Uci0Pt PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY cuius it k. cunTis, PnEsiDtnr. Charles It Lnainirton, Vice President i John C Martin, fiecrelnrjr And Treasurer j Philip B. Collins, John It. Williams. Directors. EDITORIAL BOARD) CtKdi II. K. Curtis, Chairman. I It WHALBT ,.. ....Executive Editor JOHN 0 MARTIN. .General Business Manarer Published dally at TcBtio LtDOER Building, Independence Bijuare, Philadelphia. ttMtit CiNiait,.,. .,,... .Broad and Chestnut Streets ATLANTIC! CITt..,,.,,,,,.,,,, , ,rre-Union nulldTiiR Nltw York. .nil, .mi... .1T0-A, Jlotropolltan Toner CnicAao..,., , 817 Home lnetirnnee Building London, .., ,,s Waterloo Place, Tall Mall, 8. V. news bureaus t VAnmoTOV nritEAO... The Tost Bulldln loitic Rcheau The Timet BulldlnR Buttm Bcro.,,.,,, no rrledrlchatrns tof(iowllctu.....i 2 Pall Mall East, 8. W. P. Boheau 32 Hue I,ouls Is Orand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS "'"'""j ." Yrut n cents, uy man, posipnia outside of Philadelphia, except where foreign postal ,.EfJ?"ierrfu?i,.,'J-?.N.Lr' '?" ?Z . POtpald Ijr required, Diilt ONtT, one month, twentymo cents: IUIM OMt, one ear. threo dollars Ail mall sub- up iei erlptlons payable In advance NOTfri Riihaf.rlt,ra tvlfthln,? .fit... fl.......! mi... sire old as well as new address. BELL, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 1000 W Address alt communications to r.itntno Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia txtznza ii ins ruuuDcLrnu rosrorrics is bfcond- Clite MAIL HATTtB. THE AVERAGE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA TION OP TUB EVENING LEDGER FOR APRIL, .WAS 82,104. rillLADl I.I'IIIA, FRIDAY, MAY 81, 1913. The tclsc man knows how to icait, for he understands that wheat is not gathered in the blade, but tn the car. Why Talk Hard Times? THE average Increase in tho national wealth has boen $5,000,000,000 a year for tho past ten years. Tho Bureau of tho Census estimates tho wealth of tho country at $187,000,000,000. In 1904 Its cstlmato wait 5107,000,000,000, a gain of $80,000,000,000, or 75 per cent., In a decado. Tho United States In this short period has added to Its resources a sum within $5,000, 000,000 as largo as tho total wealth of Great Britain nnd Ireland, an amount equal to tho wealth of Germany, $30,000,000,000 more than tho wealth of France, twice tho wraith of Russia, more than threo tlmrs ns much .as tho Austro-Hungarians are worth, and Your times tho wealth of Italy. Wo could havo bought with tho Increment of a slnglo year nearly all tho bonds that havo been lssuod by the warring nations to raise money to carry on tho fight. And tho na tional wealth Is still growing as tho sun shines on tho crops In the fields and as Europo pours her millions Into our mills to pay for war material. The "World Against the Teutonic Allies ELSEWHERE on this page thcip Is com ment on tho developments In Italy writ ten by an Italian In his town tongue, from the point of view of his own country. Tho publication of a synopsis of tho Green Book indicates that tho Austrian conces sions wero not satisfactory to Italy, cither in extent or In the date on which they wero to be executed. It discloses further that Italy had protested ngalnst tho Invasion of Bervla, which precipitated tho war, nnd had sought for an adjustment of the diftputo for many months. Tho situation becamo so strained that Italy denounced her treaty with Austria on March 4, and freed her hands for whatever action might seem necessary. Armed neutrality ceased to bo a possible Bttltudo several days ago. That was evi dent when Glolitti's attempt to rally his fol lowers failed and Salandra consented to re tain tho Premiership. The nation is united for war. The Glollttl party In Parliament disappeared when tho Cabinet asked for a grant of power. Tho vote by which tho King was authorized to dcclaro war at his discretion was practically unanimous, all parties save tho Socialists' acting as a unit. Preparations for this outcomo have long been made General Pau, as tho represen tative of tho Allies, has been consulting with tho Italian War Minister, and It Is an nounced that a complete plan of campaign against Austria by tho French, Russians and Italians has been arranged and Is ready for execution. The Teutonic allies now havo all tho Pow ers of the world against them savo tho United States. A Great Day for Methodism JOHN WESLEY would not havo believed It If he had been told that an office building-, costing $300,000, would bo put up in this city In tho twentieth century for housing the chief organizations of tho Methodist Eplseo pal Church In this part of tho country. lEvmtittg Methodism has expanded beyond the dreams of Its founders. It Is tho largest body of Protestant Christians In tho United States, numbering more than 7,000,000 in its different branches. It exceeds the Baptists, the next largest denomination, by 1,000,000 comjnuntcants. The building at 17th and Arch streets Is the visible embodiment of the material strength 'of the church as an organization. Their meeting houses testify in brick and stone to the substantial quality of the Meth odist people, but they stand for tho separate churches. The new building Is evidence of a still more substantial unity which holds the different churches together. It might be called the seal of tho confederation ns well as the seat of the authority which , directs all the activities of tho separate i members. ItB dedication yesterday called together distinguished Methodists to glory t In the growth of their great society, and it 1 afforded an opportunity for representatives 4 of the other denominations to show forth . t that fellowship which exists among1 all J Christians. A Cross Section Through the Centuries THE ring around the sun yesterday cut a cross section through the centuries and t disclosed all the progressive stages by which tho intelligence has developed from i abject fear of the unusual to the courageous confronting; of natural phenomena by the Inquiring and explaining- mind. The "sign in the heavens" was regarded Jy some as a warning- of tha approaching lend of the world. Just as an eclipse of the -fsun is supposed in certain parts of the country to forecast the end of all things. Many Italians here were convinced that it 1 Ittiifaatefi that tlioli- rniimtM, iu,,.fit .. , ., j.- -v.4,j vv4U BUIW tna war, ana n wpuia rase less space to fcttcvM what the Negroes did not think It fiant than tne explanations which they Sve of It. And there were hundreds If not fci , taonwnds of educated persons who still Saj-iwrwl In tn tack of their minds the wiftarttmwts of thir ancestor?, and could spot ape ti ttwiyht that after all It t, sos soawtistog ter ftw, tt. shin- J Itig of the buh through Ico crystals In the tipper air. Thoso who accepted tho scientific explana tion without any lingering doubts were o! course, In tho majority, just as a thousand years ago tho portentous significance of tho rainbow about tho sun would havo been ad mitted so generally that tho man who dis puted It would havo been In danger of death for hla Impiety. Thank God for the Oceans 1 THERE nro eight great Powers In tho world. When placed In alphabetical or der tho list stands like this: Austria-Hungary, Krnncc, Germany,"" Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Russia, United s'tatcs. They are all at war Bave tho United States. Wo have no ungrntlflod territorial ambitions, nnd no boundary disputes, and no commer cial desires tho fulfillment of which Is suffi ciently threatened by tho rivalry of other Powers to Justify an appeal to arms. Wo aro assured of our placo In the sun by 3000 miles of ocean on the east of us nnd by moro than 4000 miles of sea on tho west of us. Tho cold salt untor laves our shores and tempers hntcer war spirit thcro may bo. It makes our invasion of foreign lands diffi cult and discourages foreign nations from contemplating any Invasion of our shores. Thank God for tho oceans, and may they never bo reddened by tho blood of our cltl rens defending their native shores I So Far So Good THE necessary ordinances for pushing tho rapid transit plans to completion havo been reported to Councils, and tho ordinance authorizing an advertisement of tho contem plated loan has been passed nnd tho adver tising Is likely to begin today. So far, so good. The city expects Councils to fulfill tho promlso of Its worthy action yesterday and to pass nil tho ordinances beforo adjourn ment for tho summer, so thnt digging can start ns soon as tho proper authorization has been given. Merely a Guaranteo of Good Faith THE appropriation by tho General Assem bly of $500,000 for tho development of this port must bo considered merely ns evldenco of tho Intel est of tho Commonwealth In Its sea trade. Tho sum Is so small that It will accomplish little In comparison with what needs to bo done But that nn appropriation has boen mado at all Indicates that tho rest of tho State W beginning to understand that tho prosperity of tho whole Is wrapped up In tho prosperity of Its parts. Philadelphia cannot grow without benefiting every other community. L'ltalia ncl Vorticc dclla Guerra LA CAMERA Itallana ha dato, dunque, I pleni poterl all'on. Salandra, doe si o dlchlarata concordo con II Paese, In favoro dclla guerra per completaro l'unlta nazlonalo L'opposlzlono dell'on. Glollttl ha dovuto sparlro dl fronto alia unanlmo volonta del Paese, o cosl cessato l'lmposslbllo contrasto tra la nazlone o la Camera. L'ltalia c pcrclo sul punto dl dlchlarnro la guerra alia Monarchla austro-ungnrtca, alia nemica tradlzlonalo dell'unlta o dell'In dlpcndenza del popolo italinno. Non II gov crno, non II re, ma il popolo, tutto II popolo vuole la guerra, ed 11 popolo sara chlamato fra qualcho glorno, fra pocho oro forse, ad lnlzlaro la sua terza sangulnosa lotta na zlonale. II governo dell'on. Salandra ha aglto savlamonte, secondo gll Interessi plu grandl e plu vastl della nazlone Imponevano, nonostanto Io manovro dell'on. Glollttl o deU'abillssimo prlnclpo von Buelow. L'on. Salandra ha prevlsto. Come era posslbllo prestar fedo alio promesso ed agll accordl scrlttl della Germania. quando questa ha violato allegramento o senza pensarcl su duo volte 1 trattatl cho la ohbllgavano a rlspettnro la neutrallta del Belglo o quella del Lussemburgo? Como prestar fede ad un governo cho si era macchlato del delltto del Lusltanla, cho non aveva esltato ad assasslnnre donne o bambini inerml per nffondare materlale dl guerra destlnato al l'Inghllterra? Come pensaro cho la Ger mania o I'Austrla non avrebbero attaccato l'ltalia plu tardl, quando essa fosse rimasta lsolata, senza alleatl o senza l'nmlclzla o la rlconosconza o 1'aluto dell'Inghllterrn, della Francla o della Russia? Ecco le rnglonl della guerra deU'Itnlla. cho devono esser considerate insleme con lo raglonl nazlonnll ed economlche che Io Im ponevano dl parteclpare a questa lotta por 11 prlnclpio della nazlonnllta e per il rispetto del trattatl. "Billy" Sunday refuses to go to England for $10,000. Who cares whether the Liberty Bell breaks so long as the Councllmen have their Junket? It will bo hot enough when It does get warm, so endure your blessings while you have them. "Abasso I'Austrla" may mean the same, but it does not sound so vicious as "Down with Austria." May the war game In which the Atlantic fleet Is now engaged never be changed from play to earnest, The war Is costing Great Britain $160 a second or about $150 while you have been reading this paragraph. This is the week for the suppression of unnecessary noises. War talk is-, of all noises, the most unnecessary, Switzerland, with 1,000,000 foreigners within its borders, will not suffer this year from lack of American tourists'. Tho members of the Poor Richard Club are pledging themselves te protect the birds, but this Is not understood to mean that they will deny themselves the pleasures of the table. It Is announced that the Queen of Holland )s raising an army of 1,000,000 men and Is exerting herself to the utmost to bring about peace. But aro 1,000.000 pitn enough to accomplish the task? Sir Ernest Cassel, though fcvm in Ger many, has qualified as an Englishman by writiEtf to the newspapers that he feels a deep sense of horror at the manner in wblci tba Germans aro, waging war. WHAT CAN ITALY DO IN THE GREAT WAR Nation Faces Colossal Task In At tacking Fortified and Mountain protected Frontier Army Has Reputation to Make. By FRANK H. SIMONDS AT THE outset of the discussion of tho . Italian phaso of tho great war It Is well to dispose of certain obvious misapprehen sions. First of all, Italy will not bo ablo to lake up tho road to Vienna or Budapest with tho opening of hostilities. On tho con trary, she will havo for many weeks to con-' slder tho defense of Voronn, of Milan nnd of her Venetian province. Look nt any map of Northern Italy nnd It will be seen that tho Austrian Tyrol pro- Jes Into Italian territory like a gigantic peninsula. It Is moro than this; It Is, In fact, n fortified and mountain-protected fun nel, down which in the valley of tho Adlgo run a railroad arid a highway from tho north to tho very henrt of northern Italy. Down this funnel, flank nnd rear protected by tho fortified mountain, not Austria alone, but Germany can pour their masses. In tho Napoleonic times, In tho war of liberation, waged by tho French nnd Ital ians In tho last century, Austrian defense took Its stand behind tho Mlnclo nnd tho Po. tho former Issuing from tho Logo dl Gnrda. Half a century ago tho Quadrilat eral, mndo up of Verona, Pcschlcra, Man tua and Legnngo, was as familiar In tho mind of tho world ns Llcgo or Verdun or Antwerp today. Holding theso four for tresses, the Austrlans, their road homo through tho Tyrol protected, long domi nated northern Italy. Country Favors Austrlans Today nil four of theso towns are Ital ian. Verona Is strongly fortified; tho 20 miles between tho city nnd tho Austrian frontier nro covered by modern forts. But tho naturo of tho country Is against tho Italians. Austria has kept her hand on tho slopes and hills which in fact command tho gates of Italy. For precisely the Bamo rea son that tho Russians could not begin tho war on the Poscn frontier Italy cannot push a great army far to tho cast of Verona on tho Isonzo whllo tho Austrian Tyrol is un tnken. On tho other hand, could tho Germans drawing from Gallcla somo of the victori ous corps now pursuing tho fleeing Rus sians, concentrating their heavy artillery, burst out of tho Adlgo Valley Into tho plain, tako Verona nnd tho northern bank of tho Mlnclo, they could stretch their front cast to tho Adriatic, buttlu up all Italian troops In Venctla, occupy a lino Infinitely stronger than they hold In northern France, and leavo It to tho Italians to" wear themselves out fighting on their own, not Austrian, soil. Moro than this, by crossing a corner of tho territory of Switzerland on tho upper Engndlno thoy might pour troops Into tho plains about Milan. For tho moment Rus sia has boen disposed of. It will bo weeks beforo sho can recover herself for a new offensive. German military theory calls for opening a war with a crushing blow. She has tho troops, nnd the Italian situation calls for a vigorous thrust. Italy's Colossal Tnsk But If Germany and Austria remain on tho defensive Italy's task will still be colossal. Every point of military value in tho broad circle of mountains from Lago dl Garda through tho Dolemltes and tho Julian Alps to Fiumo has been heavily fortified In recent years. Remembering tho campaigns In Belgium and Franco, where the country Is almost a uniform plain, It is easy to understand what expenditure of tlmo nnd effort will be necessary to clear roads and hack through mountains 9000 feet high. On tho north Italy Is, presumably, con demned to the defensive or to a slow and expensive offensive. Nor can her fleet, ad mirable as It Is, bo expected to accomplish much In tho Adriatic, whoro tho Austrian fleet lies behind tho forts of Pola and Aus trian submarines nro active. Until these are removed tho possibility of landing a largo expeditionary army in Istria or Dnl matla seems slight. It may bo assumed that Italian troops will be sent to tho Dardanelles. It Is clear that reinforcements aro badly needed by tho Allies. Conceivably an army landed at Enos will be sent against Adrlanoplo In an effort to draw Turkish troops from tho Gnlllpoll peninsula and to cut tho Orient Railway, the solo connection between Constantinople and tho capitals of her allies. Nowhere can Italy servo her now friends better than In European Turkey. Unquestionably she will nlso send troops to the mainland of Asia Minor, cast of Rhodes, where she has al ready marked out a sphere of Interest. More serious for tho Austro-German for tune In tho immedlato present is tho prob ability that Rumania will follow the Itnlian example and declare war. A Rumanian in vasion of Transylvania, Joining hands with tho Russians now in Bukowina, would do much to nullify the recent Gallcian victories. Million Men Ready A great deal of guessing has been done about numbers. Presumably Italy will put In tho field about 24 army corps that Is, approximately, 1,000,000 men. They should be well equipped and well trained. Italian high command has had all tho experience of tho great war to guldo it. If It Is weak in any branch It will probably prove to bo artillery. The Italian fleet is strong in superdreadnoughts and generally held much more efficiently administered than the army, but It will bring little help actually needed by tho Allies. The Italian army enters the conflict with a reputation to make. In Abyssinia and Tripoli it did little to win the respect of the soldiers of the world. It Is an unknown quantity, held in low esteem by both Ger mans and Austrlans. But similar notions of the Serb and the Greek proved erroneous in 1812. In the end the addition of a million, a million and a half with Rumania, neV troops to the enemies of Germany must have a tremendous effect. EDMUND BUtfKE Burk9 had thoughts of a great statesman and uttered them with unapproachable nobility; but he never wielded the power of a real statesman, Woodrow Wilson. PRECAUTIONS It Is one of the undisputed functions of gov ernment to take precautions against crime be fore Jt has been committed. M1U. THE BLESSING OF LIFE Must we count Life, a curse and not a blessing, summed up la its whole amount. Help and hindrance, joy and sorrow. Brow-pin. skhhIot'! 4rwijibji.t..,fmJ9my - ' S&ki3eiftr -rrwiii-j,.wfc...-J. , rwiavjTFw.v.''J .. , - ',JaJXU-tf1MM,.,J-- rhxmvimwtiillKt4VtJ. -Wfi.irfiwWHWiIV"rwr3ZT' fllr XtCH ' f ...,. .r--- J t- 'MWMfrVnt'HUsMMiuMi k '.T(twS&Sja tr I inmfi'r'jfr '1r "jr" llty MWOMVn&ft?:ftAOTAWVWi ,,s1lrtftrtl7t'Vil1YirxV)lt4f.rw.aKJ.UAlf. x-mwjww "- """ti?Hsans.). WHAT AVIATION OWES TO THE WAR Marvelous Developments in Military Aircraft and Their Manip ulationWar Brings Its Wonderful Gifts to the Age of Aerial Travel. By CHARLES DAEDALUS, who for many centuries held tho world's record for overseas flight, would doubtless be greatly Interested In tho improvements effected In wings since his day. Imagine his circling about over Nleuport last Monday, whon a huge Zep pelin was attacked by a cloud of British aeroplano-hornets nnd stung until sho fled for her Ilfo Darting hither and thither, her tormentors dived in for a blow now here, now there, avoiding the counter-strokes of tho lumbering and clumsy , leviathan of tho air, all a mllo or more up from the earth. Wo have reached a point where tho art of flight Is taken altogether too much for granted. Wo havo been satiated with tales of aerial adventures from the war zono until tho sensation of eager interest has, perhaps, passed by. For this reason wo fall to real ize tho tremendous advance made In the development of aircraft, particularly of tho dynamic typo. The war has equipped avia tion with seven-leaguod boots. Thus, out of the conflict, will stride one great benefit to humanity travel by air. Chiefly responsible for this progress 13 the number of men who aro now flying. A rough though approximate estimate gives us no fewer than 600 military pilots actively engaged In hostile operations. This number Is augmented dally, Britain alono training from ten to fifteen new operators each week. Tho casualties havo been surpris ingly small, less proportionately than In any of tho other branches of tho actlvo service. If these men fly willingly and suTfer -comparatively llttlo In perfect hailstorms of shot and shell, how lightly will they con sider air Journeys without such risk! Dally tho man-birds are proving that tho aero plane, In Itself, Is as safe as any means of rapid transit. So tho fear of tho heights of the atmosphere, one of the greatest obsta cles In the path of tho widespread develop ment of aviation, has already been dealt Its death blow. Round Trips to the Moon But tho material of flight, as well as Its human element, has also Improved vastly. Tho heart of tho aeroplane, Its motor, now beats with a regularity which indicates a final conquest of cardiac troubles. In scout ing alone, during tho first eight months of tho war, tho French avlons, or war ma chines, traveled a distance equal to 45 timeB tho earth's circumference, or two round trips betwen the earth and tho moon. Near ly an equal distance has been covered in offensive operations including the direction of artillery Are by French aeroplanes, When we reflect that the British and Rus sian totals, to say nothing of thoso of Aus tria nnd Germany, must also bo estimated at large figures, wo begin to realize the re liability which aircraft engines havo at tained. Other members of tho aeroplane's anatomy have likewise greatly profited from the war's hard-won experience. Strength and simplicity are, respectively, tho chief de mands made of construction. Thero are, In America today, a numbor of flying officers from belligerent nations seeking aeroplanes, Among them several Englishmen. It has been the writer's fortune to seo the methods used by the British experts in acquiring suitable designs. They know, to the last turnbuckle, Just what they want nnd how they want It. One of them, an officer In the royal naval service, has had wide ex perience of the vicissitudes of conflict in the air. He wept down on the aeroplane mother ship Hermes, when that Ill-fated craft was sunk by a German submarine last fall In the North Sea, A recent experience of his in this country illustrates the disappearance of fear of, tho air, 'The Englishman was testing a new machine, and, with a passenger on board, was Just about to alight after an hour's flight. While on the last turn, some dis tance out over a considerable body of water, and with the craft steeply banked, the Wire control leading to the aileron broke, depriving the pilot of the customary mean of maintaining lateral balance. Coolly the aviator-looked over the side of the nacelle to see what was wrong, and Juggled his vertl' cal rudder till be had -worked the craft back to an even Heel. Then be shut off his power and descended. Neither pilot nor passenger received a scratch. Backward Russia, however, has furnished the sensation In flying craft, for she has brought out a type which gives promise of revolutionizing aerial traffic. For several "THE KING IS DEAD: LONG LIVI3 THE KING!" , vsMMPr-""". wrirwmKii'SiSisYiintsrv'. Sm!J3!:!, AuudiTOuZj " " -wi-Wj ,hJ .-wj-3-.v'l.-.jWim -- "fftWJHUa B ... .i affiSS88 MOT.WSlisJHROT5taaTO-w;'3OTs3" DtMiJVXW!tllPlJwt.,"ilJfrfflvl-...w65s ir TTi-rrr"i ri, if i .,m-i ,-'-? ti,-z.iiri.Titr7iojMiUi?m'itK l mi iiiwi ri S " if it ess M'lfJwAiU&WUUKPRlJWtoJtSwiEW.OT.'tt'' iui,.,i y--vi "'I2J52JgiWjn'0'j S'AJiv'wy.aV.tf:jOT oKassr-w,w''- a,S?li Watt... Wiin. (.. wsjmh. -- - mmn t rtHsWW'P tn M. CHAPIN years a modest young onginear, Georg Sikorsky, had been experimenting with a large-scale biplane, and had doveloped It to a practical point only a few months prior to tho outbreak of tho war. Of lato this nero plano hns figured very prominently In air raids over positions hold by tho Germans In Poland. Something of Its size and power may be Judged from tho fact that It will lift moro than two tons, In addition to Its own weight of threo tons and a half. Two tons of explosives, Judiciously distributed, should havo an exhilarating effect on the recipients. "Scrapping" Military Textbooks Momentous changes in military operations havo been wrought by tho aircraft now In use. No longer, against a foo of equal num bers nnd equal equipment, is it possible to hurl nn unexpected and unsuspected mass at a weak point In nn enemy's lino. It Is for this reason chiefly that we soo, stretch ing from the North Sea to tho Swiss border, two huge forces breast to breast, and tho only means of gaining ground tho deadly frontal attack, hitherto anathema In nil military textbooks. For aircraft spy out and report every movement of an enemy beforo tho operation is fairly under way, and by tho tlmo tho attack reaches Its ob jective it finds tho position lined with wait ing defenders. Not only do military aeroplanes replace the cavalry reconnaissances of tho past, but they act as eyes for tho nrtlllcry. British and French official accounts bear witness of tho efllcacy of tho German tnubes, or doves and not doves of peace, by any means. A whirr overhead, a detected bivouac or group of trenches, smokeball or rocket from tho aeroplane, and then a rain of Krupp shrap nel. Not that the Germans havo a mo nopoly In this stylo of wnrfaro, for the British and French craft aro fully holding up their end of tho game. But It Is ns a means of nttnek that both heavler-than-alr and llghter-than-alr navi gation chiefly stirs tho imagination. This use Is tho new and unforeseen lesson of tho great conflict, nnd it is for this purpose that tho hostile nations oro straining every nervo to incrcaso their aerial forces. Tho British seem to havo accomplished tho greatest re sults. British pilots havo skimmed over tho foothills of tho Alps and blown up Ger man Zeppelins at Frledrlchshafen. A dar ing Englishman, single handed, destroyed two German submarines at Hoboken, Just outside Antwerp. To make certain of his aim he descended to 300 feet, braving rlflo and aircraft guns, and escaped by a mira cle, his machine shot-riddled. Moro won ders, however, are at hand. The coming summer will probably see paralysis Inflicted on one enemy or tho other by tho blowing up of communications, by tho destruction, from above, of ammunition trains, food stores, gasoline supplies. Then the aero plane tako Its placo as man's most powerful weapon In warfare HEART'S DESIRE IN GARDENS No Need to Tramp tho Andes or Traverse the Rings of Saturn. From Scrlbner"s Majaiine, The charm of blossoming things growing out of the green needs no apology. Our crocuses VnlP0When' Wue' white; or yeHovv! they open after the snow, as If God, and not a kind young friend, had planted them. Not all at once, but after long winter waning and eUy spring days of suspense lest frost h as kl"ed thorn, wo year by year see "a crowd, a host of golden daffodlls"-not a marching hott .but I straggling host, a" hundred strong htVl ?here everywhere in and out among the white birches In the wakening green of the grasaV An! If the ghost of William Wordsworth would only wander this way some sunny April day One by the south porch. coSnee long "before the swallows dare," and "takes the winds of March." and us, with beauty, Our garden would never do as a basis of nn article In a gardening book or a lady's maga sine. It Is not one of those methodical un. natural gardens where all the seeds that ara sown germinate, where all blossoms turn out lnexpeoted colors, where a whole row of holly, hocks come up without gaps, it is no placid spot of gradual growth, but a thing of wild hopes and sudden fears . of quick Inspirations unknown to tho careful husbandman; of un paralleled successes! of blasting defeats. It seems almost at' times as if it too had fleet, imaginative glimpses of what might be, and ehsjwl our sense of triumph or mood of failure S"or nature Is by no means the orderly, inoh by-inch personage we are taught In sclentiaa text-books to think her. She also has her moments of inspiration, of rapid and luxuriant growth, and my garden makes me aware of her ewirt divining. hr blind hopes, her pa eloaate Impulses that wax and wane. If it is th .gardening at Ignorance at ast nte? lyMCi.,, Natorlt,w fTtamm !&fftaM&trtw SaSwMK 'aSffiBfcXSm, $$& 4IK .K&UFfiSltllit .WW-" WHWxrfTHllK'mVlfKiXAlltulM. fltl-V.r.f ?! , J,W "WSUHMhw x ,.. v.znMir ?rA.- ' :"" VJtWV'wjis.,Hll ivjirsty. SDXnT it is run or uio joy of discovery. To well.1 Instructed friends I should be ashamed to wn-1 fess that, busy for many years with wtrtf books and ldeus, I know not annuals froal perennials. Biennials are still a puzzla; thouji! the theoretical meaning Is dear, I find It hard! to discover the moment of bloom. When thai guaranteed to flower every second year doeij not blossom at all, what aro you to think oil the oooic7 puzzles enougn to make ono loaij ono's wits spring up In ono's own garden; then? Is no need to tramp tho Andes nor traverse tM rings of Saturn for nature's riddles to read. ARMIES AND ALCOHOL Trom th Independent. Tho hostility of the lato Lord Roberts cfi Kandahar toward liquor was the only grudnj that Tommy Atkins had against his favoriua lender, "if wo may tako Kipling ns Interpreter! of tho feeling of nies-on-parauo: 'E's a llttlo down on drink, Chaplain Bobs; Dut It keeps us outor clink Don't It, Bobs? So wo ulll not complain Tho" 'o's water on the brain, If he lends us straight again Blus-lleht Bobs. When Lord Kitchener becamo the head of the nrmv tho llauor-lovlng soldier looKea lor al leviation of his lot, but his hopes were dlwu-i nolnted. for the new Secretary of war put huj household on tho water-wagon and seems dl posed to treat his army In tho same way. Thi 20th century version of Cromwell's motto Isj "Trust In God and keep your army ary ; SLEEP To "the child In us that trembles before deitfcj- Say, hast thou never been compelled to Us' Wakeful in night's Impenetrable deep. Counting the laggard moments thnt so cretp Reluctant onward, till, with voiceless cry Enduring, thou hadst wUUng ueen to vy ,ij -c-nm llfn Itanlf. nnd in oblivion SteeD Thy tortured senses? To such loneed-for sleep Death Is a way, ana aost tnou tear io mei j Nay, were It this. Just thl3, and naught beside-! Merely tho cairn tnai we nave unsuisucu iv.,j TVin wnvfnrpr mlaht still be Klad to hide I From grief and suffering! but how much mors 3 Is death life's servitor and rrlona-ine bumo That sarely terries us iroro anuio iu a Florence Earlo Coates, in London Atheneeup. I AMUSEMENTS THE MARKET ST. ABOVE 1BIU J CJ-I 11 A. M to 1!:1S P.M. Dlctnifcjy ALL THIS WEEK 1 "THE MOTH AND THE FLAME" AlBO ADELAIDE-HUGHES Dance Pictures NEXT WEEK MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY HOUSE I'ETEllS and BLANCHE SWEET in "STOLEN GOODS" THURSDAY. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY INA CLAIRE In "WILD GOOSE CHASE" 1 A E C A D I A I CHESTNUT, Below 10th St. Fhotoplais uorunuouj 10 A M. to II :30 V. M Ai.nraiT PTIEVAI.IER In WILLARD'3 BUCCESSjS 7,T Vi-n-VTTTXrA-M" "More satisfying than spoken play, ' In1"ltr'--"si "One ot tho .best phoio-dramatlzattons yet saown. m lit a a aa kls n ki I nt ninant "D Mnn 1 ADELPHI SoMo-iTnow.jiM KITTY MacKAX Messrs. Shubert nm-frA Nflfih l21& Present uvut, -- -- "-jg-ufl "The Threo of Hearts" SCT B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT AND TWKLFTH BTB6.ii va nnnvir.r.rva nEav FEATURta! "RYHVi Taliaferro & Co. ' Claire Rochester; Hans Kronold; Norton NIl!l rriaaowsKy troupo "" "'- TWICE D4UT 4 FORREST NOW y .30 AWJ Qt.! am nnnm IB urAWKDN-H MARVELOUS & PRICES 25o AND BOo. NO 'y0H.?2.i trM ,V I Dr. Montessori;. E'Vl f J i,m Illustrated lecture by Dr. n "a Tomorrow at 11 A. M. tern. Illustrated lecture dx ' .'30 ft OUQ Hunsberger. GARRICK 10c. 15c, 25c t'Ind'eI-o B"b& G TT Tl M A T? T N "R g,Sii ONLY FILMS Of KIND BVBR TAKEN . ANOTHER CHARLEY C1IAPMW trg'S-Ff A..j-.im am a.1K . 5H' LYRIC 4UlU" VATINEB TOMORROW. W "FIND THE WOMAIN' A NEW 8.ACT FARCE, WITH RALPH HE RX. T ATIT1 MARKET AND JONffJ G L O B Jbj PHOTOPLAYS, U Jl JB-i "The Island of Regeneration" a. il. .... "WILD LIFE" FiCtUi Mil I I - T ' - WXON'B GRAND "SIX PEACHES AND ' Jfim DAN EDWARDS, Sfgj BENJAMIN KLEVANl OOW Today, 3 115, TAD A KGATlflUi juM"'"T - - m nmnncmni T5 ATJTT THflATBI Lfu&l8 "THE RED WIDOW. BAPTIST TEMPLE BROAn AND ,EBWJ RUSSELL II CO.NWELI4 Will Lec'KV ACRES OV I A M u "J Zst eg. BAT V.Vft MAY 35. ill 8 16 AOM- "' - jSSSmBl&as!i&S!!IlZzTIi!E!!i . . ....x4wh-jiJAwmy,w""" j Trocadero n&uA Gtilfoi