H h:t ) u M 8 ' , toning gpJj ffciiget , PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY it " CTRU3 ft K. CURTIS, PaiwiDinir. 2 Chart it. Ludlnston, Vice President! John C. Martin, Secretary and Treasureri Philip S. Collins, John D. Williams, Directors. EDITORIAL nOARd! Crura H. K. Ccsria, Chairman. P. g. WHALEY...... .Editor JOHN C. MARTIN.. General Iluslness Manager -Published dally t,FoM40 I.itxitn Building, Independence BQuare, Philadelphia. Liccarn CimraU.... .Broad And Chestnut Streets An-inno Cirr.. .......... Prfss.tnf on Bulldlnr Haw Tosk. ....... ...200 MetfSpollun Toner I)tr01T.. .............. i. ..820 ford Building- HT. Louis. ........ 400 Olobe-Bemecrol Building CniCAOO.,..,.. ....1202 Tribune Bulldlnr NEWS BUREAUS! YPVisirhrOToK Boso.,.. ...... ,,nlrjj Building Nan Tonic nrttio.. ....... The rimes Building Jlrai.l ncnitD........... ..CO Frledrlclntrases Londo. Bonuu......i.Marcnnl House. Strand Pis Etjatio j. ......... 32 Bus Louis lo Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS By carrier, U cents per week. Bjr mall. Fostpaid outside ot Philadelphia, except where orefgn postage la required, one month, twenty fir cents) one year, three dollars. All mall subscriptions payable In advance. Nonco Subscribers wishing oddreaa chanted must live ol a well As new address. BELL. 1008 WAtWUT KEYSTONE. MAIM 3BM S V Address nil catorminfcntlo lo Evrnlng Ledger, Independent Square, Philadelphia. ' aixouD at Tns riiiLiMttrniA rouornci as SBOOnD-CtiSS M1IL KATIES. THE AVERAGE NET PAID DAILY CIR- CULATION OP THE EVENING LEDGER TOR JOLT WAS 131.009. rhlltdtlphls, Mendtr, Animt 31, 1916. Nothing it laid nowaday that hat not been said before, Terence. Champ Clark admits that tho Pres ident may havo mado somo mistakes; but his friends havo not been willing to con cedo so much. Tho Federal Government Is plan nine to begin a campaign against bad eggs. Mr. Hughes has already reminded tho country that Mr. Wilson has put too many of thorn in tho Washington depart ments. Why do not tho railroad presidents call In Mr..Bryan, tho great champion of arbitration, to help them pcrsuado Mr. Wilson? Is It because tho distinguished Nebraskan has lost his Inducnco with tho Administration? Tho closest approach to cheeso in tho l heavens 13 tho Milky Way. Evening Bulletin. Ahd what, wo may ask our con temporary, Is tho closest approach to cheese In Philadelphia? Tho politicians know, but they won't tell. They obscure Caldwell Is not to have & walk-over for tho Republican sena torial nomination In New York. The Record. It must mako Mr. Colder feel very obscuro Indeed to be called out of his namo like that. Austen Colgato Is one of the per manent products of tho Everett Colby re volt in Now Jersey Republican politics. Ho became a cnndldato for tho Legisla ture in Essex County to help tho Colby faction, but he has proved too big a man to be a mero factionalism Tho State has had an opportunity to discover his caliber during his (long service in tho House and the Senate, and now he Is responding to the undoubted domand of his party In en tering' tho primaries as a candidate for tha govornprshlp. He 13 one of tho beat assets of New Jersey Republicanism. Things havo come to a pretty pass when a magistrate cannot fiet into his 'own club becauso of a police quarantine against It Magistrates Call's Twentieth Ward Republican Club cannot bo a politi cal organization, for Director Wilson says that he knows of no political clubs In tho city except tho Union Leaguo, so the quarantine must have been ordered for i some other reason. "If it is a gambling house why don't he raid it?" the magis trate Is reported as saying to the efflcer on guard at the door. Perhaps it was quarantined Saturday night because it was a speak-easy. There must have been some reason. Will Director Wilson ex plain for the information of tho managers of other political clubs that are not po litical? The prohibition Issue has played the mischief with Maine politics for years. It gave the State to tho Democrats be fore the Progressive wing developed in the Republican party In 1912. The State Is normally Republican, and if the cam paign can be fought this year on the legittmato political Issues, uncomplicated by the regulation of the liquor traffic, it la morally certain that it will roll up. a good old-fashioned majority for the Re publican State ticket in September and for Hughes In November, The State election takes place three weeks from to day. Thp Democrats have already begun to send their national speakers down East to hold the voters In line. Colonel Roose velt will make some speeches to Impress on the Progressives the Importance of re turning to their old allegiance, and Mr. Hughes -wilt be in Maine a few days before tha voting begins, when he Is expected to unllmber the batteries which he has been masking on, his Western tour and let the enemy have some hot shot. We know as little about infantile paralysis as was known about yellow fever in the last century. At the con , Terence in Washington last week a Public Health Service surgeon paid. "Frankly, we don't know bow the disease. Is trans mitted, nor- its cause.' The physicians knew things that were not so about yellow fever in the days before the Reed Commission discovered the relation of mosquitoes to Its transmission. Dr, Wil- liara Pepper, of this city, writing in Johnson's Encyclopedia, published in the nineties, said, that it was generally con ceded that there was a specific Infectious aeent which propagated the disease, and that this materies inorbl when let loose would prove harmless unless the weather was warm, and the air moist. He said it tnlfrht be carried from point to point through business intercourse or personal Visits, but that there -was no general at tnospberio contamination and no infeo. Hon or contagion necessary except as the air was vitiated by the breath or vomit or ether discharge from, the patient. He .admitted, tawwr that the queUonvpf 'ill dtraot Q&iagtoUAiNM of the tftease 6 iiUJ & Oj opinion. Witowww iht it f no Bi.vWlcwa ulttuvU w imu te. mam &malm9w&iiB&&&ito&&to yellow fever, but that the mosquito is directly responsible for Its transmission. But we learned this only about fifteen years ago, and the mysterious character of the ailment no longer terrifies. Wo are fighting Infantllo paralysis In tho dark Just now, but the light may como any day. FINANCIAL JOKER THREAT ENS TRANSIT DELAY Nc O CONTRACTS for transit work un der tho authorizations of this year can be let until some part at least bf the loan ratified by the people In May Is sold. If, however, even $1,000,000 worth of the bonds for transit purposes are sold, It will be possible thereafter to lot contracts In advance of particular bond sales. So run tho technicalities in tho caso, accord ing to responsible officers, tho peculiarity In tho caso of transit arising from tho fact that a fifty Instead of a thirty year amortization term holds for theso special bonds. The city requires now about $9,000,000 wherewith to pay mnndamuses, duo to Parkway condemnations, which manda muses aro drawing interest at tho rate of six per cont. Quito oblously it is good business to get these paid, as tho saving in interest will bo very great. There ought, in fact, to bo no further delay In this matter, as tho unnecessary cost to tho city is approximately flvo hundred dollars a day. Tho condition of tho security market Is such that It Is possible tho city would havo difficulty In selling nt par two suc cessive Issues of bonds. By law tho tran sit bonds cannot bo sold for less than par. If, therefore, $3,000,000 should bo Issued for tho Parkway and difficulty should bo experienced later In selling a second Issuo for transit, tho effect would bo to tlo tho wholo program up and delay would bo inevitable. In the circumstances It seems perfectly clear that not nlno but ten millions of bonds should bo sold, of which $1,000,000 should bo specifically for transit work. Tho effect of this would bo to open tho way for tho letting of whatever transit contracts seemed wise, irrespective of tho amount involved. It Is, Indeed, tho one sensible and suro way of making tho transit grants availablo and rendering acceleration of tho great entorprlso pos sible. There has been too much delay In prose cuting transit work already. Several days ago the Mayor Issued a statement, considered a reply to cortaln pessimistic utterances by Director Twining, in which ho declared that he was ready to push things along and that new contracts would bo advertised for in tho near future. If no new contracts can bo let until somo of tho bonds are sold. It is per fectly clear that tho first thing to do 13 to sell somo transit bonds. Instead of that tho city is confronted with a pro posal to sell bonds for the Parkway only. Wo doubt very much If tho technicali ties of the situation havo boon called to tho attontlon of tho Mayor. We confidently expect that he will now tako measures promptly to see that tho financial diffi culties are removed and everything mado easy for Director Twining to get busy. Certainly it will bo amazing if subordinate projects authorized by tho May loan aro hurried along while tho main project pro vided for is left up in tho air. Tho Important thing for citizens to re member is this: Unless some bonds for transit purposes are sold with the next batch of bonds offered to tho public, tho whole transit program will be threat ened with long and tedious delay. There is nothing that would better please the obstructlonlstswho, although they have been whlppod in every encounter in tho open, are still hopeful that they can ac complish further delay by indirection. ULTIMATE ARBITRATION IT IS not the question whether there shall be-arbitration in the railroad sit uation or not, but who shall arbitrate? A protracted strike without violence would be impossible, nnd violence would spell defeat for the employes. There Is not to be a state ot siege, because the country, will not stand for a state of siege. Mr. Wilson has presented a plan for agreement which the union accepts and which the railroads reject, demanding arbitration. Mr. Wilson replies that he believe, in arbitration, but that "this is a condition and not a principle we face," a fine quotation from Grover Cleveland. But its finesse is not very helpful. The railroads are "willing for the Pres ldent of the United States to appoint a commission of disinterested persons to arbitrate all matters of dispute," Now a commission appointed at Mr. Wilson' personal discretion would simply be Mr. Wilson in disguise. If the em ployes have gotten fair play from Mr. Wilson, why could they not get equally fair play from Mr- Wilson's commission? Whether they call the proceedings arbi tration, a condition, or a principle Is not important. The Important thing is the personnel of that body, which now or later -will be the thir4 party to which both sides eventually must yield. The employes have an opportunity to have that personnel fixed by the man who thinks along- the tame lines that they do. Their failure to seize this opportunity has the appearance of a seizure .of Mr, Wilson's prestige as President as an asset, he having happened to state an opinion which was more acceptable to them than" to the railroads. The railroads cannot be deprived of their "day In court," as they put u indefinitely. The President's threat to let the public knew where to place tho responsibility Is merely another way el calling- In the pub Ita to act arbitrators tbrqugh vhat- EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA', MONDAY, AUGTTST 21, 1916. Tom Daly's Column INTRODUCING BERT LESTON TAY LOR, WHO BATS FOR US TODAY The Chicago Tribune modestly calls it self "the World's Greatest Newspaper," Whether it's all that or not, the third column on the editorial pace, which houses "A Line O' Typ& or Two," has helped much to make the Tribune what ever it ft today. At the bottom of that colyum is B, h. T, and in many other ways ifit the initial -colium. It was the first of its kind for one thino and it speaks to a larger audience than any other colyumlst addresses, Bert Taylor also plays golf. We might dilate upon that but he fias been kind to us, Hear him: Cnnopus W HEN quacks with pills political would dope us, Whon politics absorb tho livelong day, I like to think nbout tho star Canopus, So far, so far away. Greatest of vlsloncd Buns they say, who list 'emj To weigh it Bdenco always must de spair. Its Bholl would hold our whole dinged solar system, Nor over know 'twas there. Whon temporary chnlrmon utter speeches And frenzied henchmen howl their bat tlo hymns, My thoughts float out across tho cosmlo reaches To whore Cnnopus swims. When men nro calling names and making faces And all tho world's ajanglo and ajar, I meditate on Interstellar spacos And Btnoko a mild ncegar. For aftor ono has had about a week of The arRumcnts of frlonds as woll as foes, A fltar that has no parallax to speak of i;onauce3 to roposo. Whon tho presidential campaign la out of tho way, and tho -great war Is over, thero will bo, pralso heavon, Interesting things to read and write about. Speaking of tho great war, Explorer Stefnnsson will not return to civilization this season. Ho Isn't missing much civi lization. Wise and Motor Wise Sir la this a now Ford Joko? Ding, tho peerless salesman for tho eight-cylinder Cnntnloupo, says: "I'd like to havo tho Ford agency In a good llvo town. You can sell cm Just llko Bul Durham." Jim, another wlso ono, replica: "You roll your own, eh 7" MAC. Add humor of tho war: Berlin worry Inc over tho amount of money tho Allies aro shooting away in shells. Rock River Anthology Sir Tho Rock has its tragedies no less bitter than the Spoon. Hero exists Tom Jackson, teamster, who weighed 345 poundi yesterday. Ho has enough money to retire on, but tho doctors tell him ho must work six days a week or dlo from exccsslvo avoirdupois. E. D., M. T H. B. IC Speaking of tho hired man eating celery, tho Benton Harbor Chautauqua announces Dr. Ng Poon Chow, and every body Is urged to hear this famous Doctor Chow. Much Ado About More or Less Sir Whon a flcklo, shrewish spring gives way to summer, and fair days prompt a rCBponslvo youth to outdoor pleasures ami attlro, tha hoys and girls of this thrlce favorcd spot are wont to paddle to and fro upon tho lako In quest of romance" and diversion. I am myt.elf a lover of diversion, and romance Interests mo strangely, and so nt times I venture to do likewise" So It was that throo of us glided In our frail craft n f. c. always g. past a cliff before which nesting swallows wove a veil of flight. "Look!" cried tho bow paddler, who Is by way of" being a bird crank. "There aro barn swallows among them." "I thought barn swallows built their nests In barns," said the passenger. "They do, generally." answered the man up front, "but those doubtless feel at home where they are. That Is a very lofty cliff." I waited a moment for him to go on, and then, "Yes," I said Boftly and next day the papers spoke of tho remarkable display of lightning unaccompanied by thunder "yes, and then, too, a cliff Is real ly more stable than a barn." I have before Inveighed against groan ing, and silence desolates me scarcely less, but what I most abhor Is a forced merri ment, hinting a contempt that friendship veils and kindness cannot bear to show. It affects mo much as an acquaintance of mine, a real estate broker, said a cold did him. "It takes." he wheezed, with tears In his eyes, "the wind out of my sales." I remember that at the time I was In no mood for airy nothings, and so, "Sir," Bald I, "dam the wind in your salea 1" thus coining, as It were, a phrase. PADDED HAMMER. Madison, Wis. As they have names for everything in tho European battlefields, it is strange no ono has referred to the American sheila that don't explode as "nutmegs." Roaming in China Sir Just back from the Orient, where I saw this in the Grand Lama temple In Pekln: THE ROAMED RULES. (1.) Any persons who hold tha ticket can bfl permlttM to enter (or roam. (2.) Tho price ot tha ticket is $.585 coppers but, tha children and tba servant only to (3. r Without another ezpensa except the price of ticket, 14.) Tha idols, the sacrificial furnitures, tba buddhism's statements, and the many exhlbl tlons which are m several halls would not be touched and moved. (3.) Tha roads of this temple has been divided Into the passaces and hansed the pointing; wooden boards (or tho travelers passtne to reach the dllferent places, but do not so- Into the else of the broken and destroyed building to prevent the risk. ;. T. "Watson, My Hat and a Well-FHled Basket" 1 From th Jasper (Ala.) Mountain Eagle, Please announce through your columns that the (uncral of old Dro. II. W. King and his vtKe will be preached the 4 th Sunday In August at New Oak Orove church, two miles cast of Mauvoo on Jasper and Russellvllle road, by Itav. John w. Moore; and there will also bo on the tame day, a memorial singing In both the New Hooks and the Sacred Harp, as they were dear loers ot all good music Tbs new book sloglns will be conducted by Prof. C. C. Alex. ander and the old by Uro. Jess Lamons. 11 ro. John R. Dutton and others. All singers are cordially Invited to attend with your books. Everybody . come with well tilled basket and spend the day; a grand and glorious time Is ex pected. Como one, come all. Yours truly. "Bewildered," -who found the following undar his door, suspects his landlady; "Mr, S : My Rents are We In ad vance, & when I let It go three weeks & ask twice for It I want results." The English have had a great deal of fun over Doctor Wilson's unfortunate phrase, "too proud to fight." The latest slam is a comment on the sharks along1 the Atlantic coast, 'Thero - is such a thing," remarks Punch, "as being too proud to bathe." . "Wanted Donkey or a eoatj must be reasonable. Buffalo News. That's asking- a good deaU Apropos of the foregoing, Mr. Wil son Is saia to be displeased because Mr. Bryan has. butted. Into the strike situation. JlHi Pm Wtosa uts & fe afc AJXD THE VOICE OP President Wilson Charged With Subscribing to the Brandeis Theory of Railroad Management Cooked Food as a Preventive of Infantile Paralysis This department Is free to all readers who wish to express their opinions on subjects of current interest. It is an open lorum, end the Evening Ledger assumes no responsibility or the views of its correspondents. Letters must he sinned bu the name and adtlress ot the writer, not ncceaanxlli lor publication, but as a ouarantca 0 good alt 71. HELPING A WORTHY CAUSE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Tho Presbyterian evangellstlo com mlttco for summer tent, open-air and dally vacation Bible school work, at Its closing meeting for tho season, held In tho Wlthor spoon Building Monday, August 14, unani mously voted to thank the Evemino Ledobr for Its valuable assistance In giving pub licity to our evangelistic services and our dally vacation Bible school work, and for Its report of tho proceedings of our Mon day noon rallies. Tho committee greatly appreciates this courtesy on the part of the Evenino LEDacn, believing It has greatly aided a' worthy and deserving cause. WILLIAM P. FULTON. Secretary and Superintendent Philadelphia, August 19. MR. WILSON AND THE RAILROADS To the Edttor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Tho one man In tho United States who ought to be congratulating himself In these days Is Louis F. Brandeis. He said a few years ago that the railroads were managed so extravagantly that economies amounting to $1,000,000 a day could be made without seriously affecting the serv ice to tho public. President Wilson has, in effect, told tho railroad presidents In Washington that they can make the In creases In cost of operation Involvod In tho eight-hour day as tho basis of pay without having to Increase their charges to the public. His language Is: "Calcu lations aB to the cost of the change must, if made now, be made without regard to any possible administrative economies and adjustments." There can be no doubt of what Is In the President's mind. He In sists that the eight-hour day bo granted "because It Is right," and then promises that he will use his influence to bring about an Increase In rates "If the findings of the Federal commission show that such a course would be Just." But tho Federal commission Is tainted with the BrandelB notion that the ralhoad managers do not know how to manage tlo roads; that they aro wasting money that might be used to pay dividends to shareholders. The railroad men are willing to arbi trate and toabide by the decision ot a body of fair-minded men who have heard the evidence. It seems to me that their position' Is unassailable. They object to being held up by the neck and compelled to agrea to a plan which they insist will bankrupt tho great enterprises In their Can it be that tho President is playing politics? Is he so rash as to believe that for the sake ot securing a re-election he is Justified In holding over, the railroads a threat of Government ownership unless they yield to his demand? Does he not know that through the Interference by tha Gov ernment in the management of the roads it has become difficult for tha directors to se cure the capital needed for proper main tenance, to say nothing of necessary ex pansion? Does ho not know that "It is NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW The Republican water Is so fine this year that the people Just can't stay out. Cincin nati Commercial Tribune. So far. no substitute for gasoline has been discovered cheaper than shoo leather, New Orleans States. ( There is nothing more important, wa re peat, than tha study of mental, processes and tha qualitative analysis of intellectuals in tha case of a Chief Magistrate who la a candidate for re-election Vbw York Sua. Taking his talks into consideration and the grief they cause President Wilson, it is plain that a term on tha bench has had no effect on the splendid and unerring aim Mr. Hughes is directing against tha Ad ministration. Cincinnati Commercial Trib- HEALTH INSURANCE Compulsory health Insurance for wag. earners, which is now being strongly adve. cated in this country. Is pretty certain to ba given a further boost by tba adoption of tha measure as ft plank la the platform of tha national Liberal party of Canada, led by Sir Wilfrid Laurler. Compulsory Insurance, with, proiriaion for eontributWna from the State, eoployer and employes, baa already Hun t.hlishedl in Germany. Austria-Hun-, axy4 pusaia. prtaj prftaw HaUand, Not WHICH WILL WITHER THE PEOPLE within the power of the Interstate Com merce Commission to bankrupt any road and destroy the valuo of Its securities by rofusal to permit Incrcaso In rates or by Interminable delay In reaching a decision? And Is ho not aware that If he had In mind tho purchase of tho railroads by tha Government he could not bo pursuing a more effective policy for depreciating their securities so that they could be bought on tho bargain counter? Ho said whon ho signed the Underwood tariff law that he had been waiting all his life for the opportunity to approvo such a statuto; that Is, a statute which has put American manufacturers on the defensive. Can It be that he has also been awaiting an opportunity to launch the Government in tho railroad business and that ha thinks that It has now como 7 G. W. D. Philadelphia, August 20. COOK THE CHILDREN'S FOOD To the Edttor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Kindly permit me to offer a sug gestion In connection with the present paralysis epidemic. In this ailment, like all others, preven tion Is better than cure. I have had personal observation of nearly five hundred cases In New York nnd New Jersey, and have found that In 00 per cent of the patients anemlo conditions, tho result of Improper food, are accompanying condi tion, and that modern apartments with gas stoves and patent foods are In tha history of every case. Feeding children or adults on the present patent foods Is a crime and Impoverishes the body In the very parts that then cannot resist tho paralysis. Half-cooked food, such as oatmeal, tha result of saving gas or heat, is poison. It takes at least an hour. Hastily boiled milk. Instead of gradually warmed, ruins the milk and the stomach. In an apartment In New York where breakfast foods, cantaloupes, corn and other Indigestible, uncooked foods were tha det, three children and the mother died. In the flat above with more children and less Income, but a' good, patient mother and cook, where well-cooked oatmeal, rlco and soups, plso soft boiled eggs, cooked fruits and plenty ot milk were the diet, you could not give them paralysis. Proper food Is everything. GEOnGE E. FORREST. Philadelphia, August 19. , WHEN IS A MAN GROWN UP? To the Editor of tha Evening Ledger; Sir I hava been told that the", only in. fallible way to discover when a man ceases to be a boy is to And out how he arranges the bills In a roll of money in his pocket. While he Is still a boy ha puts tha blg'bltls on the outside so that ha can Impress people with his wealth when ha flashes the roll. When he arrives at years of discretion ho puts tha little bills on the outside, both for convenience and to remove temptation from the light-fingered who may sea him. There may be other tests equally good, out I have observed that this works very well in practice. I would ba willing to wager a five-cent cigar that Colonel Roosevelt puts tha big bills oti tha outside of his wad. Wouldn't you? STANDPATTER. Philadelphia, August IE. way, Rumania and Serbia. Tha new Cana dian plan Includes maternity benefits. There is considerable expectation that tha Con servative party will follow the Libera lead and that legislation will follow soon after tha war, A model bill for tha United States has been drafted by tha American Associa tion for Labor Legislation, and will be In troduced next year, tha association an nounces. In 20 State Legislatures. Spring field Republican. WHEN I AM STANDING, ON A . MOUNTAIN CREST When I am standing on a mountain crest. Or hold the tiller In tha dashing spray, My love of you leaps foaming in my breast, Shouts with the winds and sweeps to their foray; My heart bounds with the horses of the sea, And plunges in tha wild rlda ot the, night. Flaunts In tha teeth of tempest tha large . eleo s That rides out Fate and welcomes gods to fight. Ho. love, I laugh aloud for love of you, Glad that our love Is fellow to rpugh weather. No fretful orchid hothoused from Jha dew. But hale and hardy as the highland heather, Rejoicing la tha wind that etlnss and thrills, ueavaas oi eccss, piaymsio ot wa bum. ZL -webari mrm 1 FIRST? What Do You Know? Queries of general interest will tie answered In this column. Ten Questions, the answers to which every unit-Informed person should know, are asked dally. QUIZ 1. What is a sea-puss? 2. When Is the Maine Slate elections? S. A fourih Allied ofTeniilTo Is said to bo be ginning. On what front Is that? 4, About whnt percentage of the railroad work ers In the United Slates aro ,tho 400,000 who hate threatened to strike? 5. IlaTB eirthquake shocks ever been fell in Philadelphia? . What Is "a flradgrlnd"? 7. What Is a horoscope? B, Who was Stephen rhllllps? 0. How Is the name Paderewski pronounced? 10. How many quarts in n magnum? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. The Articles of War are the discipline and disciplinary procedure cods of the United Stales Army. 3. Ballistics! the srlenre which treats' of tha motion of projectiles. S. Rain . washes from the air doit, soot. nn annnta pollen, and ordinarily contains an appre ciable percentage nitrogen, ammonia nnd carbonic nc rid i 4. The rygmlrs. a dwarf negroid race of equa torial Africa. They ore under S feet In satAttirOe 5. Hale Jloldent president of the Chicago, Dar lington and )u ncy nnd spokesman for tho railway executives. "sregeuriVocT4 '" n nnMr7 to l'rrsldent Cleveland, who called out the army and resorted to tho Injunction. " Thbou.rM.000rIO,l0n 0. A claque t persons paid for applauding. 10. Horse latitudes! tho region nlong the polar edge of the trade-wind belts. National Holidays . i D,7 V1"0 July ,B ca,,e4 a "national holiday,' It has not been made one by Congress. Congress has at various times appointed special holidays. In Its second aesslon tho Flfty-thlrd Congress passed an act making Labor Day a publlo holiday In the District of Columbia, nnd It has recog nUed tha existence of certain days as holidays for commercial purposes, but with tho exception named there is no general statute on tha subject The proclamation) of tha President designating a day of thanksgiving only makes It a legal holiday in tha District of Columbia and tha Terri tories. There are more than B0 legal holidays observed in tha various States and Territories. r A Saying" of Louis XIV's Louis XIV, Tha correct form is "L'Etat o'est mol" "I am the State." Designer of 25-Cent Piece R. E. S. The designer of the new 28 cent piece la Hermon Atkins MacNell sculptor, who was born in Chelsea. Mass., n 1886 He was a Tupll of Chapln. at Jul an Academy, and spent 13 years at tha Ecola des Beaux Arts, In Paris. For three vara Mr. MacNell taught at CorneU and ItoK thl' samo period at tha Art Institute at Chi cago. He won the Roman Relnehart schoU arshlp n sculpture. 1836-1900; was awa?d. ed designers' medal. Chicago ExDosltlnn "?i! 8'iV.r,meU, Pa-s ExPoSUoS1800: gold medl. Buffalo Exposition. 1901 sliver medal. Charleston Exposition. 1902; com memorative medal, Louisiana Purchase Ex" post on, 1904; gold medal. Pan 5 position. 1915. Did Important decorativ. work at Chicago, Paris Buffalo Tathe Panama Exposition, and in addition won in numerous competitions for publlo works. Roosevelt and Wilson Editor of -What Do You Knota"Jn what speech or writing of Mr. Roosevelt did a recent remark of his occur comparing the situation which Wilson confront Tin Mexico with what McKin ey confronf-d Tanrt if possible, will you quota the Mnttl '' It was in his letter declining the Pro. T'TS "V?1""'"' that Mr, RooseveU made the following statement, probably tha one you refer to; "We owe ah of our wis! ant trouble with the professional German American element in the TUnitSS sf'"? Mr. Wilson's timid and Vacillating f, to during tha last two yearX Tha defSS. of Mr. Wilson hava alleged In excuse ? him that he confronted a dlfttcul ? situation' As regards Mexico, the situation which iSS" WlUon confronted was nothing jjka me' "that which PrVsidSt MeSaiS confronted in connection with Cuba ?S ,y fWtaZ" a- 0 time of the SpanUh fttS? ynder the actual circumstances Tw T W,a with only a minimum ofrUkv. LEW on behalf of Belgium, a smalLeVhSn?' nation, when ah was expend Tto 'iJ,V.! extremity of outrage by tfaVbrutit vlaltf" 'it ".&. t Sa?SSS I VtZ'tarzS1? W4 eonvetanl WHY WAS HP, CALLED JOHrI . ... .. " lai jLiireo uonmcting Accounts of ijj Kjumiga oi iName of the Famous Revolutionary Admiral By JOHN ELFRETH WATKlMo "TTE CHANGED his name for n"j v Xlunknown." So saya history of John Paul j,,n.. J -wizard or tho sea." H9 was hT mystery from first to last, He J with tho surname of Paul John ot!r and no more ho had been as a pi!" laddie, whon his bare feet hart .... r"li ovor the heather: and lil ai,,. T est Scotch cardenflr. hnH u -'. tt.fc puro and simple. Indeed, it ( ? V, Known iaoi mat joiin Paul had be. ' good-enough name for our hero uniinl arrived nt tho ago of 26 or 27, ," ft trriltaf tin Aria tlnn et i. . " Ql . ....., .... M. UAlra surham0w$ scores of men havo gono into court $ doff that thoy might have surer laair This precocious youth when U t captain pf a Scotch brig, which hs Wf tincin two trlnn In thn w t., r!' lng ono of theso cruises occurred aa S cldent which wnj, liM t... . count for his changing his name. & coming Involved in a quarrel with Iff, ship's carpenter, Maxwell, by nam. i$ Is said to havo flogged that lnsubordlaSt of cruelty woro thereupon preferS against tho Scotch skipper, but were th" missed as frivolous. When In a weoks, howovcr, his alleged victim dfcP tho charges wero rovlvcd. Somo say tw John Paul was charged with the muriJT of Maxwell and was Indicted by a grml Jury at his old homo In Scotland. In uA" evont ho was not arrested, but tha lnet' dent preyed upon his mind, and to piotT his Innoconco ho sent nmdavlts to Ww1"" tamiiy in scoiiana. it was to escape ihi possibility of identification in the ettet'l of his capture tnat no added Jones to We namo, according to this theory, Other accounts give quite a differs!' motivo. His Brother, William Paul M como to America In 1760, had bouehtV largo plantation in Virginia and had w.J teroa nt tjnanoito, jn. u., into a icer. cantile business In which ha vrai es? gaged at the tlmo of his death In IHI His storo was In tho same bulldlnr fa which Georgo Washington was InlUaW as a Mason. John Paul came to YlK' glnla In 1773 to administer his orotic er's estate. According o one tiidltleri, his deceased brother William, on comliie. to America, had been adopted by a ridr but chlldloss relative of tha nana j Jones, nnd William had taken this nam. of his foster parents, who had provMeT that in caso William Paul Jones died Is-' testato, his young brother, John tUS, might Inherit -tho property if he itf j should tako tho namo of Jones. , whisk) : he did. ' ' According to a third theory, the Ml mariner went from Virginia to NotdTij Carolina to settle tho estate In that Stitr and thero met two brothers, Allen m Wllllo (pronounced Wylle) Jonea,aa of a wealthy and distinguished tufa who had been educated at Eton flJl woro very influential in political IKtlBiJ lng out of funds and unable totalta! upon his inheritance unUl after sm itrylng delays, John Paul became, tse beneficiary of theso brothers' soutfiHB hospitality. Colonel Willie Jones tecaj his bondsman for $2500 when he filed nanera of administration and attended It tho legal 8ido of the probation of thai. Although a rough diamond compared wits his distinguished hosts, tho frlendle tlo Scotchman's plcturesqueness won tls ndmlratlon nnd ho gratefully accepts! their Invitation to remain in their fam ily until his Inheritance might be forth? coming. Charmed by his' new summrf-' Ings, John Paul determined to retain Ml Southern plantation and become a.f dent of the new world. So, as an w dence of hla crrntltude. he assumed stirnnma f Vifo r"i"n ttnfl fYH. a wa j u uwiivMtw.v, (Copyright.) THE SCHOLAR A& A DUB Looking over tha long list of PWRr who contributed to Mr. Wilson's cwrW-' fund nnd subsequently got their M7.B?f 1 we ara forced to tho painful nf11?lt that tha willingness ot tne aomJ'"Ktt to pass around tna pie was """"VT In politics may be a' dub In pie cuttli-j: mrx. New York American. THE TRUE MEMORIAL Of course England will build a """Rierj to Lord Kitchener, but the silent """JKrJ will rest batter if. first. England W JpKttm the good worK ne started uoe i iMff New York Telegram. AMUSEMENTS MARKET AB0VB 11:18 to ltlW STANLEY IOC, joc, IN MAPfiTrrcmTrc CLARK 'eejea IT Trprrrr T? T.ATYV TCTT.EEN' Thur.. Frl.. Bat., Blanche flwett, PuW PrtH . . . inw ir.nVET TR?f AliAUJS "" mShcW :i In "Hulda From Hoana Thurs., Frl.. BatWalUee Bell aaflM, Rldgely In "House ot the Golden Wiasw ;Wej B. F. Keith's TheaM AN ALL tfEW FBATUBB J3"! j?l Bert Kalmar & Brown-isy EXi a U In NURSERY-IN" Dous;la nm.rl.s j. Wood Co., in -;" E-e Dong i"o -- -t -- m n . irH IILDSIS- ig uue iiartr .?? .- rs.u Today at 2. 2Se & ouoj Tonignt z. SM us. 6W LlhC IM Dorothy Bherman i-rsenw - - W "ThP. Colonial jjbih i TUB BCOOP," "ramatto yowltr. H2j BROAD ManMoil, Aug. r-rTA ATJ A TJTJ A"NTRLL mir fcW la a New T T O R A B E 1 GAKIUCK BgSSAMat.,A! BNt't 'b. Ifcitto Ini TWICE DAH.V. NCT&II Matinees" 25c. SSct Evg.. " .Oa "m Howe's Travel jmw d...i.i. on.. Thursday. Afeifc ? "T T CHESTNUT W$ fll Arcadia l0 MSm xA. rum. Burks: "OloHa's Bomaacs Thurs. . fit "PUlars o-S Victoria MARJ? &B . a?J3HB HMB-Sar& WOopsmt!lfe I MS Bit JsWLm UlifAU '4 'i s? j D, tt Turk ta. "vn x Mr H.kXAHWat ,S KiMl -