BWHU'v-w & EVENING LB1)(JEH-PHILADELPHIA. WED.NLHDAY, MAIU'll 10, 1015. t mmmmmimmmmim PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY rvnt-s it. k ctrnTia timipicnt. Charles II biwllnirlon. Vice Pretldenti John C Martin. Secretary urn! Treasurer) Fhlllp S. Collin, John II. EDiTont Aij hoard t Ctac 11. K. Ci'ittii, Chairman. l IT. WirALEt Executive IMItor JOHN C. MAItTIK. Oneral Business Manager Publlnhed dally at I'cnMo Lsoorn llulldlng, Independence Square, fhlla-lelnhla. t.nxiBn f 'iterant. Ilroail and Chestnut Bt.Teta tr.Avne flit v I'rtia-Vnton Building NfcW Youk ltO-A. Metropolitan Toner t'litcjiao 81 Home lnrurnnre Ilultdlne J-o.mion 8 Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, S. W. NcwsfiunnAUSi -VA-nmoTOS lluniuu The rf Itulldlnc NHtr Tonit Bcmcau. ... The Timet Hullrilnir Il-r.tM Jiumuu . no Filertrlchetraene jMKCO.f Ill'RCAO 2 Pall Alall East, 8. W, Pta IJlbiud ( 3i Hue IajuIs te Urand SUUSCtllPTIONTDnMS tij carrier. Djtli.r OvtT. -Ix cenle, Ttv mill, ponlpald bulelde of Philadelphia, except where foreign pontage l required, DKll.T Only, one month, tnenlytlve cente, Daiit Onit. one yenr. three dollar. All mall sub acrlptlona pnable In ndance. nr.IX, .1060 WALNUT Kr.YSTO.Nn, MAIN 300I W Addtvsi nit ronimiintcaffo'ia to Evening ledger. Independence Square, Philadelphia. cvrEtttn it tub riiiLADrLniu ros-romcr. is sccond clash mail MATtr.n. Pllll.itlKLPIIIA.WCn.NhSBAV, M.AIttll 10, 1915. in the handbook of efficiency there are no rules for making excuses. The Machine Keeps Its Hands Off THE best news that linn come out of Hnr rlsburg this week Is that Iho Organization lias decided to Issue no orders on tho local option question. Tho bill II appears, Is not to bo treated ns a political incuMirc on which It Is necessary to conccntiuto the party forces, cither In opposition or in Mipport, This Is n victory for the locnl optlonlsts, headed by tho Governor. They havo demon strated that It would bo politically unwise, for tho Organization to commit Itself to op position to a measure for which there Is so much popular support. Tho Democrats nro for It. Tlioy havo been for It from tho be ginning. Their lenders nro actively co-opor-ntlnpf with tho Governor to push It through. So tho machine has wisely decided to "pan der to the moral (.cntlmcnt of the commu nity" nnd let tho bill ulone. Each Representative and each Senator must dccldo for himself whether he will vote for it. Tho matter Is put up to his conscience, reinforced by his Instinct for sclf-proservu-tlon. This Instinct will certainly influence some legislators, even If they have no con science. "A Livelihood for Every Man" THERE havo been two years of Democracy. At all times during tho sessions of tho "Long Congress" It has been apparent that but for tho influence of tho President hlm3olf and a few sensible leaders tho party would havo rushed into legislative excesses from which the country could not havo recovered in a. decade. Tho disasters which business has escaped render thoso which havo been visited upon It unimportant in comparison. Tho President has tempered his party's radicalism. Whatever ho has forced through has been less objcctlonnblo than it would havo been had tho majority taken tho hit In their teeth. There Is no thought now that tho Democ racy as tho Democracy would havo even a fighting chance In tho icxt presidential elec tion. For Democracy Wllsonlsm has been substituted. It Is on 'Wllsonlsm that Demo crats rely for a fighting chanco next year. They nro hopeful that his personality has impressed tho nation sufllclcntly to cnablo tho party to rldo to victory on It. Thero never was and never will bo a party, however, capablo of surviving such a winter as tho industrial centres of tho Union havo Just experienced. Thero Is no oratory that can convert a hungry man, no political pro gram that can reconcile him to tho loss of his bread and butter. "A livelihood for every man" will bo tho Issue next year, and it Is an Issuo that spells certain victory. In time of prosperity men havo tlfno to experi ment and play with "Isms." They becomo Intensely practical when the larder is empty. Mr. Wilson will bo the Democratic nomi nee next year, and he will be hopelessly de Xcated. Conditions Justify Business Courage FOUR thousand men were put to work In the Homestead plant of tho Carnegie Steel Company this week, and for tho first tlmo In nearly two years every department is in operation. Tho Bethlehem Company ulso 13 seeking men to operate its plants In filling orders that have been obtained since tho war began. Steel Is coming Into Its- own again. This means that there Is a revival of business confidence, and men are pushing ahead with tho enterprises which have languished during the period of depression. Business cannot go on always on a hand-to-mouth basis, and every tlmo It Is forced to retrench It Is ac cumulating some demands that must be met In the future. There nro needs enough now for raw and manufactured material of all hinds to Justify rcnowal of activity in overy line. The- man who has tho courage to be lieve in tho future today will reap a rich harvest tomorrow. Maine Is Swinging Bade Into Line THE municipal elections In Malno this week show that the reaction from Democracy, which was noticeable in September, has lost none of Its force. The Republicans' made substantial gains in live cities, and they olected their ticket In Augusta for the first time In live years, and In Belfast for tho first dm in nine years. Of course, local Issues always affect local elections, but every one familiar with the state of sentiment lu tho nation at large Is persuaded that dissatisfac tion with the blundering Inefficiency of th nomocracy in Washington lu In some meas ure responsible for the return of the voters to tlialr old allegiance. They are getting ready to support the Republican ticket next $ear Beware This Dangerous Policy TTINGIJVND can make no greater mistake XLl than to refuse to crews of captured Ger man submarines the rights usually accorded to jirisMiere of war. These man are In the regular Mirviee of their country, the officers eominieaioned, by It. They are not individ ually rotipoiutlble for acts committed under ortlrB, Their tat us cannot logically be dif ferent fruw that of other prisoners, captured wbtl 1 pursuit 0r their regular duty. To troat theeo men as criminal would b hi iftV4 repriesJ. There are British prteoa- w tw inii-. tfeewMind of them, and it m quit clear ttuu they ili be treated no eucr and " worse ttutn Giy-niau jn-Uonsrs l,rgluuii are triwted. The wholesale da- ,, .) ..f iiti'e would b? too gruesome .. , mtwsnjtiat.e. jet what lse could bo expeated under a policy that divided reg ular officers and men of tho German navy Into classes, treating ono class fairly nnd tho other class ns criminals? Tho causes of a war are one thing; tho manner of Its conduct Is another. England's quarrel Is with tho Government nt Berlin, not with tho men who obey tho orders Issued by that Government. Moral Suasion Not a Slctigo-llnmmer THERE Is no reason for excitement becauso American warships ImVo been ordered to return to Vera Cnns They might never to havo left. Tho right of tho people of Mexico to govern themselves, whether they can do It or not, has been recognized by tho President of tho United Stntes. That only beenme this Government's Idea, however, nfler tho with drawal of Huerta and tho dissolution of or ganized authority. Thero nro too many bandits about for tho United States to bother with any ono of them in particular, Carranza probably 1ms his hands full holding on to what territory ho controls. Ho will not try to capture our bat tleships, nnd It is altogether probnblo that ho will mako whatover promises seem to bo necessary. Why not? Ho docs not havo to keep them. Tho moral drive and humanitarian thrust havo not redeemed Mexico. Tl e reeking tubo and Iron shnrd speak tho only langungo tho people of Hint .stricken nation can un derstand. Let them shoot themselves Into prosperity nnd happiness If they can nnd rob ono another to their hearts' content. So far as American nnd other interests nro con cerned, there Is nothing much left but ruin. Moral suasion is an excellent thing, but It can never tnke the place nf a slcdge-hnmincr. A Business Accelerator? THE chairman of tho new Federal Tindo Commission nnd Hie, President havo con sulted together ns to the course to be pur sued by tho body as diicotor general of the business of tho nation. It was ugrccd that sensational attacks on business methods would not bo attempted, ns something in tho naturo of a soothing syrup seemed moro nec essary. "Wo hope," said Chairman Davles, "to bo a renl benefit to all business men everywhere In tho United States." That is a big job, and yet It can bo ac complished by tho simple expedient of toll ing tho truth. All tho commission has to do Is nail tho lies to which muck-rakers have given currency nnd prove by Its own Inves tigations that honorable, not dishonorable, methods aro tho ones which have earned success In tho United States. When a largo part of tho people become convinced pros perity Is not a moral wrong; that a compe tency Is cvldenco of ability Instead of thiev ery; that tho acquisition of property is a praiseworthy thing; that tho material well being of citizens Is of very great Importance, and thnt money In tho bank Is better than dally visits to souphouscs, much will havo been achieved. Tho big thing for tho Federal Trndo Com mission is to glvo somo publicity to tho truth In n. word, to bo constructive instead of de structive. Sauce for the Gamier Served to the Goose A BOSTON probation ofllrcr has discovered , that there are two sides to tho home making question: tho man's side and tho woman's side. With disgraceful lack of gal lantry, ho has declared that tho woman who neglects her home ought to bo subject to arrest, Just as tho man who spoils Its pcaco by becoming intoxicated Is llablo to public discipline. But why not? Is tho man to blanio for everything that goes wrong? There nro statisticians who maintain that as much evil Is dono by slovenly housekeeping us by tho saloon. . Of course, they are mistaken, but it is unfortunately truo that when a man has to chooso between tho exhilaration to bo ob tained from alcoholic spirits and tho depres sion that comes from going homo to a slov enly wife and a biting tongue, he chooses tho exhilaration, forgetting the after effects. But this does not justify the mnn, and thero Is no Justification for tho woman's Incompetence. Tho homo can be preserved -when both par ties work harmoniously toward the same end, accepting the responsibilities and tho burdens as the price to bo paid for Its preservation. 1.1 fo Is Just ono opportunity nfter another. Js'o dinner Is dry that tho Governor at tends. Obviously the Smyrna figs will have to come from California. New Jersey must bo Democratic. There Is a threatened deficit of about a million and a half. It now appears that Europe will get rid of Turkey long before the United States gets rid of Thaw. What do we want with a navy? Tho Brit ish ships seem to be taking care of our mer chantmen. Being opposed to transit Is very much like having a 14-lnch gun when your enemy is armed with a 16-Inch affair. A peculiar thing about the situation In Eu rope Is that londed guns are doing far more damage than unloaded ones. If a one-legged man can vote eight times in Terre Haute, how many times can a two legged man vote In Philadelphia? There might have been peace In Mexico long before this if a certain orator In the United States had not talked about it so much. It niakeu some difference how England treats the crews of captured submarines, but the Important thing Is how the submarines treat England The Interest In baseball In this city will be veiy materially Increased when It Is pos sible to get to the grounds for1 a nickel and get there In a hurry. So much for rapid transit. The Athenians have been nn excitable peo ple since the record of history runneth not to the contrary,. But the King probably knows more about Athenian history than Pericles did. After all the talk about QentMling the elec tion of "Uncle Joe" Cannon on ths ground of fraud, tho Department of Justice an nounce that it Is unable tp make out n ease. When "Uncle Joe" is defeated it's a vaca tion, not a retirement. It ray b remarkable that the British bavaI guns can bombard the Dardanelles forts IS mile away, but this acblevamsm is trivial l comparison with that of the local optionistii who aro pouring hot ot into HrrWMur from every corner of J?eiyl vania regardless of the distance. NEW CRISIS IN THE NEAR EAST On tho Fighting; in the .Dai'dnnelles Hangs the Fate of the Hapsburg PowerFall of Turkey of Little Comparative Significance. By PRANK H. SIMONDS Author of "Tho Great War." f7ic ni Helen by Mr. Nlmonds Interpreting the events of the fliironciin conflict arc gcif erallg aeknoicleiliial to surpass anil similar u-oik In America. They arc distinguished bj( their Informational raluc, bu the writer's compichcnslvc knowledge of the historical end social background nf the tear, and by his power of pcnrttallng the superficial aspects of lis successive, stages to Us ictily ilfiniil noting facts and Implications.) IT l.S easy. It Is natural. In the present crisis In the Is'ear East to permit tho details to obseute the gr. iter fact. Thus tho Cabinet crisis lu Athens, tho mobilization orders In Solln, the unrest lu Rome and Bucharest arc all but Incidental manifestations of tho single major Incident. After flvo centuries thn wholo face of tho Eastern question Is elinnglng tn the tune of tho revolllo ot the allied guns mi the Torts nf tho Dardanelles. Viewed from tho Western standpoint tho Great War Is n contest between rival nn. lions, erne mole manifestation of jealousies ns old as modern history, Jealousies between peoples who havo contended for many cen turies for European supremacy. But viewed from tho Balkans It Ik a final stop In the libeintlon of rncrs which Turkish tyranny anil Euiopcan rivalries Imvo held in subjec tion for moro than llvo centuries. It Is n war nf Independence ns unmistukablo us any in human history. Sentence of. Death A gcuernlloii ago Europe, sitting about tho table ill the Couglcss of Herlln, condemned Hip nnlhiius to misery, to agony, to servi tude. The senleiice of death was passed be causo the ambitions nf the British, tho Aus trlans mid the Russians conflicted. Millions who had fought for liberty, who hnd de served It, millions f Heibs, of Greeks and ot Bulgars, were given over to tho Turks, lest Russia or Austria might unduly profit by their liberty, or Eugliind'H pathway to her Indian Empire be Imperiled by Russian pos session of Constantinople. Three years ago the Balkans broko from their servitude, and once more, with tho samo courage, devotion nnd with new efllciency, assorted their national rights. On tho battle fields nf T.nle Uurgas and Kumanovn, on tho hills above Knlonlcn, these thrco races earned liberty. But Europe, Immobilized by rivalries whllo tho first lialkuu war progressed, found lef ugo In Intrigue and chlcano when the wnr was over. The Balkan Confederacy wkb shattered to suit Austrian purposes. The Turk came back to Adrlnnoplc. Among the Allies of yesterday there was- created a hatred moro bitter than that each had felt toward tho Turk. In 1913, as ut Berlin, Europe to .servo its selfish ends, again passed sentenco upon tho millions of tho Bnlknn. But this tlmo tho sentence did not run. Tho answer to Aus trian intrlguo was inndo at Sarajovo, and tho nssnsslnntion nf tho Archduke was tho sig nal to bring down upon Europe north of tho Danube nil tho agonies It hnd visited upon tho Serb, tho Bulgar nnd tho Greek. The Poisoning of Europe Today tho fleets which nro opening tho road to Constantinople nro also clearing tho road for a now, a better Europe, slnco they nro making posslblo tho liberation of tho races of tho Balkans, whoso misery has1 been llko an Infected limb slowly generating poi son, which in .tho end was disseminated through the whole European body. If Bulgaria, Greece, Servla, Rumania can not composo their jealousies; if to Bulgaria enn bo returned tho lost children of the prov inces taken by Servla and Rumanlu; if tho old Balkan Allianco can bo restored, under tho guidanco of tho sea Powers, thero may vanish from tho chancelleries of Europo tho greatest of nil international problems. Yet thcio can bo no mistaking the wider aspect of tho wholo question. The Turk Is about to surrender tho last of his stolen lands. Ho Is going back to Asia. But tho Eastern question does not begin at tho Dan ube. Tho liberation of tho Greek and tho Bulgar docs not close tho fight of tho Serb nnd tho Rumanian In Austria for liberty. It does not dlsposo of tho question of tho Czech, tho Slovak and tho Slovene. Eastern Question Moves to Vienna Rather, It seems accurate to say that with the going of tho Turk the Eastern question Is removed to Austria. What the Allies are seeking to accomplish at the Dardanelles Is not merely tho overthrow of Turkish power in Europe, with tho Incidental liberation of tho Balkan peoples, but the destruction of the foundation of tho Hapsburg power, of tho Central European Alliance. Tho fall of Constantinople will be n fact only less considerable for tho Austrian than for tho Turk. It will provide the chance for settling the quarrels between the Balkan States, and this settlement will release Ru mania ind Greece, who can thereafter Join their Servian ally on the Hungarian frontier. Not less Important must be tho effect of allied success upon Jtaly. Already her peo ple aro Impatient at the delay which has kept Italian troops out of the Trentlno and Italian warships from Trieste and the Venetian cities of Dalmatlu, Italy, Rumania, Servla, are thus longing for tho lands Inhabited by the people of their own race, but ruled by the Hupsburgs. Greece hungers for her share of Asia Minor and hopes to see Aus trian ambition to rossess Salonlca finally shattered. The fall of Turkey Is of little real moment Jo Europe now. Her exile has been too long discounted to excite great interest. What Is vital to remember Is that the fate of Vienna, of Austria, may be settled under the walls -of Byzantium. The deoislon of the great war may be had not In the North Sea, but on the Golden Horn. INCIDENT OF THE SIEGE Turkish Fleet Took Land Voyage Into Golden Horn in 1453, Constantinople, for commercial, military and political reasons, is a natural capita. For 1100 years and moro it was the govern mental seat of the Roman Empire of the Qast. At the middle of the 16th century the empire had shrunk to a small district about the city, and Muhammad felt that his hold Inge in Wurope were unsafe so long as Con stantinople remained In other hands. An incident of the etege of 1453 ie of in terest at the present moment, when Con stantinople in the objective at the allied ueet agnung us way tarouga tn uarua.- j t r " V' - :"V ,. I W- ncllcs. Tho city is located on the hilly promon tory washed by tho Sea of Marmora, the Bosporus nnd tho Golden Horn, a. narrow crescent-shaped inlet about four miles long and from ono to four miles wide. The slcgo began early in April. The first attacks on the lnndwnrd defenses failed. Genoa nnd Venice, whoso commcrco tho success of the Turks promised to destroy, had allied them selves with the crumbling Greek Empire and their fleet managed to run tho gauntlet of the Turkish ships nnd to throw succor Into tho city. Chains stretched across tho lower end of tho Golden Horn prevented the entry of the Turks. Unless a double attack could bo mndo from tho harbor as well as from tho land tho reduction of tho capital appeared hopeless. Undaunted, Muhammad adopted a strata gem which had been repeatedly practlcod by the ancients. He constructed across tho Isthmus from tho Bosporus to tho upper part of tho harbor, a, dlstanco of 10 miles, a road or well-greased planks; and In a slnglo night, with tho help of rollers nnd pulleys, seventy light vessels climbed over hill, sailed across tho plain and wero launched In tho upper harbor. On tho 20th of May tho city fell. For tho arms of tho now stato Muham mad adopted tho familiar cresctnt of tho Golden Horn. HO, FOR THE GARDENS! From tlie Chicago Herald. Breathes there a man with soul so dead Who to hlmrelf hath never said ' I'd llko to plant a garden?" We unhesitatingly say no. The desire to plant and work a small, personal garden springs eter nal In the human breast. During the winter season It lingers In the background of consclous npcs nnd perfumes oven the steam-hented air with tho gentle thought or spring. Enrly in March, though the landscape bo still robed lu snow, it Inspires earnest study of seedsmen's catalogues and their pictures. And when spring really comes what words can set forth tho strength with which It seizes hold of the urban population? What the citizen of Chicago ought to realize Just nt this time Is that this Is not a guilty de sire for things ono should not havo, but a most valuable human impulse. It is tho ono Impulse of tho season which the urbanlte should follow sublimely wherever it may lead. Even though It lead only to a small back yard or to a plot even smaller It Is a good impulse and should bo trusted, There's health In It. There's health because there Is physical exercise In the open air and relaxation for the mind. There's occupation for the children In It. Children like nothing better than to see things grow. They ncqulro a personal Interest In the various plants and In following their career. And there's money In It, strange as It may seem. One Wednesday tho Herald printed a list showing the net profits young farmers In Chicago had realized from small gardens. Look It over. You will find some surprising figures. Hut if you manage only to supply your own fimily with fresh vegetables during the sum- mer you will havo cleared a good amount and. what Is more, havo had better than the market often affords. The plan to have Chlcugoans seize this oppor tunity for health, happiness and profit for them and their children has been received with favor on all sides. It Is planned to have demonstra tion plots In the parks nnd other places, where the urbanlte can get all the Information he re quires, po once more and all together "Here's to thousands of new small gardens in Chicago this year!" THE SOUL OF AN ARMY From tho Youth'i Companion. The soul of the canal army lived, of course, n its American contingent. In that brigade of about tJOOO men were embodied the enthusiasm, zial and patriotic devotion that carried the great Cask to success. Virtually every man In It felt such pride in his work and was so thor oughly absorbed in It that he believed in his soul that without him the building ot the canal would receive a serious check. That was not conceit, but the conviction that "we are all doing this together, and every man of us must contribute every ounce of his power to win." And every man did contribute every ounce of hla power. Visitors were struck with tho uni versal habit among Americans ot all ranks In the force of saying, "We have done fhls," "We are going to do that," "We will have the canal done on time.'" They never wearied, never doubted. They knew they should succeed be cause they had unbounded confidence In their leader and faith In his ability and Justice. A KING AND AN ANGLER From Anwers. Victor Emmanuel, King of Italy, Is a keen fisherman, and spends, hour alter hpur with his rod, though the best of luck does not always attend his piscatorial expedition. Once, after several hours' angling had brought him only three poor fish and he was returning to the cas tle, lit Has met by a peasant with a magnificent catch of trout "You seem to b no great fish erman to judge by your catch," commented the peasant "I should sa you were about as lucky as the king ' "Why?" inquired hi Majesty ' oh, ' replied the peasant, "he thinks a great deal of himself as a sportsman, but Jit is a poor i much more fit to be u. fctag tfean a fisher man ja? ' !!. dr ir i?r isi'l iKKHHa7ilHftfiiflx ?$?-., I Wi Fern' 'MsMmSmSSKHHKm lJsi sfi"' 1 undraw.'". if'i'&tiSsiasNMBlL iwartimH' j msbSimi)SirKaj&n..j... . I STILL IN CHARGE jr .mm7 SB i JSmMmM mi l -jv tm. .i vjjyiTmr.tLj -w vt.- i t i n 1 1 wi wm n iu rf- ,t jw&x im&Mm9mmm.i MmmwwmffiMmt!; i i r.rtiTpi keflSxQSnBgffl 3 MfMiS'M-' ..v--'' I BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA 1 DIGEST OF THE MAGAZINES (1) World's Work "Do Wars Really Cost Anything?" (2) Atlantic Monthly "The Cost to Humanity." (3) Metropolitan "German Frnnce." (4) Review of Reviews "German Ideal ism and tho War." ON ACCOUNT OF WAR THERE are so many debits to war's ac count, not only tho obvious Items of homes destroyed nnd cities burned and women rav ished and men killed, but so many moro subtlo consequences which appear for reckoning only gradually that It is never posslblo to balance tho account books with any accuracy. Tho scaro hcadllno stago of this war Is temporarily over, and our Incredulous sur prise has given way to sad nnd disillusioned acceptance. Having satisfied our curiosity with copious descriptions, tho minds nnd imaginations of writers and editors havo now turned to the more analytical phases of war fare, such as tho actual and ulthnato cost of war. Thero is an effectlvo nnd striking contrast of antipodal points of view on this question In two of tho March magazines. Is war an Irreparable loss to civilization, or does It provide Its own compensations which suf fice to balance the debit account? Tho optimistic position that war has its grim advantages Is cleverly presented In an article by T. H. Price In World's Work (1): Asldo from tho loss of human life, tho real economic waste of war is represented by the powder and projectiles used, tho buildings wrecked, the crops ruined nnd tho horses killed or rendered useless. Most of tho money that Is spent In war is for what may bo called overhead expenses tho wages of men unpro ductively employed, tho movement and feed ing of troops, uniforms, nrtlllery, guns, aero planes nnd warships. Tho cost of all these things, being disbursed through ono agency, the Government, bulks large in tho public eye; but Is it, in the aggregate, much greater than the total expenditure mado through myriad agencies In time of peace for imper manent and unproductive tilings? In an economlo sense, Is tho purchase and main tenance of an expenslvo automobile any less wasteful than the purchaso and maintenance of an artillery gun carriage, provided the cannon Is not used to destroy life or prop erty? Is a military uniform a less productive Investment than a dress Btilt? Is the move ment of troops en masse moro wnstctul of wealth than the annual heglra of the work ing millions of this country for their summer holiday? The chief difference Is that In wartime the people pay tho expenses through taxa tion and deny themselves many pleasurable luxuries for which they would pay directly out of their own purses If there were no war. Thero aro no statistics on the subject avall ablo, but tho reports that come from Europe Indicate that economy Is now universal, Tho estimated cost of tho war for six months is six billion dollars. The population of Europe 1b 450,000,000. If the average ex penditure for unnecessary and unproductive thtngs has been reduced JIB per cnpltn, the costs of the war have been paid by saving. On the Debit Side , Mr, Trice seems a bit arbitrary in his valu ation -ot human life, generally admitted to be a considerable factor In the cost of war, when he dismisses It wth the phrase, "Aside from the cost of human life," Herbert Horwlll, an English journalist, takes It more seriously ip his article In tho Atlantic Monthly (2), which Is really based on an acceptation of the spiritual values of men's lives and potentiali ties as being on a par with moro material Items, such as horsepower and explosives consumed In battle. Even when satlstlcians have completed their estimates ot war's products and by products, their figures will come far Bhort of an adequate account of the toll levied by the war upon the civilization of our own and following generations. A single instance Will suggest considera tions that can find no place In any statistical table. Prof. Paul Ehrllch Internationally fa mous as the discoverer of salvarsan gives much of the credit for that discovery to a colleague. Doctor Berthelm, the greatest re cent authority on organic arsenic compounds. Doctor Berthelm wdBone of the first German soldiers slain in thereseut war. It Is not ex travagant to say that the bullet, or shrapnel, or bayonet that killed Berthelm killed also an unknown number of future sufferers of all nationalities whose lives might have been saved by the discoveries he would have made. An infantry officer at Jhe front has de scribed in a letter home the effect of the shells from the big German guns, which more than once burled whole sections of men in the earth of the parapets. "Some of them," be writes, "took no harm, and we dug thtm out and used them again. Others died being torn to fragwenu." "W dug them out and if used them again" thnt is n phrase to stick! ... uuun luiiiu in reiiecimg on the emploj. meiit given by wnr to somo of the finest spirits or our time. Any ono who has over listened to the magic of li rltz Krolsler's playing will Indeed wonder at tho ninHnnag llmf nmiM fin.t .... i,.ii .... for him than to send him Into the field t oicrij iiibiii aucr nignt in wet grass and then Into tho trenches to bo ridden over and huuiiucu Dy a uossacK lancer. John Reed tolls a war story In tho Metro politan (3) Which EIVOS a Vivid Honsn nf M liumari nature functioning along tho same u ever, wmi an us inconsistencies and para.j doxes. He was with tho German army: j You could find no animosity against thi. jic-nuii unu not inucu respect ror them. TciJI not only theso moil, but officers in other1!-! iuuecs, ioiu mo mat isngllsn and Gernmiijl tanvu nu mure quarter to ono nnotiicr, tna ..uvj.v .". iiiuiu JJUOUUV18, - Yet there remained tho wonderful story of, tho Christmas truce whero English and Ger-, man and Gorman and French visited on j another's trenches and even exchanged gifts.? j no &axons were in trenches somewhere not fnr fpftm nlxilmn. nn eti.l.tmna T,.. h.l. Ppfltinll unllllAI, s.nnnil.n nnnlnB .t... man.. J .v...w. uviu..d ui;uoik,-, tLf,a.l!Ot. Uiu vuut-, mands of their officers, sent an envoy under . a whito flag to ask for n truco on Christian ;' Day. This tho Saxon officers refused. But on vurisiiiuiH morning mo caxon soiaiers oc-t ciuiuu uiu uuug in spue ot lUB ouicers; auaq .lln f.l... ...inn.!.... !.., It .... I.. 1. . t. !.. In.3 and increasing friendliness for six days, untl finally tho mutinous regiments had to hj wuiiuruwii irom uoui siues, Germany Discovers Her Enemies Ono of tho most subtlo effects of war U ti. necessity for self-Justification which It fores upon both sides. It Is at first confuslnff Io see tho intellectual leaders of modern thousnt, arguing from identical premises to opposlti conclusions, according as they aro Frencii; or German born. Ono of the greatest and most original thinkers of tho day, Prof. Ru-; dolf Eucken, has just written some phllcH sophlcal reflections upon tho war, which m translated from tho Illustrlrte Zeltunjr If1 tho Review of Reviews (4): This year has broueht us experiences boll sad and joyous; the sad fortunately ore froa without and tho Joyful from within. Then has been n notable swliicr of tho Dendulua with regard to our relations with fowling countries, wo wero Justified In benevwji that wo possessed, if not the love, at any rlttj tho esteem, of tho great majority of nations; now wo aro not only forced to suffer the enyl nnd hate of our direct opponents, but eteai among -neutral peoples so much dlsaffecuM, against us has been displayed, Buch J willingness and Inability to put themselvM our place, that It is very clearly shown b foreign we havo remained to the others de spite all external points of contact. j For example, wo had recently establish a multiplicity of cultural bonds wth Amtf-S lea, and now there como to us thence ow-; whelming expression of a hostile nature-, wfc also had behaved ourselves to bo In a clos, community of culture with French SwIU land, yet now Geneva seems to have becomj, ln defiance of Swiss neutrality) a very of agitation against Germany. But .wl!rJ such misunderstanding and such Iff? rages against us in tho outside world, need have no fear, for this year has snow a mighty strength in tho German PffP"; strength that none of its foes would MB dreamed of attributing to it, Jl The war was forced upon our PePj9jH foes who, envious of our growing Brat?j havo long cherished sinister plans. W :! did not accept this necessity with eh?ns groans wo Immediately transwrmj" fate Into the deed of our own free wU1-tu this whole position was new and the weapg forged against us hitherto unheard ;,, past can offer us no counsel; we muss s on our own feet, discover new paths, '-j new forces our life has b$M5 that chain of the past ana stanas W)iv.., - the present. THE PILGRIM Give me my scallop-shell of quiet My staff of faith to walk upon, My scrip of Joy, Immortal diet; My bottle of salvation; , My gown of glory (hope's-true gaugw And thus I'll take my pilgrimage. Blood must be my body's 'balmer. Whilst my soul, a quiet palmer, Traveleth toward the land of Heaven. No other balm will there be given. - Over the silver mountains, Where spring the nectar fountains, There will I kiss The bowl of bliss, And drink mine everlasting Unon every mllken hill. My soul will be a-dry before. But, after, it will thirst no more Then, by that happy, blissful "s More peaceful pilgrims I shail see That have cast oK their rag ot ly Arul walk appjreiea freh i f ,1J4rS