' - J 'v- & feimmtg ; ftcj&ger PtTIH.tC LEDGER COMPANY emus it. k cuntis, rwitsiT. 0n Vf Oelw, Secretary! John C. Martin, TruMrj ChlriM K Lodlntton, Philip S Collins, John B. WH Him, ltimlors. EDITORIAL DO AUDI ,P It WHAIJ3T SxutlT Editor JOftH C. MARTIN. General Business Manstsr Published dally at Tcauo Lxoan rjulldlnr, Independent Square, Philadelphia. ticnoM crmkt. ......... inroad and Chestnut Stmts AtlASTIc Citt . . . J"rtt$- Vnion Bulldln New Toss ,,....170-A, Metropolitan Tower Onioiao .... .817 Horn Insurance Bulldlng- JJSWh 8 Waterloo Place. Pall Mall. S. VT. ffMssisscse BestAn -Ihm Patriot Ilo d nr ?tWit.tero bbseo The roe www iir.v YosK neir.it) .. The Times BulMlrur -.Eistls HrsAU . ......... i .. . 00 Frleflrlchtra VtoTr!?. BC.MO 3 Fall JIMl Esst, 8. W. EMMS Brass tr . 33 nue Jjouls la Qrana suBsciurnoN terms By carrier, Dutt O'rLT, el tents. Br mall, ttostnald outside of Philadelphia, except where foreltn pottsf Is required, Diilt Oklt, one month, twenty-fire centji tjtu.T Onlt, one year, three dollars. All mall sub scriptions payable In advance. SELL, 8000 WAtlTOT KEYSTONE, MAW 8000 )sW Addrtt$ all communications to Kvtnlna Ltdgtr, dpmJencs S quart, PMtodetpnta. m-i i ' ' ' .... -i iXHisasv as zaB rntzaDCLruu roiTorrios la bccons cubs uirL utrrsa. FUlLADEU'lllA. SATUnnAY. DECEMBER 36. 191 , a resolution is a good thing In Itielf, out a resolution carried out U far better. Rotten Hoso and Politics THERE) is rotten hose and plenty of it In Philadelphia. The rosponslblo offlclala Jiavo said so, and there Is no reason to doubt their accuracy. Only the splendid esprit do corps of the Flro Department and the excel lence of tho personnel have prevented serious losses and maintained the splendid record for flro prevention which Philadelphia has en Joyed for many years. The parsimony of Councils, however, la -without excuse. It has neglected a very ob vious duty, and by so doing has menaced tho entire city. Its bitter antagonism to the re form Administration, tho oxcoUence of which haB made It a red flag to the Organization, could be no excuse for Its obstinate refusal to supply necessary hose. It Is humiliating that a protest of tho Insurance companies should have beer necessary to bring Councils to a recognition of Its duty. But this sort of thing Is what gang rulo means- It Is what tho people vote for when they cast their ballots in favor of puppets. Probably Philadelphia will get some new hoso now, and It Is better late than never, but how much longer are the necessities of the mu nicipality to be sacrificed to the petty politics of gentlemen who are always ready to sub ordinate public Interests to their own prefer ment? Concentrated War Must Be Short THERE was never a war like this. Battles formerly wore fow and far between. "When , the Union and Confederate armies fought for , seven days about Richmond It was so unusual ( an event that tho contest took Its name from the fact. But war now Is one long, continu ous affair. There Is no end. The thunder of the guns Is constant. Day and night they bolch forth their messengers of death. Thero 1b no roat for man or motal. These modern battering rams arts as persistent as the sun In Its course. And therein lies the hopo for early peace. The casualties have been exaggerated, but . accurate analysis still leaves them stupen dous. Cars which bring up fresh troops do not return empty. Their Journey back Is reo " ognlzed by the stench which precedes and follows them. The life of tho guns also la short. A hundred discharges will ruin most of them. Such a saturnalia of destruction must Inevitably wear Itself out. It not only exhausts the nations' human resources, but It wastes with appalling quickness their ma terial means. It Is war continuously at Its l supreme moment, a constant crisis, beyond the power of human stamina and nerves to l)n maintained Jong. There la more fighting now In a week than "Sthero used to bo In a year. A year's war now Is a hundred yearn war in concentrated form, tfhero win be peace In exhaustion and ex Ehaystlon Is certain. Co Councils Refuses to Help Unemployed JfTlHB Mayor has shown Councils how nearly JU nam a million aouars can do maae avan- , able for the relief of tho unemployed. The ,TJnlted Gas Improvement Company would spend that sum in substituting gas for gaso- lino lamps. This wonfd result In the saving i annually of thousands of dollars for the city, ' and It would also mean better lighting. The unemployed are clamoring for work. Theyneed It In order to keep body and soul - together But Mr, Connelly, who a few months ago prated so nobly of what he would do for these men, actually does nothing ex cept block the plans of other people who sin cerely favor helping the needy. For the Or ganlzatlan, which was once so prone to squander public funds, now has the economy mania. Its policy Is to starve tho Adminis tration into ineffldenoy. If a few thousand mm also starve meantime, what difference ' does that make? The Administration, how ever, can bo depended on to da everything - ,Tvoslbl to relieve the situation despite the jf fiu&traotloni3t tactic of the Finance Com- rttee, Molljcoddle Government Means Chaos MOLLYCODDLE! government means no government at all, but disaffection, re bellion and eventual chaos. This la as true tn a democracy as in other forms of govern v went. Republicanism does not mean timidity ttt the enforcement of the law, but rather full liberty In the people to determine what the t Jajf ebnH be. , a We are not Inclined to take too seriously raMrts of disturbances and conspiracies in , -atJIn Philippine, but it Is apparent that the KtatUudes of Washington, repeated and taken - seriously in the islands, have already bad the effect that every student of conditions there predicted months ago. Some of oar polltl- rtnns save managed to oeuvtnee tb Filipinos tost our role la a tyrannous thing, whleh no aoJ peopte would eadur. and thy av nfoiicJbd tn doctrine of BMtFUatte until , lata have actually succeeded 1b loatJleatBg jpt th&t semi-barbarous population tb tA f ret.liwn It in ae of the tcajredUM of Aatertaut sUatcsiiwsiiiP ttuat at a time wfeen the demo- nvii ...!) lmeut la Mexico te proving on- vifa-Ji'x.i ti.ar rreedoci canot tk conferred qa t vi 't t uc o!Ut be earned by theu. our $. iurie t .v hi sfrtedit.g a pfurtesfewfo VUxr t faeu iac of dUciplto U tn S- n tMtmMt u i ctrtttio inure would b j , i-a naorft t.i-H' r Htrrtswn arrived , w J. Aatiutuiiu n diJ s-d. nd It EVENIKG LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, BATTTRDAY, DECEMBER MjJWIl. refusal to look facta In tho face. Ho will have nothing to do with them, and he will permit them to have nothing to do with his theories. Not onco so far in his career have events Justified his analyses, but In every great issue ho has espoused he has been found on the wrong side. It la tho ort of. morality which Is eventually extreme cruelty, for In It thero Is nothing but disappointment, disillusionment and disaster. Tho fatuous Philippine policy of the Ad ministration Is Mr. Bryan's. He Is responsible for it. If disaffection thero becomes general or dangerous, It must bo rememborod that the seod of It was sown and nurtured here at home, within the continental limits of tho United States. Give the Nntion a Definite Policy THEIIE nro commissions studying alt ques tions except thoso which are Important. Nothing so makes tho mouth of Congrcsn water ns to provide for a board of experts to Investigate and examine Into successful busi ness, but any suggestion that an unsuccess ful Industry, one which has rotted under the hardship of law, be aided, Is received with polar Iclncss. Our merchant marine has confessedly been starved to death. It has become ema ciated under a system of unparalleled exac tions. Onoe a great Industry, It has bocomo something we are ashamed of. Tear after year we pay our toll to foreign carriers, .whllo our own tonnage languishes. As a remedy the Administration proposes that the Govern ment buy and operate merchant ships. It docs not want to build the vessels at home, which would rehabilitate tho shipbuilding in dustry. It does not expect that the lines would pay exponses. It merely understands that the poplo are determined to put our flag onco more on the high seas, and It proposes to satisfy tills demand In what is at onoe an easy and an extravagant way. Let the Gov ernment pay the freight until the freight pays for itself, then turn the profitable busi ness over to private corporations. Tho Evening Lkdoek has repeatedly urged tho appointment of a commission of experts to recommend a definite national polloy, non partisan and no more dependent on elections than the bonking system is. Such a com mission, for Instance, wopJd bo quick to see that many of the disabilities under which American ships now labor could be overcome by the use of Internal-combustion engines or oil as fuel, under modifications of the ex isting laws relative to the number of the crow. It would also bo able definitely and authoritatively to point out the advantages which foreign ships have over our own, tho way In which equalisation can be procured, what Government aid In the form of payment for mall carriage would be necessary, how to make, the merchant marine a powerful sub sidiary of the regular navy, how to officer ships, etc But Washington prefers to piddle along. It does not understand the problem, and it does not want to understand it. The Secretary of the Ntwy Is even convlnoed that nautical terms are confusing and shouldibe abolished. Nevertheless, the party that stands for sensi ble rehabilitation of tho merchant marine, without quibble or fear, Is the party that will be Indorsed overwhelmingly In November, 1916. Get Off the Track A DISTRIBUTION of more than 00,000 to employes Is an event of moro than ordi nary Importance, and the John B. Stetson Company, which thus commemorated a half century of productive activity, Is an excellent examplo of American, and particularly Phlla delphlan, energy and thrift. Doctor Brum baugh was especially happy In his congratu latory address. "This country does not need the voice of the pessimist," ho said. "When you find a man who can see no good In America, you had better help to bury that fellow alive. And when you bury him, bury hliri face downward, so that when he tries to dig his way outho'll keep -going deeper." Tho Governor-elect, however, need not fear that many of the pessimists will try to do any digging out. They aro not built that way. Their Inertia Is absolute, and It Is In moaning only that they display any vigor. Tho country has had Its fill of them. They growl and gnash their teeth in season and out of season, and if Industry were dependent on them there would not be enough smoke coming out of the factories to soil a handker chief. Between them and the muckrakera it la a wonder that even the everlasting hills are left standing. Away with them and their complaining. The country is waking up. It is looking ahead, pushing into openings, striving for new business and stimulating the old. The war la doing something to counteract the effects of present tariff law, and with business off the operating table it is the consensus of opinion that the time has come for a sprint. There Is a reaction toward optimism in all circles. If the pessimists do not get off the track there will be nothing left of them but the pieces. If Christmas Day had been made to order it could not have been better, and that made the pessimists very unhappy. Those who have heard the debates are con vinced that the Prohibitionists cannot make Congress any drier than it 1. Manufacturing in Burope has not stopped entirely. It keeps an army of men busy man ufacturing guns and ammunition- "" ' ) Viewed as a shell game the European war makes the country fair fakers look cheaper than the disused two-cent pleee. It was doubtless, the most oharltable Christ mas eeasen ever known in this part of the country. There wera few who did net give geaereusly of their means. There is a growing belief that if te Qv eminent wevid attftad to its own bueineee in stead of ether peeajea there would be a great improvement In both. Submarines are aM right, VW when it comae to a real Agbt o toe oiMtt sea far from house, with the control of trade rewtea ae the prise, battleship sod W aun tat 'i Wynr hae ua JMt Sgat to bve tb eanke pay ' " " - 4ejH-4ta la st. of Pr vnt f tHs I tww la cm PROFITS IN MIXING BRAINS WITH BUSINESS Successful Men Do Not Wait for Oppor- tunitics, But Make Thcrri Mind the Only Commodity That Has rt Iligh Market Value. Dy JOSEPH II. ODELL ''jyTAN WANTED!" To tho short-sighted JLVjL those words sum up tho wholo philos ophy of life. Thoy think thero aro so many places to fill. Just so many Jobs to bo done, and that tho lucky man Is ho Who mnnuges to get tlio vacancy. The rent chances of tho modern world nre tho possibilities that como from adding new values to old things by mixing In a Httlo moro brains. Fortunes nnd honors nro waiting for tho men who can meet mechanical needs, supply Indtls irlol deficiencies, clip off a fow minutes from tho tlmo required to accomplish a given piece Of work or find a now use for a by-product. Ichabod Washburn was a Now England blacksmith, working tllltgontly at his anvil. Ono day ho learned that no steol wlro wai bolng mado In America; Great Britain had a monopoly of tho trade. He determined to mako tho best wlro that could bo made nnd win the market. Tho now deparluro In volved study nnd experiment, but he per sisted until ho drow nearly nil tho fine wlro used In America, John,D. Rockefeller, when every one was rushing to buy oil lands, saw that tho oil could bo Immeasurably Improved In quality and value by bolng properly re fined. Ho took up tho problem from a scientific standpoint, fitted up a laboratory, Btudled chemistry, carried on experiments day and night, until he was ablb to triple tho value of every gallon of crudo oil ho could get. Men of Imagination Ell Whitney saw the plies of Southern cotton bolng treated by hand,' and realized that If a machine for clonring tho green cotton seed could bo devised It would do tho work of a hundred men and mako tho Southern States prosperous. He set to work with a will and invonted the cotton gin. Ezra Cornell saw that telegraphy could bo only an expensive luxury If single wires had to bo Insulated by a sheathing and laid In trenches underground; so ho sot up poles. Insulated the wires with bottjes and mado the world his debtor. Ellas Howe built his mechanical sewing machlno becauoo he suddenly realized the cost and slowness of hand labor. Bessemer Invented his famous steel process becauso ho believed that steel would take tho place, of Iron and wood If It could be made cheaply, quickly and In sufficient quantity. McCormlck built his reaper and harvester when he had estimated that tho population of America was Increas ing so rapidly that It would soon bo Im possible to feed tho many millions If grain had to bo mowed and bound by hand. Wherever there Is a possibility of cheap ening production by new methods;. of pro ducing two articles whoro only one Is now nvallable; of quickening transportation; of simplifying processes; of adapting natural forces to mechanical ends; of saving time or strength to tho worker, thero Is an oppor unlty. Scattered all over the earth latont In tho moving air, dormant In tho up turned sod, pulsing In every flowing stream aro forces or fabrics that say, "Wo aro yours, If you will use us." The Two Machines "If I had only thought!" Tho man who puts no thought Into his work Is only a mechanical device for carrying out some other man's thinking. Tho difference between tho human machine and the motal machine Is that the one can suffer and the other cannot. We stand today on the threshold of Immeasurable possibilities for men who will think, who can think. Almost every Industry Is In Its Infancy and is demanding clear brains and skilled hands to guide It to Its larger development; every profession Is seeking for men of disciplined mind and trained Imagination to copo with the evor enlnrging opportunities. It Is almost possible to arrange a scale showing the financial value of brains ap plied to raw material. A favorite Illustra tion la: "A blacksmith makes five dollars' worth of Iron into horseshoes and gets $10 for them. A machinist makes the same amount of Iron Into needles and gets $6800. A watchmaker takes a similar piece of Iron and makes It into mainsprings, and gets 200,000; or into hairsprings, and gets J2, 000,000, 60 times the value of the same weight of gold." Undoubtedly the great difference between the successful man and tho comparative failure does not Ho In the amount of work done by each, but In the amount of intel ligence, brains and thought put Into the work. One man puddles Iron, and when he had worked for hours the product Is still Iron; another man takes the same metal, adds brains to It, and though it la still ion, yet by virtue of tho creative and constructive thought It has become a ma chine. The quarryman cuts out a block 'of marble by mero muscle; Salnt-Gaudens takes it, directs his hand by his brain and produces a ptece of statuary that is worth Us weight in gold. Conqueror of Circumstance "Whoever Is resolved to oxuel in paint ing or Indeed in any other art." said Sir Joshua Reynolds, "must bring all his mind to bear upon that ono object from the mo ment that he rises till hs goes ft bed," Arts, totia admitted that he owed his vast ac quirements to his having command over his mind, to the ability to concentrate all of bis thought upon one abjeet. Sir WtUbun Hamilton eonteftded that "the dlfferanaa he. I twee an ordinary man and Isaae Newton constats primarily In this, that the one Is capable of more eontlaueue mental appli cation than the other." The words of Em erson are always worth recalling by any aae who wonders why he does tutt succeed, tvk ba fHtfc or akaaee. ecgreuiMUnee: "If a man oas write a better book, preach a better sermon, op make a. better mousetrap than his neighbor, though he build. Me house In the waede, toe world will mas s, beaten track to hie door-" It doea baC a)Uer how uaprttUu the environment or now others way eonaplre U kep Up H l-ackrottHd. the man Wlte ( ai asi wttklas to put kraln -power J j bj, wr wtU ultimately be Uecoveid aj4 r hie reward. Courte.y iu Batmen f ' asapl-, i tmiiir iHKu, t&n& it Be j)IJOK K IS Imti-Kl tikm, o tn, useusnsf- . JJ '-7T.TT eiataw. J y- malign disposition of the offender. It Is throw ing oand Into tho machinery of life. It Is de liberate meanness. It Is unwise and unjust to tolorato In anywhere. And yot It Is so common In so many cases aliens one thinks ho has another at a disad vantage, he Is Inclined to show his Ill-breeding. We so often hear a meek, quiet person ask a simple question, only to be crushed by a sneer ing. Insulting answer. Whatever tho plane of authority a person ocouples, you can always tell whether he Is a gentleman or not by the tone of answer ho gives to a simple question; and If ho Is not a gentleman, ho has no business occupying a place where he Is brought Into constant contact with the public. It Is Just ns Incumbent upon a man to bs courteous ns It Is to be honest. No man knows the duties of his position It he has not learned that among tho very first Is to bo a gentle man. SWITZERLAND'S CITIZEN ARMY The Inexpensive System Whereby a Force of Haifa Million Men Can bo Mustered nt Any Moment for National Defense. Howard D Wheeler, in Harper's Weekly. Switzerland, certainly the most democratic nation In Europe, held by some writers to bo tho world's model State since tho adop tion of the Constitution of 1874, ban no standing army, its only pormanent military ofnecra are military trainers, selected by and under tho supervision of tho general Government. With a population of about 4,000,000, nt an expenditure of less than $8,000,000 an nually, tho Swiss Confederation can, In an hour of need, muster a fighting force'of half a million men, trained and perfectly equipped. With a population of over 90,000,000, It costs tho Republic of the United States In tho neighborhood of $90,000,000 to maintain a professional military organization which, In emergency, could throwa baro 50,000 men. Incompletely equipped, Into line of battle. To trace tho Swiss 8,000,000 Into a first class defensive force of halt a million Is ex ceedingly simple. The money goes for training, clothing and equipment nnd pay of soldiers and officers while they are with the colors. It Is not wasted In politics, because It is next to Im possible to play politics with the Swiss mil itary system. Every male citizen of Switzerland, who Is able, receives military training for certain short periods between the ages of 17 nnd 52. Every two years, for the first 10 years that Is, live times In all he answers a call to the colors. Ills period of training is never more than 90 days for any one year, and that only In the first year, If an artillery recruit his training covers 75 days; If In the cavalry 90 days, and If n the In fantry 60 days. The period with the colors shortens as he grows older. During his third, fifth, seventh and ninth years this period of training is from 12 to 15 days. He is paid only during the time he la with the colors. More than that, so tar as is possi ble, his military tratnlng is made to follow the lines of his occupation. If he Is a baker, he finds his place In the commissary; it he is an electrician, he can enter the engineers or the signal corps. His commander of troops is elected by the Legislature. lie has as good a chance of becoming an officer as any of his fellows. Officers are drawn from the ranks according to seniority, and ap pointed by the Governrnent. "Compulsory service!" Those are the other scare words, the team mates of "militarism." The Swiss military training is the law of the land, certainly, even if It has become so by vote of all tho people. Its relation to democracy depends to some extent on whether you argue that a person can be compelled to do what he wants tor do. The Swiss youth, from hla earliest sehool dava. la tausrht that tha nrrav I fnr t- fenae only. PetHotUm is Interwoven in hi. development, tie atacerns no line between civic duty and military duty. He learns to look upon each ae essential to real oUixeiv ship. By the time be leaves sehool ha la not a raw recruit. He hu already had setae military training. He is ready and eager to Join the oolara and tft aomnlete hla edueeties. Certainly he dse pot regard as undemocratic or unreasonable the re quirement that he must know how to fight Is order that he may take an Intelligent nan In the defense of hie country, any autre torn we look upon a undemocratic and unreasonable the requirement that we must know how to read in order that we may taJut aa tntet&seot jart in the poHttcal af fairs of our country 1t;e Swiss army U the manhood of the coui:ir Li-fciuad for mti.itu.ry itittu?, lb Hart tAi 4Jy t 4 o-al ritrta el a e ttvtad rftW-ii & BUT NOT FORGOTTEN mxm t . h mv? i 19 U j .- Ji. rr-t i v.TT.j! .. w.c?'.v-jr "svs-,t .? r T":C Tw T -TfliS?5 m. -w. - WEATHER BUREAU'S It Saves Philadelphia More Money mm MflTV-'',i;"$Tvil ' SrecSY' wMm tp.j.in Costs Commercial and Maritime Interests Henclited. ,M - , - liy irrAJiii. Section Director, U. S. THE transfer of the United States weather service from tho Signal Corps of the army to tho Department of Agriculture created tho mistaken Idea, which has slncp prevailed In many quarters, that Its chief services aro rendered to tho farmor. Tho facts are that prior to tho rural mall delivery and the wide spread use of the rural telcphono the former received practically no weather servlco at all. Generally the period covered by tho forecast would explro beforo he could bo reached with the Information. Tho chief bencilts of tho service always have been, and perhaps nlways will bo, realized by the commercial Interests of tho larger cities. It is true that In somo of tho thickly settled fruit-growing districts', where there Is a network of telephones, the frost warnings and tho cold wavo warnlnga aro of ImmenBO benefits, second only to that which accrues to the moro condensed and concen trated Interests ns found In the larger cities. Tha average townsman reads the forecast In his dally paper and then, without consid ering tho proclse period which It was mado to cover, ho looks out o seo If It Is being verified. If tho conditions correspond to tho forecast all Is well and good and ho thinks nothing moro about It. If the forecast la not being verified at the time he dismisses It with contempt, and with the thought that the bureau. Is only another Instance of sense less appropriations' and useless drains on the public treasury. Thus it Is that the average townsman profits very Httlo In a direct way by the Information which tho bureau collects and disseminates. Cheapens Cost of Living In an Indirect manner Mr, Cttyman pro fits to a much greater extent than he realizes". This is because he raises none of tho produce which he consumes, but buys it all in tho 'open market. The services of the weather bureau result In the saving of vast quantities of perishable produce. These savings some times begin In the field of production, as Instanced In the large fruit-growing regions, where frost warnings frequently save the cropB over large districts. These savings In crease the Bupply and naturally cheapen the cost to the consumer, The saving in the field of production Is1 only a beginning, for the goods must bo transported to the consumer, sometimes over long distances. During the winter season much care must be exercised to protect them from injurious temperatures. The transpor tation companies and the large shippers ha.ve learned to govern their shipments in accordance with the telegraphic reports of the weather bureau, and not to send them through districts where unfavorably low temperatures aro likely to obtain. When a cold area is drifting over a certain district, all shipments of perishable goods destined for points within it must be protected ac cordingly or else withheld until tha unfavor able conditions have passed. The atmos pherlo survey which the bureau makes over ihe entire country every JJ hours' enables it to follow tho movements of the cold areas and" to give Information regarding which districts they will cover. In a more reliable manner than it can estimate the precise con ditions for a single point or definite locality. Six Million Dollars Saved In' some of the largest cities the bureau renders a special service for shippers, and the caylnge during the winter season have been conservatively estimated at 10 per cent. of all of the perishable product handled. In I Bher wrd8' ho "uppIlr ,s '" that amount, and la eheapened to the consumer to that extent. This saving, which appUee to fruits, vegetable, plants, eggs and botijed Hoods, has been estimated to amount to from four millions to six mUUoas of dollars eaah winter season in Philadelphia. At the lowoet estimate, the savings in Itti qlty talma amount to more than twice the cost of main taining the entire national bureau, the an nual appropriation being about ILlHMtJ The ebeet for which the aerviee was Art organised was not to (Ave produce, but to aflerd JH-oteetton for the maritime later' against the never storm that lonvHiavMi ween along or am. coast or over the Great Lakea. TUe early records of our ojtca show that each severe storm, that appeared on the Atlantic coast in tnoec tlraea uiuk tl tell uf vessel od el human Uvea buvh oeea,. m! la. ar. have t., ltUU. SU.'i AW W JS4 -jI lllliilli m aw -.. TINfwL,.-.. 1 .-.-. - .. 3SP - ""3- - 'Vivt- oJi rypoowv -. vws3sws2t.. &a v--5Siaiwa "x&aUai.:: w'Cfe- .--v . -. r J.'CA jzr-jtf " -V- r4t W3 V3&3 5-S SERVICE TO THE CK in a Year Than the National' BuS r.D nrTC. " a. ulisj Wetlhcr llure.u. ? gnrdlng the warnings, bellovlng ItoatsgtS could outrldo tlio storm ana couia iaviumsR by not remaining In port. During fteTwjtAl bIjc venrs no storm of conseuuence"haVmd9.'-Il lla nnnnanrtA nn thn Atlfintfn nJlt KfPfOl t i the Great Lakes unheralded by thaarar5l Inim of tho Weather Bureau. Such'trw tlon for tho marltimo Interests meana5533 to Philadelphia, the second largest portU tho country. Educational uses is, Tho dally weather maps are sent tcrnMsJ of the schools1 in Philadelphia and the stl rounding towns for uso In tho physIogrpM classes. With their aid It Is hoped that"t coming generation will gain a fair knowtedsi of tho character of storms and their rnoYM ments, and that all of the ojd superstitions! regarding tho weather will vanish completely Tho work of education would have btea creatlv facilitated if we had secured thp pra-J posed observa'tory in Falrmount Park. AV3 though City Councils appropriated the moneys needed for tho project, the citizens did notl supuort It strongly enough to convince in Park Commission that It should be built m the Park. Tho building would have cost tjjjn people of Philadelphia less than 1 : Pjr eanitn. and would have afforded exceilS facilities for classes of school children to P fnma fnmlilni. with tha workings of tna pa ronn Thr. ntiionmlnrv would haVO beCSl nnnlnnail nnrl Tnntntnlneri bv the QOVeP ment without expense to the city beypj tho initial cost of tho building. Tho dally forecasts of ordinary weathfl and temneraturo chances aro relatively Important. Ordinarily they protect nelttgl life nor property, nnd are In reality oni5 matter of convenience. However, they fjl the part.ot tlio bureau'B work that comM; most prominently before mo gtiisi vtjs ond aro consequently tho feature Dy wj Us efficiency Is Judged. " P '' ItEMEMBRANCEt GItEEK FOLK-SONQl Mnt iii.t,. tlm fnrnat not unto the forest, 0 fifl lover! wtiv rin vnti I Kid ma to the forest? Joy Is where tlio temples are, lines of danen swinging far, Drums and lyres and viols In the town lit lu .Inrlr in thn forest). And the Happing lojves will blind me and $W itn.ln? vines will bind me 4bb And tho thorny roae-boughs tear my eatfrro gown And I fear the forest. 11 Not unto the fqrsst not unto the forest, O Jgt lovtri f Th.rA wan ana onco Mho led ma to the fort&i Hand In hand wa wandered mute, where t3 neither lyre nor flute, IJttle stars were bright. against the dusk. liner? was winu in uia loresij And the tliioket of wild rose breathed Across Una locked close Dluy perfumjngs of spikenard and musk, s 1 am tired or tne lowest. Kot unto the forest not unto the forest, 01 lover! Take me from the silence of the forest! I will love you by the light and thefet arums at nignt And echoing of laughter In my ears. Tint h.rA In th tnrnni I am still, remembering a forgotten, Wi thing, A 4 And my eyelid ere locked down for fterj tears There Is memory In the forest Margaret Wlddtmtr. to ih Crtt THE MEN OP THE EMDEN What matter if you He atanafe and true To the QrlUtn blood In the veins of you. When it's "hiD hurrah!" for a deed wsU ' For a flfht well fought and a race wiell run wjiai raaiter it you do truer Hats oft to the Bmden's orew. Thoi was thj lifa of ih triralzod'S TTtuuuintl txiUaa fpAZM th 17nthrlAll4 With ee beneath every wisp of tmoki Ana a tneeaee m every atrip j " usk giasi vm jobs w9 mn " " nun, uminoiMs. oeeatur. tntv tool dial those pirate nights In a ring of fee When you dense yer light And drive aeene your Mow l) Ilata o to the Bnwlttft's erewi Bre.t on the wave-wasaad decks stood !Wj Ana ucara aiut a vtataire anw . The weir nt th wlsae of death by day Aod tae i.9 o( Aeath in their reJ alKfai. Uor the eweW et the whe of ,, By tha Maxima gun, lu tha temp ht,S' wnue a wona of anAal atrttve ut i""1 i Kara. uiu.idi4 u,i.i..,.t &muiA, Th' l4 U tt.r aw, frtM-l " 'JJJJ , , Wb$ T "" I , , t,1S-iV I SS a t. f Uwt ftvir -f i t.iial luhi it - ltw a1 1 a .ji T-t-n . rt i , sJl J- . -. i,At8