MMPIMP0HMN "K EV&NiaTQ, LEDQEB-rHrLADELPHIA, aATTTttDAY, PECEHBKB 12. tnUL i'ii- i. i y?i- -...i-. a,..- ,.., lB . - !! ri'i- I" 1 i ' "' 1' '' ' ,, ' " " 5 I ' I i $2 SMfcMafBtt-I rr,-.5 EafM-. 4 ; ', IljBI, ' - VKiE - . .turning PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY emus Jr k cunris, rHir,ir. Oatt, W Orhe, Bwretarr . John C Martin, Tfeaaurerl Chart II Iudlngton, Philip S Collins, John B. 'Wit Itatna. plreetata. KDlTOnlAIj BOAIltt I Crima H K. Otitie, Chairman, ,, It WHALBT . . ., BiwitlM Bdllor J ' -y'-' - " - - i"i JOllM 0 MAuTIN Ceneral Buatntae Manager - " "....., ... u ... ':::: ,v ' x-uDiimva nawr ai i'dduo xspara jjuuaina, Indpf ndtne Square, Philadelphia. txoatk Citrrau. .". . .Broad and Chestnut fl(rt Artistic CrM rrea-t7lon Building Nw Tonic. . . , 170-A, Metropolitan Tower CntOAao..... 817 Heme Insurance BulMIng JUrdon 8 Waterloo Dace, Tall Mall, S. W. NKWSnunEAUSI JTljtUM ttcaaio ...Th Patriot nutMIng nnHiiiiuiui rvipm .Mi.iitiitr. ino loaf iiuuuing iv Yosk Unarm .The Xlmrj Ilulldlnr bmmn Unarm London Hcnno... rails Bciudh. i. ... .I(J FrledrlchatraMe ...2 Pall Mall Kaat, 8, W, . .32 Rue Louie la Grand suDscnimoN terms Br.carrler, Dittr OLr, atx ctnta Br mall, poitpald entaiae or rw aoeinn a. excent whera roreim M required, Daily Oalt, on month, twin! UAttT Orlt, one year, three dollars. Al orlptlona payable In advance BHX,S0OOWAUrirr KETSTONE, MAIN 1000 tST J-dinst all communication to Evening K Lt&etr, Indeptniiene Bouart, rfilladtlpMa, IW"f ' "i- iv. ' .'i"t '. I ' I I 1 turmxo at in Ttmxtpjnux roaiomca la arcoicc J CLAa MAIL MATTtJ, nilLADELTIIIA, SATU1IDAT, DECEMBEII 13, 1914. m ' ' ' ' i ' Fog 44tIVH us facta nnd wo'll know what to do VT with them" In an old cry of tho Ameri can people. But thero Is a disposition to sur round the wholo question of tho navy with an Impenetrable fog. What Is tho Administra tion afraid of 7 It Is not a political question. Tlilo haphazard preparation has bcon going n for years. Anybody, It Bcems, If strong politically, was good enough to bo Secretary ef tho Navy. There have been landlubbers In ahnrgo year after year, with ono or two In tervals of really Intelligent leadership. But now tho people want to know, and thoy are going to know. Try to hldo anything from an American and thero is no power that can prevent him from finding out all about It. Mr. Gardner may not succeed now, but the frankness he demands will bo forthcoming sooner or later and tho sooner tho better for those in authority. Lift tho fog and got out Into tho clear light. That Is tho thing. If there is anything -wrong, tho nntion wants a ehanco to correct It; If thero Is not, by all means let the public bo convlncod of the fact. "Women, War nnd Government WOMEN suffer from tho effects of wnr not lesi than men; women nurso tho Wounded who fall In battle; women are tnxed upon their property to pny the costs of wcr. If the hundreds of thousands of bereaved ano. starving women of Europo might havo their way at tho close of the terrible European holocaust thoro would never be another ap peal to arms. And undoubtedly women are right when they point to tjio present cata clysm as nn Illustration of man's Incapacity tor government, ho has ruled, negotiated, quarreled, on behalf of only n fraction of tho race, and that tho comparatively small mas culine militaristic class. Mrs. Pethlck Lnwronco has laid down two propositions that are worthy of careful thought: "Reinforcement of the democracies of tho world by the Inclusion of the mother-half of tho human race Into tho ranks of. articulate ,.liUJzenship." "That women ns well as men Bhould bo sent as representatives of their nations to The Haguo Conference " , Thesq suggestions nre not only practical, but they are right. If women nro an Integral part of tho nation and Inseparable from the well-being and progress of tho race; If they are sufficiently responsible to hold property nnd capable of shaping tho physical, mental and moral life of tho country, they surely are competent to share the problems and perform tho duties of full citizenship. Charity at the Breakfast Tahlc THE demands upon tho charity of Phlla dephia have been extraordinary this fall. A Macedonian cry which no great people could neglect thundered from oversens At home, with industry not yet recovered from Ita heroic experiences on the operating table, unemployment has become tho most pressing of immediate problems. Those who havo suf fered least during the period are being culled on for contributions with a regularity that has seriously depleted exchequers. Yet there lina been no let-up In generosity, and cor tnjnly Philadelphia has set a new standard . for community servlco und the practical np- f pjlfsatldn. of the Gqldon Rule. iBut what man, tr hoenn avoid it. wants Charity? The most priced right of the Ameri can citizen is to do wltffout it. That Is what Ami I lea has stood for the land of oppor tunity, with n living in it for every man with grit enough to take it Prosperity la urirtetlilns demanded as a right. It belongs to this people They have been trained to espoot it Better, then, than charity is com mon sense in legislation, capacity In states manship, leadership that will shun the shoals. There Is no charity that can cgmptwate for industrial depression caused by Incompetent legislation The economist has It over the gtvejr every time henu hysteria Jo govern tnpt means leas unemployment nnd less need - fgr oharity PubUe policy Is tested at tho , breakfast table of every man In the eountry. - What's In It for Jones? JONBS' picture is in th magazine. It began to appear in the neHapapers ten yeara ago. That was when Jonea gathered together five or six heap of scrap iron and converted them into a great nroduotlvo In dustry. An expert in. ffleUnoy, men called hjm, and so he was. His was a genius for organisation. Quiek, sharp, incisive, ha met : situation? day by day and got the better of $J$g?n. The world has a reward in dollars for at sort of man. Sliver and gold leaped to A great man waa Jonw, liveried in otimm." but Jobwj i dead. TiMara is the. Wauaoteum, cold and forbidding, and in It What Is left of Jone will ty Wll It onuu Mas. Poor Jones. A fale note anywhere is hta efganisatkm and he anew it Innoedtetety, but wImb nature hoisted danger Hguul Joaaa etta not recoeulaa them He waa too busy. As to that taut liver. thre was Capaton. tbe Hvar SjetXaHst. and aawthet man, rencwaad the r)d over aa a authority on nerves, was ipgal)I dawn th street go Jonas took ', Mp tneteaa of ftftenlse The machine be alrnjleyl meted, but lone didn't Where ptt$l to tet the tiiat.? It never occurred to lgf tfcay J hour a 4ey for 10 years was not OUtcA as I tour a da. fur 30 yttars lis yaa so imhd for time U.at lie sttuaadered it . Joftee b ii.aJ I'u.jr de.ll and thee $ tWvl ltt tU- ( J il wilier J .rie cjafv- 8ajEjw rh s Hi i.uoie.i J.o0 he W ftnil ni'"-i n i .1 ,: . i . cei fur elfiuiiiakers la ttm - ' iirOiy, uj.t ttum of dm JsaJJL In the eoUnjippartntly haven't tho "foresight of n rjuffer" so fnr"n8" care of the machine Providence put tholr souls In Is concerned. All Together to Help the Needy TOMOMIOW, In nil the churches of the city, the cry of our own people for aid Will bo voiced. Tho Division for Organising Branches of the Bmorgency Aid needs ne slstnnco. Into the broach every citizen can leap with full assurance that duty rests as heavily on him as on any soldier In the trenches Let thero be an outpouring of I'htladelphlans that they may hear and un derstand the necessity at hand and conso crato themselves In this Interval of suffering to the needs of their fellow men. SclcclhiR the " Gonts" IN THE henring beforo tho Public Service Commission It was argued that "Now York was enjoying better commutation scrlco at a cheaper rato than I'htlsdelphla and no In crease had boen suggested for Now York." Mr. Pennypacker seemed to think that tho railroads woro suffering from rato delusion. That Is tho opinion most people have when they stop to consldor tho absurdity of great railways urging tho necessity for Increases In tho environs of one metropolis whllo they themselves, by thclt actions, admit that thero Is no necessity whatever for BUch Increases In another metropolitan territory but 00 mite away. Tho situation Is so obvious that It Is scarcely worth nrguing. The truth Is that the Interstate Commerce Commission has put tho railroads In such a fix that they uro trying to wrlgglo out In whatovor way they can. They havo boen goaded to desperation by extra-crow laws nnd grade-crossing enactments and dorens of other roform-the-world-in-a-mlnutc statutes, all ot which havo combined to Increase ex penses Inordinately. But tho solution Is not to mulct commuters. It Is to get fnlr treat ment. We surmise that tho Legislatures will be less radical hereafter, and thoro Is somo reason to believe thnt tho Interstate Com merce Commission is waking up But the commuters do not Intend In tho menntlmo to havo tho burden shunted onto tholr shoul ders; nor do tho Philadelphia commuters, In particular, feel that they should ho singled out for punishment. ltcalism in the Nursery IS THE doll-fnco dono for? Not on ladles, of course that wcro too much to hope but at any rato on dolls "God has given you ono face." says Hamlet to tho doll designers, "and you make yourselves another." Tho simpering, pudgy sweetness of fat checks and fat foreheads and teeth llko a picket fenco has been thrust upon children year after year us a model of feminine perfection, until one can hardly bliimo the way young ladles have taken to Imitating It between IS nnd 22 But that Is over now. Realism has Invadod tho nursery. Tho toy shops arc full of real baby dolls. Thoy havo a Jolly sort of every day klddlshness about them. Rolypoly and u bit gawky, they look very much llko nn In fant at Its most Investigative age, and with a subtle Insight Into tho wlshywashy framo of mind behind the baby-doll face, tho makers call them "character" babies. Hooray for character! ) To the End of the Game THE war Is reaching tho stago when economic laws come Into play. Tho enor mous losses nro beginning to bo felt. Pro digious loans cannot nbscuro the facts. No dispatches from tho Interior nro necessary to prove that tho nationals, as distinct from tho nations, are becoming restive. Tho bur den is becoming too oppressive. On sea, the Allies hao succeeded In sweep ing aside tho German menace Tho Kaiser haB virtually no naval force lett except that bottled up In his own ports. On land, the campaigns nre beginning to produce some thing definite. It Is evident, for Instance, that the Russians arc Inferior to their oppo nents, nnd are holding their ground, so far un they nro doing eo, only by weight of num bers. Tho Cznr's chief servlco to tho Allies is In keeping so largo a forco of Germans away from the war in tho West In Franco, following General Joffro's magnificent de fense along tho Marne and tho obvious with draw il of Important German units to the East, the Allies are in a strong position, vig ilant and aggressive. But a standstill means to both sides ulti mate bankruptcy. Thoro Is n rebound from madness ns from everything else, and hu manity in Europo has not become so hysteri cal that It will not count the cost. Rumors of peace iipgotlatlons, or a feollng-out proc ess, are significant In the circumstances. An appreciation of tho utter wnste nnd folly of the rltuatlon Is becoming apparont. The war will not last three years. Another Bummer will see the end of it. Tho gambler will play so long as ho can get chips. When he enn't, he has to quit. Europo is rushing to the end of the game. The greatest Russian triumphs are In re treat. The plan to make tho City Commissioners more powerful roads as if Mr, Costello might have had something to do with it. , Theie have been more signs of prosperity while Congress was not lit session than there ever were, when It was. There will be no peace prize this year, it is announced This must mean that the Chau tauqua lectures are to continue. According to Admiral Fletcher, submarines are no terror. Still, they and trouble are always bobbing up together. "i m Couldn't these new revolts breaking out in Mexico be stopped under the provisions of the hvyvs prohibiting endleas chains? l ' Who will the five members of the Federal Trade Commission .be? Three democrats and two others, perhaps. It is reported that tbe Japanese assault cut TsIngtao la two. But It's etlll Just as hard to pronounce as ever Tha Osar has not yet Bone to the HrinaT line, but be baa begun to praittee by firing General Rinaeakarapf. 1 ' ' ' P' i ' i' 9W The raid al Jeaaa Jaroea into Coffeyvllje, Kan., is et)ualfd ealy by the daring raid of tho Federal IVeague into Uie same town, German arms ase evidently making prog rtat eastward, bajk la Poland and in Bl- glBffl- It's a great thing to have the greatest coaat-dafanea gits in (Jan world, bat there is a growliw faeJtqj? thai tfea detail of supply ing tbeja with maaunKtoa ahould be taken under advisement About ,80jeo Busaiaac and twttw as away Otfrtvau and AustiUm itava baas tapwrad S far tn tht. war accoMing to tha wex oAkc, wl.uli .!! m iu huw wal leppur htj co do tut vt-ratlty. SOiME JGLUlDINdJlUXES . . FOR SELF-EDUCATION How Leadership Wns Achieved by Some of tho World's Most Famous Men. Eighteen Languages Mastered by a Carpenter Alter Ilo Was Twenty-one. . -1 . . . .i lljr JOSEPH U.ODELL ANY ONE can gain nn education who la J willing td spend his spare time in study, In many cases tho mind does not awaken in childhood, and tho erroneous conclusion Is reached that tho dull bby or glri has no natural aptitude for education. Many of tho world's conspicuous men were dunces in youth, among them Newton, tho discoverer of gravitation; Shakespeare, the dramatist, Edmund Burke, (ho orator: Patrick Henry, the patriot; the Duke of Wellington, Eng land's soldier and statesman; Stonewall Jackson, tho Confederate leader, John Wee) Icy, tho founder of Methodism; Henry Ward Bcecher, tho prlnco of preachers! Ulysses S. Grant, President of tho United States; Sir Walter Scott, tho novelist; Linnaeus, the botanist, and Byron, the poet, By stern resolution and unflagging application to books, thoso men were able to rotrlovo their early losses and rlso to positions of leader ship. Tho possibilities of systematic read! tho books are well chosen, are almost limited. An Intelligent man can cosily and digest an avcrngo of ten pages oven of what Is called serious literature, If ho will set osldo ono hour scrupulously for tho purpose. Tho ordinary book contains about 300 pages, nnd ho would thus grasp (ho contents of 12 books a year. Almost any branch of knowledge may be completely mas tered In flvo years If such a habit Is per sisted Iu. Sixty books, or their equivalent In pnges, if carefully selected and thought fully read, w.111 undoubtedly give a man export- knowledge of tho subject upon which they treat. When wo think of tho number of days in each year in which more than one hour could bo given to reading, wo see how vast must bo tho gains nnd how swift tho progress of tho man who is fully de termined to educate himself Romance of Hard Work Ono cf tho most rcmarknblo stories of solf educatlon IS that of Samuol Lee, of England (born 1783, died 1862). As a. boy In n charity school ho was so dull that his t . chcr gave him up In despair. When 21 jenrs old ho heard a priest read soma Latin in a Catho lic church where ho was working as a car penter. Leo's curiosity wns nwakened, nnd buying n second-hand Latin grammar ho learned It by heart. Following this, ho quick ly read tho Latin clnsslcs and tho Now Tes tament Ho wns very poor nnd had to sell ono book In order to buy another. Then ho learned Greek nnd Hebrew In the iamo manner, working as a carpenter all day and studying at night. Ho begnn to teach tho elementary subjects In a school, but soon found thnt, though ho knew soveial Ian guacs, ho was deficient In tho humblest branches of knowledge Ho had to resign his school and almost starved whllo master ing English grammar, geography, arithmetic and history. But ho persisted, and swiftly addod Arabic. Pcialan and Hindustani to his stock of foreign languages. At tho ago of 30 ho managed to enter Cambridge Uni versity and four years later he was mado professor of Arabic In tho snmo Institution. Ho became complete muster of 18 languages, and when he died ho was honored by all tho world as ono of Its grentost scholars. What Is Importnnt to remember Is that ho reached manhood beforo ho realized 'the need of study and yet by tho uso of his sparo time ho was fnmous In less than 15 years. Hero ore a fow rules for tho homo stu dent which I wrote somo years ago and which were adopted and sent to the .stu dents by a well-known nnd successful edu cational Institution that promotes homo study. First. Launch yourself upon tho task of study with ns much Impetus as you can command. Make n solemn vow to yourself that you will study; write your determina tion upon a piece of paper and sign it, and If tempted to break tho promise read what you havo signed It will remind you that your manhood Is at stake. 2. In deciding upon tho course of study to pursue estimate your Inclination and powers to determine along which line you will reach the best results. Usually tho thing to which we turn naturally Is the one we shull bo ablo to do best. 3. Get tho best available books. Some text books nre written for professors or advanced students, and aro useless for a beginner; others are written for students In a class room and presuppose a teacher present for explanation or demonstration, but somo aro designed for the man who must work alone without a personal Instructor these should be obtained. Thoy explain each difficulty in clear and simple language and lead the stu dent forward by natural stages from the ele mentary to the advanced. rorminp the Study Habit t. Set aside a definite time for study, and keep your books and papers always in one place. In this way there will be no irritating obstacle to delay the work or excuse an omission, 5. Never allow an exception to your rule. Let your friends know that your study hour Is sacred. To make this easier set apart another time for outside engagements and pleasures When you have made such an arrangement stick to it as if the destiny of an empire depended upon your fidelity. , If you study at night allow a few min utes before going to work the nejtf morning for review. A quarter of an hour will do, and the subject will thus get firmly fixed In your mind. 7. Whatever you learn from your books test out In practice at the first opportunity, g. Establish the habit of study by being inflexibly diligent for a month. Work over your books will be more tedious the first week than the saoond, and tha swod more irksome than the third, but It will stan be oom normal and wilt tbaa be a dtilght, 8. Do not study with your h,ad near a lanjn, JM fresh, ajr Into your reajB, V y stow drowr" takj) a few moments 0f rW. ojea and then resume study. 10. If you have hcadaehe as a. result ot study $et your ayes exewlaed by a propr poulijrt, and let hu preserjbe the right glasses, Tbera is oaa feature of thjs study habit that U jtn averiaoked it not eihy quail Asa a maa seatally for a sucaessrul life, but also morally. Andrew Carnegie pays u, trib ute) to the value of study upon character 3rit4 he says of bis youthful days I w tcjo iMaffr studying to contract the bad habits that auX sucl) inroads on the health ai.d loclMU af yruas mm, ad Uua fceitMd ma t Mglgr Majaj." to,.KAJ.i4M'!TOBB M n. " SfflHSEJSiSSS!. . . 3fe?,. read , raga&fig3gEg a day. ragHiNtiU -.. . ii i .. , i i i. . i - . "" "Hm COLONEL JOHN NIXON, PATRIOT Memorial to the Man Who Publicly Itcad tho Declaration Alter the Signing. ON THE slto whero tho Declaration of In dependence was first proclaimed to tho proplt, a memorial bearing tho name of C'nlorcl John Nixon Is to be erected Colonel NImiii uuh tho man whoso voice carried tho st mi g message of that great charter of liberty Into tho very soul of tho listening assemblage According to tradition, ono of the iLimns why ho wns chosen for this func tion was tho fnct that his voice wob of un usual clearness nnd power, nnd It Is written that tho multltudo which assembled at 6th nnd Chestnut streets heard every word. But before July 8 of that fateful year of 177G this Philadelphia!! had already eurncd dis tinction In tho colony and boyond Its borders. Ilo wis oiif ot the signers of tho Declara tion which hd himself read In public Back In li.Vi ho had put his signature to tho nou Impoitatlon asntiment; In resistance to tho stamp net. Ficm that timo ho was ono of tho loaders In tho opposition to tho tyranny of England. Ho was a deputy to tho con vention of the provinces In 1771-75. In April of 177G, when the "Assoclators for Homo Do fenfe." (t which his father had beon ono of tho fotndcis years earlier, was ngaln callod Into sorvlce, ho whs mado a lieutenant colonel of tho 3d Battalion, known otherwise as "tho Silk Stockings'.'" j A year later ho took charge of tho defensos of the Deiawnro at Fort Island, nnd In July beamo commander of the Guard of the City. Following the signing of tho Declaration of Independence, tho Committee of Safqty, ot which Colonel Nixon was a member, ordered that tho Declaration bo proclaimed tiom tho State House on Monday, July 8, at noon. Tho document was read by Colonel Nixon from a wooden observatory erected for tho uso of Dr. David Rlttcnhouse, tho astronomer, an other great Phlladelphlan to whom a me morial may bo erected. Tho observatory was built by the American Philosophical Society nnd torn down soon after the Revolution. A wooden tablet mnrks tho slto at present. Tho Pennsylvania Society, Sons of tho Revolu tion, will replaco it, probably with one of bronze. Tho inscription has not been de cided on. Colonel Nixon served the Colonies In battle and In helping to Bupply the money and credits without which the war would have been a failure Succeeding John Cadwalader as colonel of tho 3d Battalion, In December, 1776, he Joined Washington's army at Tren ton, and took part in tho Battle of Princeton. Ho was at Valley Forge in '78. In 1780 he was a member of the committee which formed a bank for financing the supply of provisions for tho army. He helped organize the Bank of North America, still a flourishing Institu tion in this city. In recognition of this work he was made Its second president in 1792, holding the post until his death in 1S0S Throughout the war he was constantly ac tive, furthering in one way and nnother the interests of the revolutionists, Richard Nixon, father of the Colonel, was closely associated with the pre-revolutionary history of Philadelphia. He came to this country from Wexford County, Ireland, near thf close of the 17th century, and was one of the large shipping merchants of the city, Rlchurd Nixon was a member of City Coun cils In 1721. During the excitement Incident to the French and Spanish War he helped organize the Assoclators and became captain of the Dock Yard Company. 1 ' ! ' i ' Not a Good Show From tha New York Bvanlnc Poet, The news from Mexleo continues to be kaleidoscopic in the suddenness of its changes though it cn certainly lay no claim to the beauty and order whiob belong to the Azures of the kaleidoscope. 1 I "! II Middle West for Busmen From tha Omaha Be. AH prognostlcstora logic for a steady revival pf business, and they all look for the Middle West to lead the procession. The moral u that wery wide-awake matmlfcsturer or Uualnasa man will find It to hie advantage to cultivate the trade of this seetiaa gf the country where farm jwoauet values are greater than ever, and every farm produat festwy running full time ii , 1 1 AIIorMsl A Hone 1 Frept tha 8t, Paul IHepaUh, It is reported tram hmlm that the British are about to confer- a new kbedtve. on Bgynt. But the Bgypttatw are ure than llkajy -to lok tula gift khealve In the taouth before Whole-heartedly aerlog him. ' sa-v tue oavy (Na Vnm Uw Xw York HfVt It witt aot mead mattes by leskteg to sa por Hon the blame pr to trace tbe aws fora decline that Is psrlloualy near a deasdeaaa. What Is wautud ie action action rtlrji) beiiJ on knowledge and iataiUeuc and tollow4 by h. quKk cuiirl uu.1 Curis'e aluiio uu fur i.lab By ortl ui ni.ntaui.iu the at La ahojt lg4 eaiit4 uisu ovj .aid above the fu KfrAfi2tL auzaurtuui fit ia.Br ai,A .u ... ..h,a 1 &$'$ ' th taW- IJIlflWrtW FOG FOG J&; - WHY THE ITALIANS HATE THE GERMANS Paris of Italy Have Been Overrun by Visitors From North Who Prove Any thing But Neighborly in Their Ways. SGVKRAL cars ago un American, who was making his first trip to Italy, fell Into conversation with a German follow traveler on tho subject of beggars. His rend ing of Baedeker and other authorities had convinced him that from tho moment tho ship reached Naples his lifo would bo mado miserable by swarms of repulsive men, women and children soliciting, almost demanding-, alms. As a matter of fact, ho was less troubled, even In Naples, than ho had often been in Now York. But nt the time ho was greatly plcasod to discover an easy means of protection. "You speak Gorman well enough to bo taken for ono of us at least by an Italian," said his candid acquain tance. "So If you aro troubled by beggars Just roply In Gorman. Thoy will run from you as from tho plague. Wo Germans aro not popular In Italy." Tho American was duly grateful for tho hint, nnd pn tho ono occasion when ho followed It ho found that It worked llko a charm. To say that tho Italians hato the Germans Is hardly putting It too strongly. It is a different kind of hatred from that which thoy foel for tho Austrlans. The latter is moro historical than personal. Were Italy in possession of Italia Irredonta, Indeed, It would doubtless become In tlmo a merely traditional sentiment, llko that which waa so long fostered by Americans against tho British. The Austrlans aro n much pleas antor peoplo than the Germans, nnd thoy havo moro in common with tho Italians. With all their flno qualities, tho Germans cannot be called adaptable. Even In this country, whero they become cltUens and the best of citizens thoy keep their na tional and racial traits with great tenacity. And they aro more nearly akin to us than to the Italians. When, therefore, they settle In Italy, thoy aro very distinctively strangers In a strange land though they may sing tho Bong of Zlon almost too loudly. In other words, they havo not tho tact to consldor Italian sensibilities. The Italians nre nat urally a grateful people. Tljey do not for get that Germany, as well as England and France, had a hand in the achievement ot Italian unity. They woujd love the Germans if they could, as they love tho English nnd In a less degree tho French. But tho Ger mans Irritate them by a condescending and supercilious attitude toward Italy and every thing Italian. Control Many Banks German enterprise and German money, to be euro, have dono much for Italy. The much visited Island of Capri is a familiar illustration of this fact. The present inhab itants are largely German, and they havo carried out all sorts of Improvements with truly German efficiency, The Italian Riviera is another spot where this efficiency has been manifested. Then, too, the Germans, with their wonderful aptitude for business, have Invested large sums in Italian under takings; they control, for example, many of the banks, as well bb the chief steam. ship companies. This dominance has been shaken recently and probably the war will put an end to It But all the advantages, and they are many, which have come to Italy from German enterprise, have not suf ficed to allay this fundamental antagonism. The German would be obnoxious If only for the reason that he Is not "flitnpatico." Add to that a fear of his eQonomio and po litical supremacy, and the cause of the ac tual hatred which exists (a plain. Probably there was never any chance that the Triple Alliance would be unbroken In time of war. Even. Bernhardt, dn his now famous book, pojptsd out that the weakness of tho Alliance was "its purely defensive oharaeter' a. statement worth considering In ocnneWpn with the German assertion of the obllgajjoas ol Italy In the present war. And he urgtd that, as Sngland stood In the way of Italian ambitions tn the Mediter ranean, Germany, should reconcile Italy and Turkey and act as Italian champion against both Baglamd and France. That would have bean a wlsftwaad more Intelligible policy than th one Germany nursusd when Italy took Tripoli. Had she wanted to threw Italy" Into the araw of her, low se eould hardly haya, acted differently. Bvea If the Geqesa had been batter Ufc4, the Italians wuJd hay had no nthuslawp for Ue wric of pttiRg tha Kaiser's cfcastisMs out of tha 4re. Tea Seif-Csatrad QM asftoiis auatax whtab tha "rreimii hV naa lit their daaJMws with tha Itei Mfltv k natural fssuit at what mm plltia4l4t we mi -ail- W MM mm aW0WCt) or provincialism, but simply an inability 1 look at anything snvo from their own pofi of vlow. An Illustration of this may found in tho neighborhood of La go dl Gardi wnicn is rapiuiy occoming a miio uermaa Englishmen and Americans go to italSj many of them to live there, not for tha poso of taking England or America wlUV them, but becauso thoy lovo Italy and It Ian ways so much that thoy are willing, a longer or shorter time, to expatriataJ themselves. Open my heart nnd you will si Graved Insldo of It "Italy." Browning's well-worn word3 express thejfi feelings. No doubt tho Germans are moro patriotic. Ono need never expect froS them any variation from tho straiw "Deutschland, Deutschland, ubor Alles. Thus, though they compel respect, they a not conquer affection. Tho Trlplo Alllanco was never popular Italy, and oven Us cxpedloncy was g( orally doubted. Long beforo this war brokj out, most Intelligent Italians would admit that tho Idea of fighting with Germany only less distasteful than that of flghtlnx. with Austria. Tho writer remembers how. In a long conversation on Italian aftal: with h Sicilian priest ot pronounced derj leal vlows, ho found that ono indictment, acalnst tho Itnllan Government. In the CVM of this loyal son of tho church, was ths, Trlplo Alliance. It was. ho sold wrfh de' llghtful Inconsistency, unpatriotic though antagonism to United Italy was the highest. kind of patriotism) But tho same idea expressed by Italians of all classes in vi ous ways. A peoplo who now cheer hemently for England could not havp been. oxpected to throw In their lot with Gej many. It speaks ill for tho efficiency German diplomacy that the adherence Italy to tho Alliance in ari offensive i should havo boen counted upon for a1 1 ment. v i a THE NEW YORK CENTRAL SYSTEM The New York Central System was lnentel by old Cornelius Vnnderbllt, a genial brleanjl who starved out connecting lines Dy rnonv ollzlng terminals and who Invented the phrwi "The Public be Damned," an expiession wuv has dona more to brine the railroads und public control than all the reform speeches the last 50 years. in,. -KTci, Vn.V Pftntml hnffln In fl. SSO.000. station In New York city, sweeps up the Hud son and on to Buffalo, a magnificent four: track railroad, covers New York, onio 8 Indiana like a fish net and ends at St. Lo nnH varlrtitn TUInnla TinlntR In fl. humble S unostentatious manner. It owns the La.! !,. .hj XTIaItaI Uinta flnrl tYin Xflrhfcan Ceil' kM'VIC, WIU ...WAV. A.UVV v.... ..- -. .- - . tral systems, all competing lines, and wrmj its pull with tne Qovernmoni is no ono . tell, for no suit has ever been brought to dl solve this Illegal combination. It operates ovei isnnn milna nf railroad, la caDltallzed for J225. ooo.ooo and owes halt a billion dollars La .,. it ..rneH iir (VKt.nno. but this year has to charge the traveler 10 cents for bread; nnd butter on Its dining cars ana is exniuuim other marked signs of poverty. u Th New York Central has been the beet ad-d vertlaed line in America. It built the first four- track railroad. It ran the famous Empire State TTnro. tha fastest train in the country It1 nut on the first 21-hour train between New York and Chicago. It owned ana opersiea Chauncey M. Depew, Ameriea'M famous after dinner speaker, for many years. It published a magazine of its own. Oeorge Daniels, its enterprising general pasienger agent, lost no chance during his life to emit an effective shriek for tha New York Central, He even fr.trniinpnil locomotives to the nubllo. and old 1 "999," with a record of 112 miles an hour, was I1 as famous as aiauu p in ua oar. The New York central connects New York, . n..M.1 M.v.lnmit Ttafrnlt HhlflvA niiu Im. 4 XJUUUIV; ..w, .., .., ....vwow, W...V.M- natl and St. Louis with high-grade, double. triple and four-track lines. It owns magnln cent stations In New York and Detroit, but still maintains a prehistoric cattleshsd in Cleveland and recently caused several hun dred cases of near-apoplexy in that city T. propping up lis aepor. witn umbers instead o, removing It with sn axe. George Fitch. AT A GATE ON THE UIVC At a gate on the hill in the parting Hour. When the wind blew eolt on the spa. He laid In the maiden's baud a flower, Q sweet, thy pledge from rael Years shall be sped, the flower be dead, But net my love to thee; O not my love to thee I Keep thou it sUll in a heart on. the hill In a tender memorial" At a. gate on the hill, in a weary hour When tbe rough wiad vexed the sea. She held in her hand the faded flowers "O eweet. wy pladge from theel The years are sped, the flower 13 dead. But not thy lova to ma. T.Tfr taw "on" no news front the a t iin sun ia a aa on the BUI In a queaehtess nwraorlel" Oa a grave by the Mil he knaU-alww. w . use nam the sea; He knelt atons by wbK gnAreHoae; rheacToU heraaA:' A -lWw Sowar is dead. "i s my leva is nit, Tho that) stays loli M the a. B a topks hUi liwattsth U, 4a fairer sals fW thae: l MtffiiaS trfst with tfc"! Otrrsig jja,., t, n, !, a, mu.- m i4a&&"tWlllhm tense. sfKjs '-jtei arWiWEaai .ESSlHSslSsHtfL. Jai.iI9SBR