t M V to--ff 1 K it n 1 tmriftr r frnnrr rnxtnANV rUfltIC LEDGER COMPANY crnufl u k ct-nTis, rsttitssT Charles It tdInton,V!errwldnt. John C Martin, Secretary rnl Treaeurer, rhlllp 8 Collln, John B. jvilllomt. Dlrrctore . . KorrontAii uoAnDi Cues It K CcTl, Chslrman r II WMALBT Bwcutlv Editor JOHN C MAIITIN O&ieral fcualneae Manater FuMlahed dally at rcsMO Lidoir nulldlnr. Independencs Square, Philadelphia. I.rnots rKtnt. Broad and Cheatnnt Btmti ATrTio Cut ..ri-fM-enlon Dulldlnir flaw Ymhc 170-A, Metropolitan Tower Dmoir . . . ... S2 Kord nulldln St. Loci . . 109 aloee Democrat Ilulldln CllIOAao.... ..1203 Tribune llulldlns Ikcoh S Waterloo Place, Tall Mall, S. W. NEWS nt'RBAUSt . . WianiKnTO-r Itcar.AU .. ......... Th Poet nulldln Nw Yorm: Cestui The Time nulldln rnUK Ilraiun ..HO Frledrlchatraass lAvno Dcauu 2 Tall Mall Baat, 8 W rim IIOKIO. .. .. ...... .32 nue Louie le Grand BunscntrTioN tehms Br carrier. Uiilt OM.T, lx cenla By mall, poetnald euulde of Philadelphia, except where foreign postaire l required Daii.t onit, one month, twenty-five cental Diitx Only, one year, three dollara All mall aub crtnllons payable In adtance. Notiob Bubecrlbera wlahlnir addreas chanted muat live old a well aa new addreaa. BELL. 8000 VALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN KT Addrene nil eomtmmfcafloM lo r.enlna Ledger, Independent Square, Philadelphia. XNTCltO XT TUB riIII.JBn.HtlA rOBTOFMCS AS BICOKD" CUII MllL HATTtJ. T1IH AVEHAOE NET PAID DAILY CinCUIiA- TION OP TUB EVENINO LEDOEn FOB JUNE WAS M.8B7. PniLADLLTIItA, MONDAY. JULY 19. 1915. Future dcltghta seem farther awav than past Joys. Tho Gadfly at Work IN ALL this uncertain war thero seems to bo nothing bo fortuitous as tho relations of America and Germany. Between tho dim cultles of communication, tho varying and alien tempers of tho two countries and the speeches of Mr. Bryan to hyphenated audi ences and to Mr. Dumba, tho natural antag onism of Interests aot up by tho favorablo situation on tho Allies on tho high seas has been fanned hither and thither, now hot, now cold, in a way that makes for no sort of mutual understanding. Sunday brought tho newest complication of tho sort. Secretary Lansing's account of a communi cation to Great Britain, demanding tho ap plication of tho rules of International law to American cargoes now In prlzo court, would undoubtedly havo done much toward a better understanding between Germany and Amer ica, especially as It camo on top of promises from tho German Admiralty of moro respect for llfo at sea and on top of well-meant at tempts by Ambassador Bcrnstorff to read a moro pacific and conciliatory meaning Into tho last German Note. But these moves toward a mutual under standing wcro very successfully overshad owed by tho news of tho attack on the Or duna. The attempt to torpedo without warn ing and tho actual shelling of' a passenger Bhlp, an America-bound ship, a ship carry ing neither ammunition nor contraband In any form, naturally aroused now Indigna tion. The moat unfortunate part of tho wholo affair, howover, was that paper after paper .treated thla attack as a direct refu tation of Germany's conciliatory attitude during tho lost week, as a new defiance, as something that threw all chanco of harmony to tho winds. That Is tho Impression Ameri can readers undoubtedly carried away. Back Up tho Chamber of Commerce IP PHILADELPHIA'S Councllmen ore as progressive and as anxious to advonco the prosperity and good namo of this city as tho Chamber of Commerce, on adequate con vention hall, centrally located, will soon be gin to tako shapo for tho prospective Repub lican National Convention next year. Chair man Illlles has told Secretary Kelly that many of tho national Republican leaders favor tho selection of this city. Tho Cham ber of Commerce has tho thanks of every loyal Philadelphia for the initiative It has shown in going after tho convention, for tho way it has put tho Issuo up to Councils and for tho publicity campaign It Is preparing to undertako to mako Councils show Its colors Every business man and every voter, too, should back up tho appeal tho Chamber of Commerce Is preparing to send out to mem bers of Councils, demanding that this body take action at Its first meeting In September. Philadelphia Is now an active candidate for the convention. With an adequate conven tion hall wo would have a handicap oft every other city In the country. Today Philadelphia Is forging to the front rank among nationally advertised cities. But wo don't want the sort of advertising that would follow our rejection by tho National Committee because Councils won't provide tho convention hall. $1,000,000 Worth of Honest Work SOMETHING else besides the Vare brand of harmony must havo taken the heart out of tho contractor-politicians who read Sun day's papers. It waB the announcement of dates for bids on sewer, street and bridge building for tho city. What a sharp and cruel reminder that the Blankenburg Admin istration has nearly 11,000,000 of publlo work still to give out, work that can never drain fat contractors' profits into sagging pockets! Human; All Too Human BEFORE things began to hum, women and war were supposed by a good many antl militarists to partake of an Inherent, divine and salubrious antithesis. They were the corrective to man's pugnacious predilections. If women had the say! And now 30.000 women have braved a rainy day to parade London begging for employ ment in the munitions factories. There aro quite a few things, of qourse, which tend to dull the point of this contrast. Thirty thousand woman are not. after all, a majority, the women who mourn, mourn at home. Further, the 90,000 were led by women like Mrs. Pankhurst, who constantly seek wider aetlon for the female of tho species, and who In the present case are supporting war because they hope thereby to end it. At bottom the whole thing Is no more than another argument against generalization. W omen are Just about as human, just about na heroic and Just about as pathetically ro mantio as men. Once war is loose they ean be counted oa for patriotism. But before, perhaps for a little more sanity where, hu man life is concerned, I HI I I1 mini HBWIIH'IBBg Another Blankenburg Record GOOD works gatMr momentum. In the last months of the Blanksnburg Admin istration a hundred fine results of honesty and esscieni j are piling up Now more than ever before the voter can get a Just meas ure of what good govertuneat can do for Philadelphia !.( week was a terribl weak. The poor, . lukiy. tbe youag have rarely sjana i jousb ati.& a seven day ot trial by heat EVENINtt and humidify. Tct what Is tho city's mor tality record for tho period? Four hundred nnd ono deaths, ns compared with 461 In tho samo week a year ngo. With tho exception of tuberculosis which Is traceablo to bad housing and ill nutrition rather than to atmospheric conditions tho new eases of communicable dlscaso developed last week wcro fewer than a year ago. Such a record is a feather, Indeed, for the cap of the city's Bureau of Health and the caro It has had slnco Mayor Blankenburg began his term. It means a steady growth In efficiency year after year. And the momentum of such an accomplishment Is likely to last clear into whatever sort of administration tho voters glvo Philadelphia In November. Helping tho Harmony HE MIGHT havo picked out a kinder tlmo to break tho news. "Tho Hon. William S. Vare, Congressman from tho 1st District of Pennsylvania, whoso bauiwicK is vinuuuy South Philadelphia," shouldn't havo lot tho rat out of Mr. Lcnnon's bag until Jim Mc Nlchol had enjoyed a llttlo of his prospective vacation nt tho Clovcland trotting races. Tho Senator might havo had to stay over nnd rchcarso his Harmony Quartet again. It Is hard to say what elements of Phila delphia read Mr. Lcnnon's editorial with tho most Interest. Thoso of a literary, oven ora torical, turn of mind searched It with won dering eyes. Early business opponents of Congressman Vnro must havo found a par ticular fascination In tho sentence: "Bo foro his cntrnnco Into politics ho had exhib ited a capacity for tho details of business, which is to this day a treasured recollection of thoso with whom ho dealt." But of nil that scholarly plea for section alism In city politics, no portion con have attracted tho Interest of tho best and tho worst elements of Philadelphia so sharply as the following: j. Looked at from whatever angle chosen, ho Is the so-called "logical" candidate, tho type of man needed to handle tho tremendous municipal problems which await solution. Estimating tho thoughts of BUCh a ono ns Jim McNlchol Is no slmplo or salubrious matter; but It is safo to say that tho contractor-Senator thinks thoso "tremendous municipal problems" might bo moro profit ably handled by somebody nearer homo than Washington and South Philadelphia. Nor does that "faculty of quickly seizing details," which Mr. Lcnnon parades, commend Itself to a rival of brother-contractor "Ed " As for Phlladclphla'o reaction to this mat ter of n solver for "tremendous municipal problems," It Is something very liko tho smile which Illumines tho faco of tho commuter who reads that Plgn along tho Reading: "Edwin II. Vnro, Largest Street Cleaning Contractor In tho World. Underground Con duit Department." Thero Is, however, ono time when tho pub lic values that "Judgment amounting almost to prescience," which Mr. Lennon attributes to tho South Philadelphia Congressman. That is tho tlmo when tho gang Is after "har mony." Philadelphia can stand a lot moro of It. It can stand enough to bring about another tragl-comedy such as Congressman Vare enacted in 1011. A Scholar and an Athlete TO THOSE grouchy persons who think that scholarship and athletics cannot thrlvo in tho samo body wo commend Norman Taber. Hero la a youth who was a Phi Beta Kappa man at Brown University, 13 now a Rhodes scholar at Oxford, and last week crowned theso achievements by running tho fastest milo on record by professional or amateur. Not only did ho lower tho provlous world's amateur record of 4 minutes 14 2-5 seconds, made by John Paul Jones, of Cornell, also a scholar and an nthleto, but ho lowered by three-twentieths of a second tho world's pro fessional record of 4 minutes 12 seconds mado 2D years ago In London by W. G. George. Overindulgence In athletics at tho cxpenso of scholarship is becoming more and moro a myth In tho collego world. It Is on abuso which may bo controlled by tho proper sort of faculty supervision. Indeed, It Is a ques tion If our faculties are not a llttlo unfair to tho athletes, because In most universities tho nthleto must carry fower conditions than tho nonathlotlc student. Young men like Taber are a credit to this nation, whether as scholars or as athletes. Our Part in the War rET NOT Americans worry over tho place 1 tho United States will hold In history for tho part It has played In this world war. Whllo we are trying to maintain strict neu trality and to keep out of "entangling alli ances" our sympathy for suffering and our efforts to relieve It havo been world wide. On top of the achievement of feeding starving Belgium our country haB rendered tho most conspicuous service In checking tho ravages of typhus fever In Serbia. Distinguished Europeans have paid tribute to tho tlmoly and effective steps America took when war ridden Serbia was dying with 300,000 typhus cases, aid which Sir Thomas Llpton said "has made America beloved by all Serbians, from tho King to the lowest peasant." Feed ing tho starving and healing the sick is cer tainly a nobler thing than helping to spread tho ravages of war. Labor wants a few of the munition melons. Now England BayB, "Me, too!" on the am munition question, What is the proper cargo for Inventor Lake's freight submarines? Watermelons, of course. t With the typewriter factories making war munitions for Europe, thero ought to be a big boom In the peri1ndustry, Why remark that It is the Liberty Bell which brings out all this enthusiasm In the West? No ono would think that the presence of our Councllmen accounted for it. If the Frenoh and Germans in the Argonne continue pushing each back in this annoy ing and unseemly manner, the umpire will have to penalize them both for off-side play. Possibly some of the shipyards are right about the inferiority of the submarine, bijt the awkward thought simply will intrude that there s m?re meney Jn building dread, noughts. i- 1 awy J 11 li Woman suffragists in Ungland have Won at least one point: Wh&rt they begin work in the munitions factories Lloyd-George promise that they will rasclye equal pay with The paajses that tba Italiaaa occupied Sat ur4ay my have been iMM feat high, but waraa't ball so long as the LiDerty Well pass that the Juakeur-guardswes of Couaoita occupied oa their way West. T.inainn-imTT,AD1i.LPHIl. MONDAY. JULY 19, 1915 THE WEAKNESS OF ANNAPOLIS Professor Fiske, of Columbia, Says tho Naval Academy Is Handi capped by Its Inability to Employ Enough Up-to-date Professors. "pvOPE SHEETS," with answers to tho U approaching examination questions, gh en out In advance, nnd easy access to tho department offices at Annapolis, as revealed In tho Naval Academy Inquiry now under way, havo directed criticism not only toward tho cadets, but toward tho faculty for com plicity on their part In tho system. Somo 18 or 20 graduates of Annapolis aro sent to Columbia ovcry year for advanced work In tho higher mathematics, electrical engineering, wireless telegraphy, ballistics, etc., nnd as many moro aro sent to Massa chusetts Instlluto of Technology In Boston for work In a cotirso In naval construction. Discussing tho question of why It should bo necessary to send tho navy men away from Annapolis for their most advanced work, Professor Thomas Scott Flskc, administra tive head of tho department of mathematics at Columbia, said to a representative of tho Evenino Lcoann: "Tho United States Naval Academy at An napolis and tho Military Academy at West Point can never hopo to securo the services of teachers of great distinction In tho scien tific world until they can offer thoso tench crs dignified conditions of service. It would bo Impossible for a teacher of tho highest scientific ability and reputation to accept a teaching position In olther Institution under tho conditions existing today. "Ono of tho crying needs of the country Is that tho Government should undertake tho education of military and naval engineers of a higher typo than they aro now prepared to turn out. Teachers Wink at Fraud "Ono of tho unfortunate results of tho pres ent situation Is that tho teaching staff havo como to wink at practices among tho Btu dents In preparing for their examination that would bo disapproved and immediately pro hibited In tho best colleges. If what wo read In tho papers is relloblo tho teachers them selves put into tho 'dopo sheets' circulated nmong tho students tho answers to tho very questions they Intend to ask In tho approach ing examination. Tho motive, of course, would bo to bring tho number of men in their classes ablo to pass up to a higher average. "England and Frnnco and other nations havo solved satisfactorily tho problems here in Involved, nnd somo of tho greatest scien tific men In tho world hold professorships in tho great military and naval colleges of thoso countries Tho head of tho Royal Artillery Collego nt Woolwich, England, Is Sir Alfred George Grccnhlll Ho was nothing but an ordinary professor of mathemathlcs In tho Ordnance Collego to start with, but tho Brit ish Government knighted him In recognition of his services to tho country: tho young British artillery officers feel that it is an honor to be permitted to study under such a man. By this policy of recognizing and con ferring prestige upon her great scientific men, England Is ablo to securo their services for her army and navy Tho United State3 Government could never hopo to get a man of that sort, ono with a world-wldo reputa tion, to accept a position In her military and naval academies. But England can. Handicap of Civilian Professors "One of the most distinguished mathemati cians connected with any of tho educational Institutions of tho Government Is Professor William Woolsoy Johnson, who has been a civilian professor at tho Naval Academy slnco 1691. Ho has novcr received any rec ognition from the Government, has never been accorded any official prestige, and now, when ho Is an old man over 70, ho Is forced to go on teaching past tho ago when he ought to retire, becauso tho Government re fuses to pension him. Unless a bill has been passed In his favor very recently thero Is absolutely no provision made for his old age. When some of us tried to got a bill through for him not long ago wo were re fused on tho ground that It would create an unfortunate precedent, nnd would commit tho Government to a policy of pensioning Its civil employes. On tho other hand, the Car negie Foundation to whom wo appealed re fused to includo tho civil employes of tho Military and Naval Academies on their list on the ground that It would bo encouraging tho Government to neglect Its duties. "Our Government has set a precedent, how over, In Its recognition of tho lato Simon Newcomb, who was director at tho Naval Ob servatory at Washington, and who, In recog nition of his great services, as ono of tho greatest Bclentlsls of his time, was given a rank equal to that of a captain in the navy. Slnco his death other civilians at tho Naval Observatory In Washington havo been given rank In the navy. But mark this the thing that helped Professor Newcomb to his recog nition was the fact that ho also held a pro fessorship at Johns Hopkins University and 0 separate salary. This gave him a certain strategic Independence In his dealings with the Government, "The trouble, of course. Is primarily duo to the Jealousy of the army and navy offlcerswho hold the high positions In theso academies, nnd aro Jealous of any recognition of out siders, and regard them all as interlopers. Theso army and navy officers were them selves graduated from their studies some 20 or 25 years ago, and havo not kept up with the newest thought and discoveries and re search In the scientific world." HOW MEXICO MUST FEEL From the Portland Argua The small boy who eats green apples knows how poor Mexico must feel with the disagree ing factions rioting within her borders, . , WISHING - I've only but to bend my head To see the Western skies grow red Beyond the home I used to know, v 'And hear the gentle cattle low As they come to the pasture bars, And see the vanguard of the stars Come dimly Into the pale sky, And hear the whippoorwlU's sad cry, And fsel the all-pervading- love Of the old home I wearied of. And I have but to close my eyes To hear my mother's lullabyes, And fel myself grow young agalnj And be a boy as I was then, With cotton line an4 alder pale Beside the old-time ttshiur hole. Neglecting line and hook and bait, And sitting till the hour grows late, A little figure all alone. Wishing sad wtuhtog I were grown, That poor, pathetic little tadl With aU on earth to make him glad Waiting with longing for the years ' Of disappointment and of tears! Th year are good, the tasks ta do. Tb chance to tao4 straight, stsaag aod true. Had MP, for aU thawtfht warth wfctt. To meet nilforte wtth a aailU. But I UuaK t9m w " tiw Att wish that th WH yeans al - J JMwt h- ta Uuumub Fsit. BUN0OFONEEYE ANDCAN'T SEE OUT OF THE OTHER THE LIPS OF THE ORACLE ARE DUMB Reminiscences of St. Clair McKelway, Who Abandoned the Bar for the Tripod and Made Brooklyn Journalism Famous His Philadelphia Brother Gave Him Loyal Legion Button. By GEORGE "mHERE nrc two kinds of journalism, X namely, Journalism and Brooklyn jour nalism, and tho latter Is an acquired tasto." This epigram, delivered at a dinner In Now York by St. Clair McKelway, editor of tho Brooklyn Eagle, was greeted with apprecia tive laughter by the guests. Tho distinc tion of Mr. McKel way, who has Just died, Is that ho ac quired tho tasto and then mado Brooklyn Journalism d 1 s t i n gulshed. Ho belonged to a later genera tion than Greeley and Dana nnd Raymond, but ho had tho doml n a 1 1 n g personality that characterized these men, and he still believed In the power nnd Import ST CLAIR. McKELWAY. ance of tho editorial pago in making tho character of a newspa per. Ho devoted his time and his energy to that page, and was in tho habit of writing from one to two columns a day. I havo said "writing." Ho did not write, but dictated his articles to on expert typewriter, who reproduced them directly on tho machine without tho Inter vention of shorthand notes. I havo seen him walking up nnd down his room declaim ing as If before an nudlence, gesticulating and ending a rhetorical period with a shout of triumph. Tho emotion which ho put into this sort of composition was so strong that It saturated his words and reproduced In tho reader tho feeling that inspired them. I havo seen him so moved that tyio tears filled his eyes as he poured forth a procession of Bentonccs filled with an appeal to the noblest sentiments of tho electorate. Ho was born In Missouri, but ho was edu cated In New Jersey, chiefly by private tutors In Trenton, where ho lived with his grand father, while his father was engaged as a surgeon In tho Civil War. He did some writ ing for the Trenton newspapers, and, aa ho grew older, he took an Interest In politics. He studied law and was admitted to tho bar, but ho never practiced. Delivering Frelinghuysen's Speech Ono of his favorite stories Is how he cam paigned New Jersey with Senator Frederick T, Frcllnghuysen. .Ho was reporting the political meetings for a Now York paper going from town to town with the speakers. Frellnghuysen was lato In arriving at one meeting, and McKelway, who was known to the committee, was asked to fill in the time. He consented, and thought that he could not do better than to tell the crowd what the announced speaker would have told them. Ho had heard Frelinghuysen's speech every night for a week or two, and ho knew It as though It were his own. So he launched forth. When ho was about half way through Frellnghuysen camo in. He was in the middle of an argument, and he kept on until he had made the point. But before he Btopped ho noticed that Frellng huysen suddenly sat up In his chair with a look of astonishment and then leaned back with an amused smile. McKelway offered to withdraw, but tho crowd shouted, "Go on! Go on!" and Frellnghuysen insisted that he should continue. Ho finished the speech. Then Frellnghuysen arose, "Tho gentleman who has Just spoken," he said, with a quizzical look at McKelway, "has said what I should havo wished to say so much better and so much more eloquently than I could have said It that I will not de tain you, save to say a few words Jn in dorsement of his remarks " When ho sat down he seized MoKelway's hand and shook it heartily. "How In the world did you do It?" he asked. applanations and apologies followed, and there were no hard feelings. Named the "Carpet-baggers" He coined many phrases that have beoome the common language of political dlsoussJim. It was while be was employed on the New York World that he called the reoonstruo. luMtun. fiepumtf-an Amoenoiaers in the WloehQlders In the 8ajtJ, ' Carpet-baggers; tng on the telegraph k.T VT 'T . . T '"sui-iue amis, which he at one time shared with B. H., Clement, who was editor of the Boaton Trail- script for years when a meaesge came la an nouncing ttutt the Administration was aead- lag a tot or Northerners into the South He VMU baadaa f a ia wuieU h, cau tbe W. DOUGLAS. Invaders "carpet-baggers," and sent it to tho composing room. Manton Marble, then editor of tho World, saw tho heading In tho proof, and asked McKelway to wrlto an editorial article about tho now phrase. Tho next morn ing "Carpet-bag government" wns denounced on tho editorial page and Its Inauguration announced In tho news columns. Tho phrase fitted tho situation so exactly that it still survives. Ho was an editorial writer on tho Brooklyn Eaglo for soveral years, and then went to Albany to edit tho Albany Argus, owned by Daniel Manning, who was to become Secre tary of the Treasury In Cleveland's Cabinet. "My salary was $3000 a year when tho Re publicans were In power and $3500 when tho Democrats controlled tho Stato government." ho said to mo once. "But I managed to sco to It that conditions wero such that I got $3500 most of tho tlmo that I was with tho Argus." A Tradition in Albany After a short interval under another editor ho succeeded Thomas KlnselUj. as editor of tho Eagle. Kinsclla is tho man who is credited with nominating Hancock for tho Presidency. Long before tho convention ho had sent William C. Hudson, ono of his ablest political writers, through the South and tho West to talk with tho leaders about Han cock's availability. Ho sowed tho seed which bore fruit In tho convention. Kin sclla was a great editor, and for soveral years after McKelway took chargo of tho Eaglo men In tho office would say in times of crisis, "Oh, If KInsella were only hero to handle that subject!" And It galled him to know that thero was a feeling that ho was not so big as his predecessor. But ono day ho went back to Albany and visited tho Argus office. His friends all said that they wished they had him back thero again. "And whenever something big happens," they told him, "wo nil say among ourselves, 'Oh, If McKelway wero only hero now, wo should have something worth while.' " Ho Btopped worrying about tho traditional greatness of Kinsclla when ho discovered that he also was a tradition. Whllo he was in Albany he delighted In unuaual words. Ono of the office boys said that ho kept In his desk a small dictionary of obsoleto and obsolescent words tho ofilco boy did not call It that and studied It every day. And thoy Bay that tho Albanians waited eagerly for tho Argus every morning to discover what now word tho editor had used. In his later years, however, ho cul tivated a simple and direct style. I once used "caoutchouc" in an article. He camo; to mo and said; "I wouldn't use that word. The girls in the composing room do not know what It means. Put 'India rubber" in Its place." But he would persist in writing long sen tences. At a dinner In honor of his birthday the boys of tho staff printed on the menu tho most recent example of his ability to marshal words that moved with orderly pre cision to a full stop, and it filled as much as three inches of a newspaper column. Best Speech of the Bunch Thero was a tlmo when ho was ono of tho most popular afterdlnner speakers In New York. But ho had to give up going to pub Ho dinners becauso it was impossible for a man to work all day and then talk nil night. The popular, if profano. estimate of him as a speaker was expressed by an Irishman after attending a mass-meeting in the Brooklyn Academy of Music, held to de nounce soma political chicanery. "That blankoty, blank, blankety blank Mc Kelway mado the best speech of the bunch " And T. P. O'Connor, who heard him In a debato on immigration, wroto: "I never heard a wittier, a more sensible or mora pul verizing speech than that of St. Clair Me. Kalway. The one man who oould have 8.rdwm,h VP9 Jn W experience Is Sir William Hareourt; and I am not sure that even he oquld have made Jt" Wke so many other men. he shortened the name glvn him at birth. Ho was chrls. tened St. Clair Kirtley MeKelwav w. L remarked to me once. , mmf)a w " ; many for one mn to earr. so dropped one ry quotations from the phlloiaier KirtuJ jm tbe editorial page you wmew i be is." w wlM Although he was not the etdaat aoa ha wore tbe Loyal Legion button Htl J be died. a m V -wl (THE ' "J - A DtWjtntnrsmt I claim to momborshlp in tho Legion in favorl of tho younger man, to whom It had somy value becauso of his relations with publlol men and events. GERMANY BUILDING BATTLESHIPS From the Liverpool Journal of Commerce, Tho fighting strength of tho German navy at , tho orcsent tlmo con only uo a matter of con jecture, whllo Its power of expansion has beeiH tho subject of consiaeraoio speculation. To her battle squadrons tho enemy will un doubtedly have added tho Kronprlnz, which wai laid down at Kiel In tho mlddlo of 1312, while? the battle cruisers Lultzow, launched at Dantzlc. near tho end of 1SH3, and the Ersatz Hertha, lnld clown in tho same year, will certainly have i Joined tho waiting battle cruiser squadron by! this time. The best known of tho now ships under con-j structlon are tho Ersatz Worth and the "T,"ij both commenced early In 1911 Theso vessels are! approximately of 23,000 tons displacement and"! mount eight 15-Inch guns. Compared with th Queen Elizabeth class they carry the same ar mament much moro einclcntiy protectea, duisi. an Inferior speed. Tho Germnn fleet Is most likely to tight wheal the land campaigns have gono so badly for tiers that a master stroke Is necessary In order tl retrieve the situation. When that state ot atj fairs will nrrlvo Is. nt tho moment, beyond mors tat knowledge Many critics still antlclpiUJ that another winter campaign will not be nKtS'V sary, but this view appears to err on the op- ffl tlmlstlc side, and It wo neglect it ano nssum j that 18 months of war la a practical nosslhllltjj" then tho German navy Is likely to prove V much more powerful argument than. It Is at present. T!nrlv In Hia tvnr thft RUnftrlnr value. of the 1 battle cruiser was emphatically demonstrated. --' --- "- ------ jr- . and it tho Dig snip facilities ot mo utrman , yards were concentrated on rusnlng out ima. class of snip the squadron would be immediate Iv stremrhtened Firms such ns the Oermaiiai nt Kiel, Btohm and Voss and the Vulcan Com-S nanv nt Hamburg, and the HclUchau yard ai Dahtztc. could probably between them complete Esven or elgnt oatuo cruisers Dy ino ena ot -next sprlnir. when the Germans would have available something like 20 dreadnoughts and 15 battle cruisers. The nbove figures can only, of course, be quite general, but they serve to Indicate that If the final sen battle be postponed till next 1 ear tho tussle is likely to assume proportions hither- : to undreamed of, and far beyond the general Imagination. MODERN DIPLOMACY From the Washington Star. "I understand that you have a new motor car? "Yes " "Do jou drive It yourself?" "Nobody drhes it. Wo coax it." A BAD COMBINATION From the Ohio State Journal. A Massachusetts man had a monkey wrencly tern from his hand by a thunderbolt. Anyi man. Massachusetts or otherwise. Who attempts to turn that kind of bolt with that hind ofa wrench is very certain to come to grief. THE MANXMAN From the Boston Evening Transcript. "The only material source of Manx Income,' complains Hall Calne, "Is the visiting In dustry," He forgets literature. THR NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW Secretary McAdocs admirable plan for llmlt-' (nt thn xnaf rt foHoml hiillillnirn will haVS tnS, unanimous support of everybody In all tn-jW towns it uoea not uneci. ew ium ". There never should be another Thaw casjn (II nio oiam ui .lew lum. ... ,1 it life nnd squandered monev have Riven US that 3 assurance, they have not been spent In vain. New York World. Mr, Daniels Isn't getting to the root of the trouble in his department, lie is sitirrmi"- around the edges, and it Is doubtful whetntg he can accomplish much with his new awujj uotroit .free 1'ress. nfiA Thnn. la a n.lfln nt M TtanlfilS tl would delight to be confounded If there o steam behind his Idea and If It can be national Ized we shall have started toward efficient Chicago Tribune. , It Is not a bad sign that Secretary Lansln shows, like President Wilson, a disposition W d think things out alone before talking about them, Successful government by the Pf'jM depends quite as much on thinking aa on -lug. Springfield Republican It Is the eminently practical nature of the Edison genius which constitutes its value, im mediate and prospective. He brings about r' suits., ,JfU more Inspiring selection could be made" aS alflvUer and director of the under taking, laboring our navy up to the standard. requJrtd by the new conditions of defense and a( warfare Boston Post AMUSEMENTS B, F. 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