wwp "-- '-Ttf- -"" itw H'J'WWWI ' J- - J, & - if! I'll ?-$? (I it u wing g9& Vedgeir PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY cTitiait k. crriTm, rfiMvr Cnarlee K. L-jfllnrion, VlrrrMn!: John C Hi Hit), iiit ni Trurri run yillUmil, Dlnrrinta p e coiiim. Jhn a KDIToniAL TIOAnD: rr II. k. mm. Chalrmsn. WHALE? r.xccutlre ftdl S. IT. ' 0tlN C. MAimN Oertersl tlmlnrM UlMttf II IWMUl .1 ,- - . - I ,k Published Jftllr at PctUc Leeem thjlldlnj, Independents Square, Philadelphia. Lrpnta CesrraAl. Broad ntwl ChMtrnt Streets Atumo cirt ,..,imitDR(9ii BuiMinr Jw Took 1TO-A. MilropMIUn Tower DtttfttT t , ...,Mit Knrd milMlne AT. Lori 4W O7oo flimecnif Hulldlnc CntuinO , 1204 Trios" DullJIn Lo.ioo.s 4 Waterloo ilace. Pall Mall, B. W, NltWS IXftlKAfB. JVaMUMITOS tirtMV Th )VI fllllMIn tobk tu-antu Tha rim't IhilMlns IlnuN neurit' . no rricdrlehitraM IjO.iho.v Ilrnr.it- 2 1'aK Mull Bun, H W. ! Beam- 32 tin Louie la Brand stHscmrnrtN trimm Br carrier, lMtt.T O.N1.T, alt unta Ur mall po'traM utM of Philadelphia. her forelen pottast la required, Cum Ovi.t, nn month, t-ur-fUirntit D1H.T oii.r. on ypar. thrpa dollara All mall aub (srlptlons parable In ndtancv Notice Ruhrrlhera wih'p(t addma chanted must He old es well aa new adirase, BEtt, tOM WALluT Kr.WTONF, MAI.V IMS O Aadrr all rimmuiicntton to r.x'filno Leaner, InJcrmftnoe Square, PliUaA'Jphl. Mtxaio at Tna rnit.iiiri.iiiii rnTorrica Aa iico.vn cuaa uin, tfiTTaa. TUB AVKIIAOR NET PAID DAII,V CIIICUIA- TIO.N OV THU EVKN1NO t.HDOfclt VOll JULY WAS DJ..MI, riiiUiiFxrniA, wi:i)mmi)av, auuujt in. ivis. The frenchman ivha said that one man' jiroill U another mart' lass xcaa an essayist and knae nofhlno about the economics of honest trade. Quiet at Last "rpHEUE Is no rlotlnjr or oIrii of jubilation JLjn Atlanta today!" So end the story of lp Frank. Why? Are the men who nwore that they would "get Frank" so suddenly satiate with his blood? Or huo they grown sober uftcr their riotous orgy In blood-lust nnd tueju dice? And It It was holy Justice they brought with the halter round Frnnk'n neck, Is there nothing In their triumph to relcbruto? There need bo no answer now. Atlanta and Leo Frank arc both nt peace. Tho country grew sick nt heart with the news of Friink'a lynching. Hut Georgia must not grow sick; she must glory in the act, or phe must aim to a quick and terrible ven peanco on thoso who nro guilty of It. And Bho must answer to the world for the deep damnation of her negligence. Against the brutal violence of the mob there la no stny but force, and force, by a. elnlstir coincidence, was lacking at the Mll ledgcvlllo fnrm on tho night I-eo Frank was killed. Instead of armed guards there wore present three members of tho Prison Itonrd who refused a purdon to Frank. In tho face of the attack made on him by a fellow con vict n month ago, there were no precaution! taken for Frank's safety. He had been out of tho hospital only a day when bis pursuers caught him. Wilfully or by Ita negligence, tho Integrity of the State of Georgia I.i compromlbcd by this net. Not even If the twenty-live men who killed Frnnk werd hanged today on tho highest tree In Georgia would her name bo cleared: One man, perhaps a guilty man, has been killed. That la all. Georgia's sense of Jus tIco has been flatlallcd. There Is no rioting fin Atlanta today. I Welcome to tho Ice Palace EVHUl" believer In wholesome amusement hopes that tho proposed Ice palace will be built at Walnut and 33d atrcets. In ac cordance with tho announced plans. Skating on the .park lakes Is dependent on tho weather, but In tho proposed building tho lea can be frozen regardless of the external temperature. There will bu no overhanging trees and no snow-covered landscapes to please tho eye; but tho average skater does not care for these things. All ho wants is Ice nnd a free way In which to use his skates. Thcro will be room for many skaters In n rink with an leu Iloor 85 foot wido and iOO feet long. And when one Is tired of skating there will be comfortable seats on which to rest. Dnncing Is n good amusement In Its way, but skating (a more wholesome, If Philadelphia society will upend part of Its time on tho lee, tho young men and maidens will grow up with more vigorous constltu tlons than can bo developed In'ii bullrooii. Too few opportunities are provided here for sano and healthful recreation, So there la certainly an opening for such on Institu tlon aa Is planned near the Western end of the Walnut street bridge. .Its proximity to the University ought to Insuro to it tho patronage of a lurgo number of young men, tn the pront bothjf the young men nnd of tho managers of the enterprise. Inciden tally, holders of real estate In tho neighbor hood ought to welcome the erection of a dig. nlfled structure In a district whose character has been changing for the worse In recent years. Ending a Chapter WS IU4AM W, RUSSELL succeeds Jamea Sullivan aa Minister to Santo Do mingo. Not so very long ago Jnmea 31. Sul livan succeeded William W. Iluaell us Mln tster to Sunto "Domingo, So the diplomatic musical com4y wenw to have come full circle. Sir. nusscll Is a "dwervlng diplomat"; Mr. gulllvuii was one of William J. Bryan's de eerving DemocruU," That la ail the dtfTer cne, and tUat. with the decline of Mr. Bryan, is enough. Coal and Prosperity COAL production U a taromeUr of Indus, trial prosperity, for tlje mtuea are per mltted to yield only about what the country can consume eaeh year. This State mtnd in J8U more anr.hro.ciU than in any previous year in its history, an4 th country abrbe1 It. In Wi, the figure for which have Just bem compiled by the UnlU4 gtate CmIobi ml Survey, the State mined snw.Me - long Um. o' a little lew than th imt befor. h average produetlon from W7 to WTO only M,7..mw tone, or about on-flft,h as Bjuch let year The average Increased to Hp.MO tons in the ten arti from 310 to WW, end from ISw to ISM It expand to 81,. Isrd.MM) tons In the next Ave ysre It Ja cMMed.bciut ll.wiooed ton, then it afclt h er till it iachcd 8O.'J4.',o0O tone tn IMS ftatf B4HM fur il fell to J6,9W,000 tone. Tbl a tbj nfii uf the hi eat strike The year after It leii.4 to M.'woow tons, and hu not ltlrn helu bJiUOoiK) t..t m an ,.ui mine WUcu thi .xpanlun in liu limiid for anthraetie t put ulonenid of the growth in th mmmpaun Jl Wtumlnou euaj on ,i tler WfciJ- ut Out inUuttlrmi Biiiaflaltm EVENING T.Tamiratt-PTTTLAnELrHlA. WEDNIgBDAY at th unitM mat, in me deendo cndiMB with IStO tho nvcragp consumption of soft crml was 10,300,000 ton a year. It hat now reached the enormous nmounl of between 380,000,000 and 400,000,000 Ions. The )optun tlon ling increased about two and ohr-half time in the pant IB years, the anthracite consumption has Increased more! than Ave time nnd the consumption of bituminous coal more than 35 time, la It surprising Hint tho consumers want to have the coal freights reduced? Kcntovc the Obstruction T'lE consent of David IS. Dallam's ntlorncv to City Solicitor Itynn's appllcntlon for a definite decree In tho taxpayers' stilt to hold up the execution of the transit plans ousht to bo the preliminary to the dismissal of the whole proceedings. The city has voted for the tinnsll plans, the Public Service Commission has granted a certificate of public necessity and conmtclors have offered to do the part of the work for which bids have been solicited for much les? than tho estlmatei. There is no disinter ested objection to the project. The IIHrIoiii obstacle should be removed nt the curliest possible moment through the eonsmt of Mr. Dallam, and If not through his consent, then by tho summary nctlon of the Court Itself. An Edilorinl From the Headlines IT IS seldom that a piece of news carries Its own comment so fully as did the story which was headed In ycaterdny's Hvunino I.nwir.n, "Wilson Studies Shipping." Ono wonders Idly why the President did not study shipping before the I.a Follette bill camo to him to sign. Ono wonders whether this new activity on tho President's part means thnt numo sense will come Inlo tho national merchant marine policy. When it became necessary to reform the financial basis of this country a commission of experts was sent to study the bunking systems of Kuropo. The present Admlnlstra tlon has also shown Itself almost too anxious to appoint committees of Investigation Com missions for everything, everywhere, except where necessary, has been a principle of ad ministrative activity. For the merchant mutlne there Is no com tnlnslon of experts. Kxperts nro likely to hnvo ideas, and Ideas tho Administration Inn so fur successfully avoided In this matter. Pleasant words have been spoken, and tho merchant Hag of the United States has flut tered In a merry metaphorical breeze. As a result, there la only one American ship In tho Puclflc ports. There wlM'beiKi merchant marine until tho matter Is taken out of tho hands of political know-nothings. Kdltors nnd Inland dem agogues arc almost as Incompetent as Con gressmen to deckle. Tho difference Is that Congress has the power. A Itcal Submarine Triumph THK sinking of the British transport Iloyal Edward by a Oct man undersea boat Is the second victory of this sort which hns fallen to Germany. The first transport sunk went down, however, with little loss of life. Passenger ships nnd battleships have sunk under uubmarino attack, and theso swift disasters have occupied the public mind to such on extent that this war has been called a submarine war. It Is not that. The effect of all Germany's U-boata upon British commerco has been comparatively slight. The continuous stream of transports across the Kngllsh Channel bus been unchallenged. The Royal Edward, it will be noticed, was Mink in tho Aegean. It la Ironic that tho Dardanelles campaign, where Britain's own notable submarine achieve ments hnvo been won, should be tho scene of her misfortune. Nothing la added to the world's knowledge of the submarine by this exploit, although it was accomplished very far from Germany's main submarine base. But It is n legitimate triumph for Germany, and leaves only the regret thnt German submarines did not limit themselves to their proper prey from tho be ginning. Prcpnring to End the Chinese Farce THERE are college presidents and college presidents. Ono of them, now nt tho head of the Government In Washington, set out some time ago to establish constitutional government in Mexico, based on tho theory and practice of an enlightened and educated people. Another of them, who has boon legal adviser to the now Chinese Republic, Is cred ited with advising Yuan Hhi-kal to set up n monarchy in China on the ground that tho monarchical form of government is bettor suited thun tho republican form to condi tions In tho great Asiatic nation. President-elect Goodnow, of Johns Hop kins, Is ovldently a man who cares little for forms so long as results can bo accom plished. Ho doubtless knows as well as Yuan Shi-knt that China Is no moro h repub lic now thun when tho Manchus wer relgn lug In tho sacred city. The country Is gov erned under a dictatorship, although tho die tutor Is called the President of tho new Re public. China needs a strong man even more than such a man Is needed in Mexico, and In tho course of a century or bo it may bo far enough udvanced to govern Itself under democratic forms. So let us congratulate Mr. Goodnow on his unwillingness to put u theory before his eyes In order that he may not see a very evident condition. It has been n great year for crabs in the Dardanelles. "Uhln-Chln" Buck Again. where is Mr. Bryan hiding? Headline. But Cotton may go on the contraband list. What w(ll slater Susie sew with? Paace Is unpopular anions? Currunzn'u generals. It moans going back to work, ' Kngllsh pound drops to $1,64, At that a few hundred thousand wouldn't be unacoeptabli to some of us. 11 '" ' IBM The Persian rug under the Mberty Bell may be m years old, but Porsjan liberty is not yet born. The wuy to gat free transfers is to puh the UulUHnpT of the new rapid tmrwlt sub. way on Broad street. The Publla Service CommUwlon hej made the startling ruling that the first btutneae of a railroad i oublle xwvlee. Jokes o marriage are all right! only nine out of ten men would never recognize them aa approaching the truth. Neither the war nur the wej umer Inter fern with the biMineaa of Klkton, Md. Four tsaij oeuijlee were inarrie4 there yenteiday. If tle Oloucestev boataotMee afe not cle H tb OloueeetM Boajal of HeW wUdlM it U be uuderatoott they wm deuud out. nTTirmnrA'S HOVFiRNOR A nT-,iTtriTTtr Nathaniel E. Harris, Vetoran of the Civil War and of Many Political Campaigns, Faces Botli a Duty and an Opportunity By ELLIS RANDALL' TUBY have murdered T,co Frank. They have spilled blood on the good name of Georgia. They havo shaken their criminal fists In the face of civilization. There Is no sign of Jubilation In Georgln, so It Is told. Thcro Is no sign of Jubilation In heaven or earth. "All hell shall stir for this." It Is strange that tho Governor of Georgia can find wordi In which to express his horror and grief. Indeed, It Is probable that his comment on tho outrage falls farv short of his feeling. Even if a. sense of official duty did not compel hint to take personal charge of the Sheriff's possonnd volunteer bands organised to catch the lynchers, ft man In tho position In which the Governor of Geor gia finds himself could hardly refrain from going out and taking an active part. There are tasks which pcrnonnl feeling makes It Impossible to delcgnto to others, and tho man who Is Governor of Georgln faces such a task. The least part of It, however, Is the capturing of tho criminals. It Is a gratifying thought 'thnt If. as ex (.Inventor Slaton declared on hla departure from tho State for a trip to N'ow York and the Panama fair, Mie people of Georgia as a whole wore back of him In his lutlnn In com muting tho death hentonce of Leo Frank, they nro behind Governor Hauls In whatever action It may be necessary to take, not only to bring tho murderers of Leo Frank to trial nnd punishment, but to deal adequately with tho conditions which Ho behind tho several successive Incidents which have disgraced tho Slnto from tho beginning to the end of tho tragic story. Nathnnlel E. Harris won hlrt nomination to tho highest olllco In tho gift of his fellow citizens by his record as n war fighter. That he Is still a fighter Is proved by his victo rious campaign. There Is evidently n hard fight before him. If ho lives up to his record his term of ofllco will mean a. good denl In the history of Georgia. In the Confederate Army Ho was born CD years ago In a little town In eastern Tennessee. His father, a minister and physician, was an nrdont secessionist, and canvassed tho eastern part of the Stato In Joint debate with Andrew Johnson when Tennessee left tho Union. Ho raised sovprnl Confederate regiments nnd became, chief sur geon of tho C!)th Tennessee lnfuntry. A rela tive was the famous war Governor, Ishnm G. Harris. Nathaniel Hurrl.t was tho youngest of 11 children. Ho attended the common schools of the neighborhood and was grad uated from tho old Martin Academy, In Jonciboro. When tho war came on he enlisted In tho Confedcrnto army, Joining Blair's company of Infantry. This wns January, 1SC2, before he was IC years of age. The company was commanded by Alexander Blair, a Presbyte rian minister, and was raised in tho counties of Washington and Knox in East Tennessee. It acted as tho bodyguard for General E. Klrby Smith, the department commundcr, until It was organized Into h icglmcnt. Dur ing this time It was called the Klrby Smith rifles, and saw Its first service in tho sum mer of 1S02 at Chattanooga, Tcnn., when tho Federal General Negley Invested thnt city. Afterward the company became part of the 03d Tenuesseo Infantry regiment, as Com pany D, nnd continued with this gallant command to the end of tho war, serving most of tho time, after the battle of Chlckamnu gn, In eastern Virginia, under General Leo. In tho fall of 1SG1 Private Hurrls was de tached from the regiment and ordered to re port for duty at tho department headquar ters. Ho served for a tlmo on General Will lam E. Jones' staff, and afterward wns as signed to duty In tho 16th Virginia regiment of cuvnlry, attached to tho 2d corps in the Army of North Vlrglnln, where ho continued until tho surrender of Leo. Ah the cavalry did not surrender at Appomattox he started over to Johnson's army, with about 1500 other homeless cavalrymen, and when these were disbanded at Charlotte, N, C, on April 23, 1863, by President Davis nnd General llreckcnrldge, the then Secretary of War, ho went back homo to East Tennessee. Harris wns In 12 pitched battles nnd about 60 skirmishes dining tho war, nnd wns under flro almost every day during the lust months of the war. Farming- in Tennesscel After tho war tho young cavalryman re turned to eastern Tennessee to find the old homestead devastated. He rented a small farm and worked It for three years, support ing his mother and tho other 10 children. Finally ho borrowed from Alexander II. Ste phens tho money to go to college and in 1867 entered tho Unlveistty of Georgia, from which ho was graduated with highest honors. Ho then taught school in Spartu, Ga., bui soon entered tho law ofllce of Judge Linton Stephens In that town. Whllo studying law he edited n local newspaper. In 1S72 ho wua admitted to the bar, and In the wimp year formed a law partnership with Walter n. Hill and opened oHlccs In Macon. The part nership continued for 27 years, Hill then withdrawing to become chancellor of the Uni versity of Georgia. Hurrls early became a political figure of prominence In the State, servim several terms In each branch of the Georgia Leglsla. ture and holding a high place Jif the councils of the Democratic party. On varjoUH lvauea he stumped tho State with u fire' and vigor which he still retain'. By appointment of Governor Brown he 'served n short tlnia aa Judge of the Superior Court, resigning In 1012. In the prlmury campaign last full he received 90,000 votes to 71,000 for hie" nearest competitor and 40,000 for the third man. In the course of the campaign Major Whit man, ndjuUnt of the regiment In which Judge Harris fought In the Civil War, wrote to-the candidate a letter In which he said,: "You may tell your old comrades who have no faithfully stood by you In the race that aa adjutant of my regiment I will say you were, a brave, honorable and trusted soldier of my regiment, and 1 don't think they )ave made any mistake in promoting you to the honor able poeltlon of aavernor." Governor HarrlH l married and has five children. Ha Is a member of tljg SfathadUt Church and has been active In religious work. In Masonry he is a Templar and. a Sfctinsr. Georgia faith in him was shown by hi eUction to the Governorship, ft is bow up to Mm to keep that faltb. NOT "HOW FAR," BUT "HOW LONG" U le only MOO miles to New York, bout,a aa esctted Munich editor If we wye Inclined to be arctlc we might o,k Mm now far be think It U to Purl. Detail Free IVes. I , wv-wv w Bssaem t Wamjw ravw jj STILL PAYING THE BILLS FOR ATHLETICS Colleges and Universities Can't Throw Stones at Annapolis. The Commercialization of the Laurel Wreath What Is the Trouble and What's the Way Out? t By EDWARD R. BUSHNELL THERE nre many good people throwing up their hands In appropriate horror over tho exposure of certain aids, not exactly ethical, by which some of our future navy ofllccrs pass the examinations which Undo Sam prescribes for them at Annapolis. Every ono will approve. In theory at least, tho assump tion that theso young men whom tho Govern ment Is educating nt great cost ought to bo abovo such reprehensible practices as to cheat In examinations, whether their dis honesty takes the form of stealing ndvanco sheets of examination questions or unfair aa. slstanco rendered to midshipmen who happen to be athletes. That part of tho court's report which criticises tho practice of helping the midship men athletes finds general approval. It Isn't a sin to bo an athlete, oven at Annapolis, but that the athlete should bo singled out for spe cial consideration, simply because ho has been cast In heroic mold, Is untcnablo In theory, though unfortunately not always In practice. But what a commotion there would bo If some court of inquiry, with power to sub poena witnesses, could sit In Judgment on the BYBtcm of Intercollegiate athletics in this country! Realizing their own vulnerability, therefore, It won't do for our universities to cast stones at the Naval Academy. As far as their athletics aro concerned, they have too big a beam In their own eye to bo of much assistance In extracting tho mote from the eye of tho Naval Academy. The Descent From Olympus Most laymen win need some help to under stnnd tho terms "gouge" and "dope," which figured so prominently In the midshipmen's preparations for examinations. "To gouge" means to securo possession of advance copies of examination questions, whllo "dope," aa tho middles know It, Is a collection of exam ination papers of previous years, and Is val uable on tho supposition that these papers will contain a majority of the questions to bn asked In any particular examination. Tho wish to smooth tho wuy of the athlete is as old as athletics Itself, When tho ath letes of Greece assembled on tho plains of Olympus and thereby started the Olympic games, they competed primarily for tho pure lovo of competition, and they wero satisfied to receive no prize other thun a laurel wreath. But their friends, tho gallery, wero tholr undoing. Carried away "with their en thusiasm they bestowed special favors on their victorious representatives, remitted taxes nnd did' other things equivalent to a flnaurlal remuneration and which university and amateur athletic authorities try to re press. Helping n college student because ho Is un athlete, therefore, has plenty of precedent: and although circumstances alter the meth ods, thero Is quite as much unfair aid given to university students who happen to bo ath. letes as there Is to midshipmen who repre sent the navy in nthlotica. The lack of the close supervision which exists at the Naval Academy makC3 It easier for tho collegians. According to Code Here Is the situation which exists at most universities, Eligibility codes nre pretty much standard; n, htudent to represent his university must attain a, certain grade of scholarship. There arc all kinds of student athletes, good, bad and indifferent- Many nre good students and always stand high In their classes; but others aro Indifferent or lazy nnd constantly In need of assistance to meet classroom requirements. Suppose a man is a football player, accumulates too many condl. tlona and is declared ineligible to represent his university on the gridiron. fe Is needed In a particular game. What can be don? If a Bpaciai examination can be secured for him a tutor l placed at his disposal, and with the tutor's knowledge of what questions are likely to be asked the studaat athlete Is restored, to good standing. But who pye the bills? For, unfortu. nately, tutors are not Inspired with amateur ideate. They work for so mueh an hour. In rare instances an athlete nuances the tutor in uaalded. Usually there is a fund in tbe treasury of the Athletic Association for just such emergeBcies. When there isn't, i0yai gwdnatw some to tbe rescue. But tu one 4RT kswn to endow a university wiUt fund to tvoAu this wt of awiwawi AUGUST IS. ID IB; THE SUPREME COURT IN to tho non-athlctlu student. He, poor soul, has to stand on his own merit. But free tutoring Isn't the only kind of help tho college athlete receives. Thero la n dis tressingly large number of collego athletes who seem to think thnt because of their skill some ono owes them tuition and a living. Scholarships find their way to athletic np pllcants, nnd it is nstonishIng how many good positions arc found for young men who can do something in athletics. It Is u situa tion for which tho nthlotes nro not so much to blamo us nre enthusiastic alumni. At tho Naval Academy tho midshipmen receive an lncomo from tho Government and, therefore, aro not subject to quite the same tempta tion as tho collegians. Tho evils of athletics here referred to arc not confined to any particular locality or In stitution. Nor aro they any worse in tho Naval Academy than In tho big universities of the country. Ono educational Institution is no worso than another. It's all human nature, and tho standard 'both of honesty among students and of amateurism In ath letics Is precisely as high as tho honesty of mankind, no more and no less. The future may seo tho millennium In college sports, but right now tho strictures on athletics at Annapolis can be applied with equal force to virtually every American university. Some day somo ono will wrlto the diary of a collego athlete. It will bo illuminating and It will bo Interesting. HORACE GREELEY SAID IT To the Editor o the fy'renliij Ledger: Sir I believe It wu3 Horace Greeley who first eald that "The way to resume Is to resume," though John Slieiman may have recognized It ns a good thing and appropriated It as his own. Two or three years ago I had a dispute over this baying and trnccd It to Jumes Ford Rhodes' HlBtory of tho United States, where 1 found It credited to Greeley. Mr. Rhodes Is a patient investigator and I am willing to accent his nuthoilty for It. U doubtless could cite the date of the New York Tribune In which the famous baying first appeared. S. a. u Lnnsdowne, August 16. OUT OF DOORS To the Vdltor of the Evening Ledger: Blr-It was with a feeling of tho deepest re grct and pain that wo reud an article In your paper advocating tho opening of Wlssahlckon dr ivo to tho nutomoblllsts. For years wo nave felt a deep satisfaction In tho pleasure that has been gained by walks along thnt beautiful path free from the nolao rind dust and constant watching that Is necessary on almost all other roads near the city. The carriages, with their fine teams and coachmen, only seemed an added attraction. Many times visitors have bee" taken along the stream' and. without exception, have praised tho quiet loveliness and clmrm of the place. And wo always walked. Wo will have to forego all that pleasure If the road Is opened And wo can get there with so little expense And the owners of the autos have so man v places. Is It necessary to open it' Jnf,ny Philadelphia. August 16. " a Tho article In question contained no editorial advocacy of opening "the forbidden road" ,' automoblllsts. but was a report of an entr.i undertaken to secure that Uult-JrU wuor" CHEAPNESS OF CUBAN LABOR To the Editor of tho livening Ledger: Sir-In your news article headed "Low Tarir Means ICnd of Sugar Industry," Mr TruSntV states that the labor in Cuba Is chen J.fQ,J in selling at 2 cents a pouS a pX'aboVu'sl' ness Is made. These two statements aVe'i roneous, because I don't think lahnr i ! r" Since the smaller wage he sugar mi?a 2i?,p' spends to i.50 In United States wrrenov iK boarding Included. currency, with Now the crop of 1913.H was chiefly sold 8 cents a pound, and the results were tw numberless houses went into Zt,.; tUat only the quick uprise of th. prtS. fe '" 1 cents, due to the Kuropean war was Ti J V vatlon and hope of sugar mill nwnil! ,h al chants in general " l OW',e', 8a WW- this country. r r ."ntha In Vlllanova, August 16. A- Al dts Ut A LINCOLN LETTER To tht BdUor of tha Svenlw Ladgt,; SIr-Undr the heading at "Llneoln-a elous Views" you publish .uff". Hell. KtttrWTuU'e, WES Kw. His P. Qy " ',1 " raiMt Que. m 'Personal ReWleS owTlwufci i0?8 ,n circulation." wq: for private late Dr. Tlwrnas K K a or?, wo b " vUu i & " ", " GEORGIA during one of her annual visits to Atlantis cittr Just before bis death Doctor Reed presented It to his friend, Alfred M. Heston, City Treas urer and historian of Atlantic City, who refers to It In the second volumo of his annals and describes tlio circumstances under which tha' letter wns written. On Lincoln's birthday, 1013, Mr. Heston pre-' sentcd tho letter to tho Atlantic City Public Library, of which he was n trustee for a num.- bcr of years. It may be seen, ncatlv framed.! any day In ono of tho cases of tho library tnu-4 eeum. At tho tlmo Mr. Heston presented this Inter ostlnr? f.lnpnlli rnlln tn tTin nntillp Itt.rii,.., !.' tlnllj pnpors of Atlantic City, the Press, RoYlewJjB end Union, published the letter In full, which fact disproves tho statement thnt It Is "Juil. puDiisncu ' and is "quoted for tlio first time by General Dodge In his Personal Recollections,! issued tor private circulation." LEDGER READER. Atlantic City, August 16. WHAT JEFF DAVIS DID We think of Jefferson Davis as a warrlory and as a Senator In the United States Congress, and as President of the Confederate States, bull nowhere did his genius display Itself more tlB1) t.clly than us Secretary of War under Frankllni l'lerce. It was he who first formulated tho scheme ol buildlnc a rnllwav across the continent, also fi acquisition of the Panama Canal zone and tbt I urchase of Cuba, and the opening of JapaS anu cmna to American trade, and for cli commercial relations with South America. Unner him tho army was enlarged, Improv gur.fi were Introduced, young officers sent offo! various surveying expeditions for better train? mg. Ho sent young George B. Blccielwn a n special representative of tho War Depart ment to Btudy tho movements of the British ana Russian armies in Crimea. R. E. Lee. his boyhood friend, was made superintendent of the West Folnt Academy, and he advanced Albert Sidney Johnston to Important com mands. Ho liad camels brouirht from Arabl to transport military stores across tho Western fli deserts. He planned large things for th' nation. Mncon Telegraph. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Mexico may as well mako up Its mind at last.M to u poucy ox prepareaness tor peace. wasn.i Ington Star. j In remaining a Progressive with such p?r-j slstence Colonel Roosevelt becomes a etantl patter. Chicago News. i "Politicians are about the same tho work) over," says Lord Northcllffe. America will b'ft relieved to hear It. Cleveland Plain Dealer. ' It Is very much to bo hoped that theso ie-J currlng Intimations that come from Washing! ton about n special session of Congress have no 8 foundation In fact. Detroit Free Press. The Government says that we are going ItW have the greatest wheat crop that ever hop pened, and everybody knows that there Is SO-M ing to be the greatest need for It. Indlannpolls.jH ixews. Not a Citizen Who ow nllpirfimrn tn tho United States will fall to appreciate the Irn-S portance to our country to maintain, to pro-3 reci ana to defend to the utmost its rights to tho freedom of the Beas. The whole future ofJB me repumic depends upon our Governments t success In defense of those rights. Cincinnati! jiiuuirer. Former Senator Burton, of Ohio, ono of thtjj mronsesi men In the Republican party today! is in agreement with economists and stuqenH of conditions in tho prediction that after th war the country will havo to face the keenest tuiiiiiouuon u nas ever Known, and he believes, with tho Tribune, that this necessitates a thor ough revision of our present tariff, not on Denv ocrctic lines of revenue, but on Republican unee 01 protection.-Chlcago Tribune, PARADOXES We are ashamed to spring this tale, And yet we hate to duck It; A fellow gets a little pale Before he kicks the bucket. viuuunuii ,nquirv job Uhls story, too, so gray with age, Your rlsibles may vex: A man gets nothing when at last He passes in his checks. Memphis. Commercial Apptll. H V. e might get HnedT for pulling this, But still we'd like to note How sheepish even wise guys aro When some one gets their goat! Spokane Spokeaman-RevU- AMUSEMENTS B. F. KEITH'S THEATRE UllsNtTNUT AND TWELFTH STBKBTS JS Howard & McCane gtf. lU. IriM. and dber Stars THE MARKWT ST ABaviTlOTH (-Si 1 H A. M TO 11:16 P it S TQ n I (XiT ?LANCHH 8'VBKT to OtcUliey "Secret Orchard" POINT BREEZE PARK TW-STATE FARMERS' PICNIC THUR8,. lItL AND 8AT.. AVQ. JO. SO. il. fH uijhiw Hwuj prou.u. Baby hgW h'rldif . .ww . gwtwiit rae CMiur04y sftarnoa. UUMt 9 tVB KULIK8, KOUJ.G ftTD A XTf-V HSOIUS; WONT Hi TRIO. UK 4, S3 1 -WiJ BABTLETT8 : L'N iijTo VU US rPvnnnAain Kfelka at lBia uLt h.m Hjia III .kia m mmmmm