Tnuiry vEkZ 8 c EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1915; i "II I m Btfeuttig sSIedger PUM.tC LEDGER COMPANY CYHLS It K. OLttTIS, rtislBSHT. ChirlM It Ludlnirton, VlcPrldent; John C Martin, Secretary nnd Triurtri Philip S Collins, John 1J. yriHUtm. Director EDITORIAL MOAHDl Cuts II, K. CcinJ, Chairman. P. IT. TOltALBT EiMUtlro Editor IOHSC MAnTttt........ .General nulnn linl(l Published dally at rcauo Limi Building, Independence Square. Philadelphia. tmn CsNtmi,... Broad and Chelnitt Striata Athntio Citt.,.1 Piess-Vnlon Bulldlnc J'mr Tokk.i. 1I0-A. Metropolitan Tower Dihoit ,,..,,,, 2l Font ItllllrllRC Kt. I,ocit..... 409 aide Democrat Dulldlnc Cmciao 1202 rrlbuna nulldlnc London... .......8 Waterloo Dace, Pali Mall, S. W. NEWS BURDAUBt VTASIiIKOTOie lJnsain The Pout nulMtns Nw ToK Bcaiutf The Tlmea HulMltte BntIN ritmriO 00 Frltdrlchatrama I.onbo mucin 2 Pall Mall nat, H W. Pitts Benin 32 Hue Loula le Grand srnscniPTio.v terms Br carrier, Din.r o.nlt, alx cent. Dr mall pottpald utalde of Philadelphia, Mcept where forelfn poMit la required, DilLI ONtT, one month, twenty-nve cent! s Bint Osli, one year, three dollar. All mill sub scriptions payable In advance. Notics Subcrlbera wlihlnf addri chanced mint CiT old ai well ai new addreat. BIIX. MPS WALftUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 1001 try Addrei all communication to Evening Leaner, Independence Sot-ore, Philadelphia. rnttnui it ins rHtt.iDit.rnit rosTorrtci s sscoita CLAaa llilL MiTltm. THE AVERAGE NET PAID DAILT CIIICUIjA- JTIOM OP THE EVENING LEDGER, POn, JULY WAS ,334. PHILADELPHIA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 19. 191. The contempt of scoundrels for honesty docs not arise from their familiarity with it. Root and the Presidency I do not know what Hoot want's or Intends to do. He can bo nominated for tho Presi dency If he wants It, nnd without uny effort on his part. William Barnes. THE Albany leader who talks thug about tho former Senator from New York and former Secretary of Stato and Secretary of War Is not understood to bo nominating Mr. Root for tho Presidency. Ho Im merely diag nosticating tho political situation. Tho frlcnda of Mr. Boot, however, who hopo to sco him occupying the White .House In spite of hla own statement that ho Is too old, will not welcome any booming from Barnes, oven bo Indirectly as In a general diagnosis of tho political situation. Tho grandson of Thurlow Wccil la a discredited politician, however great his abilities may be. The Roosevelt description of him was nailed fast to his hide by the Syracuse Jury. Hundreds of thousands of Independent Republicans would oppose any man whom Mr. Barnes favors merely because he was favored by Mr. Barnes. Therefore, the Inlluential lenders who aro supposed to bo hoping to draft Mr. Root Into tho service of the Republican party next year would better get together nnd put a mulller on Barnes before It Is too lato, or their candidate will be bq heavily over weighted by the burden of Bnrnes as to niaho It Impossible for him to run. Jitney Is as Jitney Docs CITY SOLICITOR RYAN1 has darkened the days of the jltneymen by Informing them that tho "sight-seeing" ruso will havo no Btnndlng in court. If a Jitney Jitnoys, In short. It Is a Jitney, and not all the signs In the World will hide its essential Jltneyness. After Friday, then, tho deluge. Tho straw at which the drivers can clutch Is nn offer from a company to bond them nt a hundtcd and flfty dollars each, which is not exorbi tant. The riding public hag llttlo concern with the law's dolnyx. It has signified its do Biro for the new transit Hystem, nnd still looks to tho city to make that new system possible. Meantime tho Jltneymen nro being raited fore as well as aft by an incrense of one cent per gallon on the price of gasoline. Tho rise in price eeems to be universal. It comes with a strange and significant suddenness after tho raising of wages at Bayonne; behind It may even bo nn Intention on tho part of tho refin ing companies to pay all their employes prop erly. Who can tell? A Mother Comes Back Home NECESSITY, until the outbreak of tho Great War, wun familiarly considered as a blood relative, on tho maternal side, of In vention. At the beginning of tho war she seemed estranged from her progeny. It was said In America, by Americans, of Amer icans, that they could not get along with out German dyes. Now mother and child are reunited. Whether thq experiments made in Philadel phia the other day will provo that a dye has been perfected or further discoveries must be awaited will not change tho Impor tant fact. Americans havo gono to It nnd have begun to make for themselves what they previously nought from others. They have been thrown upon their own resources and, despite tho dire predictions of their friends, those resources will soon provo suf ficient, If they have not already. A Local German Scare THE publication, in various New York papers, of data concerning German American and German activity In the United State, was bound to havo a local effect. The stories there printed are some of them very Important and some not; some are false, no doubt, and some true. Their total effect Is likely to be indifferent. It la to be hoped that the stories are bet ter "planted" than the one about Oerman ownership of Cramps' Shipyard. That story was ' Immediately denied. Its full absurdity can he easily seen. Not even If the yard were German owned would this country per mit It to build battleships for use in the present war. Not even if the yard built and sent such ships could Germany use them. In the race for sensational news this item was as good as any other. It will serve perhaps to make its sponsors a little, more careful hereafter. The Crime of Riches BRYAN used t say that no man 4YJL cot .could honestly accumulate a million dol- Uum When he had accumulated a consider able sum he changed his mind and said that a man Is entitled to what Iw earns and that It u impossible to pay to sosu rasa as much as tby have merited, became their wwMam ctnnei be measured la dollars. A ra's awn wealth auta hu opl&Jeos fiXMit the crime e rimes The man wltlwpt money i likely to Utline thai the wan with money U an enemy to .ciy and to advocate llmlt ttig tiie Mai of fortune .iad te favor eoa Bfcjiiui u !.irt,t vs'.attH by the Government , tie h ih of tin hjlJi i l.ttlv ttojUahtiig lu fluU in ihuir i,ertinwiit ,. uMuuaSloii aUwefct- .1' as it ll J.tBJ U) tytttSJ -Ct I M.OOO.OOO, as Frank F. Walsh, of the Com mission on Industrial Relations, is credited with doing. A majority of his colleagues refuse to agree to any such revolutionary recommendation. They apparently think thnt so long ns this Is n country of un bounded opportunity tljc Government should do nothing to dltcourngo men of greot flimnclnl ability from exercising their skill. Thrro may have been n time when tills wns merely n million-dollar country, but thnt time passed long ago, ami today this city nlono probably lias mole enterprises In Which theio Is nn Investment of n thousand thou sand dollars than there were In tho whole na Hon a hundred years ago. If Mr, Walsh wants to draw the lino between criminal and Innocent riches ho will have to put it a long way nbovo 11 single million dollars to ciilltlo Ills recommendation to tho respect oven of tho most radical. Censorship Is Un-American and Dangerous "TJGAH no, see no, speak no evil," Is per- XX haps the motto of the moral "high brows" whose efforts to establish and en courngo a moving picture censorship have so far resulted in a mingling of farco and In sult. If It Is, they should bo reminded that tho words aro addressed to each Individual nnd require no Olympian assistnnco to bo made effective. Censorship is nn ouico peculiar to tyrants: In a country of which tho very foundation Is resistance to tyranny, It Is wholly and wil fully and obnoxiously wrong. It Is wrong inherently becauso tho genius of the Ameri can pcoplo nnd of American institutions Is opposed to It, and It Is wrong In tin- head because It Is bnbed on bad logic, bad povchol. ogy nnd bad morals. It is nn attempt to force righteousness und whoso conception of righteousness? upon men and women, and righteousness must be won, not without dust and heat, by each man for himself. It Is a negation of tho very fundamental thought of democracy, which Is tho privilege of choos ing without coercion or restraint. The police power to slop outrages upon pub lic morals Is granted. No Insult to common decency can llvo on the stage, on the plat form or in the printed page. But with the pollco that power should icnialn. It should not bo used except at the instance of tho public; It muBt not bo used against tholr ex pressed will and desire. There Is a censorship of moving pictures which cannot be overawed. It Is tho censor ship of the patrons. To Interfere, by legal process, with the free activity of their ta3to and Judgment Is to render vnin the long bat tle for liberty through which mankind hits struggled. A movie censorship today for bodes a press censorship tomorrow. So In sidiously Is liberty always undermined Lcavo the movlo consotshlp to those who go to tho movies. They are quite capable of Judging properly. The King Made Contraband THE decision of Great Britain to place cot ton on tho contraband list has been ex pected for some time. Every time a big gun Is fired a considerable part of a halo of cot ton is used to drlvo the shell to tho trenches of tho enemy. Cotton Is an essential clement In modern nmmunitlon. To permit cotton to j each Germany Is to permit nn Indispensable requlslto of war to reach tho enemy. Tho Allies have been doing their best for months to keep cotton away Irom Germany by a blockade of the coast. This blockade has been the cause of much friction between tho United States and Great Britain. The mo ment cotton is formally declared to be con traband tho cause of part of the friction will disappear. Tho market for American cotton will not be seriously narrowed by tho decree, for tho Allies havo permitted llttlo of tho staple to got through tho blockade, and tho sales Ir Norway and Sweden havo not been affected 0110 way or another by tho war. And Great Britain, anyway, buys moro of our cotton than any other Power. Tho market there and tho market In China will remain open, and the mills at homo ought to be ablo to use what Germany has been in tho habit of buying. Get Your Money's Worth THE delegates to the annual convention of Pennsylvania Sealers of Weights and Measures were not the llrst men to discover that the public cares little about full meas uro when It buys. Unscrupulous merchants discovered It long ago. They havo given short weight for years, with llttlo protest from tho consumers. Now and then a thrifty and careful housewife has weighed the things she has bought and then compelled the merchant to make restitution of that of which he has been cheating her. But most of them aro indifferent, and so the few scoundrels among the tradesmen prosper. The officials whose duty It is to enforce tho law regulating tho standard of weights and measures may somo day bo assisted more generally by the public, but tho cost of living will have to soar still higher before the aver age family will begin systematically to insist on getting Its money's worth. And bo long ns It does not Insist It will be practically Im possible for any corps of official Inspectors to detect all violations of the law. The Vares are still taking city contracts, - The weather man deserves a vote thanks. of As a professional abandoner the Grand Duke has no equal. The Allies have no objection to the Ger mans' getting cramps. Eggs seem to be Just as good as pepper for throwing In the eyes of footpads. The eights one sees in the Jitneys certainly ought to Justify calling them sightseeing cars. So long as the Liberty Bell gets back home, it matters little whether it comas by the Southern or the Northern route. The German Crown Prince says that Ver dun must be taken. Then why does he not take it? lie has been at the Job long enough, "Hooks and Eyes for Kaiser." Industrial News. An English correspondent writes that he in under the impression that straitjackets need neither. Motherhood has Just baeu "charged" against Mrs. LAtey U W. Wilson. Where ar the good oW-fashliwl men who used to tbluk It an honor? Germany, whloh has been p?aring to in vade Biufland toe a long time, is new get ting ready to invade Finland, Mrieifw be cause it seems easier. That Hamilton N Y I buy v. ho was run over by a trsJa at Washington, N J , with out injury must hive been tuirdtnud fey his tkftumujl in the Cubjitu football i-U-nu. PAUL FULLER, NEW NATIONAL FIGURE One of the "Barefoot Boys" Who Hnve Risen to Fame Inter national Law Expert Never Went to College. By EDWARD R, DOSIINELI. WMENEVEU tho world encounters a hi an who has achieved international dlsline tion in law and letters without the aid of a. collego or law school education it Is frettS' suio to want ft second look at him. Wo hnve plrnly of self-mado business men, but precious few of the sclf-ctlucntetl whoso 6ctio,lnrshlp attracts the attention of uoschol. nrly a man us President Wootlrow Wilson. Such Is Paul Fuller, of New York, who was sent to Mexico by President Wilson to ro port on conditions In thnt war-torn Hepllb lie. Ho has' been ttt tho Administration's cull in the deliberations which led to the recent All-American Conference. It wouldn't bo fair to saddle on Mr. Fuller tho responsibility for tho Administration's mis takes within tho Inst year, but during this period of experimentation Mr, Fuller, bo cntiFc of his sympathetic understanding of tho Mexican situation and his comprehension of tho Latin-American temperament, lina provrrl himself tin- most viilnnhlo ndvlaer tho President has had slnco ho started tho train of special investigators led by John Llntl to find out what nlled Mexico. Of them nil Fuller Is credited with tho most comploto understanding of tho situation, which ex plains why ho Is being retained ns tho nd vlser of President Wilson and Secretary I.n using. A Motto From Solomon Who Is this man Fuller? Thnt was the question on many lips when It wns an nounced nearly a year ngo that Paul Fuller, of New York, was to be henl to Mexico as President Wilson's personal leprenentatlvo to confer with Cnrrany.a, Villa and other revo lutionists who might spring up over night. It was useless to look In "Who's Who," be causo this man had so persistently shied from publicity that the biographers ml.sscd him. And oven now he won't submit to tho delights of being Interviewed. His motto seems to bo that or Solomon: "Let another man praise thco and not thine own mouth; a stranger and not thine own lips." How this scholarly man was dragged Into tho limelight of the Mexican question la an Interesting story, lie is a member of tho law firm of Cottdnrt Brothers, of New Yotk. His specialty has always been International law, and this subject ho knows so thoroughly that New York lawyers Instinctively turn to him when they need tin export. In addition to his knowledge of law Air. Fuller Iiiih built up n. knowledge of Latln-Amcrlcan countries and of the languages nnd temperament uf tho people that Is rarely to bo met with. A little more than one year ago ono of his clients revealed to him a stoiy of injnstlco In a certain republic below the Rio Grande which astonished and nngeied Mr. Fuller. Slnco it involved tho American diplomatic service, Mr. Fuller decided that It should bo brought to tho attention of tho Administra tion. Consequently, ho wrote a letter to President Wilson explaining the situation briefly. Tho matter camo to the personal at tention of tho President, and he asked Mr. Fuller to seo him In Washington. Mr. Fuller went, nnd in tho cottrso of his conversation with tho President rovealed a situation that astonished the President as much as It had Mr. Fuller. Tho President determined that it should bo brought to tho attention of Mr. Bryan, then Secretary of Stato. Mr. Bryan was sent for. Ho promptly confirmed what Mr. Fuller had said, but blamed it on tho previous Administration, from which ho snld It had been Inherited. With great firmness the President declared that no matter from what source It had been Inherited It was nn evil which should bo corrected at once. And It was. Becomes "Special Representative" It was Mr. Fuller's rare understanding of tho situation which appealed to President Wilson. Mr. Fuller returned to New York untl supposed he would henr no moro from tho President But about three months Inter ho received n request from Mr. Wilson that ho como to Washington upon a matter of great importance to the State Department. Mr. Fuller went, and within a tew days wns on his way to Mexico to Investigate condi tions there, and particularly to prevent tiio looting of Mexico City by either tho Carrnnza or Villa forces. In splto of his age, ho i3 about 60, Mr. Fuller made the difficult trip overland through Mexico, halted both Car ran7a and Villa, and in the name of Presi dent Wilson told them that under no circum stances would tho United States permit the sacking of the Mexican capital. The Mexi cans were astoubhed to find nn American who understood them nnd spoke their lan guage. His warning turned back Villa ami caused Cnrranza to issue strict orders ngainht any vandalism by his forces, and to enforce strictly his orders when later hla troops actually entered Mexico City. Fuller's early life is enveloped In some mystery. He camo from New England stock, although ho was born on a ship enter ing San Francisco from Cape Horn. He lost botli parents during his infancy, and spent the first eight years of his life In Califor nia, where he mastered tho Spanish lan guage. He entered New York as a barefoot hoy. and in some way attracted the attention of Charles Coudert, a French school teacher, who had served under Napoleon, but had been exiled for participation in the Bona parto plot. It was Mr. Coudert to whom the boy owed his education, for he was taken Into tho Coudert family. He learned French here, because it was the language of the Couderts. Mr. Coudert's sons had opened a Jaw office In New York, and when 12 years of age young Fuller entered their employ. He utilized his time to such good advantage that he not only secured a good education, but mastered law, and when a young man was taken into the firm. He eventually married Mr. Coudert's daughter. It was in the expansion of this firm's law business that Mr. Fuller became the specialist that he Is in international law, particularly as It dealt with Latin-American countries. SAFETY FIRST An, unnamed Senator is quoted as saying: "I certainly will support and vote for a law creat ing Government meaopely of all war eupil, tauiiunents, ammunition, armor-plate and the like." All right. But don't do It until the United States itself is fully prepared for defuse, will yeuT Buffalo ttxprese. WOMEN IN TENNIS The return of Mrs. Thomas C Bundy. who was IUy Suttou. to the tennis couiu In ihtu pionshtp play show that the foimer tiUh,ulder li a-S good as mti if not better A huU'o be ttui lie j mid tlic W' antliiiivtaii champion would 0"ry- -5:pg&- f nPTJTT1 nrh"tKTTnrnr'T r1? TTKJrm?'KJ'V ln?"T Thesd suspicions In process of tlmo subsided. I I I 1 ' 1 ilflJ V II fl II lit I f I I I I 1 M ll'ftV I I VI I W I M 1 Strange Cases in the Criminal Courts Circumstances May Not Lie, but They Often Mislead Remarkable Instances of Mis taken Identity The Freakishness of Evidence By ROBERT HILDRETII WHATEVER may bo tho defects and perils of circumstantial evidence, they nro not tho exclitslvo discovery of tho lay mun or the lay reformer. Nor uro tho dif ficulties which they present wholly absent from other forms of evidence. Direct testi mony Is subject to the risks which nrlso from tho observational Incapacity of the witness, tho faultlncss of his memory and tho possibility of deliberate falsehood. These and other considerations have led experi enced American nnd English lawyers to do claro their preference for circumstantial over direct evidence. Witnesses, they say, can lie, either Intentionally or unintention ally, but clu'imstnncos cannot He. Even tho testimony of cyo witnesses of a crime is not always to bo taken at its face value. As a measuro of protection against error Professor Muensterberg would add to croijs-oxnminatlon certain psychological testH which ho describes In his Interesting b&ok, "On tho Witness Stand." Professor Muen sterberg tells tho story of "a painful scene" which occurred In Berlin In the University Seminary of Professor von Liszt, tho famous criminologist. Memory on Trial "The professor had hpoken about a book. Ono of the older students suddenly shouts, 'I want to throw light on tho matter from tho standpoint of Christian morality.' An other student throws in, 'I cannot stand tliatl The first starts up, exclaiming, 'You havo Insulted me!' Tho second clenches his fist and cries, 'If you say another word ' Tho first draws a revolve!. The second rushes madly upon him. The profcsFor steps between them and, as he grasps tho man's nrm, tho revolver goes off. General uproar. "In that moment Profes.sor Liszt secuies order nnd asks a part of tho students to write an exact account of all that has hap pened. The whole had been a comedy, care fully planned "and rehearsed by the three actors for the purposo of studying tho ex actitude of observation nnd recollection, Thoso who did not write the report at onco were, part of them, asked to write it tho next day or a week later, and others had to deposo their observations under cross-examination. Tho whole objectlvo performance was cut up Into parts which referred partly to actions, partly to words. As mistakes thero were counted tho omissions, the wrong additions nnd tho alterations. The smallest number of mlstnkes gave 26 per cent, of er roneous statements; tho largest was 80 per cent, Tho reports with reference to the second half of the performance, which was more strongly emotional, gavo an average of 15 per cent, moro mistakes than those of tho first half." An curly Instance of the manufacture of circumstantial evidence Is on record in the Bible, which records that Joseph's silver cup was placed In Benjamin's sack. With all due respect It can be said safely that most men have had, at one time or another in their lives, some bitter or at least unpleasant experience caused by the fact that, in the common phrase, "appearances were against them." Literature abounds with, cases of compromising appearances and of mistaken Identity. Lady Macbeth, It will be recalled, "smeared the sleeping grooms with blood." Bulwer Lytton founded a novel on the story of Eugene Aram. The Aram and Molineux Cases Eugene Aram was an English schoolmas ter. In Knaresborough, where Aram taught for several years, lived a shoemaker named Daniel Clarke, One day, shortly after making a. purchase of valuable goods, Clarke disap peared. Suspicion fell on Aram, not as the man's murderer, but as his confederate in fraud. He was arrested and tried, but ac quitted for lack of evidence. Thirteen years afterward a skeleton was dug up near Knaresborough, and the citizens, remember ing the disappearance of Clarke, declared the bones were those of the shoemaker. The suspicion of foul play had been reinforced by strange remarks of Aram's wife to tlui effect that her husband and a map named Houseman knew more of Clarke's disappear. ance than they chose to tell. Houseman, confronted with a bone of the skeleton, de clared emphatically that it was not Clarke's. The dental only added to the belief that Houseman knew where Clarke's body had peea hiddu Finally he sud thtt he had "CHOICE FABRICATIONS I" seen Claikc murdered by Arum nnd ono Terry. A skeleton wns dug up hi tho place Indicated by Houseman and Aram wns con victed of tho murder of Clarke. Conduct ing his own defense nt tho trial Aram made a memorable address on the doetrln" of circumstantial evidence. Before hla oxo cutlon ho confessed his guilt to two clergy men. Whatever may have been tho facts In tho enso of Aram, It Is remarkablo that on several occasions In tho history of criminal tiials men have confessed to ri lines which subsequent events showed they had not committed. Ono of tho most famous criminal trials in American annals was that of Molinoux, convicted in New York for tho murder of Mrs. Adams. The ovldenco against him was purely circumstantial. It was charged that Mrs. Adatris had died from a poison sent her through tho mall. All over tho United States an outcry ntoso against Mollnoux's conviction on circumstantial evidence Tho public feeling over tho conditions surround ing tho trial and conviction of Leo Frank was no moro rebellious. Molineux wn3 granted a new trial bj tho Now York Court of Appeals and on tl.o second ttial was ac quitted. Cases of mistaken Identity aro not uncom mon. A man named Jenkins was arrested at Nowburgh, N.Y., charged with tho murder of ono Sarah Bloom, who hnd a short time previous mysteriously disappeared. Tho dead body of a young woman hnd been found, which Jano Bloom Identified ns that of her sister Sarah, Sho was very positive of tho fact: described with great accuracy and mlniitenes.s certain physical peculiarities of her sister and insisted that tho body was hers, notwithstanding directly opposite tes timony given by Jenkins. But, during tho Investigation instituted by tho Coroner, the original Sarah Bloom appeared In Nowburgh alive and well, Tho young man Jenkins, who had been confined to await tho result of tho inquest, wns at onco set at liberty, nil cause of suspicion against him having been removed by tho discovery that Miss Bloom was living. Tho question then camo up: How could MIsh Bloom's sister havo been so deceived ns to testify positively that tho dead body was that of her sister? Tho result of 11 comparison of marks upon tho bodies of tho two women, however, settled the doubt. The peculiar marks on tho dead body and thoso on the body of Sarah Bloom wero identical In form, position nnd number. Tho body had a scar on tho left oyobrow; Sarah Bloom had tho same. Tho body had a scar on the middle Joint of the middle finger, of tho left hand; Sarah Bloom had the same. The two mlddlo toes of tho left foot of the corpse wero grown together nearly to the first Joint; n similar peculiarity ex isting in Miss Bloom. The toes of both feet in the corpse and In those of Miss Bloom were compressed, as from wearing tight shoeB. A mark, as from a ring which had been roughly drawn from the finger, was found on the hand of the murdered woman, but the ring was not "found. Miss Bloom wore a cornelian ring on the corresponding finger. Those curious coincidences, very re markable as far as regards physical pecu liarities, seemed to Justify the conclusions which were arrived at prior to the reap pearance of the missing woman. A False Confession The foregoing story Is told In Waterbury's American edition of Archbold's "Criminal Practice nnd Pleading." An equally strange story is that of a murder case cited in William Wills' famous essay on the "Prin ciples of Circumstantial Evidence." It was the case of the two Booms, convicted in the Supreme Court of Vermont In September term, 1819, of the murder of Russell Colvin, May 10, 1812. It appeared that Covin. who was the brother-in-law of the prisoners, was a person of a, weak and not perfectly sound mind; that he was considered burdensome to the family of the prisoners, who were obliged to support him; that on the day of his disappearance, being r a distant field, where the prisoner were at work, a violent quarrel fcroke out between them, and that one of them struck him a violent blow on the back of the head with a club which felled htm to the ground Some suspicions arose ac that time that he was rouideied, which were Increased by the finding ol his hat in Ibe um aeU .few oiunthi atterwaid. Thesd suspicions In process of tlmo subsided, but In 1810 ono of tho neighbors having ro pcutcdly dreamed of the murder with great minuteness of circumstances, both In regard to his death and the concealment of his re mains, tho prisoners were vehemently ac cused and generally believed guilty of the murder. Upon strjet search tho poeketknlfe of Colvin nnd a button off his clothes were found in nn old open cellar In tho same field, nnd In n hollow stump not many rods from it wero discovered two nails and a num ber of bones believed to bo those of a man. Upon this evidence, together with tho de liberate confession of tho fact of the mur der and concealment of the body in those places, they were convicted nnd sentenced to die. On the snmo day they applied to the Legislature for a commutation of tho sen tcnoo of death to that of perpetual imprison ment, which ns to ono only of them was granted. The confession being now with drawn and contradicted and a reward offered for tht discovery of tho missing man, ho was found In New Jersey, nnd returned homo In tlmo to prevent the execution. lie had fled for fear that tho prisoners would kill him. Tho bones were those of nn ani mal. Tho prisoners had been advised by somo misjudging friends that, as they would ceitainly bo convicted upon tho circum stances proved, their only chnnco for lite wus by a commutation of punishment, and that this depended on tholr making a peni tential confession and thereupon obtaining a recommcndntlon to mercy. , Wllklo Collins utilized a report of this r-' marknhlo case In ono of his novels of mystery. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW . A year of war ends and a century of regret begins. Chicago Herald. Though In many icspects an untutored mnn, ,,v&j Pniidio Villa makes better proRress than Car- .1', rnnza in learning I1I3 A B C's. New York Sun. "God is still with us," snys the Kaiser. "Same here," is the word fiom tho Allies Somebody Is headed for tho Ananias Club. Atlanta Con Mltution. Itusjlan nrmlcs may bo safe, but they prob ably feel lilto a pedestrian who has just ducked across a motor highway on a Sunday after noon. Wall Street Journal. Not often In the history of diplomacy hai thore been a moro conclusive answer by on Government to tho demands of another than tho note to Austria-Hungary. Indianapolis News. The marvelous system of German railroads carries tho German troops wherever they want to go. Yet Germnny's Internal commerce soes on with evidently llttlo disturbance. Whyr Becnuso German 'h marvelous system of im proved rivers and canals is thero to do th work, Kansas City Times. There are thousands of upright nnd law abiding Georgians who hnve been proud of their Stato in the pnst, and to whom tho sen tence of outlawry upon It by the lest of th country will seem cruel nnd unjust. But to avert that sentence thoso law-respecting Georj Inns must organize and usscrt their supremacy over the mob of barbailans who havo brought their civilization to a standstlll.-Iirooltlyn Eagle. THE UNATTAINED They tear up the paving and then they proceed To pile up the tar anil tho gravel. The numerous signals of danger you heed Till you s'carcely know which way to travel. With tunnels and chasms they fill up the town While vapors nriBe, superheated; And this ready assurance effaces the frown. "It'll be a fine job when completed." All restless wo hurry nnd upward we gaze, And engage In benevolent movements; And work which we thought had won perma nent praise Is destroyed to make room for Improvements. Tills great wot Id of ours as for peace It strives on Of its fond expectations Is cheated. But man says as he labors with brain and with brawn, "It'll be a flno Job when completed." Waahlns-ton Star. AMUSEMENTS B. F. 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