EVENING LEimER-PHILADELPHTA. MONDAY, JTHTT - im" ' --j 6 it. 8 I Ml PI j fc Irs ll PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY emus ir k. rrims. rattim .CBartea ir Lndlnirton.VlraPreeMent, John t Martin, gfhrrr afrt Trvnenrer. FMIIp A. Cotllne. Mhn ft piiiranw, inrtnfirt KDtTQRTAL BOARD: Ctira 11 K Cvati. Chairman. t. It W7IALBT Rrette WHx JOltN O MAMTTM General ftaetneta Manager PeMlshed daily At Tsbuo Ltoen BolMInf , tndereodene 8tjttar, Phfladeltihla. LtMit Cimn. Broad and Cbeetnnt 8lreti Arusno Cm rrett-Vnim BIjBdlfi Ni Tone 170-A, Metrermtltan Tetter DnuoU SW Ford Bnfldlnf Br. Mm 409 0lH Democrat MMtnt GHteieo IMS Tribune SStWInr LoirepK 8 Waterloo Plec. rail Mali, 8. W. NBWS BrnBAVS: WtaalwTO Brawn .Tie rtt BtrlMlnr !'W rota Bcaun The Time Bnlldlflr BntiH Braaae ,...80 rrledrtcnetratM 1-o.wi Bimt i rail lull Bart. W. Pill I Bnauv 32 Rue Loula la Grand fiunscniPTiOM Tinun Br carrier, DiiLt O.slt, etx ewita Br mall, postpaid eutelde of Philadelphia, axcept wher foretrn poatafa ii rrqsirra, uiiLi oi.T, on montn, iweniir.nreeenns Dm.l Chili, one year three doilare. All mall ab aertptlana parable In advance.. Notice 8uterlbtr wlehlrr addreae chanced mut ltr eld aa well at new addreta. BELL, MM WALNLT KEYSTONE. MAIN MM fcy Arfitrree oil remmwilrafloRii to Jhrfalw Lrtltr, Independent! Square, WhUad'lfhta xiTaato at int rmunttrnli rotorrlca as atconD ctin wilt limit. XIIE AVERAGE NET PAID DAlI.r CIRCULA TION OF Tltn KVBNINO L8DGHR FOR JUNE WAS 02,87. PIIIIADELPIIIA, IttWDAY, JULY 12, 1915. There cannot be "mute, inglorious Miltons." It ts a contradiction of terms. A Magnificent Report WHAT Is the outstanding thins In Di rector Cooko's magnificent report7 Is It tho 1,000,000 saved In 19U over 1911? Is It tho 4,200,000 that he expects to sco caved by tho time, his administration is ovcr7 Is It tho revolutionary Introduction of scientific management Into the business of a city? Is It a dollar's worth of street work for overy dollar expended? Is it the considerable total of such Bmalt but significant things as routing tho mosquito through a campaign of education by motion pictures? Is it the stu pendous fact tha't 4000 city employes, a good sized town In themselves, havo had the spending of $31,267,000 In three years, and havo spent It at every point to tho utmost public advantage? Is It tho realization that all this has been dono In tho face of that condition which has shaped Itself Into a Philadelphia proverb, "tho antagonism of an unfriendly Councils"? No, the outstanding fact Is no ono of these things, not even the flno total of them all. It Is the assertion ringing through tho whole report of that now Ideal of communal Bcrv Ico which the TJIankenburg Administration has brought to Philadelphia. Men llko Di rector Cooko and his associates, even down to tho last of that 4000, aro doing a now work In a new spirit. They are working for tho common weal of tho city. Mllltantly, they uro putting Into their work something of that purpose which animated tho greatest city of all time, Athens. They are working for the common good and achieving for them selves and for every citizen somo new benefit of civilized life. What does the gang think today when It reads that report? Is it struck with some dlvlno envy of such work? Or docs anger surgo within It, and drlvo It forward to new plans of Jobbery and fraud next fall? Getting the Most Out of the Schools THE Child Federation Is showing the Board of Education tho way. At Its re quest It has already been permitted to uso a classroom in every school where summer playgrounds are conducted. With tho excel lent example of ono Twist In mind, tho Child Federation ts now asking for moro. It wants to utilize tho whole building for teaching mothers and children how to bo healthy. It wants the city to get all possible value out of Its educational Instruments. The Idea is right In lino with social prog ress and business common sense. No manu facturer would vacate his plant during four months of tho year. Corporations doing a lino of work dependent on seasonal demands Introduce other lines to tako upt tho slack. It Isn't necessary to go so far West as that much-heralded city of Gary to find educa tional buildings used nil tho year round. Our colleges learned tho lesson of commercial common sense and human needs long ago. Summer schools grow In scopo and useful ness every year. Tho registration at Penn State has Jumped 25 per cent, over last sum mer and runs above 1000. There is no reason why summer classes In the public schools, and night classes, too, the year round, shouldn't change our educational system from an instrument of teaching chil dren when summer lazylng Isn't In order, to a means of fertilizing with knowledge those great human fields which accidents of In dustry Jeavo fallow far moro than culti vated. No prlca Is too great to pay for an educated citizenry; good business sense In the utilization of public property Is a pretty small one. A Healthy Body for n Healthy Mind IT IIAS been the despair of many a phil osopher that while civilization grows finer, subtler, more complex, and produces peoplo with keener mentality, better brains with moro In them, tho raco degenerates. Tho body becomes lax as the mind grows Arm. Bonus, muscle and sinews Bhrink, and health with them. Within very recent years before the Great War, England furnished a PUblle example by having to lower tha re. quirements of height and health In order to obtain the necessary army recruits, Tha reason is partly natural the neglect of one side of man when emphasis Is con centrated, on another and partly artificial the produot of letting- Industry run wild in its demands on human energy and Its con sumption of human nerves. Both ora rem edial; and both are being remedied. A de liberate, conscious regard for physical health Is being promulgated In laws, In literature. In the press and In the schools. Speaking only of the last, gymnastics plays a larger part In all kinds and ages of In struction, while mora ts taiigiU of the uses nd abuse of the body. TJ'ewt aspects W this propaganda of bMttfe In Philadelphia Dome from the Child Federation and the Board of Education. The rtdwaUon to ex. tending th claw room work in eoonatitm KlaygMeoads. by whlh H.m girl, in the twantb and eighth grades were taught ttw sra of babies and young otiUdrta last unnr The public- school nag, fell will add mom very practical and personal In strucUtui to the i-uurses they have given In pbysielrttjy fit care of tits teeth, personal tUajilin, irciee is bmtklag and physi cal dovtriopiMiit wlU for ri of imuue- tlon given utmost wholly by nral wmus and through personal demonstration Such ai mnees mean no desertion of the school' function to teach the brain. They mean ofilr a facilitation. A healthy mind Is almost Im possible, certainly not very useful, Without the old Greek duality, a healthy bod'. Last Move of the Obstructionist THAT some obstructionist or other would run to the courts In an effort to defeat rapid transit has been obvious for some time. No great enterpriser can be under taken that some disgruntled person Is not found to object. The city had Its taste of obstructionism when It was proposed to In troduce lighting by gas, and It has had Us fill of the same sort of tactics whenever since any modern project has been consid ered, nut progress continues despite tho Lilliputians, of whom thero aro not enough In this whole community to prevent tho con summation of the people's hopes, Mr. Dallam Is quite within his rights in bringing suit, whether on his own Initiative or as tho representative of Interests that havo no desire to disclose themselves. It Is fortunate for the public, howover, that not the least valuablo part of Director Taylor's work has been his careful consid eration of tho legal technicalities to be ob served as each step was tiken. It was on a legal question that tho great fight against tho "trick" ordinance turned. Through a maze of technicalities the Director has pur sued his way cautiously, and It will bo sur prising If any flaw Is found In tho legal foundations on which tho transit program was Inevitable that a suit of this char acter should bo brought. It is a good thing, therefore, that It has been brought so soon. It will occasion somo delay. Nevertheless, on a matter of so great lmportanco prompt action by tho courts may reasonably bo anticipated. Indeed, tho city will undoubt edly endeavor to get tho Issue out of tho Inferior courts and Into tho Supreme Court at the earliest possible moment. O. Henry onco searched for "Tho Voice of the City." He found It. "Chicago says, un hesitatingly, 'I will'; Philadelphia says, 'I should,'" That was In other days. In April, with n chorus of ayes that completely drowned tho noes, Philadelphia said, "I will havo rapid transit." Philadelphia meant it. Go Ahead and Win THERE nro two ways to go about getting tho Republican National Convention. One Is to sit complacently by and wait to see whether Councils will let tho Convention Hall be built. The other Is to go ahead and Invite the convention here. The first course means certain failure; tho second means probable success. It Is, therefore, tho courso which tho Chamber of Commerce will adopt- Philadelphia is facing a new era. Tho time has past for business men to twirl their thumbs while waiting for Councils to perform Its obvious duty. Now business men ore prepared to tako the issue into their own hands, to go ahead mllltantly, to forco Councils' hand and compel that body to fall Into lino. Tho Chamber of Commerce need havo no fear. Councils meets In Soptember. It will have beforo It the specific question: Shall Philadelphia havo tho Republican National Convention? Its vote on tho convention hall project will be Its answer. Thero Is not enough splno In Common and Select Coun cils together to turn the program down. Tho way to get tho convention Is to get tho convention hall, and tho way to get tho convention hall Is to mako It the test of getting tho convention. The Toll Road Relic ATOLI, ROAD Is a relic, a withering, tot tering, bothersome relic. It came Into being In thoso "good old days" when coun ties and States were such timorous things they doubted their own abilities to do any thing but pass laws upon their Inhabitants, and left obviously essential but expensive and unremuneratlve things to bo dono by private Initiative. Unfortunately for Pennsylvania today, but a blessing to tho State of other days, thero was plenty of energy and fore sight lying round looso which tho corporate people sadly lacked. The result as and still Is tho spectacle of much-traveled roads llko Lancaster and Montgomery avenues tak ing tolls for what has come to bo regarded as tho commonest of freedoms, tho freedom of the road. It Isn't alone the much-harried automo blllst who will rejoice if tho petition of the Commissioners of Lower Merlon township to free Montgomery avenue goes through. It Is the spirit of public works, the spirit that inhabits tha soul of the State and makes It an Inspiration as well as a helpmeet to tho people who created It. A lookup cures any Chicago lockout. The Lemon Hill Association's plcnKj belled Its name. After al, the Kaiser might have sent us a rejection slip. In the theatre of without applause. war encores continue It sounds as If somebody had locked up a bumble bee In the British Cabinet. Plana and motorboat races' ao popular Just now in and around tho Adriatic. It begins to appear that the ship in ques tion gave tho bombsters the Minnehaha. Fighting in tho Tyrol Isn't so bad after all. See comparative temperatures' here and there! minaiMHp.il ita m a The "slBht-slng" Jitney would doubtless pick out Councils as tha flrs sight, f jt was only home. Wouldn't it be ohoap- to ljuwre Taxpayer Dallam against damage and go ahead with the transit plan? 1 'i i ii How many guMsw as to tha make of "the small ar" that ran into tho rear of the Frewtdeat's automobile? Tb 13 something mtt of nbtto la Gar many's oUoiee of verbs, viz.: "Ownwny had always panauted itself to b gowned by the principles of progrosj al humanity to dealla; wtti ttta law of maritime war." But what About gas bomb asd Bltamr MARVELS WROUGHT BY PATRIOTISM The War Has Led an Italian De faulter to Give Himself Up for Fear of Being Called a Deserter, and Old Men Beg to Fight. By ADALBERTO CAPORALE r T WAS tho moral factor that turned tho Italian peoplo, as a mighty whole, heart and soul. In tho church and In the mnss meetlng, In favor of war against Austria, Italy's former ally. Trieste and Trent do not represent, In fact, either big territorial acquisitions or nny great economic advan tages for the Kalian Kingdom, though thero aro military reasons, necessities of defense and other material advantages. They, how ever, could not bo tho deciding factor for the great mass of tho people. Trlcsto nnd Trent are tho two unredeemed sisters of tho "Cento CItta;" aro tho captives upon which the captors, the hated Austrlans, exercised their denationalizing energy and power. The historian of the future cannot fall to rccognlzo and emphasize tho fact that, moved by n powerful, unchcckable moral factor, tho Italian army, that Is, the Italian people for the armv Is, In democratic Italv, a vital part of the whole compact of the na tionhas achieved the quick military suc cesses of tho first stage of tho war mainly owing to the "morale" of tho troops and tho nation. There are Incidents and episodes which seem to us, 5000 miles away, unusual and astounding, nnd are only tho normal happening of every day, the result of what has been tho moral dynamic forco moving the Italian masses In these last few months of anxious waiting and warmly cheered hopes for tho opening roar of the cannon and the rattling of tho machine guns. So It has been seen that nearly all tho members of the Parliament havo requested to bo sent to tho front, nnd havo been appointed offi cers In tho territorial mllltla. But It Is ccr tnlnly surprising to hear that old men havo Insistently begged to be given a uniform and a rlflo and bo allowed to bo killed for their beloved Trlesto and Trent, and that boys fn their early teens havo deserted their homos to go to tho front to fight for tho "unre deemed." as they said. A Gnribaldi Lieutenant Volunteers Ten days after tho opening of hostilities an old, white-haired man, still having tho appearance of perfect health, climbed tho stairs of tho War Office nnd passed his card to a high ofTlcer. He was Immediately intro duced, and exhibited documents proving that in 1S60 General Cooenz, ono of Garibaldi's lieutenants, had appointed him a sublieu tenant. Ho asked to bo sent to tho front with, tho rank given him by Coscnz. Tho old man, who was no other than Commenda toro Farrarl, a famous sculptor, resident ot Buenos Aires, was born In 1837, nnd was ono of tho "Thousand" Garlbaldlans who con quered a kingdom and presented It to King Victor Emmanuel II. Ho had crossed tho Atlantic with tho absolute confldenco that tho Government would listen to his fervent prayers and send him to fight against tho Austrlans. Tho streets of Rome are crowded with aged soldiers, all volunteers, many of them wearing tho ribbon of the Corona d'ltalla, others tho green ribbon of Commendatore Maurlzlano. still others tho black ribbon of tho Order of Malta, nnd all donning tho uni form of privates and ready to face all tho hardship of tho Ilfo at the front, though many of them belong to the Roman nobility. Their dream Is only one to be allowed a fight, nnd their only regret Is to see others, younger and stronger ones, sent beforo them. An old man, 61 yenrs old, Zanobl Barsantl, has been enlisted and sent to tho front after Insistent requests. lie was given tho rank of sergeant. He Is a veteran of another war against Austria, .that of 1S66, and fought at Montana nnd was with tho troops who occu pied Rome. Another old man of 71, Edoardo lasher, succeeded also In being enlisted, after a medical examination and insistent begging, and was attached to a regiment of infantry. Ho fought with Garibaldi in I860, and six years later against Austria as a Bersagllerc. Patriotism Converts a Defaulter But hero is an extraordinary story. Last year Bonavcntura Cortl, a messenger of p. Florence bank, disappeared with a package containing 160,000, which ho had been ordered to deposit In the Banco di Napoll in Flor ence. All tho efforts made by tho police to discover tho whereabouts of Cortl failed. Seven days after war had been declared againsi Austria, uortl went to the Cara bineers station In Florence and gave him self up. saying that his act was prompted by fea.r that he would bo considered a de Berter. How many of theso people, who mako a supremo gift of their lives to their country. Joyously, with tho samo readiness and tha same spontaneous dash as If they were going to help their mother out of a dangerous situation how many ot them will return to their wives nnd children? They know, theso old veterans of wnr and these others who have fought recently against tha Turks, they know what Is war. But they go to the front for their "Patrla." ready and anxious to Bhed their blood for tho oppressed sisters of Venice and Brescia. It is the combination of Ideal and material reasons that has brought about tho moral unification of Italy in tho present war against Austria, and It is the high morale of the troops and tha people which makes tho military successes of General Cadorna pos sible and tangible. PLAYING OFF THE DRAW From tha Cleveland Plain Dealer. Military experts declare that the war will re sult In a draw. That would be too bads for as In the case of most draws, the contestants would be eager to play It off and determine the championship. KEVERSE ENGLISH From the Atlantic City Ravlaw, After all, the essential difference, so far as we are concerned, is this: That when the Ger man Government doesn't like what tho news papers ay, u auppreeaes them; and that when the Amerlean newspapers don't llko what the Government dees, they euppreea It. TAGORE Asia hath found a tongue Which the world can hear; Ala, oir nurse when tho raee was young, Asia, whose harp has been long unstrung, Asia, whoee heart has been long unsung, Aela speaks out sweet and clear, Again we lt about one hearth and feel the glow. Aryans who parted. East and Wet, ten thou. sand years ago; We built; tbey built; grew Westj giew Bast; We fwgot we ever bad eat at a eoaraea feast; Theie were ware and bate and allmce aad wrong. We ate brought together by a poet's song . B. WUaen ta flkirlmm 4fceuafUl-Ttise. IfaSatfffCTKllBalW g3GaMeBJK .afcr '" ""'' JattfMSSfe "ttf-r . Uf,tiif5 ""..-J..J.v,.. ....' w..rw .-.(-(.cm. wwrtUUtMl' THE BLOCK-PAVED ROAD TO SUCCESS The Heads of the Incompetent Make a Smooth Highway Over Which the Capable Find It Easy to "Get There." A. A. Christian Talks of Opportunities. By GEORGE "TF WE had had an organization llko yours JL wo would not have neon compelled to go out of business." This Is what the manager of tho Simpson Crawford Company, of Now York, said to tho manager of Glmbel Brothers after ho had seen tho Qlmbel forco tako hold of tho stock purchased from the retiring company and get It ready for transfer and salo In their Philadelphia and Now York stores. Such an efficient organization ought to offer splendid opportunities to young men and women anxious to get on In tho world. Ono connected with It ought to absorb knowledgo of the best business methods without conscious effort, Just as a child brought up In an educated family learns to speak correct English, adorned and mado picturesque by tho colloquial metaphor, 'sometimes called slang, that ho learns from his playmates. Tho apt child picks up both with equal facility, and uses both with equal case. I once heard tho 3-year-old son of a physician, when nsked where his grand mother was, reply: "Sho Is out on tho Btcps, chewing tho rag!" And ho was conscious of neither disrespect nor other impropriety. Tho languago of his tlmo was reacting upon his Impressionable Intellect as truly as cream of tartar reacts upon blcnrbonato of soda In tho baking pow der biscuits that his mother ought not to let him cat for supper. Acid Tost of Opportunity With a vlow of discovering how the alkali of ambition could bo brought in contact with tho acid of opportunity right hero In Phila delphia, I called on A. A. Christian, manager of tho Glmbel store, and told him I wanted to get somo words from him that would en courage the young men and women of tho city who are Just beginning to earn a living. "They got too much encouragement al ready," ho replied, with feeling. "What young peoplo need Is not encouragement, but hard work. Let them start In an honest business, and the rest depends on them. But the business should be honest In the first place. That settled, nothing else matters, except the Individual himself. The troublo with most young peoplo Is that they do not caro about anything except the money they get. They take no interest In their work. This store is full of peoplo who do not earn J5 a week for tho company. But those who do tako an Interest have no trouble In get ting on. "Why!" he exclaimed, "If a boy atlcks his head above tho rest bo much," and ho meas ured about half tho length of the first Joint of his first finger, "ho will bo seen by somo ono In authority and pushed ahead. If wo do not push him ahead, somo one clso will catch sight of him and take him away from us. Young people havo no chanco? Why, wo force chances on theml Everybody does. Every big business Is going over the country with a fine tooth comb to nnd men who can do things. But they aro not easy to And. Taking the Shears to the Sharpener "If a new boy comes in hero and I tell him to- get these shears sharpened" ho picked up a pair that looked aa if they needed it "and ho asks me where the sharpener's shop Is and to look up his address in the directory and how much ho ought to pay, a man be gins to swear. But that Is what wo are up against all tho time. There are places where shears are sharpened, and wo want somo ona who knows enough to get tho Job dona when wa put It up to him." There opened then to my vision tho long vista of tho highway to success made smooth with tho block pavement of tha heads of tho Incompetent, where there would be elbow room enough for all who choose to travel by that road. So I asked for the store proc esses of employment and advancement. "Wo have about 4000 people with us now," MY. Christian said, "but in tho holiday sea son we have about 6000. Every person who oomes in here is first put through the Col lege of Salesmanship. Wa call it a college instead of a school, because that sounds bigger. But It is only a school, and It does not jtake very long for a bright young man or woman to learn all that la taught there. We tell them to be courteous and accommo datlnsr. and we show them how to make out a Balta slip, and we test them In penman ship and simple mathematlee to disc-over whether they can compute the amount of the sal oorreetly. Then we put them be hind a counter and permit them to watch the salespeople at work When we are satisfied that tbey can sell goods without making erieua xntat&lses w give Ua a. salesbeoj THE LAST SHOT M ri , Je 1 S-e-''',''i.afi;'y" aaaswcSrti''' W. DOUGLAS of their own. And wo pay them while they are learning. Thero 13 a minimum amount which a girl Is supposed to sell In her de partment to earn her wages. When sho sells moro we begin to watch her, and If It keeps up wo raise her pay. We've got to do It to keep her. Records of tho Recording; Angel "Somo girls provo to be especially valuablo because of tho attractive way In which they arrange tholr stock nnd tho orderly way In which they keep it. Such qualities offset defects In sales ability. We know what every person In tho store can do. Why, our records aro as complete as thoso kept by tho recording angel I do not mean any Irrever ence by that. But to show you what wo do, let us tako tho caso of a single girl. Sho comes In nnd Is put at a certain counter, say laces, for example. We record tho dato of her first employment and her wages. We watch her to discover whether sho Is cour teous to customers nnd how sho gets nlong with thoso In her department, and make a record of that. Wo keep an account of her sales nnd tho speed with which she Increases In efTlciency, so that wo can toll in a moment how valuablo sho Is to us. Wo record also tho successive Increases In pay and her pro motions. Wo may discover that she Is not fitted to sell laces, and wo transfer her to somo other department and give her every chanco to make good. If she falls wo have to let her go. Wo follow tho Bamo rulo with tho men as with tho girls, and wo pay them In proportion to their ability to serve us. You know that If you hiro somo one to help you sea goods ha must help or get out. "What rewards aro open to tho most effi cient? It depends entirely on tho person. We have some heads of departments who nro getting from $16,000 to J18.000 a year, but thero Is no limit to tho amount which they can make. If they sell this year $100,000 moro In their department than last year they will receive a bonus. You can see a man lea'lng the store some night with a big wad of money in his pocket as his bonus for tho season, and the next day ho will buy an automobile with It, and Jt will not have to be a Ford, either, Thero nre women as well as men who are getting large Incomes be cause they have proved that they can earn money for the store. "Wo are advertising all thd time for help, because we are continually looking for peo plo with tho right kind of ability who will tako an interest in their work beyond tho mere pay envelope. We pay them, of course, but we want people who are willing to pay tho price of getting on, and that Is hard and faithful work." And there you have it, Mr. or Miss Ambi tious Young Phlladelphlan. the secret of get ting on in the business of selling mer chandise. THE CORN BOYS OF OHIO From the Ohio Stat Journal. .h0hl tn "l w"01-? t0 pennlt Interest to lag In the Buckeye boys' corn-growing contest that haa brought such excellent results during the three years It has been In operation. WhMeve? cau.e has operated to decrease entries this yea? value In rou.lng the spirit of youth in ?ent?no Jn"nln5- " "? bn a most valuable object leS son In demonstrating that Ohio soil can be mad. more productive when brawn calls to it? aid the modern science, of the soli d n w.eae aays wnen the cost of llvlne- la hiirh end shows no Inclination to decline the or boy who shows how production may be In creased, how the soil can be made Toirodu?! E?.0 f, produot8' "ntrttata tpffi terment of the community. Tha firt J.... ,7 applaud and encourage" ti. hSd.nS! Ing wnat s perhaps the only rational and t ural method of combating the high "cost t ifi Ing. The State that would .tana d?y by inrt permit an activity of such value to falf fif 5 2orltirat1dultrtanC8 b" In'aW- 10W have taken part. Some relwr, ii!t th.an the loes of Interest" It U of lnno?tanV8 ir terrain, that reason rt taffl! The average yield of corn In n,i . L!8 els. The boys lUaCli'ffi? " ft' rrown on one aore. jgnwi! younAta,. -strated that M and wKhels wfrl .5(m.?n' owes a duty to the b7a wh ' ,?: nI make these &, y3 who w "wWlng to KEEPING TOE BALANCE From the Sprteflal4 Republican. S.VrnalSPenh.uer their balance co completel8 ,rf,y Bot ,Mt profeo. One reads J tL." a" the Open Court tbftofeaiSJ &' Bub- t :ttr!SV3K?yK3r2F " x&mcZte&at ffgt ot German professors who navo renounce! their forolgn honors and titles. There was, it seems, a woman member of tho society wh was moro patriotic man mo men. when the; society refused to excludo Its French, Engllih.' and Russian members, tho woman In ouestinnl promptly withdrew her membership, and, Prfjl fessor Deussen says, "published her brav'el resolution In tho columns of a local paper iqj1 her provincial town." "Wo shall not shed anrl profeseor. Thero seem to bo prospects of f restoration of "Slttllchkclt" in somo quarter wnen tne war is over. l COL. SHRAPNEL'S SHELL It Is the Chief Reliance of the Artillery if tho Present War. From Harper's Weekly. The great rellanco In artillery today iiijj the shrapnel shell. Shrapnel was lnvttfel over 100 years ago by a young English oScS of artillery. Ho had studied tho splld kftm inai coum epecincuiany pamage ono man,' mi whose area of effectiveness was too small, hi the comparative Ineffectiveness of tho ordinary sneii tnat burst into a row unaimea iragmemfi This ofTlcer filled a shell with bullets and added a charge ot powder sufficient to burst the sheu.1 This officer was Colonel Shrapnel, nnd the prja jecuie sliu carries nis name. r or yearsult held but slight esteem, wo used It In tho CM War but, unless tho burst was exactly timetl tho effect was slight. But with tho burst a& trifle above and 60 to 60 yards In front of UiF enemies' lines it hurled a blast of bullets wlthl deadly effect. Shrapnel does not burst Inta fragments like common oxploslve shell. It ha? merely a sufficient charge of powder to bloWl Its own head off and at tho name tlmo throjj out tho bullets contained in tho shell casinrj Theso havo, naturally, tho velocity of the pro-1 Jectlle Itself, together with tho slight additional'; force of the bursting charge These bullets scatter In a cono-shaped spray llko a chtrge of shot from a shotgun. Properly buretlnj under all Ideal conditions, ono threo inch In' H In -n af a.. .Iirnnnal m n (1.M m. .. .. Jl '1 ut.t, ,.... aiiiuiitii.i ..Kill lb ,11-111 bUll dill Ulfl.j organize a company of Infantry, and two cr. tnree, also bursting perfectly, simply annihilate it. And shrapnel Is fired today from all fornu of guhs. It Is used in howitzer fire thf howitzer being a cannon that throws a venfl heavy projectile a short distance with a light cnargo 01 powaer. ji is uropped upon troops with this high angle howitzer fire, bursting aoovo an army iikb n snower bath ot leadea death. THE NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW We do not recognize that because n submi rlne Is physically unable to observe the commoy law or the seas regarding tha caDture of, prize, we should revise the law to fit these pjg sicai jncupacuies. uosion UIODc. Whether the United States shall have a "allaj protective tariff" or a "revenue tariff" Is not n. tmportnnt as whether the country Is to be sum jected to continual tinkering with an econonilS question. cmcago Tribune. The primary was instituted to abolish the sway of corruot Dolltlcu nnd tn d-tlirnne the boss. This was In urgent need, and still is, trajfl up 10 aaie ine primary nas not done wnat was. expected of It. The Ohio State Journal. AMUSEMENTS PALACE THEATRE 1214 MARKET STREET PICTURES 10 A. SI. TO 11 P. M. 10c ALL THIS WEEK lOcl FIRST SHOWINO FUNNIER THAN EVER CHARLES CHAPLIN! IN HIS LATEST COMEDY "A WOMAN" BURROUlfDINQ BILL INCLUDES , TODAY and TOMORROW HAZEL DAWN WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY EDOAR SEliWTM In "THD ARAB" FRIDAY and SATURDAY IRENE PENWICK (Formerly Mra. Felix leman. and Lata Star ot "The Song; of Sonea") in "THE SPENDTHRIFT" WILLOW GROVE PARI VJ.J.UJtt n.2JK&EJtt,X AND HIS ORCHESTRA' VICTOR HERBERT. Conductor. CONCERTS AFTERNOON and EVENING RESERVED SEATS 10c. EACH CONCERT. IN ADVANCE AT TUB PARK MAIL OR PUOWU . .. TODAY 2 S80 Overture, "Raymond" ,,.,..., 1:80 Fantaay from "The Serenade", T6 'Cello aolo Mr. I'aul Kefer. 0:15 Suite, "L'Arleilenna" No, 2 ,, Tbowii Ilerbfdl Bl DANCING EVERY EVENING AT THE, CAfQM LATB DINNER ot Cl8lSm BPHOIAL DOLLAR PLATS TOMORROW SUNDAY SCHOOL DAY B. F. KEITH'S THEATRI C11H8TNUT AND TWRLIT1I STHr.'" BELLE MASON RATrRVR Xr TOtTEIl LADDIE CUFF; FOUR ANTWERP Q1RLS WAM b FITZOgRALD. AND OTHER STARS j THE MARKET ST ABOVE IM II A. U. TU 11 r Charlotte Walker i TMni.INOT Stanley Added OUARLBS CHAPLIN In Ue Firet WH ox New cooiaay, -A woman " . ,, BYUPUOifY OROUBSTSA and BOLOiaTS NIXON'S GRAND harry imr.MAN & o inniu rrti T inv ' nlLE BlDVtMIl WARREN it D Today 5. IB. 7Jb TRICII, DENNY 4 BYl-, VBTTS, OAKDINBR TRIO t-icruH -AlUll.' ' WOODSIDE PARK Free Vaudevil i. utiijji T'e' ijr" " DAILY . NVSMlNUg 1 A "