t 8 SlTCttfttg; HHrger PUBLIC LEDGEIt COMPANY emus it cunws, rrin"r. Chartta It. Lodlnalon. Vlea Trttlittnt i John C Martin, BMsretarf nJ Treaturtrt Philip B. Collinn, JOlin B, yiUUtin, Dlreclota. EDtTOMAL JSOAnD! Crica It. K. Ccsili, Chairman. P It WIIALET BetutlT Editor JOIWC, ttAHTIK ....OeneraJ Bulne Manater Publlahtd dally at PcaUo I.trwti nulldlnr, Independence Squire, Philadelphia. , ltMXa CifTAAt ,.,., Broad and Cdtnut Streeta ATtitTIO CITI . .....Frtm-Vnlon Bulldln New YoiS.., .170-A, Metropolitan Tower Dnaorr ,.,,, , K2 Fonl nulldlnK bt lyocia.. 4oa uioi uemocrat iiunamit Cnirioo. ..1202 Tribune IlulMIn London ,,,.8 Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, 8 W NEWB BUREAUS) WiaRiNOTON BctUBi. ....... ......The Poll Building Niw ToK notiD. .......... ....The Timet llulldlnr pUMN SntiO, 00 Frledrlchttra lKDo-i Iltmutr,,..,., ,,,,,,. 2 Pall Mall Elil, B W. Iie Bdicac....... S3 Hue Louie la Grand subscription tkbms Bycarrler, Diii.t OM.T, six centa. By malt, t"tpajd eutalde oC Philadelphia, except where forelfrn (xmace i requirca, ajilt unlt, one r Dairt nrr rw var lhr crlptlom payable In advance, Nonce Bubecrlbera wlehlnr addreea chanced must rle old aa well aa new addren. HELL, 1900 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIM 10(10 W Adirtts all commMnlcallona to Evening Ledger, Independence Swart, rhltadttphla. XNTXxto at m rmt-ABrtrnu rotTorrics n ECOND cus Min, xirrtn. TUB AVEnAOE NET PAID DAILY CIRCULA- TION OF Tltn EVENING LEDCJEn FOB MAT WAS 8,9H. nilLADELTIItA, MONDAY, JUNE 31, 1915. Bucceu l a mantle which coven more tins than chatitv "School's Outl" What For7 "QCHOOlS OUT!" may bo a Joyous cry O for the youngster; but it means prob lems and dimcultlcB for tho parent And It means problems and difficulties for tho schools, too. Tho summer of play that begins this morning Is an unmixed blessing for tho child of well-to-do parents, tho child who is sent off to tho beach or the mountains to brcatho in fresh air and health together. But what about tho average boy or girl who must stay in tho city through Juno, July and August? Unless thero is an nttractivo playground handy, Is his body going to bo any hotter oft for tho "rest"? If ho takes to tho lnovitablo stroots, Is hiB soul going to prosper as tho result of his vacation? Ono cannot help looking with a great deal of interest and hope at tho experiments Gary, Indiana, has bo successfully mado with voluntary summer schools, largely vocational, whero the chil dren go because they havo enjoyed tho win ter's work nnd expect to onjoy tho summer's. Tho problem in vacation that confronts tho schools themselves is also tied up in tho experienco of Gary. It is simply the problem I , of getting tho most use out of the mech p anlsm of teaching. Tho schools Buffer tro- uiuuuuuoiy ij-uiu iiiauiucicnL uuuuinga ana teachers; tho boglo of "half-time" Is always present. And yet hero wo And tho buildings and tho teachers utilized for only soma 36 weeks of tho 52, if wo allow for the various holldnys spread round tho calendar. Tho natural result Is that, moro nnd moro school 1V superintendents nro wondering why tho sum i mer vacation shouldn't bo cut up and re- ;S distributed in such a way as to utlllzo all it Vtho toachlng force and all tho buildings practically all tho time. Ellen Adair in "EurdpV S ' fe TTttiXiEN ADAIR la en routo to Europe for XL the Evpmua LEDOBn, not to risk her Hfo in the trenches or at tho front, but In order to find out Just what tho women nro doing for their country in this tragic crisis, how they are doing It and what their contribution means in the great Issue. Ellen Adair, in following tho Red Cross work, may penetrate far Into the lines of tho Allies, though only "under proper guarantees for her safety, It Is no tlmo for noncom batants, oven though thoy aro nowsgather ers, to go into tho thick of battle. Tho war correspondent of that sort has passed. It Is peculiarly a time, however, when women In America are entitled to a faithful picturo of what their siBters abroad are doing, of how they aro proving themselves nnd demonstrating their right to participate in tho government of tho countries for which thoy are Sacrificing so much. Ellen Adair's first stories' will deal with conditions in Scotland and England. "They Ilave Stolen My Country" IT IS not an iron cross but a decoration from tho Red Cross that Marie Ade laide of Luxemburg wears. Nothing could bo moro pathetic than tfio lnterviow, pub lished in this newspaper Saturday, In which the Grand Duchess related how "they havo stolen my country." "Had we suspected tho 'treaty-breaking1 in tentions of tho Prussians," said she, "wo should have rushed to arms. If wo had had 48 hours' notice, we should havo put at least 25,000 men on our eastern frontier, "We are as big as Montenegro, and our country is as mountainous, but wo had implicit faith in the international law; and wo thought we trere immune." Instead, the trapped Grand Duchy was pil fered over n!ghtt taken as a burglar might irteal a -watch, betrayed and exploited, Tho young Grand Duchess must ask a German officer for permission to take a ride. She, who did not resist, is s, prisoner. Yet Potsdam tells ua that Belgium was outraged because Belgium resisted. Had King Albert broken the faith and given free passage to Von Kluck, thero might bi fewer Belgians dead, but tho starving would still bo starving', aa they are in Luxemburg, and Belgium would ha no mora frea than la that trampled ter ritory There Is no Justloa and no pity In a mill tary machinal thero is only ruthless might Out of the Fulness of Sacrifice THE fulnwa of sacrifice whiorr rnada tho Revolution will never, of pourse, ba known, Crtain permonalltles-rnot always tho finest perhapa left a sharper Jnmraq; the natural prJudto ef histories roasted to ome more than to other, and pu.ro accident flayed its Prf. to. In the recording of the games to which America, owes bo much. But H is an admiraM quality ? aueh uatoW ful ssw that it renders up every new and then mmm $w her to a Jbm applavuw. Vtw newest to oae ilayw Salomon, some , lrne Utizen of TalladlpWa, and broker to ,tij Continental Oovmujet from hla littlo s$ms on Front street & why the eervteae tfct foljah Jew lovw oi UbMy alike la - Ammww ajstd In fcU own dleemered Poland V-tt fcee fofftten, u la ord t It tmmm vs Ms Iimp and rli- - bwfert of ttn tuilw4i thought EVENING 1 too well of htm. Of this man whoso name figures in no school history, Madison wrote Randolph! "The kindness of our llttlo rnena In Front street Is a fund that will preserve from oxtrcmlty, but I never resort to it with out great mortification, as ho refuses point blank all recompense." Perhaps tho fault lies with fate Batomfln died at 4$, leaving no wills his papers fell Into tho hands of Incompetents, and tho burning of Washington In 1814 destroyed tho records of his beneficence. Now this seems to be established at somewhere round 6fi0,000 and Interest. It Congress can bo mnde to sco the Justlco of Salomon's title to some memorial, the "llttlo friend In Front street" may nln n monument, or oven perhaps a national university In Washington for th.e encouragement of foreign students. Too Ashamed to Fight? THROUGHOUT somo of tho comment on the Wearing affair at tho University of Pennsylvania runs tho note, "I am ashamed of my Alma Muter." Tho woods are full of mollycoddles who aro "ashamed." Thoy sneer, they snivel, they criticise, they aro disgusted. They can even blush, which shows that they must havo some red blood In their veins. Yet when tho hat drops they run to cover like coyotes and the battle knows them not, Thoy sneak through back doors Into news paper ofilccs with letters which thoy aro afraid to sign. Thoy bedevil editors to mako this or that fight for them; "but keep my name out of it," is tholr pica. Bravo gentle men these, who aro so frequently "ashamed" and so infrequently found on tho battle front. For tho Boko of tho University of Pennsyl vania, let it bo hoped that tho alumni who are "ashamed" of tho courso which tho trus tees havo taken are not of a type with thoso citizens who aro "ashamed" of Philadelphia for threo years and on tho fourth voto with tho gang. No man has a right to bo ashamed of any thing unless ho Is ready to nnd docs dedi cate himself to tho task of changing tho con ditions which causo him to be ashamed. Ho must act, ho must do something, or his shamo Is worth nothing. Instead, he himself becomes a pltlablo object; a citizen of whom other citizens, even gangsters, must bo nnd aro In tholr turn ashamed. Thero aro hundreds of University of Penn sylvania alumni who view with alarm tho action takon In tho Nearlng caso. Mr. Near lng himself Is merely an Incident; a man who has been unfortunato in many of his methods and who has been tho victim of a sort of publicity that is likely to harm any person. But tho suspicion Is strong that his removal is not entirely duo to theso things, and Is duo In largo measure to tho fact that ho has preached a progressive economy, some what radical and certainly not error-proof, which n powerful body of Tories dotest and the discussion of which they aro determined to prevent. For Tories and holdbacks, what ever their faultB, are fighters. Thoy know what they want, and thoy battlo to get it. Tho good name of tho University of Penn sylvania la worth fighting for, is it not? This is a democracy, nnd tho University is do pendent on tho Commonwealth, is it not? Let tho Bhamo then be, If shamo thero is ulti mately, on tho citizenry, on tho rank and flle who cower In tho background. Tho Near lng affair is not political, but many feel that tho gang would not hesltato to reach into tho very altars of learning and attempt to sub sidize or intlmldato tho authorities. Why shouldn't tho trustees dare almost anything after witnessing tho campaign of last fall, when industrial leaders on whom tho people had a right to depend dumped their contributions into tho very Jackpot that was receiving tho "boozo slush fund" and did what they could to mako the debauching of tho Commonwealth a success? Aye, tho trustees havo good reason to feel that they need not fear public opinion, because it Is an opinion that is loud but inactive, vociferous but controlled, bloodless and impotent, a pale descendant of tho spirit that hungered at Valley Forgo and trirmphed at Yorktown, Tho University might be a leader In pro gressive public opinion. Instead, it has too often been unofficially a reflector of tho kind of public opinion which tho gang represents. The problem confronting tho alumni of tho Unlvorslty Is linked inextricably with the problem confronting the citizens of Pennsyl vania, and particularly of Philadelphia. Shall thero bo free speech free speech does not mean license at tho Unlvorslty and shall there be free government in Pennsylvania? When wo get tho one thero la every llkell, hood that we shall get the other, "We shall never get cither so long as tho men who are "ashamed" of conditions are content merely to be "ashamed." Blushes accomplish no reforms, Adl Adl Adl The boya are marching. The back yard is Just about the most im portant room in the house theso days. Go away, Raisull, and don't bother Mother Europe, She has enough bad boya of her own Any man who Is selected by "nave" Lane for Mayor of Philadelphia will be a good man to vole against. tll'U1 Ill I i II The Cr apparently wants to see the wheels go round. He has ordered 67,480 of them fjw the BaWwln Looomotty Works. Th bajdehJiw ofar have extended ihm selves mm to this State. No llqyar la te be allowed In the encampment of the National Guard this year. Jf the Russians did sot have ammunition tt ta a good thing that they had legs. T1jhJ N,yo rwroaxM aooui urn muw within the last few weekp, Tfr Katew U reported te hf tajd ifeat he eB have (pa wbu be want It. He m4e a. nUteJt In telttwif it to the Bav&rtajia, He fawld fea-w W4 ilt Uw Vmm. T.TCnOTm-PHIlAPELPHIA. MONDAY, JTTHE 21, I01B;. FROM APPRENTICE TO SHAREHOLDER lTno"OpportUnity For Rapid Promo tion and Partnership Offered to Boys in a Philadelphia Hat Fac tory. By GEORGE W. DOUGLAS WHAT 18-year-old boy would not llko to get n Job in a business at 2 a week, only to bo promoted to H a week within a month If he proved his fitness, and witnin flvo years becomo a Shareholder in tho com pany which pays dividends of 25 per cent, on Its capital stock, and within ten years be sent on tho road as a salesman with tho op portunity to mako $30,000 a year in commis sions on his sales, and possibly to becomo president of tho company at tho ago of 40 years? There aro boys right hero in Philadelphia to whom this opportunity is presented. Somo of them aro on tho way to promotion and a competence. Some of them havo already won both and can look forward to old age with a feeling of confidence and security, and others havo Just settled down to living from hand to mouth without ambitlon'or desire to get on. All theso classes of men are found at tho hat factory of the John B. Stetson Company In Kensington. If n young man docs not get on thero It Is his own fault and not tho fault of tho opportunities. John B. Stetson, who established tho busi ness, never adopted tho plan of promotion by seniority, but pushed his men nhoad whenever thoy showed fltnpss and whenovor tho openings for them appeared or could bo made. J, II. Cummlngs, his successor aa president of tho company, who entered tho buslnrss as an crrnnd boy In tho office, con tinues tho somo policy. Workmon aa Shareholders From tho lowest apprcntlco up to tho most skilled workmen tho company exerts Itself to dovclop its omployos to tho utmost for their good and for its own profit, on tho assumption that mutual helpfulness is bettor than mutual hostility. As already in dicated, tho apprentices nro employed nt tho rato of 12 a. week. Tho boya hired aro usually 17 or 18 years old. They aro nevor undor 17, because tho boy beforo that ago Is not strong enough to do tho work The wages of $2 a week aro regarded aa nominal, and continue only whllo tho boy Is learning to mako a hat. As soon as ho can mako a complete hat ho s paid for what ho does on a sliding scale. Tho prlco for tho first dozen Is low, but It Increases with succeeding dozens In order to encourage tho workman to learn to act quickly and with precision. A bright boy can learn to mako a hat In three "or four weeks, and It seldom takes, the slow boys moro than eight weeks. It sometimes happens that beforo a boy has completed his apprenticeship, ho is making moro monoy than somo of tho Journoymon who havo been working at tho trado for years. But tho average apprentices soon begin to earn $10 and $12 a week. When thoy show unusual ability they are rowardod whllo still apprentices with threo or four Shares of Btock In a building company, valued nt J200 each, organized to asslBt tho men In owning homes of their own. If his efficiency continues ho Is likely to recelvr soon after ho completes his apprenticeship a least threo shares of tho stock of tho John B. Stetson Company, Itself worth 1350 ' a sharo at present prices nnd paying 25 per cent, dividends. Ho does not havo to pay a cent, for theso shares, Tho dividends pay for them in aboutfour years, aftor which he receives tho dividends himself, though tlio shares nro held In trust for him for 15 years, after which ho may do with them as he chooses. Eight hundred employes of the company aro shareholders under this system, which Is an average of nbout one out of every throe nnd a half eligible to tho privilege. The 1500 women employes are continually changing, because they get married within threo or four years, or before thoy would havo earned tho right to shares of stock, and tho appren tices and Journeymen in the early stages of their employment still further reduce tho number of ollglbles. Tho expert hatmnker, with a quick eye and a senaltlvo touch, Is likely to bo promoted to n "passer" or Inspector of hats, as thoy are passed from one process of finishing to an other. Then ho may become a foreman, nnd if ho dovelops tho proper capabilities he may even be sent on tho road to learn tho nrt of selling what ho has mado. Whllo thero la no formal system of training passera and foremen there Is n continual watch kept for men with tho required abilities', bo that thero are in every department two or three understudies for every man in a place of responsibility. , "If a man tries to attend to every llttlo thing in his department, and does not give the others an opportunity to learn tho art of management," said Vico President Free man, "we usually arrange to give him a long vacation so that some one else may bo trained to tako his place In any unforeseen 'emergency." Salesmen at $30,000 a Year Tho ealea force is recruited by a Bystem of trying out young men from the different departments. Buch a man is sent on the ,road with "a regular salesman to act aa hla secretary in arranging dates and looking after tho baggage and transportation and in any other ways that aro possible. Soma of these young men show that they have tha ability to sell goods, and they are put on the sales force. Others are put back at their old places In the factory, "As to the earnings of the salesmen," said Mr. Freeman, "they vary. We pay the man 5 per cent, on what he sells. One of pur men who covers a large territory sells $600,099 worth of hats a year and gets 130,000 com missions His expenses are not moro than J1000. This leaves a generoua income. It seems large, ut we believe that it is wise to continue the system because it keeps before the men who have not so profitable territory the hope of advancement and the prospect of a prize really worth while." Mr. Curamtngs, the present head qf the feustneea. Illustrate In his own person how ajualort boy can rise where there la an op, sartunlty for every man to show what there t in him. He had been promoted from errand boy to the vise prealdenoy jwfien Jobs B. Stetson died. He was then pro moted to Um presidency. Uader the clrun etaaew it to unnecessary to remark ut (he OMBpasy never baa to Advertise for appren tice T boys w know wht Is beiere tfeeas in the big factory In North 5th ( l!o whilis in tho iftmssmAt eliovle to apply for i viw Uy sco ii $&. 700.00 LL NEYER WINI WE'VE SUCH m&my "f ' I '' . ....; . t . .ttr,.. hSv feW. I x.Kft Marl Pf 'M . V 1 fellU .stoK m: :jv . " .m mmmm. totu.. v vm ssiss8mmmwt?Mi i SHOULD HUSBANDS LEARN TO COOK? If So, Why? An Unacademical Discussion The Wife as Teacher. A Suggested Course of Elementary Lessons to Try on the Man of the House.' By PERRY BALSAM " . SHOULD husbands learn to cook? This la not a suffrago hyp6thcsls. By learning to cook professionalism or oven scmtprofesslon allsm Is not Implied. Tho subject of fairly dependable household utility IS broad enough. Ltkowlso it confines us to tho homo. Camp flro cooks will also bo barred from discussion. Tho skill thoy attain Is purely occasional skill, and questionable at that, to say tho least. They may not prctond to neatness or gaudtnoss in tholr efforts, but that does not lot thorn out, Whenover they break out In tho kitchen with camp-fire methods some thing happens that war correspondents would refer to aa a'dcbacle. Tho home-trained husband-cook Is the arti cle, then, that wo will put tho tag on. He need not bo a husbandetto or in tho merest trlflo effeminate. It is not to bo presupposed that ho need surrender his Job as1 bread winner for the family. The only ouro skill required of him is that he fit Into emergen cies, bo thero with tho right stuff in him to substitute at odd moments' and know tho kitchen and Its tools thoroughly. Just give him tho elemental principles, but hammer them deep and true. Thero can bo no un certainty about him In tho matter of big lit tle things. If thero is ho had better bo chained to the front porch. There Is no doubt In tho minds of those who havo gone into this sort of training of Its positive benefits. Whllo It may not solvo all tho tribulations of domestlo relations it cer tainly softens thorn. As an initial stop let us consider when this training should begin. Having got that far wo will go on to tho how-to-do-lt processes. Somo Hght-thlnking theorists persist that tho mothers should begin the good work with their sons. Thero is no substanco to that thought. Mothers aro too indulgent. They havo not sufficient grip of their sons' tlmo and attention. With tho email minority who remained fast to their mother's apron strings wo havo nothing to do. They aro hap'plly tho exceptional few, nnd when thoy come to make husbands thoy fall Into that new and despised class of husbandettes. We aro deal ing vlth men. Domestic Relations Begin Having eliminated the possibility of mother training wo como along to the subject of brides. There aro snags and deep-mired marshes here, tfo wo must walk gingerly. Most of us flatter ourselves that we know when a bride la a bride, but how few of us thero are who would venture to say when a bride cena'es the brldlshness when aha ar rives at matronly maturity. Women will tell you that the male and not the female of the species marks the terminal boundary by his first outbreak of savagery. Humorists play round this absorbing subject with unholy Joy, Husband derides the turnovers, the bridal tear-ducts release their flood and tho stern reality of life comes crashing Into tho bower. Domestic relations have begun. Philosophers havo described this uncertain bridal period aa an indeterminate sentence. There is no law of average to consult. Poets' are more rash, and say that a bride is no longer a bride after Bhe has learned, to cook. Pure plfille that, for a brida who can boll an egg la convinced In the Inmost depths of her that she can cook. There is, however, a definite and at least comparatively euro boundary. When a bride gets up her nerva to ask In her mother-in-law to a meal of her own compounding she is at last wifely sura of herself. She may be a long way off from matronly maturity, but she la no longer a dreamer In the clouds worship ing an Idol of clay. Bhe has got range of this clayand sized up ltd shortcomings, and n doing this she has come down to earth on a sure footing for herself. Now It would aeem that we have got some where. The brlde-wlfe or; wife-bride has got her kitchen nerve with her, It makes no dlf. ference if she went to cooking school during her days of maidenhood, nor if she learned some of the art of cookery at her mother'a eide. Having apqulred a home that Is only partially equipped with cooking school od Junoie, Htep-eavers and the meet modern fa cilities for nurry-up washing and drying, ah must unlearn a great deal of the set prin ciples of the oDOklng school and build up a. new eonsejousnes for home cooking. 8he la confronted with the vagaries of a. husband's appetite and the prize-winning satiet a4 ragota of the cooking school do not seam to apply The etrge creature bolts carboby ffrjata when he ebeuld, be absorbing pretalda. He U a Jack Spratt or tha opposite. He u fa4 of greaay bto tf lwWly ie, Tha ewu-ne-ffraiued tffcetlM crastare hat so Idei at the bourn pnt mrr tba fir tryiam tte drifaMMSie in d tM mO, dryia JH 4Msr "SslA"! W,s,,?l r IrT f ct)l b5 4 jHc7 n" Vl-! ii iSf VvV'ilu yt. - ....(. tAu aVi"fiiif, H. A I "V "., .,., Ait .iM.t , UVvs, i, i. p every last drop of grease on sheets .of grease-absorbing paper. Individual Instruction in tho Kitchen Tho fact of tho matter is that ho knows ab solutely nothing about kitchen work or tho artifices and labors of cooking. Ho should. Not only that ho might break in for a llttlo slmplo cookory when Ws co-slavo in tho do mestlo relations partnership Is too ill to drag, herself down In tho kitchen, but in order that' ho might havo somo adequate Idea of relative valuos. But don't begin on him with a itsh ball course. That is almost postgraduato work for tho general run of men. Lot him begin by boiling eggs. Ho esteems, probably, that this Is crudo raw troglodytic work. You Just drop tho oggs In a Saucepan, pour on tho water nnd let It go. Four or flvo minutes Inter you tako out tho eggs. If ho really does know that you must boll the water first and drop In tho eggs whllo tho water continues to boll ho will likely drop them In so roughly that thoy crack. Tho next step after you can trust him with egg-bolllng is to instruct him in making coffee and toast. If ho can do theso throe things ho can supply himself with breakfast at any old time. It is safer if you can afford it to glvo him a percolater to mako coffee in: otherwise ho is likely to bo messy, particu larly If ho uses egg-shells and a trlflo of tho white or yolk in making tho coffee. By all means avoid any thing" messy in tho prelimi nary steps. If ho mcsScs himself up at tho start ho will never go on. Therefore, teach him at first to make dry toast. If over a gas stovo, provldo him with ono of thoso Inexpen sive llttlo contrivances in which you may In sert four slices. Don't begin with odd pieces of bread left in the bread-box. It may bo economical, but it is unattractive Show him how to cut from tho loaf at tho nearest pos sible Ideal bIzo for toast, and then show him how to cut oft tho edges so that ho may pllo up a uniformly square or oblong product. If ho follows without mishap up to this point ho will consider at ono bound that ho has got the world beaten aa a toastmaker. Encour age him In that conceit, and ho will mako toast without tho slightest provocation. Ho will generally make twice ns mu,ch as you have any need for, but do not kick at that. At least not at first Later on, by gentle hlnta nnd subtle Innuendoes, you can cause him to unconsciously cut down tho trifling waste. When ho haa como up to that culinary ex cellence that enables him to butter toast tho waste will begin to eliminate itself. Bo cau tious what sor,t of butter you give him to spread on tho toast If Jt is hard adaman tine butter ho will bungle the Job, tear the toast to pieces and possibly utter uncouth ejaculations. Some would cuss. No hus band will get anywhere In the kitchen on even the most trifling utility basis unless he" la brought gradually to tho exercise of self restraint. Therefore, have the butter slightly k melted so he can lay it on loose and spread it emootniy to permeate tho entire surface of the Blab, There aro some husbands who are complete artists at making toast and regard their craftsmanship with supreme compla cence. Don't Go Too Par When you have brought your victim to tho point of Scrambling eggs, stop there, at least in the egg-course. The ablrrtng of egga is a tedious baking Job, and only your exceptional man, or one of the husbandetto type will over learn to make eggs a ja Edward creamed eggs a la Henrietta, eggs souff ee, and bo on. Having passed tho Scrambling point, you have only one more elementary lesson to Blve-the brolline of steaks and chops and tho frying of potatoes. These will come along aa simple addenda and need not be dwelt on at length. .Don't ask Mm to peel potatoes and boll them. That la'pushlng it a bit too far. There are lots of canned vegetables that can be heated and look hot, when they get hot He wm not have time to bother with baking or pie or cake making. Don't ask him to wash and bdll spinach, beeMop or kin. dred greens. It would be an lmwW0n to ask him to ehell pea, if bo la of an perl meptal turn of mind, he can ba persuaded to make bieeuita with lf-ra!statr flour, though this task Ja aUo a bit may, Aa for X Jug qereals properly to a daubfe ijTit wld he mere diplomatic to let him hein srsa1" "?-' yart -his a very posejbla that soma grew aad sea-ablated ehamptens of a'Tii wS " MitH 91 iaMrfaX kind mtM.i ..!rr .. .. w,u BuA t L . IILTT. "? ma ww ooum i, Vfor?":t K r-f -, l i i,"fr. y. i A ROTTEN TEAMV w in .V'J." . ei.tr ; V"W v UMliii l sMly'V '" . courso, an enormous lot depends upon tho sagacity of tho. wlfo. Bho may follow thi suggestions or ignoro them If she docs Is- '' noro thorn thero will occur innumerable emer- genolos in her Hfo whon oho will regret It -Thoro is no reason why any man should net bo ablo to cook tho family breakfast whlia ' his good frau is comforting a pair of col icky .twins. & FROM A NEW READER To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir I wish to Inform you that I received the Evuninq LEDonn yesterday afternoon, and' I am porfcetly satisfied with it. This is tho flrat tlmo I over saw tho Evbnino Ledqeh. and It certainly did make mo feel good that Phlladel. nhla has such a very good evening caper. Tou can rest assured that I will bo a Ledoeii reador ;a as long as you can print It. ELMEU T. BEAR. Marino Ba'rraoks, Norfolk, Va., Juno 15. DEVITALIZED UNIVERSITIES To the Editor of Evening' Ledger: Sir As tho University of Pennsylvania says good-by t6 Scott Nearlng, so must We alt say good-by to tho slight vestige of democracy and progresslvenesa that Institute of learning possosaes. Wlierover and whenever any sug gestion of mental activity manifests Itself In our pinnacles of pedagogy, It is resolutely snuffed out as a warning, perhaps, to the youth of our land to abstain from such dangerous pastimes. At tho paco they aro now traveling, our uni versities and colleges aro rapidly giving way to tho street, tho theatre and the lecture plat forms as .sources of vital Information. Only by the presence of such "live wires" as Scott Ncarlntr. Clyde Klnc and others of their stamp can tho universities stave oft an otherwise In- " evitablo decay. GERTRUDE TRAUDEU 200 Elm street, Camden, N. J., June 19. THE OBSTACLES TO EVIL In the constitution of our naturo a limit ha been fixed to the triumph of evil. Falsity In theory Is everywhere confronted by tho facts which present themselves to every man's ob servation. A Ho has not power to change tho ordinances of God. Every day discloses Its utter worthlessnesa until It fados away from our recollection, and Is numbered among th things that were. Tho Indissoluble connection which our Creator has .established between vice and misery, tends also continually to arrest the progress of evlt, and to render odious what ever would render avll attractive. Francis Wayland. EQUAL PAY From tho Boston dlobe. The Mayor of Worcester has ruled that the. women on' tho police force of that city aro to draw the samo pay as policemen. As they are to do tho samo kind of work, why should there have been any question about tho compenia tkn? n LANSING'S DIPLOMACY I'ioih the Brooklyn Dally Eagle. Lansing's entente with newspaper cor respondents shows that our State Department now sees that diplomacy must ba like a watch', Its worlts concealed, but Its face open to every observer. A DELECTABLE DISCOVERY From the Detroit Free Pren. A New York chef has discovered the way to remove the bones of a shad before cooking It, thus conferring a greater bleaslncr on man Hind than all the Inventors of all the imple 'M menu ui waritiro over Glu. A WARNING From the Botton Eyonlng TramcrlpL , If anybody tries to haul down the American flag make him eed etars and wear stripes I FIREWORKS You hate ma and I hato you. And we are so polite, wo twol But whenever I see you I burst apart And scatter the sky 4MB my Mazing heart It spits and sparkles nP stars and balls. Buds into roses and flares and faJIs. Scarlet buttpns. and palo green disks. Silver spirals and asterisks. Shoot and tremble In a mist Peppered with mauve and amethyst I shine In the windows and light up tho trees.' 4 And all because I hate you, if you pleaeo. -u And when you meet me, you rend asunder And go up in naming wonder Of saffron cubes and crimson moons. And wheels all amarantha and roaroonsi Golden lozenges and spades. Arrows of malachites and Jades, Patens of connnr. nvm-a fci.AnWA As Vou mount you flash In tho glossy leave M guh fireworks as we make, we twol Beeausa you hate me and I hate you. Amy Lowell, In the April Atlantic. AMUSEMENTS B. JV KEITH'S THEATRE Elizabeth Brtce and, Charles King Walter C. KeJly GLOBE MA.RKBT AND JUNlPJOt FHOTO-P&AYa 11 TU 41 . ,. 1& S. SO ram.. vrTx2,M..iP WAY" Than, grt.. Sat,, IrisJ Allan, "WWU SUtar" :wa0? 8nK TFAY-r-vlSSfP1!?8 INVENTION. UBV- GRANT! USi,.,,?,4HciJ j D' id! J: 2h 3 j-j I K4MER MORTON. U.COH- ILJ w OuSOIS FICTt'BBS ' Woocjside Park w , LA iyilGHT FOR A DAY" . f0ti&4ftO KBt Saw imawaw 1 m 1 haMi) ttwir m lateA rt NKpi