at'W,MtfW'W''W( ' immmwwmtom lo EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, APRIIJ 24, 1915: -THi- V ...... If -3 I I f B m f IK&btpt s PUHLIC LEDGER COMPANY emus it. k cunTis, raisiDtxi. CbrltH Lit.llnittoH.V ice-l'reMdent . John U Martin, Oeretsry nd Treneurert Philip S. Collins, John B WUIWnn, Uirectore 1 EDITORIAL BOAP.DI Ctnrs It. K. CVRtlR Chairman P. K WHALEY Exeeullie Editor JOlty C. MAItTIN. Gene ml nulnc Manager Fubllahtd dally at PcnUo Lcrnr.it nullillng-, Independence Square, Philadelphia Lrsotit Cktbl. .......... Hroad and Cheetnut streets ATUhtlC CtTt rrtsi'l nfon nulldlnic New Tonic, . 170-A, Metropolitan Toner Cmeion 817 Hom Inmnnre Tlulldlni: Lo.ndon S Waterloo rlace, rail Mall, E w. NKWB IlLIlHAtlR- V itVmntMitn'f nrnrAC The I'oit llutimnc -.r VorK lICftEAL' Tn Time MulMin ntBttv nmEAC "" FriMrifnatraafs Lovno.v til rC 2 Pall Mall Kai S W. PAHS UcorAti .... ,12 Hue Louln 1 Orjnd SUIUCnTPTION TERM J fly carrier, Dill.v Ovlv, fix rente I1 mall poMpnld , 6utlde ef Philadelphia, except where rorelen posture is required DIM OM.t, one month twentv.fne rente, Ctlt.r Oin, one j ear three rtoil.ir All mall mh- crlptlone jiajable In Advtniv BELL, .1000 WAl.M'r KC1 STCM M UN .1(100 IST" .4df.'itat nil MimmtiWc if 10114 to Eicntng Ltdptr, inJ-p-ri'c icr Squire . r'lt'r.tir'.h'n ixtrnen At the ruiLAtr.tniu,roTorrii: as srrnvn cue Mitt M'jrtrr, I'lllLADLLIillA, SMI niM. litlt. SI, l'Jl.. A penny In fhc pocket f ri.s thrifllesi as an idler ttio spends Ms trmc In brd. Build a Hall Instead of Squabbling Over It EVERY time a new site lor n tonoitlen hall Is suggested the difficulties In th way of agreement are increased nnd tiio be ginning of work is delayed. Some of the proposed sites at" better than others. Some are urged with the thought, primarily, of the convenience of the people who will use the building, and others, with a desire to boom real estate In this dlstr'et or that. But the responsible men In the 1 ity should not peimlt Councils to forget thnt what the town Imperatively nerds is a cr n ventlon hall and not a squabble nver Its location. The squabble will not accommo date a single convention or a single Indus trial exhibition, but will Inrreasp the diffi culties In the way of harmonious co-operation among all those Interests engaged In the work of making a greater and more pros perous community The question ought to ba approached with a bigness of spirit worthy of the bigness of the enterprise. The Colonel's Supreme Failure I thought his morality at least nbne th ordinarv political and business morality and believed ho had It In him to hecome a al uable leader in the State I boned to elim I inate the bad In Mr. Il.irne nnd deelop the good Colonel Rooseclt, under oath COLONEL, ROOSEVELT has, "got awa" with t-o many things It Is surprising that he did not get away with this stupendous task. But he has tied to confess on the wit ness stand that th- good and bnd were so Inextricably Intermixed in the character of Mr. Barnes that it was impossible for even him t" separate thpm If he had only succeeded, what a different course, events might have taken In New York and in the nation at large! But what the Colonel cannot do it would be nh for any other man to attempt. Not even "Billy" Sunday, who is possessed of a most discreet brand of courage, dated try to reform the bosses In Pennsylvania. And he let tho men who make the bosp.s possible think that he had no disapproval for their double standard of morality. Every mun will fall to reform the bosses until personal morals and political morals are measured by the same yardstick Unshackling the Housewife THE gas range has done mote than any other single Improvement In kitchen apparatus to free the housewife from her summer bondage It Is not possible to fix with any certainty upon the exact date of the signing of the proclamation of emancipa tion. There can. therefore, be no annual celebration of emancipation day: but the ob servance of "Gas Range Week" come, as near to such a celebration as is possible under the circumstances The kitchen in the properlv equipped house Is no longer a torture chamber in summer. Heat for cooking can be had at the moment It Is needed. It can be turned off when there Is no longer use for it, and the room is habitable between times, as well, Indeed, as when the heat Is on, for there is no great .mass of cast Iron raised to a high tempera ture standing anywhere In the kitchen. The gas rangp has not only moderated the temperature of the kitchen. It has made It possible to put the heat wherever It Is most convenient to use It. The women no longer have to break their backs bending down to a low oven for baking and roasting, but they can stand erect and put things in an oven without stooping "Women may seem to be slow about accept ing Improvements In household devices, but their objections are usually duo to their In ability to perceive the value In the alleged Improvement. When a real advance Is made they move with the procession. No woman will live In a house without a gas range to day except under protest. Planting War and Reaping Peace ANSWERING questions U one of the duties Lof a policeman. Yesterday a Philadel phia bluecoat was accosted by an Individual who evidently was not new to thlrstlness and who asked: "Say, where can I get loaded? I want to get loaded" "You can get loaded all you want down at the next street there's a bar on the corner." The militarist, too, Is good at giving di rections. But don't blame him for all the wars there are In the world Statesmen and people are not wholly guiltless, and civiliza tion still has far to go, Suppress the Irresponsible Jitneya TITNEY regulations could not have been t) delayed much longer. They have for tunately been made before any great scandal i or disaster has occurred through the sollclta- ' (ton of business In the streets by a large . number of irresponsible and unlicensed ' operators of motorcars. j It Is Important that every Jitney operator I carrying passengers day or night shall bo known to the police and chartered or licensed Jn such a,way that he can be Identi fied, If need be. The safety of the public, de mands this, the safety of the men and women In the streets as well as the safety of the womfw and men in the motorcars. The regwlatjwis which the Police Depart ment has already mads are reasonable, and are accepted in eefi part by the responsible operator of the cars. Experience may prove tfeat thJ need to be increased and made more stringent, but so Ion; as the. primary pwiKe 9f -tJMHa U ttee protestios of the pub- 1 3uniiig lie and not the suppression of a legitimate business there can be no Justifiable com plaint. A modest license fee, not to discour age the business, but to protect It. may bo necessary, and It would probably bo wel comed by nil the Jitney men except "hose who wish to escnpe responsibility entirely. MarvelousnesB of Common Things THK accustomed things are. usually ac cepted as a matter of course One seldom stops to think of the beating of one's heart to which the flow of blood through the body Is due, or of the process of breathing, by which that blood Is tilled with oxygen. Im munity from disease does not Impress one until It ceases. Ability and opportunity to work are sometimes regarded as bllldens Trtends with whom one has genial Inter coursewife or husband, children or pa-ents are frequently accepted without thought of w hit they mean Habit Is ri sponsible also, for much neglect to consider when?" come the grnclous rains ntul how It s tha' harvest succeeds seed tittle n the re-urilng years. The spectacle of the sunset and the more glorious panorama of the dawn are neglected forponny chrrnos. The mlghtv pageant of the stars attrncts less atlentlnn than a circus parade, and men will cross the ocean to st the Alps when by looking upward from the streets they can see the Himalayas of the heavens tiling peolt on peak as the mountnln-llke clouds loom against the horizon Tho mute appeal in the eyes of the dumb beasts Is too often denied, nnd we are thus deprived nC the kindly companionship of our fellow mortals. And even when we do accept that comradeship we tin not prise it n? a blessing. The old earth, Itself, swinging through Infinite spners, might fly from Its orbit Into chaos for nnv serious thought that we give to the matter. We nrcept It as a mnttr of course. If one pauses for a moment to consider these thlng, one will bo filled with wonder at the orderly plan of Nature, nnd will Iip moved to reverent awe In the presence of a power and a mysterv bevond human com prehension. Thankfulncs". therefore, Is the proper mood for human kind, not thnnkful-ni-ss on a single da set apart bv the Gov ernment, but a dnllv mood of reverent grati tude for all the benefits that encircle us. It Is fitting for youth, thnt It m.iv face life with some appreciation of Its significance, and for age that It max approach Its end, knowing that the Power which has guided tho uni verse through the eternities nnd a sinsl" human soul through its brief span on eat tit will nut cease His care at that transition which we call death. Ethics and Self-interest CHARLEMAGNE TOWER has discovered that a dam will hold only so long as the pressure behind It Is less powerful than the resisting force of the structure When tho pressure becomes too great tho dam gives w a . Llkewisp an international guarantee to protect the Interests of the guarantors will remain effective nnl so long ns the guaran tors are protected by the guarantee. When the pressure of contrary interests becomes too great tho guarantees are disregarded. Mr. Tower elaboiated this proposition be fore the American Philosophical Association yesterday. Whether this Is right or wrong Is an en tlrnly different question from whether It Is the way things nrp done. The moralist may discuss the ethical qualities of the law of gravity without affecting the operation of the law And a discussion of the moral enor mity of the violation of thp neutrality of Belgium will not persuade the Germans to withdraw p single soldier. Whether vp like to admit It or not, the forces at work in this war pay as little heed to the theory of ethics as ilos the avalanche when it crashes down the side of a mountain. But If the world Is to progress, wp should not fall Into the error of worshiping the God of Things as They Are to the total exclu sion of the God of Things as Thpy Ought to Be. inspectors to Inspect GOVERNOR BRUMBAUGH'S approval of the bill increasing the number of fac tory Inspectors from 50 to 100 Is in fulfilment of the humano program which he outlined for himself when he took office. There can be no adequate factory Inspection In a manu facturing State tho size of Pennsyhania with a force as small as that which has been hith erto employed It Is doubtful If 100 Inspec tors will be enough to make the thorough inspection that Is necessary If the employes arc to be protected In their rights and priv ileges. When the standard of factory construction has become established and respected by the manufacturers of all kinds, and when the human obligation of the employer to his em ployes is admitted and fulfilled, It will not be necessary to make so thorough an examina tion of the factories every ear as Is now required But until the conditions are im proved the State must exercibe its right to compel obedience to the laws and regulations intended to protect the health and morals of the factory workers Some time they will be obeyed automatically, as a matter of course. Character witnesses' More character wit nesses! Perhaps our grandchildren will see the end of the Thaw case. At the rate they are coming most of the April showers will have to fall In May. 1 I., Japan says to China. "Yield or fight." But China may take it Into Its head to do neither. General Obregon has occupied Irapuato with resuItB less distressing to himself than If Ipecacuanha had occupied him. The college athletes may have to engage In relay races, but the Colonel wants It under stood that ho can outdistance any boss relay team all by himself. Tho children who start to walk to the Panama Fair ought to remember that It Ib even a longer way to San Francisco than from the French battle front to Tipperary. How futile that suggestion to the Pan American Union for a permanent arbitration commission to take the Initiative in settling international disputes seems in the face of a real war! The discovery that the report of the naval battle oft the New Jersey coast was without foundation will not prevent the olrculatlon of other similar reports. Naval battles as sum mer resort attractions are much better than eea serpents. One gathers from the addresses before the American Philosophical Association that If the kings of Europe would only marry Phil adelphia girls the next generation ef princes mljht contain' mora real men. THE BEAUTY OF A NIGHT BATTLE Like a Storm Before the Dawn. Scenes on the Eastern Front as Described by a Russian Writer. An Addenda to "War and Peace." The following l n translation of a tlvlrl sketch, which rerently appeared In the Hueslan nev paper "P-uaskoe Slnio" and le eharaeterUtle of the unique manner In which the Ruaelan writer Weus eerythlntr, eten war. Tlin muster a small, shriveled old man can hardly get up from his filthy bod: and the mistress a wrinkled, 111 old woman weeps unceasingly. Somewhere far away are her children for she does not know where they are. Theie Is nothing to eat, and she Is ashamed to have to beg from the soldiers, who are so willing to share with her. Besides this, there Is the ever present terror that from the trenches, which are so very, very close, there may appear a German to Ate the last remainders of her once-prosperous farm And with these two. in their half of tho ' nUl thcr" are billeted eight oidcrllcs: In the other half, In which there arc two low, J minute bunks like those In a ship's cabin, I there are living five doctors and thrco or 1 ganlzers of nn ambulance unit. In these 1 rooms are two offices a kitchen and a store of provisions and here Is carried on the 1 business Interwoven with tho life of every J day. I Evening j Townrd the evening It becomes hot and 1 stuffy In the hut from the number of per sons gathered In It, tho tobacco smoke, nnd i the stove on which the evening meal Is be- Ing cooked So every one goes out for a walk 1 In tho road by tho woods. ( Therp Is a moon, and tho evening Is: bright and qulot Prom here ran bo seen troops 1 advancing, orderlies galloping to nnd fro, and a lone Ilnp of field-kitchens on Its way I to thu front sti etched over the surface of tho 1 rparkllng snow. Now is n strange time, whrn everything ' along the front is quiet and Hip war censes J for an hour or two, for the men must ies,t I nnd eat to be able afterward to carry on aa I before I At 9 o'clock everything Is as It was. shrap j iipI bursts close by, and the heavv boom of I artillery can once more be heard. Sometimes rifle-firing will start, to continue Intermit tently throughout the night. Having rpturned to the farm, where a lamp Is burning and newly ni lived papers aie lying on the table, we drink tea with lemon juice A oung Caucasian do;tor smokes, now and then to lessen the numcr- ous smells Then wp all begin to get ready to go to sleep Some He on their nai row folding camp beds, some on crates which once held provisions, and tho rest simply on the beaten earthen floor. The conver sation I of the war. of our birthplaces, and of the possibility of a night attack by Hip enemy. Soon all are asleep In the little hut It Is warm, quiet nnd stuic. nnd only j occasionally It shakes from the force of tho I esplodlng shells It seems that here there is and can be no danger. The Attack Close on 3 o'clock wo are awakened by a series of shocks which by the rattling of the furniture seem to be so great that the flimsy hut Is having great difficulty in keeping lo one spot Some one speaks ex citedly: "Do you hear it? It must bo a night attack." An Incessant artillery battle now begins The bursts of shells come oiip on top of another, thoy are quite close, net to us, almost upon us, right under the walls of the hut. surely It must fall And now wo can hear a sound as of a person tapping persistently, untiringly, irritably at tho wall with an enormous dry hard flit. This is tho rifle fire beginning We hurriedly dress and go out. It Is terrible, but wonderfully beautiful. The Battle Short red flames burst out one after an other, tho searchlight throws its strange long pale beams as far as the horizon, and the screaming shrapnel falls on the ground In bright, metpor-llke sparks, and In the air there Is tho ceaseless crack of rifle fire, bursting of shells nnd the clatter of shrap nel, the constant, untiring business of a battle. Then everything begins to quiet down like a storm that has exhausted its fury. But hardly have we started townrd the hut when again It starts slowly, quietly, far away Then nearer, clearer, moie per sistently, shriller Rifles, quick-flrers, how itzers, all once moro enter the lists The farther away the fiercer It seems. Now It T. ROOSEVELT, MAN OF LETTERS Nc MAN can forecast his own life And Colonel Roosevelt has been as unsuccess ful as tha rest of us. Perhaps he has been mora unsuccessful, for his actual career Is so different from what he thought it would hae to be 25 years or more ago that no one would think that the reality could possibly have suc ceeded the dream which preceded It. The Colonel Indicated his early occupations when he was cross-examined In Syracuse by the attorney for William Barnes Here 1b a trans cript of part of the record: "Were you a lawyer?" asked Mr Ivlns. "I studied law," Roosevelt replied, "but I never practiced. Early In my life I became an author." He did not say then that he had expected to be a man of letters and nothing else, but that Is what he thought was to be his fate after the Utlca convention In 1SS1, when he was elected as a delegate-at-large from New York to the Republican National Convention and committed to opposition to Blaine. After the convention he wrote S. N. D. North, then managing editor of the Utlca Herald, that his course had aroused so much hostility that he had little expectation at being able to keep on In politics The letter is printed In full In "The Many-Sided Roosevelt, an Anecdotal Biogra phy." by George W Douglas. In U93 he wrote another letter on the tame general subject, which can be found in the same book. He said. "If a man has political foresight, who llve3 In a district where the people think as he does and where he has a great hold over .them, then he can seriously go In for a continuous pub lic career; and I suppose in such a case it is all light for him to shape his publlo course more or less with a view to his own continu ance In office. I am a little Inclined to envy a man who can look forward to a long and steady course of publio service, but in my own case kucb a career is out of the question, and, personally. It seems to me that a man's com fort and usefulness are greatly Impaired the moment befins to zt worrying- about how THE ..vv- '-'- v ,"'tA""- j;.'. - V 1 I becomes haid to distinguish one sound from tho other, for the rifles and the big guns srpni to make tho same amount of noise,. J hnvo an unconquerable craving to go and see what is happening ti verst or two away. whore tho battle is being fought. But from I tnc I'oat bE on w"'ch the hut stands a fog has risen, and, In spite of tho bright moon, it Is impossible to see anything in tho damp mist. And then suddenly a drawling, low, dis tant roar arises, glows, approaches. I can clearly hear amid this tornadq of sounds the tones ot many men's voices. A far away "A 'a !a !" getting louder every moment. "Again, again'" Hcio it Is quite close to me, then farther off again, from this side, then fiom the other. My henit beats with excitement und agitation. I Imagine ns I cannot see any thing in the cold, dank mist that something Is approaching, that in a minute out of that darkness there may appear foreign soldiers. And. again, although I am enciiclcd by a blanket of fog, I imagine I can see some thing. But that Is Impossible. Dawn Then again the long-drawn-out "A 'a la !" Now somehow louder, more convinc ing, more triumphant. Uut suddenly ovoty thlng almost at the same moment grows calm One or two moro shot3 are fired by lilies und guns. " And by 7 o'clock In the morning, when a olow, dull, drowsy dawn comes up from tho north, there is com plete silence all along our fiont. The day In the lienchcs begins. Baggage carts make their way along tho toad, or derlies huiry hither and thither On tho plain and in the woods tho artillery fire at Intervals. Some wounded are being brought in to the bandaging point and some one say3 that last night there was u night attack on our trenches, but by the stiong, well-aimed thrusts of our brave men's bayonets it was repulsed A FIGHT WORTH FIGHTING To the Ertttar nf the Evening Leitgrr: Sir Keep up the fight' I am Immensely pleased with jour editorial, "Put a White Feather In Respectability's Cap." It Is to the point, and ceiy word of it la true. Keep up the fight' ALBERT S HACSELER Philadelphia. April 2 RIGHT AND MIGHT Hold by the rlsht. you double your might Bronnlngr. his votes and actions will affect his own future. When I was In tho Legislature I roon found that for my own happiness, as well as for the sake of doing good work, I had to cast aside nil thought of my own future; and as soon as I made up my mtnd to this end and oted sim ply as I thought right, not only dlsregaidlng the people themselves. If I honestly thought they were all wrong on a matter of principle, not of men or of expediency, then I began thor oughly to enjoy myself and to feel that I wa3 doing good. My hands are fortunately free, for I have not the slightest concern about my political future. My career Is that of a lit erary man, and as soon as I am out of my present place I shall go back to my books." He did go back to his books and has gone back to them many times 6lnce, If It can be cald that he has ever completely abandoned them. The list of titles of his published works Is long and It covers a wide range of subjects, from natural history to naal affairs and from philosophy and ethics to the development of a continent The man of letters persists In him. And the men of letters of the nation have wel comed him Into their number, for he Is a mem ber of the American Academy of Arts and Let ters, composed of the most distinguished 60 writers and artists In the country. Including William Dean Howells. Henry James, James Ford Rhodes, Thomas Nelson Page, Hemy van Dyke, John Singer Sargent, William M. Chase and the rest of the leaders in their profession. After the Colonel had confessed that he was an author, the attorney with whose questions this article was begun, asked; 'What else did you do?" "I went West and was a cowboy upon tha Little Missouri' In Montana." "We want no moro of that. You have had many callings, have you not?" "Yes. I've followed many ocatlons," laughed the Colonel "And all simultaneously?" interposed Ivlns. "Yes," was the reply Yet of all his simultaneous and multifarious occupations be Is doubtless proudest of his lit erary achlaverasntgi CHAMPION OF SHOT-PUTTERS HEROINES OF THE EUROPEAN WAR Woman's Work Across the Sea Is Varied in Kind, From Fighting on the Battle Line to Carrying on the Work Left Behind by UV LL1S T ETTERS and news dispatches from XJ Vienna tell of the hard, efficient work which a Philadelphia woman, Mrs. Ponfiold, wifo of tho Amoilcan Ambassador, Is doing for the welfare of Austrian soldiers. In iec ognltlon of her services the Emperor last No vemher confeired upon her the Grand Cross ot tho Older of Elizabeth, an honor hereto fore icservcd for persons connected with the imperial fnmilj. Ret ent messages which have come out of Austria describe evidences of appreciation and gratitude shown by the people of all classes townnl this American woman, who bears a distinguished part In the humano activities of wartime. In cery war women have honored them selves and their countiy by what they havo done are what they havo suffered. There Is nothing surpilslng in woman's heroism, but thcio Is nothing moro deserving of tho wot Id's ttlbute. From Europe come stirring tales of hero ines of war. We learn that many kinds of work formcrlv performed by men are now being capably continued by women. There is work nnd work a-plenty for the women of Europe, nnd hardship and grief Heroic qualities are called forth with every rising sun. Women Warriors Numbers of women, at the beginning of the war. marched to tho firing line with guns on their shoulders They had personated re servists who because ot illness or absence had been unable to answer the call It Is said that several hundred reached the front. Some of them were wounded. It Is probable that most. If not all, of the women soldiers havo heeti dlEcoveied by their officeis and sent hark home. Olga Ellvlser. however, Is a member of n Cossack regiment, and not under pretenso of any kind. She fought In tho Russo-Japanese War and won a medal, and when the present war broke out she re joined her legimcnt. Russian and Polish women are acting ns scouts and spies In Eastern Poland. Tho corps which Is thus engaged began with the Polish Women's Unity League of Poland. Tho 200 members began to practice gymnas tics and military drill on tho Jlokotsky field. They drilled without arms, the aim being to attain physical fitness and to dovelop a dis cipline which would enable them to render efficient nsslstanro to the defending army and the noncombatants In case of tho siege of Warsaw. They took to men's clothes and then to n uniform of their own When tho Invaders retired in November the women's corps spread out through the evacuated ter ritory and gave valuable aid to t- army of Grand Duke Nicholas. On the relnvaslon the women changed their uniforms for their cus tomary dress and went on scout duty. Guarding tho Railways "Tho work of tho German women," says Mrs. Bernhard Dernberg, "began with the first movement of troops. Patriotic women's associations were formed voluntarily, and these Immediately took steps to furnish food at tho different railway stations, day and night, through which the trains of soldiers passed. Young girls and children were eager to Join tho work with their mothers, and boys of 16 and under gruarded the railways day nnd night. "Coincident with, that came the move ment of refugees from East Prussia, for this Btarted with the advance of tho Russians across tha border before the declarations of war. Theso refugees had to be taken care of in private houses, whose owners threw open their doors to them. I had six of these refugees In my own home. "Then, of course, women had to take up the work left by tho men who had been called to arms. If men were in charge of big businesses, their -wives took their placea In the office; shopkeepers left their stores In tho hands of their wives; In some cases women took the places of men on the tram cars, and, of course, mothers had to take the place of fathers as heads of families. The war came so unexpectedly there was no tlmo for men leaving for the front to make ar rangements. "Next, the stream of wounded began to flow back from tho fronts. When it was raUa4 that great problems must bo met. 1 the Men i KAINJJALL 1 children were sent about collecting clothes. shoes and stockings. These were all assorted, i washed or cleaned, and stored away by slreiJ in tho different schools of the towns, so that when these things were in demand for refu ; gees or other victims of the war they could ' be readily drawn upon. Housewives madt great stores of Jellies and jams and lljht foods so necessary for the hospitals, and everywhere branches were organized of the ' National Women's Service." Sister Julie's Tribute All France is proud of the little Frencht nun wno preserved tne Hospital at GerlX' vlller from German attack, and the world hu heard no more thrilling story of the war than that about Sister Julie. But when hi was asked why she did not wear the CronJ of the Legion of Honor given her by Preil-j dent Poincare, sho responded: "I do not wear It because It was not meant! for mo alone. It was given to tho women on France who have done their duty." The women of France, of Germany, of Ans-1 trla, of England, of Russia are dally perform- Ing deeds of valor and of greatness. j Of the nurses, thousands are exposing' themselves to as great risk as are the sol-3 dlers. A hundred women have received? from Czar Nicholas the St George's Cross, which Is given only for valor. In London a statue of Florence Nightingale I has just been unveiled, She Is represented as "The Lady of tho Lamp"; that is to say, ui sho used to appear when visiting the hospltalf wards at Scutari during the Crimean war.: It is fitting that new honors should be paid to the woman who did so much, both la -war; and In peace, to advance the methods of bos-' pital work. Her Influence still lives. Czar's Sister a Nurse - In warring Europe women of high rani; and low are devoting themselves to nurslnf wounded soldiers and caring for the families ot the poor. The Grand Duchess Olga, sister of the Czar, is a uurso In one of thej largest Russian field hospitals Of her, MmM Bakhmeteff, the wife of the Russian Am- bassador to America, says. "She wears tnJ same dress, takes her turn by day and on night In doing the hardest routine work, ln lecelvlng the wounded, removing their bloody stained clothes and their heavy boots, bathes: the wounds, assists at operations and share In the work of the wards, precisely as does tho young woman from the humble walk ofj life. Scores of men have had their wounds! closed and dressed, have been fed. and 6onS times have had their eyes closed in death Wl lots jiauus m wig uraiiu yutii - ever knowing the Identity of the gentle wpm- an who to them, and to her fellow women. 1 is lust a nursa." In Germanv a. similar effect on claw " Unctions has been observed. Women who had been in tho habit of having every wba attended to by a host of servants, and who had never known what it was to do anyWTii of service for themselves, cheerfully unoei tnnlr Tn.nlnl igslr. Tho rtn licrhter of the ChM 11n hpz-nmn nn ncslntnnt nurse, WuWV meant that she had to helD do anythlnr quired In a hospital, down to scrubblnr floortj In a thousand tasks presented by warcondy tlons, women of all stations of life areij lnir sldn hv hMa. If thera in irlnrv In war. natrlotlO W "i ... - - . . ! ffAffl&8 manitanan service has won it ior m v - of Europe. UPWARD LIVING e live oy Auniiruuun, nvfi "- -."-jiSB And, even as these are well and wisely Me Y Jlnuli.. M !-..l. -.A HAnfiHff 1slH' In dignity of being we ascend. '.Wordjwsrtk-j THE NEST Quid ts the grove with light. And the glen Is song-caressed. But longing comes ere night For the one, dear nest! Far fields may seem more fslr, And distant hills more blue Still claims that nest niv are In the dawn In the dew For though the wild may co Wy wing to many a iuw' tjwet In the dawn and the ow Ait home and rest' gerftatr -iuu -! roitat. sen"0" r-- Li B , 1 V I t I ft St frt 1 f'l !r iy i rr F. I t f I aMM.;iSS?f r if jgfjii-i