6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A SBHSPAPER FOR THB HOME Founotd rtj: \ = Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO.. Telegraph Building, FVlerml Square. E.J. BTACKPOLE, Pres't and BJilor-inCkitf F. R. OYSTER. Bu.rintti Managrr. OPS M. STEINMETZ, Manafimg Editor. M Member American #1 Newspaper Pub ® llshers' Assocls sylvsnls Associate Eastern of flee, Hu- Brooks. Fifth Ave nue Building. New Gas Building, Cht cago, 111. K, i t ' r « d _' lt the Post Office In Harris bury. Pa., as second class matter. Br """'ere, si* cents a w «ek; by mall. »S.OO a year In advsnce. knars dally average circulation for the' three stoat ha ending Dee. SI, 1915. These figures are aet. All returned, kasold and dialled copies deducted. MONDAY EVENING, JAN. 17 Jt came upon the midnight clear. That glorious song of old. From angels bending near the earth To touch their harps of gold; "Peace to the earth, goodwill to men. From Heaven's all-gracious King," The earth in solemn stillness lay To hear the angels sing. —Giardim, 1760. AMERICANIZATION MEETING TiE National Conference on Im migration to be held in Phila delphia this week deserves more attention over the State than it lias received. At the sessions on Wednes day and Thursday an antl-hyplienated crusade will be organized and pro cesses of assimilating the immigrant will be discussed. As Governor Brum baugh said in a recent interview, the movement is of great importance to Pennsylvania, in view of the very large foreign element in our popula tion, and it should receive the hearty support and co-operation of all those working for true American ideals and the fusing of all the various na tionalities brought together within our borders. "The essence of a stable democracy j is the possession of common knowl-1 t-dge. common ideals, common sym pathies, common language by all the members of the democracy," Governor Brumbaugh said. "For this reason the right forms of civic education are paramount concerns in this State, where we have, since the days of Penn, given home and haven and wel come to all the peoples of the world. We want them to be, above all else, loyal, law-loving and law-obeying citizens. Our whole effort should go effectively to that end. Its attain ment insures the stability of our institutions and advances the well being of all of us." As the Governor intimates, we have no warrant to bring these people to our shores and then turn them loose to work out their own salvation, while we ait quietly by and expect them to become in a year or two good Amer ican citizens, conversant with our ideals of government and measuring up to our standards of free citizen ship. We owe them more than a mere living wage. We must offer them, too, the right hand of fellow ship, difficult as that may be in some cases, and we must help them to at tain the views of life that we hold. This we must do, not only for their sakes, but for our own, for unless we make good Americans of them we let live within our borders a spirit so alien to all we hold dear that it may some day endanger the very life of I our republic. } THE KAISER'S ILLNESS THERE is more reason to suppose that the Kaiser is seriously 111 now than there was when Ber lin took no notice of the reports. It always happens that when a crowned head of Europe is nearing death an effort Is made to quiet the fears of the public at home and to prevent undue activity in certain directions abroad, by sending news broadcast that the royal patient is on the high road to full recovery and not Infrequently, to bolster up this assertion, the death stricken one is forced to appear if for only a moment in public. "Where there is much smoke there must be some fire" and it would not be surpris ing that to-day's dispatches from the usually well-informed Vatican, to the effect that the Emperor has under gone an operation and Is not yet out of danger, arc more nearly correct than those from Berlin to the effect that he is ready to go or has already gone to the front. WHEN* ISRAEL ANSWERS ISRAEL Bread for the living! Shrouds for the dead! What is your answer going to be? When Colonel Cutler yesterday made that stirring appeal to the great gath ering of Jewish people in Technical high school on behalf of the hundreds* of thousands of co-religionlsts in war stricken Europe, naturally it was to l>e expected that the response would lie generous. Hut it is doubtful if anyone dreamed 1 lint subscriptions would total any thing like the actual sum in cash, jewelry and checks which poured into the collection baskets. That the Jewish people of the city and vicinity would upuucstUm&blx au MONDAY EVENING, swer the cries of hungry babies anU weeping mothers on the far flung bat tle fronts of Russian Poland, Germuu I Poland, Oalacia and Palestine was a | foregone conclusion. But the answer was more than ordinarily characteris ' tic—not only of the Jews of Harris burg but of Jews the world over. The appeal of less fortunate brothers and i sisters has always been heard and heeded by this widely scattered but always distinctive race. The mass meeting at Technical high school was unique in more ways than one. The stripping of one's sleeve links and shirt studs, the discarding of one's diamond rings for the contribu tion basket under ordinary circum stances might be considered a wee bit spectacular. Not so, however, when tears stream from the donor's eyes. Not so when the donor remembers the stories of suffering relatives whom he may never see again. To David Kaufman and his commit tee of patriotic fellow Jews much credit should be given. These represen tative Jewish citizens earnestly and loyally heeded the request of the American Jewish War Relief Commit tee and the biggest mass meeting of its kind ever held here was the result. However, yesterday's meeting was but a start. Plans have been laid for continuing the good work on a larger more permanent scale. Harrisburg Jews are arranging to form a perma nent war relief committee. DON'T LKT REDFIKDD DO IT WHEN the tariff board, provided for in the Republican tariff law of 1909, was in existence, it reported, among other subjects, on wool and manufactures of wool. This board kept strictly within its pro vince as a scientific, data-collecting and statistics-preparing bureau. The board consisted of three Republicans and two Democrats, selected by Presi dent Taft on the advice of commer cial Interests all over the country. One member of the board was editor of a wool trade magazine, another was a textile expert, two were uni versity professors of economics and one was a Democratic ex-member of Congress. The wool report was signed by all five members of tbe board and submitted to a Democratic House of Representatives, without recommen dations. Three wool schedules were framed, based on the report, the Underwood schedule, Democratic, the Payne schedule. Republican, and the I.a Follette schedule. Progressive. The champions of each schedule de clared that the rates in their parti cular bill were absolutely justified by the findings of the board, artd the tariff was in politics again. When the Federal Trade Commis sion was organized President Wilson declared that he had put one over on Congress, and that the functions of a tariff commission were placed in the hands of that commission. In a report on muslin underwear, recently made public. Secretary Redfield call ed attention to the fact that this was in the form of a report such as may be expected from a tariff commission, and while not directly calling atten tion to the fact, it was intimated that Congress should provide the bureau with more funds so that it could ful fill the position of a tariff commis sion. A report on the cost of manu facture of beet sugar, made by the Federal Trade Commission at Mr. Redfield's instigation, is said to have been filed with the Secretary of Commerce last July. Evidently these cost figures are of a nature embarrass ing to the Administration, for the re port has been pigeon-holed, which shows the danger of giving the super vision of such work to a man of such decided opinions as Mr. Redfield. The tariff board organized under the Republican Administration came as near to filling the bill as anything ever will in a country possessing two radically opposed views on the tariff question such as exist in the United States. But a Democratic Congress stifled that board by refusing to ap propriate for its maintenance. A tariff commission organized for the scientific collection and preparation of tariff data, to be submitted to Con gress without recommendation, would fill a long-felt want, but a cave dwelling Democracy, which fears the searchlight of Investigation on the tariff questions, is now trying to beg the question and lodge the power of such a commission in the hands of an administrative department, where any light embarrassing to the party 'in power may promptly be doused. HARMONY IN THE AIR EVERY day makes it clearer that Republican leaders in all parts of the State are looking more and more with disfavor upon any attempt to stir up a factional row over the selection of delegates to the coming national convention. The hearty endorsement of Phil ander C. Knox for the Senate and later as a presidential possibility by Republicans of all shades of feeling were the unmistakable indications of this. The announcement of Con gressman Vare, of Philadelphia, that he will not be a candidate for dele gate is the latest development. Slowly but surely the field is narrowing to ward a point where any sort of fac tional contest will be impossible, and the rank and file of the party must rejoice that this is so. Governor Brumbaugh made a wise move when he got behind Mr. Knox for the United States Senate. This at once brought not only all Republicans, but the Progressives as well, together on common ground and eliminated the possibility of a serious contest for the most important office to be filled In Pennsylvania at the November elections. The Knox candidacy has alqo made It possible for the Re publicans and Progressives to join forces at Chicago in urging him on the national conventions of the two parties as the unanimous choice of Pennsylvania for the presidency, which is a happy state of affairs from many points of view. Every day finds the prospects brighter for Republican harmony at the primaries in May nnd for Re publican success at the elections in November, | TELEGRAPH'S PERISCOPE" ■ —Thirty liquor licenses are held up in Schuylkill county. But at that no body's likely to go thirsty In that dis trict. ' —lt's a slow week when ths Rotary Club doesn't have something: on the go. To-morrow's educational night, for in stance. —Our notion of adding insult to in jury is to print pictures in the news paper this weather of bathing scenes in Southern California. —Cheer up, we have no mosquitoes in Pennsylvania in January, and they do have in Florida. —Talk about the ups and downs of life—the thermometer has 'em. —"The Kaiser is seriously sick." says a report. Under the circumstances we don't blame him for feeling bad. 1 EDITOR lAL EN T [ Two North Carolinans were shot and slashed fatally in endeavoring to de cide which was to teach a Sunday school class. It would be interesting to know what they proposed to teach the class.—Pittsburgh Gazette-Times. I Til e voyage of the Prace-Ship may go down In history as the greatest sea nght of tne ward.—Brooklyn Eagle. In building up our merchant marine one craft that would help some is statesmanship. Pittsburgh Gazette- Times. It is beginning to look as though it would take more than the support of Uerr Munsterberg to kill off the Roose velt boom.'—Boston Transcript. GETTING TOGETHER [From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.] The call of the national Republican committee for the convention of next June indicates that the leaders realize that the setting-together ground swell is the most significant thing confront ing tno party to-day. Consequently the call invites the electors to "elect dele gates without regard to past political affiliations, who believe in the prin ciples of the Republican party and en dorse its Policies." Quite right in principle and just as it should be. There never was an oc casion in the history of the United States when the country more needed a strong, united statesmanlike and en thusiastic party in opposition to that in Sower. Xot only have national affairs ecomo internationalized with a ven geance through the war in Europe and the necessities of our own hemisphere, but the great future of the united States demands that its policies shall be defined along lines that will insure its prosperity and hold its supreme po sition free from doctrinaire absurditless which tend in our own time to repeat the old blunders of the days of Jeffer son and Madison and jeopardize all we have gained. To see the one great opposition party hopelessly divided would be a calamity. And whatever the past differences of polity between the regular Republicans and the Pi*ugressives may have been there is unquestionably a common ground of action for both, in view of the extreme necessities of the country, to be found in those principles, begin ning with Washington arid Hamilton and continuing with Uneoln and Mc- Kinley, which are the very heart of Republicanism and which never were I more vital to the country than now. But while on al! sides signs multiplv that the getting-together movement is Well under way. this does not mean that, like Pharoah, the standpatters should harden their hearts against the Progressives or their policies any more than that it means that the Progres sives should take an exigent advantage of the regulars and refuse the proffer of recognition, with the past wiped out, on the ground of some possible future difference over unimportant planks in a platform still to be made. PRISONER'S RESOLUTIONS Charles Albeit Seifert. of Harrlsburg. sends to the Philadelphia Record the following New Year's resolutions from the pen of a prisoner, and printed in display type in a recent issue of the Leavenworth United States Penitenti ary paper. New Eta: First, 1 resolve not to break my New Year resolutions. Second, to be more temperate in ex pressing my opinions when they are Third, to start a year book of myself, and make It as acceptable to myself as I can. Fourth, to go to the bank every even ing and deposit there something that will indicate that I am making charac ter. not money. Fifth, to spare much time this vear finding out how I can help men "who are in prison with me. Sixth, to find out from personal ef fort what all this talk about the Bible means. Seventh, to hold my temper right down to where it should be, and keep it there until it is entirely unuer my control, for a man's temper is a sense less thing. Eighth, to cheer up my family jn every way possible and not in any let ter home complain of my lot, nor ask a favor of them that is hard for them to grant. Ninth, to be a man. Tenth, to stop going over my troubles like one harnessed to a wine press, trudging round and round in a circle. Eleventh, to abandon vain and foolish things as much as possible and reilx values as between the worth while and the things that are not worth while. Twelfth, to practice deep breathing and pay more attention to health. I OUR DAILY LAUGH And here he U 'at the office using the boss' time telling another ?Pf fellow all about s|f|k , what a fine wife Wia lie 8 got ~ In * our » rssL minutes Cf the J I clock's right) he 1 can, and will, quit If you look at ithe calendar you'll And it's Moving Day— WF-> yi— Ma y ut - Wifey says "I move we H move," aad Hub- JbSV s «conds the wB motion. As Ilub- A§& by leaves for the T office Wifey says, HHI J| "Now don't for v» the new ad " dress, and • be home early." V SAD PLIGHT l»y Wins Dinger A friend to me unfolded, A tale of his sad plight, It seems that e'er retiring On downy couch last night He peeped into his ice chest That stands quite high and dry Upon his porch, and therein Some scrapple he did spy. He pictured for this morning A dish of hot, fried paste, And with this zero weather How good the stuff would taste. But when wife to the Ice chest Did early go this morn She found it void of contents And looking most forlorn. O. think of all the heartaches The thieves who walked away AVlth all the food, did bring to That home on this cold day. For what could disappoint one More than to set his mouth For scrapple, and to have It With some thief wander south? HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH TMtLc* IK "Pe-KKOi^taahXa By the Ex-CommltteemMi State Senator Vare lias announced