m EVENING TDttEB-PHILAPELPHIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1915; 8 Sfttbger rUDLIC LEDGER COMPANY crnus it. k. ctmTis, rimiT. Charles H. WMnjrton. vice TreMnt i John C. Martin, Sferatery nd Traaeureri Thlllp 8. Collins, John D. William, Directors. ii a i t - EDITORIAL DOAIlDl Crura H. K. CcII, Chairman. P. It. WltALEY , Eiecullre Editor JOllkO. MARTIN Oeneral Dualnese Maneier -' " ! I.I HHHIMIHIIII II ! ruMlahed dtlljr at rcuLto Linota Bulldlnr, Independent Bqatri, Philadelphia. Ltixira CirfTHiL ... Dread and Cheatnut Streeta ATUirlc Cur... ,... Prase-tnfon Ilulldlnc Naw Yoalc. .,,.,,.,.. ,,.,,1?0-A, Metropolitan Tower Drrsoit.. .Z9 Ford HulMlnr Br. LAcia.........i.....40n Oloba t)fmnrrl llulMlnr Cnioiflo..... ...1503 Tribune Iiulldlna; Lohms.. ........ .8 Waterloo riaea. Pall Mall, 8. W. NEWS JJUttEAUB! WasittKOTOx DcnKAO,.... ....The Pol nulldlnr kut ion nuiKjc...... ......... ine rim Dunning run UN Meant) no Frledrlchatraaae Laura la-iiAC... 2 Pall Mall tail. 8 W. run ucio.. .....02 Hue Loula la Grand SUBSCRIPTION TEP.M8 Drearrler, DtM O.itT, eta cents. Br mall, poetpald eutelda of Philadelphia, except where foreign poatacs la rrqulrad, Dutt Oxt.r, ona month, twentyntre cents nirnva cema; All mall tub- ..tit n vp rnr. nouara, acripuons pajaDie in narance, NoTinB Rilhftrrltwtra wlahlnv mAAr-mm i,A m.... (Ira old aa wall aa nw addreas. ELL, JMO WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN ION W Addrttt all rommunlcaflona to fffanVna LAgtr, Indipindtnce Bquan, rhlladitphla. iHTraro it tub rmUDELrim roatorrtcs is accoKD cues Kiil Mima. THE AVBnAOB NET PAID DAILY CincULA- TION OF Tim EVENINO LEDGER FOR MAT WAS 118,011. miLADELPUIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1915. When discouraged with your little part, re fleet that It were not for the rivu lets there would be no rivers and that the rivers make the sea. Regulate, Bat Do Not Outlaw the Jitneys THE peoplo of Philadelphia are not hostllo to the Rapid Transit Company. They want to glvo It a fair deal and they want It to glvo thorn a fair deal. In tho statement to Councils relative to Jit neys, It Is pointed out that tho transit com pany's property "Is seriously threatened by a form of competition which represents no capi tal, pays no wages, owes no duties to tho pub lic, but which carries on a catch-as-catch-can business In fair weather, taking from the transit company, which must at all times bear tho burden of tho transportation prob lem, thnt portion of tho business In which there Is a profit, namely, tho Bhort rider." That statement Is to somo extent exag gerated, but In Its essentials It Is correct. On the other hand, bad or no service In some sections of tho city renders tho Jitneys a public "convenience. They have earned for themselves, too, n well-defined place In passonger transportation. To permit them, however, to roam the strcots at will, unregulated and irresponsible, would bo the worst sort of folly. Not only is tho transit company entitled to some pro tection against wild competition, but tho public nlso may logically object to an orgy of these vehicles, blocking the main high ways and rendering the trafllc problem acute. It is obvious that quick measures must bo taken to put tho Jitney business on a reputnblo basis, to regulate It and exact from it some stability, financial and otherwise. Just what form tho regulation should toko and what the ultimate place of tho Jitney In transportation Is, nre subjects for dis cussion. Tho main thing now is to dovlse some plan. It will be experimental, but that cannot be helped. The Jitneys must not bo run out of busi ness and the Jitneys must not bo allowed to run the transit company out of business. Chicago Has a Mayor THE voters of Chicago made no mistake when they elected William Hale Thomp son Mayor last spring. He Is evidently a man with a proper appreciation of his re sponsibilities. No other kind of man would have had tho nervo to assemble the disputants In the street railway strike nnd then lock them In a room until they had agreed to resume the opera tion of tho street cars and to settle their dif ferences without Inconveniencing tho whole ; ) city. It Is reported that he used force to pre vent the president of the traction company from leaving the room. The report Is credible. The resumption of street car trafllc waB of enough Importance to Justify all tho forco that t was In the power of the Mayor to use. He had the police back of him nnd, if that failed, he had tho militia of the State, and if that failed It was possible to ask the assist ance of tho United States army in protecting every man who was willing to operate a car and every citizen who had to use, the cars to get to business. ' One determined man has demonstrated What can be done In a crisis, Just as weak kneed men have demonstrated time after time what ought not to bo done. Wo take off our hat to Mayor Thompson and wish him long Jlfe and happiness. Ho will get ,such further political preferment as tho people, who are delighted with a real" man when they nnd one, ore pleased to give him. Martial Amenities THE human beast still has some klndll ness in him, despite war's demoralization. It may take a threat of reprisals to bring England to her senses In the matter of her absurd treatment of the German submarine crews as a new and sinister variety of prls oners of war, something close to Indicted murderers. But Germany has struck a note of genuine respect for fellow humanity In the ereotion of a monument at Noyers, ded icated in both German and French, to the soldiers of victors and vanquished who fell at the orosstng of the Meuse. A few more such memorials to two "Fatherlands" would do much to lay the vicious anger which this "war of defnaga?" has raised. Uses of Submarines Limited THE submarine Is a raider, not a fighter. So far Is It from destroying the value of battleships and other surface ships that not in months has & war vessel been the victim of a submarine, except in isolated instances whan the presence of the im. mersible was unsuspected Not only have the English been able to prevent the de structioa of their naval hip and raduee the lose of commercial vessels to a minimum, but they nave actual transported hundreds of thousands of UgjLtJfee Continent with out i be loss ojyBBBpniBftpart or a single life. The submaIKpr deadly when It can sneak up on aa unsuapaatlna (stray, it is jwwiically powerless at aigM, and in Lbs 4jyUa it is Impotent in the face of a vlgt 1 saemy. TSw sabaaiislae. tnvr tastes, u an excel lent defensive asU, far tje very voitsoe vhsta U requires of Mm uway reduce - ,1iiimfitg preclabfy his ngrreffate efficiency It keeps him on the alert, necessitates his remaining far from shore and requires a. large detail of smaller vessels to guard the primary units of a blockading fleet. It has a valua In this way, asldo from Its use as ft com merce destioyer. But the assumption that the submarine has revolutionized naval warfaro to the ex tent that the Introduction of the monitor and Ironclad did Is not at all Justified. Not the submerslblcs but the surface ships deter mine the Control of the seas now as formerly. That this Is true the entire diplomatic at titude of Germany testifies, as do tho cut cables ond the Inability of the empire to im port cither food or munitions of war. However necessary It may be, therefore, for the United States to Increaso Its sub marine equipment, bucIi Increase will not meet the need for a greater navy. Wo must havo capital ships also, fast cruisers and tor pedoboats to act as a defense ngalnst such submarines as an enemy might bring against us. Councils Arranges for Stated Meetings THE program of Councils, as evidenced by Its nctlon yesterdny, appears to bo to stand by its contract with tho peoplo nnd permit tho beginning of subway construc tion this summer. It has provided for two stated meetings, which Is a doublo precaution against a tech nical blockado of action. It has, In a word, mot tho situation, ns It now presents Itself, In tho manner desired of It. What remains to bo dono Is entirely formnl, Councils has reiterated and reaf firmed Its contract. It is irrevocably dedi cated to tho beginning of construction work this summer. It is with relief that tho peo plo see the barriers to tho great enterprise melting away. At last real rapid transit seems to bo actually In sight. Co-Operation Is Not Intervention PERHAPS a careful study of tho situa tion created by tho landing of COO marines In Mexico to protect an American colony that Is menaced by tho Indians In the YnquI Volley mny suggest some way out of the complications across the border. Tho marines are not Intended to attack nny of tho wings of the revolutionary party fighting for pos session of tho government of tho country. They nre Intended to co-operato with tho VII llsta commander In that part of Mexico In suppressing an outbreak of the Yoqul In dians. That Is, they aro to assist In policing a certain section of tho country with tho con sent und assistance of tho revolutionary lead, ers there. The pollco protection is to bo ex tended to American citizens, but tho Mexlcnn citizens will nlso profit by tho restoration of order if such restoration is possible. There are precedents for such co-operntlon. Jchn Hny established tho most distinguished one when ho suggested that American troops be sent to Peking during tho Boxer insurrec tion to "assist" tho wily old Dowager Em press in restoring order In the Chinese capi tal and in preventing tho Boxers from mur dering Americans and other foreigners. It takes a statesman to discover the right word to describe a necessary process of govern ment. Married Men at the Front ENGLISHMEN with families agreed somo time aqo to enlist If their services were needed. The request for such pledges may or may not have been mado to test tho war spirit of the nation, but the married Eng lishmen responded, if not with enthusiasm, certainly with a determined purposo to seo the thing through, now that tho issues aro drawn. Tho unmarried men, however, nre not so patriotic, Home-makers who gavo their word are being called to tho colors, and there is a widespread feeling of contempt for those bachelors who are remaining at home in comfort Instead of responding to tho genernl summons. ( The bachelor usually has none but himself to care for. Ho can tnlk war with a feeling that If It comes and he should enlist no women and children will bo left In need when he Is gone. But no married man with any sense of his responsibilities will urge his nation Into wnr unless there Is grave cause. The Out-door Cure THIS week a man who has spent his life In banking ofllces starts on a 10,000-mile canno trip. Up the Hudson to Albany, through the Erie Canal to tho Great Lakes and westward until some inland stream shall have taken him half his distance; a lone man In the frailest of boats conquering days of gruelling work against head currents, spinning along through favorable water with an exhilaration only second to the whole con ception of the trip. And all for what? His eyes. He must have a year In the open to save his sight. Very few of us can afford the time or the cost of a hundredth part of such a trip; and few, Indeed, are fortunate enough to pay their way, as this man will do, with articles for a sporting magazine. But the-out-of-doora holds a cure for all of us, mental as well as physical, and It will render it up on easy terms, If only we seek It out. Tho manufacturing Jewelers are persuaded that if Jewels were called necessities Instead Of luxuries their business would boom. It la a crime to sweat gold coins. Some day the laws against sweating women workers will he so rigid as to make that offense crimi nal also. Those peace leaders who met In Independ ence Hall evidently understand that It Is easier to lead the nations to a dove-like plan than to make them adopt It. The four policemen selected to guard the Liberty Bell on Its way to the Pacific coast are IntSflded. to show to the Wft what kind of men we can raise In the effete Hast. That Spruee street doctor who has been sleeted president of the American Laryngolo g(eaL Rhlnologieal and Otologloal Society la Just a yleln throat, nose and ear specialist. The Topeka Capital reports that there is a tailor In Atchison who never makes a, note when measuring a man (or a suit of clothes, bt uu tbs cioth from memory. We will not dispute It, having seen some Kansas clotbwi out that way. Because It was not the setting hour for saakw wbtn be coiled up oa the doormat of a Falrvlew aveaue bouse a six-foot wratfBak paid with his Hf lor bis ijuwreaee of lbs sa- THE CITY AND ITS EMPLOYES Combining Lunch and Education A Check-Cashing fteform-An Employes' Conference Committee. Municipal Pension Systems. (The author of the following article, a lead ing authority on matters pertaining to mu nicipal science and progress, presents a num ber of suggestive facts as to the considera tion which one great city is giving Its em ploye. Large private corporations are de voting more and more attention to what Is generally called "the human element" In business, and the. movement seems to have reached the city governments. What is being done by one municipality In the way of meet ing Its problems and enhancing its efficiency It of real Interest and value to the people of other munclpalltlci.) By CLINTON ROGERS WOODRUFF UNDER tho present administration In New York city much Important work is being dono for tho welfaro of tho city's em ployes. In the first place, tho Sinking Fund Commission has passed a resolution allotting space In thra Municipal Building for a lunch room for the women employes of tho city. This lunchroom Is self-supporting nnd Is run under the supervision of a commlttco of womrn orgnnl7cd and selected by the women themselves. The city gives the privilege of space, heat and light frco for this purposo. This Is the first attempt, I believe, of nny city to supply n convcnlcnco that Is now com monly supplied by largo corporations. An employes' conference commlttco has been organized. This committee Is representative of both the classified nnd unclassified servlco nnd consists of representatives chosen di rectly by the employes and a representative chosen by the heads of departments. It Is hoped that a great deal will bo accomplished by this1 conference committee to bring nbout a better relation and understanding between tho Government and Its employes. Safe From tho Loan Shark Semimonthly payment of salaries has been established In a number of tho departments where nn analysis showed that tho majority of employes wero In favor of changing from monthly to semimonthly. This chango In system has been long ndvocated by tho various civil service papers In New York, particularly for tho police nnd fire depart ments, on tho plen that It will save a great many city employes from applying to loan shnrks nnd loan agencies for funds to carry them through the month. Tho Comptroller has also established a system of having on each payday an amount of cash ready In the paymaster's ofllco suf ficient to pay off n largo majority of tho checks. This has been found a great con venience by the employes who formerly had to change their checks at different stores nnd In cases of men, In saloons, when It In variably happened n certain expenditure had to be made In order to got tho desired ac commodation. Tho Department of Health has Instituted a system of periodical physical examination of Its employes. The Chamberlain's ofllce, un der tho leadership of Henry Bruere, who has been a moving spirit In all this welfaro work. Is also taking up this question and such servlco will be avnllablo to any other de partment desiring it. Tho examinations will lie made by physicians cither on the Health Department payroll or from tho Municipal Civil Service Commission. On Mny V) Commissioner Goldwatcr opened an educational lunchroom for tho employes of his department, which offers meals at cost prices and will endeavor to promote education In matters of food and nutrition. New York University has conducted during the year. In the Municipal Building, courses In various subjects of valua to city employes. Employes wero permitted to attend these courses once or twlco a week, from 4 to C o'clock, one hour on their own time. There was an overage attendance of 227 through out the tprm. In addition tho university has nrranged a scries of engineering courses, "ith the ndvlco of a committee of city engi neers. So far atr I know theso courses, which wero Initiated nt the suggestion of Mayor M'frhel and Mr. Bruere, are tho first serious attempt made to provide special training for municipal employes outside the pollco and fire departments. A Trial Board Tho president of tho borough of Manhat tan has established a trial board for tho employes of his department, consisting of two executives and two fellow-employc3 drawn by lot. During the past year the city has spent about 150,000 In the most thorough investi gation yet made of pension systems, includ ing an examination into the condition of tho existing pension plans of the city of New York, under which an annual disbursement of 4,900,000 is made, together with an actu arial computation of a properly financed pen sion plan, based upon the service and vital statistics of the entire city service from 1908 to date, affecting 130,000 employes. This work will serve as a model to the scores of pension funds throughout tho United States which have been established without reference to ultimate cost, and which for the most part are In the bankrupt condition In which most New York funds nnd themselves. The teachers' fund, whose deficiencies aro not made up from city ap propriations, is now In Buch condition thtt it is forced to reorganize because pf its In ability .to meet its "obligations. Th.fi work of the Pension Commission is perhaps tho most promising of all undertakings for tho ulti mate welfare of the civil servlpe, both-from the standpoint of the government and of the employes, - r DECATUR'S SPIRIT From tha Naw York Sun. To the 8un It seems that the spirit which armed Decatur and commissioned him to free Americans from the exactions of the Barbara States; the spirit that refused to accept Euro pean precedent in dealing with the corsafrs oO northern Africa; the spirit that broke fop us and for the world the oppressive yoke ofdep awl stronger nations bad long borne patiently, was a good, an excellent spirit. It was the American spirit, and If It does not live today the nation that Peostur represented, has failed' of its mlMlon, reeardjaes of Its remarkable expansion, its vast laareaie la population, aad its. unprecedented growth 'n its material pee- sesele isaa anu MU"r. RUSSIA'S VAST AREA RueaU laaks oaly tea longitudinal degrees of stretching half way round the earth.' and pos sesses oae-slxth of the landed area at the Iktaaet. Russia's Aslatio peaaeuiogs sre 46 times as great as those of Japan, swea stpee ttae new AsUtle balance that faliewee the Ruese-Jepanes War. The variety at Russia's resources ialt Ut empire tacoad only to the United Stats the greatest jMB ttrpititrlng country in the worU it toads iJfaUeas m nriaew I wealth aa4 timber supply- STORIES OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE Anecdotes Illustrative of Traits of Mind and Character of the Corsican Conqueror Who Met His Waterloo One Hundred Years Ago Today. A YEAH of great events was tho year 1815 from the battlo of New'Orleans to tho for mation of tho Holy Alliance. In that period enmo tho Hundred Days, Waterloo and tho complete rrshaping of tho map of continental Eutope. Napoleon landed on French soil on the first day of March, on his return from Elba. Today Is tho centenary of the battle of Waterloo. Tho following anecdotes of Napo leon Bonaparto have been collected from various sources: Perhaps the purest passion of his llfo was his youthful dream of freeing Corsica from the clutch of the government that was edu cating him. In moments of the greatest peril, he could not listen unmoved to any words that reminded him of Corsica. And In those last dcsolnto years on St. Helena, ho could still smell, ho said, tho sweet scent of the Cor sican hillsides, the fragrance of the tangled underbrush that tho winds carry far out to sea. Tho boy was leaving Corsica, but not Its Influence. He had been In Franco but a fow weeks when somo French lads told him that the Corslcans were cownrds. Fire flashed In tho boy's eyes ns ho replied that if the French had been four to one, thoy would never havo beaten down tho Corsican resist ance. Thoy had triumphed because they wero ten to one. "But you had a good general, Paoll," said his tencher. "Yes, sir," was the lad's answer. "I should llko to grow up to bo llko him." From "Bonaparte," by Job and Montorgueil. Bonaparte in London Tho Adelphl, which is being largely rebuilt, possesses a plausible claim to have be"en tho London residence of Napoleon Bonaparte. Mr. Matthews, grandfather of tho comedian, Jnmes Colman, a centenarian denizen of Lei cester Square, nnd several Strand tradesmen, all declared that they remembered meeting "tho Corsican usurper" during a five weeks' visit ho paid to England. These authorities agree that ho lodged In George street, Adelphl, but differ whether the year was 1791 or 1792. Tho supposed Napoleon "passed most of his time in walking through tho streets." Hence, perhaps, his marvolous knowledge of London, which used to astonish many Englishmen. He occasionally took his cup of. chocolate at a coffee house opposite Northumberland House, where "ho occupied himself In reading," and "preserved a taciturnity provoking to gentle men In the room." From tho Pall Mall Ga zette. Before his coronation the marshals he had created a few months before came to pay him a visit, all gorgeously arrayed. The splendor of their costumes, In contrast with his simple uniform, mado him smile. I was standing at a little distance 'from him, and as ho saw that I smiled also, he said to me In a low tone; "It s not every one who has the right to be plalrily dressed." Presently the marshals of the army began disputing among themselves about the great question of precedence. Their pretensions were very welt founded, and each enumer ated his victories. Bonaparte, while listening tn them, again glanced at me. "I think," said I, -"you must have stamped your foot on France, and Bald, 'Let all the vanities arise from the spll, " "That is true,'.' he replied, "but It Is for. tunate that the French are to be ruled through their vanity." From "Memoirs of Mme. de Remusat." No Need of a Dentist Having washed his face and hands, he picked his teeth very carefully with a box. wood toothpick and then brushed them for some time with a brush dipped In opiate; went over them again with fine tooth powder and rinsed his mouth with a mixture ef brandy and fresh water. ' Jt was to these minute precautions that he attributed ths perfect preservation of all his teeth, which were beautiful, strong and regular. During the whole of tjls reign he never ap peared to have had rsoourse, except for seal ing, to Dubois, bis surgeon dentist, home on the list for WW francs, and a recipient of a gold travelog oas, the Instruments In which wsre for ths exclusive use ef the Emperor. From "Napotea at Howe." by Frederic Mas. son. Bonaparte dictated with great ease. U never wrote uoythlag with bis own band J tm fcAttdwHUos was bad. aa as UletfM to YOU BET HE GOT IT OVER himself as to others; his spelling was very defcctlvo. Ho utterly lacked patlenco to do anything whatever with his own hands. Tho extreme activity of his mind nnd the habitual prompt obedienco rendered to him preventod him from practicing an occupation in which tho mind must necessarily wait for tho ac tion of the body. Thoso wno wrote from his dictation first M. Bourrienne, then M. Menovnl, hl3 private secretary had mado a sort of shorthand for themselves, in order that their pens might travel as fast as his thoughts. Ho dictated while walking to and fro in his cabinet. When ho grow angry, ho would uso violent Impreca tions, which wero suppressed In writing, and which had at least tho advantage or giving tho writer tlmo to como up with him. Ho never repeated anything that he had onco said, even If it had not boen heard; and this was very hard on tho poor secretary, for ho remembered accurately whnt ho had said and detected every omission. From "Me moirs of Mme. do Remusat." The Mnn Who Was Longer One day in a library Napoleon attempted to reach a book far above him on tho shelf. A tall courtier took the book down with this excusa: "Pardon, Sire, I am taller (higher) than you." "No, only longer!" snapped the Emperor. From "The Napoleon Story," by Wayne Whipple. . When the steward of his Tuilleries palace was exhibiting the new upholstery with praises and demonstrating how glorious It was and how cheap withal, Napoleon, mak ing little answer, asked for a pair of scissors, clipped one of tho gold tassels from a window curtain, put it In his pocket and walked on. Some days afterward he produced It nt tho right moment, to the horror of his upholstery functionary; it was not gold but tinsel! From "Heroes and Hero Worship," by Thomas Carlyle. If the work which gavo him a constant feel ing of the possession of power absorbed him so much that all preoccupation of the feeling disappeared, need we be astonished that ha impoaea tne same sllejice upon his physical wants? Ono is compelled to ask If he had any such regular and urgent wants. At least he had no fixed time for satisfying them. He had control over his stomach, or rather ho forgot that he had one, and ate when there was something to eat, in an absent manner nnd thinking of the work which he had laid aside and was anxious to take up again. T?rtm "UsnilssH m a, IT. as i . .-... .,K.tu i umo, oy icreaerlo Mas son. Genius frequently sees truth opposed to Its own trend. Napoleon represents violence, yet he was capable of saying; "Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne and my self have formulated empires, But upon what did we rest the creations of our genlusT Upon force. Jesus Christ alone founded Ills empire upon' love, nnd at this moment millions of men will die for Him," The following may not be a Napoleon anec dote, but here U Ib; "M In a small American town there was a vet eran of the Civil War called Colonel Blngls He was stored full of talis of ha ., a soldier and they had won him the unbounded admiration of .a certain little boy who one day shouted to a playmates "Come on, Jimmy, let's play soldiers. You be Napoleon Bonapartsri be Colonel Bin- Blfta LOYAITO THEIR NATION yrera tha Cleveland flalti Dealer, There la no Swiss raw. Tber, u language. The popi, of 8wit.VrI.na are o man, Frnh or Italian in race ind lant,? But in patriotism they aro all SwUs. lanuae- Of the at oantona 15 are German 5 ar v end J are Italian. IneldeVtaUyU maJ ftS t wed that of the canton, are Mronslv testsnt and W .tronrfv Cnhn- l;."1. pr" absolute nation.! unity. Swltierlaiui .- i solidly and harmoniously for Swuierhfnd""' German SwUs of tUbmmuZSU ?Z ?&, wany; the French Swl, f QmJJZtJV.Pfl: wany, me irenca Swiss pf Geneva ar. ? Psanae; the Italian swlasW TlclnS at. J I8 Italy, and this ia spite oTthe HfSci .a?,?0.!" oatMag ; caauws are almoat iurrouaded bv oM' es sad Um of language naTbT.Uong but ?hi Ue. of patrtouam re much $&' "' th U ao Coated State ,.4. oo UaStst J" sums- Maay Uaited 9wtM IS iSS i r yv r-- ' German or Englleh or Italian birth or immediate ancestry. But they ahould nrltn.-irllv h f- ii,J United States; the Interests of the United Stateiji should be far moro Important to them than any I Bympamouc attaenment to tho lands of their origin, AS TO INSULTS From the Boaton Globe. Tho quotation, "No gentleman would Imultl mo; none other can," Is crodlted to John ' yumcy Adams, Who Is said to have made the reply when he was told that a man had spoken to him so rudely that ho ought to send a challenge to a duel, and It Is said olao to havo been used by Senator W. II. Seward, In a debate growing out of tho assault upon Sen ator Sumner by Preston Brooks, in 1856 and 1857, but it Is pointed out that the quotation,, "A moral, sensible, well-bred man Will not affront me, and no othor can," Is to be found In William Cowper's "Conversa tion." A PLEDGE From tha Springfield rtopubllcnn. A The Allies, Including Italy, swear onco more': never to make oeaco separately. Taking thii pledge rather often may do no harm. fJ '. BETWEEN From the Cle eland Plain Dealer. ' Lloyd -UeorKO says Encland'o nrnlilm In ft:,. fold it has tho enemy In front and tho shirker' BALLAD OP KING'S TRIUMPH "Call mo my minstrel," said tho king, "And lot him sing a glee. For I havo won this summer day A mighty victory. "Between tho tides of dawn and dusk Upon a field I stood And saw my gallant swords drink deep Of body nnd of blood. "So bid my merry minstrel in, With lute and sliver thong, And let him tako my stained sword And sheatho it in a song!" The minstrel came, an ancient man. And smote a silver string. "Oh, gallant is the victory And mighty is tho klngl "At dawn he rode with all his knights Into a virgin field. At dusk the blood of honest men Was stained upon his shield. "And In tho houses of his foes A thousand leagues away. The hearts of women bled and broke . Upon a summer's day." "What song is this7" the monarch cried, "What sorrow dost thou sing?" "Why, only of the victory That crowned my lord the king." The minstrel smiled a fleeting smile, And smote a splendid chord. "Oh, gallant is the use of arms And mighty is the sword! "For on this day a greening Held Was won at crimson cost; And what the gods of war havo gained Tho loves of men have lost. "And many a heart of friend and foe Has broken on this day. And children starve and women weep, A thousand leagues away! "Then cry the triumph to the stars And let the heavena rlngl For gallant la the victory! And mighty la the klngl" Dan. Burnet, In N, T. Brenins Bun. 1 II AMUSEMENTS B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE CHESTNUT AND TWptFTII STREETS A SELECT BBASONABLB BUOWt John Hyama & Leila Mclntvra HORELIK EN8EMBLE; LADY BEN MEI, BfllTO.V HOLMES TnAVKLETTBi JAMES DIAMOND AND p vnanptArt , uriUSMS, GLOBE MARKET- AND JUNIPER PHOTOPLAYS 11 to 11 Hi iv. 40, :oo ELAINE Irbtein'THE MOONSTONE" Baaed on Wltkle ponlna' Famous Novel iiamm: Baaed THH MARKET BT. ABOVE 18TU i Stanley k- i v -r u o a It A. M TO llttB F, M. HASSHI, DAWN In Adaptation 'nA&rnipn'fl invnftiTBft CMldrCt Program Bvitv Saturday 10 A it J ruimuoT .uasE weeK beats zocj TWICE DAILY 2:15 and 8 fin j Natural Color Llfe-SIn Motion PU-lur.. ' fBH FIGHTING FORCES e$U WOODSIDE PARK NOW OPBN TO THE PUBLIC FREE ADMISSION TO PATKONB OP PARK TROLLEY GARRICK &!& lOo. lKc. 230. WEEK 1 11 to 11 THRO CENTRAL AFRICA ii an TiKN-or u a tta a a ,,. nnauti WrXOKS AL L8W13 A cw j Ti3f A.L LEWIS a NSW LBAPER GRAND Today aas. TtB 11 O W A BUI VWf9 41 1U MIN! q 8 O B i, 1 a ufclTH; MANCKL Kurt vuia 'HNQ PICTOKtS CROSS KEYS " ' m .. VAUDEVILLE .& PhutopW Woodside Park vT'?.S1l. 1 w neine j'lace, and the tinr TRGCAbEROo' - J i 1