ft EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA. flATTTKDAY. MARCH 13, 1016;. 8 g Singer PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ernes H k ci-jitis. rriissT Chariest! Lucllnition, Vile i,re,.litent,.fohn L" Martin, Secretary ami Tmmuref fVhlllp H Cnlllna John II. ;iiilnnn Dtrerlorn. . j KDlTuniAt. ISOAllDt 1 hi H K c tin, Chairman P It WltAl.r.V. . Kxnnllt Mll.tr John c. MARTIN. Cmernl ttun'neni MsniRor lMWIeflfd dully nt I'm. ii t.ftiwiim Til Mine, lniTtpendenr Rpntr Phil lelph'A Ltnaan crstfcAl Mroml ii.nl ('liMlnul Burets ituirn I'll! riTM-l'iiinn IhtlMlinc si limit ItO-A. MttrnpnNlan Tnnrr fittiA'o Rt Itnm tnriininfi nnlMlftic tosnON .... 8 Waterloo Place, l'nll Mill, 8. V. NEWS tll'RKAt'Bl Svmiiv.iov Tii nm , . . The rout tiull.itnu tit lonK ItniMl ..The Tlmti Hull llnif :tlI lltRMIi . lt KlIaftrlrhKttMiFt Ijonmin llunr.AC. . 2 I'all Mull Knl, W. Piki Jicnsiu. :ri him Lends la ilmnd si nc.l(irTto"ll.lll f carrier turn Onlv. lx eent Hy mull tinipnlil mnde nf rhllailelnhlil xifit uliere fnrlRn pnatnire MiMI.Ie nr rhllftilelnhlil eve l remitf".!. DAIi v Oviv. one i month, twrnty (iv centp, Hint Osi.r em )nr three, dollars, Kt rtpilons tnjM.la In mJinnn. aii man nun I!EU 3000 WALNUT KI'.snK, MAIN .Kidll W" Addte nil commHnteulton lo Ktrnlng Trdfter. Imlepcnilrttcr Kiiuarf, f'M'arfet. hla kmkrfd at the rinuuiM inn msTnirtcrt as mtcnsn ciass maii At-rm riiii.nii.fiiiv. ATriiinv MMtr.il in. tii5, 11 la easier io act niniirp than lo pel pviiso In t,priiilltia tl. Woman's Place in the Nation ANSWERING tho arguments nf suffragists Xi Is n pnstlmo In which few opponents of the calise Indulge. They prefer to talk In gencrnlltIo, nnd Irt It go at that. "Woman's placr Is In the home'-- from which sho has been ousted to the number of nearly 10,000.000 hv (conomic pressure. Phe belongs In the home, perhaps, but she hap pens to bo In the factories anil behind the counters of stoics Tn be sure, women's giandmothcr., did not Imve the v He nnd wore satisfied, but in that .state n'so were the an cestors of the ploneois who c.ilne to this country because at home they faced the sumo blind wall of prejudice, and wnntcd to fret to some place on the geography where stund pattlsm "Would not be a. religion. They suc ceeded In their purpose, wherefore there Is now a United Stales, n nation bulltlod quite as much by the heroism of Us women ns by the brnverj ol its men The best kind of electorate would bo a re stricted ono, whereby tlio right to a voto would bo earned and prized accordingly; but since breeches nnd "I jcars of life nro now the solo qualifications for the franchise, ordi nary good judgment icqiilro.s that the quall fl( atlon of Kurb be eliminated and npe alono he left. Just wh an uneducated man should be considered more lit for the ballot tluin an educated woman is not clear except to tho uneducated man. Ably Represented in Mexico THE Brazilian Minister is without doubt the ablest representative tho United States has had In Mexico since the present Admin istration came Into utile e Within less than 24 hours After the muuler of an American citizen by tho Zapatistas in Mexico City ho demanded that tho murdeieis be punished and that reparation bo mado to tho family. Then ho reported to Washington what he had done. This is the ordinary cotirso of diplomatic proceduro In such cases instant and vigorous demand lor punishment and reparation and the Hrazillan Minister could not have done less without neglecting his obvious duty. Hut the men sent from Wash ington to Mexico City have been content with much less in similar cases. Now it Is up to Washington to enforce tho demand made in Its behalf. Mr. Crynn says ho approves tho course of the Brazilian Min ister and has urged him "to leave no stone unturned until the murderers are punished." IJut those Americans who hao been match ing the courso of the Administration are not confident that redress for tho murder of Americana will bo found under any stone which tho Brazilian Minister can turn over. Give the Other Fellows a Chance THE scheme to givo tho haHebnll teams of other cities a fair chant o to beeoino pennant-winners bv apportioning among them tho gicat suns of Philadelphia will doubtlths be advnntngiou.s to the national puntlmc Mr. Mack, it appears, had collect ml so great nn aggiegatioii of ball placrs that adversaries became discouraged, and wero whipped boforo they began to fight. In tho circumstances, it Is right and proper, and sportsmanlike gonerosity requires, that thera bo a shifting of players to tho end that bat tles Instead of slaughter may bo furnished at Shlbo Park, Easy victory has become monotonous. As for tho Phillies, now In process of Incubation as a ball club, It may be remarked that oven If many strong mon have left, tho inappi oathable Alex-ander still remains, a wholo nine In himself when occa sion requires. It may bo a summer of real sport End of a Beautiful Life EVEN his bitterest enemies should cense their reviling while John D Rockefeller is engaged in performing IiIh last solemn duties to his wife Indeed, they should bo alilo to discover something fine tn say of the rtlation that has existed between husbiind and wife for SO years. Ills friends will say It, anyway. And It was fine, this companionship for half a century between the most suoceesful money-getter of his generation and this imet. modest, retiring woman who sought ipuher to exploit herself nor her husband's wealth. It might have beon no different! Society, with a capital "S," had no charms for her and none for her husband. A bos nt the opera, dinner parllrs In her own home and at the publlo restaurants, with frivolous guejjla who cared for nothing but what they ate And what they wore; a season at the watering places of Europe and K parade as an animated dummy for displaying gowns and diamonds, active participation In the standala that disgust the Judicious and make the Injudicious emuloua thoe things v.r within her reach If she had chosen to take them. Hut the sought the quiet society c ," bvr husband and friends after the fashion tt tne ladies of old raintly ami long-estab-Hfcbfd position, in preference to the tragl tnmvd of the display of thoae who have Just come mtu a fortune, without having smimb enough 40 understand that money cannot juake people different from what they are And Mr, Rockefeller solultous care of her $!irtj; recent years ha hen a fine tribute 'It.jM'M' worth ami 4 revel. u ion of a side of 'f''.' uiaii' suture wbirh was, Jn tl.- euspeited ! j 1 tiftor all, uch a life js these tww peopb ,ut Uyd Is 1 1 psjMWlioj a 1 li m s 1 .' in 1 1 1 !.at iif Ulkf it M 4 (patter of iourm. ' if i- UDtauig about it to attitl uuunual ,, 1 tun or tt Sliitfb uveif like the twrmony a. i'li uic jhumh lhv d(corUs are what lEutmmg g( t Into tho newspapers nnd persuade the un thinking that the domestic lire of tlio eiy rich In America Is full of lottenncss nnd nit uuclentiness. Greatest nf Modern Salesmen BIGG lilt Minn any uini In It !i Philadel phia. It Is the irmilt of forcos which have accrued to It through sum ceding gener ations nhd lme stumped upon 11 n ehnrneier which it enn neer lose, tt lied Uh great men !e!terdny nhd II bus its gtent men to day. There will be others tnttiuttmv ti tflko IhPli places. .Men dip but tho t'll.v HtirvlVM. becttitse thtl'8 Is inme In It I hall hllrlt Rild tnnrtar or living Mesh. A imturul catnhtrnphe mleht lay Its bulldlugs In ruttis, but 1'lilln deltihla would remain. Tho genius of Its instlttillons Would survive, inspiring tho new with the old, emphasizing tho city's Itletitfl hut not changing them, giving them a dlf fricnt garb, but In no wlso filleting them In essentials. it was progiesHlvcnosa, stamped with wlso rntisorvntlsin, that pushed tho city forward In lis beeliinfnR tn Revolutionary times the henrt of the radicalism Hint spelt free- I (lorn wns here, ttpfore then Philadelphia , nrtlsnlis hntl spread their fame from ono end of the Colonics to the other. Industry here hnd allniiied an nseendnney nnwhero elao DPimrrni. Men thotiHlit and talked Philadel phia. They udvortlaed tho city In tho only way then Ictinwn In which to atlvortlse It. There Is nothing tho matter with Phila delphia's great Industries now. In excellence of innnufncturo they ehnllengo compnrlsnn with tho liest anywhere. Hut our pnducrrs. many of them, have boon enntont to hide their light under u bushel. A new weapon lifts como Into tho Held, os vastly superior to old ones ns the modern 42 centimetre guns nre to the obsnlcto cannon of tho ISth cen tury It In publicity. Markets arc no longer circumscribed, fo excellent Is our system of distribution that the irerchint can sell to nd vnntnge In everv hnmlet of the land Cheap printing has made It possible for hlrn to take llto world Into his confidence And whatever the market the merchant or producer seeks to cultivate, (hero Is but ono Instrument with which he ran thoroughly plow It. nnd that Is publicity. The great salesmen of modern times nro dressed In type, not breeches. Philadelphia producers must market their own products. They lire mnde In Philadel phia and must be so'd from Philadelphia. Cities retain supremacy by attracting brains, nnd tho value of brains is to conceive now methods and sclzo quickly processes which have been proved advantageous else where. The Unchurched Masses of the must interesting books issued cr; from the Government Printing omec is tho Statistical Atlas. It contains more than BOO pln'es and dlagiams in whirh tho statis tics on a Inrge number" of subjects 1110 graphlca'ly represented so that at a glancf one enn tell which county In Tenncwen lalses the ' most cotton, which county of Pennsylvania contains the greatest number of inhabitants of foieign hiith. wheie marriage- mid divorces are most common, nnd the relative strength of the different reli gious denominations to one another and the relation which tho ohuiched population has tn tho total population In the different States. The recently issued Olllei.il Catholic Direc tory shows that about one-quarter of tho population of Pennsylvania, for example. Is Roman Catholic. This corresponds roughly uu ..... ..h..." ........c. ... l..c ...uK. a...... ... 1 1110 ouiljsiiuui juiuh, Aai 111 urucr ox mimbors hero nro tho Methodists, followed by the Lutherans, the Presbyterians, the mem bois of the Reformed Church, the Baptists, tho Protestant Episcopalians, tho Evangeli cals and tho United Brethren. But thoso church members includo less than 45 per cent, of the population. Indeed, thero aie no States In thp Union unve Louisiana. Massa chusetts, Rhode. Island, New Mexico and Wyoming In which more than 60 per cent, of the population Is connected with tho churches. In Now Jersey tho percentage of churched population Is less than In this Stato. but tho percentage of Roman Catholics is much greater. In Maryland the Methodists nnd the Roman Catholics break about oven, and in Virginia the Baptists comprise more than one-half of the church meiubeis nnd tho Methodists about one-fourth. In New York tho Roman Catholics outnumber the Prot e.stunt.s by nbout two to ono, and tho per centage of churched and unchurched Is about the .nme as in Pennsylvania. Tho diagrams and maps ought to ho of especial Interest to religiously awakened Philadelphia at this time. Who can toll, offhand, why they aro called tho Olympic games? According to the Administration, in tlio vocabulary of elllcloncy tlio ono big word la Jail. The surgical operation on Sccrotnry Mc Adoo will not euro what nils tho President's Cabinet. Tho HUlferlngH nf the drug victims In all parts of the country suggest that tho "dopo" law was not passed toon enough. Ten countleB of tho Commonwealth havo already gouo "dry" under the discretion of the Judges enforcing tho Brooks law. Clean-up week will soon ho here, but some human rubbish will bo left that every 0110 knows ought to be carted to the dump. Tho moviiig-plcturo innnagora apparently do not like the Stato censor any better than the State cen&or liltoa tho movlng-plctura men. If tho Interstate Commerce Commission could only reduce all freight rates on coal to this elty It would be potwdble for houwhold. eis here to buy cmI as cheaply as it Is sold In New York, The pjoposed tax of W a head on bach elors In West Virginia ought to be author ired, especially as the money raised is to be ud for Improving1 the roads so that It will be easier for the bachelors to go courting. Judge Staake uttered only half a truth iwnen he said that publis opinion might obanse. but that the law did net change, for It kt public opinion that really changes thq law through tbe orderly processes fixed by th Constltuttea. If the story of Mrs. Mayo, at Scrunton, Is 11 ue. VUgiPtus Mao, f New Haven, ought to i.e ieraudd to face a proper tribunal to . xpuiu bis conduct There are three parties i.) cwi)- marriage, the man. the womau and the community. Even though the wonieu nu be ttllliujc that this man should make lia-hc of the marriage bowl, the commuiuiy la net willing. itiltt. iltA flnllKAii Uitlnn l,l I . t It n .-II, n.n ll... V CALLING OUT OUR RESERVES OP ENERGY Past Accomplishment Is a False Measure of Our Possibilities It's Never Too Late to Succeed The Habit of Trusting Oneself. Hy JOSEPH H. ODI3LL PRntlARt.Y thero nro thousands of. boys nnd .Voting men In tho schools and col letfes, In tho Holds, fuclorlts, ofllpos nnd shops of America, capable of the ery highest nchievpmem. nblo to do things as great and valimbln ns any that have aliendy been done, but who cannot bring themselves to launch out on their own account. The writer was nlire ilshltig for trout In a river flowing through a sparsely populated country. He and his companion were suddenly slopped by a waterfall having n dlop of nbout 60 feel One or the sportsmen said, "Whtit a sliamo this river Is lost!" "Lost!" echoed the oilier In a tone of surprise. "Lost! How can tho river lie lost? tl is right hero now and has been here for ages." "Yes." responded tho llrst speaker, "but It Is lost because It is not being utilized. There Is enough power run ning to waslo over these falls to make a con siderable Industrial city." Multitudes of men nro lost to tlieniselvas nnd lost to the advancing Intercuts of civili zation by falling to use themselves to their full ndvnntnge. They nre doing llttlo things when thoy might be doing great things; thev nro letting forces run to wasto which arc su premely valuable, nnd by which thoy could accomplish astounding results. They need to do Romo prospecting among tholr own pow ers, nnd then, when the nssny turns nut tn he high, they need the courage to work the vein. Strata of Combustible Mntorial To measure the possibilities of life by what wo havo already nccoinpllshed Implies an un worthy and nn Incomplete conception of our selves. Tho science which deals with man's Inner life, his povveis, faculties and senses psychology nsnures us that thero aro large strata of energy, mop In our naturo, upon which wo have not et drawn. The latp Prof William James, of Harvard Unlverslt.v, wrote" "It is evident that our organism hns stored-up teserves of energy that are ordi narily not cnllPd upon; deeper and deeper strata of combustible or exploslblo material, (lisenntinuously arranged, but icndy for use by any one who probes so deep nnd repair ing themselves by rest as do tho superflcliit strata. Most of us continue living unneces sarily near tho surface. Of course, there nre limits; the trees don't grow into the sltv. Rut the plain fact 1 cumins thnt men the world over possess animintf. of ip souice, which onlv very exceptional indi viduals pubIi to their extremes of use. Hut the verv tame individual, pushing his ener gies to their extreme, muv In a vast number of cases keep th-6 paco up day after day, and find no reaction of a bad sort, so long as de cent hygienic conditions ate ineserverl." Which simply menus that n man Is usunlb much bigger thnn he thinks himself to bo, that hp Is capable of doing more than he has ever dicnmetl or attempting nnd that, having started doing more, he can continue doing It indefinitely. "My success has always turned upon ono maxim," said Nathan Rothschild. "I said, I can do what 'another man can,' mid so I nm a match for all the rest of them. When Jnmes Cordon Bennett sent Stanley to find Livingstone lie did not nsk' Stanley if he thought he could find him, ho simply fur nished tho money. And Stanley started for tho unexplored continent without a question, saying, 'If Bennett wants mo to find I-lv-tngstono I can find him, nllve or dead." " Galileo and tho Telescope Galileo heard that a Dutchman had mado and given to Count Maurice, of Nassau, n curious instrument by menus of which dis tant objects wero mnde to appear as near; and this was all tho rumor stated. But It was enough for Galileo; he belioved hu could do what any one elso had dnno. Ho Immediately set to wnik to find out tho principle upon which tho new discovery was bahed, and vcr ""on decided that it was by nn ar rangement of spherlcul glasses. In the course nr a few da.s he presented a telescope to the Senate of Venice with an extended memoir upon Its importance and value. Somo time alter Lincoln hud uehlovod con siderable success uk a lawyer ho was en gagod upon an important case in Cincinnati, lu which ho found himself associated with men of high training collego graduates, equipped with tho ctilturo of tho moro de veloped East. After tho trial he wild to a friend: "Emerson, I nm going homo to study law." "Why." Emerson oxolalmed, "Mr. Lin coln, ou stnnd at tho head of tho bar In Illinois now! What nro you talking about?" 'Ah, yes," ho said, "I do occupy a good posi tion thoro, and I think I can get along with the way things nro dono thero now. Rut thoso collcgc-trninod mon, who havo devoted their wholo lives to study, nro conilng West, don't you see? And thoy study their cases ns wo novor do. Thoy havo got us fnr ns Cincinnati now. They will soon bo in Illinois. I am going homo to study law! I am as good as. any of them, and when they get nut tq Illinois I will bo ready for them." Very many of tho most distinguished men did not succeed until mlddlo life woh leaohcd, In some Instances long years of grinding ap prenticeship were necessary tn cultivate the faculties; In other cases the. men wero not aware that they had great powers locked up In tholr nature until a hudden emergency mado an unusual draft upon their re sources, and thus revealed the unsuspected possibilities; here and there we find an exam pie of slow development as the result of an oarly miutako the adoption of an unsuitable profession or business, for Instnnco. An Astronomer Built St. Paul's At 40 years of age l.'lyssea H. Grant was a failure as u real estate dealer. Three of America's greatest practical benefactors were artists; Pulton, tho Inventor of the steam boat, was a creditable painter, but his powers were stronger along the mechanical line; Morse, tho man who made telegraphy prac ticable, actually won a certain fame with his brush before turning; his attention to scien tific pursuits; Alvan Clark was 30 when he dropped portrait painting to manufacture Christopher Wren, the architect of St. Paul's Cathedral, London, was a professor of astronomy; all he knew of architecture he .aught himself, and when the great Are of London swept away the entire centre of the city. Wren submitted plans for the rebuild ing of the cathedral which were accept!. h himself auperintetulliig the work of con struction during the 30 years necessary to its completion Professor Benedict, a teacher of Latin, beard the click of an axparlraental a .. immitfmimw tow $M4 I Ml hMif " y i . mIw$ yj & typewriter, nnd Inntiititly realizing the possi bilities of Hip invention, threw down his Lntlti grammar nnd began to innnufncturo the Remington machine. Alexander Graham Bell, the successful ndnpter of tho telephone to practical use. whereby he mado a fortune and won enduring fame, was a teacher In a deaf and dumb Institution when bis private studies In electricity and telegrnphv opened his p.vps to the possibility of speaking thinugh a wire None of thej.p triumphs wns ntcompllslipd without self-reliance. Self-reliance Is the habit of trusting oneself. Wo must rest our claim to success upon the powers that nro stored within us Wo must believe thnt wo are equipped to meet every emergency, to overcome every obstacle, lo win every battle. In Mtidy there Is no subject tho mind cannot master; in life there is no problem thnt pei -slstenco cannot solve. To cultivate self-iell-anco wo must prnctlco It. Wo cannot buy or borrow It : we do not need to do so bornuse we nlready possess It. Simply uno it; that Is all. MINERALS OF THE SKA Common Salt in Greatest Quantity, but Even Gold Is Pound in Solution. Prom thp Washington Star. It lias been pointed out that ucnily all the mlnet nlH, In a state of solution, aro found in Hid sea. In the beginning, scientifically spenk Ing. the earth was "Incandescent"; then, grad ually, as It cooled, it acquired a solid oovoilng or crust, which for a long tjmo remained nt a high temperature. The different elements of which the chemical combinations are formed wero nt that time floating itliovo the cnrth"B covering in the form of vapor. When tho temperature lowered sulll elently these elements grnduully combined. AVhon thero came a still lower degree of teni peintme water fell rippling In hot torrents over tlio teircstrlal ciust. dissolving everything that it could dlssnlvo and accumulating in the tlc picsIon.s lo form tho first oceans. This is why tlio v nters of the spas aro salt and whv this saltiness Is derived not only from mdlnnry suit, but from many other substances. Common salt gives tho sen threo-fonrlhs of Its salinity. The other marlno substances aro cliloililf of inngiiPHhiiii, bisulphato of magnesia, sulphate of lime, chlorate of potassium, bromide or magnesia, metnphosphato of lime, blenibon nto lime; in brief, nearly all the mlneruls to he found In a pharmacy, not to speak of thp inre metals snbldlum, caesium, etc., together with gold and silver. Tho totat salinity of the sea Is placed at 21 grams to n llttlo moro than a quart. In other words, It something In excess of a quart, or water drawn directly from tho ocean bo evaporated thero will be a residue of 31 grams of a mixture of nil tho different salts of tho sea, ami three-fourths of that mixture will bo com mon Knit. Tho Immcnso mass of salts held lu solution In the sea would covor many square thousand miles of the earth's surface. The total volume of tho European continent above tho level of tho Bea Is only ono-thlrd as great ns tho block of salt produced by tho evaporation or the oceans would bo could It bo laid out ns n solid. This enormous wealth of snllno elements is not uniformly distributed nmong tho different seas of the globe. There nre. therefore, seas that nro nnt so Bait ns others. Tho warm seas, which receive llttlo fresh water from rivers, are more salt than those receiving floods that nro free ftom salt. SPORT THAT IS RARK, INDEED Prom lh nosKili Tot. The news tells about a man from Wnretnvvn, P.i.. who caught tnil landed a deer lu a fishnet. Det.iiU are lacking, yet we can readily believe this to be n fact. This siiort or Until tiff for deer, however, cannot compare. In excitement, with gunning for fish. Tho best time to hunt brook trout with hrearins is eaily In May when the tender bui's of the trees begin to bhoot forth. At this season of tho ear trout should bo hunted with n shotgun, never with a rifle a rllle mangles tho trout so that they nro not fit to eat. Co along the shore of any stream or lake with the fhotgun cocked already to shoot. Sneak along very quietly, because trout ar wary and can bear ou coming a long distance away Never look In the water or on the ground fnr trout always look up among the branches of the trees at this season they will be up the trees budding on the tender shoots. Wh'n you see a trout perched on a limb take careful aim with the shotgun and pull the trigger. If your marksmanship is good you will have the satisfaction of seeing the trout fall to the ground, where, after a few spAsmodiq flops, It will expire. Proceed In this way until you shoot enoush trout for a mess. p 8 With a little patience you can train a dogfish to follow you Into the woods and re trieve your trout for ou after they fall from the trees. A PARLIAMENTARY MIDDLEMAN A sreat Parliamentary Middleman; It la well known what a middleman Is: He Is a man who baroboozlos one party and plunders the other, only, having obtained a position to which he Is not entitled, he cries out: "'Let us have no party questions, but flltyof tenure "--Disraeli. WEAKENING ONE'S LIFE Kew things are more striking than the levity nf the motives, the feeblaoes ol the impulses undsr which, in youth, fetal steps, are taken. wbkh bring with them a weaksued lift ami ofteu an early srave. Lky. I 1 ; w- Vr "NOTHIJNT POINT! READERS' VIEWS ON TIMELY TOPICS The High Cost of Living How the Organization Controls the City Taf t for the Presidency Again War Comments. THE SHADOW OK THE REAR I'o ttir lidiUir of thr ;irnlti( Lrttjtcr The picture. "The Wild Charge of the Wild Cossacks," on the front page of the IIviinino Lunacn ot llnrcli 1 in, rrom art's vlovvpolnt, an excellent reproduction As fnr ns high excel lence, good tnste and general an aiigcmcnt of rending inntter Is concerned the Uvcsi.va LKoarcu In easily lending nil other evening pajiers published anywhere in UiIh country. This is high praise, indeed, but It is desercJty earned. The able and well-intentioned editor was pleased lo write underneath Iho nbovo-nnmetl photo: "Tho sninc Mnd of neoiiFatlons as thoso made iiRnlnst tho Cieunnns in Ilclglum by the Allies hiivo been lnld ngnlnst tlio Cossacks In Unst Prussia by the Germans, who charge wanton murder ninl pillage " The Hermans weic, a few weeks ngo, acquitted of all atrocity charges. 1,0-tteia like that by Jnmes O'nnnnell nnnet (printed some six weeks ago In the I.'v fvivn I.UDonn nnd tho results or n t-enrch-ing Investigation made by tho Rngllsh authori ties among the Ilclglnn refugees in Great Tlrltain contributed much to tho Hermans' ac quittal Uut the cruel behavior or tbn Itussinns hns been piovocl beyond a doubt nnd attested to by the American correspondent, K V. W'legand. and by tho rnmous Danish critic and author, Georges nrandes, nnd by many othor trust worthy vvritern. The writer of thce lines re cently paid n visit to Klmlrn. N. Y., and there piivnto letters wero shown him, written by residents or LotU, hi Russian Poland, to their rokiilvPB hi Rlmlrn, In which letters tho follow ing sentence was oft lepcnted: "Tho German troops are hem; now vve nro tntc and UTo Is secure; before the Germans cnine the Russians outraged and maimed our .voting women, hacked to pieces old people and bnblcs, burned and pillaged our houses nnd drovo many sur vivois to insanity." Why Ainoricnn newspapers neclcct to publish nnd fnll to comment upon such mnssacrcs com mitted almost daily by tho Russians (even now during tho wnn upon Jews, Lutherans, Roman Catholics and otlieis is n mystery io me. Should Germany bo crushed in this war, then the monstrous, sinister shadow or barbarous Russia would full over all Ruropp nnd beyond, nnd tho fllthv hicnth of the "Henr" might eventually extinguish tho Unlit of Anglo-Saxon civilization. CONSTANT RRADCR. Danville. Pa., Match 4 THE KISII DEALER'S DIFFICULTY To the KMtor o the Ilienlna Leitaer: Sir Allow me lo state a few farts in legnrd to the high erst of living mid whv It cannot bo reduced Tor Instance, when the prlco of beef goes up io tutli a price thnt It Is consid ered a luxury tlieio Is usually n big cry tn tho people to eat fish, im It Is iiimli cheaper nnd Just ns nutritious and benellclal ns meat: hut if nny fl.sh denier in tho wholo city nf Philadel phia, would mark his fish 7 or S cents a pound ho would be unnblo to sell any of them, for tho simple rcas-ou that tho public would think he Is selling fish that Is not good at nny price. Now I am .peaking tho truth, being a rctnll dealer In fish myself. Pish last summer was as low as 3 and Jl a buriel, nnd I don't mean stnlo, cold storage fish, but rresh porgles, but tcrflsh, coalings, etc. Now that means that tho wholesale prlco of thoo fish was nt the moat 2 or L", cents a pound, and any rctnller would have been glad to sell them nt G cents a pound, but they could not afford to do so, as thoy would not bo able to cll nn fish nt all. As I Bald before, the people could not bo con vinced thnt they .could buy rresh fish at so low a prlco. Tlie outcome was und 1h that the dealer. In order to maintain his icputattnu of keeping fresh fish, could not afford lo sell bo cheap, as ho would positively lose tinde. Philadelphia, March 6. II. II. FLAG AT HALF-MAST To tlie Kiltlor of the Evening Ltdgtr; Sir Please answer In our correspondents' tnbimn why tho flag over tho Uustcrn Peniten tiary la always floating nt half-mast. LEONARD. Philadelphia. March 9 , ITho flag over the Rastcrn Stnto Penitentiary U at half-mast for a period of 30 lns ns a mark or respei t to the memory of Robert Hal four, a niton luspeotor. who died recently. IMitor of tho IIvh.nino I.KDfisn J PRESIDENTIAL TIMBER To the Bdltor of the ZicMno Ledger: Hlr "Professor Tuft for President?" by J. O. llcinphlll, In the Rvc.nino Ludgisr a few days ugo, looks good to me, nnd I think It would look the same to about the three nod u half million, the Irreducible minimum, who voted for him in llil!, as well as several million more who are no doubt sorry they did not voto for him then. As to the chances of the Republican party for IShJ. one has only to look at the figures at the last election, which will prove that the Democratic party (Wilson, that's all) Is going to get it so hard that it will stay down for about another W years, or until some other possible fluke may temporarily put It n again. And the ilggres are large enough, no that It does not tako a ''prophet" to dope out the above conclusion And as it Is the regular Wing of the a. O. P. that counted In the last election, like Penrose. Cannon, pilllngliani, Brondegee, MeKlnley, Longvvorth and a host of gueh other "comebacks," It is a cinch that the party doea. not want to run a La Kollette, a Curomln or even a Borah to wn( for, on the other hund, take note that the power of La Follette was crushed In Wisconsin in the Republican landslide, a standpatter being sleeted for Governor instead of a man bifcked by Im Kollette And then note that another so-called Pro gressive Republican. BrUtow, of Kansas, was beaten bv ex-ttenator Curtis for the Senator ship, and some others who got through by the si. 1 1. of their uih or were beaten by a Peoi otnet on. account of the split. There are Mor i tis, of Nebraska; Kenvon, or lovwi La I'ol. lettc. ot Wisconsin, who In voilnB with lh tiiiui.. aiic rnouer stamps roi thp prcpos. (crous snip purchase bill onlv show how tnev and such as thev as linn nlunvs ninmi ft,.. only nro iiRitt pintr the nnmo ol Ronnlilir.ini. J li,u, ... Ml.l 1 r , . . . . "'"", 1 .inn. ,. is Michael Donohoe, late defeated Con- 1 nnn from Philadelphia, really r.o ' gieasm uoniocrni, necnusc lie votcil atr.imst (in. tv tlervvood tailrf bill nnd tho ship purchase bill, for Inslnncc Rut he vv.i hentpn in the Tit publican landslide, nevcrthclo..-i William Row ird Tnrr is the lilenl ninn lo load ilia stand pal element of thp G. O P to virion In 1316. Philadelphia, March 4 H M tt ' A VOICE FROM THE TENDERLOIN To the r.dllor o the Kicnlnn I.rdirr Sir: "They lvrtniW uliy (ho nrEi.nl iitlon to ?.,"1."ff." "aid n resident or the "Irndnrloln tnJar. ill tell 5"nu: Ii'b becau-n thm hnw. h rood relloun oh Clinrlln Qtilgley, uh .. niu ,v ready l" Ket n feller i,m o" tinuHe m m linn n mml without iiKklif iiuenilnna Thii ..in ,. t(it nis tii-lict. (hat's v.hj .. mtn r, ,,, ,, hn0l, nro no Rood, lieramo a gowl fellow ho is friend nslca an to." Tho above, which annrnied in tin I.venimi5?! J.nnaEn on Wednesdn.v, tells its own storv nnd 3 gives tho Inxlglit ns to hou tin inm-arton' 'Koiu&iiioii noui us dupes in line to roll un fraudulent majorities. "Alw.ija ready tn get n feller out of trouble WUUOUt nRklnr- iinnQlIn,.. " Thnt Is what Diiuctor ticoige Porter U "i. utiiiuisc mtiny in fact, eveiv l,uKe iltvln Iho country Is sufTc-rlng fiom It 1 hev all have Uiolr good "fellers," who aie -uppmted by tin laxpnj era. Thank you, Mr. Resident of the Tenderloin. ou nnvo slated j.mi i.w n-nln-t mr city - .... Biien cinrity and pptcisioti. that there wlU lip no robuttnls. Uon"t wottv in the meantime. V. "'Jcilolnei. Thero will be no Inek ot good fellers" to look nfter vou and vour kind. it is tne principal dutv or om "invKiblp govern- :M ment to nrrnim-n u,,ni, .....,... k. ., m -....n., uuv.. ,,,,.,,i;i Next RVRRKON J ! N INGS, PhlLidcIplila, Match 10. "AN UNCONSCIOUS HUMORIST" To the Keillor 0 the IXenliiu I nlw, , Sir In the long lettei of the It. v l)r rtobert .loiinston. appealing in toniwhi , ivie of jour paper, I note that this vvoithv .hviiio states with conimciid.ihlo candor ho "would nitlior Igtit than pie.ich the Gospel nt this hour W'ouldt (tint wo mid more, or the cIcikv with tilts ru M ..... .una opposition, lamer than Me peace on earth to men or good will" po m. .ommonto many divines nntl so lnconiMni Doctor .lolinston's views, thougli ho Is t-i-otclinmii. have evidenilv heen nulved at (9 ftnill ,1,. linn.ll..l .....I ... .. ... I (BJ .."... .... .,,,ij.ii ..a. wciKiiniK 01 in, ev liicncc it. .1 tne case; nnrl ills ntnteiiicnt tlmi Hie ""press l a nun; ino Mcoi or Its nrtl.lcs. (he oftv con' ccptlmi or right is not excelled In the London aresa, Is coitnlu to bo commenicd fnvorabiy upon hy Philadelphia now.spapis Hocior John' ston Is mi unconscious humorist' INTRRESTRD RHADCR Ardmoro, Pa., March 0. 1915. FOR A BETTER CITY To the r.dttor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Pray tor Philadelphia nnd whv not "get together" more? I want to thank jou. sirs, forj jour stand on the Sunday movement, your nm picture ot the evangelist given with your paper, yesterday, also jour clear, concise mid helpful news columns In certain other lines or endeavor. Let the good work go on. Success to ou, dear Mrs. Also, plcnso occept thanks of a grateful reader , 31 portions of yesterday's Lvbnino LBDOek. Thnnks. t say, ror your Utile portions publlshe" over cdltmlal page. "Smile and Hie W'orW ) Bullies Willi You" would bo a helnrul ono, and "Rojolco Rvermorc; Again I S Rejoice," or any good Rlhllc.il quotation While abroad I saw Loudon Times, which hnd such n quotation. dli.l In (tits rnnnln, vnt. .nm tl.A nnlv nJDer fOl" lowing, or originating, such nn idea Thanl' ' atrnln. Plousn rend carefully now what ,s on ! mind to say. Why not havo a stono bulldlnf nt 19lh mid Vino stieets on the Uouievard, so - l,n,,ft,..l ,ll, llhrn.... nr, IIai l,mlt SehOOl k and human Institutions, for wcek-dav meetings' j Tlie city whoo "God is the Lord" l the 1" ri.ii If tho prospeious city, and other thins8- food, cloihli'g. Iiealth, wealth an suncraciueu. , It is well to remomber this, and. taking example,! llnhtiliin lnl, rnMin.i tn ,i ii nr A IieFI'SC Philadelphia, to make it moro of a city 'v urotherly Love. . Ai.iiunT LAND. A Gallilee Mission, Philadelphia, March S, CONCERNING A CARTOON To the lldttor ot the Bienina Ledger: Sir Do ou think the people ot rhlladd r fr.nt tl,n u,,l.al,llvA.l nwtimiM fltwl (lift AtRVOr W1 i tlLanlA. rPfiv,!,.. nA tl.A n.tau l.'l.n HrA (StUUgl pot counails change the duck to read councm , and the other vvikq change to (Weeri TAXPAYER. Philadelphia, March 10. LOVE'S ANSWER Dost thou grow old? Doth time, tho darlnS : thief. , Pileh from they cheek, even thine, the boa"' teous rose? Alaa. the nmrn at all fulr tlilnss Is brief. Yet chide him not that calls It to Its clo. He doth but change the nid roe for tho whitfc Doth but a little shade the Intenser pu". And shield us from the sharpness of that 1UW Wtirhu mil" HAana wan trolilblpd. tlS V6JI ' done. - Thou growest old? Dar Iajve, It sliould be 1 That eveu thy beart should feci the grav xtmtu Of his wise haul, ami thou n dealer i,row To u who change, I uioum not m eunuch- lav. r&tbAT. BKBlsA dim. nlin l-, j.Lliltl, lltSS Tho rea4 I so, must keep thee .uc i- ""' II 1 1