8 tttntmg gggajfr matt rtiBLIC LEDGER COMPANY trrruis it, k. cuims, Fissinsr. iolm C. Mattln, Traa-urtri Charla It Ludlngten, tM( R. Colllna, John JJ. William. Director. EDITOR! Ah BOAUDt Crati it. It Ccatit, Chairman. WJlXl.Kt Ettcutlra Editor K W, StHIJC.MAriTtN'... ft..n till i l . .General Dutlntm Manartr rubllnhed Jaltf at ruaLio Lnrita Sulldliur, Independence Bijuare, Fhlladalphla. I.roa c?r..rmt Bread and Cheetnut ntreet jLJtimtcl Cltt , Wrtti'Unloit Building tfifl foaa; 1TO-A, Metropolitan Tower Cuiclob...... ..817 Hern Insurance Bulldlnc 14KDOX... 8 Waterloo riact, Tall Mall, S. W. NEWS BUREAUS! piaMssimo Btiawo.... ,. . , , . .The Patriot TlulMln TVAkniKOTON BCBtiD , . .....The Pott Hulid!n Kkw Tork IlCRKtD..... .... ..The nmM nulldlne Bnu.nt HcitrlD SO Frledrlehetraeee LoRoownoacio... ........... 2 Pall Mall Eatt, H. W cVuuaBraaiUi ,.... ,. . ...33 nue touts U Orand subscription terms . Sr carrier, Diilt Omit, alx renin. By mall, postpaid filtelds of Philadelphia, except nher forelrn postage 1 required, Dim.t Onli, one month, twenty-ne cental lUlir. O.wr, one year, three dollars, airlptloos payable In advance, niy-me cenia All mall eub- Deix, aooo wainut KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 W" JL&dnta all communications to Evening Zriatr, Sndeptnttnct Square, Philadelphia. r - , " : trruo at mi rniLioiLrnu rosTorncn is sicond ctiss Walt, virraa. PHILADELPHIA, FItlDAY, lEDnUAnY S, 1913. There are many avenues to success, but not one of them Is without bumps. "Will Fight for Ballot in Three States THI3 woman suffrage amendment to tho New York Constitution will bo submitted to tho voters of that State next November. A, similar amendment will bo voted on In Pennsylvania, unless nit signs fall, and In New Jersey also tho capacity of women to tako an Intelligent part In tho conduct of government Will be put beforo the male electorate as a Jury. So, Jn thrco of tho greatest and rich est of the Original Thirteen States votes for women will bo tho big lasuo of tho fall election. You can't make a man out of a woman, avers Henry Watterson, and he Is right; but neither can you make a man out of a ballot. All men vote, but all who voto are not men. It Jo quite possible that a woman can decide whom she want3 to represent her without los ing any of her Interest in tho home and with out defemlnlzlng herself In any other way. As for mollycoddle voters, the woods are al ready full of them: better women who want to voto than men who can but won't. Women In Western campaigns have shown an understanding of political method that has boon amazing. There is a sweep to their plans for the Eastern fight that augurs suc cess. That thoy have a genius for politics will bo amply demonstrated. The Pay Envelope Is Not Responsible "pILLY" SUNDAY got hold of a funda-- hiental truth when ho told the women of the Phllorauslan Club that tho pay envelope ought not to bo blamed for tho evil done by men and women. But it Is blamed. When a bank clerk defaults, and It Is disclosed that ho was getting $1200 a year while handling millions, sumo shallow thinkers will ask, "What can bo expected if tho banks do not pay their clerks big salaries?" If they would think a little deeper, or if they had memories, they would know that bank presidents, draw ing largo salaries, sometimes aro defaulters also. They would know that there are big criminals and little criminals, according as opportunity offers Itself to the criminal in stlnctr but that honesty does not depend on tho size of the salary. Every one who goes wrong is willing to shift responsibility to some one else, and cer tain sociologists havo made It popular lately to blamo low wages when a girl lapses from virtue. O. Henry has a famous story on tho subject that Is as moving1 to the emotions as It is false in morals. Hundreds of surface emotionalists call It great. Hut tho wrong doer who examines his own heart, must con fess that ho fell because ho was weak. When the, test came he was a broken reed, and tho responsibility rests on his own head. This Is tho kind of moral and political gos pel to preach If there Is to be any great up lift. Bungling by Amateurs MR. WILSON'S address before the Cham ber of Commerce of the United States Justified Doctor Eliot's famous remark that we aro now governed by amateurs. When tho antitrust bill was before Congress the JHresIdent Insisted that It be passed with those provisions In it to which experienced busi ness men objected hampering provisions, de liberately Intended by the men who drafted them to tie the bands of business and pre vent combinations formed in the interest of economy and efficiency. The warnings of the business men were unheeded and the bill Is law. And now the President tells an assembly of business men that tho very law, which he. was praising a few months ago as a char ter of liberty for the small manufacturer. Is defective because It will not permit a group of men to unite their forces in pushing the ale of their products in foreign countries. Of course It Is defective and It should never have been passed. The President has the good grace to admit that he Js learning and that he had never before attended a school In which the oppor tunities for a, liberal education were so broad HI those In the White House. But If he has discovered that business men who opposed Us antitrust program were wiser than he, IrRy does not he listen to the wisdom of the kuslness men who now tell him that his shlp jiurchase plan la worse than his antitrust JawT He may be learning, but he has not y?t learned enough. Farm Boys Arc Needed in the City DEtAWABB farm hoys can do much worse than come to Philadelphia to work c trolley car conductors and mlllhands, an,d an lijtrYmenc In the rural schools of the Stata would have little effect upon the migra tion. f the alert and. ambitious to this city. Yst the Delaware. Commissioner of Education lias ben bewailing the employment of the boys here Instead of on the home farms. ! ought to know that labor goes where there la t demand for It, and h.e ought to bo diplo matic enough ta refrain from making any tevMiou comparisons between different Oo- aajljamwyp. . uvuvy ar muuor W as f wrrty' a. citii as a man behlndf the plow, Mjf mfitx wmaJUar maabjna Jn a, mill s nT IMfd t Mm hum kind of wrk as tbat wfatah .itiM R turning gvJmiaene la a tmrm bam 11.. HflimapK toys Who bav Mm) enwpy -. J -t tK'ihm to pet out inu tte world and .... iii.-n hviiitf -ker vmma H'e good iud jr- MHitatttiw w f.'JvuicmiH sir. i. . j wrii m msjtefc vtiM t tt br .i ! h IU (at t$4 tj ta ma Both 11 ' ' . '' . kind of tollers are needed. The cities would becomi stagnant If It were not for tho In fusion of fresh blood from tho Inexhaustible reservoirs of tho country, and Delaware can fulni Its mission If It sends every year sev eral hundred slcrt youth to thlBelty. And Its nubile school should bo so conducted as to train tho boys to hold their own with tho best when thoy do come here, Tho larger Philadelphia grows tho better demand will thero be for the products of tho Delaware farms, and the annual migration to this city benefits both tho folks who stay and those who go. Beware the Hands of Esau r T WOULD not bo fair to accuso Finance Commltteo of Councils, or Mr. John P. Con nelly, the chairman of that body, or Mr. Charles Scger, who has Introduced a resolu tion asking Director Taylor to furnish Infor mation which has been for months available In his ofnclnl reports and has b'cen shouted from housetops day nftor day, of betraying tho Interests of Philadelphia. Tor Klnanco Committee must needs wait on Its chairman to bo called together, and Mr. Connelly, as chairman, must needs wait for tho Control ler's report, and Mr. Seger must needs havo time to find out what every Intelligent citizen In town already knows. Thero can bo no March election now. Thero can bo an April election and subway construc tion this summer, however, If tho obstruc tionists quit obstructing. Mr. Connelly has tho Controller's report. It may bo assumed, therefore, that his conscientious scruples will not causo'hlm further to hold Philadelphia back, to penalize the citizens and continue for an Indoflnlto period .he exchange ticket "out rage. Mr. Scger, too, can get hold of Di rector Taylor's report at any time, and ho and other Councllmen who havo not heard of tho transit plan, havo a full two weeks In which to master Its contents, for It Is very simple and not at all Intricate. So thero Is nothing In the way of favorable action for an April election, unless, of course, new bogeys are discovered and new excuses for thwarting tho ambition of Philadelphia. Tho people lovo to bo fooled. Tho trickster tricks them over and over again and they rush to him with their votes Just the same; but that is because the pcoplo are credulous. Once let them understand that they have been duped and their Interests traded off: onco let them see betrayal In Its nakedness, and they crush to smithereens tho man who has victimized them. There Is a suspicion of trickery about now; any further delay and it will ripen Into conviction. Let there be no mistaking the facts. Citi zens aro offered a universal flve-cent fare and quick transit between all parts of the city. At tho rnd of 30 or CO jcars the entire now system would belong absolutely to tho city and not a dollar would bo owed on It. The dilatory attitude of Finance Commltteo means that thousands of citizens must bo mulcted In the sum of six cents the day more than they ought to pay; that practically the entire population must wasto precious min utes in going to and from work, hanging on straps; that Philadelphia must lag behind other great cities and do without modern fa cilities. The city Is unanimously for rapid transit, except for a few gentlemen 'who apparently aro strongly represented in Finance Commit tee. These few men inside stand up against the hundreds of thousands outside who know what they want and Intend to get It. It Is an unequal fight. Sore-heads and hang-backs are Invariably crushed. Antl-PhlUidelphlans will do well to become pro-Phlladelphlans In a hurry. There Is work to be done and the Jugglers must get out of the way. The voters hae asked for a chance to otc. and they Intend to have It. American Traditions Upheld THE margin of victory was narrow, as an ticipated, but the House yesterday upheld the President's veto of the Immigration bill, with Its constrictive literacy test. A snob bish policy at its best and a vicious ono at its worst, the spelling-book test will not be come an American principle. The best of our traditions has been upheld and the door of opportunity Is still open to men and women of character who wish to avail themselves of It. Discovering Cornnical THE war In Europe Is likely to teach the Europeans the value of cornmeal as human food. The demand for It has already boosted the price of corn in the American markets, and is likely to boost it still higher. This is unfortunate for the domestic consum ers of corn bread and boiled mush, but there will be compensations. After the war Is over the Europeans who have eaten corn and found It good will continue to eat It, and the fields of waving corn on the American farms will be transformed into gold mines. The yellow kernels will glint with the real lustre of wealth. But even though cornmeal Is dearer than It was a few weeks ago, It Is still cheaper than wheat flour. Necessity may teach some Americans that they can reduce the coat of living, even now, by using more cornmeal. And that Will be another form In whloh the compensation will manifest Itself. Seven Little Bisters and now Seven Little Senators. i-, -One of the compensations of a, snowstorm is that It provides work for the unemployed? Eggs are so expensive that It takes wo or three quarts of wheat to buy a dozen of them. Thero Is a real enjersenoy when men are out of work and It requires real money to help them. - It. JS all right to wage war on Canada, but toBi IJnUsjl States Is not a good plaea from wbiob, toao lfc Hi -1i4l "m i ll j m, i When she has an art so perfect that yu cannot tell it from nature, why should Bramy INattinn. seek to b naturalised T Tteftt AuasUa s,iri wbo boa bva in 13 bat tUm i clow rival af the AjMM&ftt SMSBiw gtrt lw wrrvd m aaynwiaj !,, ' ''''" .' " -" ' ' ON THE BATTLE TJNE OF IUCH AND POOR Both Sides Met Beforo n Commission. They Were Mother Jones and n doling Millionaire Tho Original Closed Shop Discovered. By VANCE THOMPSON Day after day tho baltlo went on. It was a 00ft, slow, unurgont fight, as though alt men know It began In tho beginning of days hnd would go on to tho end of days. Thero was no hurry, for this was tho otcrnal bat tlo between tho Haves and tho WanUto Haves. And so men saluted each other courteously, nn In a leisurely Hundred Years' War, and put up their swords at noontide, and lunched and went at It again lh tho afternoon. But nil tho snmo It was war. ' Will you look on for a moment? Possibly In thl3 casual way you may got nt tho real significance) of what Is called (rather pom pously) tho United States Commission on In dustrial Rein t Ions. It began, I believe, when Congress was petitioned to Investigate tho labor troubles of tho lionworkers. Beforo tho slow-mov ing statesmen got their law passed that troublo had been dynamited Into prison, so tho commission was loosed upon nn nmplor Investigation of labor and tho men who labor. It went forth To mako nn inqultlon Into their real condition, and find n remedy for tholr Ills and discon tent. Thcrcforo tho Eight Inquisitors sit In tho palo .Colonial room of City Hall, New York, In a dignified semicircle hedged off from tho awed spectators. To tho left Is a high-backed chair wherein Big Money sit ting uneasily, is put to tho question. Look nt tho Inquisitors. Big Men Don't Abnub. "Walsh In tho ccntro sits tho chief. Ho Is Frank P, Walsh, nn Irish-fncod man of 40, with red hair and a freo Western manner, a law yer. It Is a plain and evident matter that ho has a heart. Littlo Indignations quiver In his volco when ho speaks of tho Poor Man who has been mutilated In tho mills of toll. Withal the Rich Ma- does not abash him. You may plcturo him lolling back In his big chair, his hands clasped at tho back of his head, his elbows pointing north and south, a smllo on his shrowd, kindly Irish face, as ho glowers shortsightedly through his glases at tho nlch Man. At his left sits a gray, alert old mnn of toll, Lcnnon, the treasurer of tho American Federation of Labor. Ho eyes tho Rich Men warily ns they come and go and keeps It may be habit and not a precaution a light grip on his watch chain. Next to tho laborer member sits Mrs Ilar rlman, the only woman on tho commission. Sho Is dressed in widow's weeds. Tho hat Is curious and amazingly effective. It Is flat and angular and tho crepo falls In straight lines down cither sldo of tho face You havo seen something of the kind In old Venetian pictures, and Indeed it Is to a medioval pic ture that tho beautiful, clear eyed, patrician face rightly belongs. To her right sits Mr. Welnstock, a California merchant. He Is in a revolving chair, so that ho can turn his back on the lady and look out of tho window or turn his back on tho window and talk cheerily to tho lady; thus hour after hour he swings between the two like a pendulum. Round to tho chairman's left are four com missioners: O'Connell, a glzzlcd and drowsy looking (but that Is only his way) man of labor; Ballard, a Kentucky manufacturer, a gray and steady man, who sat hour after hour, his chin In his hand, pondering; Gar retson, an old conductor with a fine bony head, rimmed with gray hair, who studied tho Rich Man with cold, unblinking eyes; and last of all. Professor Commons, of tho Uni versity of Wisconsin, who Is expected to write tho tcport of tho commission. Him you mny plcturo ns .1 small dark man, wholly nlive, spectacled, as every self-respecting pio. fessor should be, with a strong, ccccntilc face madp fine by habits of thought. These, then, aio tho Inquisitors. Mother Jones They faco a dark, crowded, silent audience that fills the pink curtained loom. Doubtless many thero aro eminent. You need only look nt that obscurely celebrated old woman, Mother Jones, of Colorado. Sho Is dressed In tho decency of black serge, with white laco at the throat, and is altogether a radiant and winsomo heroine oven the Rich Man looks upon her without disapprobation. And what havo they done? What docs a commission with a pompous title usually do? They have talked. Day after day, leaning back in his chair his e!bov3 squared over his head Chairman Wulsh has asked questions. So doing ho has dono (as he would say) his "Juty." The chairman was very fond of that word, and said a great deal about the Juty of Capital and tho Juty of Democracy and other solemn Jutles. At first the Rich Men who were put to the ques tion took refugo In pragmatism. Mr. Schlff and Mr. Guggenheim had theories, based largely on the German system of doing things. Mr. Ford, who manufactures automobiles, I think, was anything but pragmatic. He fired a shot that with the less momentous one fired at Lexington has rung round the world. He made one of those amazing state ments that make men sit up and think make them stand up and che?r. I do not bo- Heve there Is a newspaper In the world, East ur tvcoi, mm new itui juiiiteu nis ueciaranon that ho could (and given the chance would) take every prisoner In Sing Sing and employ him profitably at a good wage In his factories. It knocked the wind out of the criminologists. It set the reformers thinking, Jt mad? the rigid old crime hunters gasp. And perhaps there waa in It the germ of a new and rational treatment of the convicts of our thousand prisons and Jails. That may bej but one thing Is suret. If Mr. Ford is not careful he will get himself talked about and his automobile factory, tpo. All this was skirmishing, ' A Man You Can't Define The real battle waa fought when Mr. X D. Rockefeller, Jr., was called tp the stand. You have heard of Fablus Mr. Hockefeller s a great general alpng Fabian JJnsa, Withal his Is an Interesting personality a most curiously Interesting personality. 1 do not think I have ever studied a man of whom H is harder to say -We Js thbj" or "He i that." There are no angles that define him. You are looking at a coqI, smooth surface. 80 far as tha physical man goes tho chief note is one of Inconsplcuousnesa lie Is one of those men you never remember haying seen, bcauf you have seen a tboutajid Just mvh ms. He ta neither tiM nor uhoH. r j Maut or thla. Ht U nornwL H U tfca av '"' ...... ' ' Wl,vt5 H &.J$Sk lViV ,, jA?. vw cK.lv s-svl ,AT t u n - .r, ngo man. Ho has a longlsh, down drooping face, with daik, sereno eyes; his hair is brown and when you havo snld that you havo snid everything. Thero Is nothing more. Mr. Rockefeller Is Inconspicuous not in a mysterious way but simply, Just as tho lamp post Is, because It Is ono among ninny thousands. On thl3 youngish man of 40 there aro no signs of the stress and sag of nn Incredible hugo fortune and stagger ing responsibilities. Ho took his place in the tall-backed chair Just In front of tho grim portrait of old Zachary Taylor and Bpread out his papers on the desk. And there ho was a calm, pleasant man In brown tweeds' and bar and clot shirt who kept a wary eyo on tho Inquisitor and waited. And tho Chief Inquisitor went at him. Such n Duel of Wits It was evident thnt Mr. Walsh was n keen and expert cross-examiner; It was evident that ho was thoroughly familiar with tho dark and tragic labor wars In Colorado ana with tho Rockcfcllor Foundation and with all tho multiple Rockefeller affairs; it was evident that his heart was In his work. Well? He thrust and backed and hawed, he coaxed and cooed In his Irish voice; ho dou bled and turned nnd twisted; lie tried Irony and claborato politeness; ho affected weari ness and Incredulity; and nothing happened. Always In front of him was tho cool smooth surface of a politeness blander than his own a deadlly defense thnt ho could not pierce. It was an astounding thing. I havo seen many gi cat men giants face nn Inquisition In court or In Parliament; but I have never seen so calm nnd deft and tilumphant a witness ns J. D. Rockefeller, Jr. It was not an Intel lectual exhibition. There waa nothing Intel lectual about It. What was In It was some thing rarer and subtler and more Indescrib able. You might think of It In terms of sword piny, but thero wns no apparent effort no flash no clank of feteel. I think Mr. Walsh's feeling must have been that of a man without hands In front of a locked door. Ho couldn't get In. It was not that Mr. Rockefeller refused toan swer. He answered every question with grave politeness, with ample explanations, with po litely worded qualifications, with an evident cate to answer with scruplous exactitude; only, when ho was done you (suddenly real ized that he had left tho matter exactly where It was when the question was put. He was so entirely master of himself that he was Inevitably tho master of tho commis sion. Now it Is not an easy thing to face for das a skilled nnd earnest cross-examlner, to answer him fully, elaborately, with unfailing readiness, and yet never for one moment to say anything but what one has determined to say. I hao nover seen It dono bofore. And therefore I say that behind the cool, smooth surface of that Rich Man that youngish man who has raised Inconsplcuousness to an art thero must be a strange kind of power, I do not know what It Is. It may be Will and a trained Will Is a formidable thing. WlistWillComooflt? And what does an Inquisition of this sort amount to? What will Professor Commons put In his scholarly report? There has been a lot of abstract talk about the psychology of labor, benevolent absolut ism and uplift; there have been certain sad concrete facta about the deeply Intrenched lives of certain miners; there have been dls quieting discussions about huge, oyertoppltng fortunes that are (an Irish volcel Intimates) trying to buttress themselves up on charity foundations; but talk of this sort has never changed anything. Reports to Congress do not usually work miracles. Yet I do not think the Inquisitors have wasted their days. You may remember a statement, which Is possibly historical: "Now there were two men In one city; the one rich, the other poor," The United States Conynlsslon on Industrial Relatlpns has brought those two men face to face; out of the wary oye-searohlng good may come. And one thing more. I have discovered I give you my proud word for It the original Closed Shop. It Is J. D. Roekefeller. Jr. ' 'M LIFE Forenoon and afternoon and night Forenean. And afternoon, and nlghti-Forenoon, and what! ' The empty oag rpau ItKif. No mare? , Ts. that U Uto Mke this fereaooa tuMunc, SWf atUfiwoo a Mbn. this nigbt a ??& j4 'fto U eouid. i4 tby etptra is wn. " "" ' ' HERE'S UOPING 1 .JlJ 1. VTVI . . rJ1-1- . TTnT ' - uiTtuiUl tTtwli1 It rfifi nrrryniTrifi " ft . MIL i nmttW&&?&&S&te&&GV- !- MUl 11 mmi itttsI I I I 1 l3tj JSC5fVn',44BAWjffS3f PANCHO VILLA IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF DIAZ Mixed Qualities in the Character of Anew as the Man of Destiny in Muddled Mexico. w PANCHO VILLA, who on several occasions has maintained that ho would rather bo right than President of Mexico, Is at last President In tho guise of a dictatorship. In his Hfo ho has played many parts. Fugitive bandit, leader of a causo, warrior, dictator tho annals aro briefly told. Less than two year3 ngo, the story iun3, he slipped out of El Paso on a borrowed horse, with a revolver In his belt and seven dollars nnd a half In his pocket. "Will he ever sit in the presidential chair?" was the question of 1914. Thero is yet no an swer, but he is still tho big figure In Muddled Mexico, still hailed by not a few of its pcoplo as "tho man of the hour." Strange things havo happened belotv tho Rio Grande, as those who are familiar with tho history of Porflrlo Diaz know; and stranger things may yet happen. Villa is following tho path that Diaz trod how far therein will he go? The Robin Hood of Mexico His admirers claim that Jn his bandit days ho robbed tho rich to divide tho spoils with tho poor. Thus he appears In the character of Robin Hood. Tales like this are uncer tainties, but Pancho Villa must havo dono something, it seems, to ha;o won the devo tion given him so freely even beforo ho rode out on a borrowed horse for the Invasion of Mexico. They who have seen him at his present work testify that he Inspires as no other man In that much Inspired country. Ho Is described as stocklly built and of medium height, with tho chest nnd shoulders of" n prlzo-ilghter and with a head that Is really "bullet-shaped." Receding from tho back of the neck and from the Jaw it tapers upward In tho most extraordinary fashion. His head is covered with black hair as crisp and curly as a negro's; his skin Is tho color of a well-smoked meerschaum; a small black mustache serves to hide a mouth that Is cruel even when It Is smiling. Tho most at tractive feature of the face Is tho eyes, which are largo and brilliant and piercing. But a reporter who saw them blazing at Torreon describes them as "the eyes of a man who will some day go crazy." Love and Fear and Power It has been Raid that If he has any religion at all It is the religion of demanding absolute obedience from his officers and men. Rut In return for this obedlenco ho gives them al ways und everywhere the best attention and care possible, and his generosity to tho hosts of poor people who come to him for help has been many times reported. Ho has tho two characteristics necessary to a Mexican leader. Not only does lie Instil In his followers fear of disloyalty, but he makes them believe In his sincerity. He acts the part of a real friend on the battlefield or off. When his orders are disobeyed he docs not reason with those at fault he shoots them or locks them up, "Diaz ruled wjth the Iron hand," comments a writer who knows Mexico and the Mexi cans, "but he went little among tb,e people; he was always to most of them a man In a station above them, And be lost his grip; his subjects had only fear and little If any love for him. Madero neither Inspired nor awed his men. Villa does both. He Is a companero,' his men say the highest tribute a Mexican can pay." Love and fear Villa plays each against 'the other. Such Is the secret of his power, lie Starts a Train At Juarea one day Villa rode over to the railway station to superintend th$ departure of a punitive expedition which he was rush ing south. Owing to some mishap to the en. gne the train was late In starting. Villa, after angrily striding up and down the plat form a few tlmea, went across to his chief of transport, and Jerking loose his heavy auto matic, shoved the muzzle In the face of that Startled official. "If that train Isn't out of the station in five minutes," he snarled, "r blow your head off" "But, Bwiwal" trembjiBgly lm not re sponsible for !b delay. Ta ttiEiae's brakwt d.wn.'" iAu, W Vi. ry JL the Famous Ex-Bandit, Who Figures! "That doesn't concern mo," said Villi coldly. "I'm not an engineer I'm a soldier,, If that train doesn't movo In lilvo minutes m you'll bo dead!" You have heard "mind over matter!" Any. how, tho train moved. Another Incident illustrates his peremptory methods. When tho rebel chief entered Chihuahua In December of 101J Villa called to him a Driest, demanding tho kevs to a cer tain church property which lie wanted to use j for a storehouse. Tho priest replied that only tho bishop could turn over the keys, and th bishop was not in tho city. Thereupon VIllsJ said: "I hereby make you bishop. Give me thi keys." And ho got them. Much thnt Iq ncrlv hna hpftn tnil nt Vran. clsco Villa his commandeering of women! J how ho killed his best man at ono of his two a weddings; his arrest of wife No. 2 on H chargo of stealing money; many stories of his ferocious temper and contempt for human life; his brutal executions of prisoners. ,, "Thoso that I have executed," he said a year H ngo, In response to tho protest of an Ameri ; can visitor, "deserved all thoy got. Hereafter wo shall conduct tho war along more civilized lines." A Man of Destiny Out of tho multitude- of btorles of the good and bad in this extraordinary man It Is hard to find tho real Villa; but In recent months, especially, he has been credited with a lopg advance In his personal civilization Perhaps ho must still bo culled a grossly uneducated man, but his Ignorance is not so dense as It 3' was a few years ago. He taught himself to WnH ntlri Tin lino lnotnA.1 cmnfHInt- 01 H - , ...... ..U ...... aw.. ..wu uuuibtM,D S geography slnco the time when ho said to ana American: "I know El Paso is not the largest town In the United States. I have heard there Is larger place called Chicago. But look tfl this" taking a large scale map qt Mexico 1 and placing It over a small scalo map of tM4 United States. I '"Aha!" ho said, "you seo that your country is smaller than mlno." TTIa atnitn.n l1 ilii AmiAi.J nannla ftf his race, following his sudden rise to prom-Si InPtlPA line tflAA cnm.n .,.,, nt- nt ln iTvl All Pi 1H upon him. His advisers nro educnted ram. His generalship nnd strategy are praised M in the bfirhpRf f-Armct rtr rv.tlltnvv pYnprtSts Of Amerlrn. nnd Tl!llrnn TlVitMi rtf wtlflt is H called "force of character" helps account's for his remarkable caroor. In Mexico and elsewhere there may be found a great faith ' Francisco Villa as a national reconstruction 1st. At least he looms large as a maker ef Mexican events. ) Men who knew him before his emergence toj fame, when he had only a handful of tat tered horsemen at his command, say tlistj even then ho was planning to be Presldept. Whether Ills ambition has o'erleapt U"1 Uf time will tell, but In Us service he avoids b Kg folly of Huerta. He does not drink. "WHISKY IS A POOR PILOT 1 To tht Editor of h nunl.. r.,fn, Sir I dealre to taka airantlnn tn vour tii'!M torial In today's paper headed "Whisky U S roor -uoi." m which you make the assertions umt in? uoara or commissioners of Navieaii9" JUver pilots who get drunk The queat'ou oil rttlntn Tln. IntAwt......... 1.nM .., U.. ...Iran ttB:! -.., ." iuiv.iv4.cu JIM liuv uec .. -ff'aa vi w .uuaiu vi iuinnusaianers oi fitYi6"v" according to the secretary, with whom I o" ferred this morning, nor have the pommlMiOJier passed any regulations concerning this ques tion. The law of 1803 provides that ehpuld MJ pilot become Intoxicated while in charge "',. vessel a snan ror the nrst pfrense lose m j" cense for the period of 1? months and for IW second offense be forevor afterwards depriv of hie license; therefore such action as claim the commissioners took yesterday I" B perfiuous. I consider your editorial moat Vn' fair to a body of men consisting of 7$ Pot the majority of wnom do not use liquor la W, form. JOHN P VUJ--n Pre!dnt of the Pilots' Assocltiles. Philadelphia, February J. 1915. The Kveniucj Ledobb had no Intention H: u uniair io one of the most courageous "n: of men In the coirtmunltv when it corometi On tha recent sntlnn nt tha 13,,-rri of CO.1 intMlent of Navigation. The fut thU 1 law penauxeg drunkenness among the pno'-s ' tjie genvral conformity of the pilots t to liwjteiiH tlwt pijbNc oirfalon sustains toe It1 MM t9 l tn9 eetasnn ttc warn? pes pilet adltor akRMpra JaiLR,. ML ft. A 91 Ba' Mt Ca tm I