WOMAN S LIBERTY BELL STARTS OA RECORD TRIP Huge and enthusiastic crowds greet the historic suffrage symbol at all towns and cross-roads on tour through State —women seeking the ballot are jubilant over the bell's reception. The Woman's Liberty Bell ha. c started on its Slate-wide tour ol Pennsylvania. Leaving Sayre, iD Bradford county, on the morning ol June 23rd, it has swept through the northern tier counties at an average rate of 50 miles a day and is now swinging southward to reach Pitts burgh in time for the big suffrage demonstration there on Independence Day. If the big crowds and the enthu siasm which have greeted the bell all along its route thus far can be taken as a true indication of public senti inent, the suffragists of Pennsylvania need have no fear of the outcome on Election Day. For in each of the scores of towns through which the bell party has passed, tremendous crowds have turned out to cheer the plucky little band of women and pledge them their affirmative votes on the suffrage amendment in No vember. Moreover, the suffrage enthusiasm displayed by these crowds has been as honest, as it has been hearty. The big bronze replica of the original Liberty Bell which, with its chained dapper, mutely symbolizes the plea for political independence which the women are making, has struck a re sponsive chord in the hearts of the thousands who have turned from town and country-side to see it. It made them realize that the women of Pennsylvania who are asking for the ballot today are prompted by the same patriotic impulses and mo tives that stirred the men of this State in 1776. And with this realization has come a desire to help, so that the new WHEN A MAN VOTES What is required, at present, of a man before he can vote in the United States? He must be twenty-one years old. He must be native born or natural Ized. In some States he must be able to read (in a few Southern States there are additional educational and prop erty qualifications affecting the negro voters only). THAT IS ALL He is not asked whether he will use his vote. He is not asked if all men want to vote. He is not asked if he thinks the laws need changing. He is not asked if he will promise to better the laws. He is not asked to give statistics showing whether men have previously used their votes to better the laws. HE IS NOT ASKED IF HE IS SURE HE CAN STILL BL A GOOD FATHER. He is not asked to "remain attrac tive" after he votes. But all such requirements and more are made of women when they aspire to vote. SONG OF THE SUFFRAGIST Tune —"America.'* Our Country, 'tis of thee We ask our liberty, For thine own sake. Freedom for all alike We'll shield thee with our might We pledge thee what is right Do not forsake. Justice we ask of thee. Justice we'll give to thee — Justice to all. No child shall labor then, We'll help our splendid men To make this land a gem For one and all. Our native Country, thee. We ask for liberty. We want it soon! We love humanity, Help men humane to be. And grant us liberty— Nineteen-fifteen. —Mrs. H. W. Phillips. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Women's Sphere. "It is said that woman's place is in the home Surely it is. But a better place to vote from has never been found. "Frank Crane." WHERE WOMEN VOTE "Women suffrage exists in New Zea land," wrote its Prime Minister, "be cause it. dawned upon the minds of thinking men that they were daily wasting an almost unlimited supply of mental and moral force." Liberty Bell may ring forth the same message of political emancipation to the women of this State on the night ; of November second, as the old bell proclaimed for the men nearly a cen lury and a half ago. This spirit of help and eager co operation has been demonstrated day | after day and in county after county from the very beginning of the Wo men's Liberty Bell tour. It has been I ahown in the friendly faces of the crowds at every town and cro3s-roads, in the resounding cheers with which they speed the bell on its way, in the pledges of the men to vote "yes" for suffrage in November —and, last but not least, in the freely given offerings to the suffrage campaign funds by hundreds of those who have seen the bell and caught some of the spirit which it typifies. It is not merely incidents of this sort, however, that are making the members of the bell party so optimis tic of victory on Election Day. It is rather the indications of the rapidly- 1 increasing sentiment for woman suf frage that they find in each town and hamlet. They find it not only in the big crowds and the cheers that greet them and their Liberty Bell, but in the eagerness with which their speak ers are listened to and the earnest ness with which their arguments for equal suffrage arc received. And so, I at the conclusion of the bell trip on \ Ihe night of November first, they see "Victory" looming large and printed on the election return by the ballots rf the men of Pennsylvania who be lieve in fair play for women as well as for men. WOMAN'S PLACE i kept my wife, when first new-wed, On a quite inferior plane; I made of her a servant, And I scorned her heart and brain. But, oh. alas! it came to pass She talked of naught but pots and pans, Of mops and soaps and pickling cans. Of tucks and tulles and pins and thread And recipes for soups and bread— Until I vowed no more I'd rule A combination drudge and fool. i put her on a pedestal. To worship at her shrine. Her head enhaloed and her eyes Upraised to look divine. But. still, all, me! 'twas misery. She talked to me of hymns and spires Of saints and souls and martyred sires. Of sins and sacrifices high. Of training piously to die— Until with all her saintly strength, She got upon my nerves at length! So now nor high nor low I place My mate, but by my side I keep her, share with her my life, With her the world divide. And, lo! 1 find this suits my mind. She talks to rue of business schemes, Of politics, of arts, of dreams, Of love and laughter, of the news. Of books and men and modern views— Until I swear, by all that's brave, A comrade beats a saint or slave. —Oreola W. Haskell, in Judge. VOTES FOR MOTHERS "I do not care so much for the vote for myself or for men as I do for mothers." says Julia Lathrop, head of the Federal Children's Bureau. "The great test is whether it will be use ful in the hands of 13,000.000 mothers in their business of rearing our 30.- 000.000 children. I believe it will." JUST A MINUTE PLEASE ! ISN'T IT TRUE that the State is merely a home for the People just as the household is the home for the family? ISN'T IT TRUE that in the right kind of home the man's point of view and the woman's point of view are both needed? ISN'T IT TRUE that voting would not interfere with a woman's busi ness, housekeeping, any more than it does with a man's business, bread winning? Women taxpayers in Alexandria La., have used the vote to get good roads, which otherwise they might not have won. The Columbus Grange, said to be j the largest in Indiana, has adopted unanimously a resolution indorsing 1 woman suffrage. Odd Happenings I In the Day's News j "M Ml i H" I'| I I pr~iirtiiiM 11111 H m v Beer gardens in Munich, the greatest beer drinking center in Germany, serve j lemonade because of shortage in beer Aurora boreulis on rampage inter rupted telegraph service and stopped trains in northwest United States and ! Canada lie didn't hit the frog, but Peter Banks. colored, must spend thirty days in jail for shooting at one, because he had no license to shoot a gun in Ne\t Jersey. 31 au who must appear in supreme court in alimony case inspected Lud low stret jail. New York city headquar ters of the Alituouy club, and said it suited him. Haircut didn't suit Walter Eddy, so he has sued Colgate fellow students for so,ooo. charging that they forciblv | clipped a head of hair it took him four years to grow. NO GIRLS ON WARSHIPS IS NEW BRITISH EDICT. Order Due to Torpedo Being Fired In Dock During Visit. "No more girls on warships," is the edict of the British admiralty. The order is the result of a torpedo run ning amuck at Newport, Isle of Wight The British destroyers put in at New port frequently and the officers have become popular with the inhabitants. One evening a prominent citizen of Newport, his niece and another young woman were aboard a destroyer, and one of the gunners was explaining the working of a torpedo tube. The charge of high explosive had been removed and placed to one side, when the gunner was temporarily call ed away. Meanwhile another gunner came along and. thinking the explana tion had been concluded, replaced the charge and went away. The first gunner returned and. una ware that the charge had been replac ed, proceeded with his demonstration, saying, "This is how the torpedo is dis charged." With that he pressed the button. There was a rejß>rt. and the amazed } little party saw the deadly torpedo leave its tube and travel under water right across the stretch between the pier where the destroyer was tied up and the next pier. It was making straight for a large Italian steamship. But for some unexplained reason the torpedo's course was suddenly deflect ed. Instead of striking the steamer it crashed into the wall of tire pier twen ty feet from the vessel's stern. Tons of water were thrown into the air. drenching many persons who happened to be nearby. The pier suffered con siderably. There will he no more little parties. EDISON'S NEW INVENTION. 3-000,000 Candle Power Searchlight Fed by Storage Batteries. Profiting by an experience of firemen in fighting the $3,000,000 fire at the Edison works Lu West Orange, N. J,., on Dec. f). 11)14, Thomas A. Edison has perfected another invention, which he took to his home in Llewellyn Park. A few minutes after Charles Edison began operating the device for the edi fication of his father people living in Ihe valley east of Llewellyn Park tele phoned police headquarters and asked. "What is that terrible light shooting wnt of the park?" A policeman found Mr. Edison an* 1 his family enjoying the wonders prv duced by a new ".o candle power searchlight capable of throwing a raj several miles, the most powerful port able searchlight yet invented. It is very small, and the power is supplied oy storage batteries. In the lire at the Edison plant she jards were thrown into darknes- when i the i>ower was shut off. Mr. Edison conceived the idea of a jsortable search light, and two days alter the blaze he 'gad designed a working model. Now he has announced the perfection of bis idee- J i was said at the Edison la bora tor. that the lamp will be very useful ir. mine rescue work, at fires and op Wonderful Memories. "We are told that Pascal never for got anything he had seen, heard or thought Avicenna could repeat by rote the entire Koran when lie was ten years old, and Francis Suarez had the whole of St. Augustine in his mem ory. In three weeks Scaliger, the fa mous scholar, committed to memory every line of the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey." Another scholar, Justus Lipsius, offered to repeat the "Histo ries" of Tacitus without a mistake on forfeit of his life. OBSERVATION. It is the close observation of little things which is the secret of success in business, in art, in science and in every pursuit in life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts made by successive generations of men —the little bib of knowledge and experience care fully treasured up by them growing at length into a mighty pyramid.— Samuel Smiles. ..The Indiana Macaroni Company.. OUR MACARONI Can be Iinight at the Following Stores: The Cunningham Department Store. Steveson V Myers. Plotzer Meat Market. They are FRESH. Made in Indiana V ; SIR JOHN A. SIMON. Secretary of State For Home Af fairs In British Coalition Cabinet. i ' iv. * Ere., m -V l Jis ORPHANS IN HOLLAND. In Some Cities They Are Dressed In Most Grotesque Fashion. The Dutch differ from the Chinese ia announcing to the world the birth of children only in the article displayed. The Chinamen hang a piece of ginger over the main entrance to the house, while the Hollanders indicate the event by a piece of lace, combining with the lace a pink background for a boy and tinsel for a girl. The orphans of some of the cities of Holland are quite conspicuous, and especially so when seen on the streets of Amsterdam, dressed in what might be termed half and half clothing. The east half of a boy's coat, including the sleeve, is red, wh.Ue the west half is black. The dresses of girls are divid ed in a similar manner, but are topped off by becoming white caps, which make the young misses look very neat and attractive. This singular style of dress is said to have been adopted to enable the railroad officials, as well as the au thorities, to keep track of them, says the National Geographical Magazine. As the orphan asylums of Holland have the control of children committed to them until they are of age, the more mature of the unfortunates (wearing these odd garments in public) present a very striking appearance. INFLATING A TIRE. A Way to Test It When There Is No Pressure Gauge Handy. Time was when every tire manufac turer warned all and sundry to inflate their tires to a high degree of pressure, and more probably than not this was due to the fact that in those days all pumping was done by hand and w'it very inefficient implements. The correct thing to do nowadays, of course, is to consult a standard taole of requisite pressures, according to 1 he size of tiro and the load to be carried, and to use this in conjunction with a reliable gauge. But there is also a rough and read method which is by no means indeter initiate if n< pressure gauge is handy, ami that is to take the car out on to a dry road which is in a bad state of re pair and full o{ holes. Preferably then, should be no passengers on the rear seats. If_the driving pumpe Names Usurped by Women. Mary is not by any means the oni;. name that has been borne by men and women alike, writes a correspondent of the London Chronicle, who has di]>- ped into old parish and other registers. Sir Patience Ward was lord mayor of London in 16S0. Eve Sliffhton is men tioned in a will of the sixteenth cen tury. and Grace Hardwin was an old landowner in America. As to male names usurped by the la dies, instances occur of feminine Phil ips and Georges, and in one case a daughter was duly baptized Noah. A goddaughter of the Duke of Welling ton was named Arthur in his honor, and in Effingham church there is a monument to Timothy, wife of Richard Mabanke. Spoke as They Passed. "I hope you don't associate with that man 1 saw you speak to in the street • just now." "Associate with him? What do you take me for? That man. sir, is one of the most rascally, corrupt, sneaking, underhand, low down, villainous and depraved scoundrels that ever man aged to keep out of Jail." "I know it. Rut why are you on speaking terms with him at all?" "Why. 1 m—er —his 'awyer/'—Lon lon Mail. ' NATIONAL OFFICIAL BOOKS. They Are Named by Colors and Cover a Wide Range of Hues. British government publications art called "blue books," because they arc usually bound in blue paper covers and because blue is the officially recognized color in parliament and law. in a few departments, however, "blue" books are printed in yellow covers to ilistiu guisli the department Diplomatic cor respondence with foreign countries and short acts of parliament are often left unbound, or "white," because there is no strict rule for binding any docu ments less than an inch in thickness. In addition to the "blue book" there is the "red book." This contains a list of persons who hold appointments. The only other color used by England is black. A black book contains an ex posure of some abuse, the name "black book" originating from the famous "black book" compiled in the reign of Henry VIII. to expose the abuses in monasteries. In France the chief color for govern ment publication is yellow. Although the latest French government report has been called a "black book," in real ity it is published in yellow covers. It forms, in fact one of a long set of "yellow books" which France has been issuing annually ever since the year 1861 upon the affairs of the country for the use of politicians and historians. The chief color of Russian govern ment publications is orange. Belgium uses gray,- Italy green, the United States blue and red, Spain and Austria red and Germany and Portugal white or drab.—New York Press. Garden of the Near East. Brusa, situated at the foot of Mount Olympus, in Asiatic Turkey, is the gul den city of the near east. Every mosque and public building and almost every house stands in its own garden, under the shadow of sycamore, cypress or fig trees. The flora of the surround ing district is so rich and varied that it has been the happy hunting ground of botanists for centuries, and some authorities regard it as the cradle land of many of our sweetest spring flow ers—the hyacinth, the tulip, the snow drop and the jonquil—l,ondon Spec tator. BONEY IN GOOD TASTE. A Woman Who Capitalized Her Sens* of the Beautiful. A woman's good taste is a part of her stock In trade and could lie made mud more widely remunerative than 1' now is. One would naturally suppose that th success of an auction depended maini upon the wit and skill of the auction eer. A prominent auction house in Nov York city has discovered that a worn an's good taste in showing up thur_ r artistically, or in their true relations or with a suggested use, is quite as va' nnble an asset as a voluble auctioneer For example, in a sale of orients: goods were some handsome old hip" cages, wonderful creations in tortoh shell, black lacquer. Ivory and Jade There were seven cages In all. and so spirited was the bidding that they brought prices ranging from $4lO tc $7OO. The thing that did it was not any thing said or done by the auctioneer, but the fact that In anticipation of th Rale there had been put in each case a pair of singing and twittering birds ex actly suited in color to the cage* in which they were placed. Capes and birds made a symphony of color. With out the Mr.ls in them the capes would not have broupht half the price. Who but a woman would have thonpht of if* The same auction house has found that a suitable and artistic arrange ment of poods, ail under the deft hand of its woman specialist, adds man! dollar* to tile sales.—Leslie's. Necessarily Slow. A California youngster had been per mitted to visit a boy friend on the strict condition that he was to leave there at o o'clock, lie did not arrive home till 7 o'clock and his mother was very angry. The youngster insisted, however, that he had obeyed her or ders and had not lingered unneces sarily on the way. "Do you expec t me to believe," said his mother, 'that it took you two hours to walk a quarter of a mile?" She reached for the whip. "Now, sir, will you tell me the truth?" "Ye-es, mamma," sobbed the boy, "Charlie Wilson gave me a mud turtle and I was afraid—to carry it —so I led it home."—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Small Anvils. The anvil that rings to the sturdy blacksmith's sledge may weigh 200. :k)0 or 400 pounds, but there are anvils whose weight is counted in ounces. These are used by Jewelers, silver smiths and various other workers. Counting shapes, size*, styles of tiui*h. and so on. these little anvils are made in score* of varieties, ranging in weight from fifteen ounce* up to a number i pound* each. All the little anvil of the finest sfe-.j. "t'tiey arc ait riiiil> finished, often nickel p!at*d. and How surfaces tbar are brought int . um- y made as smooth as glass Damage Done Dardanelles j Fort by 15-Inch Shell | ' W iX" J*' - JfeF. " t -T* T- . f >V . %?ifi Photo bv American Press Association. This picture shows the effect of one of the Queen Elizabeth's fifteen-inch shells. It was made at the Dardanel les after the allies* bombardment had caused some of the forts to fall, it made a hole in the wall large enough for a train tn pass through. TRAPPED A SEAGULL Queer Contest of Strength Between • Bird and a Bivalve. At first thought it is hurd to imagine how a clam could endanger the life of a bird. That such a strange circum stance is not impossible is shown by the following Incident: A settler on one of the small islands near Vancouver was returning to hisi home byway of a beach of hard sand I when he beheld an unusually large 1 flock of seagulls gathered in a compact 1 mass and heating with beaks andq wings upon the sand. Evidently they,! were attacking some enemy. Over head dozens of gulls wheeled and screamed in evident excitement. The settler was almost ui>on the fighting birds before they burst apart and flew, chattering, toward the clouds. One, however, lay flapping upon the ground, and the man saw that u mon ster elam held the gull's beak in u vise like grip. It was. too heavy for the j bird to fly away with, and for ail the gull's frantic struggles it could not loosen the clam's tenacious grip. With his hunting knife the man pried open the shells and freed the cap j tive. The gull was exhausted from Its desperate efforts and at first could only stagger like a drunken sailor toward the water. Finally, however, it flew away and soon returned In the van of a cloud of gulls come to insj>ect the en etuy that had trapped one of theb tribe.—St. Andrews Beacon. Lip Reading Detectives. In a Vienna school for tlie deaf and dumb, where lip reading is taught, a course has been established for the sje cial purpose of teaching the urt to de tectives. The possibilities of lip read ing, says the author of the account in the Volta Review, have been exagger ated. But they are sufficient to cause authorities to think the instruction of detectives worth while. When a de tective becomes proficient, he is able to learn something of tlie conversation between people who are visible, but out of earshot. The article says that at from 7,0 to KM> feet it is possible for an expert to get tlie general run of a con versation. Some reading lias been done with glasses at a distance of 12.7 feet Instruction and practice In the art must be very thorough if the detective is to use it to real advantage in his work. Transforming Clothesline Posts. A suburban resident grew tired of the wooden clothesline posts in his back yard. He incased them in chicken wire netting and planted sprouts of honeysuckle around the posts. He then nailed a little bird house to the top of each, in a short time the honeysuckle had completely covered the unsightly posts and a pair of bluebirds built a nest in one of the houses. Many of this man's neighbors took up the idea, and honeysuckle vines and bird nouses now make the clothesline posts of his locality a pride to their owners.—House and Garden. Her Other Half. Society Dame—Oh. doctor, I'm so sorely troubled with ennui. Doctor— H'm! Why don't you interest your self in finding out how the other half lives? Society Dame—Gracious! Why, I'm not looking for a divorce. —Chicago News. Time Something Started. "Have you noticed the clock?" he asked at the hour of midnight. "Yes. I have." she replied, with a yawn. "It hasn't been going for three hours." "Neither bavo you."—Yonkers States man A Sure rroof. The new family who have Just moved in hare something tn their lives they want to hide." "Why do you think so?" "Beenuse their hired girl is deaf and dumb."—Baltimore American.