EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA. SATURDAY, JUNE M. 1915, itmtttt0 Metiatv PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY cinta ii. it crni-is. riiiwt S.'! If ill,ton' VlceJrldnt ; John C Xtartln, fm.ftli'? APd Tfrri Philip 8 Colllim, John II. Wlllem, DlrMBH. BDiToniAt7 boa ho. dars K. crane, chairman P VIIALBI..... Rjecutlte IMIter JOHN C MAttTlM.. QalltuTinVaTManaite'r Fubllihe. .11 If t I'pn.to I.Kmr.n ttulldlna, ihdtptmteoee Square, rtilLMphla. lMM frirnil Ilttvitit and Chertntit Btrrrta Atuktjo Cit rrfM-tnfn Handing New roiic 170-A. Metropolitan Ttmtr DstttoiT MM Font Hiillilln 8T. Loots 400 OItw if moernt Building iw run nullum Loaww 8 Waterloo I'lace, rl! Mall, 8. W. nkws nrniiAvs! Wiiixotow nriuu The rl nulMlnr- Kw ToK BraaAU , The lmM limidln Brans Denial: ,,,, .no FrlfOrlfhitr-M loiujow licmt..,, a riu mu nam, h. w. Jp-ata Ot'taiD. ...52 nue Louie le (Irani! SUD8CnIPT10N TEIWIS By carrier. DAttr OstT, ili centi. By mall, poitpald MilA of Philadelphia, except where forelrn pontes le required. DAiir O.itT, fine month, twentr-ne rente j Daiit Om.t, one rear, three dollar-. All mall tub aerlpttoni parable In advance. N'ottCB flunncrlbere wlnhlnr addren chanred mut give old at well ae new addrete. DEtt, l09 WALNUT KEVSTO.NE. MAIN iMt 7" A&irttt all communication lo Jitentng Ltaotr, tnieptndmot Square, Phlladtlpila. kitctxd at in. piitt.AhririiiA rosTornoa i" atcoxn CLitS WAIL MATTES. inn AVnnAon nht paid daily cincuLA- TlON Or THE EVENING LrjDCJEn FOn MAT WA8 88,014. PHILADELPHIA, SATUnDAY. JUNE 26. 1915. Two hands tccrc given to man to cam vilth, ami not for spending what he gets. Two Thoughts for Uncle Snm THE dlstnnco from Wllliclrnshnven to tho Dardanelles qb tho Gorman submarlno fliea Is about S000 miles. Tlio dlstnnco from Wllhclmshavon to New York la considerably less. This fact, suggests tho Munich Nouesto Nachrlchtcn, "will mako tho war party In tho United States think twice." Twlco? Quito probably. Onco about ade quate defenso and once about tho interesting- fact, among others, that Cleveland brought down Great Britain In 1805 with a pea-shooter navy and a 42-ccntimctro na tional conscience Tho history of tho United States has boon the history of a confidence in national honor and In national power unimpaired by oven tho most deplorable lack of preparedness. Who'll Be Famous Next? WHO Is Pennsylvania's most distin guished citizen? The Governor wants to know. Wo fear It will bo a guessing con test, but still it Is profitable for tho people to run over tho names of tho State's best known mon and consider their entitlement to fame. Tho Governor's question. Indeed, might well bo resolved Into another, "Who Is tho citizen In whom Pennsylvania takes the most pride?" For this man, we are told, Is to bo "signally honored" at tho Panma Paclfic Exposition, and tho cholco should bo carefully made, It Is an Interesting reflection that distinc tion usually comes moro suddonly than greatness. Wo have heard of a poet who awoke ono morning to find himself famous. LHo wasn't, of course, a better poet than he vas tho night before And tho other way anfcout the world sometimes wakes up In tho mirnlng to read the name of a great man of whom it had never heard. Then thcro are "vllwgo Hnmpdens" and those, who exem plify the words of Browning, t 'TIs not what man Docs That exalts him, but what man Would Do. "Safe nnd Sane" Prohibition IT PAYS to advertise a "safe nnd sano Fourth," but advertising alono Is not sum cient in any kind of enterprise It is all well and good to warn parents and children that cannon, guns, pistols, firecrackers, squibs nnd rockets are dangerous, but that isn't enough. When all theso things are temptingly displayed In the stores and on the streets, you can't prevent a youngster from digging down Into his pockets for his pennies. Stop the selling and you stop tho buying, Tho way to make the Fourth safe is to make It safe. Aesop on "Social Unrest" IT IS the modern theory that man was not born a "social being," but that ho became social through self-interest. If now there Is class conflict, It Is largely duo to lack of so cial consciousness. But the phrase, "enlight ened self-interest." Is becoming moro and more familiar In talk of child labor, alums, workmen's compensation, freedom of speech In colleges and universities. Its meaning ap pears in Aesop's parable of tho social un rest: "A Woodman came Into a forest to ask the Trees to give him a handle for his Ax. It seemed so modest a request that the principal Trees at once agreed to It. and It was settled among them that the plain, homely Ash should furnish what was wanted, No sooner had the Woodman fitted the staff to his purpose than he began laying about him on all aides, felling the noblest Trees In the wood. The Oak, now seeing the whole matter too late, whispered to the Cedar: "The first conceaalon has lost all; If we had not sacrificed our humble neighbor we might hav yet stood for agea ourselves.' "When the rleh surrender the rights of the poor they give a handle to be used against their own privileges." So the economic heresy of "enlightened self-Interest" Is at least as old as Aesop. Hope for Low Cost of Drugs THE very rich and the very poor have no worries over the high cost, of medicine or the high cost of doators, Fat bank accounts and free dispensaries and hospitals take care of that As In so many other matters, It is we middle oiass that suffers. But even the woll. to-do have probably noted the effect of the war on drug; prices. Germany, that treasury of so mueh tauajfl-scientlflo Industry, Is looked tight. Its j tented compounds, synthetic chemicals and (standard drugs under copyrighted trade names no longer roach us. Tbe situation, however, U in many ways decidedly advantageous. Under the new stim. yhM, new process are being develop!, and ven new discover leu mad. More important Hill, It probably mean a reorganisation at the patent situation. England hw annulled tmnaberleM legal monopolies (r trad name uid proc-cssee- that Germany has enjoyed. hvn the war fa over a world-wide rend Kiatment will ba m- essary in which America Will undoubted i v pi iy u part AtnerttJA kul 5jhI, not b,. tuu IlnUky In t Wdliu ui i' 'i ; a njjUu mug good dru, cheap drUAts end plenty of them ,.n tit of the piimenr needs of clviuu i i,,. iiiH.iu.lUmg of the patent lew -not fu-AgSfowc5 hurt tho inventor or discourage Initiative; for a great deal of chemical advance tomes through salaried research work In both gov ernment and prlyato laboratories. Dlsoaao la the common enmy toward whoso extinc tion overy weapon must be turned. Lobster Palaces 'Glitter In Statistic aMlBIlB Is wealth and wealth. New York .has ono kind; Philadelphia another. No body can regret that. Thereforo, nobody can regret tho fact brought out by tho newest Census Bureau monograph that, whllo Now York's assessed wealth runs to 18,204,882,430, Philadelphia is content to lead tho rest of tho cities of America, with 91,533,791,86?. ' When theso figures spread over tho coun try It Is moro than probable that no news paper will print In ft parallel column tho facts regarding housing In the two cities; no newspaper will point out that whllo tho aver ago number of Now Yorkers accommodated In each dwelling has risen Jn SO years from 12.0 to 16.6, tho flguro for Philadelphia has gone down from G.6 to 6.2. Yot there Is n, solidity In Philadelphia's wealth which -corresponds to those housing figures. In a comparison of tho wealth of tho two cities n great deal besides differ ences In population must bo allowed for. Drop out Now York's big luxury factories; throw asldo theatres, "lobstor palaces," tour ists' hotels and all tho glittering mechanism for transient, unproductive money-spending. Add lo theso largo items tho still larger sharo of Now York's money which goes only into Instruments of exchange. Then contrast with that city of offlce buildings and nmuso ment palaces, this city of homos, which Is also tho workshop vof tho world. Hy overy sign of smoking Btacl: and humming work room, by tho sight of busy factories nnd full railroad yards which overy turn of the cor ner brings, tho wealth of Philadelphia. Is constructive. Such wealth means security and prosperity In ono. The License of the Seas 0! N'CE more it Is said, In a cablo dispatch from Berlin, forecasting tho reply to the second American note, that Germany is fighting our battles for us, thnt sho is bat tling, In fact, for tho freedom of tho seas. Wo cannot feel any senso of gratltudo. Tho trouble with this thing called tho freedom of tho seas has always been that somo ono nation fights for it and then, If successful, keeps It It it can. Germany's possession of tho freedom of the seas would hardly bo an Improvement on England's. In other words, who rightfully owns tho ocean? Wo know whoso might Is ruler of tho waves. Adding Unto Justice SADIE OIIENAN will not go tho way of her sisters. Not If tho first session of tho new Morals Court nveans anything. If Sadlo Orcnan had been arrested a day earlier sho would havo beon haled into some Magistrates court, heard In tho hurry of an overcrowded docket perhaps by a not very sensltlvo or sympathetic Judge fined a fow dollars and shown out on tho strcot again, a llttlo bit sadder maybe, but decidedly wlsor. Not reformation but evasion would havo boen her goal. As it was, tho first case in tho Morals Court got sympathetic, understanding treat ment. Tho Judge, tho attorney, tho proba tion officer and tho defendant's lawyer tried, informally nnd helpfully, to work out tho problem beforo them. Tho result was the return of Sadie Orennn to her homo and her child under tho guidance nnd help of tho Court Aid Society. Tho first enso beforo tho Morals Court seems a good omen for Its future Social service and time for mercy havo been added unto Justice. Weeds, Bugs nnd the Minus Sign THE Iowa Stato Collcgo Is all worked up over weeds. It has got out a pamphlet to show that the farmers of tho Stato lose $23, 000.000 a year thereby. Whllo far from all of Iowa's two million inhabitants aro of farm ing ago or inclination, weeds must be n pretty large Item in each agriculturist's profit and loss shcot. Hut what about potato bugs? Before the summer's out Knnsas will doubtless furnish the annual statistics to show that tho chief consumer of Paris green stnnds between at least four or five million farmers and tho Fords thoy might buy. Also, lack of proper soil preparation, the neglect of suitable fer tilization theso muBt cost the farmer moro millions In losses. Dad seeds from Irresponsi ble Congressmen, wot Augusta and cold Junes, hailstones, rabbits and crows they all mean email fortunes that might have been, Jf we bellevo tho rural statistician. Think, for n moment, If the farmer fendod off all these troubles and inado the best of every advice-monger In the country, Morgan and Ilockefellcr would bo sorry "pikers" bo eldo him. And If these losses really did occur why, tho gentlemen on tho farms would bo doing a minus .n.uanttty business year In nnd year out. The Russians have copped Kop. Where Is that fabled "lmpetuousneaa" of the Italians? Do the Councllmcn who refuse to travel with the Liberty Dell fear the contrast? It has now been fully demonstrated that there is no trace of anti-Frank mob spirit In Atlanta. Final tableau. "The Drlva on Warsaw," repeated by speqlal request. Then complete change of bill. If that first "e" In Lemberg were only an "I," think what terrible execution It would do among the near-humorists. Dunkirk can start quite a nice little steel Industry If the Germans keep up the present dumping rate of 36 tons a day. The Aero Club of America, confesses to being considerably elevated mentally oyer the difficulties of assembling air racers just now. To Atlantic City bathing- guards Why not spend the winter as submarine tenders? A narmltejr occupation for a couple of able bodied men. The reports of allied advances in the neigh borhood of OalllpoU seem to plaae the accent definitely an th last syllable of the people and the plaee. It takes a, miaul or two to QOtfupU mur der, and three or four timea that many years to uavt tne penally f tne mutimm. The Thaw case 1 still under way and the Becker case is not yet cloeed. Justice, like peace, J often very bard to get. STOP WORKING : BEGIN THINKING The Man Who Earns His Bread by tho Sweat of His Brain Is Sure to Got On in tho World The Exam ple of Cecil Rhodes. By GEORGE W. DOUGLAS A BUSINESS man who was suddenly called away left his offloe In the care of his secretary. Ho did nol expeot nnj emergency to arise while ho was gone. On his return he naked the man how he had got along. "Oh, ntl right," was the reply, "Jones called up about his contract. There was n point that ho was In doubt about, and 1 told him to go ahead In tho Usual way." "Whatl" thundered the man they nlwaye thunder In such circumstances, "Whatl The contract was not like tho old ones, and we put that point In that he says ho did not understand In order to change tho conditions so wo could make a llttlo moro money out of it. Why did you not tell him tho difference?" "I never thought of Itl" "But why did you not think of It?" "1 suppose tho rent reason, Mr. Harrison, Is that If I were ablo to think of such things I would not bo working for you for $20 n week." Tilts man at that moment started on tho way to promotion, for tho reason thnt ho had entered that group of mon known as thoso who know not and know that thoy know not. Tho next time ho would think. Cecil Rhodes was ono of tho men who lifted himself above tho general lovol becauss ho used his brains. Once, In a romlnlecent mood, ho explnlnod to somo friends that after he had beon In South Africa for a whllo ho doclded to stop working and to begin to think. Ho had discovered by ob servation nnd reading that tho mon who ac complished groat things woro the mon who did somo thinking In advance. They earned what they got by the sweat of tholr brains and not by tho sweat of their brows nlone. When Ilhodcs began to think ho saw a great South Africa, unltod to tho British Empire, and enormous wealth for the mon who had tho courogo to risk everything in tho de velopment of tho resources of tho now coun try. There Are No Canine Caesars , Tho difference between Rhodes and tho African lions was that tho lions wero con tent with satisfying their animal appetites. If nnlmnlfl think It Is in tho most rudlmen tnry way. There aro beasts, I know, who post sentinels whllo thoy feed. In order to detect tho approach of dangor. I havo n dog which knows enough on a hot day to stir up tho fresh earth under n shrub that ho may get a comfortablo place In which to He, nnd when his bod has become hot from his body I havo scon him get up nnd turn tho cool sido of tho pillow uppermost by digging tho earth over again to bring a fresh lot to th surface. And when Teddy Is hungry ho will eat, nnd ho drinks when ho is thirsty. But reason with him as I may ho will hldo under the bed during a thunderstorm, or elso cling to my heels as though I wero n Higher Power that could protect him from tho ter rifying noises. Tho dog Is about as Intelligent an animal ns we know. But thero nro no canine Caesars. And you may search tho books in vain for tho records of n Socrates among tho lions or n Moses among the bull in cos o. So far as we know tho law of bruto llfo Is based on n narrow range of Intellectual ac tivities. The animals havo never organized a Stato nor formuated a system of philosophy. They havo not built cities nnd thoy woultj not work 20 years on a problem In chemistry or physics or go hungry whllo searching for a process of making a porcolaln glazo. Thero aro no Pallssys among tho beaBts. But tho Man sits him down and thinks and thus distinguishes himself from all other animals, bruto nnd human. Lincoln's medi tations during tho years of his npprontlco ship to llfo were to soma purpose. Ho lived in the free outdoors and -worshiped In hypaethral temples open to skyey lnfluoncoo and illuminations, and graspod firmly tho elementary principles of truth and Justice. Mnrtln Luther's mind worked and ho got hold of an Idea, to him n raro and precious thought, for which ho was willing to die. Watt thought and the Bteam engine was. Edi son thought and tho electric light Illumined the dark places. Henry Ford thought nnd the automobile was transformed from a toy of tho rich Into a necessity for tho man of mod erate means, and n tool of everyday use. Men of Action Are Men of Thought The orator who declared that tho country needs men of action and not men of thought did not know what he won talking about. Thero has never been an action wo-th whllo that was not preceded by thought. It was not blind Impulse that won the Franeo-Ger-man War, but careful planning and long years of preparation. You may 'say that this was not worth while, but tho German will disagree with you, Carnegie did not blunder Into mastery of the iron trade, and Rockefeller did not "Just happen" to control the oil business. No philosopher wrestling with a problem In metaphysics ever put harder thought Into his taBk than these men devoted to the mastery of the secrets of the forging of steel and the reflnlngof petroleum. Your failure to discover the destiny of the human soul will not nffect Us ultimate fate; but If you fall to forecast the future In your business you nro overwhelmed with disaster. A man by thinking may be unable to add one cubit to his stature, but he can broaden the foundation of empires. Ho can raise him self from a private In the rear ranks to the control of an army, and he can In one short lifetime transform half a continent from a disorganized Jealous group of settlements into an Integral part of a great nation. He who despises thought'nnd the thinker, therefore, despises the very foundations on which achievement Is built. It was Fletcher, of Saltoun, who remarked that if he could write the songs of a nation he did not care who wrote the Jaws; but It It were given to me to direct the thinking or a nation Pleteher might write all the songs he pleased without changing popular sentiment one par ticle or nffeotlng even the popular taste In music. There are other reasons for going to Qhureh on Sunday, but the farmer's wife who said she always enjoyed the morning service because. It gave her a. quiet hour in whleh to plan the weelCa work yraa wiser than sha knew. It was the only tljne In the week she bad to think, and she used It as beet she knew. BCHOBSOFWAR tba WufcUalftH Tina. ith ail the ehoaa werMog in tke TVreU. a ferule cannot be ijolt bed m tt aoub&g. Wk r A$ THE. cJlHOO "a n V. -7 , ' h 8 AW) AS SB C i3v mxs& to be. fdfc . i!?i fY -n L I LfirS C . VraiiSB' JW(r"0 IJSV-t Vv AS THE. Ultra pacifist us- fflfW& V. Know. TfcO Pfa J&BJmMj is. lm 'Yymlj HVnoM- pasyi1 IMMffih ) IBS! iK8$KBSII' v5 UNCLE SAM'S EXPENSIVE ARMY Every Soldier Costs $1000 a Year Many Millions Could Be Saved by Abolishing Posts Originally Established to Protect Settlers From Indians. By PAUL EXT to tho smallnosa of our army, tho J.N n most notablo thing Is tho bigness of the cost of maintaining It. Uncle Sam, not sat isfied with tho distinction of having tho littlest fighting force by many thousands of any of tho nations of considerable slzo and Importance In tho world, has to outdo them all In his lavlshncss of expondlturc. It Is a distinction, to bo sure, but not a desirable one. Whllo wo havo been "blowing ourselves" on tho appropriations to our army, Europo has employed herself scientifically In curtail ing in overy posslblo manner tho expense of maintaining hor vast military machines. And If she had not dono so her armies could not havo been bo vast as they wero beforo tho war began. In our regular army thcro aro less than 90,000 officers ind men, and on theso wo lavish In tho neighborhood of $90,000,000 annually. Flguro It out, and you find each ono of our soldiers costs us $1000 a year, from two to flvo times moro than is the caso with any other nation. In 1906, when Mr. Taft was Secretary of War, our regular military establishment cost us $72,000,000. France, ho asserted recently In an article on tho national dofenso, spent In that samo year only $133,000,000 to support her fighting forco of 546,000 men. Germany maintained 610,000 soldiers by an expenditure ot $140,000,000. So, Mr. Taft found, Franca kept an army nlno times tho slzo of our own meagre one at less than twice the sum wo spent, and Germany maintained a ten times larger army than ours at just twlco our ex penditure. Conditions havo not changed perceptibly since then, and with an increasingly Insistent demand from the peoplo for more adequate means of national dofonse, It behooves us to Inquire into tho relative merits of all the items In our military expenditures, frown upon any evidences of profligacy, do somo bookkeeping nnd stop up tho hole In our pocket. Professional Soldiers in America But beforo putting our expenditure to tho acid teat, so that, In our sudden zeal for effi ciency and economy, we may not expect too sweeping results from applying the cutting down process to the running expenses of out army, let us reconcile ourselves to the truth that Just aa It costs more to pay, feed and equip our boys In blue than It does other na tions to provide similarly for their soldiers, so will Uncle Sam's military expenditures proportionately exceed those of any other nation. Ours Is not a compulsory citizen army, but a professional fighting force, so that while Russia pays her soldiers the un thinkable wage ot $ a year, we are glad to engage our regular army men at n liberal wage ot $180 at the mlnlmiyn. Here is an Hem we would not think of skimping, nori would we think of cutting down tho reason able cost of substantial food and serviceable clothing. We will tolerate no policy of stinginess where the comfort of our soldier Is concerned-, we want it known wo aro grateful to them as the guardians of our safety and 'honor. How, then, shall Uncle Sam practice economy without any robbing of Peter to pay Paul? First of all, there Is our curious army post. ABk any American why Is an army post and he no doubt will answer candidly he doesn't know; that they "Just are." Then go to any Congressman or Senator whose dis trict la blessed -with one of these luxurious patohee ot green sward and put the same question to him. The chances are many times to one ha will get hot under the collar, and then, like the citizen, enlighten you that they've Just Bot to be. If he doesn't. It's a safe bet either he Is not going to be a can didate for re-election or else he is a pretty smooth one, and you had better look out for him. Obsolete Array Posts The faet is the army p,oat doesn't exist nowadays for any great and good reason. Once upon a time army posts were needtd to proteet the white settlers as they pushed the frontier westward. There was Justinsa ton then for these stronghBlds; but now tho army post offers no logical reason for uln up good American money. The army post belongs to the navy-yard-graft species ot the pork-barrel genus, Unete gam squanders H.iM.m annually so that the politicians will not be eoaei raised to go baek home and explain to their constituents wby these extensive mlUtaw parks had to be abandoned li is a cae of ' you vote fur my u. a, us R. WENDT postoHlco or my navy yard and I'll vote for your army post" and of placing local con siderations abovo national patriotism. When Henry L. Stlmson was Secrotary of War ho sent to Congress tho names of all army posts "which havo been located In their present situations for reasons which aro now totally obsoloto." Fort Bnolllng, Minnesota; Fort Riley nnd Fort Leavenworth, Kansas; Fort 8111, Oklahoma; Fort Moadc, South Dakota; Fort Missoula, Montana; Fort Rob inson, Nebraska; Fort Apacho and Fort Huachuca, Arizona; Fort Clark, Texas; Fort D. A. Russell nnd Fort Mackenzlo, Wyo ming; Bolso BarrackB, Idaho, and Fort Douglas, Utah, wero tho army posts ho named. Since then, of all our 49 antlquatod army posts, each of -which houses somo 600 poldlcru, we havo abandoned only four. Stntiona of No Strategic Value The army poets aro wasteful because tho cost of shipping soldiers and supplies to such Isolated "necks of tho woods" nnd of maintaining them In general is fabulously large. In case of war with an Asiatic or Euro pean foo, tho army posts, becauso of their Isolation from the Atlantic nnd Pacific coasts, would not possess a tlttlo of strategic value. This is another reason for thoir aban donment nnd tho establishment of mobiliza tion centres In places of great strategic Im portance. Incidentally, from the salo of tho vnluablo real estato theso posts ropresent this useful military readjustment could bo largely financed. After dealing with tho hapless army posts In tho manner they deserve, Undo Sam should tako up the question of reducing tho cost of supplying his soldiers with tho proper accoutrements for servlco nnd munitions for war. By giving this and lesser leaks our earnest attention nnd stopping up that largest hole of all whereby $5,500,000 escapes each year to the doddering, old political army posts, we can cut down considerably the cost of keep ing up our military household, and thereby Increase In a largo degree the slzo of it. FIGHTING PROFESSORS They Left Their Gorman Classrooms for the Cnmp When War Broke Out. TUB war In Europe, wtile not completely closing Germany's great universities, has practically depopulated their classrooms. In these Institutions before the war there were moro than 50,000 matriculated students. The University of Berlin hod nearly 10,000. Bill! at their tasks In the laboratory, how ever, soientlsts are working quietly but no less efficiently on problems raised by the war the geniuses who are said to be discovering sub stitutes for copper and gasoline and other things. They deserve a paragraph in the his tory of the war, because they give an InWIng of the extent to which the best brains of the nation are "enlisted for the war"-wh!ch to overy Herman is synonymous with a "winning war." Many of the professors In the German uni versities laid aside their classroom notebooks at the beginning of hostilities and went to the reai nnng-nne not the firing lino with which we associate the names of Haeckel, Eucken and the others who wrote for the benefit of out siders "the truth about Oermany," An Amerl cen, writing from Berlin, says that the "German air raids, for Instance, might not be quite ae successful It the nearest meteorology professor Whom we dub weather-prophet at home, were not called up on the telephone first and asked about the matter. In many other ways the army meteorologist t. as Indispensable as the commanding r,al. And on hap Inquisitive he will fll.wv.r prore.sor, S sociology and professors of economies, pro fessor. of history and professor, of lanju.g,, anthropologist., statl.tl.lan, and meet other In the catalogue plying tntlr Utt(1, , "" or the Immediate rear. nt "The advantage of having professor, of !. a battle I. apparent even to the layman bu believable. If one did not hear It ones..? tto-WJI contingent should ever ."iv vou " be sure that .eme German kouZZV fn Ul will be th,re U Tpu?tt,Ttwu, h"" ,B cathedral. the Toml J ,Wt As SOME. rORElOH FRIENDS WOUIP HM US- APPEAR. Count do Squash's chateau of Its palntlnn and Gobelins, tho right kind of a professor li rushed to tho scene and then and there this expert makes a thorough Investigation of th remains, If any, and writes a monograph on the subject, which Is made available for ths publlo If anybody wants It. "Thus, on tho heights overlooking Rhelms, I onco saw a professor squinting through a tolescopo at tho cathedral alternately squint ing and taking notes for tho beat part of an hour and n month later read his report in the papers, a. model of sound reporting. "Tho official German war 'Baedeker' to Bel glum and Franco will probably be tho greatest work of Its kind In extitence, for already a corps of exports have examined and reported on nil historic buildings, fountains, art monu ments, as well ns Inartistic onos, right up to tho firing lino. And If tho Gorman line ever advances the professors will not bo far behind." Prof. Fritz Freeh, of tho Unlvorslty ot Brcslau, calls the attention of his countrymen to tho need of geological knowledge In the army. This being a war of entrenchments, a commanding officer must know closely the na ture of tho country to which ho Is callod, that he may adequately arm his men with the re quisite instruments. Further: "Somewhat moro comprehensive knowledge Is required whon It is a case ot seeking ground which shnll unlto favorably both for tactical and gcologloal operations. Many field fortifications aro necessarily erected at certain definite locations, tho character of whose soil must needs therefore be taken Into the reck oning. But when there Is a choice between several posslblo tactical positions, the 'more easily worked ground would bo chosen. Hence-4 tho leader of the troops should possess a knowledge of nt least tho fundamental prin ciples of the construction of the crust of the earth, or, In Important cases, should have advisers at hand who can tell without loss of time, by tho appearance nnd by geological maps, where favorable ground conditions are to bo looked for. "Tho trained oye will bo ablo to discover, oven on a rooky subsoil, strata of clay where advancement trenches can he quickly driven, or perceive the necessity of tho carrying of artificial cover by tho attacking troops, when, for example. In front of a fortified position sufficient cover cannot be cut In solid rock In a single -night." BACTERIA ANCESTORS From tha Baltimore American. Marvelous as wore the discoveries of such prehistoric monsters ns the mammoth, the mas todon and the stegosnrus, they are now eclipsed by recent Investigations which show tho most minute microbes nnd bacteria In fossil form. The ancestors of our modern Infectious disease germ, nnd microbe, have been found In fos sils of the earliest llfo on the earth. Fossil bacteria have been discovered In very ancient limestone, collected by Dr. Charles D. Walcott, ""'ary of tho 8mtthsonlan Institution, In Gallatin County, Montana, In thin sections of limestone from the collections In 1914 the microscope now shows these very minute forms of life, some 20,000,000 to 30.000,000 years old. The bacteria were discovered In three sections cut from an algal form Included under th. gener o name Gnllatlnla, named after the great American explorer, Gallatin. The bacteria con sists of Individual cello and apparent chains of ceils which correspond In their physical ap pearance with the cell, of mlcroccl, a form of bacter a of today. The world ha. believed that Dacterla were modern forms of life, but now ?. Jtre "ladB, t realise that they existed in the aawn of world history, many million years ago. TEMPERANCE 5500 YEARS AGO From the ChrUtlan Herald. A foreign exahamrn haa M tn-.A.lMw m. ith! Th.w tl n existence an Egyptian oKTLm! of the dot0 ot 00 yars before the h.r.ii n .f.1?' whlch contains the following ??"! """ . ,My "on. do not linger in the wine Jhopr drlnk too much wine. It causeth thee iL, r wotda ardng thy neighbor which 'J0," ' membr.st not. Thou falleat upon th 5mm ' Xhy llmbs becme weak as those of a fiA. rJ1 cometh to trade with thee and Jh- i, , B0, Thel eay they. 'Take away the fellow, for ho Is drunk.'" This Is believed Istence temperance lecture In THE FAITHFUL HOUSEFLY A th u'vllle Courier-JournaL rich S J? ?"" not whether his master is a. to ii,r r but ,s a fal'hful to the cottager the hM.nwnerv?f a mansion." Same way with it U humble- Never deMrts a h0UM beMUM CHICAGO'S FIRST SETTLER Fr" " Chicago Herald. MayorTT,nmnot any means our oldest, settlers Pn " Mrtftln'J' " ' our bMt Hav. AFTERGLOW Th. ii ?L hMfdi ' the lonesome night, lit.L. J il $ 4h windswept e, ?vf pitched In a minor keyt iJkS T'0,9 world and the night w hur14 Wke a pall o'er the afterglow? KAirj,y!,r .n t it n i wltry blast, Wu?l4.B8' J ouwving hi. dy. Ulth hie tun te d wistful paetr Tw2i.'LU,!!5,,.y.. y.ou kMlw of mbr. iblogi Te f. ta J" wUdo WW .., thwWt tote WndUer vein wn.o th. day', mad labor eada J. Walter Sitrd. te ia Su-iie, 1 m ii ! TbBs ta $ m I