fV it' i V ! . r V 1 H it : Sj sr llttii I i Ml imfcUh-rtiTThiaiiii wn , n..mi i.i.i..! iln " mi Sutuln gSSjfe ffibijer tfUDLlG LfctJGER COMPANY CfttUS . K. dURTtS. PftMfDattt. tfrtrUj) if ldlV&ton, V(cal'rldmt, John ti MArtln. P-rtnr nd Treasurer; Thlllp 8. Collin. John B. WillUnm to! rettery EDItO!uXl.l30AnDt Cie II K. CC4TU, Chairmen. ft H, .WliAtET SDtreutlve Editor 5 JOHN C. MAilTlN Benertl flu.itnt Manager ' PpWtaheil dally at rcntio tttom Building, Indepenilthce Square. Philadelphia. I.nrKjEit 'CitSTHL. ......... .Broad and Chestnut Streets Atlantic Crar ...v rrtSfVntert nulMln KW V6ic 170-A. Metropolitan Toer CrtiCAdo 8(7 Home Inaumnce llutldlnr LoBO!r. 8 Waterloo Dace, Pall Mall, 8. W. . i, - NEWS BUREAUS t WaehtttOroH neaKAD The Tott tlulldlnir Naw Tonit Mmiain The riirn llutMlnn IlftnMK Ilmuo 00 FrMrlchtraa I-osdon Kruno 2 Pall Mall Hat. B. W. , nuns Btmwu ...... 8a Hue Louie 1 Orand subscription terms By tkttttr, tyxtvt O.NtT, elx cent. Br tnall. poitpald entald of , Fhlladelnhln, encept where forefim pottage I; required, DAiLt ONt.r, one month, twenty-nve cental Dtt,T Onli, one year, three dollara. All malt aub jKrlptlohe payable In advance BOX, SOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 8000 i W AMmt all rojnmunltatlon lo JJvenlnp ,ttatt, tnitpendtnct Square, Philadelphia. XTrniD xt xm maium-iiu romorrica it srcoNn- CUII HAIL MATTM. I i ' ! riULADELTlHA, MONDAY, MAIICH 1, 1915. The day hath eyes and the night hath ears lest the teicked should go undetected I in their vlllalnv. Putting Sunday to the Practical Test WHEN "Billy" Sunday called upon tho men In his bis audience last night to show how they stood on Qovernor Brum baugh's local option plan, and to make tho General Assembly realize that public senti ment demanded Its Indorsement, he chal lenged thoso who have been Influenced by hla preaching: to prove that they believe what they havo professed. They havo accepted his leadership In one thing. Now let them accept it In another akin to tho first. Sun day was putting his own work to the test, to discover whether It Is straw or stone. The local option bill 1b to be reported out of tha commlttco on Tuesday. That bill Is the touchstone which will Infallibly disclogo the amount of sham there Is In tho purposes of those who profess to be for local option. Thoso who favor local option this year are for that bill and thoso who are against It opposo that bill. "Billy" Sunday has thrown his lnfluenco on tho right sldo. Now we shall see how strong It Is. France Takes the Trick WHILE tho United States was waiting for tho British to sctzo the Dacla, tho French have arrested tho Bhlp and taken It to Brest. According to French theory and practlco tho transfer of a ship owned by sub jects of a belligerent to subjects of a neutral is Invalid in time of war. The English have admitted that such a transfer was valid If made in good faith, and the American de fense of tho transfer of tho Dacla has been based on Its own practice, which corresponds to that of tho British. But tho situation Is changed completely, now that France' has stepped in. The British could defend the seizure only on the ground that the exigencies of war made It necessary. The French can defend tholr course on tho ground that It is de manded, not only by the exigencies of war, 'but by tho long-standing practlco of tho na tion. It will tax tho skill of tho most astute diplomatic lawyers In tho country to per suade tho French that they have made a mistake. The Dacla is, of course, an Ameri can ship. The State Department has Insisted from the beginning that Us transfer from tho German to tho American flag was made in good faith. It must continue to demand that the American flag be respected when ever it is raised on a merchant ship with tho authority of the Government, and that tho Allies cannot evade tho Issue by tossing It about among themselves like a ball. Most Appropriate VICTOR MURDOCK explained a few weeks ago that he was through with poli tics and that after his term as a member of the House of Representatives expired on March 4 he intended to devote himself to literature and the lecture platform. The National Committee of tho Progressive party announced Sunday night that It had elected "Victor Murdock as Its chairman. This is tho same Victor Murdock who is no longer interested in politics. Tho unthinking might conclude that the Kansas statesman had changed his mind, but tho facts do not warrant any such infer ence. The Progressive party no longer has any relation to politics. It Interests lecturers and literary men as material out of which articles and lectures can be made. Mr. Mur dock is only carrying out his announced In tention. ' "Who Will Guard the Guards?" E Y A vote of 37 to 10 the Senate has con- curred with the House in a proposal to require the President to make public what ever indorsements are submitted in behalf of a. Federal Judge to be appointed for a Geor gia district. According to Senator Root, the schema is not only unconstitutional, but is likewise "preposterous, almost Insulting." Of course, but haven't our demagogues been teaching for years that every Judge is potentially and jnferentially a crook? Therefore, let all the people know who it is that recommends can didates for the Judiciary. And It the Stand ard OH Company pr any other corporation wishes to defeat tho appointment of any can didate all it will have to do is send In to the lesldent a strong letter of approval. TM? inquisitorial, distrustful, commission smelling, raorallty-by-leglslatlon fad became bo strew; in ancient Rome at one time ftiat an eminent satirist ventured to ask, "Who V.-JU guard the guards?" Why not carry the nlan to its logical conclusion and insist that indorsers of Judicial candidates likewise make public the (ndorsers and influences that in duced hern to sand in their letters of recom mendation o tho President? The Governor Plays Ills Cards IT IB in accordance with his polloy of lay log hU cards on the table that the Gov ernor has printed and distributed his work Kwn'B ewnpsnsattoa bills accompanied by an eatnHMjpn, The Commonwealth now knows i tfc k)a of law which the lovernor thinks 1 iHMl)f be rwBd and hlo reasons for it. 1 any iifHtn. actinic in good faith, can show tMt tn provisions of the varluus bills can JUmpMvad. the ijovernor will probably con ft ts the improvements, Hotb wurkmen and employers setna to be itrd thftt soin timi of a law JmwW be &jpw& W ruptorr tWmk KUy should aw fee ki te it b,K-j for mm tmm in t&m wtM M t8tr ttsabied Tile wrfc bku . m mrm $t tftpiv wojjM like thi to f EVENING compel employers to give full pay for ten years It has been suggested that the com pensation given lo injured alien workers Whosft families are In Europe should be less than the compensation given to American elllaens whose families nro in this country And some far-seeing men havo urged that the compensation Inwe of other Btntcs should bo considered before tho General Assembly nets, I'-st tho employers here bo handicapped by j such an Increased cost In operating their i mills and factories thnt thoy cannot compoto with tho fnctorlos and mills In States wltero leis onerous laws are In force. It Is apparent that the differences nro on matters of detail only. Tho falr-mlndod men on both sides ought to be nblc, therefore, to get together and ngiee on a workable law. Inilmatlon of Connection With "Fake" Ordinance la "Slanderous" rjTHE Intimation that the Philadelphia --Rapid Transit Company Is not living up to Its agreement, has failed to urge tho Union Traction Company to give Its sanction to tho Taylor program, and has in ono way or another aided or connived nt tho palpablo efforts' of politicians to Unlfo the cntlro schemo Is denounced by Mr. Stotesbury ns "slanderous." This means that tho Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company Is not In sympathy with tho Connclly-Segcr-Costcllo program, that It docs not countenance tho hold-up, that It stands fast by Its proylous determination, thnt It considers the plan n good one, that it Btands ready to fulfil Its agreement to equip and opcrato tho now system provided tho Union Traction Company stockholders can be brought Into lino, which It hopes they may be. In thoso circumstances, it appears1 that be hind tho conspiracy for delay and botrayal are mainly politicians only. It seemB that thero is an nttempt to hold up the transit company and tho city at tho samo tlmo, to prevent them from working In harmony, to put and keep them at swords points for tho greater profit of the gang. Lot citizens turn out in forco Thursday afternoon that thoy may see with their own oyes how thoy aro represented. The vision of the master must bo on tho servant. Tho lash of publlo condemnation has before this whipped recalcitrant and "easy" legislators into line. It can do so again, hero In Phila delphia, and It will do so unless citizens nro so apathetic In defense of tholr own inter ests that thoy will do nothing to enforce their rights. In such a caso thoy would desorvo to bo betrayed. Tho Immediate thing is to make the demonstration at next meeting of. Councils so emphatic that no Councilman will dare ignore It or venture to voto against the wishes of his constituents. Before then, of course, Mr. Stotesbury's position will havo been barricaded by a pub llo statement, "mado over tho signatures of all tho directors of tho Rapid Transit Com pany, disavowing any part In or connection with tho Connelly-Seger-Costello ordinance against which the public is so Justly in censed," and which is generally bo excoriated that any intimation of sanction of it is re garded by Mr. Stotesbury, and Justly so re garded, ns "slanderous." When 1b a Woman Old? THIS is a question which managers of young Women's Christian Associations in different parts of the country have answered In different ways. In a New England city thoy havo decided that a woman ceases to be young at tho age of 35, and must give up those privileges in tho association buildings enjoyed by active members. In the absence of further evidence It may be assumed, for tho sake of those above the limit, that the managers think that a woman of 35 has reached tho age of discretion and no longer needs the motherly oversight which they glvo to the less mature. Tho necessity of fixing an age for adminis trative purposes does not, however, settle the question when a woman passes the boundary beyond which she may no longer be called young. But what Is youth, anyway? Is It a matter of years or of Inoxperienco or of point of view? Every ono knows women of GO who aro no wiser than 15-year-old girls in their outlook on the serious problems of life, and girls of 18 are often bettor qualified to assume responsible burdens than women of 33. Yet, In spite of this, there Is something magical about tho word youth which makes every woman and many men reluctant to admit that the sun has set on that glorious time. and that they are in the twilight zone that precedes age. Woman always delights to think herself young and attractive to tho eye, and so long ns she does think; it she delays the fatal day when age shall overtake her. Some of them are so successful that they die young at the age of 70, with none of their buoyant Joy In life abated. Count Okuma, the Japanese Premier, says that the liberty of China is sacred. Sacred to whom? The Chinese? With 619,000 visitors for the first week the Panama-Pacific Fair seems to be proving that it is wqrth looking at. i " If the Chinese boycott the Japanese In California, on what ground can they object to being boycotted by (he Americans there? Although the Freneli do not respect the American flag on the Dacla, the Belgians, at any rate, salute it when they see it in their country. Przasnysz was too much for the Germans, after all. They had to glye it up after strug gling with It for a few days. Most Ameri cans give It UP at the frst glance. Does Senator Newlands think that the nu. tral Powers aan bring the war to an end? If he dues his faith in moral suasion is sublime, if not ridiculouflL When the Governor remarked that the man who shouts about immorality in politics la usually the lazlent about voting, he Prob ably uttered the oonelusioj) which he reached last November after rwading the election returns. There must have been some error in that dUpateh from Berlin announcing that the Kaiser had eonerred the "Four le Merite" Order on Field Marshal von Hindwiburg The fUid uryptoai would Accept nothing with a preach , t avast egna. LEDGEE-PHILADELPHIA, .MONDAY, MABPtI 1, 1015, . MARCH BEGINS THE LIVING CALENDAR Romulus Made n Mistake in Naming It The Early Anglo-Saxons Un locked Their Word-Hoard With Better Effect. By RAYMOND G. FULLER IN THE tlmo of Romulus, founder of Rome, tho month of March stood nt tho head of the calendar. Tho legnl year In England bo gnn with tho 25th of March until tho mlddlo of I ho 18th century. Thoy aro dull and spiritless, nowadays, who think of March hi tho formal terms of tho dictionary, "tho third month of tho modern cnlehdnr." Such Is not Its truo mcnnlng not at all. A poet sang, for all poets aro singers, though not all Blngers aro poots a poet sang: It Is tho first mild tiny of March! Each minute sweeter than before, Tho redbreast sings from the tall larch That stands besklo our door. Then a fow verses farther on: No Joyless forms shall rcRUlate ' Our Ilvlnjr Calendar: We from today, my friend, will date The opening of the year. If you havo never had that thought, or rather, that emotion, your calendar Is a dead and lifeless thing, llko a dend langungo to thoso poor drones who lack tho gift and grace of adventurous receptivity. Tho tall larch of thp poem Is before the door of Words worth. Let us sco If any American can speak his language. Bryant responds to tho charm of March: Ah, passing few aro they who npenlc, Wild stormy month. In praise of thee: Yet, though thy winds aro loud and blealt, Thou nrt a wclcomo month to me. For thou to Northern lands apnln The glnd nnd glorious sun dost bring, And thou hast Joined tho gentle train And wcar'st tho gentle namo of Spring. The Disgrace of Mars ThlB year, when tho houn'-dogs and cur dogs and wolf-dogs of war, aye, the wholo yelping, snarling, crazy pack of war-dogs, biting even worse thnn they bark, nro making a bloody bedlam of Europe, the namo mlll tntes that Is tho word against n duo appre ciation of meritorious March. Romulus choso tho appellation, desiring to honor his puta tive father, Mars. Such Is ono account of Its origin, but Ovid avers thnt tho month of March was In existence long before Romulus. Howover that may be, Mars has latterly fallen Into 111 repute, Ho Is drunk, reeling, roaring drunk, nnd goeth about seeking whom ho may devour. Ho Is much moro re spectable In tho pages of Bulflnch's Ago of Fablo than In tho cablo dispatches of the modern ago of science. Let us try to pre serve our Judgment of March from tho evil association of Its namesako's orgies. The early Anglo-Saxons called tho month by a name which has a much pleasanter etymology. "Leneten-monath" was tho ap propriate title bestowed on It by tho viking people. It has a fine Beowulflnn flavor. It Is connatlvo nnd descriptive, a condensed naturo poem, picturing tho month itself, which to Northern lands again The glad and glorious sun dost bring. "Lcncten" means spring, and In its Ger manic form refers to "tho lengthening days." From it our word "Lent" Is derived. It Is true, however, that tho old Anglo Saxons hnd another designation for March "hlyd-monath," loud or stormy month. This fact merely calls attention to the Infinite pos sibilities of March weather. There is noth ing humdrum or monotonous about March weather, and It yields itself to tho purposes of cheerful, yet varied, conversation as docs the weather of no other month of the wholo year. There Is winter to talk about In March, and spring also; and something can bo said in favor of both. March never well, hardly over violates tho proprieties by welcoming Sweet Springtime without giving Old Winter a grand send-off. "Winter, Frosty But Kindly" Of courso, with its snow and lco, winter has not escaped calumny. As Bryant lamented, they aro not numerous who utter forth Its praise, but James Russell Lowell, in one of his most delightful essays, has spoken a good word surpassing well. Shakespeare do fends winter by tho method of negative com parison, when ho says that Its winds are not so unkind ns man's ingratltudo, and some where else he speaks in positive fashion of a lusty winter. Frosty, but kindly. Thomson, in his "Hymn on the Seasons," apostrophizes: On the whirlwind's wing Riding sublime, thou bldst the world adore. Though the poets and prosemen are in clined to regard the season itself as typical or symbolical of sorrow nnd desolation, it is little more than a "manner of speaking," and there are many of them who seo a matchless splendor of beauty in the accompanying snow. Passages In Spenser, Cowper and Whlttler immediately come to mind. Swin burne describes Acadian Atalanta, snowy-Bouled, Fair as the snow, and footed as the wind. The kindliness of winter is suggested by Emerson: Housemates sit Around tha radiant fireplace, enclosed In a tumultuous privacy of storm. There's a fireplace In Whittler's "Snow Bound," and in Charles Dudley Warner's "Backlog Studies" It Is apotheosized as the conservator of all the homely virtues. Camp bell pictures the home comfort of a winter's day: And when Its short and sullen noon is o'er, The Ice-chained waters slumbering on the shore, How bright the faggots In the little hall Ulaie, on the hearth, and warm the plctur'd wall! Old Herrlck, too: To our fire we can betake, And enjoy the crackling brake. Hawthorne's "Fire-Worshipers," In the "Mosses From nn Old Manse," Is full of sea sonable suggestion. An Anglo-German Copartnership Goethe, reviewing the poems of one of his countrymen, proves the international oneness of literature when he tells of winter, "storm borne from the Pole" "while the poet re Jolooa in tho shelter and comfort of his home, and eheerlly bids defiance to the raging elements- Furred and frost-covered friends ar rive, and are heartily welcomed under the protecting roof; and soon they form a cor dial, confiding circle, enliven the household meal by the clang of glasses, the Joyous song, and thus create for themselves a moral summer." Then we find companions brav ing the inclemencies of the wintry jheavens. "At length a ehoerful inn receives the half frozen travelers, a. bright flickering tire greets them as they crowd around, the chim ney, dwe. choral song, and many a, warm viand are reviving and grateful U youth and ago." Shcnstone, too, has paid his tribute to tho welcome of an Inn, and his famous quatrain, which had tho warm approval of Johnson, Is graved over tho flreplaco of a llttlo New England house of public hospital ity. But all this Is too much about winter, and perhaps Is better fitted to shorter days and to a more robustious season than tho one which ends in the present month has thus far shown Itself to be. March, however, should havo been named January, from Janus, who looked both for ward and backward. O, morry, marvelous month of March! It Is the beginning of tho year. It is the commencement season. It is Nature's Triumphal March. Man's Inhumanity to Man Spring has suffered no neglect from tho poets of praise. In perhaps only ono Instance has sho been disparaged in tho name of poetry. "I have hnted thee, O Spring!" cries Glovannlttl. For what? No storms, no tempests, no hurricanes. No spasms of long-nursed follies, No violence of coveted passions, No brazen display of warm desires and un clad sins. No exaltation of fecund motherhood. Nothing but the recurrence of nn old fash ion, the re-wearlng of tho discarded, ignoble dress of green, a new coat of perfumed rouge over tho wrinkles of tho same old yellow face of the world. What can all the man? Is not spring tho time of rebellion, of bursting vigor, of high and noble ambitions? Is it not tho tlmo of casting off tho old forms, tho old creeds? Wordsworth was also a revolutionary. It was In early spring when ho heard tho thou sand blended notes that brought sad thoughts to his mind: To her fair works did Nature link The human soul that through me ran; And much it grieved my heart to think What man has mado of man. Here la Interpretation of Spring. Words worth did not call her names because he was out of sorts with the world. Hu was, In deed, so well acquainted with Naturo that he was not embittered with tho world. Yet One Impulse from a vernal wood May teach you more of man. Of moral evil and of good. Than all the sages can. Naturo" speaks a various language, which, in spring as In winter, has an International oneness. Theso aro words of the Bengaleso poet, Rablndrannth Tagore: The Southern gate is unbarred. Come, my spring, come! Thou wilt swing at the swing of my heart. Come, my Bprlng. come! Come In the lisping leaves. In the youthful surrender of flowers; Come in the flte songs nnd the wistful sighs of the woodlands. Let your unfastened robe wildly flap In the drunken wind. Come, my spring, cornel GOETHALS' IRON ANCESTRY Toaeph B. Bishop, In Bcrlbner'a Magazine. It might be said that many generations had united In fitting Colonel Qoethals for his great task. The history of his family dated back to 860, In which year one Honortus left Italy with the Duke of Burgundy for France. In n fight with Saracens, Honortus was struck across the neck with what was capable of proving to be a deadly blow, but because ofthe fine quality of his armor and physical strength of his per son no Injury was caused. His escape won for him the title of Bonl Coll, Certain lands were given to him in the north of France, now forming Holland and Belgium. His nickname was translated into the native tongue as "Qnet Hals," meaning, as It had in Italian, "good neck" or "stiff neck," and in course of time It was united in one word and became the family name. The family divided, part set tling In Belgium and part In Holland. Colonel Qoethala la descended from the Holland branch, both fatherland mother being Dutch. His par ents migrated from Holland to the United States, and he was born in Brooklyn, N. Y on June 29, 1858, (The name has been Amer icanized and Is pronounced CJo-thala.) WAR CASUALTIES SELDOM FATAL From the London Spectator. The French Government has Issued some re markable figures showing the percent gae of wounded men who have recovered, or are re covering, and are, or will be, fit again for service- The figure are taken up to paecem ber V- Wounded, but fit for almost Immediate re turn to the front, 61.60 per cent. Wounded and on leave, 2t60 per eent, Woundtd and still, in hospital, 17,10 pr cent. Permanently disabled and unlit for further service, 146 per cent. Wounded and died from wounds, 3.18 pr cent The enormous proportion of complrte recov eries testifies to the "humaneness" o.' the mod ern bullet and to the great skill of the surgeons- But there Is another poht. it is obvious that In a long war the majority of wounded men will return to the front. When we speak of the cavualtlee of an army we puut remember that it would be quite mis leading to deduct them bodily from the fighting Mrw,(t "f that arm- Casualti nowaday are ehU8y temporary casualU , VHY, IT'S STILL A-POPPING"! BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA DIGEST OF THE MAGAZINES (1) Century "Peace and Disarmament." (2) World's Work "How Big an Army Do We Need?" (3) North American Review "Are Naval Expenditures Wasted?" (4) Metropolitan "Hanging Round the Nation's Capital." (5) Everybody s "Every College Should Introduce Military Training." Bringing the War Home IT WAS Inevitable during tho present war epidemic that our national temperature should rise a degree or two above normal, oven though wo managed to escape the actual fever. Of course, says every one, rolling his oyes and crossing his hands, It Is earnestly to bo hoped that tho United States will not be Involved in tho war. But tho hoping is not earnest enough to keep a good many from talking about our duty toward this and our responsibility toward that, and our na tional pride, until the thermometer goes up another degree. There Is also to bo considered tho rather voluble school that holds that having tho largest army and navy In tho world Is tho best precaution against being drawn into war, in spito of tho object lesson which England and Germany have Just furnished on this point. As tho first glamour and strangeness of fvar wear off tho magazines devoto an In creasing amount of space to articles on na tional defense and domestic phases of tho situation. Across the February cover of World's Work Is printed in big red letters, "A Manual of National Defense." Not only entertaining, tbut broadly philo sophical, Is an article on our relationship to the war and our best means of keeping out, by Morgan Shuster in the Century. Mr. Shuster, who Is perhaps most famous for his brief but brilliant career as Treasurer Gen eral of Persia, maintains a neutral attitude In his article (1) : Whether ono knows it or not, he has be come brutal since this war. Just as slaughter house omployes become brutalized by their work and Its sights, so must any person be come so who reads the war news for a con siderable period of time. The fact seems to be that while excessive militarist sentiment and unreasonable mili tary and naval preparations on the part of a number of rival nations and races may actually provoke and bring about a vast ca lamity within the briefest imaginable time, the admitted inability of a nation successfully to resist unwarranted attack will neither eliminate tho dangers nor mitigate Its suffer ings in the hour of national peril. If not by disarmament, how then shall peace be sought? Treaties, conventions and even tho accepted law of nations have been shown to be Inadequate to preserve peace. They are not self-exeouting. Indeed, many treaties and declarations have proved and are proving a fruitful source of discord be tween both belligerents and neutrals. There seems to be only one hope, and this la edu cation in Its broadest sense education which will give to every person what Doctor But ler has called tho "International mind"; edu cation which will bring us to understand and realize the aspirations and ambitions of other races and peoples, Just as experience of hu man nature in the case of an individual en ables him to rcallzo and make allowance for the foibles and Idiosyncrasies of his fellow men. National honor must become as sensi tive as individual honor, It must be con sidered Just as wrong for a nation, alleging its own welfare, to violate its own solemn obligations, as for a man who had made a contract to break It on similar grounds. In the meantime, each nation should main tain defensive forces proportionate to its size and wealth. This last paragraph, with which Mr. Shu ster closes his article, rather puts It up to tha United Stntes as to what Is proportionate to Its size and wealth, And this, is Just the question which others are ashing. In "How Big an Army Do We Need?" in the World's Work, George Marvin writes (2): Speaking generally, the great nations of Europe can easily mobilize and embark their forces within one week after the declaration of war; and from the time of leaving their home ports 10 days may be considered as tha time required to cross the Atlantic. Briefly stated, aside from the naval part of the problem, the solution which the United States must be ready to furnish is to meet successfully the following Invading troops, either singly or together: 100,000 meq on 10th day (Canada and Mex ico). 200,000 to 300,000 European troops on At lantic coast, 17th day. 200.000 Asiatic troops on the Pacific coast, 27th day. 600. OOu men on the 97th dy. The land foroaa at the UMted SUte consist of the regular army and the organized mi -jj.wu!r- H litia of the several States, Tho mobile braocS of the regular army contained In November.! 1014: 30,481 mon In the United States proper? 20,863 men in oversea garrisons. 61,344 regular army. S 19,087 paper strength mobile organized militia. M 119 170.431 total. Tho United States has about 100.000.000 IS habitants, and is vnstly endowed with grwt1 military resources. There are about 800.000. 000 people In Asia; thero aro about 3GO,OO0,OI peopio in uuropo ana idu.uuu.uuu in Doin ins Americas. AH peopio think they navej right to live and that their right Is si perior to the right of others, It Is the satM old story, Tho Panama Canal is tho key point. Tho Question whether a whlto or yea low civilization will predominate will be del uucu in iiiiuijuu. .11 maul wuu tiiu skiiwv lean people to determine wnat win do uom dosm 1 under the circumstances. Pork Barrels Of course the next step, after deciding hw. much additional defense wo should have, tho getting and spending of further appfSJ priaiions. xnis is usually very easy pleasant for tho spenders. Just how easyjfil uuouiiueu in iu ui uuiu in mu rNurui nta lean Revlow (3), by no less an authorljtl than George V. L. Meyer, former Secreuur of our Navy, under tho significant title, ". Naval Expenditures Wasted?" The American navy during 15 years has cost 4b per cent, more tnan the Kaisers navy, Yet today Germany's navy Is more powerful than ours. 1 It is Interesting to analyzo some of the opa propnatlons between 1895 and 1910. In 1!!1 a site was purchased in Frenchmans Bay? Maine, at a cost of S24.GG0 far above thai assessed valuation and later an addltlonitl amount of $600,000 was expended to obtain! there an absolutely unnecessary coaling staa lion, wnicn nas since Deon dismantled, asia was practically unused. M At tho Portsmouth Nnvv Yard, so called.'! Kittery, Maine, a dock was built at an : pei.se or $1,122,800, nnd later It was founj necessary to blast away rock in tho chanml In order to reach the dock at an additional oxnensB of S74f.3nf). Rptwopn IRAK nnd 111! improvements, machinery and repairs anil maintenance in tho yard amounted to $13 BbY.uuij, aunougn mere was a largo navia yard within 70 miles. At Port Royal, Squill Carolina, n. rtnnk wnn hnllr nt tlm Irifltatenctl of a Southern Senator, at a cost of J-IBO.OM,!, which proved useless, and although the ori(- inai cost or me site was out $booo, it -was now abandoned as a naval baso until $2,276,000 hl beon expended. The United States has over twice an man! first-class navy yards as Great Britain, wl a navy more than double the size of oui and more than three times as many as Get many, whose navy 13 larger than that or xj UllllCU CJfcUba. The fundamental cause of excessive t pendltures is due to the fact that approprU; tions are not made with the sole view of till battle efficiency of the fleet and Its mllltarY requirements. Politics and log-rolling, asjtj have shown, have entered Into the makfnsi or appropriations by congress. Tnat tw havo not been getting proper return fPq money expended in the navy is not knotf& to the majority of our people, nor is it reajj lzed to what extent political Influences hsvj misdirected the appropriations during taj past 26 years. The remedy will only conl from aDsoiute publicity. These inside revelations by an ex-Sccreta of the Navy recall the closing story in Young's whimsical "Hanging Round the N tlonal Capital," In the Metropolitan (4) Over In Smithsonian Park. Policeman; O'Connell was accosted by a stranger frqoi the rural districts and asked If he could tL him where the Government kept the poj oarrei. Teaching the Young; to Kill "President Schurman, of Cornell, belleveJJ every college should introduce military tr ing," is the very explicit title of an artigO in Everybody's (6). President Schurmia writes; We must create a reserve volunteer army I am a firm believer In the intrinsic value military training, even apart from Us utllil to the publlo In time of war. If wara wee banished from our nlanet I would retain : tary training side by side with athletics an instrument of nhvslcal education in OB universities; and not only for its physiJ advantages, great as they are, but aiso Its moral, mental, social ana civic enec rcnHnnn T hnVA lnncp fall- that this mllit training is one of the best things the und graduates receive at the University of uornjj THE SNOWDROP Many, many welcomes February, fair maid. Ever as of old time. Solitary firstling. Coming in the cold time. Prophet of the gay time. Prophet of the May time, Prophet of the rotes, Mapy, many welcomes February, fair raaldl w