Denar Mean, Bellefonte, Pa., January 11, 1918. BATTLE YMN OF THE RE- PUBLIC. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the com- ing of the Lord: He is tramping out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored; He hath loosed the fateful lightning His terrible swift sword; His truth is marching on. of I have seen him in the watchfires of a hundred circling camps; They have builded Him an altar in evening dews and damps; I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps; His day is marching on. the I have read a fiery gospel, nished rows of steel; “As ye deal with my contemners, so with you my grace shall deal; Let the hero, born of woman, serpent with his heel, Since God is marching on.” writ in bur- crush the He has sounded forth the shall never call retreat; He is sifting out the hearts. of men be- fore His judgment seat; Oh, be swift, my soul, to Be jubilant, my feet! Our God is marching on. trumpet that answer Him! In the beauty of the lillies Christ born across the sea, With a glory in His bosom figures you and me; As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free While God is marching on. —Julia Ward Howe. was that trans- — THE WAR’S GREATEST SPEECH. “Lafayette, We Are Here.” “Lafayette, we are here!” By all France, this Simple, unaffect- ed utterance of General Pershing at the tomb of Lafayette is acclaimed the great inspired oration of the war. How it came to win instant place with the famed sayings of history— how it stirred and strengthened a na- tion’s faltering soul were told with vivid force by a hero of the Marne— Lieutenant Paul Perigord, of the French Army—at the Speakers’ Bu- reau meeting in Lincoln Hall of the Union League last month. _ A slender figure was the Lieutenant in his steel blue uniform of the line, so colorfully reminiscent of Marne battle-smoke. And just as battle- smoke cloaks the flash and thunder of the guns, so, too, his tunic of battle- smoke blue enveloped fire and force— the fire of ardent patriotism and the force of dramatic oratory. An audi- ence swaying from tears to laughter and back again to tears testified to the emotional appeal of Lieutenant Perigord’s recital. His putting aside the robes of priesthood to rejoin the colors, his desperate wounds, his five decorations for valor on the field of honor, his presence as the “living voice of the fighting man from the front,” all were themes of a masterly introduc- tion by Chairman Pepper. It was an introduction that prepared the big au- dience for thrills. And the thrills were forthcoming. Lieutenant Peri- gord’s remarks were made all the more effective by the savor of native French that clung to his words. Here is the story he told—the man- ner of the telling cannot be reproduc- “I am the smallest man on this plat- form tonight, and I have just been very bold. I have requested your Secretary of the Treasury to wait a few minutes so I could tell him what I have on my heart, and this is what I have on my heart: “I have wished, while the Secretary was speaking, that his voice could car- ry so far that every one of my boys —every one of the boys of the infant- ry, with whom I have lived for three long years, in mud and blood—might hear his words. And then I have wished that the boys of the British army might have heard him. Could your words have carried so far, Mr. Secretary, five million ‘boys fighting for our liberty would be trying to shake your hand for these sentiments. “This war has meant loss of blood and money and sacrifice to us boys. We are the boys who are going over the top, who live in mud and dirt, un- der gas, steam, and fire. These are the men who should hear you say that self-sacrifice is going to win this war. Ah, yes! tonight the boys of France, England, and Italy are thankful to you, sir, for I know they shall hear of these words. For there will be less blood shed and there will be victory for us all because of those words. “If I have ever wished for elo-: quence, my friends, I have wished for it now. I am not a speaker, I am on- ly a poor soldier, and a very tired sol- dier at that. But whatever I have I give willingly, and I shall only speak to you out of the fullness of my heart, not looking for eloquence of human wisdom. And, of course, the first thing I must do is to repeat for you what France has proclaimed to be the best speech of the war. After hear- ing your Secretary, tonight, I believe I should say the two best speeches of the war. “When General Pershing came to France’ and visited the tomb of Lafayette; when he arrived there the French people and the French officers expected a great oration. “But the striking figure of your General—your typical great soldier— bent low as if to greet the silent spir- it that lay beneath the stone and he whispered, ‘Lafayette, we are here.’ My friends, do you know what that meant to France? Do you under- stand why we salute that speech? “I come from the Middle West and, before leaving again for the Middle West, I want to say that some one has expressed the fear that the West is not perhaps quite awakened. My friends, there are two lines of defense, the first and the second. The first line of defense on the Eastern front has collapsed; the Western has not— be sure of that. I have my boys there, and I am going to them short- ly, and that company has not lost one foot of ground since the battle of the Marne, when they retreated on orders. ; to hold. And I know they are not going to lose one foot of ground. “What is the second line of de- fense? I know now that the West- ern front here in this country is going I have seen a most wonder- ful thing. I have seen the soul of these States—Minnesota, Indiana, Illi- nois, and Missouri,—and there is there a wonderful miracle taking place. A new soul is being born, and the West- ern front of the second line of defense is going to hold. I know it is going to make up largely for the collapse: of the Eastern front of the first line. “Well, my friends, I will detain you ! but a very short time because I know you want to go home. But make this little sacrifice: Just you imagine you are in the trenches and you have got to stay for a while. I know you will expect a little story of me. I have very few stories, because a soldier does not know very much about the war. But there is one I am going to tell you. NEW USE FOR PESTS. “You know we cannot keep very clean in the trenches, and when we go back to rest we are seldom alone. We bring a lot of company that comes to us unexpectedly in the trenches. At the beginning of the war the officials were alarmed at that state of things, and they decided to take the boys who had them and send them for a few days to a ‘de lousing’ hospital. ! “When that first group of boys: came back they had a most interest- ! ing report. They were well taken! care of, and had slept in beds. This! is the utmost luxury for a soldier. I have not slept in a bed more than fif- ty times during the last three years. So they came back with wonderful stories about the treatment they had received, and all the boys wanted to go. “But those who did not have them could not go, and would say to the ones that did have them, ‘Have you got any?’ (Laughter). And if they said ‘yes, the next question would be, ‘Can you give me a couple?’ (Laugh- ter). “Of course you would think it was easy to find a couple, but it is not. And so the boy who was fortunate to have a couple would say, ‘I am not giving them away, I am selling them.’ (Laughter). So you see, you never thought that a Frenchman could make business out of such a product. (Laughter.) “] am bringing you the warmest greetings of the French army, that body of valorous officers and men who have fought and bled for three long years from a thousand wounds, and who have lost three million boys. Their children are looking longingly to this Republic without uttering a word of complaint. But they have felt a great fear that this sacrifice might be in vain. “But, behold! one beautiful morn- ing a new flag came out of the trench- es, its colors well known. It was red, white, and blue, with stars within its fold. And the voices of a downtrod- den people along the Atlantic, the North Sea, and the Mediterranean arose in tones of happiness. Those voices came from France, England, Italy, Australia, and every corner of the world where liberty-loving people, speaking love and greeting to you, the American people. And it is the echo of that voice that I bring you tonight, my friends. i FAITH IN THE FLAG. “When I left New York in the early part of August, 1914, one of my old teachers of the University of Colum- bia gave me a small American flag. He said, ‘Take it, my friend, thous- ands will follow you soon.’ He was one of those men who had a clear vis- ion of the future. He knew that was | to be no ordinary war between two | races or nations, but a mighty con- flict between two different interpreta- tions of national dignity and interna- tional justice. But the flag he had promised did not come soon, and when the officers of the allied armies in- quired, ‘Well, what of the United States?’ I always answered, ‘Be pa- tient, they are coming.’ For I had studied and labored amongst them, and I knew the day they would see light they would be with us. And I was not disappointed. “The little flag that was given me I kept with me. I treasured it loving- ly, and I brought it through all the great battles of this war. And I as- sure you, my friends, I never lost con- fidence in the glorious Stars and Stripes and the principles it repre- sented. “But I am bringing you more than the war greetings of the French ar- my; I am bringing to the American people the warmest embrace of the whole French nation. Do you know how much France loves the United States? France looks upon this na- tion as her spiritual child. You know her history. France always rushes to the aid of the nation for the cause of freedom. She is always ready to shed her blood for Christianity and civili- zation. So when the most terrific conflict the world has ever seen was bozo, she proceeded to carry out that plan. : “She sprung forth and rushed into the frontiers and isolated cities and exposed the breasts of her children to the sabers of tyrants, endeavoring to stop the criminal practices of war. But, my friends, France had been dreaming dreams, even as you have been dreaming them, and she was un- duly prepared for this mighty con- flict. And this living wall crumbled down under thousands of thousands of machine guns and monster engines of destruction. And you sat aghast and wondered, ‘Was Prussia to de- stroy the liberties of mankind?’ But no! It seems that God heard the prayer of all the liberty-loving na- tions, and then took place the most wonderful miracle of all ages. JOFFRE'S GREAT MESSAGE. “Broken in heart and spirit, we heard that wonderful message from our great General, Marshall Joffre: ‘My boys, my boys, the retreat is over now. It is victory or death!” And indeed it was death—death for many, for thousands. The rivers of France were red with the blood of her children. But, my friends, a vic- tory for France was a victory for you all, a victory for the whole world. It was the dawn of the day the sun of which will never set. “You will never know, my friends —you cannot know—what France has | : | endured in its three long years of war. | Your boys will be loved over there. : While England and Russia were pre- paring for war news came of the vio- lation of Belgium, her northern ci- ties destroyed, her treasures ruined, women ravished, young children tak- en into slavery, her whole civil pop- . ulation led into bondage and made to work against their will, children and ‘mothers murdered, and fathers fight- ‘ing with their boys dying on the same | battlefield. We have that same thing in the French army. HER ALL FOR FRANCE. “] will never forget, my friends, ‘the day our regiment was stopping ‘at a small village and our colonel | asked us to give a parade for the ben- | efit of the citizens. It was my privi- |lege to carry the flag on that day. | | Suddenly a woman came and knelt at {my feet, raised the corner of the flag { lovingly to her lips and kissed it, and { buried her face within its folds. The i colonel came and said, ‘What is it, mother?’ She handed him a letter. | That letter contained notice of the i death of her fourth son and the last i child. She was a widow. And then she ! said, ‘I have given all to France, her {flag is my only love. How proud I lam of my flag! “That is the spirit which is going to 'win the war, my friends. You have heard a good deal about the mud, fire, soil and blood in which the soldiers | live, and I know they are bad enough. | But you have not heard enough about the agony—mental and physical ago- ny—endured by the women of France. | The women in France have not only | worked in the trenches, but have fill- ed the factories. When they get home at night, they sit down and write, ‘My child, my beloved one, be strong, | {be brave.’ And do you know what it | means to say to a man on the battle- | field, ‘Be strong, be brave?’ I hope you will never know. Do you know, my friends, what it is that has helped France most in this mighty strugle? You might think it was victory, glo- rious as it is. But no! “Here I must pay tribute to Eng- land. England has not always been {our friend. We fought many a fight with England, but it was always a chivalrous fight. England was our gentle enemy. Well, my friends, sure- ly a Frenchman would be the last man in the world to forget Ireland. But today I must say England stands a four-square defender of liberty for all nations. we love them, we love them! We have always looked upon them as ! brothers of France—of the good Cel- | i tic family, our family. “I have seen them in the field and I know they are brave. They go into battle with their whole heart and soul. Once we have fought and gained lib- erty, there will be liberty left for Ire- land. And, my friends, liberty with | honor is the only kind of liberty wor- {thy of the Irish nation. “It is not the fidelity of England, nor the devotion of Italy. What is it then? Why, my friends, it has been all through this war this sympathy of these United States. For long be- fore you came into this war officially teers into the Foreign Legion, and died the death of heroes. And France can never forget! I assure you, my friends, they made their presence felt in the skies of Europe. LOVE FOR RED CROSS. “Others came and attended to and took care of our sick and wounded. More than that, when the women of America heard there were orphans and widows in France they not only gave them money but they gave their heart’s love to these orphans. What shall I say of the American Red Cross? For wherever there was a wounded or sick soldier, wherever there was a home in distress, or any sorrow, there could be found the American Red Cross. But beautiful as these things have been, there is another thing that has kept France alive, and what is that? “One morning a mighty voice was heard coming from across the seas, and that voice, as it passed over the waves, took some of the grandeur and solemnity of the ocean itself. It was reciting the most sublime words ever framed by mortal tongue—the mes- sage that you would endeavor to make this world safe for democracy. The voice was the voice of a man whose patience and forbearance the world has never before seen equalled, and that man was your illustrious President, Mr. Woodrow Wilson. Of course, it would be out of place for me to make a political speech, but you people of this great Republic are entitled to know the esteem and respect with which President Wilson is held by the Allies. Wherever in France his name is spoken, it is pronounced with rev- erence. “And I know some of you have said that, after all, the President has only read aright the heart and mind of the American people. All honor to him! Not only has he read it aright, but he has read it beautifully. It is an hon- or to the American people for having inspired a message so beautiful. We have had it read in every one of our pubtic schools, and preached in every pulpit, and given over to our army, and we are endeavoring to spread the good seed across the line. Greater than the independence of one nation is the independence of all nations of the world. A MESSAGE T0 FRANCE. “I wish I could talk to you longer, my friends, for an audience like this is an inspiration and a great tempta- tion, but I know I would be taking advantage of your kindness. I will be here only a little while; then I will return to France. When I do return, I will take your message with me. “I shall close my little talk as I be- gun it, with an expression of love and gratitude of the French nation. You have not only one capital in this coun- try, Washington, but you have anoth- er in Paris. If you were to go to France, you would see theré more American flags in the city of Paris than you have ever seen in any Amer- ican city. The other day one of the little girls of Philadelphia sent an American flag to France. Paris claimed it and taking it lovingly, put it on the dome of the City Hall high- er than any flag of the Allies,—high- er than the French flag itself,—and said, ‘Look here! the great battle for democracy is about to be won!’ “As for the boys you are sending over there, don’t worry about them. for it—instinctively. As to the Irish people, | as a nation your boys came as volun- { When the first boys in khaki came, ithe attention given them by the | French mothers made their boys jeal- !ous. The boys in France have never been so well received in our capital | cities as have the boys you are send- ing over. Some will stay. ‘will not be too many of them. Re- ! member, the number will depend up- lon your loyalty and support, but it { will not be many. Let me say to the | fathers and mothers of your boys I hope it {that the French mothers, with empty hearts, will take the place of their ' mothers.” { ! Russia Sets the Pace in Giving Wom- | en the Vote. | Suffrage is universal in Russia,” | explains Charles Edward Russell, |iences in Hearst’s Magazine. { “I mention this fact once more in ithe hope (probably vain) that I may | gain some attention for it. ‘know why the world has elected to | dwell forever on Russian anarchy that | never existed and calmly ignore the Russian progress that has been so | great and so veritable. | the wormy old structure of imperial- {ism fell over there was but one thought in the mind of everybody, and that was universal adult suffrage. Nobody opposed it; everybody was troglodyte in all Russia had not a the place for women, about the de- grading influence of the ballot, or the terrors of the ignorant vote. “Compare, then, our own exalt- (fifty years of ceaseless campaigning | we have won in America full suffrage | suffrage for women in three or four After sixty years of argu- | others. i lines Health and Happiness “Mens sana in corpore sano” — ee —— “Public health the foundation on which reposes the happiness:of the people and the power of the country. The care of the public health is the first duty of a statesman.” —Disraeli. is At the beginning of last year it! was announced that under the head- “Health and Happiness’ the “Watchman” would publish a system- ‘back from Russia with the American : Commission and reporting his exper- atic series of articles intended to arouse interest and ance to every individual. Happiness is the universal goal of mankind and while philosophers and . poets, from time immemorial, have 1 don’t! The moment ! attempted to tell how it may be at- tained the advice of Elbert Hubbard, “If you don’t find HAPPINESS in| your work, you won't find it,” seems the simplest and sanest exposition yet | . offered. “The delight of work, of do- ing the work well that one is best fit- | ted for, is hard to beat” says another The worst old | writer and the great Rodin exclaims “How much happier humanity would be if work, instead of being a means of existence, were its end!” But without health work is impos- single grow! in him about home as sible: therefore to be happy we must first learn how to be healthy. This is a duty not only to ourselves but to our State and Nation for as Socrates, 'the Wise Man of Ancient Greece, ex- | ed achievements on these lines. After pressed it: “No citizen has a right ‘to be an amateur in the matter of | ment and five years of what was re- {ally civil war, the English suffragists i have won too a sight of a part of the | | justice they demanded. In Russia, | suffrage for women was achieved in a moment and without discussion. It ‘was taken as a matter of course. To ithe Russian mind democracy meant , democracy; it didn’t mean a fake ar- { rangement under which one-half of {the population was denied any share lin the government that governed | them. | Order Fertilizer Early, Advises Col- lege Expert. | The fertilizer problem should be ! given immediate attention by Penn- | sylvania farmers, advises E. L. | ment of The Pennsylvania State Col- | lege. i There need be no hesitancy in or- | dering the normal amount of fertil- {izing materials. | prices are high they are proportion- | ately lower than those of farm pro- iduce. The rate of application of | plant-food should be increased rath- | | er than diminished. . There is an opportunity for great i saving in the more intelligent pur- chase of fertilizers. Acid phosphate, i bonemeal, or rock phosphate can, in | most cases, be profitably substituted for the high-priced mixed materials. Farm manure should be conserved and applied judiciously in order to furnish costly nitrogen and potash in mixed goods. Acid phosphate can be purchased for about $20 a ton f. o. b., Baltimore. It contains nearly twice as much phosphate as the ordinary mixed fer- tilizer. At this price we cannot af- ford, either from the standpoint of business or patriotism, to keep down yields for want of this plant-food. in the near future. Freight is mov- ling slowly at best. Let us benefit ourselves as well as aid in reducing additional freight congestion in the spring by ordering fertilizers now. A Troublesome Carpet. A member of the diplomatic corps at Washington tells a story of a Per- sian who came to the United States {on a special mission. Among those who entertained him was a wealthy American, who invit- ed the Oriental to his country house. On the morning of the guest's arrival the American visited him in his apart- ment, and was astonished to see him hopping about the floor in the strang- est way imaginable. The host ven- tured to ask the reason for this curi- ous action. The Persian replied: “You see, this carpet is green, with pink roses here and there. Green is a sacred color with us, so I am oblig- ed to hop from rose to rose. It is good exercise, but rather fatiguing.” —Youth’s Companion. - = ® e = a e = w | e | - Q e 8 Ss a » in) A new pupil in the cooking school sat at the instructor’s desk copying recipes from cards. She wrote busi- ly for some time and then approach- ed a fellow student and asked won- deringly: “Do we have to have all things to make fruit punch?” Her card read: “Fruit Punch.—2 lbs. powdered su- gar, 12 lemons, nutmegs, paprika, tarragon vinegar, 2 heads of lettuce, raisins, buttermilk. It appeared that she had copied the teacher's grocery memorandum for the next day.—Youth’s Companion. these Army Captain. London.—The engagement is an- nounced of Esther, daughter of Gro- ver Cleveland, to Captain Bosanquet, of the Cold Stream Guards. Captain Bosanquet, a son of Sir Albert Bosan- quet, has been decorated with the distinguished service order. Miss Cleveland came to London in June of last year after having quali- fied as a nurse and instructor of the blind and took up work as a volunteer at St. Dunstan’s Home for Blinded Soldiers. More Trying Position. Newrich (to prospective butler)— A hundred dollars a month? Why, that’s all I pay my bookkeeper. Butler—But ’e doesn’t ’ave to has- sociate hevery day with your family sir. | Worthen, of the agronomy depart- | Fertilizer prices will not go down ! fit for duty 2 3 ! physical training. | for women in nine States and part |p,ofession as a citizen to keep him- It is a part of his self in good condition and ready to serve his State at a moment’s notice.” In Switzerland it is considered more or less of a disgrace to be found un- and the temperate, healthy, open-air life among the Swiss induce careful ; thought on subjects of vital import- | | “And, to state the proposition more concretely, the Happiness of Man | comes not from Without but from { Within. | “Anarcharsis, by some reckoned as ' one of the Seven Wise Men, stated it: ‘A man's felicity consists, not in the | outward and visible favors and bless- | ings of Fortune, but in the inward and unseen perfections and riches of | the mind.’ ! “That is the Great Truth, perhaps the Greatest of Truths. | “That is what Buddha discovered when he sat under the Bo Tree and i received the Illumination. Not the ! Sating of Desire, but the Rising to i purer and higher desires, is the ans- {wer to the Soul’s Riddle. “That is the gist of what today we I call New Thought. | “That is the dynamic that underlies i the Christian Science movement. {| “That is the essence of Christianity, | as expressed by its founder: ‘Except | ye be converted, ye cannot see the | Kingdom.” ”’ “Circus Feats” on Fighting Lines, Every day at the front all manner of what in peace time would be re- garded as “circus tricks” are perform- i ed as necessary measures of safety in ! the presence of hostile machines. With a view of illustrating their bearing ‘upon aerial fighting methods, and alike upon the conquest of the air, I may now describe in detail the chief | variations from ordinary straightway ' flying, says Charles L. Freeston in ‘January Scribner. Let us first take | the feat, well known on every flying | exhibition ground, of ‘looping the loop.” A Hun pilot, we will suppose, has succeeded, owing to a misty at- { mosphere, in dropping behind an Al- | lied machine, and the pilot of the lat- | ter hears at close quarters the un- | welcome “tack-tack-tack” of a ma- | chine gun. If he is not “winged” { there are many things he may do, but i we will suppose that he “loops the loop,” and meanwhile the oncoming . machine passes beneath him. The po- i sition of affairs is thereby reversed; { the Allied machine is now “sitting on ‘has produced a wonderfully sturdy !the tail” of the Hun, and may get in | | i i | i | i | | i | | ' ' | { | physique, not the least of the assets of this little country and one that has doubtless gone far to make an effec- powerful military neighbors. A healthy State requires a healthy citizenry and to aid in securing phys- ical well-being and the public health —for public health is merely individ- | ual health in the aggregate—this se- ries was undertaken and will be con- tinued through the coming year. The articles thus far published may be grouped as follows: GROUP 1 Eugenics. land Moffet. GROUP 11 Diseases—Their Cause and Preven- tion. As a fitting preface to this subject, the advice given to one of his patients by Dr. Charles K. Mills, Professor of Neurology at the University of Penn- sylvania, was quoted, “Never go to the point of fatigue for if you do you are breaking down and not building up tissue.” Nov. 24, 1916—Take as Much Care of Your Body as You Do of Your Furnace and Youll Ward off Disease and Eliminate Opera- tions. — Maxwell Lauterman, M. D. Feb. 2, 1917—The Necessity for Cleanliness. Feb. 9, 1917—How to Prevent Colds in the Head from Becoming Dangerous Diseases. Feb. 16, 1917—Hygiene of the Mouth How to Help Prevent Decay of the Teeth. Feb. 23, 1917—Bad Teeth and Their Effect on the Laboring Man's Efficiency. March 2, 1917—Five Cases of Tuber- culosis and Their Probable Or- igin. March 9, 1917—Cancer. March 16, 1917—Notes from the American Association for the Advancement of Science. April 6 and 13, 1917—Diphtheria: Its Cause and Prevention. April 20, 1917—Care of Diphtheria in the Home. Aug. 10, 1917—Sunstroke mer Complaint. Oct. 12, 1917—The Danger of Poison- ing from Vegetables Canned by the Cold-Pack Method. GROUP III Scientific Nutrition. May 18, 1917—Balanced Rations. July 27 and Aug. 3, 1917— How to Regulate Your Weight. Aug. 3, 1917—Eat Wisely. Sept. 21, 1917—Family Balanced Ra- tion. and Sum- GROUP IV The Relation of Bacteria to Milk. Aug. 17, 1917—Bacterial Content of Milks Supplied to Bellefonte. 24, 1917—How the Number of Bacteria in Milk is Determin- ed. What are Bacteria? 31 and Sept. 7, 1917—Environ- mental Influences Upon Bac- teria. 28, 1917—Sources of Bacteria in Milk. Oct. 5, 1917—Influence of Tempera- ture Upon the Growth of Bac- teria in Milk. Oct. 26, 1917—Effect of Bacteria Up- on Milk Nov. 9, 1917.—Relation of Disease Bacteria to Milk. : Nov. 23, 1917—Preservation of Milk and the Significance of the Bacterial Count. Dec. 7, 1917—Pasteurization of Milk. ON THE SECRET OF HAPPINESS. «The Secret of Happiness is not in Satisfying your Wants, but in chang- ing them,” writes Dr. Frank Crane in Hearst’s Magazine. : “Satiety is the Great Delusion. Getting what we want does not bring happiness. The real Joy of the Spir- it of Man is in Development, in Iris- ing ever to higher planes. The Soul is not to be filled, as a bucket, it is to be unfolded, as a bud. The only Sat- isfaction of Life is more Life. Aug. Aug. Sept. la vital shot. It may be, on the other { hand, that the Allied pilot has engag- 'ed a Hun in a direct attack, and each | tive insurance against attack by her may have an observer with a swivel i gun. Either pilot may elect to loop {in order to pass under the enemy ma- chine, and thus provide a fair mark | for his observer from below. | A variant on the original loop is | the sideway loop. In order to get out i of the line of fire as speedily as possi- i ble, in case of being attacked una- wares, the pilot swings aside and {loops with a rolling motion instead of in a vertical circle. This is a very useful expedient for the pilot of a | single-seater, who has only his wits {and skill to depend upon, whether for | : oi Although fertilizer | How to Have Better Children.—Cleve- | attack or defense. | The tail slide is frequently employ- led for the same purpose—that of ' causing the enemy to overshoot the ‘mark and so effect a reversal of the | positions. The pilot elevates his ma- | chine just as if he were beginning a | loop, but instead of turning over and | completing the circle, he allows the | machine to “stall” itself when at a | steep forward angle. To be exact, it { does not actually slide backward on | its tail; as soon as it is “stalled” the ! machine is allowed to fall by the head ‘and the pilot dives. The enemy has ‘ meanwhile passed overhead. , There is yet another remarkable | feat which has been evolved as a re- | sult of war-time experience, namely, | the “spinning dive,” and nothing per- {haps could illustrate more forcibly the extent to which the skilled pilot has assumed the mastery of the air. Circumstances may render it desira- ble for a machine to drop as directly as possible either to avoid an attack or in order to reach a particular point below. An ordinary glide would car- ry it a long way past the objective, while even a plain nose dive would involve a certain amount of drift dur- ing the descent, as very few pilots care to dive in a strictly vertical line. The pilot, therefore, imparts a rotary action to the machine, and falls ver- tically in consequence. No absolute- ly uniform method of putting a ma- chine into a spin is practiced, but after discussing the subject with many fighting pilots I may state that the commonest method is as follows: The pilot first pulls his “joystick” right back, and then, by operating the elevator at its steepest angle, soon “stalls” the machine, i. e., deprives it of its flying speed. It then automat- ically settles down by the head, but, instead of letting it merely “nose dive,” the pilot still keeps his eleva- tor up and at the same time operates the ailerons of the opposite wing. Some pilots would use the rudder be- fore diving, and others would not use the ailerons at all while stalling the machine. In any case, the elevator becomes a rudder when the machine is vertical. It therefore sets up a spin, and falls in a series of gyrations that to the unitiated would appear to represent the ultimate limit of ‘“un- controllability.” As a matter of fact, however, the pilot has only to put his control in the neutral position for the machine to right itself, provided he has room enough. . : The amount of fall that is obliga- tory before the machine will automat- ically recover from its spin depends upor. the weight and design of the particular aeroplane concerned. It may be a question of 3,000 feet or as little as 100 feet on the most suitable type; the lighter the machine the quicker will be the recovery. Only a very badly designed machine would fail to right itself. No Room for Choice. First Little Girl.—Your papa and mamma are not real parents. They adopted you. nd Little Girl.—Well, that makes it all the more satisfactory. My parents picked me out and yours had to take you just as you came.— Exchange. r——————————— Playing it on Father. She—Papa says he will pay half the cost of furnishing a house for us. He—But how about the other half? She—Don’t be a goose! Of course we'll pick out a lot of nice things, get papa’s check for half of the bill, and then go back and select things only half as expensive.