v 8 EVENING' LEDMBPHIjLADEPHIA MONDAY, MARCH 0, 191S Mttytv PUDL1CJ LEDGER COMPANY CYP.U8 H. K CWITIS. PsESinetr. Chant H LuUr,tn.Vlce-Irf!ldint; John C Martin, Erffftary and Treasurer; Philip S. Collin. John tl. William, Directors EDITOlUAtjBOAIU): Cues It. K. Coins, Chairman. V. It. tVltALEY. Gxccuthe Alitor JOitXC MAHT1.V General Uualness Mnnnser Publlahert dally at t'estic t.troEit nulldlng. Independence Square, Philadelphia. Lr.nora rtxraAt. . ....,.. Broad and ChfMnut Streets AitiiNTic Cirr ... rreti-Vnion UulMlnir N Tork ....... ,170-A, Mriropollmn Tower ChICAOO . .817 Home Inruiinrr tSutliUng LONDON...,, 8 Waterloo Place, Tall Mall. S W. WKiirox TltiiKAV. , . The I'oif llullclinn Nbw YoK rlflCiu. ,. The Time Iiulldlnir. GaaMit Ilcaun (to Friedrlchstraoa Loir) ntiaiAU..,.. 2 Pall Mnll t:aKt, S. W. Piatt Dtiuv 32 Hue Luuls la Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS By carrier, Diilt Ostr, nix cento, ttv mall, postpaid euulde of Philadelphia, except where foreign postage l required, Dllt.I Only, one month, tnenty-flve cents; Daii.t O.tt.T, one year, three dollars. All mall nub acrlptlona payable In advance BEIX, 8000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN .1000 W jiddrvta all communications to Evcntttff 7.cf0er, Independence Square, Philadelphia. ENIiBtD it Tile rniLinrt.riilA rosTorrlcE is second. CLABS MAIt, MATTER. PHILADELPHIA, M()MA, MAIK.ll 2', I'll.'.. Great disaster! bring us to our senses, ivhllc. petty annoyances long continued unbalance the reason. Where Will German Generosity Stop? GERMANY hns been limiting free with tho territory of Austria and Turkey In an effort to strengthen Iter position. Sho has offered to give to Bulgurln all that part of Turkey which the Bulgarians won In tlio Balkan War provided Bulgaria will keep out of the present fight, and a few days ago sho offered to Italy a big slice of Austria on the same conditions. She lias not yet offered to glvo a slice of German territory to any of tho warring- na tions. But Austria and Turkoy may be ex pected to suggest that while Germany Is In tho business of partitioning tturopo at tho expenso of her friends', sho should begin to think of buying peace at tho prlco of some of her own territory. It Is posstblo that tho suggestion has been mado nnd that Germany Is getting ready to surrender Alsaco and Lor raine to France nnd to return Belgium to the Belgians. There are rumorw that tho war Is to end In 30 days, rumors trtnt are at present lncredlblo; but If Germany should seriously consider taking tho medicine which she has been prescribing for her friends, no one can tell what desirable result might follow. Bipartisanship in Fnycttc County THE successor to A. Mitchell Palmer as the Democratic national committeeman and party leader will either bo a man who likes tho kind of bipartisanship tho products of which are making a stench in Fayette County, or ho will bo a man who la opposed to the policy of dividing the spoils before tho battle and then making a fake light at the polls. Every honest nnd high-minded Republican hopes that there may continue to ho a real Democratic opposition, active and alert and ready to arraign Republicanism for all Its mistakes and all Its misdeeds. We cannot have, tho kind of government that wo need unless there Is an effective opposition party, led by men of honest purpose, Aggressive temper and marked ability. Mr. Balfour's Sensible Admission , . ENGLISHMEN of all political parties are supporting their Government In this crisis, so the statement given out by tho Rt Hon. Arthur J. Balfour, defending tho order In council. Is remarkable, not for the fact that it comes from n former Conserva tive Premier, but becauso It seeks to justify a disregard of tho letter of International law by an appeal to tho necessities of tho case. Ho admits that, technically, the British have disregarded tho rules of the law of nations In ordering tho blockade that is not a block -ado. But ho maintains that the circum stances are such that It was necessary to trample on old precedents and to make now ones. Tho distinguished British statesman is un doubtedly right. The conditions under which this war Is being fought are unprecedented. Both groups of belligerents have been doing unprecedented things. Tho Germans have denounced tho Allies for their disregard of tho old customs, and ,tho Allies have oven more bitterly denounced the Germans for their adoption of such methods as scorned to them necessary under tho now circumstances. Tho fact of the matter Is, as has been said in thla place many times sinco tho war began, that necessity makes Its own laws, and that new International law must bo mado to fit tho conditions of warfare with airships and submarines and to regulato the rights of neu trals on tho sea when a continent Is In arms. An Improvement to Be Rushed THOSE who have been hoping that tha proposed convention hall and the much needed Btadlum might be combined in ono great structure will bo disappointed by tho decision of tho city Administration to buy the lot bounded between Market and Chest nut streets, running from the Schuylkill to 24th street. But If the convention nnd ex hibition hall Is to be built scparnto from tho stadium It would not be posslblo to And a site) which offers more advantages than tho one. selected. It Is accessible from all parts of tho city and it Is near the terminals of tha railroads that will bring exhibits and visitors from a distance. Enough money Is available to pay for a monumental structure that will set a pattern for other buildings to be built along tho Schuylkill In the future and glvo to that water thoroughfare a distinction which It now lacks. Councils Is expected to approve the recommendation ' the Mayor, A Call to the Reserves in College MAJOR GENERAL LEONARD WOOD is not pessimistic, but merely Intelligent, When he says that wars are not to cease. Every one hopes' that the provocation to war will soon cease, but few expect any such desirable consummation. All persons with red blood In their veins hope, too, that tha time will never come when tho men of this nation will ho unwilling to lay down their lives for a righteous cause. Peace Is not an end in Itself. It is but an incident In tha operation of the principles of equity and justice. So what IS tho use of calling, "Feacel Peace!" when Its essentials do not ex!t7 G sacral Wood's recent suggestion that the- vigorous students of the colleges and weparatory schools enter the summer mill-, iiyry -camps and receive elementary military, awtnution, therefore, deserves the .serious imWratloii of those youths who have 935 u igiaat! for a few week" outing in de JtjpMNM iUrroUadiiiKS. It ve only the part of common prudence to y.--.iae ajpUiMtf the, cMtiosencUs of Mfe 1 t iCUCU10 hrowa something of tho use of a rlflo and something of tho first principles of military discipline nnd life In tho open strengthens the nntlon's reserve army. And In these days when wars nro fought, not by nrmy corps, but by confronting hosts of millions, ll Is desirable, If It Is not Important, that we should bo about tho work of preparing soma sort of a reserve of educated men ready to receive commissions in tho event of war. A Nnttonnl Fourth mitrj "national celebration of the Fourth of '-July, in Philadelphia, in muepeiiuenuu Square, was begun ns an institution Inst I yenr, when tho President Journeyed to tho I shrine of our liberties, to drink afresh Its in- 1 splrntlon nnd fenst once moro from Its In ! exhaustible sources of patriotism. I Let SUito nnd city unite In urging him to I come again this yenr. Let both be liberal In appropriating for the necessary epensos of tho undertaking. Governors, Senators, Representatives, lenders In all forms and phases of Americanism should bo called on I to Join In tho commemorative services. And from every church In nil the nation should arise nt the same hour a prayer for peace, led by tho President here. Philadelphia cannot bo neglectful of her historic nssots. The nation expects her ngnln to do her duty, again as a generous host to nssemblo her guests together and once more to lead the way nnd point tho course. Theto is n tension In the world that renders this spiritual celebration nerossnry. There must be no lagging behind, nn hesitation, no draw ing back. Onco tho Fourth saw the nation born and onco it saw It saved. Let the Fourth tills yenr ho laureled yet ngnln by tho unprece dented spectacle of a hundred millions of people bespeaking mercy for their desolate kinsmen In foreign lands, whilo at tho snmo time they accord their solemn testimonial of thanks to tho Creator for the pcaco nnd quiet which they themselves enjoy. The Ships Must Come Back Home THE ono regret of those who saw Jho steamship Northern Pacific sail from this port was that she is not expected to re turn here. She 's now steaming to the Pacific Ocean by way of the Panama Canal and will run between Portland, Oregon, nnd San Fran cisco, a splendid example of the kind of ves sels that can be'bullt on tho Delaware. The Delaware-built ships ought to como back to their nntlvc waters. No ono has any desire to restrict the scope of the business of the great shipyards here, but every alert nnd progressive Philadelphlan would like to sec tho port developed to such an extent that harbor room could be found here In the course of tho year for every vessel launched in our shipyards. Philadelphia ought to be tho terminus, or nt least a port of call, for every merchnnt ship built here. Of course this cannot be, for coastwise steamers nre needed on the Pacific. Yet there ought to bo a spirit in this old town which would put into every sheet of steel and every plank nnd every rlvej; that goes into a vessel a homing instinct which would bilng the ship back hero nt least once on every voyage that It makes. The time may not be ripe for it yet, but the day will como when Philadelphia will ho so Instinct with life that it can put u soul even into an Inanimate ship and mako It show allegiance to tho place of Its creation. There Is No Embargo on Ideas IT WOULD bo easy to fall into the error of assuming that Great Britain has returned to Professor T. II. Morgan, formerly of Bryn Mawr College, what purports to bo nn essay on "Heredity" for a German periodical be cause they hove decided to prevent the im portation of foreign Ideas into Germany ns well as the importation of food and muni tions of war. The essay was on board a Ger man ship seized by tho British and sent to a prizo court. No part of tho cargo was for warded to Germany, not even this apparently harmless essay. Tho real reason for its return to America will doubtless bo found in the conclusion of tho British censors that It Is a cipher doc ument disclosing to the Germans mucli secret information. As Professor Morgan Is an ex perimental zoologist it would bo perfectly easy for him to use the terms of his profes sion in describing the British and in reveal ing such secrets of British strength as ho might bo possessed of. Tho fact that ho married his wife in Germantown is sufficient proof that ho is a German sympathizer and, if that is not enough to convince the skep tical, his book on tho development of tho frog's egg Is nothing but a glbo at tho Frenchmen In tho favorite terms of the Brit ish of the last generation. No, thero is no British embargo on Ideas, but a very proper embargo on all documents which might bo of value to the Germans. Smallpox in Camden Is under control bo cause It never got out of control. Colonel Roosevelt's telegram to Senator Walsh proves that ho has not lost any of his old-time punch. Tho ship purchase bill will never be any deader, so why does the Senate committee persist in trying to find out what It died of? The average. dally attendance at the Pan ama Fair has been 61,000. This is more than went to Bee "Billy" Sunday save on his most crowded day. Those who are expecting "Billy" Sunday to bring about a political regeneration In Pater son have apparently forgotten that ha had Just as good a field here. That Now York suffragist who was knocked down by an outomoblle and then asked th owner If she had hurt hla car, has a proper appreciation of the stern qualities needed to defend her cause. A great deal more patriotism would be aroused by looking at the Liberty Bell In, Independence Hall than at the bell jacked up on a freight car at Kutztown Junction on Its way across the continent. No friend of the President will advise him to let one of the best men in his Cabinet re tire to accept the Chief Justiceship of the New Jersey Supreme Court, Secretary Gar rison may not need more Cabinet honors, but the Cabinet needs mora Jan of his ability. Every Philadelphlan who goes to Atlantic City from Camden for 23 cents less than it would cost him to go from this Uy is thank ful that New Jersey has a considerate Pub lie Servio Commission which believes that It sitWttJd & ay tor people to get a breath of "WHITE-MAN-WHO- DOES-NOT-LIE" General Scott's Knowledge of Sign Language Gives Him Extraor dinary Power Over Indians. Witchcraft Causes Many Uprisings. By VANCE THOiMPSON rptlE norm of news values hns been knocked JL on the head by tho Great Wor. In ordi nary times tho adventure of General Hugh L. Scott In going single-handed Into the Pluto country nnd bilnglng out four war-pnlntcd chiefs would havo got Itself reported In big typo In tho front page i Of course, General Srott Is a silent man; a brief dispatch to tho Secretary of War said "Successful," nnd lot It go at that. Probably that Is about nil ho told tho Utah war corre spondent when ho rode Into Salt Lake, tho four chiefs riding nlongslde. A fillcnt man. Do you know what tho Indlnns call him? "Secrets" of Power Thero Is nn entire biography In that nlck namo of his: "Whltc-Mnn-Who-Docs-Not-LIc." Time and again when tho Indians have flared up Into rebellion ho hns been sent to them; tho moment they henrd tho great Chief of Staff was on his way trouble halted nnd his nrrlvnl meant peace. It is becauso tho Indians trust him and (it Is a melancholy truth) ho Is almost the only Whlto Man they do trust. Ho Is tho Mnn-Who-Does-Not-Lle. That Is the source of his power. Ills promise tlutt they shall havo fair treatment sufllces. At his word they ride In docilely to bo hanged or shot If that be tho sentence wholly as sured that they will gel tho "Justlco" ho promised them. And General Scott Is, I believe, the only Whlto Man who can converse with tho In dians of every American tribe. It Is not that he speaks every Indian language. I do not think ho Is familiar with any spoken lan guage; but lie knows the sign language this mysterious method of communication which Is known to nil Indians. Tho Eskimos understand It; It Is understood by all tho nntlves of North nnd South nnd Central merlon. And It Is not a slmplo thing. There nro about 3000 different signs. Tho language is so copious anil precise thnt anything may be discussed In It anything from cosmogony to philosophy. General Scott Is the ono whlto man who has mastered the stratige nnd world old language. It has brought him close to Indian thought nnd feeling. It has made him tho ono man, civilian or soldier, who is known, ti listed, loved by all tho scat tered red tribes. Black Magicians and White How did ho learn it? That Is his seciet, and tho knowledge will die with him. I havo no intention of wilting about tho "trouble' for which tho four chiefs arc to be tried. It would not be fair. They will answer us they must, and I do not wish to darken their difficulty. But within tho last year or so thero havo been two similar outbreaks. At tho heart of thorn lay the same mysterious cause. And that is witchcraft. Of rouise, ou do not believe In witchcraft. It doesn't matter In tho slightest whether you do or do not; the point Is that tho In dian does believe In It. In every tribe, on every leservatlou, thero nre witch men. They are black nnd evil magicians. If they are not placated they kill men, women, cattle, sheep by their sorcery. Every Indian knows this. His only protection against them is tho medi cine man or good magician, who also has to bo paid. So between tho black magician and tho white magician life for tho Indian Is not a slmplo thing. You can imagine readily enough that tho Indian attacked by n sor cerer is not daft enough to take his com plaint to the ngent of tho reservation; ho knows too much of the white man for that. What ho does Is more effective. A little over a year ago these things happened all tho outsldo world heard was that there had been an "Indian uprising" here nre tho exact facts. Treatment by Star Gazing Hostecn Klaz, a good magician, was sitting In his hogan near Lukl Chtikt, when Wrest ling Brave, a Navajo Indian, rodo up and said his nleco was ill and it was not known whut had caused her illne&s Ho wanted tho good mnglclan "to try tho star-gazing cere mony" and find out what was tho matter with her. At first Hosteen Klaz refused, and told him to get some ono else, saying: "Thero are plenty of star-gazers in tho country besides myself." Finally he consented to accompany Wrestling Bravo to the hogan where tho sick girl lay. Ho waited until midnight, when tho clouds had cleared away and tho stars shone bright. Hero I quoto tho good magician's own words: "In my art I use a piece of mica and a very clear crystal called 'Tho Big Star.' I anointed myself with tho medicine called the caglo's tear drops. I went out and sat down a short dtstanco from the hogan and looked up into the heavens. For a time I could not read anything in tho sky. It was suspected that some sorcerer was practicing his art on tho girl. I looked at her star. It threw its rays down on the sick girl, and In the light of the rays I could not see anything that was out of tho way. I went Inside tho hogan and told them the girl was not bewitched. The relatives of the girl her uncle and brothers told me sho was bewitched or tho medicine man would havo cured her long ago." So the star-gazer remained and tho next night ho tried again. Squatting in front of the hogan ho stared at her star. Then; "Finally her star burned up and I had to come In. I went Into tho hogan and told them I couldn't find out anything, as her star had burned up. They wanted to find out what that meant. They told me to go out again and look Into the heavens and And what It meant by burning up. I said I did not know what It meant, as that was the first experience of the Hind that had ever happened to me. Then they asked another Btar-gazer, Ne dl dole (Hairy Face) to gaze at the stars, but ha refused and covered his head. So I said I would try with my hand." "The Ceremony of the Hand" . The little Indian maiden lay unconscious; for three days she had not eaten or spoken. And over her Hosteen Klaz began "the cere mony of tha hand." He covered his hand with corn pollen. His hand began to trem ble; then It began to move and "it became so strong It pulled me all over the-hogan." At last the hand began to talk the sign lan guage. Bald the magician: "My hand would whirl In a sort of circular motion, mixing1 up things so I could not determine what it was trying to say to me. It seemed to v that at some previous time, perhaps a couple of years before, this girl was bewitched by soma one probably by two persons, as my hand pointed; up with two fingers." The band seized the girl's dress and made as if to throw itlrat of doors; this sat ha hl X 1 would die. And then tho hand pointed out tho direction whero tho sorcerer lived. Even as tho hand pointed tho girl guvo a cty and died. Wrestling Btnvo bowed his head, but his nephew, Nnyo Notnh, touchqd him on tho shoulder and said it very strange thing. It was tills: "Slnco yonder is tho man who caused tho maiden's death, let us go to him and lot him kill us." So Wrestling Brave and Nnyo Notnh and other nephews set out; they crossed a valley and enmo upon tho sorcerer sitting lit front of his hogan. Nnyo Notah caught him by tho hair; nnother nephew seized" his nnklo nnd looking round about him Wrestling Bravo saw an nxo and picked It up and therewith split tho wl tollman's) skull. This is tho way they "lot him kill them." "Come and Be Hanged" When thoy got homo they found tho squaws washing tho body of the dead maiden. And they saw that she had a black spot Just over the heart and another black spot on tho back under the right shoulder the innrks of tho witchmnn's magic bullet so they knew they hud dono well. Of course, you don't bellevo In witchcraft; but tho Indians do. And having killed they take to their guns and refuse tho coaxing of tho ngent to "come In and bo hanged." It Is quite natural. Only ono volco they cannot resist. That is tho grave, truth-telling volco of General Hugh I, Scott, the "Whltc-Mim-Who-Does-Not-Lle." "Come," lie says, "It Is Just; you havo killed; come In nnd bo hanged." Without anger, without hesitation, they mount and lido in nt his side. It Is an amaz ing thing; tho most amazing thing happening in these mnd days. Two of theso young braves argued with him. . They refused to bo hanged, becauso (ns they reasonably stated) when a man dies his soul goes out through tho top of ills head, and if you choko him with a ropo hla soul can't get out. Gravely tho General acquiesced. "That Is true," ho said, "and I give you my word you shall not bo hanged como in and bo shot!" Blithely thoy rodo In. Thoy wero con demned. Fifty soldiers wero drawn up to shoot them. Shouting and waving their hands the boys dashed nlong tho line on their wild ponies. And not a shot was fired. So they wheeled their ponies nnd rodo back again and 50 bullets got them. The power of tho "Man-Who-Does-Not-LIo"; thero Is nothing llko It. And when you read of nnother "Indian uprising" you may bear In mind that back of it lies tho Indian's desperate, eternal tight with tho dark forces of his black magicians a. 1 understand. THE SEA OF MARMORA With the htrongeBt fleet ever nssemblcd for battle reported righting Its way through tho Dardanelles toward the Sea of Mnrmora, thla quiet Turkish sheet of water suddenly has taken on a thrilling world-Importance, for this sea may soon witness tho last scene of the mighty struggle of centuries for the preservation of Unropo from tho narcotic effects of eastern agression. Nature hns been mora than generous in her provisions for guarding this sea between Asia nnd Europe against hostile power. The Bos phorus. its approach from tho Black Sea on tho north, Is a deep, water-filled, twisting valley, whose surface almost all the way U at the morcy of the enclosing mountain heights. In the south, the Dardanelles, while of greater breadth than the Bosphorus, form an easily de fended channel, 17 miles long, and commanded by its shore heights. Marmora Bca Is a wonderful amphitheatre for a modern naval struggle. An elliptical bowl ot bluest water, It Is inclosed by a hilly shoreline, vhlch In bold and steep upon tha ABlatlo side. From east to west, tha sea Is 176 miles long, whllo It"! extreme width is about B0 miles. It has an urea of 4500 square miles. Constantinople, the objective of the Invading fWtn. lies tucked awny near the northernmost point of Marmora, ut the opening ot the Bos phorus Inlet In the west and south are sev eral considerable Islands, of which tha largest, MRrmors. has been famous for Its alabaster and marbles since the days of Grecian sculp tural and architectural glory. The Sea of Marmora Is the most famous and Important sea of passage in the world. Be hind Its waters, along the northern shore of the Black Sea, are the most fertile and favored provinces of the Russian Empire, Russia's gran ary; while on tho eastern Black Sea coast lies Russia's greatest oil port and her famous oil bearing hinterland, FRUGALITY Ba sura to live within compass; borrow not. neither ba beholden to any. Ruin .not yourself by kindness to others; for that exceeds tha due bounds of friendship, neither will a true friend expect it. Let your Industry and your parsi mony go no further than for a sufficiency for life, and to make a provision for your children if the Lord gives you any, and that In modera tion. I charge you help the poor and needy. Let the Lord have a voluntary share ot your income, for the good of the poor, both In our society and other; for we are all His creatures; remembering that he that glveth to the. poor lendetit to the Lord. William Ptnn. A THRILL AWAITING BRYAN From the Kw Tori IUrl& Whether Mr Bryan will resign today or soma other day may be uncertain, but one thing very certain is that when he does resign be vvlU for onoj in his life experienee the thrill that goes with toowltdxe that a awjjrity of the. Astern can people fasartuj? toawsa oos of Us acta. SPROUTING i . a BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA DIGEST OF THE MAGAZINES CD The Houso Beautiful "Seed Catalogs and Things." (I!) Voguo "Flowers ns They Aro Made." (3) Harper's Monthly "Tho Control of Soil Fertility." (4) Current Opinion "Elements of Con sciousness In tho Courtship and Mating of Plants." (G) Review of Reviews "Better Seeds for tho World'3 Food Supply." GARDENS FRAGRANCE of flowers, sparkle of cham pagne, smiles of fair women, nil tho al luring froth of tho world, rests upon a shad owy background of toll and weariness. But by ono of thoso fortunate chances which go to mako up this curious life of ours, thero Is a splendid nnd alluring com pensation of tho work for Its own sake, In the long row to hoe. tho grapes to pick nnd crush, tho weaving and hcrubblng which enter into tho creation of our precious lilies of tho field. A whiff of fragrance over tho garden wall makes up for a spring and summer's toll, an hour or two of smiles and beauty In tho evening glvo zest to long hours ot daylight drudgery. AVith characteristic in consistency. It Is tho hoors nnd weavers and tollers of tho world who achlovo happiness, whllo the lilies of the field aro notoriously bored and blase. Lot no one, then, pity tho gardener! Rather, In this day of brick and paved cities, ho Is to be envied his llt'tlo plot of soft, crumbly, brown soil, in which, as In a llttlo world of his own, ho plays tho part of creator, ruler and absolute autocrat, disturbed only by the ravages of anarchist worms and bugs. Now that tho frost is almost out of tho ground and tho seed catalog season is nt its height, numerous magazines glvo gardening advice, ranging from the amateur to the most technical. All gardeners and their wives or husbands will appreciato the whimsical tono of a typical spring tlmo dlaloguo by Dallas Sharpo in The Houso Beautiful (1): "What Is it you aro so Interested in?" she demanded, laying down the new magazine. "A seed catalog." "More seed catalogs. Why, you read noth ing else all last night." "This is a now ono," I replied, "and I do claro I never saw turnips that could touch this Improved strain here. I am going to plant " "How many catalogs havo you?" "Only six bo far." "Only six so far? And you plant your earliest seeds " "In April, tho middle of April, though I may bo ablo to get my first peas in by tho last of March. You soo, peas ' sho was back ing away "this new Antarctlo pea will stand a lot of cold; but beans do come hero and look at theso improved Kentucky wonder polo beans," holding out tho wonderfully lith ographed page toward her. But sho backed still farther away and, putting her hands firmly behind her, looked at mo Instead very solemnly. I suppose every man comes to know that unaccountable expression In his wife's oyes soon or lato; a sad, baffled expression, de tached, remote, ns of things seen darkly or descried afar off discernible, but very ro mote. Two minds with but a single thought, so you start; but soon she finds, or lato sho rinds, that as tho heavens aro high above tho earth, so nre somo of your thoughts above her thoughts. She cannot follow. On the brink she stands and sees you, through tho starry spaces, drift from her ken In your fleet of dreams or Beed catalogs, I have never been able to explain to her the seed catalog. Her unit of garden measuro Is a meal so many beet seeds for a meal; so many meals for a row, with never two rows of anything, and with nil the rows of dif ferent length, Now, I go by tho Beed catalog, planting not after tha dish, as if my only vision wero a garden peeled and In the pot, but after the bushel, peck, quart, pint, pound, ounce, package so many pounds to the aero instead of so many seeds to the meal. Vogue gives a semiofficially ellto indorse ment of gardening, as nn occupation even for the lilies of the field (2): So fashionable has gardening become of late, It Is strange that no rural hard has taken occasion to play upon the susceptible theme of "the woman with the hoe." Today, If one attempts to make a summer morning call upon a smart woman at her country place, the powdered footman very likely lifts his eyebrows that ever so little a powdered foot man may, nnd says, "Madame Is at work In her garden at this hour." Then If you may, you wend your way to the garden to find madame In a simple cotton frock, cov ered with a capacious chintz apron, a big shade hat, gauntlet gloves, and actually dig ging In tha soil. There havo always been women who have loved their gardens and really worked in thera, but It is only recently that fashionable women have wakened to the fact that digging In old Mother Earth not only gives them a certain cachet, but a slim mer waist line, and tha enviable rose and creaa complexion of the dairy maid. Our Kinship to tho Boil In an article on "Tha Control of Soil Fer tlllty" S), in Harper's. Robert Bruere attacks tha popular notion that soils wear out, as in New England and the Bast. Take. Italy, for example Her soils were ClebratI for their fertility mure, than SOW) years ago. In lflOS Italy's harvest of cereals nlono wns llvo times thnt of New? York, though her area Is but twice as great'J counting nor systematically cropped rorcsu.J 84 per cent, of her tcnltory is worked by men anu women who understand the uses of their land ns thoroughly as a mechanlo understands his tools. , Tho problem of Infertilo soils seems to b not ono of forced feeding or the use of drue ; stimulants, but air, light, deep plowing, In tensive cultivation, exercise, suggesting fur- ' titer Interesting analogies with modern medl leal practice. Such soils ore sick. Open thsj windows of the fields, let in tho air and sun- ' light to the roots of tho plants, and ths i oxygen will cleanso tho poisons from the air"; thoy breathe and from the soil solution which f thoy feed. ' Tho United States Bureau of Soils has now" isolated 37 organic compounds, nono of which 4 had previously been known to exist in tha : soil. Its patient work lias slowly trans formed our knowledge of tho soil, and we begin to perceive that it is a highly complex organism, with vltnl functions akin to those . by which wo ourselves live and breathe, per- ? petually changing, a crucible, like tho stom- i nnli nf nnlmnl whnrn nrcnnlp romnntlnds are aclt of animali, where organic compounds are rormea nnd reduced, and wlieto tno mineral plant food elements aro transformed as they aro In the courso of human metabolism. Theso discoveries nre no summons to waste tho mineral content of tho soil, or to neglect tho use of mineral fertilizers. They area call to the intelligence of tho farmer, a cry for Helf-rellanco nnd discriminating culti vation. Raising Ancestors This analogy between tho soil from 'which wo sprang and our own lives Is carried fjir titer by Royal Dixon, whose studies of plant life aro reviewed in Current Opinion (4); he asserts that tho (lowers woo and marry: Beforo the mating of any pair of plants KKriirg tlinrn Its lit tills stntro In tllO eVOlU- tion of many among them a brief pcrlH of what must ne canca courtsnip. xue mm, and gallant wooer adorns himself gorgeously with brilliant flowers, each having powdereJ faces, calling to his lovo on every breeze. He niiBt charm or thero will be no response. In considering this plant courtship, there Is ono point which needs special empnasls-j a point which must necessarily bo reiterated tlmo nnd ugain. It is the existence of some nlrllniv fnirn inn IfnrilllRlVA tn bfi mechanical, too vorsatllo and efficient to bo instinctive. -J which controls tho notions and manners i ot M plants In all tho stages of their reproductive functions, unere is an nirarai muun "-yum rrnnllw In t1in nPtlnilH! Ill tllO dlSPUty 0l'SJ brilliant colors and soft perfumes to attract their lovers; in tho cunning which they snow i.. i inAlnn. n l.An If l,n atimilri nrrlvo be- in lllll'l lOUiliub . wcu " ."-" -- ---,Aj foro the pollen grains nro ready to bo nw on his e-acic, ana or iioiuiuk """ DU,', . i" ., i. ,.r,n ttn pmi rrn forth laden with tho pollen' that Is to adhero to a Pi?'"-, and so nnd its way to tno ovary mm yr. ....... tho great mlraclo tnat results m ocw ; tho many similar tricks which they use to entico ana to noiu; uu wiubu vTifi toward that ono great aim of plant we-; reproduction. There is similar emphasis in an article on hHlni irmlnR hv K. B. PoWCll. Of tne uni; verslty of Illinois, In tho Review ot Reviews, r.- It is conceded, in theory at least, thaUj be well born is a right. It is known that be. nice y natcneo-iron. im. -""";1,,aT!on, point is distinct causa mi "VS h the H Wo aro now discovering that to give i plants the best available granmatne, part of wisdom. Therefore, a 1 over the Ian". I, iiuiiiwivi - ..... .na scientists aro engaged in tying " J: bags over sw tlint nn olltsid bags over sweot peas and otuer '"-1. nags over sweot. iieu " ""- i".;.mai-.M that no oLtsido pollen may mo a-loema m inir nnd destroy the nurlty of their cherwna ing and destroy the purity 8trJn8' . .... , st breeders. of wheat, 64 breeders of barley .a"f,lg Et.oJ;. V vnw that the pr ce of landwa tha United States is so high, the farmer nv u get the most possible from It or conWCMjj losing business. When a notable .nauj appears in tne neia, us """"?,". 0 $ bo the elevator; It must be destined to p come an ancestor. "rsrcnMANY. 1915" Professor W. P. Trent, of ColumbUWttgj slty, has contriuutea iu "7"- ..n.rmiW Zcltung the following poem, entitled """,& m5"-- .. ' ,..r r-ti Fronting tne worta, sno nuw in valor, strength and eelf-respect. The threats, and Insults of her foes She answers grim, with Bcorn and blows. In war, fihe shows herself as ereM. Witness the drenching blood that stains Polonlan, Gallic, Belgian plains, . Whilst Britain's coaBts at specters w That leap from sea, or drop from am Tha world ere npw such marvel saw Never, and halts twlxt rage and awe; , Vain rage! This Btark, consummate row Is girt with adamantine right The right to llvo beneath the sun, rrl.. -I-!,. . I, M.I uhil tlBB bet won By toll and science, thrift and art. In camp to farm. In sohool and mart A right which still without avail Revenge and cant and greed assail. Before such prowess rage must fink. And generous minds be bold to thinic Hypocrisy hath here no place; Barbarism 7-that Imperial racel By Heaven, ypn Germany, today Holding so splendidly at bay Those variegated tribes of men. Is not a thing to bunt and peal Enough of blind, bysterlo fear. Enough of menace, vaunt and sneer. Enough of Shait ly tales untrue! Give the heroic state her due! Strength to bcr arm. aod to fcr Mow All skw fbai the gods allow! 1 V