' i n EVENING LEDGEB-PHIEADSfcPH T 7, 1918: i i a Etwitbtg gySeiHger PUBLIC LKDGfiR COMPANY crnrfl ir k ctm-ris. fattwixt CVirtW II tlf!tm,VI,rtftMn, Ji C Hurt In. fiTfi"7 AL.Tr' ""' "'P s 4Mhwi. Joan a mnrontAt. hoAnD. frelt tt Ccint chairman P IT WtrAt.Kr Fwattre Edltet tOtUi r MAhTIN 8' flfrwrl rtuMn Manager PaMlthe-t dailr at rcauc Lzcogx ntitMtnr, indtptMtnce Square, rhlU4elphla. j&w Cmmt, .... Ilto! and CiSrjtnnt Btrrrta TATbAfttto Cm JYt.t).(o ttuiialnr TSjrj Tea JTO-A. Mttropolltan Tnirer ddHrritAiy. 4RT tn am, L-.a iit.ai. .... . ... .oku r dui j)ui(iiniR 4AQ nfjil.. rtiMAMt tliifMln., kv..itiiiu , vein movTv iiunains "wi a niitnoo nice, rail Mail, B IV . itfunixotoy I?ct!io Th ! nnlMIn Neir ToK nt-nil TH rtmM llulMlnr ItraUf iimmv no PrlMrlchtrF Ufrtv mitpjir J Pi: Mull i;m s w Pimi luetic .IS Itno Louli I Orn! . St'nseiUPTION TEnJIfl , Tit tkttltt, Daily ovtt, nix ctnti. Ujr mll r"'P"M futMn r rtillaHplila. ttetpt where forclitn peiuaat (J rwuilrnt Dint Orti, on month, twratr-flmccnlt! Dn, Oiit. dim Tr. thrr rislUrn. All mull nub. airfptlooa rrMc In acltanc. j: Notirfe Riihacrlhrr nlohln ddr changed munt (! elO i well ah new iddrtM XEvsTONr, Main som more England's war than France', it should be fought by Knghshmon t least as de votedly nir by the French. Tito vulgarity of volunteer service In suoh a time has oppressed many Rngllsh observ. era, to be compelled In beg tor what should be freely given Is humiliating tnough; Id bo subjected to Inquiry nnd sneers If one does not volunteer Is Inevitable but Ineffective. Nothing can be effective except compulsion. And how effective Compulsion can be Gcf maiiy Is now Indicating, somewhere In Poland MU,M WALNUT f . uj - . . . . i nuur-r nil rornmNnirnnon rrt At rninff i Leilper, Imtrreniteitet SQvnre, FhllniMptita, amnru at tit rmr Ahririm r-oTorrrct lit arcoiD Oi.is Ulll, MATTIX. Tiif: AvniiAOn nkt paid uaii.v ciiicoi.a- T10.V Of TUB KVENINO l.KDCinn KOIl ,UI,Y WAS ,SU. riiiLAUixriiiA, satuhhat.aucust r, 191s. Next Prcstijcnt Must Be a Republican COMBINATIONS In support ot foreign trade are now Illegal. American traders who wish to coopernto in winning foreign marts cannot do so. There Is a law against It. Amcrlcan-bullt ships enhnot operalo on tho lilph seta. Congress has anchored them In port with legal hawsers fr"om which thcro Is no escape. It has burdened them beyond tolerance. It has, In fact, enacted laws which to all Intents nnd purposes prohibit American ships from engaging In foreign trad. American manufacturers nro timid about building great plants for the manufacture of PRINCE LEOPOLD, CAPTOR OF WARSAW SepUifigenartflii Chosen by tho Kaisof to Enter Polish Capital as His Kcpresentative Is Ono of Many "Aged" Commanders. By EDWARD R. BUSHNELL ANDTHRft nirftfl rnmmnnrier imfprfi thrt JCX limelight of tho European wart 1'rlncft Leopold of Uavarln, who wilt be 70 years old on his next birthday, Is the man who, tech nicalty at least, has captured Warsaw. And ino laiung oi tne pol ish capital, after tho failure of two pre vious campaigns, Is unquestionably t ho crowning military achievement of tho Teutonic arms. Tho advanced ago of Prlnco Leopold makes him a fit companion of tho military com mandcrs on both sides of this fray. Field Mar shal von Illndenburg, who led tho great semicircular swoop r. ,T.--- ,,. ..... --. -- -- - nciiiiuiiuuuti dyes They know that tho termination of nround Warsaw to the northeast, can tho war would mean the enlranco of hugo retirement to take command of tho quantities of cheap German dyes, against W- A"d ho '? now s ot dash to the southeast to cut off tho This ttmoplcjor nhat men call iu,ccsa begins , early and cuds late ends onlu In the ' ccmelcrtli and ctcn there the monu ment of success toner In marble pride aboic the humbler ui aves. The Drive to Famb 'rpHEltt: Is only ono nntliloto to failure. J. Disraeli called It "constancy to purpose." . Success Is no properly of birth. Riches, tr place, even happiness, may be; but success "'Is a relative quality, a shining out above ono's clicumstnncn iih above ono's follows. Success la Innntc only so far us strong will and hardihood uro thero In the fibre of tho , mind Life may dufcut either of these If health Is lacking or If some nccldcnt of op portunity forever bars the way to the work dn which a man's m rpu.su may fasten. The ;most object of failures may erect his llfo trlnlo monumental worth, as Daniel Defoe, bankrupt In business, contemptible as a writer of reclpci for success, made himself tho etcrlustlng benefactor of mankind when he found his metier In "Robinson Crusoe." U Tho wedding of vocation and avocation, the Union of lot' nnd mirniii.-t mnlrnn tint successful mm. Uomctlmcs it is u matter ot 'the slowest labor: nt others It brings sue- ce!8 In a Hash. Often tho deepest of desires npinnot win It: again a man finds his goal with case and creates another still to con ( quer. '.And tho motive? Is It always so baso as satirists Ilko to suppose? Purpose Is tho K1ey. Without It, success Is a counterfeit ot j, 'accident: with it, success turns to the satis faction of alms thnt embrace mankind. Tho .t'drlve to fame lies deep In social usefulness. jji uuuiia a better world each day. Closing Down the Health Factories j Q1UPP08E a man owned a factory, n wcll- O built, well-equipped factory. Suppose Its 1,1 ---. ' ... ki iiuiitna. ouppose xnai . j In tho ruh season, the tlmo of all the year I It hpn ttlA tnntnrv ni.tfl n,..l, 1 a .. . j tnge. could pay tho highest dividends, tho UV.UCI uiumni ii uuwn. no nau tne machin ery, he had tho power, he oven had tho workmen; but ho lacked a superintendent, tind ho was afraid to spend tho money. So he shoved tho workmen out of tho door and locked up aflcr them. Ho thought he was economizing y letting his capltnl Ho Idle. That is no fairy talo. It Is tho story of seven Philadelphia playgrounds this sum- mor. j Xf you want a llttlo sidelight on this typl- Ical blunder of Councils, read tho current lssuo of Citizen's Huslncss, tho little leaflet i at tho Bureau of Municipal Research. It J calh up tho remarkable fact that while tho v..,, "Estitw iia upporiunmes, uio suburbs t nro awake to theirs. Arrlmnm. n ,iu think, had plenty of yard room and plenty of fresh nip iulthm, in.. -. . . Ardmoro has given ono of these miniature j health resorts to Its boys and girls. It has 1 learned tho larann rvmnMio nn, J that tho playground Is a necessity, not only - -- i".ci uui as a ncnooi or tno r-body. Play la essential; but organized, I uuporvisen piay is n dozen times more 1m J portant. i ie which thoy could not successfully compete The Underwood law Is n law to prohibit American cntcrprlso from going ahead and grasping Its trado opportunities. Where tho Democratic Administration haB touched business It has been with tho fingers of dentil. Its policies are unscientific, child ish nnd destructive. Americanism means going ahead; tho Democracy has pursued a policy of holding back. Thcro seems to bo no Industry which It has assisted, no factory which can traco H-j prosperity In any degreo to Democratic law. What prosperity thcro Is has resulted from the ncgatl;lng of Dem ocratic policy by the Great War. Tho next Administration will have to grap ple with conditions of enormous moment. Tho nation's position and trado nro becom ing intcrnutlunall7cd The horlron Is broad ening. A statesmanship that contemplates the whole world In Its considerations la Im perative to tako the place of n statesman ship formerly more or less limited to In ternal affairs. There are policies to bo ovolvod on which the place of this nation In tho world will depend, on which will hang the prosperity of tho country for genera tions. The next President must bo a Republican 590,000,000 for a Comma IN ONR day und one operation tho war uto up $90,000,000. Tho Petrograd War Ofllco granted t50.000.000 for tho removaV of mills and factories from Warsaw to tho In terior ISxperlfl place tho value or buildings and stores destroyed before tho evacuation at $23,000,000, while tho wrecked bridges on tho Vistula aro said to bo worth $15,000,000. Such Is tho slight punctuation no more than n comma which tho fall of Warsaw makes lij tho talo of war's progress. War Makes No Contributions 1 mHE only drawback to the perfect untl-O-septio discovered by Doctors Carrel and Daltln Is likely to bo tho claim of certain s ioieni-minaea persons that the war did It. j Tho two doctors wero working in t, -' i plegno Military Hospital; tho war brought them many grievous wounds to dreBs; thero. j foro they wero stimulated to the discovery i "ah they would never hovn )i r,n,.i n. -. .. . . -" """o. Ul cuurse, u is quite possible that Ddctor Carrel might not have worked on that par ticular problem without the war's stimulus. It Is even probable that Its dlm-nv.u, .it.. !JiAVf been postponed a few years. But It Is t ffve question whether In tho tlmo that Hjfchas been thus gained tho new compound will mrw un muny nves in the countries nt peace i w win ua Biiuireu out m the countries at war It is not an altogether cheering thought that either of theso eminent doctors might mo u.cu nt lne iron.t or In the hospital, from, shell or from Infection, while a dozen or two of just suoh potential benefactors were giving up their lives In undeveloped youth. Pic Needs No Panegyrist THE BLUEBERRY season is "open" In New England, and a Boston editor Is In spired thereby to tho pious task of concoct ing a paean on pie; as If plo needed eulogy. Crabbed critics, whoso allegation that tho fuvorlte viand of Americanism and Its most Indigenous contribution to Lucullan menus In poisonous to the system, hurl a charge that comes not from their heart of hearts, but from a disordered stomach that can no longer know tho beauties or relish the Joys of pie. Every one except, of course, chronlo dys peptics, whoso lack of relish for their food Is the Just penalty of gastronomic sins of youth cheerfully acquiesces In the substan tial character of pie. Every one knows that pie, well contrived with flaky crust, duly "short" and Juicy "flllln'," Is a toothsome morsel nt for tho palate of gods. In fact, there Is nbundant room for belief that tho dlvlno denizens of high Olympus would have speedily deserted their ambrosia had they had any Inkling of tho merits of pie. They were unfortunate In that tho invention pie did not add lustro to their goldon age. That Invention adds distinction to a younger era, Its product casts a poetical glory on a period of materialism. In plo wo, of tho present, have nn enjoyment denied to tho ancients. All of ua should bo grateful for It; unfortunately, some of us aro constitu tionally Incapable of that gratitude. Pie, speaking absolutely, Is good. Compar atively, some plo Is better than other the kind that mother devised, for the sake of example. Relative values In pie are, of course, a matter of Individual taste and preference. Sour apple, peach, pumpkin, cheesecake, even custard each has Its pro ponents. Mince plo, to single out ono vari ety, Is both meat and drink. Pie, Indeed, needs no panegyrist. rniMcu i.koi'olu OK UAVAIIIA nround Warsaw to the northeast, enmo out of eastern ago Tho Russian retreat Is led bv another famous flirhtpp who, according to his ago, ought to bo on tho retired list. He Is Field Marshal August von Mnckcnsen, nnd ho Is 06 years of age. Thus theso thrco military heroes of tho Ger man nntlon who havo driven tho Russians out of most of Poland nnd hurled them back over tho Carpathians averngc nearly 68 years of nge, A Comparison of Ages Somewhat tho samo situation exists In tho Allied armies on tho western front. General Joffro,.at the head of tho French forces, has already turned his 70th year, whllo his threo leading subordinates, Foch. Castlenau and Galllenl, nro all In thtflr sixties. General French nnd Earl Kitchener, of tho English forces, lmvo also passed their 60th birthdays, while Count Cardonn, of Italy, has also lived more than threescoio years. Von Illndenburg nnd von Mnckcnsen havo alrendy had their share of applause for their military exploits. Von Hlndenburir was Ger many's first military horo of tho war when lie defeated tho Russians In their first great clasb on tho eastern border nnd took enough prisoners to harvest Germany's crops. Von Mnckenrcn achieved his famo when ho camo to the defense of hard-pressed AuBtrla and led tho expedition that drovo Russia out of Gallcla and recaptured Przcmysl. It Is only fair, therefore, that Prlnco Leo pold should havo his turn. Just how much of the credit for the enpturo of Warsaw bo- longs to him we do not know. Warsaw fell not so much becauso of tho violence and In vincibility of the assault led by tho Bavarian Prince, as from the danger "of Its position to tho Russians by reason of the drives of von Hlndenburg to the northeast and von Mack onsen nnd von Buelow to tho south nnd southeast. Tho enveloping movement really made tho retention of Warsaw Impossible If tho Grand Duko Nicholas was to keep open a lino of retreat. In tho Czar's Palaco But Prlnco Leopold and his Bavarian troops dollvered the finishing blow In front of Warsaw, and ho Is Drobablv now nrvnnv. lug tho Czar's palace In the Polish capital. Th( aged Prlnco has until the present been rather Inconspicuous In this war. Ills nephew, Prlnco Rupprecht, has played a much more prominent part. The solectlon of Prlnco Leopold to lead tho Teutonic forces In tho ccntro was an honor awarded him by the Kaiser. Ho was called from Munich for this very purpose, the Kaiser apparently wlhlns tho Bavarian Prince to represent him when Warsaw was entered. Tho Bavarian troops had not achieved a gieat deal In the prosecution of the war, and since their State has suffered probably tu most from the war In tho east It was entirely fitting that they should have been tho ones selected to force the fortresses In front of Warsaw. Prlnco Leopold Is a veteran In military ex perience. His military education m. . c Ived In the Austro-Hungurlan army before E.ivarla became a part of Germany. He took a prominent part In the Austro-Prus-slan-Itallan war of I860. He fought entirely through that war and came off without a scratch. Prince Leopold was born February 9, 1816. 1U married oh April 20, MM. the Areh duchesa Olsctft of Austria-Hungary, eldest daughter of Emperor Franz Joseph I. One of his sons, Prince Conrad, Is nlso in tho army, and Was wounded lAflt winter when commanding an Uhlan dfvtolon In Grtllcla. A LOST BRITISH ISLE .q.-l. a .J. Heligoland Was England's 25 Years Ago. Tho "Bargain" of 1890. Now comes tho 3ih anniversary of Eng land's eowldn of Heligoland, to ucrmany. But England Isn't celebrating the event On tho cohtrarj. Englishmen are repenting In sack cloth and ashes the exchange of that rocky Island for Zanzibar off the coast of Africa, Of course, when that trade was made neither England nof Germany foresaw the value of tlhtlrnfaml n n tinvnl hn.10 In SUCll A War OS they Aro now engaged In. Curiously enough, many Germans at that tlmo viewed the trado with Indifference, whllo some short-sighted Eng lishmen complimented themselves on tho trade. What wouldn't England give for Heligoland today? nA-M.rtn I... m.fta irllffn1a tlrl a Vrltftblfi Gibraltar. This triangular shaped Island, with solid cliffs of granite, fairly bristles with guns of tho most powerfut calibre. In fact, the Island Is so strongly fortified that Germany be lieves it Is absolutely Impregnable. They would even match It against Gibraltar. But Its greatest valui to Germany Is tho pro tection It affords for the German navy and tho screen It furnishes for aeronautic nnd other operations from tho coast. Thero are now two Island!, though originally one. In 1720 an erup tion of tho sea cut Heligoland In two. The larger portion Is known as Rock Island, with Dunen-Insol a quarter mllo to tho enst. Duncn Inset has a magnificent harbor deep enough to tako tho biggest battleships. Then thero aro bases for submarines, On top of Rock Island are sheds for Zeppelins nnd alrBhlps. Originally Heligoland belonged to Denmark, but In 1807 tho Islands were Belzed by the Brit ish and ceded to England in 1314. It was In 1S90 that tho British made their unfortunate trado with Germany. Today Englishmen are reflecting upon what would have happened had they retained Heligo land. Tho double Island Is situated only 27 miles from the German mainland and com mands tho mouths of the Elbe and Weser Rivers What If England had utilized Its mili tary ond naval advantages? What If Germany lmd never had the opportunity of doing so7 What If? IF-but that "If" is why English men gnash their teeth -every time they think of that unfortunate "bargain" of 23 years ago. 1 DR. CARREL, SOLDIER OF HUMANE m Famous Surgeon, Who Left America For His Own Coaff , . tt.. -n i- -.. T h Mitifnnf. C.rmacpv Arrn?bi! wnen war joroiiu uuu, .- ; " --& Disease Continues the Battle in French Hospitals. ' THE part which Dr. Alexis Carrel Is play ing In tho great war beyond tho eea Is tho part which for 20 years ho has been playing In tho great war against disease. In those 20 years not many, after ftllhow amazing has ucen ins contribution to tho Dr. ALEXIS CAtmEL NOTHING IN A NAME It will be noted that tho prediction that the Progressives will win In 1916 comes from cx Congrcssmnn and Defeated-Scnatorial-Asplrant "Victor" Murdock, whose baptismal patronymlo nobly bolsters up the theory that there's nothing In a name. Boston Transcript THE DRUNKARD'S FUNERAL "Yes," said tho sister with tho little pinched face, Tho buBy llttlo sister with the funny little tract: "This Is tho climax, the grand fifth act. Thero rides tho proud at the finish of his raco. THERE GOES THE HEARSE, THE MOURN ERS CRY, THE RESPECTABLE HEARSE GOES SLOW LY BY. Tho nlfo of the dead has money In her purse, Tho children are In health, so It might havo been worse. That fellow In the coffin led a llfo most foul. A flerco defender of the red bartender, At tho church ho would rail, at tho preacher he would howl. "Hft ntantftrl pvurv ilnirltt-i ... . ,. - IrHe wasted half his IncomO on the -Uwd and I lift tnnf Ho would trade engender for the red bartender, Ho would homage render to the red bartender, And In ultimate surrender to the red bartender, Ho died of the tremens, as crazy as a loon, And bis friends wero glad, when tho end came soon. THERE GOES THE HEARSE, THE MOURN ERS CRY, THE RESPECTABLE HEARSE GOES SLOW LY BY. And now good friends, since you see how It ends, Let each nation-mender flay the red bartender, Till wo force him Into business whero his work does good. Let him learn how to plow, let him learn to chop wood. "Tho moral. The conclusion. And the verdict now you know: 'Tho saloon must go, The saloon must go, Tho saloon, the saloon, tho saloon Must go!' " ndvahes of surcerv! This wonder-worker whoso discoveries have repoatedly mado him tho benefactor of tho human raco Is still a young man. Ho Is only 12, Announcement comes from Paris that Doc tor Carrel, In collabo ration with Doctor Dnkln, of the Lister Institute, has dlscov- .. m a .1 n m HHll..nlln U I U U nil UUUDI.)JIIU which will make Infection in wounds Im possible. Leading surgeons of Franco nro said to be discussing tho nowa as entirely authentic nnd expressing their gratification over a highly Important development in tho history of their profession. Doubtless tho R'rAnnli Atnirra nrl fti nnaQ0atlnn nt YntT detailed Information than tholr brethren In America, but tho reports received on this side aro sufficient to ha(-o aroused tho keen est Intorest on tho part of Philadelphia physicians nnd surgeons, nnd to have con vinced them that a long step forwnrd In the prevention of Infection has been mado pos sible through tho work of Carrel and Dakln. TVhfln. in 1A13. Tlnnlnr Cnrrri wna n-WArdfid a Nobel prlzo In recognition of his genius as tho creator of- a surgery of tho vascular system, a large part of tho American public looked unnn him nn n fllnw ivitintrvman. and wero accordingly gratified by the honor which had been conferred upon him and upon tho nation, but when, immediately upon tho outbreak of tho conflict In EUrope, no voiuntcerea ins services, in any capncity, to tho French Government, wo remembered that ho still was a citizen of France and wo found i In his departure a text for our lamentations over the seemingly unjust de mand upon civilization In tho sacrifice of so many geniuses of science and art to tho for tunes of war. Out of Doctor Carrel's work In tho military hospitals has como, appar ently, a new tltlo to tho honor of tho present nnd tho gratitude of tho future. Thero aro many reasons to think that oven on tho bor derland of battle ho may write other mo mentous chapters In scientific history. Bv SAMUEL HARRIS nnrtn. from one aott nnd rowmI u ,-rf other, with successful results; tnd has ing in" ivuuu uiuiiii. no nas fijj glands, cartilages, bono nnd other tS from llvo animals and kept It niir,a weeks, though removed from any llvTri ganism wnatover, xno uig fact Is & llshod that the various organs have aflj VldUal llfo and vitality, nnd that thtf nnu vuaiiiy win continue when thee seDarated from their orlclnnl mitit... J effectively this amazing disclosure dg adapted to tho numan being remalno'1 seen. Unverified reports from ni.j rel's present field of labor indicate tij is being utilized to some extent in thS of wounaca somiors. "You are right, stubborn sister," I said to myself. "You are right, good sister," I said. "Tho you wear a mussy bonnet On your little gray head. You are right, little sister," I Bald. -Vaohol Lindsay, In the Chicago Evening Post Just wait until tho Phillies begin their Beptember drive. Ending a Dad Diulness THBRE will be denial and counter-denlal milOh WatAP will run ..- t i- . .. ' find much printer's, ink will be spread on lava ft Anas Iia.h 1 , . . .., UciU,c vunronpuon becomes a fact In ,.. .,..., , remember to call It jwHyuMury mmiary service." because he pemn't like the word "conscription." But whan a British army raiaa,! i, , .. to I'lander there w.U && ' "' Z2 Whether. In vUm nt k- - . . r v. f wuipuisory train- , Jflg of Prance and Germany, the Brltlsl, : ISropIre can neralst n Ita nniin -a ,.... IpuJuitment in time of peaee, U by no means mil wui imr Wnt tne shadow (, R ot that at thts time, vlewln !, i..u- jpewfic of RuMria and France, Hugland " Hniuir Ark ha, ,?. ..,., ,,, vBiuiut ave ner iage Before the fttopJiMi with shou luinu i,.. , fijtuire Is aliia, excDt by Immadlata on ".Wfri'-WKiirtniff coK:rlpUon She must end wr -.ona d urumptu as fuUy, as bravely as France ha Mat her million The war a m What DoQtor Carrel ought to Invent Is an antitoxin for Knlserlsm. The Kensington Board of Trade's dinner wuo q, regular uuver Twist affair. If peace on any terms had been acceptable thero never would have been any war. It wae a great day for Napoleon when he captured Warsaw. Later he got Moscow. The Allies could doubtless get along with fewer volunteers If they had mora big guns. "Motorboat going mile a minute sinks in sound." Must have been a deep bass note. , 4. perfect antbj.ptic Js all right, but what about working out a mosquito salve that salves? So far as the Germana am mn.. . Russian army seeins fij be Just a "scrap of paper," ' gome of the MIdflleywtem tnanufaBtur era want to put "t. o, h. Chicago" fln tna ammunition circulars. '"" "W1 I II ! Nest thing you know the "Pads" will have the price of admission down to a loaf of bread. And picking the brand U easy. When Senator Penrose eatd that such men a J Hampton Moure were needed In Cob. grew, n u just poeeiwe that he was thlnk wg alo Qt that other statesman. Mr. Vare, 60. per LIGHT IN THE LAND OF DARKNESS One of the Most Popular Books Among the Blind Patrons of the Public Library Is Helen Keller's "Story of My Life" Religion Follows Fiction in Circulation. xjOT only did Philadelphia have the first pub i.N llo library In America, but the first em bossed copy of any portion of the Bible for the uso of the blind to be printed In America was printed In this city. That was In 1833, when the Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruc tion of the Blind turned from Its presses the book of St. Mark. Since that time, mostly through charitable organizations until tho formation of the Free Library, Philadelphia haB been trying to pro Vide reading matter for Its sightless cltliens. To those of ua who have the use of our eyes blindness Is a grievous affliction to contemplate. But there are approximately law blind persons In this city. Of course, many of them are read to by members of their families or thtlr friends, but a goodly proportion depend for mental en joyment upon the books In embossed type cir culated by the Free Library and the Overbrook School. The statlaUca of the books furnished by the department for the blind of the Free Library have to be cautiously handltd. It Is necessary to bear In mind always that a work which ordi narily may be published In one volume re quires anywhere from 8 to SO In the American Braille, which Is the most common type for .the blind. For example, the Bible requires 60 Yc-Juraea of the old Moon type end of American Braille, Twelve volumes of the Moon type are required for the dictionary, and an abridged one at that At the tame time the taste of the blind dif. fere but little from that of other readers This exiOalw, wby a majority qf all the book, elrou. lated among the blind may be elaued as n tiea. iMt ywr tXMi book for the blind were emulated, of thle numb.r U.I3S wero devoted to notion. Tnu, 6T per eet of the book, clr oulated among the Mlaa vere fteUoael work, while among the library pajron, wfca rwd' with their eyea slightly more than cent, asked for books of fiction. Here the reading taste of the blind and the seeing diverges. Whereas books classed under tho general head of Sociology, ranked next to those of nctlon throughout the city, tho choice of the blind for books on religion la far ahead of all other classes but general works. This Is quite natural, because blindness Is an af fliction for which religion Is the natural solace Volumes on religious subjects circulated among the blind totaled 16. Thea8 conBste(J JJ Bibles and books devoted to religious topics Books classified General Works lead those on religion with a total of SS3 volumes for the year. tu classification, however. Includes the matinee and other periodical.. whlch many of the blind read regularly. One of the books most eagerly sought by the blind Is "The. story of My Life.- Ty He en he In,00"1" f U are a,way mano or the achievements of this wonderful girl are always an Inspiration to the blind, as well to those blessed with eight. " M T ui one at tniti m .li.i. . cujated freely. The read. , . ujy'th, u 1 with the Angers and then memorl,' n,U" I. IZn AT Bre Mar"' WW Per.ons In Philadelphia, there are only m Individual borrower, from ,hu -t T y r;rlv'd"1 ever, sends its book, to m hi7l n' b w' other pan. of the S.t. ZZ ? hecTty'ana to an additional Q-Ut,,6 ,h fl W In tho C: oVh9 dip" in- b.jnd m the Free Library, a. weU a. similar lihr rlM for the blind all . ,fc. lmur "ora ,. .. " er the country, win TTtx,s wsvrssj; by all the educational immtttioaa tor tta ' Ten Years in America It was whllo he was yet a student in tho University of Lyons, In the city of his birth, that ho began the interesting and Important researches which havo made his name fa mous in two hemispheres and evoked tho highest tributes from tho lenders in medi cine and surgery. He was graduated in 1900. but had acted as Interne In the Hospital of Lyons from 1890 until thnt date.. Ho then became a member of tho university faculty. The merest chanco brought him to the United States less than ten years ago. Ho was visiting friends in Canada, and attracted by his interest in tho new Ideas being- put Into practice at tho University of Chicago, ho camo across tho border. His fame had preceded him, for though he was then but 32 years old, he had -worr distinction by having perfected tho technique, now In common use, for sewing together Bevered arteries and veins. Ho was offered a position in tho physiological department of the- University of Chicago and accepted It, but In. 1907 re signed to Join the staff of the Rockefoller Institute for Medical Research In New York. It was In tho laboratories of tho Rocke feller Institute that he mado tho experi ments and discoveries, some of them sensa tionalized out of all keeDlnc with ttinlr trim significance, that made him known to every reader of the newspapers and magazines In America. On the fourth floor, near a window overlooking the East River, ho migh't, in thoso still recent days, have been discovered nt his desk, looking over his notes a Bhort man, compactly built, his face bearing tho bleach of the laboratory worker, his hair sparse, his eye wonderfully penetrating. About him that instinctive authority to be expected In a great surgeon. In manner and talk, a modesty that amounts to shrinking. For Doctor Carrel does not claim his great triumphs for himself, but accords full meas ure of praise and appreciation to his asso ciates. He shares publicity, In each instance, with his collaborators. When he appears In his white working Jacket, with high, closely buttoned collar, ho looks like a militant medical crusader which he Is. His Name Is Scientist Though a prophet of tho nroinn,rnin human life, he Is not a philosopher. He Is a laboratory surgeon. His Job is surgical science. These characterizations may seem to conflict with tho naturo of tho tasks ho is performing today in the military hospitals of his bleeding country, but they indicate the spirit and method of his achievements before this war came. Advances In surgical science are brought about by two groups of men-operating surgeons like Murphy. Keen and the Mayo brothers, and researchers and experimentalists like Rouse. Meltzer and Carrel, Doctor Carrel might have had a largo and profitable practice, but preferred the laboratory, Scientist is the peculiarly nt description to apply to Alexis Carrel. Always he has been lnni., .. with his work. Maybe that Is why he a JS remains unmarried. Summers It has been his custom to vl.lt the, various institute for 7ST S2 fiw .7 :. "w ueveiopments and covSU aPP"cat,on W own die- Even as a student at the University of Lyons as already mentioned, he began hu reseaches along the lines of oscular sur! gery and organ substitution. He then con celved the Idea of utilizing healthy anlma organs to perform the work of those thai had become diseased or Injured by awla or otherwise. Furthermore. aer the mmmtnl demonstratton 0? the theory In lower animals, why could Jit mankind pwat by similar subetlSloL, He has sueceeded In taking living tlssuB even vital organs, from animals aid oSffi that the leg ItTnnZ ftj? "2 A Now Era in Surgery The moro extravagant commentato Ai,ort.lpntianlftln Mnn tmnnl. .. .. ...... ...... ,...... ........ ,.t,v ut lno t genco or l'ranKenstein from fiction inti For instanco: "If tlssuo will thn. 11- grow' in tho body of another, it tt .? nun grow away from any animal orwag ITHUIUTVU 41. ITUU1U DUL'lll (ltl II I inniAM iTTl. might construct a new nnd living anjffl from tho parts of others a possibility amazing that it is at first unbelievable yet, in tho light of Doctor Carrel's rrS monts, merely a matter of doftnesifflj skill, not at all of deep study. The tffiB It all worked out." With tho dlscoveffi nuiuivai x' ftuimuaieiiiH, nowever, Dog? Carrel has never been at all concernedjfl Last year Doctor Carrel described Mi American Surgloal Association his operaUm on tho hearts of animals, but gave no prS? Iso of tholr significance to human surrc? But in human surgery his work, as haa W already said, has been of tho utmost vSt? Thanks to tho "Carrol suture," if a taiti Bhot through tho leg, and a big arte? smashed, tho broken vessel can bo llnig with n vein and circulation continued, ifii bir nrterv becomen flllpri" tuiivi i.t .tt - - ...... .. v.m, wnig, often camee gangrene, It can bo connect wilii 11 vein uuuyo mo unco and that vBj will tako the life-giving flow of artwB blood. Another benefit of this suture !?? give humanity a wholo new process of blot) transfusion tho transmission of healilg bioud from a strong man to a sufferefJS t'lre need of it. ..... ....,., u,ol;Ut,j, vl a success and satisfactory method of hin ,.....:j; was mado thiqugh cbnstant cxperlmentatiS WrTi rmtmntn nn In hl ...... a- .. m - ""' """ "' "'" oiuuy Ol CUIWftl of cancer not n few chickens havo yieljj up their lives to science. Antl-vlvlsectlonlss may object, but in the war against canca and tho other llko malignant foes of mSj kind thero Is somethlmr tn he mm a. 4T. Jesuitical theory concerning-means and'cnS America hopes to seo this French patriot and dOVOtea Of Rr.lpnrn hnnlr ntrnU m1..-? while, as a writer on medical topics, hi! saia, -wo stand on the threshold of a mo mentous nrea In surgery. The process 9! organ substitution will sooner or later a? ply to man. Reconstruction will supplatt destruction. The now surgery, together jvjti Science Of teUKenlca. mnv not mh nM ...( ,tts terrors, but will achieve a. new hudbl.' ity, mere immune from disease, disaster 10, decay." "A SMALL-TOWN MAN",'',.' ..., . . . ' ,2 oucn was unnst, Whose Way of SpeaHai Was a Folk-way. He was a small-town man, nnd no mr!$ .. .. ,,.......... w.u JUUKUUlll UI VIM. knowing God for a spirit nnd having an Inrreif iiik reiuiiauon ot me Kingdom ns a statiW litni- V3i,t TT knj .H .. . ...?, .... UM. m.ak ..(,,, 1.1, iiiuKrnm. lie lOllOTp tho Inward voice, and followed It InstlncthW, with the freedom of a river In Its natural tVa nel, with no fretting ot the flesh. But where ttl voice left Him uninformed, he wns simply a jtii from Nazareth ; His Boclal outlook was the p look of a villager. All the great prophets! "uci iiuu luiiih nnr nr inn ivntiainnai inti Jtrt mmm M.- - M m mm ... .. TA wu.,u, weru tun or me lernnie things thunaos eartnquaKes, Are on the mountains. I TCllt til. MrhIb . .. .. . - w. w,,a ui, ataua urc nil 01 uie aresa town the candle nnd bushel, tho houseirWi measure of yeast the children playing In Ik street. Tho rich He knew only as the poor iii the oppressed know them : the kings of Hla Jitf .v ... w w,n niuiia vl lairy iaio ana iestsu. such rulers and potentates as mako the et?3 of the village story-teller. His very wsy speaking was a folk-way: the pithy sentewt tho pregnant figure. He saw God reflecttd.fi uvery auriace or tne common life, and tausMP tin hlnH .!. t1. . ma . . i.l """"it.n miicii ure, nicer an, out a pertfE! form Of thn nlllrvpa an Im .m n thff lettered wit That Is why so many of them'u iciuciuuerea, wnue His prorounder sayup escaped His audience. It Is evident from form of these, blunted as they are by re-tn latlon, that they were many of them east InTfe iimiuicu uiiu uaianceu sentences 01 utory "". wnicn accounts m part for their t 13,CJI11UI1, He was a man wise In life, but unlearned, S itjuu no books nut me tjcrlpturea; wrote nouu. took tho folk-way of transmitting his teachUl from moutb t6 mouth, and trusted God W S Increase ; and he had the fplk-way In his Ptt foundest speech, of identlfvlnir Himself witblB Power that used Him. He dramatized -U S3 relations to the Invisible. And with It ",. was a Jew of the circumcision. He grew upg '" juwuam us a. eiaiit or. grain grow ug Its Bheath, but never out of tt Always tOJg uu, iv wuo mere aoout me roots or .11? iw, Mary Austin, In the Nprth American Revleir, NATIONAT, POTTJT- OP VTTHW Our Idea of an American who la Blow to tK a hint la one that hangs around until XE ncnalm film .- a war a nv. . TiaV. ,., uul u, uiico waemngion There is no more evidence of any need o,Mi,oiv-vfTiiiiu snips now tnan mer when the measure wis ejielved at the last 1 OJUII Aiuoion rost. The bare, unpleasant fact stands that 1 --.) iuu cuiie is naiiy rejected. Tne; ui States cannnt vmn.. f... ,, .it.. mJUgata Its dental of the BrltlBh cIaIrpA-3 .a.iu wuminerciai. German aubmarlno activity s rapiaiy bff the WAT tn ft. tll(lA au,aw,tHM 4... ..tlMe a at whlph rate It will take Only atoqt ? -n t nil q en,,r6 nt8n mercnani pw vwivti ArunHcnpt, Arbitrating wTill, -r-.i- . i i apt trie ana for Ariimtini ..mm.mi0i ah ences and assesalng damages, a course v deatroya human live. Is not a matter for M trfttlon, so long as it is adhered to Life i I f. maner of compromise Springfield R wean. - - - The Administration Intends to seek opinion on the proposed dqfenso plana. hh Z ut,,"1;..! 'DW.". " " SR;1-.21 i. a limiu of M ,,,-.410W ,Qrg eun t1 .,.., -. .i nujrfuc B ytem of poJIUcs wltbia SSfi,,8"1!' nd ,Q purprlaoneruiai ninnoi IE w Bwr uue ana conrv with it 1 ."r",. lt aru in i9'J uta revolt onH 1.., .. 7. .. .., . . ItlltlTlSZ t"W.W!1 tvf " )udcwMt a taken th ... i ? dogr. 22? S1 tor the ware tudicw 8M take m great Ui.timH of the I JfwJ!?.,!?rttaW mTiw. u a Kite Mr. Onbarn awingatia I a 0oi-e Springs W I ow- ll..,."JjWr' - r--iM,.m