BVBNIKO LBDaBU-PHILADIilLlHXA, WEDNESDAY, MARttH U, 101fc Ugcr PtJElLtC LEDCEft COMPANY cthub ii. k rttiTia, pir.sT. . Chrl4 l.I.rtlhton.Vlc PrMldenlj .tnhn C MArtln, JJgimftry aim Trtiuurtr I'h'.lp s. Collin, John T). Wllllftm. Directors. KDtTOWAIjBOAnD! Cut II. K Ccbtis, Chairman. , 1t TYHAtKT,. nxMUlho lIof KtfJf C.itAnTI.V. 77. 7 . . rjen-ral ttimln- Manager Xubt billed daily at Pciilio I.tnam PulMIng, Independence Square. Philadelphia. IjRivis Cmthai.. . 4 . i . . . 4 1 tltoad nn.l CheMnut Street JVTMNT10 Cm rmi'ltifon llulldlni- NiW rpK.... ....... ln-,, Metropolitan Toner ffilcAOn 4..,.. .... .48IT Hnme Innuranre tttillillni! Lonmn 8 Waterloo riace, fall Mall, S. W. NKWS HUHUACBt . WttiNeroK TtriitAt...4..i .......The l'o$t iiinMin NbW TokK HcnltAU..... ... . ..Th r(tir l.ullillni- RitattN iltr".u. , no Frlertrlch'tra t-oihON ntmitAO...,. ....... . .2 Pall Mnll Hint, H. W. Cutis Uchiau.. ..Si Hue Loula to OrnnJ sunscRirTioNTF.ni9 Itr tarrl'f. DAit.r OitT, alx cent. Ily mnll. polpal.l tratshttvof I'hllaiWnhla, etxepl hrn forflitn pn'taei in required, Dailv ONtr, nni mnntli. twenty u.hlt, one inmii, itvfniy-mr. c fl cents; jliaiit uKbT, one ar, inrea uonnr. All tnnil un Oriptlon pa) able In ndmnce. ttr.VL, 3000 WAt-NUT km stom:, MAIN .1000 Bs" .Aihbvt all rommiialcn'ians la Evening Ledger, independence Square, VMIadrlvhtct, EtiTraiD at ins niiuncinin roTomcB ab arcoso- CLASS Hilt. SIATTFn. 1'iliLAiiKLriiu, kiinkmia, mahcii at. tits. It t belter to believe a Jew things which you know to Vc right than to hcllcve many things, only to find later then are not so. Getting Results In Mexico IT SEEMS to be comparatively easy to pet results In Mexico when the man on tho 'spot really sets about It unhampered by In structions from Washington. Within 12 hours after J. II. McMiuhix was shot by tho Zapatistas tho Urn7.ill.111 Minister In Mexico City, who Is acting for the United States, de manded an apology from Znpdtn or from Villa, who Is working with Zapata, and he Insisted that the murderers should bo punished and that reparation be mado to tho family of the murdered man. Then he tele graphed to Washington telling what he had done. Of course Washington had to Indorse his acts. Now ho reports that the apology has been formally made and that he has been assured that tho family will b Indemnified and that the murderers will be brought to justice. This 13 the first npnlogy that has coins out of Mexico since tho policy of .watchful wait ing was begun. N'ot all the warships and soldiers sent to Vera Cruz could wrest an Apology of any sort from Huerta for his in sult to tho American flag. And Carranza has not been saying that he was sorry, for tha despoiling of Americans by his followers. But tho Brazilian Minister seems to get re sults. Instead of sending personal representatives across tho border to Interview tho revolu tionary leaders the President ought to send a private and confidential messenger to Mexico City with Instructions to nsk tho distin guished Brazilian diplomatist how he docs It. Then, If ho gets the secret, It may be possible to impart It to some one In tho Stnto Department qualified to use tho same methods If such a man can bo found. Pure Beer for Pennsylvanians TIHE Federal statute against adulteration of food and drink covers only such drink and food as enter into interstate commerce. Beer brewed in Pennsylvania for tho con sumption of Pennsylvanians and their guests 1b not protected by any law against sophisti cation. Neither is the purity of whisky and rum guarded against assault by the unprin cipled. If liquor and beer are to be sold, it Is Important that they should bo puro and that proper penalities should bo provided for the restraint of those who would mix up a con coction of corroding chemicals and offer It to the unsuspecting public. The anti-local optionists in the General Assembly are confident that they can defeat the Governor's local option plan. If they hnve power to do that, which Is not ad mitted by tho Governor, thoy certainly have power to pass n law incorporating into the statutes' of tho Commonwealth the provisions of tho national antl-adultcratlon laws. They have been asked to do It. Will they show their good faith by action? The Knight of the Ponder Puff SENATOR THOMPSON, who must have been studying tho faces of the young women whom ho has seen 1111 the streets of this city, Is asking the General Assembly In Harrlsburg to order that all substances in tended to Improvo the complexions shall be labeled distinctly so that tho user may know not only what they contain, but that they ara not injurious. Ills motive Is apparently ar tistic. There Is nothing easier to look at than a beautiful young woman. Sho does not partake of that quality of sublimity which Burke, In his learned essay on the subject, said made ono tired to contemplate, but is animated by tho spirit of youth which makes all things live. So a man with an artistic sense and an appreciation of the beautiful, such as Senator Thompson must be, finds it difficult to resist the temptation to protest ngalnst tho disfigurement of tho faces of young women by impure, cosmetics. Tha gallant Senator, however, has at last yielded to the temptation and makes his entrance on the stage with the spotlight full upon him, while he poses as the knight of the puro powder puff. Every admirer of the beautiful is hoping that he can persuade his colleagues to, assist him In bringing about the great re form which he has undertaken. Amateur Athletics "nUESlDENT IIIBBEN. of Princeton, nut itLttttttttg jSylKujwBi r -IT his finger on the precise spot of Infection from which germinates one of tho worst evils of Intercollegiate athletics when at the Yale. Alumni banquet ho advocated tho ab solute, elimination of sideline coaching In aStbalU This Doctor Hlbben officially tijamed for Princeton's defeat by Yale last ,IaI. Yale, men might dispute this part of Itoqtor Illbben's argument, but certainly no 'I9,ver of fair sportsmanship will differ with blnj when, after condemning the Princeton coaches for insisting on running the game F from the sidelines fcr the first three quar- Jepr, and praising the players for playing their own game In tha lajt period, he rear lied thlsi conclusion: ; jy Princeton team have .epfjj'ded too much upon the fnatrutttona i.Mlfe out from the sideline We ought lojrgjfc out the ealva tfon of our othletlo teams by nermlttlnc- tlusir members a freer (&oc and obliging thtm to play H19 rtnw In their own way. I yhoulil heartily like to see this plan Worked out In Intercollegiate sports. Elector JIlbben'H diagnosis la correct, but jMs prescription In not specific enough. He ya coaches should not be permitted to send ttr Instructions from the sidelines. But tl;ett'l PQCtor Hlbben know that to do just aiW i Ml MftitUton of the rules of the game? Wt vm (i&ed, therefore, is a new preacrlp- lt-, a snw rule. Jf the coaches enjoying titi. i-r'vii.K mt bo jajeliaea won't obey the rules prohibiting sideline coaching, then wo heed ft new rule barring them absolutely from the Held of play. And why shouldn't they be barrecl7 In track athletics no coach or trainer Is al lowed on the field: the competitor must win or lose on his own merlin. ' liven in base hall Harvard, Yalo and Princeton have nu agreement that their coaches shall bo barred from the bench nud playing field during the game, making tho plai-ers themselves re sponsible for tho conduct of Iho game. Why, then, shouldn't the coaches bo barred In football? The "Keynote" Speech for 1D1G E 1,1110 HOOT'S Union League speech was a. summary of what tho nation Is think lug at the present time. Dissatisfaction with tho Administration Is widespread and dctp pealod. Tho party In power had devoted it self for years to stirring up the hatred of (he poor against tho rich, No .hick Cade ever mndo moro Unblushing efforts lp- hold the mob by tho offer of tho loot of the rich. Power and responsibility sober men, and the Democracy has tried to forget Its old errors, but Its thinking Is so saturated with hostility to nil successful enterprise that Congress has found Itself unable tn deal with business questions In n business way. It has refused to accept assistance of business men In framing business legislation, because It has been declaring for a generation that tho way to frame a business law is to find out what tho business men want and then glvo them the opposite. Mr. Hoot's emphasis upon tho business In capacity of tho Administration waB none too strenuous. And his declaration that tho country was determined to have n change corresponds with the conclusions of all other observers. Tho conditions that prevail now aro very much llho those which "preceded the campaign of ISDfl. The Democracy, then, was bowing down to the falso gods of free sliver and Inflation, nnd the business men of the nation deckled that If national bankruptcy was to be avoided the Democracy must ho kept out of power. Patty loyalty was subordinated to business honor, nnd In every great commercial centre Democrats nnd Re publicans worked shoulder to shoulder for sound money and McKlnley, In spite of tho fact that McKlnley had once been tainted with tho free silver heresy. The Democracy today Is not nttacking the gold standard, but its policy Is nttacking the very structure of business itself. Some ama teurs who do not know tho difference between a sight draft and a Te.as zephyr have been laying down rules Intended to make big busi ness little, because, forsooth, every man who Is richer than any other man Is a liar and a borne thief and ought to be In prison. The Republican party has been Infected with the same germ. Mr. Taft boasted that he had proved that the anti-trust law had teeth In It, but he also proved that the teetli did noth ing but tear and rend without effecting any cure of what he was pleased to call business evils. Tho country has had enough of this sort of thing, and it Is as certain as anything run be that no candidate for the Presidency will have any chance of election In I0IR unless he runs on a platform of fnlr play for every citizen, rich nnd poor, and unless he makes It clearly understood that he proposes to uso all his Influence to build up American busi ness and extend American enterprise, instead of tearing it down and hampering It In every way possible for a narrow mind to conceive. Abolish the Toll Roads NOTHING surprises visitors from other parts of tho country so much as the dis covery that the primitive toll road still sur vives In tho vicinity of Philadelphia. Tho toll road was abolished In New York years ago nnd It Is unknown in tho other States where a comprehensive system of highways has been built for tho free use of tho people. Pennsylvania has committed Itsolf to a road policy, though it has not done much yet. In comparison with what has been done In Massachusetts. Tho toll roads, which aro main highways, must be included in the new system of State roads and they should bo bought without delay. Some road purchas ing mensuro like the bill calling for an appropriation of $2,000,000, just introduced In the General Assembly by Senator Croft, of Montgomery County, ought to bo passed so that the State can take title to tho pnrntcly owned roads at tho earliest possible dale. The only objection that can bo raised to the ap propriation Is that It may bo spent unwisely; but if tho money Is put In tho hands of hon est men tho road owners will get a reason able price for their property and no ono will get a "rake off." Tho best souvenir of "Billy" Sunday's stay in Philadelphia would be an Increase of 40,000 In tho membership of the churches within tho next three months. Tho Indorsement of equal suffrage by the Central Pennsylvania Conference of the Methodist Church la ono of the straws which show the way public sentiment is tending, Germany has completed enough new war ships since tho war began to replace all that have been sunk: but she cannot repluce tho slaughtered soldiers and sailors so quickly. Why is It that they do not want nny ghosts of Lincoln walking about tho White House grounds, oven though they appear In theatrical make-up for the moving-picture men? It is as unsafe now to carry concealed liquor on the trains In Iowa as to carry, con cealed dynamite, not because they are both liable to explode, but because the Legisla ture Is seeking to enforce the prohibitory laws, The report that the Governor has an un derstanding with the Organization that local option is to be defeated, while he keeps his record straight by working for It, was cer tainly not put In circulation by any friends of Doctor Brumbaugh. It is not true that all "Tom" Marshall gets out of the Vice Presidency la hid salary. Bee retary Daniels has had a flag designed for him, and It will be displayed In his honor when he appears on a warship In an official capacity, Marshall gets glory as. ivell as gold. If it can be found that Kentucky colonels are immune to Rlggs' disease, the Johns Hopkins Investigators, who have been seek ing to substantiate the theory that the dis ease is caused by a germ that inhabits stag nant water, will welcome it as circumstantial evidence in support of their hypothesis. Every straphanger in Philadelphia ought to protest against the passage of the bill, just introduced in Harrlsburg, intended to pre. vent the employment of unnaturalized laborers on any public work. The subways cannot be built without the help of the aliens who are willing to do the rough work that American cUItens spurn. RUSSIA WINS ALLIES' GREATEST VICTORY The Taking of Przcmysl May Prove One of the Really Decisivo Events of the War Collapse of Austro-German Winter Campaign. By FRANK H. SIMONDS Author of "The Oreat War." N TAKING Przcmysl tho Itusslahn have JL a achieved by far the greatest allied triumph on tho offcnglvo side slnco iho war began, It may easily turn out ono of tho really doclslvo victories of tho whotn conflict, coming as It docs nt a moment when Austrian fortunes nro fast waning and Austrian neighbors aro partitioning llnpsburg provinces as a pre liminary lo Joining tho fray. Llko the fall of Antwerp, which It naturally recalls, tho surrender of Przcmysl solidifies the position of an Invader In a conquered province. Against 10,000 squaro miles of con quered Belgium Is now to bo set more than twice bb largo an area In Oallcla. But tho German achievement, thanks to the intrepid ity of tho Belgian nrmy, was devoid of con siderable military consequences, while tho Itusslnn conquest seems bound to have far rcachlng effects. Antwerp Compnrntively Unimportant To tho armies' of tho Czar Przcmysl was a far moro serious menace than Antwerp was to the Kaiser's armies. Tho Belgian fortress was on the flank of the German communica tions and could be contnlned by 11 small force, But Przcmysl Is aqunrely on the mnln trunk railroad, between Lcmberg nnd Cra cow nnd the centre of several branch lines and of various highways. Thus, while the city held out, Russian armies In Gntlrla were compelled to detach corps to deal with the unconqiicrcd fortress In their rear, anil their lines of communica tion were bioken by the Austrian garrison's command of highways and railroads vital to the invaders nnd commanded by tho heavy artillery of the Przcmysl forts. Looking back over the progress of the siege, It will be seen how great was the value each side attached to Przcmysl. Tn September, when tho Husslnns swept west along Iho Lcmberg-Crncow railroad after their great victories. I'rzemysl was first Invested. Today all Oallcla east of the Dunajec and north of tho Pruth is In Russian hands and tho Slav frontier has touched tho Carpa thians, perhaps permanently. Weather Intervenes This lepresonts a complete failure not merely of the Austrian, but of the German winter campaign In the east. Krom the at tack nn Llcgo to tho defeat on tho Yser and about Ypres the main German effort was di rected at Trance, the chief purpose of Ger man strategy being to crush Franco, dlsposa c-f her nnd turn to the Russian frontier with free hand. After tho dcfenlM m Danders, Germany was compelled to deal with Russia. Weather con ditions, which now mado grand, opcintlons impossible In tho west, might be expected to favor such elfort In the east. Krozon marshes, Milltl roads, ice-covered rivers, all would fa vor :in attempt to obtain iv decision In Po land, now n similar undet taking had failed In Franco nnd Belgium. Unfortunately for the Germans, tho weather failed them. Nnpolcon was ruined by an early Russian winter; William II suffered by an open winter which turned the whole country nbout Warsaw Into a bog nnd thwarted the most gigantic combination of military his tory. At Lodz tho Russian army was within two steps of annihilation. Tho defeat of the Masurian Lakes laid the whole northern frontier of Poland open. But mud and marsh spoiled the best laid plans of German com manders. Gathering the Spoils What Is most Important is the fact that alt the liemcndous efforts of Germany In Po land and East Prussia have not relieved tho pressure upon tho Austrians. Despite all tcmptntlnns, reverses, disasters, tho Russians have held fast to their position nlong tho Carpathians, have been ablo to keep their grip nn Przcmysl and have now captured It. This capture spells the final defeat of tho German winter campaign In tho east. At the close It is Russia, not Germany, that is gath ering the spoils. Tho fnll of Antwerp relieved a German army, which pushed rapidly forward to reach tho Channel ports. The taking of Przemysl released an even greater Russian army. To whnt point It will bo directed Is a matter of conjecture. If It Is transported directly west toward Cracow it may drive tho Austrians west of tho Dunajec In upon Cracow and threaten tho front of the whole Austro-German force In Poland from the NIda to tho Bzura. This Is the plan that Is generally ex pected und may easily compel tho evacuation of Poland. On the other hnnd, tills force, moro than 100,000 strong, may bo sent duo south to the Carpathians. With Its arrival Austrian forces along tho Carpathians would probably have to go back over tho mountains and onco moro a Russian host would sweep down Into tho Hungarian Plain, this tlmo freed from any npprehenslon for their communications. Finally, tho army which bus taken the last tlalielan fortress cast of Cracow may bo sent south Into Bukowlna to completo tho recon qucst of this crown land and by a subsequent Invasion of Transylvania persuade the wav ering Rumanians to cast their lot with tho enemies of the two Kaisers. Whichever of these three courses Is followecj, it must be that the consequences will be grave for the Austro-German alllnnce. The Moral Effect But whatever the military consequence, the moral effect of tho Russian success cannot bo exaggerated. It Is sweet solace to the nation which was defeated at Lodz and the Masu rian Lake. It gives additional emphasis to the sound of the Anglo-French artillery be fore the Dardanelles. It will awaken new and uncomfortable echoes alike in Ballplatz and Wllhelmstrasse, Not less momentous will be Its Influence in Rome, In Bucharest, In Athors. A few weeks ago German press bureaus announced that Russia had been beaten to her knees, her strength exhausted, and was ready to abandon the struggle. The Russian answer comes as a rude demonstration of tho futility of such claims, Przemysl will be In Russian history a fair counterpoise to Port Arthur; the most considerable Russian suc cess in Europe since Plevna. In estimating the Importance of the vic tory, the world audience will forget the gal lantry of the defense. Yet the little known now of the siege points toward a devotion, a gallantry, a popular determination which may be long mentioned In history. Weeks ago the garrison sent back the defiant mes sage: "We will eat our shoes." Six months of resistance In present times must excite ad miration on all eMcs. Antwerp fell tn twic U 1 .. 4F " ' " ' .!i.,jvvfc -v ft., . . ,. I ? " . ""-ft, ,,. , -'-.Aui,Kir WSS!f ,"--, --'--"'.r,t.WTS3 SS. u - '. WTrtWt-Vtt.s, t i .. tStfjBKr-L --!iW.,jaiie.'-i ns many days. A city and a province h.ivo been lost, but not by any lack of gallantry on tho part of tho defenders. Yet above and beyond nil elso I'rzemsyl will stand as one moro landmark In tho decline of Austro-German fortunes. The summer campaign ended in disaster Jit tho Manic and the yser. Tho winter campaign collapses with the fall of Przcmsyl. CARD INDEX OF ARGUMENTS From tlie Now York Kvenlnff Post Saturday M.iEazlne. The Suffmslst "If women had the vote tlieic would be mi spcculatois lo raise the pilce ot bicad." The Antl-Suffiaglst "If women halted their nun lueuil tlnie would be nu speculation In prices." I ii'iote these lines from nn anonymous wilter, not because they am convincing, but because they nre brief. if ever the need of disarmament presented It self hh ncute, It Is tho need of reducing tho vast armament of pro-suffrage nnd anti-suffr.iso de bate. Tho cane on both .'Ides wns exhausted years ago. All that enn possibly be said has been said. Special suffrage numbers of tho ncwspnpcis nre a weailnoss to the spirit. Can't Pro and Antl bo condensed, codified, clnllled and numbeied? So thut l'io may sny, "I ad vance argument number 231, " and Antl can say, "I retort with argument number 151, sub division (c)"? It la a decided relief when Btir-fi-asc debaters lose their heads, forgot their arguments and begin to call names. IMPORTED WORDS From tha Pall Mall Gazette. In deprecating the uso of foreign terms by writers of war news, O. W. V. Russell re echoed a protest mado over n century and a half aKO. The writer of a pamphlet published In 1TCS complains that the English are con tinually Importing words from France. "As ho was In the service of tho French, Marshal Snxo might be excused for writing 'coup de main' nnd 'manoeuvre': but wo cannot aee whnt apol ogy can bo mndo for our officers lugging them In by head and shoulders, without the least necessity, ns 'sudden stroke' might have done for one. and 'a proper motion' for the other. 'Reconnoitre' is another favorite word In the military way, and as we cannot tlnd out that It is much moro significant than 'tako u. lew,' wo beg leave It may bo sent home again." FREEDOM OF THOUGHT To the Editor of tha .Ev'tiliio J.edper: Sir The religious vaudeville pantomime show of "Billy" Sunday has been quite an attraction from its sensational character and has drawn many people Into It, who, sad to Bny, became no wiser. Many of the remarks of the speaker are really disgusting, frivolous nnd Irreligious, and strange to say, that so-called Intelligent men give their approval, or really have not the courage to speak their disapproval, of tho so called sermons and remarks of "Billy." Hut he Is a falso prophet. Christ gives the warning In about these words: "Bewaro of false prophets that come to you In sheep's cloth ing, but Inwardly are ravening wolves." Now, "Billy" Is one of them; for he has shown tho wolfs pelt In his ferocious attack on others who do not think as he does. Where la his Christiani ty in that? Have not others a right to think for themselves, as -well ns he thinks for himself? He has given no fixed doctrine which he can declare is tho true one. Ho spoke. In a very superficial manner for all conflicting sects and denominations in doctrine and tenets, except a few which he mentioned, and has shown he has a shallow and superficial idea of a concrete doctrine. If I wanted to accept him as a teacher. I want him to tell me which church to go to. If he can tell mo which of the denominations he was speaking for and which is the true and certain one, and he will prove It, I will Join It. That Is a nut for him to crack. His egotistical, baseball hilarity and mob vulgarity are certainly a vaudeville and sen sational exhortation of a change to a religious life, and his mob vulgarity will not Inspire one with true reverence for religion, but the opposite, and that Is superficiality. LEONARD STABLER. Philadelphia, March 20. A MATTER OF AMUSEMENT To the Editor of the Evening Ledger; Sir The closing sentence of an editorial In your paper of the 16th Inst., "There is alteady little except prejudice left for them (suffragists) to overcome," would be amusing were It not so absurd. The complexities of the ''suffrage' problem are, however, summarily cleared up by the astounding intellect of your editorial writer, and we, who are not In agreement with his views, hold ours through "prejudice." Congrat ulations, fellow membera of that "prejudiced" majority opposed to "suffrage." that we shall no longer have to exercise our Intellectual functions; all problems wU be determined by the gifted editorial writer of the Evening; LiDOEn. A. R, BSUTH. Olenslde, March 17. HELPING PHILADELPHIA To the Editor of tho Evening Ledger! Blr-On behalf of the Poor Richard Club, I wish to thank you for your editorial of yester day, commending the action of Provost Smith in offering, through the Poor Richard Club, the buildings of the University of Pennsylvania for the convention, of tho Associated Advertising Clubs of the World In 1916. This is the kind of "boosting" that will help Philadelphia and the kind of writing appre ciated by alt who are almlnif at higher ideals in advertising". R H DURBIN. President poor Richard Club. PMliielplUa, Marcb 19. EUROPE'S SPRINGTIME BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA DIGEST OF TH (1) Bookman "Chronicle and Comment." (2) Atlantic Monthly "Tho Russians and tho War." (.1) Century "Tho Democratic Russians." (I) Current Literature "Tho Renaissance of Interest in Russlnn Literature." (5) Outlook "War Relief Work In Rus sia." RUSSIA AND THE RUSSIANS "pt'SSIA for mine," said n young war cor JLV respondent on a flying trip to New York recently. "Russia is tho real story of this war, and I want to get back thero und wntch it happen." His feeling Is echoed by tho current magazines, all of which agree Hint "something big" Is going to happen In Russia when tho war ends. They senso tho waning of Russian au tocracy. Tho Russian people, until now drugged by oppression and vodka, havo been roused from their lethargy by tho wur. Tho old order is menaced by tho new strength of the people's young, untried virility. The shake-up produced by the war, tho abolition of vodka, the probability that as a result of tho war Russia will at last obtain possession of Constantinople, with tho consequent stim ulus' to production and trade tlieso aro some of tho elements which promise to create a grand transformation In Russia. A delightfully vivid description ot Russian llfo by Stephen Graham In tho Atlantic Monthly derives added Interest from an ac count of tho author In this month's Book man (1); Mr. Graham is tho son of the editor of tho English illustrated Journal, Country Life. Ho bears a. marked resemblance to Maxim Gorky. Seven cnrs ago, when ho was in early 20s, ho gave up a good business post In London nnd wont to Russia to find him self. He had but 1E In his pocket when ho started. Ho reached Moscow and there shnrcd a room with two Russian students. Ho tramped nbout tho Caucasus, slept under tho stars nnd received hospitality from all kinds of queer people. Tho next year ho joined tho Russian pilgrims, disguised as ono of them, and traveled to Jerusalem. Lator ho joined n party of Immigrants on their way to the United Stntes, traveling with' them In tho steorage across tho Atlantic to Now York, nnd thence trnmplng to Chicago and the farms of tho West. Flies on tho Cossacks. Mr. Graham, writing of his adopted pcoplo In the Atlantic Monthly (2), describes tho Cossacks; Tho Cossack is always a soldier. Every man has to servo In the nrmy. When ho is farming ho Is said to be "on leave." The village is not called a village, but a station, a stanltza. No woman grudges her children to the war. War Is the element In which thoy all live, nud the maneuvers are bo wild and fierce that many get killed In them, kill one another ovon, forgetting that thoy are only playing nt war. Their homes are neither comfortable nor clean the homes of eagles rather than of men. Formerly robbers and border-riders of the wildest type, they are now bred, much as one might breed a type of horso for sterling qualities. The women are lazier than ordinary Russian peasant women nnd fat moro and sleep more. As a fair com panion of tho road explained to me: "It's the women who must be blamed for the dirt in their cottages. After dinner the women always lie down nnd fall asleep, and they leave all tho dirty dishes on the table, and let the pigs and chickens come In and hunt for food." That Is true. You enter the little room that Is all in all of a home, and you find 60,000 files buzzing over every thing. Often of an afternoon I have entered a cottage in order to get milk and have found every one asleep, even the dog, who but opens one eye at the noise of my step. The baby lies in the swing cradle and tosses now nnd then and cries a little. He would be almost naked were he not black with files. The children keep picking flies off his body, and hurting him that is why he cries. None the less, that baby will grow up to be a sturdy Cossack. And they seem none the worse for dirt and disorder, to Judge from the fine young; men we see. Summing up the situation, Mr. Graham writes; As nations go, Great Britain is like a man of 45, Germany like a man of 30. but Russia like a genius who is Just J.8. It is the young man that you find in Russia, virginal, full of mystery, looking out at a world full of color and holiness and passion and sordidness, Rus sia the silent one. silent for 25 years, and then silent for 10 years more. Is either speaking now, or is about to speak. The spirit moves mysteriously in her. She begins to know that her time Is at hand. Edwin Bchoonmaker. the American essay ist and poet, author of a series of articles on Russia, writes of her democracy in this 1 MAGAZINES month's Century (3), drawing a sharp ai- .icuon oeiwcen the governing classes ml 't tho governed. foriT ' "S..MS ", jt 1 -. - " 'uiuii.i ii 1 1 11 1 'ina ana which beenn to im ,nn.i,.j ... ."7 n n thousand years nm. wi.n n..,i .'i"rS,'n innn win, i.i .ii ""." .""'."i u 1 iii.i .1 V "erH, came in and eatab- A shed themselves as rulers of tha land. T Is 1 not generally known that tho present hiuil 1 i,"m,a0,' wnich has held tho scentre for ..,,.. ' ,s ,ul, Ormnn. We In America' ....w ..u ouiueimng 01 tne part played by ff? .V' of th0 house ot Hanover-Bruns I WICJ. Ill flirt nnnrnoe nn u 1.- position to tho Idealists of England, will un- 4 dorstnnd something ot what 300 years of Ger- 8 manlzatlon has meant to the Russian people. For a lonu nerlod. when iho rnnt m.. i ?, 1 tho peasantry were serfs upon the estates of tho Russian nobility, tho task masters upon these estates were Germans, who had been imported to wring a larger return from the labor of theso unfortunate people. And th record which they left in the land accounts In n very largo measure for tho enmity be tween the Slav und the German, which Is finding vent In the present war. In the higher ofllces of the ministry, too, It has been the hand of the German that has set the Russian Government In onnositlon to th Russian people. 1 -luioi.u ta inu Kiuriucu luissiuii peasant, 111-5 terlllC his heart tn tho wnHH frnm Ihrfrroijli ot the ages. From this man alone, in mod- nrn times, has gone out the living conviction that peace and brotherhood nrn realities des- 1 tlned sooner or Inter to conquer the world. 1, From this heart of tho Russian people we"' see, nun a saving spirit In the midst or Diooa nnd death, snrendlnc- out over tho world that ;1 wldo circle of democracy beyond which you jj rnnnnr en. . Current Opinion translates from the Revue ?j de Paris a tribute by Gustavo Lanson, "the j distinguished French savant," to this spirit of "Russian Humanity" (4): Tolstoy, Dostoycvsky, Gorky, to cite but 3 three names, wrote only In order to dimlnlin human suffering. All their work Is a crussdi against evil, nn invitation for all mea to throw asldo egoism,, wickedness, hardneM, greed. They pity the people, but without dulgenco for its vices. They are severe to ward the great and the wealthy, but without prejudiced calumny. Nothing In German m erature, nor In any other literature la com parable to this great wave of humanity wn which tho Russian novel has Inundated Eu rope. Realism, naturalism for French writers used to menn pessimism. Irony, cruelty, uooa ness and Idealism were ridiculed as the Win nf Ilia rnmnnHn trtrita TIlA RllSfllanS DBT rovenled to. us. havo taught us anew, it yo" if prefer, that ono might be true, exai.. . close to life, that ono was even truer, mors exact, closer to llfo in expressing ' PW-Jr derness, and In a word. In being "human. Tf To rv.1,1 in hn Trenches." That tho Bourco of the "humanity" InHuisj Kinn lltemturn Is in tho very hearts and uv?s. of the peasantry, Is Illustrated by the touch im- stories told bv George Kennan in V" Outlook, of their response to appeals .' help for the soldiery, nnd this in spin fliplr- nvn destitution (5): A myriad of collectors took the J J"l cities towns una viiiageo. vn. - rr-v Trenches." They went from ""'"K. collecting sneep bkius hiiu .... "",,,,,. ins for the soldiers, and the quantity mi talned was so great that It nearly swff 15 . the Government's facilities for repuw ---- j distribution, The peasants sometimes mo 1 stripped themselves In order to eena wy - clothing to the "cold trencnes." .",5 aged peasant woman who was living '". had nothing that she could give "rtht towel. Sho gave that, and then sftet w copper five kopeck piece (two ana a jg cents) said, "Here, take this. too. &, ing It for Kerosene, nut . i:" " " TO THE GOOD SHEPHERD Not of this fold, Thine other sheep .obey ta And follow on by paths we do not Kno Out (n the world, in other worlds, it - , Which God can find, and where winds blow, .ih ii Free blow His winds, although our "arrw' ,,.. ... .hu.h our fcf"uJ warm omuca o dumb -,-.,.--. are cum, ,. A His heavens aid the fall of every iparr 0. And all Thy sheep. .O Christ, may fla ,w 4 One Shepherd's voice, on hills where dusi a""?ii .. UM ..j th pm 1 une nocit oeneaw mo U,"'"T " ,.iiin, m I If any sheep has wandereq .rem -"A .Tnjr, I pray Thee, ennst, 11 " " o. ,.u.i c .,.. th-cn-belli (b One fold at last; one Shepherd , And soma that nanny snow -v climbing , -.r To enter irl, O Christ, the Open v00? LouU r- Benson, to, T6 is-3"4' $ ) 0