it M If I 8 PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY emus ii. k. ctmtis. riinT. Chfcrles 11 lAHIIngton, Vlcetriilant John C. Martin, Secretary and Treatureri Philip 8. Collins, John D. William. Director. EDITOIUAL BOAnD I Cries II. K. Cdti, Chairman. P., It WHALBT Eiecutlre laitef JOHN C. MAUTIN .Otnaral Hutn Manactr ruMlihtJ dally at fenna Lccotn Bultdlne, Inderxndenc Square, Philadelphia. LtnoM CXTSit. ......... ,Bron J and Chestnut Btreete Atlanhc Cut. ............... ..VMS-Union HulliJlr. Niir Tonic ........ ,,170-A, Metropolitan Tower Cmewo.... I......V.. ..817 Home lnnurnnce IluM.lInc London 8 Waterloo Place, fall Mall, 8. VS. .. news bureaus! .... winntNOTON noaxtu Ths roil Building- w York IIcriiu.. ......... ...The Ttm't llulldlnr 3aMN lluaato. ....... no Frlei1rlchtraii I-otnoN IluilAB.... ...... ...2 Pall Mall Kaet, S. W. Plats Bciud, .... . .......... .32 Hue Louis lo arani sunscnirrioN terms llr carrier, Dtt.T Onlt, lx centa. Ily mall, pontpald eutnlde of i'hllnlelphla, except where foreign poitara la required, DuCr O.N1.T, one month, tironty-five cent: Dlli.r ONI.T, one ear, three dollars. All mall ub tcrlptlons parable In advance BE1X, 3000 WAtNUT KHYSTONE, .MAIN 3000 PT AdJmt all communications to Evening ttitoer, Indeptntttnce Square, PMladtlphla. XNTtito at tub rttiLit)ELFitiA roorric AB eiCOMD cI.A8 jiAlt. jiattfu. 1'UILADl.U'IIIA. MIIMIAV, MAHLII II, 191B. A man cannot bo content with what he has When he knows that ho has been fobbed of what ho ouahl to have had. The Kniser'fi Reason for the Wnr THE Crcclman Interview with tlio Gorman Chancellor rovenls two notable facts. Tho Ilrst Is tho splendid loyalty of Von Heth-mnnn-HoIlwcg to the Kaiser. He speaks In terma of warmest prulso of his master, mid defends him with tho nrdor of a genulno pa triot. This does credit to his character, and It Justifies the wisdom of tho Kaiser in selecting him for tho high post that he occu pies, Tho second fact Is that tho Chancellor Is nnxlous to remove from tho shoulders of tho Kaiser the responsibility for starting tho war. That decent respect for tho opinion of mankind, to which Jefferson referred on an Immortal occasion, led tho statesmen of all the contending Powers to put tho blamo on Fomo ono else. It li evidently an unpopular war, even with those engaged In It, and each nation Is Insisting that It was forced Into arms. Tho German Chancellor holds England, and not Russia, responsible for tho whole thing. If the British had Informed Frnneo and Russia that they must lot Austria Hungary do Its will with Scrvla, Von Bcth-mnnn-Hollwog says, there would have been no war. So tho British tipped over the brick which sent tho whole row down! It Is not necessary to nrguo this point pro or con. Hut It is Important that It bo put on record, that there Is not a statesman In all Europe who Is not heartily ashamed of tho Infamous war, and anxious to apologlzo for It. "Why Do You Fear Mc, Nellie?" THERE Is not a politician in the city of Philadelphia who dares say that ho Is opposed to rapid transit. There arc a good many of them who say they aro for It, but not in ,tho way It Is possible to get It. In tho first act of tho melodrama tho villain throw Nelllo In front of nn approaching ex press train. In tho second ho tossed her from Brooklyn Bridge. In tho third ho shot nt her three times at closo range, cet her house on fire, threw a dynumlto bomb Into her car riage and sold her to somo Chinese slavers. In the fourth, being In lovo with her, ho asked, "Why do you fear mo, Nelllo?" And now tho gas-stcal advocates and franchise-grabbers, oily with perfumes, throw out their appealing hands and cry, "Why do you. fear our transit scheme, Philadelphia?" How could tho world got along without liumor? New Commission to Begin Functionating THE Federal Trade Commission will soon begin to functioiu.tc. Congress Is not always In session, whereforo it was dcemod wise to provldo a prodding instrument to take Us placo during tho off season. So tho country has a permanent commission of in quisition and regulation, which. It Is antici pated, will spread tho "Now Freedom" Into tho farthest corners of private and success ful business, with tho Idea of determining by what right dividends aro being earned and salaries paid on tlmo. Tho seamen's law will bo effcctlvo In ending whatever chanco there may have been for the rehabilitation of our ocean-going marine. There Is, therefore, nothing left to stab ex cept tho enterprises which have managed, In one way or another, to uirvive "tho Inter minable Congress." What a lino thing it will be, though, if this new commission for gets Its ralson d'etre, conducts itself In a sensible way and undertakes actually to en courago business. People who prefer bread and butter to fine phrases would rejolco exceedingly were such a miracle to happen. The 'flleformed" Senate NO NEW man who takes his seat In the "reformed" Senate can fill the place occu pied by Ellhu Root, of New York, or Theo dore E. Burton, of Ohio. These two men aro succeeded by Senators chosen In the new way, which was to change tho most dis tinguished legislative chamber In the world Into a body representative of something bet ter than tho States, namely, the "peepul." But we were told that If tho Senators wore chosen by popular vote such men as Root and Burton would have seats there. The electors would choose the ablest citizens to represent them and the old abuses would disappear. Tho result cannot be whplly pleasing to the friends of tho reform. In this State the election of a Senator at 'he polls resulted In prolonging the political power of Penrose and bis machine, and in Kansas was followed by the return of Curtis to Washington. Wads worth, of New York, who succeeds Root, may be an able man, but he Is not In tho same class with the distinguished statesman who la retiring- Tho New York Legislature would have returned Root under the old sys tem, and Penrose might possibly have been defeated in the Oeneral Assembly here. The country will have to worry a Ions tinder the new system as best It may. Hqw to Make Everybody Happy THE oo-operation which will glve( the con sumer a dollar's worth o'f food 'for wejsy daiiar that he spends Is the kind thate "lawn dweller Is looking for A psft8at tb Ifttrmera' Institute in Horticultural Hall Ua promised this kind of mutual helpful ness. It la to come about theuglt the Rale of tb products of the farm to the consumer fut iirectly as polble. At present the town Awalter rts about M WM' worth of farm pM&m tor dollW, W to tbe luu sarwm wk feUgU it d its way EVENING from tho field lo tha tabjo, Tho cost of dis tribution Is responsible for much of tho high cost of living. Tho farmer would doubtless be content if ho could get BO cents for what ho now sells for 85 cents, and tho consumer would bp delighted to get for 76 cents whot now costs him $1. But when Is this result to be brought n bout 7 The farmer or tho company of co operative farmers who can accomplish It will deserve the thanks of every producer and consumer, nnd even somo of tho middlemen may then find It more profltabto to go Into tho producing business than to continue to servo merely ns n go-between from tho field to the dinner table. The Governor's Glorious Guilt THE local option situation hns clarified Itself In tho two months that Doctor Brumbaugh has been In nlllce, so that thero Is ho oxcusc for ally misconception about what Is Involved In tho fight. Tho Organization, otherwise tho Penrose machine, which refused to Indorse local op tion In tho party platform, Is lining up with tho Interests which nro seeking to prevent tho counties of the Commonwealth from having home rule. They wish to provont the temper ance eoaimunltlci from closing tho saloons, and they nro prepared to uso all the power at their command to carry their purpose. The Governor, who was elected on his own locol option platform, Is calling to his sup port tho Democrats and Progressives, who also pledged themselves to local option In the campaign preceding election. Tho Gov ernor Is a Republican, but ho Is a Pcnnsyl vanlan first. Ho did his best to align his party with tho undoubted sentiment of tho majority of ho voters of all parties. IIo failed. But ho maintains that local option Is not a partisan Issue In tho sense that tho tariff Is partisan; and that It Is not a politi cal Issue, save ns every device for securing to the people tho right to govern themselves Is a political Issue. If tho Democrnts will align themselves with him in the fight for homo rule on the lhiuor question, so much tho better for the Democrats. If the Republican machine chooses to align Itself with tho whisky Interests In opposition to homo rule, bo much tho worso for the machine. Tho attempt to convict tho Governor of party treason because of his appeal to tho Democrats will fall. It Is possible, however, to convict him of opposition to tho whisky Interests. Ho admits it and glories In It. Ho Is guilty of tho high crlmo of striving with all his might to secure for tho peoplo of tho Commonwealth tho legal right to oust tho saloon when they tiro of It. This Is tho kind of guilt that glorifies. To bo lnnocont of It Is a disgrace which only a blind and stumbling party organization could court. Is New Freedom Despotism in Disguise? Another evil Is Hint of buyers playing ono manufacturer ngnlnst another, and tho consequent cutting of prices to get busi ness. THIS interesting statement does not nppear In a formal defense of a combination to fix prices, but in an attack by the Depart ment of Commerce upon the manufacturers of Montgomery County for what It describes as their Inefficient and lax business methods. Secretnry Redfield is not so familiar with tho gospel of tho Now Freedom ns ho should bo, or ho would not let nny such treasonable statement go tiut from his ofllce. Tho con sumer has been freed from tho tyranny of thro trust agreement and tho manufacturers have been forced to fight for their lives in tho Held of free competition. Is this not what the President has brought about by his legislative program? Did. not he prom ise tho country that this was what ho would do? Tho only Justification for this apparent backfire from the President's own artillery is that Secretary Redfield nnd the Administra tion bellovo that the Government should fix all prices and prevent price cutting. Tho now anti-trust bill makes It a misdemeanor to sell goods to ono man for less than thoy aro sold to another, and It may soon bo a penal offense to try to sell goods at all with out first asking permission from somo bu reaucrat In Washington. But It Is Incredible that the New Freedom can bo only a dis guise for tho old tyranny of tho mlddlo-ago despotisms. Value of Air Craft in War IN A report of operations of his army In tho field, during December and January, Field Marshal French says, "Armies havo now grown accustomed to rely largely on aircraft reconnaissance for accurate Infor mation of tho enemy, but tho effective per formance of this service Is materially Influ enced by wind and weather." Not as agents of destruction, but as feelers for cannon; not as destroyers, but ns tho eyes of armies havo aeroplanes come Into their own. Never before In tho history of war havo opposing generals been so well Informed of tho situation and movement of the enemy as In tho present conflict. There Is little chanco for surprises of any kind. Whatever victories aro won must be won by hard fight ing, with the Infantry rushing in to capi talize the smashing of the artillery. The Bhlps of the air have fully demonstrated their worth In war, though not exactly In tho manner expected. Their functions are different from but In no respect less Im portant than what was anticipated. A stnglo good roads day a year is not enough for a State of this size, with such bad roads. Talk of reviving racing In this vicinity "to Improve the breed of horses" Is being heard again. There ought to be voices enough in this city to supply two choral societies of 800 to assist the orchestra in producing tho great symphonies. That actress-nurse who thinks that It Is a crime against neutrality for Americans to sell munitions of war to the belligerents Is a pro-German. It will take until March IS for the Con gressional Record, appearing every day, to print all the things said In the closing days of the session. Talk is not cheap. The Treasury Department believes that there Is a drawback on automobiles. The man who puts a mortgage on his house to buy une has discovered that there is a flare back. - ' I in i " The snow has temporarily reduced the number of unemployed, especially In the early hours of the morning, when a man would rather lie abed than get out and shovel the walks. The pupils in the Hill School, of Pottstown, think that Lincoln was the greatest American who ever lived. Some distinguished Ameri cans now alive, who have a pretty good opinion of themselves, do not attend the H1U KefeucJ. or the vote might have been different LEDGER - PHILADELPHIA. Mnv THE HERO OF THE ZEPPELINS Germnn Count Who Invented Them Served Apprenticeship in America and Won Success Only After Many Failures. By JOHN ELFRETII WATKINS TEUTON tongues utter tho name Zeppelin with affection, but It sends n shiver down tho spines of Britisher, Frenchman and Slav. In It tho nclltrnl finds magic, for It spells "pluck" with a big "P." Count Zeppelin Is ns gamo a hero as figures In tho European ratnclysm. Perhaps there Is none other who, at threescoro years and ten, could come back to begin life anew after n lifetime of suc cessive failures resulting In utter ruin; In deed, dependence upon tho charity of others. That feat has been accomplished by Ferdi nand von Zeppelin. Tho Fatherland loves him for It. And now, In his 77th year, tho nged count proposes to leap across the deep, In ono of his mammoth shuttles, nnd pay us a visit (which, ho assures us, will bo bomb less). indeed, Zeppelin's nffcctlon for America Is sincere. There Is n lot of sentiment behind his proposnl tn como flying hither over tho defiant Atlantic. In Our Civil War Ho first served his apprenticeship In mili tary ballooning In or, rather, above this land of ours. Whllo our Civil War wni rag ing ho then a dashing cavalry ofllcor of 25 wan detailed by his army ns a wnr observer to travel with tho Union troops. During this service ho narrowly escaped capture at Fred ericksburg. While attached to tho Army of tho Potomac ho ascended In ono of tho Union war balloons nnd observed tho enemy's move ments, thereby receiving an Inspiration by which his picsent Kaiser's army Is now profiting. And hero wo havo another "Mnde-In-Amorlcn" Idea being put to uso by our warlike cousins. A paunchy Teuton above medium stature, Blsmarcklan In baldness of dome and fierce ness of mustache, yet merrily quizzical of eye, Is Zeppelin today. He gets his noble title from among tho first of tho land barons of Germany, and ono of his ancestors was min ister to Frederick tho Great, who, In his hon or, erected a monument at L,udwlgsburg (whero tho present count attended military Bchool before going up to Tuebingcn Univer sity). Lako Constance, upon whoso shore tho present Count Zeppelin was born, has mir rored tho long series of pathetic failures that but recently culminated In tho triumphs which have made his name famous tho world over. Whon but 18 ho began theso experi ments, which early convinced friends and neighbors that ho was a madman. Ho do voted himself first to tho hcnvier-than-nlr principle of flight, that which was to break so many henrts and heads. Model after model fashioned by his dextious hands was sont fluttering Into tho wavelets of Lako Constance. To watch contemporary inven tors ho mado cxponslvo trips about Europe. Tho Siege of Paris. This period of futile experimentation was Interrupted by his military mission to Amer ica, nnd It might hero bo added (as a Bldo llght upon his character) that after Lee's surrender ho returned Into our northern wilderness to discover tho sources of tho Mississippi, but camo nearer to starvation than to his goal. Returning homo, ho took up arms against his country's present ally, Austria, and soon after against Its present foe, France. Across the French frontier ho nnd 10 comrades mado a heroic dash on tho very day war was declared. None of tho others In the Intrepid llttio band escaped. But what most thrilled tho plucky young count during tho Franco-Prussian War was tho sight of refugees escaping from besieged Paris in balloons. This spectacle rewhettcd that Interest in tho wnr balloon which Zeppo lln had first gained In America. The ultlmato result was abandonment of the heavler-than-alr for the balloon prlnclplo flight. But be fore theso later experiments could attain tho stago of public demonstration tho count reached his C3d birthday. IIo now began to demonstrate how vigorously the human mind can create after middle life. When theso ex periments began ho possessed n mngnlflcent landed estate at Gyslnr, Wurttemborg, und a handsomo mansion In Stuttgart. Ho was very rich. He faced no prospect of crum bling fortunes, In Franco ho saw the noted neronaut, Renaud, fly a cigar-shaped balloon, whose flabby body remained tho plaything of the wind despite tho desperate efforts of Its clumsy electric motor. About that timo our papers were filled with glowing accounts of aluminum. Zeppelin, returning to France, was quick to take advantage of tho now metal, of which ho now had wrought a light shuttle-shaped framework of cantilever con struction. Inside this ho placed a water proof envelope concealing 10 separate bal loons. At the same time he turned to his advantage the light engtno perfected by pio neers then experimenting with the automo bile. As a result he perfected a dirigible bal loon which, In theory, seemed to put Renaud's to shame. Germany appeared to have won another victory over France. Yet scorn and opposition were still being directed at the count by a large faction of his own countrymen. He was branded a visionary, a crank. Men of Influence were warned to take no stock in him and, as these pessimists predicted, his first dirigible was a failure. Part of his estato had been sold to pay for it. Discouragement emote him, but he was quick to recover. He saw the de fects that had caused the failure and de termined to remedy them in another model. Faced by Ruin. More land was sold and soon Zeppelin's second dirigible mounted the air, It made a record flight of 900 miles, passing safely through clou Ibursts, thunderstorms and hur ricanes. T. .umph seemed within the In ventor's grasp, but while the rejoicing mul titudes were throwing up their caps It drifted away from its moorings, unmanned, and proved a ead failure. That was In January, 1906. The Count, although now 68 and gam bling against poverty and ruin, staked his 'reputation on a third monster, which, after showing great promise, fell a pitiable wreck upon the Swiss shore o( Lake Constance, The aged Inventor was nov In the very depths of despondency. Every houiia and every acre pf his once princely estate had been Invested Jn failure. The papers published pathetic pen pictures of his plight. Upon a small pittance allowed by wealthy relatives, he and his Countess were forced to live in a four-roomed cottage In a remote village of South Germany But his discour agement was again of short duration. Ztal OH to take another chance, he went up to Bortta ami after a hard strung m.V Ar i t enough pessimistic friends In tho Reichstag to put through a bill appropriating $125,000 for further experiments. When tho Count was 70 ho contemplated his fourth dirigible. The Government agreed to purchnso It for half n. million dollars If It should remain 24 hours in tho air, and then land safely upon terra flrma. But after a record-breaking 12-hour flight and whllo anchored for repairs, tho noblo ship was ex ploded by an electric spark generated by defectlvo machinery. Fortunately, this fourth dirigible had, dur ing its remarkable flight, been nblo to re store public confidence before the explosion took place. A great fund was at onco raised by popular subscriptions and tho Government chipped in. Tho result was tho "Doutsch land," which, after a long series of successes, was blown Into a forest and completely wrecked, her passengers descending from tho trees by ladders; and next nppeared "Zeppelin VI," whoso careless crow set her atlro whllo sho lay In her dock. Dcsplto all theso discouragements tho Count was recently ablo to organlzo a cor poration with $3,000,000 capital and to build an Immense plant endowed with more than $1,500,000 of Government money. This plant has for several years been turning out tho successful military "Zeppelins" used In tho present operations against tho Allies. Even before tho outbreak of tho present war Zeppelin Vivas tho most popular man In Germany. So much had his aeronautical tri umphs made him tho hero of heroes that, to escapo ovations at railway Btatlons, he had to confine his goings and comings to auto mobiles or Zeppelins. OUR NATIONAL CAPITAL Lord Bryco Compares It in Situation and Beauty With the Capitals of Europe. IN a paper prepared for the National Geo graphic Society, Lord Bryco, formor Brit ish Ambassador to this country, considers Washington In comparison with tho leading capitals of the world. After speaking a warm admiration for tho Ideal slto of tho city a beautiful amphltheatro between hills that aro rich with woods and declcrlng that tho surroundings of tho American capital yield only to Constantinople, with Its Bos porus, nmong thp great capitals of tho world for charm of setting, our friendly critic con trasts Washington with Its rival cities abroad. "Whereas Nature was most lavish In the artistry with which It modeled the site for futuro Washington," he says, "Berlin stands In a sandy wuste, perfoctly flat, with hero and thero a swampy pond or lake, and washed by a sluggish stream. Tho German capital Is stately. Its streets aro broad. They aro bordered by many noblo buildings, but the envious never can bo beautiful becauso of an ungracious Nature, Petrograd, the great Russian capital, has but one beauty, that of its splendid river, Nova. Besides this stream, thero is but a flat, often waterlogged, surrounding country, here and there dotted with stagnant pools and swamps, and stretch ing into an almost limitless distance, devoid of feature. . "Tho landscapes around Paris are agree able, but havo nothing at all striking, noth ing nearly so fine in the lines of their scen ery as the hills that Inclose the valley In which Washington lies, nnd no such charm of such a still wild forest as Washington affords. Nor Is tho Seine a stream which can be compared tq our Potomac, So, too, is the scenery of London, Madrid and Vienna be hind that of Washington. "The Thames, the Wlen and Madrid's thirsty little streamlet cannot begin to com pare with the beauty of the broad Potomac, Chief among the advantages of these for eign capitals over Washington Is their qual ity of being ancient, an old age which gives to them a certain number of picturesque buildings, crooked old streets, stately1 churches and spots hallowed by the name of famous men who were born there, died there or worked there. This advantage the Ameri can capital can hope to overcome with time. "There are a legion of points In favor of the young capital upon the Potomac, There is no more beautifully wooded city In the world than our national capital, nor one In which the trees seem to be so proper a part of the city's life. Further, where other capi tals are crowded, some to a point of almost Irremediable congestion, there is still plenty of elbow room In Washington, still every op portunity to make Improving changes in buildings and in city plan. Washington U npt a noisy commercial or smoky Industrial city. The magnificent structures in Its ave nues need not become sooted with the grime of factories." TO THE OVERANXIOUS Tblnk you, 'mid all this mighty sum Of thing forever speaking. That nothing of lteflf will come. But we mint t!lf be aeeUlngl Wordiworth. TT O 11 THE ALLIES ADVANCE (1) North American Review "Tho Or ganization of Public Opinion." (2) Atlantic Monthly "Somo Political Phases of Government Ownership." (3) Hvorybody's "Guilty of Unemploy ment. Who? This Nation." PUBLICISM IT IS a curious human phenomenon that tho person who does not agree with you should always bo Illogical in 'his arguments, blind to fallacies, careless as to premises and ut terly irrelevant in his deductions. Man of parts ho may bo, holder of a dozen doctor's degrees, publicist do luxe, with a national reputation for brilliance, but naive, oven puerile, In his reasoning. The curious thing Is that this fatal flaw In hl3 logic ruins his entiro stylo. Ho seems to havo lost his "punch", since a year ago, when ho wrote that delightful article on "Hoodoos and Voodoos In tho Antipodes." In splto of pitying him for his fatuous feebleness, thero Is a certain fascination in watching his misguided efforts. There Is al ways stimulus, a sort of intellectual massage for a conservative in reading radical articles, and for radicals In reading reactionary propa ganda. Thero Is a fair division of articles on public affajrs and lntorests between both sides In tho current magazines. Under tho mild and generic title, "The Or ganization of Public! Opinion," in tho North American Review (1), President Hadley, of Yale, represents tho conservatives with a criticism of tho direct primary. Ho is cheer fully optimistic in his description of the con vention system, from under which wo aro Just passing. For tho past 20 years we have been trying to give tho people a more direct volco In the work of government. Wo have been experi menting with measures Hko tho Initiative, tho referendum, tho recall or the direct pri mary. As wo look over what has been ac complished by those means, we are surprised to seo how slight has been their effect. Tho new system has simply substituted one kind of organization for another. In 1824 wo overthrew the legislative caucus as a dominant power In politics and left tho field open for tho party machine. Today wo aro overthrowing tho party machine and aro leaving tho field open to tho press. And ac cording as the press uses Its new power for evil or for good, will the results of the ref erendum and tho direct primary and other Blmllar agencies of modern democracy, be nlso evil or good. , Tho convention system has been distinctly favorable to the nomination of businesslike candidates for the principal offices. With the substitution of the direct primary we aro bound to lose something of this ndvantago. Wo aro almost certain to see a larger num ber of candidates who represent extreme views on either side. Are Wo Advancing Backward? Tho conservative point of view 1b sounded again In a warning against Government own ership in tho February Atlantlo (2). Tho article Is by Samuel Dunn, who Is editor of the Railway-Age Gazette. The fundamental trouble with Government ownership Is that it reverses a tendenoy which has marked the progress of modern civilization and has contributed greatly toward promoting It the tendency toward differentiation of political and economic func tions. Under the patriarchal system all po litical, social and economic functions were concentrated in the patriarch. From the Middle Ages to the present time the differ entiation of these various functions, while often retarded, has never ceased. Government ownership Is a movement backward because It would reconsolldate political and economic functions. Public own ership often is advocated as the only ef fective means of destroying the corrupting alliance of big business and politics. But al ready the two great movements for the puri fication of politics and for the regulation of concerns of a monopolistic or quasi-monopolistic character have practically dissolved this alliance and are raising the tone of poli tics apd reducing the abuses in business. To balance this defense of "thlngs-as-Is," there la a ringing arraignment of our gov ernmental negligence In regard to unemploy ment by William Hard in Everybody's (3) : We knew 12 months ago that during this winter, as during all previous winters, the owners of the earth, the employers, the leaders, would be obliged In the annual col lapse of their leadership, to discard several million of their employes, their followers would be obliged to desert them would be obliged to leave them leaderless and work less. And we knew that in the ears of count less harassed, hunger-hunted men the whis per of irresponsible recklessness would sound, and the suggestion of crime which brings food, and of vice, which brings forgetfulness, would make Its entrance, ana at the end of the winter we should have ono more new reeling regiment of shattered characters one more new horde of those who were among the unemployed but who are now forever among the uneroployaples. There are fourdevloes for blot ting out this spectacle of leaders abdicating and followers starving. These devices are ascertained, established, standing rusting for use. We knew them hist winter. We knew thern the winter be fore that. The committees of distinguished gentlemen who are now investigating tbe un .1 BEST THOUGHT IN AMERICA employed, lodging them, souping them, ij Ing them and asking them their n3 mothers' maiden names will discover Eoty uuw wiiul wub uuctiuy lying reCOraM ' various reports on uncmployn' Tho four devices recommended atj scribed by Mr, Hard aro: 1 "Regularlzatlon," meaning the latlng of their output by firms, so i) spread it out evenly through the yean ellmlnato rush and dull seasons. 2 Public employment bureaus. 3 Public works, largo scale public I provomonts, of commercial and pn& value, which at tho samo tlmo provlto est work for thousands. q unemployment insurance, as ucct fully established In England and t! countries. THE EIFFEL TOWER From ths Cleveland Plain Dealer. Not long ago tho Eiffel Tower celebnidS 2oth birthday, and no doubt a lot of Puiit looked up from their war bulletins Ion; etc; to remark that It was pretty tall for III i; tho umei xower is still tno stanainj th Paris. If this tallest of all man-made Btructiirtif scssed tho human senses It could tell an lit lng story. For a quarter of a century Iti braved the elements, shrinking In thecoUt expanding In tho sun, tho most extended t mometcr by many degroes known to man. In Its summit twico a day Greenwich roetn t is sent out by wireless telegraphy and coai'-l chronometers nro thereby rcgulatea. Scientists hnvo found It useful In tictriiitrnt variations of atmospheric pressure, and ticH suit of their observations shows that tM U! Is a mighty baromoter as well as thennoecH It offers tho means for many other obswvitk of an Interesting nature. In Bhort, tho groat structure, which w a signed as a world's fair wonder, a nubHBij traction, a show feature, a marvel, atoj.n developed factors of scientific value of vhidl is doubtful it tho amoitious aesisner i drenmed. Now it passes Its quarter-century WrtliM erect, rigid, sound In brace and Dolt, urcn it stand. WRITERS IN GORGEOUS RAIMEfl From the London Chronicle. terlzed M. Emllo Verhaeren in his yoatS,U been common to many famous writers, ftj raell as a young man startled the tqwniq evening dress comprising green velvet tww a canary-coiorea waistcoat, nnu iw -lace cults. Dickens, likewise, was' fond s cerium ui.Bi.b k.cc. ,w.o.w .,..,..- -- , in accompaniment with a vivid scarlet tie, e i.- ...A.4 .. n r.ll.'c, ctiiritn nnA fllV Pi sky-bluo overcoat with red cuffs. Evese fearful and wonderful was uumas aptw at an ambassador's reception In "a MM' which were depicted a number of mtw demons disporting themselves amid fun"' yellow fire." "My costume was a greitc cess," he wrotcV "overy one thronged jw and made mucn ot me. A PASTORAL xjiero in u inn uco.ua ...o ..,.. ---- - Shady with birch and beech and own And brilliant underfoot with thousand P Steeply the thlcKets to ms nooaa ucv Straight trees in every place ineir mien lopo uhdiw, , ,, t And pendant branches trail their folUJM tlnon his watery face. t , Swift from tho sweltering pasturage h &?? TT,.. . . i -ooir ihA nieaBantWf Pictures his gentle purpose, as he g Straight to the caverned pool W made. a His winter floods lay bare The Btout roots in the air; ,,,.& His Bummer streams are cool, wnm have played - Among their fibrous hair. J A rushy Island guards the bj2 j And hides u irom me nic"" - , peace ... js The lazy cows wrench many a Bcen r Robbing the golden market of the le? J .- .-- 1 .. .Inn &2 Ann mucn uarfioa iiua. By banks of myoaote; ,,vj And scented flag and golden fleur-iw Delay the loitering boat. .1 ij . v.iu oi ih uinnrt. where the SJ Eddies away, are tangled mass on i rH The water-weeds, that net tne in lj; And scarce allow a narrow stream i Where spreading crowiwv "- ine drowning iioi.ui....-, A Wavlng'the tassels of her silken s5 Below her silver stars. , Where Is the bower beside the silver S O pool and flowery thickets, near O trees of freshest foliage and treJSl Km No sharer of my secret i anunt Lest ere I come the while - B" Jl ff " "Vr.u Ui P or iem na uu..ir .....-.. -- Within your guardian s,BobM( pfe EX LIBRIS . . i i. -j. .... no T rnfl jnan ma noo. ;m - -- -""wr asi iaaiug iu u.wn - ,. a I crossed a tale of how, In o"''. At Arqua, wltn ma dooks uruu. - jm The word to Petrarch, and with f 'S t, Mntiv o-er his volume that To Silence paid his willing lsnil And they who found him whispered .Bjj Thus timely from old comradeships gg To Silence, aiao rise, f"!-; Stillness ana omy asaa VTTtnto And no light Mne save my ."S ,st of his una intent on ''"JrXt