10 EVEmNG LBDQEK-PHILADBLPHIA, MONDAY, JTJTO 5, 1910. In fcttffctfng HtbQtv rUBLtC LEDGER. COMPANY CmUS H. K, CUnTltf, PiMlDRTT. CfMtrti It. Ludlngton, Vies resident r Jetm C. Mmn, Secretary nnd TremuTert Fhllip fl, Collins. John B. Wllllatns. Directors EDITOntAD EOABDt w tJ?TS" " K- ccsnr, Chairman. r. H. WUALET i ,,,, ,. Editor OHJ C. MAjmN..aneri Bulns Muitrsr Published dally at PciUo T.tpoe- Building, Independence fiquiire, Philadelphia, Limdcti CmiL.... Broad and Chestnut Streets Atlahito Crrx...,...,i.rrest-rsna Bulldln Naw Tonic ,.,..BOO Metropolitan Tower Dmorr........,,,. ,,.,. . ,.820 fiord rjulldlns; ST. Louis. ....... .400 Olota-Dtmocrat Bulldlnc Cnioioo.. ............. .1203 rrtBtine Dulldlnj- nows bureaus WAnmnto!t ncriu.,,,., ...... rtl(tit Building NaiTi T0K Untie......... The rms Buliainc BsmUK Bosun..,,.. ....... 00 Fr1edrlctitr .London Bvsxau. ...... .Marconi House, Strand P.ai BcaiD........,..32 Bus Louis to a rand SUBSCRIPTION TEBU3 Br wrrler, six centa per week. Or malt postpaid outside of Philadelphia, .except where (onMcn postage la required, one month, twenty Are cental one year, three dollars. All tnall (Obecrlptlon payable In advance. Nones Subscriber wishing address chanced must cIto old aa well as new address. BELL. 1000 WALHUT KEYSTOftE. MAIM IMS Ky Addrtss all communteatlan to Rvmlng Ledptr, Indtpmdcnc Square, rMladttphta. I.trmcD at Tita riittiDatriilt rosTOrric is sscokd-olass lutt. iiiru, TUB AVERAGE NET PAID DAILY CIR CULATION OP TUB EVENING LEDClEn FOB AriUL WAS 117,310. Phltidttphls, Mondir, Jane S, lilt. Nothing i mora simple than greatness; indeed, to be timple it to be great. Emerson. It was a famous victory, but there docs not seem to bo ngrcemont on who won. Tho strength of Hughes lies In tho fact that almost every ono believes ho could bo elected. When that steamship service to Capo May begins, a new summer ploas uro will bo added to tho delights of liv ing In Philadelphia. Most of those who say they do not know what Supromo Court Justice Hughes believes on current questions aro men who would not support him anyway. Tho first Sunday In Juno was a masterpiece. Whatovcr he did, tho Phlla dclphlan, as a New Englander said about tho countries at war, had a fine day for It. Tho crying need of Philadelphia at tho present tlmo seems to bo for swim mln' holes for tho boys, whero they can tie one another's shirts Into knots as their grandfathers In tho country did beforo them. A man with a discriminating eye will not And It difficult to pick tho future steel magnates from among the students of tho Northeast High School who are broadening their technical education by working In tho Mldvalo steel mills. Associate Justice Brandets will havo an opportunity to discover what tho pub lic thinks of him when ho comes to this city to attend the Zionist convention next month If ha is not already satisfied with tho revelation through tho vote of tho Senate.' Another season Is beginning when tho summer tourist will spend his vaca tion money In America. The Easterners will" go West and tho "Westerners will coma East. They will all discover, If they make the effort, that Europe has no place half so Interesting to a patriotic Ameri can as Philadelphia, whero the beautiful building in which tho Declaration of In dependence was adopted Is preserved In a fitting setting. To eliminate! lawsuits under the Worlcmon's compensation act, .Now Jersoy establishes a. legal 'aid bureau. The ad vantages aro manifest, for even in the explicit wording of tho law doubts are certain to arise and tho unscrupulous 'Vunner" may make as much from de plorable cases as he once made In street car accidents. Tho leech has no place here, and the State which establishes compensation is bound to make the work ings of Its laws as easy as justlco permits. Tho London Nation has had harsh filings to say about this country, so It Is particularly gratifying to read the plea made by Henry "W. Masslngham, Its edi tor. In the current Issue. The cabled ex cerpt ought to set Americans as well as Britishers thinking deeply: This Power (tho United States) hav ing done us and humanity a substan tial service at critical points of the con flict; now, in the person of her Presi dent; offers to associate herself with an International settlement that Sir .Ed ward Qrey has defined as the thing he wishes to get out of the war, And ws treat this advice as an unwarranted intrusion on our blissful enterprise. How can this but confirm the Impression that more than one Ameri can has carried away from our shores that we are tho real obstacle of peace? Apparently the United States has some friends In Europe. Belittling her, hern or abroad, will do small good. Pennsylvanlans refused to take Interest or to. express opinion wns largely non partisan. Their duly as critics of the majority was never more necessary. The total result has been that the country Is not governed by a party system, but by a one-party syBtem precisely tho wrong thing, precisely what the founders least desired. ' THE CHICAGO CONVENTION There la no want of (rood presi dential timber In the Jtepubllcnn party. If tho lightning does not strlkn either Roosevelt or llnches. it may single out s Lincoln. IN NO epoch, not oven that Imme diately preceding tho Civil War, hna tho rtepubllcnn party been confronted with graver responsibilities or with greater opportunities for servlco than now. Tho convention about to assemblo In Chicago, to which tho destinies of tho party havo been confided, must clear nway tho rubbish, strike deep to find tho essentials, make a platform which wilt underwrite the future prosperity of this nation and supply a fighting leader whoso Bervlco to tho .country ns a wholo will be no less inspiring than his re habilitation of tho party itself. Tho candidacy of Mr. Itoosovelt Is a gamble with fate. It Is based on tho assumption that Teutonic victories dur ing tho summer will asstimo such propor tions as to magnify vastly tho necessity for preparedness on a grand scale. Wcro victory for tho Allies assured, there would bo, unfortunately, no great demand for dofenso measures In America, a majority of tho people being so Bhort-vlsloned that they refuse to look beyond tho horizon of Immediate events. What tho people do fear Is German aggression. Tho cm phaslzed Americanism which Mr. Roose velt Is preaching Is a mighty program to arouso tho nation from Its lethargy, to visualize for It tho new placo tho United States has taken among tho nations of tho earth, tho new burdens which havo been or will bo thrust upon It and tho nocesslty of meeting them In a goncrous, scnslblo and provident way. But It Is n program tho success of which must fluctuate with tho tldo of military events across tho ocean. Peaco this summer, for Instance, would crucify a Booscvclt campaign. There aro, howovor, thou sands of good Americans of tho think ing typo who aro convinced that a show down Is in order and that, win or lose, it is tlmo for tho nation to glvo a verdict on tho kind of virile Americanism for which Mr. Roosevelt stands nnd which ho, In fact, personifies. That ho would make a strong, efficient and thoroughly reliable Chief Executive Is not a ques tion for debato. Ho has proved himself by actual trial. Mr. Roosovelt is no tariff man. Ho emphasizes tho military feature of pre paredness. It Is industrial preparedness, howovor, which may readily prove to bo tho most vital to tho welfare of tho nation. It is perfectly appnront that tho pros perity 'which now exists Is n fictitious, abnormal, war prosperity, Induced by no legislation enacted by the Democrats, but, on tho contrary, existing In spite of low tariffs. It Is a difficult thing to oust an Administration under which prosperity exists, whatover the cause of that pos perlty. Ono of tho most Important func tions of tho Rcpubllcah campaign will bo tho education of tho people and tho ex posure of the fallacy that this Is a Demo cratic prosperity. The tariff lssuo Is to day the great Issue, even moro so than In tho past. To trlflo with It is to trifle, with tho bread nnd butter of tho people and to parley with soup houses. It Is imperative, therefore, that the Republi can platform carry the strongest kind of protection plank. It la claimed that the chief duty of tho convention is to pick a winner. Justlco Hughes aa a harmonlzer has exceptional qualities. Ho had no part In the factionalism which was rampant In 1912. Of his orthodoxy thero Is no question. His merit as an executive has been amply proved. So, too, has his ability as a cam paigner. Silence In him is a virtue, but when he does speak there Is tho heat of the branding Iron In his text and tho thunder of Jupiter In his blows, Thero is in him nono of the elements of tho demagogue or the trickster and all of tho elements of logical, virile and convincing statesmanship. He would appeal to the Intelligence of the country with com pelling force. Tho party expects of the convention sobriety of Judgment, not a panic stam pede. It expects, too, a candidate who measures up to the grave responsibilities of this era, when nations themselves are in the making and a new trade map is in the drawing. Should Roosevelt nnd Hughes come to a stalemate, a Republi can of superb abilities Is Philander Chase Knox, Republican candidate for the United States Senate from this State, and in Mr. "Weeks, of Massachusetts, thero Is presidential timber of the first class. "Pennsylvania, second In population of 'the States, has virtually, seceded from the Union," aaya a Washington dispatch to tha'New'York Evening Post. If the clti. sens of Philadelphia Imagine that they Ttratetfresented In. Congress they are des tined to disappointment. Tho Evening J"ost has taken the 124 rollcalla In tha . ftenate from the opening of the cession te the first of June and discovers that tfea&tor Penrose voted exactly 11 times. Oil the 113 times 'tha senior Senator Bhwed he was paired less than, a dozen tfcgtes, so that his party suffered as much m his State. With the future of the semntxy; honor a,t stake, when the jof a McLqmora resolution, which nearly ' Miaed tha entire international policy of ft President, was presented, Senator roi was not even' In Washington. Mural credits, tha Philippines, army and -. svy Increases, did not stir tha Pennsy)- Xyptn Jtepreseritatives, for in the ez vote jwp in tha House J. R, E. Scott and W "V Grit, were absent 44 times and QMI etW Hprea)ittivas scaled down tt Mat, For th Republicans, dominant tl th Stats, J". Hfuapton Mooru leads the . tMraifl " wwt, Wr- W1 w T Tom Daly's Column DltAKE'B DHUZt Drake he's in Ma hammock an' a thou sand tnlle awau (Captcn, art tha ttccptn' there belotot) Btung attcccn the round thdt tn Nombrc Dtos Bav, An' otrcomln' arl Vie time o' Plymouth . Uoe. Yarnder lumen the Iiland, varnder He the ships, Wl' sailor lads a-danctn' heel-an'-toe, An' the shore lights flasMn', an' the nlght'tlda dashln', lie sees ct arl so plainly as he saw et ' long ago. Drake ho was a JDct'on man, an' ruled tha Devon seas (Captcn, art tha slccpln' there betowf) Kovln' tho' his death fell, he wcntlwl' heart at case, An' drcamln' arl tho tlmo o' Plymouth Hoc. "Take my drum to England, hang et by the shore; Strike ct tvhen your powder's runnln' low; If the Dons sight Devon, I'll quit the port o' Heaven, An' drum them up the Channel as we drummed them long ago." Drake he's tn his hammock till tho great Armadas come (Caplen, art tha slcepln' there betowf) Slung a'ttecn (7ic round shot, Ustcnln' for tho drum, An' drcamln' arl the tlmo o' Plymouth Uoe. Call him on the deep sea, call Jttm up the Sound, Call him when ye sail to meet the foe; Where the old trade's plyln' an' tha old I flnr, T.iIm ' I They shall find him ware an' waltin', as they found him long ago I HENRY NEWBOLT. ENGLAND appears to bo in need of a lusty drummer Just about now. And If Drnlto should bo hard to awaken It might bo well to look for a wrestler who can get a strangle hold on tho foo; a half-Nelson won't do. THE LION'S SHARE Tho Usual At first ho fell to drinking A little. 'T was appalling How, low and lower sinking, Ho shortly drank to falling. Warm Weather Warning" WOULDN'T It bo simply a matter of Jus tlco to lssuo a speclni warm weather warning to kind but unsuspecting folks, covering tho period beginning next "Wednesday and ending possibly on Satur day night or Monday, the 12th, at the very latest? Something to this effect: For Wednesday, etc, etc. Shortly after high noon thero will be several sharp raps resembling the pounding of a wooden ham mer on a block of marble. Tills will be fol lowed by Immense clouds of overheated at mosphere, which will arise ns In grcnt rolls of articulate smoko from tho ventilators and other exits of a certain block of well known real estate situate nlong Wabash avenue, between 14 th and lClh Btreets, In the Middle West. This terrific heat wave will bo accompanied by much rumbling of oratorical thunder and frequent flashes of forensic lightning. Tho populace will be greatly wrought up, but tho storm will pass without doing very much serious damnge. Several well-known shores tflll1 be strown with wreckage, but the vacation season will proceed as usual. ' ' E. A. II. What's Your Sword of Damocles? Mlno Is that my Increasing deafness will make It Im possible for mo to hear William Jen nings Bryan's In augural address. FIDJITZ. Jeffery Parnol, whose eyesight prevents him from enlisting In tho British army. Is already at work on another long novel to follow "Beltane the Smith." Literary note. THE only object of which, of course, is to inform us that Mr, Farnol, being unable to Bervo his country in any other way, Intends to donate his royalties to tho war fund. THi-V(lssW MliimiiHsiih W mwNwnrmm t 1 .rrtJSt,:! sririy mLMt Bate,..' .iu.-.--veiSaBtajx.iA, fl- THE NORTH SEA FIGIIT SEARCHLIGHTS of fact playing on the North Sea battle of last Wednesday and Thursday have a distinct tendency to minimize Germany's victory. Just as the original British Admiralty report admit ted reverses, so the German official an nouncements are now yielding. The first report, uncontradicted through lack of evidence. Indicated that an Inferior Ger man fleet had Inflicted disproportionate Injuries on the British and made good an escape. Had that report been confirmed tha blow to British prestige would have been terrible. Unfortunately for Germany, she has been unable to persuade even Winston Churchill of her victory. Mr. Churchill has never undergone that experience of patriotism which dazzles and blinds men, yet even he cannot feel that Wilhelm has displaced Jelltcoa as Admiral of the Atlantic, Berlin gives tha story away when t says that-"'the German high seas fleet" met the "grester part of the mod ern British navy." If, out of the greater part of the English superdreadnoughts, Germany was able to. sink not one, and had to suffer the Iocs of a vessel of the iDerffllnger class. If aha paid for tho In 'yincible and Indefatigable with tha West falen, and for tho battle cruisers with cruisers she could less well afford to spare, her victory Is Pyrrhlo or worse. "The North Bea and the Atlantla are still British, It was Hi braves fl?ht, with aggression, pn Jieib.sld'na, and with u, shifting of numeri cal sturferiiy& Strategically the Gwh iausi mmm, m 3tr to kavs dooa o&iMir, I yz - :2?3F--- i T. ' JL J J, -- Lines on a Sunset From Banks of the Lower Schuylkill Dy CHARLIE QALOOPY As I sit beBlde my cabin on the ashdump with my pipe. Looking westward as the sun sinks low, There's a flood of feelings rising from my soul that Is surprising. And It drives my hand to make these verses go. 'TIs a picture rare with beauty that can never be forgot, As the sun across the river sinks away, Through a haze of smoke and ashes where , a locomotlvo dashes, And the whistles blow and mark the close of day, . The horizon of tall chimneys and of brlck ptles and of cars Shows a rugged line of muddy, rusty gold ; 'Tis a scene so soul-Inspiring thus to see the day retiring, That I quite forget my supper's growing cold. . --.. , - ST '.J -5MfSffiSii'P.V7 . SITTm!.SrSRH. V . r 'PrSSiuC. -I&VL j--'. If"' "'MLUvS-.". Vi fW-Vf.-ll"?!'! -, . ?n vt-r( A-":-,', avyAvOT .ri.-M":-iC-.Lv ssr .mar-.',:: : ' .. ' - .."tsrcraj--! &!.. .,ri&&'8 : j.-&- :'r;:-..CWLkrak si5BF-- uSS-T -.. ....... -' -. JCi' aer ki.. -"Vii-.'li- -i- -.-'r-.. . . .-".. 2r" r." "--;t.'w. -r. ',"?? &&.. .;-.::.,. i"-.:.r' --:.-.-.-v-bk?l m. .? -B-HMBrniu. "mi.. r-i"rt-iiu2i'-.: S -! . . jr.n'fJr l ur.VjV( jr ?5r . .i""-l- -..t-.: ' ..;ir-. i .. u-BT" ' ' ... '-. .-.. ITj--.;--,-T4S" et " . -siwtr-. ' Vt:.. ""M-I lH' ;:"', ' - THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Secretary Newman, of the Housing Association, Writes That There Is Law Enough to Make All Boarding Houses Safe for Young Women Other Matters The Democracy- of the Flivver An "nuto school" at 16th and Spring Garden streets, according to Nally, flaunts this sign; WE LEARN YOU HOW TCPllUN ALL CARS, FORDS OUR SPECIALTY, Wo Have Yet to See The unknown correspondent, asking us to do a favor, who doesn't misspell our name. Canning Contest .Sir Here are a couple of phrases I present for your cannery: "You must come see us some time," "The pleasure's all mine," J, L. S, ' Here's one b..b, scribes should can: "Put a run across the pan." I'm youra truly, TIRED FAN. The Antiquity of "Low Visibility" (From Camden's History of Queen Eliza- 'beth.) TN THE fighting (with the Armada) on 1 the 23d of July (1588) the Spaniards' shots flew for the most part over the heads of the English, without doing execu tion. The reason of this was that the Eng lish ships, being far less than, the enemy's, made the attack with mpre quickness and agility; and whenhey had given a broad side they presently sheered off to a con venient olstance and leveled their shot so directly at the, bigger and more unwieldy shjps of the Spaniards aa seldom to miss their aim. Their ships far exceeded oura la number and bulk and were much stronger and higher built and vs pre- utd ,not so krea e. target for thU This Department U free to nil readers who id, to express their opinions on subjecs of current interest It is an open forum: and the Evening Ledger assumes no responsibility for the views of its corwppondents. BOARDING HOUSE LICENSES To the Editor of Evoninp Ledger: Ot.. T., ntl.Hnn tin, t.ioti nnltnrl in J1 statement In the Evhnino Ledoeu of May 29 to tho efrect that "It requires no license to be a boarding house keeper In Philadelphia." Tho Impression given oy tne Btory on .TAtnw ITniia. T.lot fn, niltrlnnpp nf .t.U.I l .hn, ,r. In... In nn.i'lan fnvnm tllA iiucstlon of the boarding house If this Is tne impression tnai n was intcnueu nnoum be given, tho fact Is overlooked that tho .....!. n. n Tuna 1 0 1 T. annnlflrnltv rp- I1UUD1I1B HV. W. UU.., .. .-,. .. rf -- quires all rooming houses, which means hoUBes where live or moro uoaruers urn lodged, must have a license from the Board n TTAnlth ...nlMl llnAnRA POstA S2. find mUSt bo displayed In a conspicuous place upon the walls wunin anu cioae iu mc uuic. t.. trance of tho house. Such a license can l.. l. .Mnln.il l.n.n iht. lllllllllnfT Is In a sanitary condition, Is provided with ample - a a. . --.Ill HMntitnlnina vTntj") water Buppiyanu nis, win iuv privacy; also when the number of occupants standards. Moreover, tho Bureau of Health .. fn.nmiiita vni.n nnrl rpmilatlons gov erning other matters pertaining to tho health and safety or me Doaruem, xiicdo in' slons were Inserted In tho act ns tho result of a survey ot boarmng nouses raaua m 1012 and 1013. If any bonding houses are being operated ns boarding houses, for five or .more per sons, without having obtnlned a Hoard of Health license, the conductors of such aro violating the law and are subject to a flno of from $6 to J50, with the costs of prosecu- It would be a comparatively easy matter to prevent these changes in tho manage ment of boarding houses, which nro quite frequently "responsible for the conditions that make such houses unsafe for girls moving to tho city. So far. tho enforce ment ot this provision has been woefully Inadequate, owing to the failure of the city to provide a sufficient number of In spectors to cover all euch properties. The Important point, however, la that there s ample law on tho statute books and ample power to adapt the law to protect In all respects the health and safety of the oc cupants of Buch buildings, but that the failure which the good people noted In your paper of the 28th protest against Is one that can bo limited and should bo limited by the municipal "OV""1" rut . BERNAHD J. NEWMAN. Executive Secretary Philadelphia Housing Association. Philadelphia, June 3. (The statement that "it requires no li cense to be a boarding house keeper In . .. .-,.i..i. ,oo mn.ia hv a welfare worker, who apparently was not fully In formed. Editor Ol r.veniu kuwm..., WHAT FANATICS HAVE DONE To tha Editor of Evenlnj; Ledger: SlrpVrmlt a "contributing editor" to take Issue with a regular one. I am suf ferine from Fordttls, which Is mental an guish when any individual or newspaper misinterprets the spirit of Henry Ford. You have been responsible for an augumenta tlon of that disease. In an editorial the other day you called Henry Ford a fanatic because ho said, among other things, that the flag was simply "something .to rally about" and that "patriotism was the last resort of a scoun drel"' You dispose of Ford by saying the arguments of farlatlcs were unanswerable. I think you have hit the nail very well on the head, but what Is your definition ot a fanatlot Because a man sees differ ently from the crowd Is no reason in nr.mime he Is a fanatic. Judged by that standard the world's greatest thinkers were fanatics. There have been some won derful "nuts" In history and I'll guarantee Henry Ford was not sympathetically quoted on that matter of history What was Socrates but a "nut"? and Martin Luther, Oliver Crorowel), Patrick Henry, deorge Washington, Abraham Lincoln and John Brown? You can't dispose ot a man who disagrees with you by peremptorily calling him a fanatic, Henry Ford says the flag is merely something tp rally around. Well, isn't itt Minus all the patriotic, meaning less verbiage, is the flag anything else than thatf There surely la no answer. But why didn't your correspondent seek to as certain whether Ford believed In rallying about a flr that was symbollo of human progresst Ford would hv answered af. flrmatlvely. and I am sure be would have added that tha glorious "Bed. White and Blue. with its noble add lniplrlng history, has been captured by the enemies Qf human progress, the traitors. to America., and that if they hoW it, tor whatever cause, tfc . a . -I.... . ta a fini n oFI. .!.... .- tip wer?" L'"iw.T?1 "fMnfl t Hathir t him nil? Wut tbs hoa ui . r .. j m.l. t,,t. , ..-- ' c i flt j gjBiniHHK ?bm wb warn fly to a mere symbol Is a crime ; to bo will ing to dlo for nn Ideal Is subllmo. If tho flag no longer stands for American Ideals, then, ns our friend Maurer puts It, and as "Billy" Sunday would If ho were preaching this sort of philosophy, to hell with the flag. But America today Is In tho hands of tho Tories. What England failed to do In ,1770 and 1812 sho accomplished In 1014 and 1010. When tho lendars of Amer ican thought were unpurchnsablo and true to only tho embryonic American Ideal, England was unable to conquer ur; but now she buys us through J. P. Morgan & Co., until Its Inckey arouses again In this country all tho religious and economic hor ror which has distinguished England's treat ment of Ireland. And, so Ifwe prepare ngalnst tho Invader, wo will ""bo fighting not our own battles, but thoao of England. Why, then, prepare? Why prepare against tho foreign foo when our preparedness will serve only to keep us In subjection? As long ns ballots nro mighty we Btand a chance to drlvo the Invader out; but we otand no chance If wo give tho Tory crowd our military machinery. CUCIL MONTAGUE. Philadelphia, Juno 2. RAPID-FIRE CALCULATION To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir I happened to notice tho within en closed article on the matter of "Rapld-FIre Calculation" (tho report of the victory of Miss Frances A, Snyderman In tho William Pcnn High School concentration contest). I am not n mathematician, but In the course of my work I havo discovered certain rules of mathematics and one In particular which would clip about 17 seconds off the record made by Miss Snyderman. It occurred to me in tho matter of a certain popular raf fle or chance game being conducted In tho city, nnd tho chances ranged from 1 cent to 60 cents. What Is the answer as to the total amount derived from tho raffle? I do not find the rule In an arithmetic book, but found that the following Is true: Multiply tho largest number (50) by tho mean (25) and add the mean (25), giving a total of 12.75. No ono needs a piece of paper to perform this work and It can be done In a few seconds. In your proposition add a cipher and add 10 and the result Is 210. Any one who can not do this in 10 seconds In his mind Is deserving of sympathy. CHARLES H. HASSERT. Philadelphia, June 1, LAZINESS VS. DRUNKENNESS To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir In your editorial, "Wages and Lazi ness," you do certainly "speak a mouth ful" when you Bay "It is useless to quarrel with human naure," No labor organiza tion can help the lazy man, tho man who la always watching for a chance to loaf, or thinks he can do bo and get away with It. There la a hue and cry agalnBt the man who drinks, but there la not much to choose between him and the lazy man. Be tween these two characters the bosses get gray-headed and hard-hearted, and 'who can blame them? The conscientious employer and the con scientious employe suffer alke from hav ing to contend with circumstances brought about by the unreliability of the lazy or the drinking employe. How to eliminate them Is one of the ques tions which the wisest humanitarian will have to "go some" to solve satisfactorily, Of course, In time they do eliminate them selves; but In the time It takes for the "elimination to take place what a lot of trouble and patience Is endured by all hands! This Is. one ot the thiggs that makes tho business man "tired" and helps to put many of them "out of business." JOHN J. FLEMINO. Philadelphia, June 3, What Do You Know? Queries of general interest toilt be answered in this column. Ten questions, the answers to which everv well-informed person sh'ould know, are asked daily, QUIZ 1. What post In the llrltlh Cnhlnet In tlie ntnrrst eqnlrnlent of that of our Sccre-torj- of Mate? WJirrr did the old Lnfnrette Hotel stand In rhllnUelphlii? What Ilrpuhllrnn presidential nominee were nomtnntfd hr acclamation? For uhom nan tho British cruller the Black l'rlnce nnmpd? What In the motto of the French republic? Where ore the Andes Mountains? In Florida docs the temperature ever fall below freezing point? Where Is the creat Slmplon tunnel? Did the Topes ever reside nn where but In Home and. If so, where? Name six trpes of warships. Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. Hkarrrrak Is an nrm of the North Sea between Norway and Denm.irli. 2. Noah and his three sons and their wles nre the eltht persons mentioned In (iene sls as batlnc been nn tho Ark. , 3. Philadelphia was the capital from the es- tobllhment of the (lovernment until 1800. 4. J. Fenlmore Cooper wrote "The Last of the Mohicans." 5. The sword of Dnmncles liunit by a thread i to "sit under" It Is to be In constant peril. 0. To "hanr plumb" Is an expression derived rrom the use ot the plumb (or lead) line. 7. Shjrlock In. "The Merchant nr Venice" de manded his "pound of flesh." ' 8. A fnnl.e's tonzue Is harmless) It stlurs with Its fonts. 0. In recent jears about 300.000 persons have left thl-i country annunlly, presumably to reside In another country. 10. John M. Walton, City Controller. DECAPITATE HIM ' There is or should be trouble ahead for James I, Blakslee, one of the assistant Postmasters General, He sought to bring about the defeat of certain amendment to the postal bill by urging the postmasters ta Join the opposition to them. He says he did this In his capacity .of private citi zen, but he used official paper in communl catlig with the postmasters and hi letter was strengthened by an official signature. It was as an official also that he told the member of the Senate Committee on Post offices that they bad surrendered to the railroads in the matter of railway mail pay. One of the members of the committee, having denounced the letter a slanderous. asked Mr. Blakslee whether he had any-l sense or propriety. Anotner remarked s "This propaganda of yours is worse than any sent out by the sugar lobby 4 few year ago.'11 The question, about propriety was iuperfUious, The Insult to tb com mittee was impudent The removal of the offender should be Immediate. It should com all the sooner hecatws be did ot jBABSult tha head of tha deiMMsaf, u-iv knows, how te us th , A cisar tfyM r lise-it-Ulon BrouJilyu Mj. Machinists and Mechanics Editor of "What Do You Know." Will you kindly answer the following; First. When you are a thorough machinist what Is tho principal work? Second. Is thero any difference In a machinist or a mechanic? Also please state (3) the average wages for the above. p. w. JOHN, 1. A machinist Is one "who constructs machines or engines, or Is Bkllled In the use of machine tools. 2. A mechanic Is one skilled In the use of tools, as a carpenter or a bricklayer. A machinist Is a mechanic, but a mechanic Is not necessarily a ma chinist. 3. The wages of each vary from 3 to $5.50 a day In normal times. "Ultlmntc" H. II. S. "An ultimatum which does not ultimate" Is hardly classical English, It Is admissible In the spirit of humor, of course. Pensions Editor of "What Do You Know" Can you tell me whether city and county em ploye of Philadelphia, except police and firemen, are eligible to pensions? CIVIL SERVICE. Yes. An act of Assembly of May 20, 1915 created a Municipal Pension Fund and a governing board. City and county employes. 80 years of age or over, in the employ of the city or county 20 years, are entitled to a pension of half their average monthly salary of the last Ave years of service, pro vlded no pension shall exceed 1100 a month Employes contribute 2 per cent, of their monthly salaries, but not In excess of It per month. Head of Tuskegee "; s Major Robert B. Moton succeeded Booker T, Washington as head of Tuskegee Institute. He ha assumed office. Origin of 4,Star Spangd Banner"' Elli.Z o."wu Do You -Know" When was "The Star Spangled Banner" written and under what circumstance? Did the man who wrote the word write the music? (2) If on of the principals In a limited round boxing contet shquld hold the world's championship, and be knocked out would he lose his title? Is it neoessarv for the article pf agreement to read "for championship"? HAMBURG. The word were written by Francis Scott Ke ,J.n ,Mi' durm tha BHtish attack on Baltimore, he went under a flag of truce to the British fleet to arrange for an ex. chang of prisoner and was detained on th frigate Surprl during the bombard ment of Fort McHenry. He watched the progress of the fight, and In the morning seeing the flag "tm there." composed the word of th ong.- He did not write the muftc It was sung to the muslo of "An acreon In Heaven." (3) If the men fight at the proper weight for their clas and it U understood that a decision la to be reached In whatever way the law of the fitate per mits, the title of champion passes to the winner whether the articles read "for cbamplonihlp" or not But if It 1 clearly understood that tha bout Is only for ex hibition purposes, with so careful specific. tow mad about weigh! and, tut arrang, mt wade for arrtvtog at a 4ci(oa eltSar by th rfn or othsr pi, & i5jo - -- - -. a -- - r " 1 THE ROCKEFELLjij FAM1JUY MYSTE1 Father of the Oil King jjH nnnvnil In 1QRI7 XT. '25 iiv. ... ,. iviiuws vviiur, juecamoa of Him By- JOHN EtFRETH WATKlffl (.-oprrisht, 1010, A PEDDLER gesticulating ln u,. xx nnu-aumD language surprised uicmoru nousewivcs wno opened their 10 nis vigorous Knocks. And fci ho was so young, so tal, so virile, to jSff ouu.u mo uiiiiuuuii muuiiy Btrack Into'iC hearts of these dames enough pity to'jiS tit Ami fittf iifFinratrAn tslh1i t 1 jiL"l "" .. "..mom ne might gle beforo their eyes. 'ism It was tho year 1838. Rlchford JS modest New York village that lay Up'g Cayuga Lnko. This peddler appearlnjla. denly at Its doors was destined to S3 himself In a block secret that for fj2 cuuiury uuql Kiuum over WJiat Is psrfiEJ ...w ttiv.i m.i.uuo ttiiujr in America. D That fascinating. Itinerant nv.fcS who thus appealed to the pity of nichfS housewives had latoly appeared wltflj family at n farm on tho outskirts of tojg He had Just turned 23, was keen of eye S Joyful of heart, without fear or conscleS tho dashing kind of adventurer 'tJB. wvmcn iuvo tiiiu men suspect. Ills i was wiiunm Avcrv Rockefeller. IlevK not a Jot deaf, nolther was he mule?? though for months he made his new ne'i bors converse with him by pencil, upon! slnte which ho carried. Ho dlsappej for long periods at a time, prcsumihliT; netlrlln hln, wnren throltirhniit th ....l-i. , ......... w ,CBaMf, mg country. Then, after a while, his role chimfi Ho suddenly outgrow his nmictlon 'ttj becamo "Doctor" Rockefeller, Invents nnd dispenser of a wondrous rat for cancer. Thereafter ho generally turned homo with plethoric purse. IndeS ho was soon buying flno clothes, expensirt shotguns, fast horses. He became a feU les3 whip, a dashing equestrian, a flne'sSi a beau among women. In short, he wasTS chief sporting character of tho community Yet he was n strict abstainer from aleol He would havo been qulto the fine genuj man In appearance but for tho eccentrlfij of leaving off his necktie, the better to t play a big diamond stud ln the bosom'"oi hla shirt. IS Went Out Never to Return M Mystery always shrouded his long S sences and his plenteous supply of readj money. It was while on ono of his w longed trips that he met Eliza Davison?! prosperous farmer's daughter, whom u brought homo to Rlchford as his wife. dS of tho several children born to them mi John D. Rockefeller, present-day klng(S American multimillionaires. - About fo years after tho birth of this child of at? tiny tho family commenced a long aM 'cillous period of movlngs to MoravSJ Ohio; Oswego, N. Y. ; Strongsyllle, 0h5 nnd Parma, Ohio. During this period tif cancer doctor was home but little; yet whllo thero he always Improved his preS j ef liv tndlllorlnir n. fad that fteemerl wplrdlTll .. ... Inconsistent with his lack of clomestldtj,. This was a penchant for planting trees. Drove after grove still stand as monuments to his momory. Finally, In 18B7, he moved his wlfo and children to a snug brick hoiW In Cleveland. Soon nfterward he toofcJaS' hat from Its peg. stepped forth Into tt night and became but a hazy memom His son, John D., wns then 18. During ST next 32 years tho deserter's patient Trim wnlted vainly for his return. Then w died. In utter Ignorance of the fate that bri overtaken him. Luqklly, her sons haa I passion for money making. The wolf W not lurk long at her door. Tho mystery of William Avery feller's disappearance continued, oMj, enough, to be overlooked by press and pj lie alike until a long time after nil John D. had flashed Into the financial flm" ment as a luminary of the first magnltoto Then somo chance writer sounded the alw. and scribes nnd detectives, professions! nmatour, sallied forth to beat every bu for the lost father of America's mosi-w splcuous citizen. In tho years that mm since followed our country and CfJii4! have both been scoured and a forjunebij. been Bpent In hunting down false cloHj The late editor. Joseph Pulitzer, put a J price on the lost man's head nnd Is "tS nave lavisnea tsuuu on ino inyawi. jp, one time rival newspaper sleuths asslgS" to the case waged an exciting war of ! necessitating the employment of telegrapijj codes such as those used by great mlliunji forces in the field. , Newspapers Hunt for Him In the exciting hunt for the miss'" ""S Rockefeller detectives have crossed t naths of the newapaner scouts. The parent secrecy cloaking operations of tk former agents haB aroused suspicion tW the vanished man's Bona have dreaded ft discovery by outside Interests that ralj reveal the secret back of his disappearance The most persistent theories as to "WfljJ Ham Avery Rockefeller's career after eT3 Ing his wife locate him, variously, a. wealthy lumber magnate of Canada, w a ranchman of Northwest United Stat. JJ "Dr. Laverlng." of Madison. Wis., andfij "Dr, Levlngston," ' of Freeport, III, TMJ first two theories were but vague from ffttj outset The Madison address at which tj was said to reside was found to be ""SSI existent and the sleuth who hunted "fla Levlngston" to his lair Jn Freeport arrlvq there eome time after that gentleman died. . Skeletons rattle louder In the full clot of the rich than in the empty closets, of tM poor. America's wealthiest citUen ha bS called by a distinguished biographer T", world's most tragic figure." Ha his a1 melancholy been due to the riddle of father's fate or to fear that some trie4 connected therewith might pne day be r vealed to a pitiless publla? R-& m . FRQM COLONEL; TO CQLONEIii The BtraWst thing of all is that 43 Intelligent ana disinterested men, 101 considerable body even of observing a? thinning men, couia be deceived oy in 1 gram and proceeding of Theodore lv velt. -Louisvme uourier-Journsi, OTHERWISE OCCUPIER For tha coming two weeks Congr will not be in a frame of mind to atU business1-that may call for deliberate juuwyw Jourpai ana Tribune, " 1" NOW THAT'S SETTLEI .Whs mr! ?rutUktU M it Vaiuo m wsjmnv IK r Ci W r