different parts of the earth, under nil sorts of conditions, for many years, with a record for clllclency that would put to Hhnmo many male elec torates. When line millions of women were forced Into the business 'world, It became sure that they could not bo kept out of the political world. A triumph for Mr. Hughes will mean n distinct hastening of the achievement for which so many women so ardently havo worked. Hla declaration In favor of a constitutional amendment will. In fact, give a distinct push to the move ment In the Individual States. AVe take it that if It was proper to extend the franchise to the negro race by constitu tional amendment, it Is entirely tight to bring women into tho full communion of citizenship by the same method. Tho matter Is of too much importance for the splitting of hairs. Tho fight for votes for women has reached the third and final stage. MORE STRENGTH TO HIS ELBOW SENATOR UNDEItWOOD is deliver ing some vigorous blows at those who oppose the return of the Republicans to power. He Insists that the tariff law which he assisted In framing Is so good that it does not need revising, and he thinks that Congress should be trusted to make the tariff laws, anyway, without Interference from any tariff commission. If his Republican colleagues are wise they will bait him on. The more the Democratic leaders oppose adjusting the tariff to meet the exigencies of the future, the more certain It becomes that the task of tariff legislation will be Intrusted to men who know something about it. Mr. Underwood 'may be right In his assertion that dyestuffs need no protec tion; but the majority of Americans do not agree with him. It may be that our chemists can produce dyes as cheaply as the German chemivts, but they have not done it yet, and every large textile mill has been suffering because of this failure. They have not even succeeded In making, dyea to meet the demand at the high prices which now prevail through the failure In the German supply. And when peace comes, Germany will be In better shape than ever to flood our markets, for the reason that she has been manufacturing dye chemicals In much greater quantity than tn time of peace and is using them for explosives. Mr. Underwood should remember that the country used Mr, "Wilson as a flail to chastise Republican standpatism, and he should know that it Is In no mood to igjfajf Democratic bourbonlim. EVENING mpger-philabelijeeea, totsdat.- august m Tom Daly's Column McAroni Ballads LXII O. BOALAnilAItTA, riXANOinil Ofit?c;);)( Scalabrart' lie's ootia hnckitcr-corl. Dal ho ccs push aioun' lin streets ccn deesa tnxen, Whcrcvra ilcrc's enough To huy hecs ftult an' stuff. Hut nan day ccn hecs cart J)cci fallow fcalahart' I'.cx con;, lor a chanoc, A load dal's vcrra strange. ltcrr ccs la ten of eel: Jicre't ladj ccn tenit sticct )at otic heem sccxljl cent, An' art so Uhc slid meant She Mct't'n gona pay; An' she's von' move atvay, Vor on da house icun day ltc sec a sign dal so); 7)('c? Vropcrtv for Sell." Otuscpitv )ccni) da hell, An' w'en ihc com he say: "My set'xty rent; you pay V.ef mctiic so I find Som'boily ditl'.ia wlrf for hug da house fiom yout" flhe laugh an' "I'vf yon do," Hhe say, "an' I can gat My price four Ihousttn' Mf pay your heell nn slyht," Giuseppe say: "All tight " Jlet'.H iirj'ft wonm te'en lie menu da hell agen ; Da lady cum' an' say:, "I mini no fruit today." Hut he say: "Walla, pleass! Ih'sr fruits no grow on Jieci; Com', huty, taaka dese!" Den een hcei cart he aioim -Void, ir'at you gon' su'pasef- I'.cn uuilra pile of rags lies old teen cans an' bant. An' dere ccs som' of dc" Dal's full u-eeth ten-cent piece; An' sum' iveclh need eft, loo. An' pennies: an' a few HVefi feefly, twantg-JI', An' som' got notes so high As ft", ten-dollar bccll! lie say: "Xow, ecf you w.cll, Pica', lady, he so kind To count all deic, you'll flnd 1'our thousan' dollar hete A'o, nottn quite, but near Ton see, 1 hate ltl:c hal Vor lodn' te'ttl ;oi oicc, Dot seextg cent, you know, And so theenk ret wal For buy ila house mysal'." YESTERDAY wo took a perfectly good golllng afternoon nnd used It to sit Idly In a skyey tower watching eighteen (not counting plnch-gcntlemen) profes sional tall players battle earnestly to up hold the civic honor of Philadelphia and Now York respectively. Ordinarily our ovenlng roverlo. our nftcr-dlnncr medita tion, would havo been full of headache and regrets nt such willful waste of time, but yesterday we got a thrill. The nur.i of overshadowing genius, with nil tho accompanying lightning flashes, surround lng tho titanic Mr. Alexander, mndo us forgot for tho moment that he Is but a super-hiredman from Nebraska, Ave! Alec. A. M. D. begs leave to present Mr. Harvey H. Long and J. Frank Short, trading as LONG & SHORT Gcnetal Merchandlso Fcilcralsburg, Md. In theso days of disappearing king doms nnd .the total extermination of other bodies politic, writes Bachelor, the follow ing sign on Washburn's Theater, Chester, Pa., is nttractlng patriotic attention: 'The Birth of a Nation" Postponed. A Rapspudy on the Spud The Itlsh potato, dry, mealy and tooth somo (now crop) Is ngain In our midst. "Sublime potntocs that from Kerry's shore To County Antrim Form the poor man's store." And yet, dear Tarn, although we call It tho Irish potato. It did not originate in Ireland, nor In that there mysterious country they call Scotch-Ireland. One legend Is that Sir Walter Raleigh brought it from Virginia In Queen Elizabeth's tlmo. which may be true, but It had leached Frnnce mnny years before then. Tho flriit gtown In Ireland was about tho middle of the eighteenth century, around County Cork way. So Ignorant wcro tho people then of Its true use that they brewed the leaves for tea and found them rank poison. The leaves nnd fruit of the potato furnish solanum, a viru lent poison. And that Is why tho potato tuber, when It begins to sprout In the bin In late spring, makes It ho unwholesome, unless all tho sprouts aro cut out. The potato became finally tho staple crop of Ireland, nnd that Is why wo call It the Irish potato. It Is doubtful If even Vir ginia can claim It. Later Investigations ttneed It much further south, even as far ns Chill. So you see. Tarn, there Is some romance and Interest even In such a homely thing as the spud. It's American anyway, and not Irish. McTAVISII, A NUT OFF ITS TBOI.I.EY The departing of the nut from the left axle of Labonte'a Ice wagon on Main street, near Spring, Tuesday morning, made a lot of work for the two Ice peddlers. Ties were hauled, together with pieces of scrap Iron from the C V right of way, and after considerable blocking and raising the wheel was again put on. The wagon let down on the trolley tracks, and it looked for a time as though the trolley would have to stop there. Stafford Sprlui (Ct.) Prett. 1 Taller de Lavado "La Nueva Palma" that Is to say, "The Laundry List of tho Nueva Palma," In Habana, Cuba, makes some weird efforts to translate feminine finery Into plain English. For Instance: Corset Cower. .....,.,,, 10c Cheem Shirts.,, ...20c Panltoa ................ lOo THERE was a crowd about the ticket window, but one woman, who had been hovering about the outskirts, dashed In ahead of every one, with this cry to her companions; "Come on I .We'll buy our tickets an mebbe we can make It. I just saw Jack runnln' down the Btreet with the Board of Health to make out a Infantile p'ralyels certificate!" Raymond Belmont May Wed Carolyn Hul bert Price of Milk Doe Up. Hadlln In local cobUjub. One of those newspaper mytarUa that nobody can ever &mlaln. rA4&m&M c-K .MP ' .32$l !svs&MiBi!H8 . . - Wrfir'w-"'r THE MYSTERY New England Housewife Baffled Scientists With Her Remarkable Psychic Powers Psychologists Converted by Experi ments Case of Doctor Hyslop . By JOHN ELFRETH WATKINS A: MASKED man entered a modest cot tage on tho outskirts of Boston. Ho proceeded to a room whero nn un conscious woman leaned over a tnble, her head burled In a pillow, her hand clutching a pencil whoso point rested upon a pad of paper. Tho woman's hand commenced to write messages to tho masked man communications alleged to bo from his relations beyond tho grave. This mysterious visitor returned to tho New England cottago day after day, being always announced as "Mr. Smith." At length, ho became convinced that tho Information wtltten to him by tho un conscious woman was such that no liv ing person but himself could possibly havo known. Much to tho astonishment of his brother .snvnnts, ho announced his belief In tho power of tho living to com municate with tho dead. Tho masked man was Dr. James II. Hyslop, professor of logic nnd ethics at Columbia University, Now York, and the mysterious woman who converted him to the spiritistic hypothesis was a modest and totlrlng Now England housewife, Mts. Leanoro Piper, Unllko her prede cessors, she had assumed her uncanny rolo unwillingly, had never given public seances, never demonstrated her powers before other than scientific Investigators. Discovered by Prof. William James This strango woman was tho discovery of Prof. William James, of Harvatd, hi other of Henry James, the noted lit terateur. A quarter century ago, Profes sor James, delving Into the mysteries of psychic research, learned that sho suf fered now and then from peculiar aberra tions of consciousness, during which It had been accidentally discovered by her family that she could teveal certain truths that could not possibly have come to her from ' any living person. Pro fessor James tested her powers, and com municated results to Dr. Richard Hodg son, an English psychologist living In Boston, and In order to subject her to an acid test, Doctor Hodgson conspired with Professor Hyslop, whom ho knew to be a skeptic and a careful scientific Investigator. Thus It was arranged that Professor Hyslop should mask himself, disguise hla voice and proceed to the Piper homestead unknown and unan nounced, entering the presence of the al leged medium only after she had lapsed Into one of her Bpella of unconscious ness. In the course of these experiments, during which the woman of mystery never saw hla features or heard hla natu ral voice. Professor Hyslop alleges, the pencil In her hands wrote a secret pass word from hla dead father, a word un known to any one else, and which he was sure could never have been com municated to Mrs. Piper by any living consciousness. Reams of paper, bear ing alleged messagea written by Mrs. Piper In Professor Hyslop'a presence, convinced him that ner demonstrations were absolutely above fraud, and ho had her subjected to medical testa proving that while writing these communications she was beyond question In a state of anesthesia, insensible to pain. Having convinced these men of science that the dead could communicate with the living. &lra. Piper received an Invi tation to visit England, and subject her self to tests arranged by the famous Lon don Society for Psychic Research. After some persuasion she went abroad, stop- pips' la Liverpool, where, at the reldence of Sir Oliver lodge, president or th. Unlyerlty ot Birmingham she 'was tubj. - SAVED! ! x - OF MRS. PIPER Jectcd to a. rigid examination. A cojn-ij mltteo asked tho alleged medium to com tnunlcnto to them Just what two per sons, whom they knew to bo utter strang ers to her, wcro doing minute by minuto In London nt that precise time. Mrs. Piper, entering tho trance state, wroto a description of theso persons' acts dur ing tho evening, nnd comparison later divulged that sho was correct. Proceed ing to London, sho underwent a long courso of Investigation nt tho hands of a committee of tho Society for Psychic Research and many mora learned savants capitulated to her. Describing his ex periences with Mrs, Piper to mo some tlmo ago. Professor Hyslop said: Even Skeptics Respect Her "I woro a black mask covering my face from my forehead to below my beard when I began to visit Mrs. Piper. I re mained masked in this way for a year, and thus hid my Identity from her imtil after tho results of those experiments had been obtained. Sho goes Into a trance while seated In a chair, her head testing on pillows piled on a stand before her. Sho turns her face to tho left so that sho cannot see tho writing exe cuted with her right hand, which, holding a pencil, rests upon a pad on another table to her tight. Sho talks on various subjects until suddenly dropping forward on tho pillows." An examplo of the testimony alleged to havo been communicated by Mrs. Plpor to him was described tono by Professor Hyslop as follows: "Once while I was having a sitting with Mrs. Piper, a 'message' was received from a man, a stranger to me, who gave his name and that of his homo town. Ho also stated that ho had lost a finger. I made Inquiry In the county and town mentioned as his home, and found that the oldest residents of tho same name, people 75 and 81 years old, had never heatd of him. Later I found a cousin of these people's father who had had tho same name and had died beforo I was born. Pursuing my Inquiries still further, I found that this man had lost a finger In tho war of 1812." This mysterious woman has succeeded In retaining the confidence of all' who havo Investigated her, and because of her persistent refusals to mako public demonstrations of her alleged phenom ena. Bho has retained the respect even of the sHeptlcs, who refuse to capitulate to her, She disclaims any theories as to the source from which her alleged "messages" are derived. What la her power? Will any one ever know? , (Copyright.) UNIQUE Lord Lansdowne, It Is said, will leave tho British Cabinet. He may retire cheered by the thought that ho has wreaked upon hla native land an amount of harm which no man of his great name and estate, similarly handicapped by falling health and Intellec tual limitations, has ever In the history of the kingdom surpassed. To have held up single-handed the home-rule agreement was an exploit fortunately unique. New York World. MR. HUGHES'S STYLE An Impression is general that men of judicial temperament and experience are prone to epl't haira In discursive reasoning because of tho vague and Involved lan guage In which courts sometimes clothe their decrees. But there i none of this style of dlscau so in the speeches of Mr. Hushes, either before be was elevated to " .renTe V7h WnS To "& trow it. Salt Lakg Herald-epuWlcaa. . 1C What Do You Know? Oucrlcj 0 ocncral interest u-lll 6e answered (n this column. Ten cuestloiu, this answers to which everu well-tnjormtd ner son should know, are asked daily. QUIZ 1. Wlirn nml where hm tho first American ocenn-BoInic merchant oliln launched? 3. Where li I lip lilchct point of land In the city llmltt? 3. Ahont lmt l tht annual vnlue ot the liroiliirt of tho rhltndeliihlu woolen and orated inllN? Hwv old wnn filaditone hen ho wan lait premier of Kncland? V.'.'.nt laiiBiiauo In mioUen In Mexico? How far It Tacnmii from Philadelphia? What In Queen Anne'o lure? What Is tho caliber or thp larcot Run on an American lattle.hh? About how many tons of Milpplnir nre now In tirorrhH uf construction In American fchlpyardx? What Is tho tibia? 10, Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1, Thfl vordi are Interchangeable, but Banl- tnrlum In sometimes hn to detonate n health report where the treatment Is liroih lactic n itWHncuMircl from n san atorium where tho trratment Is rcinnll.il. 2. Klrh.ird (h implon nns n celebrated manu facturer of porcelain of ISrtstnl. ljielnucl. preppntrd i dinner henii.- tn IM mund IturUp for his defense of the Amer ican cnlonlrs. 3. The urea of Mexico Is 7K3.881 0.11, ire miles linil that f I'cnnsjlwinl.i 13, 130 Niiuare miles. 4, Senator ITndemoad represents Alabama. B. Hlmon riexner Is director of the labora tories of the ltocl.cfeller Institute for Medical Ueseurrh. 0. Dr. S.imuel II. Dixon Is State Commissioner of Health. 7. The Mrst Amerlran school I100K 11ns written In Philadelphia In 1D0H by Samuel l'ns. tortus, 8. The r'ranltlln Institute! Is In Setenth utrett nouUi of Market, 0, The Saturday i:rnlnir I'ost has n larcer circulation than any other American lierloUluii, 10 The btrrnum Is the breast hone. When Negroes Voted Editor of "What Do You Know" Will you plcaso stato In your column (I) Whether tho negroes wcro disfranchised In Xorth Carolina after joining tho Union? (5) Also Is the healthy human Infested at nil times with tubercular, typhoid and such germs? D. J. BAItnOWCI.OUGH. (1) Until after the revolutionary war free negroes were allowed to vote In every State except Georgia nnd South Carolina. After 1792 tho right to vote was taken from tho negroes In eight States, Including North Carolina. (2) It haB been frequently stated by bacteriologists that disease-producing germs of various kinds are present In every one, but this is a generalization based on inadequate data, and Is subject to correc tion when we know more. The Harvest Moon i'dUor of "What Do You Ktioto" Kindly answer the following questions: (l) When Is tha harvest moon visible? (2) When do "dog days" occur? (3) Which covers the greatest area, Trenton or Camden? (1) What is tho origin of the expression, "Itoland for your Oliver?" sirs. m. (1) Tho harvest moon is the moon oc curring nearest to the autumnal equinox, that is, nearest to September 22. (3) tjok days, or the canicular days, were reckoned by the ancients, according to some au thorities, as Including 20 days before and 20 days after the day when the dog star first rose ahead of the sun. The rising of the dog star was supposed to be the oc casion of the extreme heat of the season. Authorities differ as to the exact duratlbri of tha period. The most generally accepted dates are from July 3 to August U, (3) The area of Trentpn a 7.66 square miles and that of Camden 7.6 square miles (1) To give" a Itoland for an Oliver means to give as good a3 you get. Roland and Oliver were two of the Paladins of Charlemacne What Roland did Oliver did. At length the two met In single combat and fouaht for Ave consecutive days on an island In the Rhine, but neither gained tha least ad vantage. Your other questions will be answered In a day or two. Ia There a Jewish Nation? Bclor Of "What Do Vott JSCnoW'l, there , Jewish or Hebrew nation? j t The dictionary defines a nation aa a dfs tlnct race or people having a common descent, language, history or political in stuuttons. Tho Hbrews are a distinct race gT xEiGr taSS5Kd nation, Without aajr political Utencv " w "t "i "an a. common Ian. HUGHES FISHING THROUGH WASHINGM PLEASED BY WEI,C0$ Republican Presidential Nord nine, xuugmeu uy Women'' Meeting, aays State Is Digi i satisfied With Democratall WIFE HIS FAITHFUL AIdI TACOMA, Wash., Aug. lB.Chri il Hughes Is today finishing up his t?.l Washington. Delighted nnd InvlmmS ." tho reception given him nt a wornYnW '"!r..l.il.!,-o,ki"i.?:!8.,e.'r-lhe. liruaiueun.il iiuiiiiiiei; mis inornlflff riVl. . he wni content to leave the Judtm.,! his candidacy to tho electorate ! JfJ ' equally oc men ana women, which Wi. j4 ..titrated its belief that the n.i'M Administration has fallen far shorts.?' nation's needs. BnotttlJ(, The nominee arrived hero after .. 1) night ride from Spokane After adS,'1 ing a meeting this afternoon ho win 1 for Seattle, leaving Hint city lat- it ?,'' for Port and. Ore . whom t, r "' ::.. ..1 .i..J ..." " "u tomorrow, and then irnno on to Cain!I Mrs. Hughes Is shailng tlio honon-wi 1 the candidate. Hero In tn. Im," ,3' her rooms hnvo been hurled In blonn, , IP. sho Is the recipient ot tlattcrlnir miLi'l u UTUIUI cui: huw iurs MtlChAa 1. . she goes Mrs Huche, '' T' cllnlng nil Roclal attentions and ... ' strict nttentlon to hor husband. 8h73 Uoctor Dlttmnn havo constituted tkw'j eco iu ii iiia 1. uc uui- iiui incnax hlatolaji rntch cold or otherwise Impair his nhnSH strength for tho hard work ahcai ,j Tho candidate b wire hai attended tvtnl meeting plnco tho party left yet bo mJ nnd unobstruslve lias siio been that sht ku1 got through tho crowds without troultf and the audiences have been unaware oU, presence until sho was pointed out by ioB, ono who knew hor. , As Illustrating the dependence of W Hughes on his wife, the following Imiw Is in tho point: 1. Immediately upon arriving at SpolcinjV cijiiiiiiiiii:u ui ..uiiiuii uimiiit'u mo train inl iianvii iiiu 111 1 ucbu ui escorting lfrt Hughes downtown. , "Won't you let mo havo her?" asKal lr. Ilnr-li.ia. " "This Is a woman's State," was thk tt ply, 'Jand the women would Ilka to doionlJj thing for Mrs. Hughes," A mo cnnumaie mnncii nnu permllttd I'll wlfo to bo led away. j GEORGIAN ASSAILS HUGHES uviiuiu nuiuinui uuya rresiaenusl1 Candidate "Waves Bloody Shirt", ' WASHINGTON, Aug. l5.-Siito1 Ilnrdwlck, of Georgia, this afternoon IMi llM iy iiMsuiiuu Lliurius lvuns iiugnes In ill1 Scnato for "trying to rekindle sectloul hatred" by charging in his Butte tpMci that Congress Is controlled by Bouthtn1 Domociats. He charged Mr. Hughes with attempts to mako votes In tho "West by "wavtajtli bloody shirt." ' MILK PRICE NOT TO BEf . RAISED THIS SUM Added Cost of Bottles and Labor! May Force Increase in the Winter 4 There will bo no Increase this in the prlco of milk In Philadelphia said toilny. Almost every dairy Vorlc h.is InrrpHRPil thn nrlnp nt cent n pint because of the added ccitK stationary at least until fall. No channli tho prlco of glassware has gone Into tf-1 icci nero mo price 01 miiK win rtmnj stationery at least until fall. No chain a tho prlco per quart was made In New Ynlt Oniclals of the Sunnleo Alderner Diln nnd Abbott's Aldernoy Dairies said txiij, j mat mey wcro unaoie to predict w pnu of milk for tho winter. They pointed nil however, that a general increase of if P. cent In wages granted recently to nil glsii blowers has necessitated an Increase In III coat nf ImttloM Thlsi nffoi-ts this cltr U well ns Now York.. 4M Tho cost of labor In the milk, Indosnr has also been Increased ahd the' prlce'ofj horse feed, too. Is unusually high. Tti fnrmers with whom the Philadelphia nBt men nro dealing havo formed a comblai. tlon. according to olllclals of these dilria nnd that may be a factor In determine the retail price of milk this winter, "a Milkmen urgo housekeepers always;)! buy milk In quart bottles rather thin'S two beparato pint receptacles. They f that a quart bottle costs less, when boojit from the glass mnmifactuiera, thant. pint bottles. In New York the dealers kin, for thnt reason, raised tho price of SIB only when sold by the pint, the cost of m In uunrt botles remaining at the forraf tigurc. Must Curb Boulevard Speeding, A warning to motorcyclists who speed Q the Northeast Boulevard was Issued todifl by Coroner Knight at the Inquests InWUi deaths of Frank Blmeclk, of 007 BUM street, and Adam Curtis, of Fateraon. X J., two motorcyclists who collided with bJ mobiles while traveling at a high rat; speed on tho boulevard Charles BlddtaM 2017 Oxford street, and Charles Hutch. son, of Trenton, N. J., tho two autoraoW drivers arrested In conjunction with V aeatns, were exonerated. AMUSEMENTS Cim A TvTT TVV" MAKKET A!ovt 1JTW OA.tt.rN-LJ.Ui 1 M.13 to jiim iik w. nATTTJNR FREDERICK .. .ntiMitnunu rc rr.vnp PITCH'S 3 jn Aunt irtiM. v. VM,M" liflftf "THE WOMAN IN THE CASJ Thur., Vf Sat. "Tha stronger m t- "DATA rTP 12U MARKET STBEETj j. iij THUODOIIE KOBES"! 'TUB DItEAM U'" Ttiura. Frl., Sat. Marie Doro, Common crM- B. F. KEITH'S THEATER SOPHIE TUUltiiK m ,,,. Tj-iuna nt.i HVNfVlPATlONa La Mont' Cowboy; Wood & Wrdti Bjj rirrui. Other Dig Featurea, . . .....iH Today at 2. iiSo & 60c. Tonight at .fgjl ftlnhp Theater MASra MATTIE CHOATE & CU. iiirii VSM ivn trim MAMCUA IU lilt IAV - wxWVfM "THE GIRLS FROM KOHOM0JJ A Tnl.lntd Musical Comedy vai K 1 CHESTNUT Bl" iJ Arcaum u ii. .;wgiES! In "SHELI Kif$ Aildd. BU1U Burk. In Gloria's ll0jW&tlP Thiir... Frl., Bat. 'Ueil-to-Far AWW-K VTCTORIA"f4S Addd Keyitone Comtdjr, .'To Surf O Jaia7EJMfE"BBl3J WOODSIDE "".ffiiSS ilKKWOHKB EVERr ""' -jj SWIMMING sunns v , dejloj1 In toil, ' mill il f-ifft' -p.-j mi- x A A . L