' ft V E K IX ff LIST? GIT L ADfe , , ,nmi rn i iiliiunii.i. ii i) .. .im mmirir .mi J inn n - J-r V . ,il.i...'i ' i ' i - n...i.u nil mi I "' V -" T r ' i "inf n lili ' " " ' ' ''" "" """ ""' ' "" " """ linear . ;uetmt0 ifeftger f tifiLtC LEDGER COMPANY OTJII'8 II K CPRTrB. PstsieewT. efcjrtw IT LwlMfttm.Vk-trreDMwiti JWin C Mtrlln, wSTRr,n8i. """fi rM"'f ken. John B. mum BDrrontAt tOAnm Cries H K CcftTia, rhtlrmtn. t J"1' Riwitlre Belter tOilU C MAhTIN nfnrrBnlnfi UtiI!f PaNUheJ dally at Pbo I.iwia HelMIs, inpwl-nce 8)ar, rhfUdttptifa. !t,LS2!?Jt Dr' A5 ntntmll Streets P Ve 1TO-A. MetreMUUn "SiTrtr nwsntr J EsrT Bundle, J Lorn iM aloha llematml ffiilMIn, CHWOO IJM Trt- Bnfldls, I"Oaeo 8 Waterloo ne, rut lull, 8. W. , NEWS BtmBAUSs JfE." np The lnM nuHdlnr tosj( ncEAo a phi Maii mt.B w, Pin Bcxsav 32 Hue Irfuls ! Orand sunscnrpTtov TEiuta Br riftlef, Daiit Otit, lx cents Uy milt, penlpald eeieM ef Phllidelrhlo, wcept hre foreign poU H wqulMd, Dint Oicti, n monih, twmr-nrs cental PML7, 0!,Lt' m ''.. three dollars All mall ub f.-flptlons paritit tn advance. KKte 8iibctlber wUhlnir eddrem ehatifid must ! old ii well a new address. -T Into military arhlvement while other na tions linvt ben utilising their factories for the peaceful purposes of mankind. It in ft frightful handicap, but not one which It la Impossible to overcome: and overcome It must be, no matter at what cost In blood and treasure. Penco must bo dictated not from, but In, Berlin. B' BStt, 1M9 WAtNOT KETSTONE. MAM IMS CT" Ai&rtM oil Mihmimffntffliie to Kxtntng tftiutt, Indtpindrnm Sjiiari, rhttaAtltihla. a.yitscD at tn rmuerLrmi rostorrtoa jib bscond suaa unt. Mints. THE AVKHAO0 NET PAID DAILY CltlCULA- TION dP THE BVKNtNO LEDOKH FOH Jl'NB WAS 8J,8iT. PHIMDnLPIlIA, FII1DAY, AUGUST O, 1915. Hi . - .. . Humanity makes mistakes traotc mistakes makes apologies in one age for the! taronts It did tn a former auc and hullds mon uments to martyr out of the stones ichcrewtth ii stoned them. A Nntlonal Duty: Create a Merchant Marino APIUME duty( of Congress In its work for prcimrcdnes.i Is to put a merchant marine on both ocentin. Its llrst move toward that end should bo to repeal tho seamon'fl Jaw, and with tho decks thus cleared, to turn the wholo matter over to n special commla olon of experts. Thcro isn't an Iota of doubt about tho need for a bid merchant marine In peace; tho last year baa driven homo tho furthor lesson of Ha essential value to a nation at war. Tho only question is now ono of method. How can tho question bo best han dled by Congress; how can tho end settled upon bo best obtained? Creating a merchant marine is a technical question. It must bo settled by men who l'now nil tho many economic and commcr- t clal factors contributing to it. Therefore f Congress must tnke tho whole thlmr out of politics. A policy must bo framed along non pollttcal and therefcro non-contentlous linos. There can bo no battle of local self-interests, such as wages over tho tariff. National needs cry imperatively for satisfaction. It is up to congress to put them in tho proper hands. The New Germanic Union COINCIDENT with the triumph of Teu tonic arms fn Russia is tho report of diplomatic tentntlves toward a new Ger manic union. Mengro as tho nccounts are, they are unquestionably moro significant than oven tho fall of Warsaw. German dlplomnts nro at work perfecting a new customs-union to embrace tho two central empires. So far only a union In suring Identical tariff regulations in Ger many and Austria-Hungary is suggested. Already tho Huiignrlans of Ihn ,ini , archy are In protest. If nntlonal Integrity is precious to Hun gary, tho protest comes none too soon. Slnco 1815 Prussian consolidation has followed close on tho formation of precisely such unions. At that tlmo Prussia wlnnri nut aiv, .,.. .. fpront tariff schedules. In 1833 the Zollvcreln Was formed and established a single sched ule in tho thirty-six boundaries of what Is now tho German Empire. By 1842 Austria and two Interior provinces alone were out side tho union. So It was that when Bis marck began to shape his empire tho ele ments wero n!ready grappled to each other with hoops of commercial steel. That Is tho now Ideal-to embrace Austria and Hungary, to win to tho Adriatic But It will need a second Bismarck for Its achievement; nutter Your Own Dread iB A MAN, not a goat. Do your own thinking. Find out what sort of city you livo In. Search your mind and see if that Is tho kind of city you want. Is It giving you a Just return for your money? Is It making llfo better for your wife? Is It doing Its best for your child, In sanitation, in mltk Inspection, in schools, In playgroupds, In parks? Is It watching after your Interests every mlnuto of tho day? Is It looking forward further than your eyes aro capable, building for your future and tho future of your family? If It Isn't, think out who's to blamo. YoUr nolf, first of nil, for letting your brain llo idle. Then your representatives for taking ndvantago of your docility. Set your thought to work chastening your representatives. Think harder every day over this big prob lem of making Philadelphia a better city to live in. Don't let tho political boss think for you. Ho won't think your way. His bread Is but tered by your passivity, and ho knows It. He will novcr do anything to wako you up. Whllo you sleep ho robs the till. Don't expect tho business man to act for you. Ho may put your thought Into action; ho has dono so many times. But don't fall back In dependence on stealing somo of a busy man's tlmo r d energy. It is you who havo tho bigger stako In clvio righteous ness. The business mnn needs nn honest city government; but you. need that and something more an Instrument of construc tive welfare. Tho business mnn has his In come, his capital, to keep him and to do his bidding; you have only your fellows. Linked to them by tho vote you can forgo that sword of protection, that tool of help fulness, the porfect city. And If you don't think, If you don't vote, If you only cast your ballot for tho old conception of an open city till, what about domocracy? Can It exist? Democratic gov ernment Is a failure, a bigger falluro than any autocracy that over ruled over slaves, unless yqu think Its wny to triumph. GERARD, A MAN WITH A MISSION Our Ambassador to Germany Seoms to Have Proved Himself tho Right Man In the, Right Place nt the Right Tlmo. By ELLIS RANDALL WHEN tho story of American diplomacy during the years of tho Great War Is finally written, no chapter In all its splendid pages will be read with greater pride and gratification by tho cltUcns of this country than that which will pay a 'well-earned tribute of pralso and honor to the official representatives of oUr Government nt the capitals of Europe, Nor, in tho troublous twelvemonth which has Just passed, havo tho American pcoplo withheld their recog nition and acknowl edgment of tho ca pacity and character displayed by their Ambassadors, Minis ters and Consuls in manifold and dim 2s WmWm JAMES W ClKItAItD, tho performance of Munitions the First Requisite for Defense TIH3 Gcrmnns' havo tho guns and tho shells to put Into them. Tim Allies' millions of men, no matter how well they aro trained, cannot win unless they havo In their hands tho Instruments of war. Preparation for tho national dofenso is not merely a matter of training n reservo army or of building a great navy. It is pre eminently a question of providing munitions. Wo should not only havo an enormous storo of guns and shells to fit them, but factories capable of turning out in prodigious quantity whatever supplies mlglit bo needed In case of conflict. That is tho lesson Europe teaches the United States, and it mut not bo Ignored. Si- End of the Tragedy of Errors WHEN Mr. Wilson was Ipauguratedjthero was an organised government In Mexico. SCtflnt ,T ,ntereata n Nicaragua and other Central American Itepubllcs had in- diplomacy had put an end to much of tho persecution of Americans. The Wilson Administration at onco substi tuted for a atronsr forelc-n nniin,. m. ., water program. It began to argue about 1 ?m"'" """ lo oeff instead of demand, to advise instead of order, and within a few months there was chaos south of the HIq Grande Our Utopian method. of help ing Mexico assisted In making a shambles of tho country. "A fool friend," said a philosopher, "is more dangerous than any nemyl" The President, It seems, realties the futil ity of his former nroirrnm tvi.u i.- ,.. -m pother American nations, peace In Mexico la . D -iBi.uuiaiiea. uooai Dut what a pity that tlje clenched flat Instead of the supplt. eating palm was not used long ago! Industrial Preparedness PITTSBURGH'S now Public Health Serv ice Station Is out to Investigate every possible factory condition that makes for Ill-health. This government study of occu- j.auomu aiscnscs will ultimately bo into matters of lighting, ventilation, length of hours, dust, water supply and sanitation; but Its primary field will be tho very Inter esting and essential ono of fatlguo. It will study tho routine of work In tho factorioa about Pittsburgh, and try to estimate just how tho character of different operations the rapidity and duration, anil tho alterna tion with other sorts of work, nffect tho worker's nervous stamina. From Its ob servntlons the manufacturers should gain a very valuable knowledge of what methods of organization make for tho least strain in their workers and biggest iraln in timi,. .. uct. Healthy workmen mean a better out- i'ui miu u ueuer proilt. Healthy workmen mean something more something on a national scale. Uncle Sam may not realize It, but ho Is taking a big step townrd preparedness by such efforts to protect and better iho labor of the country Keeping up the standard of tho nation's health, assuring an efficient working body was ono of Germany's supremo bits of pre paredness. Her vigorous, hord-marchlng army is ono of tho results of tho wisdom she showed In the conduct of Industry cult tasks. The Amhnsnnclnrn tn thn nrlnrt pnl warring nations havo had work to do of big men's size, and they havo dono it to their own credit and to tho credit of their country. They havo not, indeed, determined any of tho great Issues of world affairs, yet they navo oorno heavy responsibilities with a tnctfulness and good Judgment which havo meant much to alt nations. If wo remember that It was only tho tactful personal conduct of tho British Ambassador at Washington which saved the United States from war with England something llko fifty years ago, then, perhaps, wo shall bo moro appreciative of tho servlco rendered bv rfflnlnnt. woll- .. .v .. .... qunlhlcd diplomatic agents In times of po litical strain Thcro Is no doubt that our dlnlomatlc force abroad has been raised as a body to a new placo In tho estimation and regard of tho American public. Events havo not accom plished this chanco of attitude, but men. Events havo brought new distinctions to Walter nines Page, stationed at London; Hcrrlek and Sharp, at Paris; Gerard, at Ber lin; van Dyke, at Tho Haguo; Brand Whlt lock, who still serves, though Belgium is not. But to say that events have made theso men Is to give undue credit to circumstances. To deny tbnt circumstances are everything, howovcr, Is not to nssert that American diplomatic posts in Eurono havo lacked nrn. vlous Incumbents who may havo been much greater than their present successors and who may havo rendered moro Important service. Driven Out of Franco i At Bcilln Is Jnmcs Watson Gerard. Whut over tho correspondence between Washing ton and Berlin may bring forth ho is des tined to flguro promlnontly in public llfo in future. Ambassador Gerard Is still a young mnn, as young men aro reckoned nowadays. Born nt Geneseo, Now York, in 1807, of n family long distinguished in tho social and civlo affairs of Now York city, ho has won his many-successes with an enso fascinating to contemplate. But before reciting tho story of his rapid ndvanco, lot us noto that bne of his patcrnnl ancestors was rlrlvnn from Franco by tho persecutions of Louis XIV and settled with his family In Scot land. A later Gerard camo to this country In 1780. Tho Ambassador's father and grand father both achieved a high reputation at tho New York bar. Tho fnthor nni n ,nii known philanthropist of his generation, and established tho first refugo homo for women In America Ho also was tho first to advo cate a uniformed police for New York city. He married Eliza Sumner, a member of the famous Sumner family of Massachusetts. James Watson Gorard was graduated from Columbia University in 1890. A year later ho received thn degree of A. M. In 1892 ho was graduated from tho Columbia Law School, soon afterward entering tho law ofilco of tho prominent firm of Bowers & Sands. He becamo a partner in 1899. Dur ing his career as a practicing lawyer ho was eminently successful and conducted some of tho most celebrated corporation case of rb cent decades Before graduating from col lego tho red blood and active Bplrlt of hl raco took him Into the National Guard, and with tho rank of captain ho served aa an aide on tho stall of General McCoskry Btllt during tho Spanish-American War. Boforo tho mustering out ho had been promoted to bo quartermaster of tho 1st New York Bri gade with tho rank of major. Ills interest In politics was early rnanl festcd, nnd for several years ho waa on the FJnanco Committee or Tammany nan, tho primary campaign In New York last fall, when Gorard won tho Democratic nomlna tlon for United States Senator over Franklin ft t!.s,aM.Atf A wna tffinnll nil ftm OrCfin- A. 1.WBUH.II) ,,CI .M ....v.... .... -. iratlon candidate, but though his namo haa frequently been associated politically with that of Tammany, nobody has over qtics tloned his personal honesty or Independence. Indeed, on ono momentous occasion In tho history of Now York politics, ho repudiated the Tammany Indorsement of his cnndldncy for office, and by his stand contributed ma terially toward tho breaking down of ma chfno methods of nomination nnd control of candidates. , This occurrence Is dated 1807. In that year tho people elected him Juntlco of tho Supremo Court of Now York for a term of fourteen yearn, expiring December 31, 1021. Gerard on tho bench wan exactly tho Gerard of tho bar, tho forum and tho field fine, frank, generouB, fearless. Ho entered upon the duties of his position with a thorough equipment rosuttlng from broad oxperlenco as a practicing attorney nnd with a scholar ly understanding of the Inw attained through long nnd diligent study. .Ho discharged his responsibilities In a way that reflected credit on tho pcoplo who by their cholco had ele vated him to membership In tho Stnto's highest tribunal. No criticism ovor at tached Itself to hln record as inwyer or Jurist, and nono has been reported from Berlin. An Enthusiastic American A successful lawyer and a scholarly, fear less Jurist, ho next becamo Ambassador to ono or tho four greatest courts of tho world. No qualification better Justified tho appoint ment than tho earnest Americanism which hns always animated this "democratic aris tocrat," as his friends like to descrlbo him. Moreover, ho Is gifted with tho crowning grnco of making friends without surrender ing prlnclplo or dignity. This capacity for friendship should prove an lnvaluabla asset to nny diplomat, for in this hotter ago tho diplomacy of directness and Intelligence and courtesy transcends nil intrigue nnd schem ing. Tho personality of tho man, his gra- clousncss, tactfulness, high character and common senso aro such as to mako friends not only for Gorard. but for tho country ho represents. His friends call him n "democratic aristo crat." His family Is blue-blood, ho haa wealth, ho Is known as a "society man." Ho Is a member of many exclusive clubs. But ho's a hard worker and no shirker of tho obligations which ho fools are his ns an American citizen, without regard to wealth or social position. Ills wife, who added her splendid fortune to his own amplo Inherit ance nnd joined to his equlpmont for social and political success tho physical and mon tnl gifts, graces and accomplishments which havo doubled all his triumphs, was Mary Daly, daughter of the famous copper king, Marcus Daly. HAITI:" THE PARADISE OF GRAFTERS , , Nothing Omitted by Officialdom in i the way ot Political Cdi nittMon Bxnort and Import Laws as Much of a 4 ru-pacm-xx ---- UlU OUIIOUWWW" Farce as jr-n.mr tn . ., K,..M1. U..AH.M fmm 1 Ol D tuga, Ulaltl has been ruled by military banditti over since the time when tho slnvo ancestors of tho present population bought their freedom from Franco by driving out the English invaders. Tho history of Haiti la an almost unbroken story of upheaval nnd bloodshed, The native Inhabitants wero nmoHrnllv exterminated by tho cruelties practiced upon them by their masters during tho Spanish occupation which preceded tho a !. i . 1 rn fe. tinrlnii Hi A n CHARLES F. KINGSLEY In tno mainicnancu m Dupicmo authority! r.nm ihn Presidency down In IVi i office in the land offices aro bought and paifl for In tho coin of favors, gifts, trlbuUJ tnrcais, miuwrr iu, biuii. u unoes. Lei gaily tho taxes aro limited to Import and t4 ,nrt duties, hut tho Haitian must mn, .L4 many exactions of tho various officials byl wnom no is raicu unu umuiseu, JnuetcM . nfflnoa In tfnltl carry a. recmrntvni.t,. ..y .. v.. ....... ... - .. "u,u aaii ary, and It Is commonly understood that th?jg lHnoml.AMfa nrn tn fltlrl help ntvn vav... -?' mi,... ""-" ...- - - .. -.... 'vuiunergs tho Spanish occupation which preceded tno "' cession of tho country to Franco under tho m" Treaty of Bjawlck. Negroes wore ? It is in tho evasion of Import and expo . , , ... ....1. ,1... H.L.. nn.l niflfltfl irom jiincn iu wum uti' muiun tlons. After tho emancipation proclamation Toiissalnt l'Ouverture led tho blacks against the English, Tho French, In gratltudo for his Services, made him military governor, but ho promulgated a constitution which Napoleon treated as rebellion and then be gan tho wars for Independence. When tho Ftcnch, busy with other troublos In Europe, finally gavo up their hold on tho richest of all their possessions in tho latter part of .... t. t- .. . . ...... rt fnn1nnH'a nun. JOUJ, JlOCIlllIIlUCUU, UliU v iiujjuivuii B l,v..- erals, lowered tho flag of France. It was nt tho time of tho Independence wars that a largo part of tho French population of Halt! migrated to Louisiana and neighboring parts of tho American South. Slnco then Haiti has been tho sceno of ono revolution nftcr another. Each succeeding Government has been a military despotism, and tho peoplo, ovon with tho constitutional forms established In 1889, havo enjoyed no rights whatever. Indeed tho governmental form? have fastened tho shackles of tho new slavery on tho pensant population os firmly as over the burdon of tho old slavery was bound upon their shoulders. They havo systematized tho extortionate practices of tho official bandits who como Into power In tho geographical divisions and subdivisions of tho country with every chango of central authority that Is, every tlmo a general overthrows tho existing government and es tablishes his own. BELIES HIS NAME Despite his Scotch name, when General von Mackenaen innkes a drive he doesn't even call "fore." Bonton Transcript.' EXEMPT From the Hartford Courant. A son without toes on either foot and having only three fingers on each hand has been born to. Mrs. Pctrosky. of Passaic, N. J. Mrs. Po trosky will not raise her boy to be a soldier I THE TELEGRAPH BOY Death bids his hernlds go their way On red-rlmmcd blcyclc today. Arrayed In blue with strcnk of red, A boy bears tidings of tho dead; Ho pedals merrily along, WhlRtllng the chorus of a song Passing tho tlmo of day with friends, Until tho Journey almost ends. i Then, slowly down, he scans each gate tor the doom'd name upon tho plato That found, ho loudly knocks and rings. Hands In tho yellow mleslvo; sings His song Tho maid says at the door. Jso answer!" and he's oft onco more. No answer' through the empty years! No answer but a mother's tears! Edward Bhllllto, In th London Nation. , No Time to Talk pf Peace fTtO TALK of peace for Knelanri j w J. Franco and Belgium and Italy now is to flttllt thnuft nnMnnu !. . ... . E ,," . ..-..- , contemptible 7wUiiBgnesa to bo enslaved, to abandon tho satrapies and to hand the world over to a military caste whose entim ,,...,..- .. F teriy antagonistic to the Ideals toward L " """ " airuggung for rtt.a. all,.... V- -.. . . . .. gi ... , u wnipp!, put thoy must p tun mat mey are whipped before they e up. There must be left in thm uwer of reelstanse. no hon nt n,.. Uo, before they can vea eontlder aequlM . ... .,., Vl iwgium or reeognic ndanoy J8 Burooe of th. ! hey hve to chooBe between the extrameet wrtfloee end degradatin utKwdiiwtbui w Vttk.ll tMUOtuU ejtftftencti matt as ,,,,. - B-nmn hegemony Better to be wiped off Mfce mh entirely than to Micutumh j- KtUch coadtUonii. For on what la Ginnm u,w.u .... .- .... p-flfte based? Not on superior bravery, on yjftter morale, on auy of thoa virtues tn fiueti tfr tat peoples rejoloe The QwButua Jiut helWr fitfhura tuty are better tint. rwf Theirs ig a meihumcal superiority, I owirhHj of u. graiti uumber of the ln- Mh ui j it i nation that ha. at4 ia ttwiiuuiis lodulrlai apaty j Thomas Mott Osborne: Victim of Success? THOMAS MOTT OSBORNE Is In for tribu lations. At this distance It Is a llttlo hard to determine whether ho or the politicians aro to bjame. Nobody doubts his good mo tives. Nobody denies the need of prison re form, and for a good deal moro of it than most so-called humanltnrlan wardens are ready to hand out. Nobody can be blind to the possibilities of Mr. Osborne's having raised political pnd personal enemies by his work at Sing Sing. And yet the tendency of earnest reformers to lean over backward Is just as evident. Mr. Osborne may have made a mess of his reforms; ho may be only a victim of their suoeeM. The public cannot say until his ac ouiers present a real bill of Indictment. At present mares' nests are. more in evldenae. A for this vegetable giut-oan It! Does "A. B, C" stand for "a has Caranwi"? Haiti seems to be the Red instead of the Black Itejpublie. " T" ' i ji Oharus of Jaok Bull and Willi tto,- Urn -fa started ltl ' ' " Cotton U no looser klntr. but it i nu.i.. .. unmake aae or two In Burose before the big gune get through firing. ' n lyiTii i IJlji L "JtelleB" I altogether too JrmiUo, eud. dm and violent tem for the settle and long prepared ewteetog of mnee.w. ' V- n How stouHiBt if one might shimber till that dtetftnt day when prophecies of the Bal kane' entrance into the war oowe true. PWUttelphb politicians will please recite Organisation is vexation. DJvIkIoa la as bad, Hermoey, it trouble m, Aaft liwtiona drivo n mai LIVELY COMMENTS ON TIMELY TOPICS Settling the Ancestry of nn Expatriate That Forbidden Road Again uuici mm oucn. "12th Paron Fairfax of Cameron" In ,hh SJ' he'r rX"", tha t''vh.XhlMory'ms'crlbe"; SatTlo'cUltns"8 Wrthy f U,e. """atlon' o? General Jacob Jennings P,rown had three Bone, two of whom were drowned, one In the pi,.ih . EALI!5AnGTH WAQEn-SMITH. Phlladeliihla, Auguit 3. 191fi. "THE FORBIDDEN ROAD" BJSntSisttfe'SB's: rights belonging to the public t hey";.? .lT perfectly safe for automobile, m i ay " la drive, and that occupMtTo? drir-6'0? tl"!' should not be deprived or pwelrte? ftomT Joying this beautiful scenery ww rom,fn' statement to make aZ nn.li,.r" n sel",h clOBe to the IIm S?a"KllSt?"AIl,hn0e0,! proU.v tempt to derelve. .Of course it i. i'hJ ?lor a" automobile, but how about th! nLnf'0 f.or ,nq walking along the drive? "ih.l? P Wh? Br8 tomoblles wa it to vietv .. 1 t.he dr,vw" ot do like the reit of uiiwalk oJ Tn Ut tn8" Open this driv" to auraowie. -ni a car'a8 thousands of mn, wornen In!,M,?0U dePrlva right that below tothem SLLUwB pf th few people Ww own momnhn """Pawtlvely to their elubJ. eUotTd have Len "! "". Ulo push thiag. too fa?: thev a-1 l11 to privileges itwtouia niver hIL ? "WtoS Keep the deelSunTnchio'ei" m9 W drtvere aposu- to act on theSSvJ ot lb-r drive bagpTskf.. PUfliVVJKJ8.ll,ta SPRING AT THEFAIRS tox and Sotd with '&jtJZ2Mm Bware of light balbrtM ""we-M". To the Editor ot tha Kvuntnn r..An- Sliv-in the very Interesting nrtlclo on Amer ican expatriates, by George Wi DouglaB, In a recent Issue, I waB particularly attracted by the account of Albert Klrby Fairfax, now Daron Fairfax. As lila mother. Mary Klrby, and her sisters and brothers were acquaintances and friends of my youth nnd later years, I am able to give some additional facts of the Karon's ancestors, which may be of Interest to your readers. About 17M, Jacob Jennlngn Drown, son of a Quaker farmer, of.Hucks County, Pa,, having ... ,u ul "" uKen' i" ew vork city, which was nn unbroken forest. In what after ward became Jefferson County, N. Y near tho east end of Lake Ontario, made a settlement there nnd married Pamela Williams, of Utlca. The hlstpry of his achievements Is another story, but by a succession of events, he became on the death of McComb, the commander in Chief of the Army of the United States. Ills eldest 'laughler, ElUa, married Major Edmund (not Edward) Klrby. who was nfterward colonel, nnd made a notable record In the Mexi can War. Ills monument. In Drownvllle Cem etery, recounts his prowess In live wars. Ills fec?nd. son' Edmund, went from West Point, in 1861, was fatally wounded at the battle of Chancellorsvllle, and was burled In tho same cemetery with the rank of brigadier general, though only 21 years of age. Colonel Klrby's youngest son, Reginald Marvin, was on EpIbcq pal clergyman, who was offered the bishopric of Utah, and declined It He died some years RCro. The rnlnnfil'n nlfl,m 1.iol..n- n ,- Williams, married her cousin, William Bverett, a naval engineer, who invented the paying out apparatus of the nret Atlantic cable, and super. Intended the entire trip successfully, but the close application to this task so undermined his health, that it was never fully restored. An other daughter, Leila, niarrled the Rev. Henry r S: t JZ , V. . ' """ oeo"e cnapialn of St. Luke's Hospital, New York city. His daughter, Virginia, married a cousin, once re moved, a Ver Planck, of VerPlank'e Point, fa reous In the Revolutionary War In the Andre tapturc. All thee cousins were of the Brown toTd Fal'fax K,rby " Ut'4 abOV' n,""'rt Poleael Klrby wM a deeositdant of Bphralm S3by; ' Cwweetiwt, a fatnlly noted la athta1ir,0rfco A?8bw " vf aeneral Jaeeb Browy, Pawela. msirried Captain Brock eobrough. of the navy; ooe. Gatbarlne, married Captain LsrldR Sojlth. UaJted States Army a ywtalan; one. Madelrise. married CwUin of all these children have, tn military naval and civil l, shown the taleot and the paulot n whl.l. dUttnguiehed thUr anvestws in PeijnsHvaata. ConnettKut ai,,i New York To rtiate In duu the ai;hlevemeiit of thle notable family would BU a book. I wUh to ciu !'.?lt.nttoo " Kvwitfca Ljummk mrfws to u. , ttat tno AwriSijgt2l8rtKe Tho Now Slavery Tho species of military feudalism which has ground tho majority of tho two millions of Haitians down to poverty and wrecked tho ngrlculturo and Industry of tho country has been described In a previous arttcto in theso columns, showing that tho Improvldcnco of the peoplo Is duo in largo part to tho fact that tho peasant can fool no interest In try ing to accumulate or Improvo property when ho knows that everything beyond a bare subsistence will bo takon from him by his military overlords and their overlords. So tho forms of constitutional government mean nothing to the Ignorant, oppressed Haitians except a slavery which Is moro costly In human llfo than tho revolutions which fol low one another in such rapid succession. There Is no such thing as self-governmont In tho Black Itopubllc. and no reannn tn think that tho neonlo nro as woll flttml tnr its exercise as tho Filipinos wcro when they becamo the wards of tho American nation. If conditions in Haiti furnish nearly tho worst example of "taxation without repre sentation" on record In the world's history, so whon It comes to "tho crooked alliance of politics and business" you will find It exem plltled beyond comparison in tho Institution or gran so deeply imbedded In tho Haitian conception of otnceholdlng and government. Clnclnnatos Leconte, President for a brief period a few years ago, took ofilco with a promlso of reform, but It was declared on all sides by Haitians and foreign residents of tho country, that his Government could not possibly continue long on its initial plane. Thoy wore, Indeed, the detractors of Leconte, nssertlng that his chief subordinates, the generals comprising the cabal composed of tho heads of tho Ave arondlssements, could not bo held faithful without connivance at oxtra-ofrtclnl emoluments; that no foreign en terprise could hopo to make an entry without clearing the way boforehand by liberal gratl flcatlons, and that, even if a successful at tempt wero made to administrate tho coun try on a nongraft basis, tho numerous dls gusted officeholders would soon combine with ofllceseekerB to oust so amateurish nmi im practical a regime. Tho Institution of graft proved, of course, too strong for Leconte, for Haiti is never contented If not corrupt. It is not of least significance that this condition of affairs has been vory attractive to foreign exploiters, who divide with Haitian officials the "margin" on nearly every article im ported from abroad, from electric light bulbs to grandstands nnd junk men-of-war. Political corruption In Haiti, then, covers tho wholo field of possibilities, Offices, even thoso which aro constitutionally elective, aro seldom, If ever, won by tho electlvo method, Tho Presidency is tho reward of military power, but there ore usually other elements .liillrq that tho crassest ovil.q nrnvnll. n.-. olgn protest has produced llttlo effect, and e, Inni, nn ihn pMKinm linuflPB nrn toft tn TrAti.l ,u..n ... - ""Hani officials thcro Is llttlo llkollhood that thej evils win no noousnea. xna chief offender' until her remarkable career camo to an eni was Mme. Nora Aiexis, mo versatile, man sided wlfo of a recent President. MndamS la Presidents used to violate tho customs laws nt her own sweet win. ena would bring In a cargo of shirtings from Now York and" undersell tho Haitian stores 20 per cent,, rc I.U1UMB IV iiuuuouiiiu iui. ,ui iiu, auu, tier' coffeo ventures were oven moro profitable? Tho export duty on iiisii-graao coffeo is, extremely heavy, whllo there Is no duty on! cottonsceu. mme. ia Jt'rcsiucnte-s wny war to buy up all the coffeo In sight in certain, districts, through ngonts, pass it boldly! throuirh the complaisant customs nn mit.. 1 seed nnd ship It to Havre. Tho swlndlo Wail discoverou by foreign coffeo morcnants, who' protested to Nord Alexis, but tho chief magjj lstrato's only reply was to restore a number! of vexatious nnti-ioreign Jaws which hatf been allowed to Inpsc. The Institution ot graft has Its headquarters In tho executive mansion nt i'ort-ou-princo, Yet Haiti, If glvon a stnblo government and an honestly managed government, wnnu: quickly becomo ono of the most productive! nnd prosperous countries on tho faco of the globe. JVnturo has blessed It with wonderful fertility of soil, variety of products and! equability of climate. But Haiti Is proof sumclcnt that Nnturo needs help in thV making of n country deserving "to bo treated by other nations ns a sovereign State. ,i What assistance tho United -States shall! give to Haiti Is again a mattor for consider-, atlon. So far as upholding Monroeism itj concerned, the question rests chleflv unm,! Iho decision of tho American President mo sonnte has seldom stood by tho Prcsl. dent in dealings with the troublesome re publics of tho West Indies. When Cimnt- negotiated a treaty with Santo Domingo for'; placing tho Dominican Government under American protection, tho Senate refused to ratify. In 1905, on tho ground thnt mw. wlso creditor nnMnna wntri .ni,n nnH , i of Santo Domingo, President Roosevelt, byl an agreement not ratified by tho Senate, putj jimencnn omciais into tho custom houses of that republic Similar overturns wnr made to Haiti by Taft and by Wilson, but in eacn instanco the Senate drow bnck. Tho "Outs" nnd the "Ins" In Haiti tho United States hns ni, t, ovon tho limited control It oxerclsos in Santo uomingo. The efforts of tho Inst two years hnve been directed toward obtaining from ono of the six successive Governments which nuve noia ouico in that porlod cithor a treaty Hiving mo unuca states control over the customs and the liquidation of Hnltl's debts or. an Invitation to tho United StateB to step In nnd take charge. Thoso efforts, however, havo so far merely served to glvo tho am bitious "outs" an issue on which to start a revolution antl-AmericanISm nnd the United States has failed in each caso to take such steps ns would keep in control tho Government with whlph it was trying to negotiate. Commissions have been sent to Haiti, The, Fort Commission thought at 2 o'clock one "la"" "mi tney imd succeeded nnd that In order to save itself from bankruptcy and downfall the Government would yield. Two hours later thoy discovered that the French; German nnd Italian Gavemmni. ,n . nlzed the revolutionary Government nnd that fi on the basis of thin mnnMi -n. . .. a German merchants-who by just such prac M .- ..u won nDsoiuto domination of tho.M commercial situation in Haltl-had mado W . w tno uovemment. Tho commission-: ers were informed that they might ns well - v.w u uio unuea states.. American aid Is unwelcome to the "inH .,,. ii.i opposed by the "outs." hra,,s. ,... ould put an end to tho present system and ts graft for those who manipulate it. This ism-'iVli m f he an-Amerlcan. NATIONAL POINT OF VIP.w JX? aerial burden of Mexican Intervention W,lId0Ub83 .?e borne wh0"y y tho Unltd w?rf' Wh "1? moral "ponslblllty will be toeale?. y republic-Cleveland Plain moYf.8re,at oMl' wltn areat Britain regarding matters of moment, but they re debataSie. not barbarous. There Is no greater difference be !! J"' Mil Mm or Hyperion and a T. R. says that there are some nations Ilka some men, that only a wallop In the eye will 22m" a?ncral,y hy " c stand at Ato" geddon for a, while before coming to their sensee.-Boston Transcript. ia1!01 Ae,ver,y ton of coal m Spltzbergen there nro 10 In Alaska of at least equal quality, closer tS a hungry market. The Arctlo zone won make a real dent m the fuel market till our Wiwrth! west territory gets In actlon-Chlcaeo SqSl Some kind of plan to train the youna- men of this country without giving them th. mlUtarta. tic disease can be devised, Preparedness la Preparation, and thor i. i "t:"11"8. The' phyeically wpable" cTvlllaT .SSSwiS gven course la the school of the dIerthivao Intervention hv .v- t,i.. ,.... ... . to the Mexicans better vribSu. 'ScPa wi u! eal and eeonomlc. than they nan ho for frl their own native leaders, but we owe l t IT Jasan would be favered of heavan Iba he oouid adoeH a form of BveSsSi TJS " as scandal brings disaster to the ' ti?s ot UNewjkw Post. lnUXty "STONSS OP VENICE" Srvlf0' 8lory' v?ioVii,,r?: lesrr nr, P. F"". that should I WUh ruin Vn m ,Z "I' m ,no aranA CanaI constltu- e' Th .n0Ver be rlven. It would WUh the burnlnUre.Te , ?fam'' Would rank the eack o nn'- J.IY ? AlexandrU. endure throuoh n-.L . r,c' xnB 'nfamy would ynonyrmt0frorVmIodsb,ero2lthy '" a" reproach, a . John Ruskln'a "Sn,, -. ,r become a work nt 11 i ,rcmce may yet i Journal ' arclleoIBy Minneapolis j DIAGRAMS T?nr mnm A new .. , " "T. "V. iV1 uaa companies ia a - " . mentB of steamboat B wast and disaster Jii.TX ".. rUJ " B,nca lD i Impressive than .now U la Probably mor With hanov oxoi.pl?ture oC decI8 cfowdeol Ilcan. PW Cxcur,il0'''ts.-Sprlngfleld Repub-J A VOlGR PPOur mimr, , Who eM ;-""". "a aUUXll 1 els Adam, .Vid hn 7? n?WnBT Charles Fran- she cDuMS.faJ5.Q Confederacy failed because! land says QtmlinyJintSi1, amJ.1w Enl of our cron? wh 3. fa" ." denied her ehar 1 tral and let hi. n. .i ",aKe ,he South peu- -Florida Times-Union "" ' every war? -AMUSEMENTS B LATH'S THEATRE HmU Ttx . X4VJSLPr STREETS ' MAjrajg-Aatiaift Stanley Pauline Frederick vt! -'. J.aS, (JCKBRT 4 FAS' TROCADERO - .f pflll .,;-V',":--:rV:--.:..?- '1