Ed EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1014. H cerl mnt pRIl a: if i Sow olu IllJ T S. ' had I flow . boy ii st scrt tpjr me. i er na 5 tT and ! I r chal flSSM TH-.f'A'ffSB . y; n ! niuB,.i j t: An i.-r . I ,n' aait .W1 ,.t i' le4 It rb3l ir i M '1" fc f .at llfF he If i itj iua II e m too ffr fti SM WAR'S BARBARITIES GERMANS CHARGETO BELGIANS' CRUELTY Newspaper Reporter Says Teutons Acted Moderately in Presence of Enemy's Frightful Atrocities. "A cry of Indignation hns been called forth throughout the world." writes W Schcurmann. a correspondent of several German newspapers who accompanies tho Mprmnn General Staff, "bv tho so-called 'cruelty with which the Germans arc car rying on this war In all countries that get their news through English and French source stories of German bar barism are repeated It K therefor doubly the duty for a war correspondent who can speak of what his own eves have seen, to report what he saw and what ho can answer for before the forum of j historical truth I I have spent days In the worst franc- i tlrcur legions of Belgium and France My first impressions of the horvrs if war were obtained at Battlce, on the road from Aachen to Llece, where fighting be tween frane-tlreurs and our soldiers wet t on for das. Instead of a nourlsning i. lage, with clean houses and neat villa" one sees there todav charred rums stretching along the highways for a mUe SAW txronGETTABLK THINGS "1 saw things there that I shall lemem- bcr as long as I live I passed throush A, village that was quite burnt out. where ' onl a few German Landwohr soldiers were stnndlng guard no other living beings visible an where But when 1 came to the doorway of a house that had fallen In I saw in what had probabH been the living-room a white-haired woman with a Kitchen knife raking In t . debris t called to her She did not hear me Het face was like a grav tono. ar 1 her eves fixed as In death She dug ns If she was epectlV.c to tlnd something under the fallen bricks. ' In a front garden, which had been scotched bv tho flames, a woman In a blai K dress was crouching and weeping 1 have stood at many an open grave In the chur'hvard, but I have never heaid am hod weep like that woman. The sound of it will continue to ting In mv oars as one of the most terrible exper leni es of mv life, for even the petty losses of property are painful to se. In the upper stnrv of one house everything had beei destroyed hv fire, but at one placi on the smoke-begi Imed wall there hung the disinioicil photograph of a woman prolMlih long dead At on" place a blue-en inn led child's bedstead peers out of the smoking debt Is. still filled with Its f.co (bed m ittress nnd pillows Whoever hns n child at home In its snov -white bed ' flii' a eiiro and thrice a curse upon those who caused all this misery' For them there Is no punishment in this world sufficient to atone for their BERLIN CELEBRATES ARRIVAL OF WAR TROPHIES i. not welsh much in comparison with whit i they actually did Our German soldlets and Landwehr men mnrched Into the country of the enemv with the same order and discipline that thev maintained on th drill-sround and In armv maneuvers hereor we tame. vv guaranteed to the Inhal Hants seiuiitv for life and propertv ' we ire willing war with the armies of the mom', not with civilians in Battlce the fti'tiun proi lamation promising the Bel gian piarn and the integtlty of their i terrltnrv was still seen on the walls of the Mimed horses MfrSPRRKD GERMAN'S VVKXOED 'Now v hat happened in Battlce, Pler mont. Herve, F!ron and other Belgian pia-e ws, with singular similarity, is follows The Inhabitants let the Germans mnrih in. received them with cringing friendllr. , offered them wire in super fluous .ninntitifs. and then fell upon thnni at nUh' It 2' "i wHIioiit saving for mfr set f-irc sprvntlon demanded It that every nmrilu'd Get-nan was avenged Wheie the mmdoieis could he taught lhy Wfro brought ti-fote a rourt-mnrtlnl. and If thtr suit was evident they wore "hot or hins.'d Ml this was done In perfect order. How fit the e'f-. nntrol of out fonps rstends wis prnyeil to n'9 by an example cnlv d iv hffnr. yesterday At the en. Iponi trt tVio rpOM. Vi rtt trvkna nf f ntn' ' 1ust ciiutiirefj. I saw German soldiers brln-tin:: in a troop of f'ane-tlrmrs. quite old fellow s, ind among them a few com mon thieves scarcely revonrt schoolboy age all of them with criminal fates of tho hardest type Pity that we did not photogriph ttv m "n that the world might ie what hideous scamps are killing our men! What did thes men do" demanded an nfti'or 'They put on Red fross saift. then wfnt upon the battlefield and ni'itilatcil our wounded We mught them In tht Kt ' was the reply 'Whv dldn'' yr i beit the scoundrels to death at once' V i ' ire not do that. They must be brought b"fore a courl-martla! ' 1..-VE VR-OU3 GIRt- SHOT "The reader should know wnat was the rlim-ir er of this mutilation. The eyos of ,iur wounded men, lying helpless In thei1 pain upon the battlefield were eu nut with UnKes But this was not by fai Mil- most cruel things these bcqslt Inventcd Old and vnung, men and won. n were caught as hyena "f 'ha battl'-tteld, and ihey received their ro vaid t Vise a ! ro!d girl hail tu bo sh"t he-ause she was caught in the st of muillatine our wounded Thrr Is no mtriv for stieh deeds, nnd ther can W notii I should IIHp to know what othei I " i . '' " "i. ' ' 'J-ft"-"'-'-' ' ' ' - y ? " ' ' ! ESMMT7aay?ii in niiTnrrr r gw flH iprrnTiwwiMi . , . rr i kris'iii tz;$rt m;,m t 0 O j J' iiiP J , i SECURES BIG TELESCOPE $Zy4 fefelSf'' C&S-Wi Lends Its Aid to Scientific Research UllsSf SwS'-StlHS' ifliltS ' ' Some eleht monthb "B the Canadian H$?ivtli 'X' JBPrw1jllvfi;l'f as f- j Governtiient onteted Into contracts for i$li?SlllA 'SSSISWlM "Sife; the constt uction of a 72-Inch icilectlng sMslflipf 'Mi'2SS&; ffltlf telescope, with the J. A. Brashenr Com- vmk. sffeJrfi t I1""' for tl10 optical parts nnd the War- mfSRTS)fSiSfS'N'i iTJKSjfefJ-JSwi ! ' ' ner& Swnsey Company for the mounting. ,53?- 1HfeMS ' Vr TSSJTCrSk ' I i j I This telescope, which will be considerably JtW'Sk'llH'LMlmJ?'''-. - -P''Jti Sl i A4 i ,&l i;! larger than any In use. will bo of the most ffl(4l5i4:.' J(Eii?J . a ,! . .Sl :mMmjnmwTiPWm n t it n i M i 'if II - i-Ar ; i-vT: " Jit.v 'j.a v vj rj nw.uru. o lt t. ij irvw r.-v. i A ihru v .AMiirtuvjTu.-.r tii.- mr.-ui s-'"i "if's .).i tT nil P tf5KEyVri.?,fo'J? irWV-JrtVT"' itrsa. i VT ftt Vt fci nSKfttlHWvtt'S.iti'' 8f .1 TnS'Jttffi xl KM -.-! Grande Iff w "f ili '' - w ' the stock of the lonelv wmnan with rvh ' he lodged Vnothet held tit buiv i order that its mothei might do the oV, Ing Such ate the Germans otT liu hortile countrv. good-n.ttmed and readv to help What villainies must hive been committed to have conerted the-e good evil deed. I fellows Into raging avengers of their Ard -vlun they now denounce our bm.ve I fallen and mutilated omrndes' l ertain- warriors as the cause of this desolation. 1 it was not the will of our soldiers that this lattt-r -lander, shnmeful ns It Is. doea de-vth and tire should hold cainlvil in the horses of civilians What the.v did tlv v call answer for. and n can the cieimin nation answer for its sons banting them selves with honor in this wni." PALMER IN THE FIGHT AGAINST PENROSE TO END Challenges Pinchot to Name Any Authorltative Call for Him to Quit. TUWANT'A Fa. Sept 21 f.,tgr. man A Mitchell Palmer, candidal.- f1 the I"Mit"d States Senate, to suecef-d B -Penrose arrived here shortly befote n i u today fr"m rnrbon t'ounty. through vb.' h campaigned jenerdav Iast nml t li adlrssrd two enthusiastic mass-me-'in-at Miurh f'hunk and Lhlghton Tho-e who huve been predicting a harmonious fusion compact between U-i-ti-'Mtive Palmer and Gifford Pin h"t wherebv Mr F'almer would wlthdiaw m favor of thf fotmer t'hicf Forestei i, ceiveri a decided shock when the i'in grehsman challenged Mr. Pinchot t p -duee the name of a single icmociati couptv (han man who ha- hiiv ted th it ho withdraw In favor of Mr Pinchot. "I do not b. long to the thdiaw fnniH-." rtec'nrtd Ml PalV'. "nt d il any one thinks that Mr. Pinchot stands fur better gi.vi inmcnt than I do let him vote for M. Pinchot. I would be untrue to tlv partv that nominated me if I did not rontlmi- to catry Its banner, and I believe T will carry It on to v'ctory." Jn his indictment of Senator Penrose, msde on the latter's own record in Wash ington, f'ongifstnan Palmer presented a count to show that Penrose In thn Senate had beeq a ehnmpion utraddler on meas ures that toncerned railroads, Standiid Oil srd other interests, and that he con tinually favored the corporations as auolrst the people. PlTTKt'RGH. P'X . Sept !l "A M'teh'il Palnur will be the !emocrt'e candidate for t'nlted States rtenatot right on up to election da fter that he will b 1'nited Stat-fc Senator-elect, oil e ssip of his w thdfwil In invor oj Gifford Pirehot notvv'thstnndlng," declared Ro. land 8 Morris, Democratic Stbte f'hair man. In th Port Pitt Hotel todav Mr Morris Is In Pittsburgh arranging for n speaking tour of the western part of l. Stat, hv Mr Palmn d Vance 0 Mef'ormi-U. Democratic Candida) for OoviTor ii H "t w.-k in iM"lr "Vou hesi I't "f talk abo-n the antl p. t.rose strength being divided between Pain-- nnd Plnch-.t That is not a cor. i h eltiiatlnii it all sain r,'-i ,- - ----- i- IS lft iru''iMii-t Photograph b rnlerwootl .V l'n'Urivoo'1 The procession in Berlin, in which the captured guns of the Allies were hauled down Unter den Linden. The Crown M. tr,rvl "It thei people In the world posst-s the r;,lr...,tb xnX dlvhUd 1 hf Uuir t .. ip tnii' t in the rrptn ' 'urn . r ,. v,,, are irniiB to vott tne sha'iftul trines, to wait and bring crlm. , .v,,i,..lm rav titkn is negllBi'le T-.-3f p'ohf-hi- .uld return to the e. piibitrtn ranks sh'uld Pnehot withdraw Trur his rettremert would do Palmet no aood Pa'mer " nothing to lose and l7r;l,l to gam if Pinchot stavs in thf flelrt " Innl- befoie a regular Lourt. Rev nnd all doubt this frane-tireur war. fare icun-t us was organized Othei vv!--e It w mil he impossible to explain the urn. foiro oharacte' of the mu'tlatlon attacks on field hospitals, where physicians, th wounded and even the nurses, fell as irtlm uf these predatnrv rascals, in the attaHs in villages and cities tho arn tatties were repeated over and over again rfuddenlv the en'iro vilisge is In possesion of arms, and In two tae even of mi chine guns. In rt.illu, between Arlon and Redan, the priest was caught in the act Of dis. tributing arms and ammunition to his parishloneis In riermom, on the other hand, the priest tried in vain to dissuade the cit'zens from listening to the mayor, who was ivm them arms and instigat ing them to rail urn me ..ermane irom ,, . , , to b. wnere me popie - - - - - - - Princess and her sons reviewed the parade from the Imperial Castle. BRUMBAUGH STIRS VOTERS OF THREE COUNTIES ROCKEFELLER GIVES $300,000 LESS THAN HALF TOTAL TO Y. M. C. A. OF BROOKLYN CITY VOTE REGISTERED i $3,000,000 Required to" Complete Of 370,577 Assessed Citizens, 107,- Magnlficcnt Building. I 557 So Far Have Failed to Qualify. JfEW YORK. S'ot 2!. The Youir,' According to the flguies completed by Men's Christian Association of Brook- j the n-.-et,sors, and certified lo by Hairj Ivn. It was announced, has been en- Kuenzel, Sup. tlnti-ndent of Elections, this riched by a gift of fSiO.OOO from John V Rockefeller. One-half of this sum has already boon paid over to the asso ciation, and tho conditions on which the balance Is to bo paid were explained by John O. Cook, the general secre tary as follows: "Tho remainder of Mr. ' Rockefeller's pledge. ISn.OOO, Is conditioned upon so cuiing In cash or responsible pledges, on oi before January I, 1010, of tho entire fund of fJ.T5S,0U0. Payments v. Ill be made by Mr. Rockefeller on nccount ot this pledge in thrue Instalments of J5f.,non each, the first to bo payable when one.thii3 of the total nmount to bo raised from all othei sources has been laid In; tho second instalment when I mniiln there tire lfi7..Vi7 ritlzf nrt of I'llllu. delphln who have et to register In older to qualify tu vote .it tho Nov mbei i lec tion The assessors' leturns show a total of r.II'.r.TT citizens iiualllled to vote. Of tliuse, 1S2.510 have icgls-teicd on the tirst two resl'tratlon days, this yeai. The io mainlns 137,537 will haw a lam opjior tunity to iualify on Or tuber i, tho lust legtetrfitlon dav this J ear. The ward totnl3 of those qualified to voto b the assessors' lists and those nlrendv reslbtered follow: assessohs' mrrun.NS. sEPTEJinKU. ton. Aenra Taona Ward, First . . H-i nd Tllnl .. v urtn ttn .. p KUIh tiivnth .. nightb ... Niirli ... Teiilh . .. two-thtrds of the amount has been paid I J,-,,' in. and the third Instalment when the j Thirteenth entire fund has been paid In." It has been estimated that nearly CUMMINS THE TARGET H ROOSEVELT'S ATTACK Hot True to Party Principles, the QASES OVERCOME MANY Colonel fleomres. DFS MOIN'FS, la , Sept J4 In a speech made here lest night hv Tho 4ore RuniMMeli. a n'owl aUaik was dlrued a Fmted States Senator Cum. i Fmrieentb I Pifuenth .... I Sixteenth .... , Frvsnteenth ! eighteenth .. , Nineteenth . ! TnenUeth Toeniy-llrst Tni-icon4 Tuwitv.fhlrfl Tntnli .'mirth It.CO ' .:." . . a - . i. i - i'vimir-uiia ..,.,.,...., w..-,' list, T.:iU 2,".W 2.S'.'. .'.mi I, SSI 7.0IU a. rat i.i:.i 5.17R 1.0' t 2.1"l2 a.5.i B.ll IU.SC I j.na S,n' 0.5T1 15.2111 11. s.a7 iT.am a t'u rcslmra'ion mi'i 2 SI I 1 !!.'() I.H7 I.I'Ml OK I 1 l.SBI, fol V l.li I lt'1 I .l''S 1 V.II $3 Ujn V will be required to complete (ill the extensive building operations con templated by the elrctors of the asso ciation Approximately 573,fll0 of th rtm-kefHllor money will bo applied to th. eost of the site foi the new building i TuentyVstb ".'.!!"!"- IMI' Tuenty-eigtttb 5.?i'.' IhlrtUlh 5.j Thlriv-fTnit . ........... .J," Thlrti -fecund 10,.lS- Thirty -tljlrd SV Tl,rt -fourth 'SS n'rt-mth .fig; lVris-t!h , tl,m TMrti-afvcnia u,jit. IN JERSEY CITY STATION ambush But even Trim -ptenta ' r.iitj -oinio Ti rtli ill Kirtj-Hm I ..i ,nm the rom. tinon our columiu us horuaraiofi in l " Kei.aiors jJienpcu m the maiehed through, we- did not make ' Ugianc" to lh people II dclr4 n the whole village responsible, but onlv j r,lmmlM. reeular Bepubliean stormed and burned the houses front ' w . , ,.M.t u nf hi which shots were flred In Uerbe, Ftoron noriliie- for r- Action, fl of his and other Ullages, there are houses still oi.po.tunltv when th Cumm'na orfcanl standing between others that were burnt 1 t.nn n 1 iain4 ItepuMU:an aftr Tatt's down on tb.ir doors are written In i no'. Imtlou m liacago. chalk suth woids as these 'House' ! 'or I'uirniins ami those who train searvhed. everything In order.' '(!ood po-t w th hi'n around the track.' all U.o nio utiure them.' 'Inmates absent, spare 1 ex-1'rtsidtnt. "cannot be true to tvie old- bouse Husband is soldier in field, spare 1 time principles of Uruoln's div a long as in v loixinuti ineir asscitiaiion wun the utteily reai tlonarv Hepubucan ma- ty.S Tank Broken ami Fassengers Suffocated. NKW YOR K. Sept ! -A large number of passengers on an Incoming train of rtirtj-HvMd tne l.ru liaiiro.iu were ovTcaiuu u fo.ty-iimna escaping gas In the train anl of the "pJ.'S'xt'b company 4t Jerwy Pltv. this mornlnB- f.nrt-vnt As each train came In the passengers 1 Fmfwwo dlserobarkeil In an atmosphere heavilj , Totals charged w'th escaping poisonous gas from tanks nearb Man passengers Acre overtomo anil rushed to the Hud son Street Hospital In New York and to hospitals in Jersey Ct 1T0.5Tt house.' Such chivalry is practn-ed by our tol dicrs toward an absent enemv Towns wbose Inhabitants did nut iie ngaint us are enjoving the fulUst iecurltv uui I.andvhr men. billeted upon the inhabit ants, sit before their dimru and chat with chines as run lontiolled in the nition Slid in the laigest and must pr.pulous fet. te We must not let our locally to a name L'nd u to existiug f-irt The Iowa Pr(.gre-.-ivf wh-n it. tan tho op- DEMOCKATS TO OPEN CAMPAIGN The reorginlzation element cf the Deinoeratie purtv in the 4tth Ward will open the fill campaign tonight at a nuss- - c . . 1 ., .. a. ..i.l d nd Maal.p Biro.!. Tnlin '""""" " "- """ - -. ...., ---- . 1.. ... . INVENTOR GETS BIG ORDER Wendill Shepheid, 1111 tiiwntor, v.bo recently established a factory for the manufacture of suction paper milk bottle caps on I.ans-duvvne avenue, I.unrdoune. Pa , has just received an order from the Imuane Pupplv I'umpanv of New York, for Mfl,tfi0iO nips t pu-int b has one press, which turns out the caps, printed vvilh the nitmr ot the milk I'tjl. 1. at the rate of 1200 per minute it ivouid take them or P'a with the'r children ai d . p"e Mr -i o. s si ml , je l tl ntere M Hill a furmer leader Mii"trate thl press aione neauy fix roontiis m th tiU. doubtless, of those they leU at the Itnub leans no j iw yvhen they I Bojle and li U. Wescolt will be the . turn out the ortw -i Mr Shepherd Is hom sa. poo of our soldiers reedJjja opposed Mr. De-ugUs." ' speakers. I planning to JnstalJ five new presses, ,1 -i Enthusiastically Received by Farm ers of Union, Mifflin and Snyder. liKWISnunG. Pa.. Sept. 21 - B'iorc hundreds of farmers gathered nt the l'n ion County Kalr here this morning, Pr. Martin G. Brumbaugh, Republican nom inee for Governor, pledged, if elected, to do all in his ptmei to Insure construction of good, honest highways, thoroughly built nnd constantly kept In icpalr throughout the entlro State. These roads, he declared, will he such thai the maxi mum crops can be bt ought to population cuntics with a minimum effort. Doctor Brumbaugh with his iiimp.ugn partj at rived hiro this morning from Sunbury. stopping on routo at .Sellns-gruve, where his reception lasltd an hour. The partj left ht i at noon on a tour of I'nlon, Mifflin nnd Snvder counties, and will speak tonight at Levvlstown Itcferring to the child labor laws, Doctor Brumbaugh declared he had nn net In mind which If patted would become a model for every State In the L'nlon This m' anure he Mild, would enable a work ing child to continue his education in the public rchoolh The election of Doctor Brumb-iush bv I ml I u majority of 3',0fi0 was predicted b HuTuary ot int. rum jiuurs iiiiuuk Doctor Brumbaugh is lie.-ulng on evcrv aide that the indorsement of Vance c McCormldt by the Wn-diinKtim party has caused such a i-erinus epllt in that Pait that Its death knell is sounded. BRUMBAUGH'S GREAT CANVASS Treasurer of Citizens' Committee Sees Wonderful Results. I.ouls J. K0II1 treasuier of tho Dr Martin G. Bruniraugh litiisens' Commit tee and an Independent In politics, laid todav that Dr lli.iniba.ugn was runling one of the mo.st wonderful cimpaigns cv 1 vv tne-eil In this bt.ite To ins liott of fr . nds his wide cinie of a' uii.iint Hires and his absolute sincerity Mr K"!b at tiiiited Hi. HiumbaugVi mr i-.i Ills Instituti work." Mr Kulb said, "has gained him thousands of fiicmlr. who remember him for the great work ho has accomplished In uilvuncing this diitttional facilities In this state" Mr Kolb cntUlsid the action of the W Islington I'artj State Coram tteo nt Hurrieburg last week In indorsing Vane c. McCormlck ns the sutiernutorlal candi date In place of William Diaper lwls "This was a violation." Mr Kolb de clared, "not only of the spirit, but of the letter of the State-wide primai.v act The action of the Washington Party committee lias caused thousands to de clare themselves for Dr Brumbaugh "The Washington parti set Itself up to stand for the best in the Itepublican parjy I wonder If this Is what the call the best? By whdt right can 15 men withdraw a candidate whom 50,00) have nominated?" Lends Its Aid to Scientific Research Work. Some eight months ago the Canadian Government onteied into contracts for the constt uction of a 72-inch icilectlng telescope, with the J. A. Brashenr Com pany for the optical parts nnd the War ner & Swnsey Company for the mounting. This telescope, which will be considerably larger than any In use, will bo of the most modern typo and will be used principally In the determination of stellar radial ve locities, sajs Science. The progressive pollcj of tho Canadian Government In the encouragement of scientific research, as evidenced by the order for this magnifi cent Insttumont, has now been rendered doubly effective by authoilzing nt n very considerable additional expense, the to tal outlay being upvvatd of $200,000, Its In- 1 stallatlou In tho best astronomical loca tion in tho Dominion. Investigations hao been In progress for upward of a e,ir nt five places, repre sentative of different climatic conditions 1 In the country. The region around Vlc totla, B. C, so much excelled all others. Including Ottawa. In the two most im portant particulars, the "3eelng" or steadiness and quality of definition, and the small daily temperature va riation, while being at least equal In otner qualifications, that it was strongly 1 recommended to the Government by tho I chief astronomer as the site foi the telescope. The Government of the Province of Btltl.sh Columbia, on being approached for help toward the additional eost of loca tion away from Ottawa, generously con tributed $10,000 for tho purchase of the necetsary laud nnd agreed to build a load, which will cost about J20.000, to the cho nun site, which Is at the summit of S.ia ulch 11111, altitude 732 feet, about eight miles north of Victoria Immediately on the decison of tho Do minion Government in favor of this site, ."0 acres of land wore purchased around the summit of the hill, and arrangements were concluded for the construction of the road this fall. This road will be upvvnrd of a mile and a half In length, leading from tho main rond and the elecliic rnll way at the foot of the hill by a 7 per cent, giado to tho summit. Building operations will begin early In 191.1, nnd the dome should be ready for tho telescope In the fall of that jenr. 1 hit t Hli 1 ! i.'il'i 7. lj?il S.02t i.t;t 7.l.i t.OH S.TW) S. UK H Sl i l 4 4"! SW ssii ITS .', 4 I 1 SSI us t .Hit ii.ni turn S..H.I 8 I mil. Met tit 8 (.'T II IS. i (, i'.JUt WHO IS A REAL EPICURE? Perhaps He Flourishes Today ns In considerate Person. The surfeited person who sits night after night In cafes eating for tho tnste ot food, rather than for the nourishment there Is In It, may or may not bo an epi cure. Whether he is or not depends on how he feels the next morning. If he has a headache or djspepsla he Is not an epi cure, for the real epicure has strength enough tu look ahead In his pleasures and abstain fiom anything which may lesiilt in pain. To the iea epicure ab sence of pain Ib pleasure, and pleasure is invailabiy his goal. Chiistian criticism of the ungeneious philosophy of Kplcuius hus led to the bcllet that an epicure is n voluptuary. Kplcurus would turn In his ginve at the thought, for tho pleasure of the original ipicuican enthusiasts was bised largely on moderation, and lliu voluptuary Is ,t!ncial!y given to cxtinvngnnt immod. eratlon The epicure has oven been de turned ns u ?b.irite which Is elander or libel, its the cntej miy be. The genu ine epidural) philosophy has been pritt clearly defined as "little more than a net "t iliiectioiis foi living the simple life, with pleasuie as the slmpilfjing medium " Krom this definition It is evident that the epicute might be a good tort who. from the deliberate practice: of his phil osophy might have achieved j ccitalu wlsduin that would make him a genial friend- He cried In that he thought trou ble could be disputed with. He could not teu tba by shifting his shaie of the worlds burdens he merely added them to the share of anothci Chrlsti.uiity camo along and told him that It was far mnnliei to sork to case his brother's pain than to augment It by skilful dodging. The eplcuie abhorrei) pain, but the im putation that he was something of a coward appears to have been more dls tdsteful than the pain it is generally thought that his light went out with the dawn of the Chiistian era. and that ht became converted to the doctrine of brotherly love Perhaps he d'j, and on the other hand perhaps he foUilshes to day in the fc-ule of the Inconsiderate per SECOND VON MOLTKE HAS YET TO FULFIL TRADITION'S DEMAND Name of German Army's Head the Synonym for In vincibility in War Quali ties Not Dazzling. For nine years another Mpltlte Teutonic Bynonym for Invincibility In war-has been chief of the gTeat General Staff of I the German army. The decisive arbitra ment of tho present campaign will b necensary to determine whether Lieuten ant General Hclmuth von Moltke, nephew of tho "Organizer of Victory," Is entitled to his celebrated uncle's other sobriquet of "The Battle Winner." Hla suprem war lord, the Katser, and the tremendous organization of 6,000,000 officers and men which Lieutenant General von Moltke heads at einy rate have unalloyed confi dence In his ability to vindicate the tra ditions entrusted to his keeping. Mean time, emulating tho habits which gav tho conqueror of France still nnother pop ular title, "The Great Sllonce Keeper," Von Moltke's energies, wrltee Frederic W. Wile, In tho Chicago Tribune, are devoted to hammering Into still more deadly per fection the mightiest wnr machine the world has yet known. The victories which the German army has won In the first six weeks of the wnr arc a striking trib ute to his genius. Von Moltke succeeded a brilliant sol dlcr, Count von Schlleffen, nt the General Staff on January 1, 3906. He had had a somewhat more than ordinary career In the army up to that time, won his lieuten ancy nnd Iron Cross In the field as a stripling In the Franco-Prussian cam paign nnd acquitted himself creditably In various grades of the service until ha renchod his llcutennnt genornlcy In 1902. But men Inside and outside the army looked askance on his elevation to ths post so long adorned by Schlleffen. They declared he owed It primarily to Em peror William's passion for the plctur eque and a gnawing desire once again to have the magic name of Moltke at the head of tho "brains department" of ths German army. SCOFFEtlS RUB THEIR EYES. Detractors were destined to have their skepticism dramatically undermined. Hav ing scoffed at Von Moltko as a decoratlvs figure, they rubbed their eyes over ths first "Kaiser maneuvers" held under his auspices before he had been at the Gen eral Staff ten months. The great autumn mimic campaign for years past hod been distinguished by operations which that oft-quoted marshal of Kmnce would have called "magnificent but not war." Ths Knlscr had an unconquerable passion for thrilling cnvulry charges over bare fields. which would make splendid cinema films, but mat the lives of n division In war. With the taunts of his rivals ringing In his ears that he was a "Kaiser staff chief" pure and simple, Von Moltke's first Innovation was ruthlessly to obliterate the picturesque from the autumn maneu vers and substitute grueling, practical op erations night fighting, roreed marches and nil the other trappings of "real" war. Count Schlleffen, who hnd opposed Wil liam II's predilection for pvrotTlinicp, had finally to leave the General Staff In disfavor. Von Moltke. revenllng a will of steel, succeeded speedily where his emi nent predecessor had failed. Ills growth In the esteem of the army was consistent and rapid thenceforth. That the Germtn army today is essentially "workmanlike" Is to a large degree the achievement of Its present chief of staff. Geneml von Moltke, born In Mecklen-hurg-Sehwerln In 1313, was fifi vears old In Mnv. 1!U Ho Is often mi'tikcnly called "Count" von Moltke, for the title of count, conferred on his great ancestor In 1S70 on the day Metz fell, was inherited by the elder brother of the present Molt ke. Geneml Count Wllhelm von Moltke, nnd ceased with the latter's death a fevr years ago. The "organizer of victory," whose wife was nn Englishwoman MIsj Burt, had no children General Helmut!) von Moltke served ns adjutant to his dis tinguished uncle ot tho General Staff from 18S1 until the Field Marshal's death In 1S31 While, escorting the latter to th grave Emperor William Informed the then Mnjor Von Moltk that he had derided to elevate him to the rank of a personal aide de camp Five vears of serv ee In the Kaiser's entourage were succeeded by regimental nnd divisional commands In tho guards until in 1901 Emperor William created a quartermaster generalship at the Gencrnl Staff, hitherto filled only in war time, and designated Lieutenant Gen eral von Moltko to occupy It. The post Is that of a vice e-hlnf and von Moltke was thenceforth looked upon as Count Schllef fen's eventunl successor. Von Moltke's qualities are not of the dazzling order Bulky and stockv of ex terior, with tho ungainly outlines of s Bismarck, blue eyed nnd blondlsh grav haired, taciturn to a degree, a famed characteristic of the Mecklenburgers anil Schlesvvlg-Holsteincre, from which the Moltkes have sprung, the chief of the General Staff Is a man of Indomitable force, unfailing candor and mental ca pacity more distinguished for mnlty than scintillating brilliancy. He cares far le" for show than a guard lieutenant HORNETS' DIET PROVES BEE-STING ANTIDOTE Odd Recovery of Farmhand Bit ten by Both Insects. HBENSBURG. Sept :i.-John Newton, the well-known old farmer who has a11 extensive place not far from Mun(,i! ci iss r ads, was In town reccntlj who n bee story which sounds like a lie """ which Mr. Newton declnres Is the 'rum A remarkable thing happened on tne Newton farm tho other day, Mr Newton "My hired man." said the old 'rm'r! "was itanlns out an olu shell "'" " inadvertently poked a rake or some""" into a nest of bees On or two or i' bees stalled a prelimlnan stinging the man suited for the door, rake In hand As he went toward the ex t upper end of his take ture tbro" hoi net's nest nnd In an instant the mcrcusing army of bees was Joliiea the maddened hornets , "Well, sii, to make a long storj ino"j when Fred reached the house he certain a tight His fnee was a ma of reel splotches. His arms b. Kgs were smug 1 uiun c .... -- n(j. iccner. so many times had he " l n Hut hetweeu the time m baj hitching up the maie ami th' ".,. gut to the house with her all the -veil" and discoloration had di-appeai-J " Fied'H luidj and ho said he ret r quite so good In his lilt bct "It was this vva. we ligund J poison was very dangiims in l"L ' jjy 11.. 11 1-I11WI iiitiav- JTJI,- MW4 -" f 1 I son. have died had It not been for the- nuri You see we don't live fur fim tne . ..Rln i.timnlrnl nlnnt Mill! till UOWl .. A b-en feasting on one ot the- van happened that whatevn ilieniia had been c-ttins lntt Ttiu.'a J pot antidote foi bee puison and so ' mtle onl escaped injur l-ut sine ir- on U' , incident he hasn't had a, tlsm in his right shouui-i I boihtrlns him siuce Uii." which ti-s,k rT riintufli -. . t& tJfgefifc ,- fr.- f"" r ,-. vmt,r. ,n ,fci 11 1 faltTljj fNaiti LSiSftJjy -"-r -j -A iiir 1 run m