"wT m.' i5a 22a ivsiKmniiHih i WT EVENING LEDaEB PHIAPELPHlAt TUESDAY, SEEffflMBl&R IB, lOli. . . - - - .. - ,- - ,J, EVENING &&S&J LEDGER PUBLIC LEDGlilt COMPANY crnus 11. k. curtis. rss:T. . John Grlhr,el. Vice Presidents nfptju,8'mtjl John C. Mrtln. Treasurer; Charles II. LudlnKton, I'Mlla B. Cftllln. John B. Wlllhm,DlrCtor EDtTOIltAl. HOARD! CtMjs H. K Cnuria, Chairman. P. K. WlTALEf KxfcutlTj:tor JOHN C. MAtlTIN QenerlJPuslnes S1RDI Published diily at Pmuc T.rwibh UnlMlng. Independence Square Philadelphia. iicmiRn Centb it. "road and Chestnut St reels Atlantic Cm...... It-ms-ttilen nimdlng SToSkT..:;; ""...... I70-A. Metropolitan Tower CmcAno 317 Home insurance nuliainjc London 8 Wnttrloo I'lnee, Pall Mall. a. v. NT.WS BUREAUS! ..., lUwusscno ntnru? The Mtrtsl u 'J J J Wahiiis-oton lltntin..... The 'ost J ' JJ New Ton llcssvu The TjmM ""'Win; nanus nmrvn .no J 'rleafichitra London Hckkab 2 Pall Mall yB''rf;ni Finis HcnB.iu 32 Rne Louie le Urand snicntrrioN Tr.u.Ma Hy carrier. Daimt Oni.t, 1x renH. Ry mall, postpaid outelde of Phlldlphta. ercept where forelsn postage Is required. PaIlt OM.t. one month, twenty-five retuel DAtLi Oslt, one year, three dollar. All mall ubscrlp tlons pa) tibia In advance. hkix 3000 walmjt kevbtom; main 3000 C Adtlreai nil eommtiilcrttlon to EcenNtf Ltdgtr, InJrpendence Square, Philadelphia. ArF-LiOACTON HADE AT THB PHILADELPHIA POStorrlOB rOB ENTRT AS SKC0Nn-l-U8 MAIL MATTER. PIltlADLIJ'ltU.'Il'E'WAV. St.PlkMItLlt 15, 1U1V Why Uic Evening Ledger Fights Penrose THE lamentable conditions which rentier it Impossible for a paper believing in Re publican principles to support tho Republican nominee for the Sennto must likewise bo fluillclently grave to make his defeat a public necessity. If the record of Mr. Penrose Absolutely forbids support of lilm by a rcspectablo nowspapor, qulto obviously .1 decent regard for tho welfare of tho State and nation requires that newspaper to bring nil of Its influence to bear to cause his defeat. Ho is either so objectionable that tho liven ing Ledger must fight him, or ho is not objectionable enough to Justify a refusal to Indorse him. Mlddlo ground for a newspaper in such an exigency is cowardly. In fact, tho Evening Ledger is not only confronted with a para mount duty, but with a splondid opportunity for servlco. The Independence of Us view point causes it to be obsorved by the forces of good government, without respect to party. In all parts of tho Union. Men be lieve, nnd have a right to believe, that at last thoro Is In the East a great metropolitan dally which will speak boldly, without fear of Interests, corporate or popular, and stand Irrevocably for good government, no matter under what party bannor. Whatever tho btandlng of Penroselsm in Pennsylvania, it is hated and detested in every other State of tho Unlou. Nowhere else is there any attempt to defend it. Tho failure of the Evening Ledger to wage an energetic campaign against it could be inter preted in but ono way. The paper's sin cerity would be questioned. Manufacturers believe that Mr. Penrose will be able to write the next tariff bill If Republicanism Is rehabilitated. That is on erroneous view. Xo party would dare enact a bill written by Mr. Penrose. A Republican majority in "Washington would find some other chairman for the Finance Committee of the Senate. Tho seniority of Mr. Penroso would not count. Pennsylvania manufacturers misinterpret tho signs of tho times quite as sadly as did tho Southern slave-holders. The election of Mr. Penrose would hamstring the Repub lican campaign in 1916. With Penroselsm around tho neck of the party, what chance "V.-oula IT" havo in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan. Ohio, in any of tho pivotal States which showed so plainly in 1912 that they are through and done with tho methods of Pen rose, Forakcr and that class of men? It is well understood that tho Democracy would view a Penroso triumph with a light heart, being convinced that it marked a sure free trade victory in 1916. The Evening Ledger owes a duty to tho nation. It must conscientiously work for tho rehabilitation of Republicanism. That can only bo brought about by the defeat of Pen rose. His elimination Is necessary to purify tho party, to persuade tho nation that it is purified. It is a medlclno which the true friends of tho Republican party will insist on Its taking. There is but one position for the Evening Ledger to take. It must declare, as the con ditions prove, that this is a moral issue. The ..economic principles of Mr. Palmer it cannot lndor-e. but his political morality it can ap plaud As between a man of high principle nnd ther man whose political record lndt cat 1 principle at all. It must stand for the mer. A tariff is but ono of many thi! - on which a Senator votes. On other thr Mr. Palmer W sound. A political revo lut m so great fis to give a chance for a new tar ff would be great enough surely to assure a majority In the Senate without the aid of one Pennsylvania vote. Oliver is still there: and the loss of one vote which tho defeat of Mr. Penrose would entail, might readily mean the gain of five or ten votes from other States, which otherwise would not send Republican Senators to Washington. So l.ir as local interest is concerned, in all his .rs in Washington, for Philadelphia Mr. r 1 rose has done practically nothing. The Dele ' ire has been neglected, the ustom house Is .. .IiBgrace and the postofllce Is llu'. bet t i The freight of the nation has flowed by 3 ladelphla and on to New York. It should 1 o stopped here. It wtll when the Oov . .nment, State and national, does as much fur the p.rt as has been done for S-w York. Hut while Mr. Penrose control afftirs there will be no difference. His Interests are all in one direction. The Evening Ledger loyally proves Its Re public unlsm by Its support of Mr. Drum Laugh It demonstrates Us allegiance to national Republicanism and good government by calling on the voters to prove) that Pen robeifem is not Republicanism, by showing that his defeat ts a prerequisite to the sue ccsa of the party In the nation, by support lng Mr. Palmer, not because, but in spite, of his tatiff views. Advocate a of good government can Justly say. "If the Evening Ledger Is not for us It is, against us"; but not to be against Mr. Penrose is to be for him. The political in.i hinery that ha directs flourishes In darii-ru-.. Silence is the support It craves. A piuspaper that acquiesces now In the elec tion of the Organisation's head cannot with any power fleht against the Organisation itself in the approaching municipal electtons. Tnere can be no neutrality when its methods are before the electorate. Mr. Penrose must be defeated, and It la legitimate and right to use the only instrument that is available for that purpose. The Evening Ledger Is an Independent Re public. m newspaper. What does "lade (.pendent" in this connection mean other than , purr1"1 to save the party from Usflf when crasii n demands It connotes an Intention sur-J" t only those party candidates who c w rrM It impli. s a determination to - ect men who have prostituted the party to their own purposes and are using it as a cloak to hldo their delinquencies and to con ceal their moral malfeosanoe. It means a willingness, evon a promise, to place the pub lic weal abovo tho exigencies of party service. Doctor Brumbaugh, by word and action, Is seeking to disassociate himself ns much as posslblo from PenrosoUm, Mr. Penroso commands a maohlno quite as Inimical to the success of tho democratic experiment in America aa militarism Is to freedom nnd liberty In Europe Both nro nulocratio, both dcstructlvo of the finer per ceptions, both grasping and vengeful. And Penroselsm, In addition, Is corrupt; noto riously so. Better no protection nnd no cus toms houses whatever than to securo them through such an Instrumentality. Mr. Penroso in tho minority Is worth noth ing to Pennsylvania In Washington. Ills election would Inhibit his being again In tho majority. When tho Republicans control tho Senate they will not bo Republicans of tho Forakor and Penroso typo. PASSED BY THE CENSOR Quit Talking: Get Busy THD peoplo nro for rapid transit. They aro for It In a hurry. Moroover, they intend to got it. They aro tlre-1 of tho con stant blckorlng over minor sums, ns If this weio n poverty-stricken municipality Instead of ono of tho most lightly debt-burdened cities of Its class In tho world. They aro disgusted with tho attitude that to get rapid transit they must sacrifice other projects. They have no sympathy with back-pulling, hesitant statesmen, who are first, against any appropriation whatever to clear tho way for nctual subway construction, and, sec ondly, when threatened by an uprising of business men in protest, reluctantly consent to provide tho money but only by taking it away from some other meritorious and nec essary Improvement. The public is positively nauseated by tho provincial vision of men who soem utterly lncnpable of comprehend ing tho Imperial future of Philadelphia. Tho United Buslncw Men's Association to night should reject all compromise. It prob ably will. Certainly tho membership will bo qulto unnblo to appreciate tho argument that tho city Is too poor to relocate sewers and also build nn Art Museum for tho hous ing of some of tho most valuable nrt treas ures In tho world. Tho Flnunco Committee of Councils has put itself In an utterly untenable position. It can retrieve Its reputation only by a square and fair reversion of policy. Thnt Is what It Is expected to do and what the busi ness men of this community should Insist It must do. Democracy If the Kaiser Wins IT IS not merely to gain favor In this coun try through American fondness for the name "democracy" that Count von Berns torff nnd other Germans are prophesying an accelerated advancement of the democratic principle ns a result "f the present war. In the Empire of the Kaiser. Mind you, thoy aro not predicting the downfall of the Em pire, like those who assert that only throuch sucn a disaster can democracy prosper. They seo plainly that, whether or not tho Imperial banners shall wave in final victory, tho triumph of democracy Is already In prog ress. Such a triumph Is not of necessity brought about by violent revolution, nnd, moreover, tho thing that a peoplo Is slowest and most reluctant to change, or suffer to be changed, Is its form of government. The story of triumphant political democ racy is a story of accumulated constitutions and charters, grants and bestowals. Usually the possessor of the power desired by the poople has parted with them grudgingly, sometimes only as tho result of coercion; but often they have been transferred as gifts of gratitude or rewards for service. It will bo exceedingly strange if the service of the Ger man people to the Fatherland In this crisis is not rewarded, and Count von Bernstorff, who is in a position to speak with some au thority, says that It will be. That the Issue, in their minds, ir not autocracy versus de mocracy i3 abundantly proved by the atti tude of tho Socialists in the Reichstag and the country at large, for In Germany tho Socialists are the representatives of political democracy. The Germans aro fighting for their country, not for a new form of govon ment, and whi-n all classes In a nation will ingly bear heavy burdens for the same patri otic cause ther- is hound to bo, in victory ns in defeat, .1 stronger sense of Independence, and Anally a larger measure of political equality. German domocraey wins, which ever way the winds of war may blow. In England the cause of popular liberty was marvetously advanced, without coercion, during the reign of the greatest absolutist among the Angelina, Henry II, and, as Dr. Frederick A. Cleveland says In his book on "Organized Democracy," it has frequently fared better under a monarchy than under a democratic form of government. Give Every Child n Fighting Clmnco MORE than 14,000 public achool children in Philadelphia over 10 per cent, of this year's enrolment will have to be con tent with half- or part-time schooling this year. This condlUon of affairs has been chronic fur some time and is not only dis graceful but Indefensible. It is full of dan ger for tho community and for the children themselves, and should be remedied at once. The pama condition, only In an aggravated form, exists all over the United States. Of the 20,000,000 children of Echool age, only about CO per cent, attend school for even half the year. In Philadelphia fully 16,000 children who graduate each year from the public schools are forced Into the 'blind alley" of industrial life and recruit the ranks of the unemployed, dependont and delinquent classes. The Arm basis of a Republic is the. educa tion, the thorough education of its citizens. This means a seat In school, at full time, for every child of school age. in Philadelphia particularly, a city of homes, thera can be no satisfactory excuse for Inadequate echool faculties. As an Ambassador, It appears A. Rustero Hay Is an Incomparable conversationalist. It ts difficult to understand how the Ger man army can be flying from Prance when it has been reported that both Its wings wars crushed. Toe "War Horsa of Reform" mows back to the cJty today- The Mayor I reaort4 to bsi In exeellent health ami ready to t8i. un th9 cudgels. In behalf of bqq4 government with renewed vigor. Food prices in Philadelphia, aside from the Importum item of meat, are lower than In any other city of eorresponding felze in America. Luscious raspberries, which are almost unobtainable in New Tork, may be had here for 7 cents a box. Cantaloupes are retailing at 6 cents here and 10 cents in New York. And so on, EVERY time lsraol Zangwlll'a name ap pears In print, Gcorgo C. Tyler, who pro duced "Tho Garden of Allah,' lays In a new supply of sackcloth and ashes and exclaims "Mea culpa; mca maxima culpat" And Inci dentally, ho snys unholy things about a cer tain ex-drnmntlc critic now a resident of Philadelphia, It nil happened in tho daya whon Tyler had Just turned tho financial cor ner with "Tho Christian." Tho dramatic road had been full of hnrd sledding, and his first big success had Increased his bank ac count to man's size. Thon, Into tho verdant and unsophisticated Hfo of Tyler crept that nefarious critic. In tho lattor'B behalf It may bo said thnt ho has reformed now and Is try ing to Hvo down his critical pnst. At any rate, tho ctltlo had Just read Zang wlll's "Children of tho Ghetto," then newly published. Full of misplaced enthusiasm ho wont to Tylor nnd urged him to have It dramatized and produced. Tyler "bit," and ns subsequent events proved was bitten, for when tho play c!ord after a while, Tylora ofore-mentloned bank account had beon de creased by some $20,000. AHOUT tho only thing in which Jnmos Gordon Bcnnott, owner nnd editor of tho Now York Herald, not to mention the Paris edition and tho New York Evening Telegram, showed hesitation, was In matrimony. It took him 73 years to get married; it never took him 73 seconds to reach any other decision. In fact, his precipitancy has been notorious on two continents. This Is best exemplified by a happening ono Thursday morning Without warning, tho New York ofltco received a cublo dispatch from Paris, signed with tho usual "Bennett," ordering tho suspension of tho Evening Telegram. Thoro was no reason given, and, ns Bennett's word is law, no one asked for an explanation. Tho stnft wns dismissed and then thero enmo another dispatch to resume tho publication. Slnco then tho Evening Telcgrnm has be come Bennett's best paying property. THE next time somo British friend reminds you that lynchings tako place only In tho United States, nsk lilm or her If ho or she hns over heard of un historic lynching in Edinburgh. Tho reply will most likely bu "no," yet .lolin Torteous was hanged by a mob In 1730, nnd tlm cntlro populace was delighted beyond words. Poiteous was cap tain of the guard and was known for his wanton cruelty. In a street riot ho had forced his men to fire Into tho crowd, seven being killed and more than :0 Injured. Ho was placed on trial for murder and found guilty. A reprieve was granted and Porteous was placed in tho Tolbooth. On September 7 a mob formed, took the keys from tho Jailer, set all tho prisoners freo and dragged Porteous to a tree and hanged him, after first torturing him. DURING tho last strlko of the cloak and eultmakers In this city, there camo an lnllUx of gunmen from New York city real "bad men" of tho "eut-'em-nllvo" typo. Stories of their prowess and Ilre-eatlng pro pensities were spread brondenst to scare away strike-breakers until Detective Isaacs, of the Central Office, appeared on tho scene. Single-handed he marched up to the three leaders of tho gunmen. Taking ono in his good right hand nnd another In his equally good left, he bumped their heads together with precision and force. Then ho took the precious trio to Broad Street Station, put them aboard a New York express and told them politely and nil that, but sternly never theless, that It would bo wlso to "beat It" beforo real trouble ensued. Slnco thon Philadelphia has been free from gunmen, and the Phllndclphln police forco has a reputation among Now York gangsters of being brutal In tho extreme impolite, In fact. ALL yo housewives who mako your hus " bands get up early these chill mornings to lik-ht tho kitchen Arc, take noto that tho man who invented the kitchen range as con stituted at present wuh ono Eenjamln Frank lin, a native of Philadelphia and said to have been intimately conneend with certain inci dents of our Revolution Franklin first In vented a stove to burn bituminous coal which consumed Its own smoke, having a downward draft. Later, ho devised another design, which had a banket grate and mov able lnrs at the top and bottom supported on a pivot. The top would bo Ailed with kindling, then th bosket would bo Inverted and the Are would burn at tho base. Tho Franklin stove is still in use in many parts of the United States, although thore have beon hundreds of Improvements nnd mode rations. BIO oaks from tiny ncorns grov, even to the extent of developing into a reigning house like the Hapsburgfc. Away back, hid den In the mi-ts of history, a Count Rudolf von Hapsburg was riding toward a stream nt which stood a monk, unablo to cross. Ho told the fount that he was on his way to hrlvo a dylne man and tho Count lent his horse that he ml-ht continue on IAh errand of mercy. The next day the monk returned tho horse. 'God forbid." exclaimed tho Count, "that I should ever ride a horse that hns carried tho Saviour to a dying man," and he pre sented the animal to the Church. In the course nf time, tho monk becamo chaplain to the Prince Elector of Mainz. A new Emperor was to be chosen and the for mer monk sugeested the namo of Rudolf von Hapshurg. And so It came about that Ru dolf was chosen Emperor of tho Holy Roman Empire, tho precursor of poor Franz Josef. TWO bos near Media found a pot of beau tiful Brefcn paint and a. brush. They also discover' 4 that their father's horse was a dirty white Ho they started to paint it jrren. When thoy had finished the tall and ono hind leg, father came upon tho scene. "Boys," Ue said, "as you appear to hava a penchant for art, you may paint the picket fence around tho old homestead green; hath etdejs, mind you, and no play until you nre done. Tnat ts why the hoys have decided to ho coma despeiadoas or reporters or something Similarly dreadful. UUAPFORIX CURIOSITY SIIQI Ppite all notion to the contrary, history does repeat Itself occasionally, and from the diary of John livclyn. a contemporary of Sam Ul Ppys. this appears proved Under date of July , 183, Evelyn wrote: "The pubUe was now in great consternation on the late plot and conspiracy; Hli Majesty very melancholy, end not stirring without double guard: all the avenues and private doers about Whitehall and the park shut up. few admitted to walk in it. "The Turks were likewise in hoetlllty against the Herman Kniperor. almost masters of the Up .er Hungary, and drawing toward Ylenna. On the other side the French King (who it is believed brought in the infidels) disturbing his Spanish and Dutch neighbors, having swal lowed up almost all Flanders, pursuing his ambition of a fifth universal monarchy; and all this blood nnd disorder in Christendom had evidently Us rise from our defections at home, In a wanton peace, minding nothing but luxury, amblUon, and to procure money for our vices. To this and our lrrellglon and atheism, great lngraUtude and self-lnterestl the apostney of some, ahd the suffering tho French to grow so great, and the Hollanders so weak. In a word, we were wanton, mad, and surfelUng with pros perity; cyery moment unsettling the old foun dations, and never constant to anything. The Lord In mercy avert the ond omen, and that wa do not Provoke Him till Ho bear It no longerl "This summer did wo suffer twenty French mcn-o'.war to pass our channel toward tho sound, to help tho Danes ngalnst tho Swedes, who had abandoned the French Interest, we not having ready sufficient to guard our coasls, or take cognizance of what they did; though the naUon nover had moro or a better navy, yet tho sea had never so slender a fleet." On July 19, 1889, Evelyn wrote In hla diary: "Tho Marshal do Schombcrg wont now ns gen eral toward Ireland, to the relief of London derry. Our fleet lay before Brest Tho Con federates passing tho Rhine, besiege Bonn and Mnyence, to obtnln a passage Into France. A great victory gotten by tho Muscovites, taking and burning Perecop. A new rebel agntnst the Turks threatens the destruction of that tyranny. All Europe In arms against Frnnco, nnd hardly to be found In history so universal a faco of war." DONE IN PHILADELPHIA IN A SPIRIT OF HUMOR On the Just and the Unjust Knlcker Thoy nre looking for a war tax that will fall equally on every one. Boclter Then tax tho rain. Now York Sun. Morning Sunt From a short poem enUtlcd "Daybreak," by Prof. George Herbert Clarke: "Sunt Sunt Bunt Bunt 81m Bunt Bunt Sunt" Sounds like a prejudiced newsboy. A Pulling Story The Texan pulled the dentist's bell, The dentist pulled him In, The Texan pulled hts Jaws npart, And bade the Doc begin. Tho dentist pulled his forceps from His caso to pull tho tooth, And then he pulled tho wrong ono out; Ho was a careless youth. Tho Texan pulled himself upon His feet and pulled a gun; An officer thon pulled thorn both, His namo was Sergeant Dunn. Dunn pulled a Up from each and o'or The Judge's eyes pulled wool; They both pulled out without a Alio, For Dunn possessed a pull. New York Telegraph. A Dual Alliance A Michigan paper announces tho marriage of Knthryn Cannon nnd William Popp. We hopo that no bang-up a wedding will not be fol lowed by a state of war. Compensation If It Is true, as our business philosophers tell us, that "those who nover do more than they get paid for, nover get paid for moro thnn they do." then it is quite clear that If you want to get paid for moro than you do, you must do more than you get paid for. Even a philoso pher ought to see how Impossible that Is, b't, of course, the truo philosopher cannot b ex pected to hesitate over a mero Impossibility. Life. A Grave Mistake From the Arst chapter of tho Belgian Com mission's romance of German deviltry: "On August 12, after the battle of Haclcn, Colonel van Damme, commander of a Belgian rcclmunt, was lying wounded on tho battlelleld, Soveral German Eoldlers found hlin, and placing their revolvers ngalnst his mouth, blew ha head oft." For this barbarity, at leant, there Is the very best of evidence. Tho vora cious Commlinluni.'rti havo an affidavit from Colonel van Damine himself. Baltimore American. A Question of Ownership Alkali Ike And so Slippery Sam died with his boots on, eh? Broncho BUI No, he died with my boots on. That's how he camo to die. Boston Transcript. Taking No Chances "Dllson yonder tells mo lie trusts his wife Implicitly and absolutely, but" "Well!" "Well, I should notice ho carries hla change and his Ashhooks loose In the same pocket." Judge The Happy Fanner The shades of night were falling fast When up the fonce tow blithely passed, Through cntusote and Paris Bieen, These grim trespassers on tho scene: One army worm, One chinch bug, One Hessian fly. One cut worm, Advancing each before Its kind, They gave the wiggle-wag behind. And unswerlng with buzz nnd whl5S Their trusty troopj Invaded viz,: One wheatfleld. One Aeld of oats. One cornflelil, One potato patch, Tho farmer slumbered In Ills bed While pleasant fancies roatn.c4 Ul3 !l3ll, And dreamed of getting after bit A few farm luxuries, to wit; One automobile, One lighting plant. One tractor, One silo. Hut where the setting sun had sliona Of opulence remained a bono, Clean-picked as frost denudes the Uoss, And what the farmer had wore Uusso: On.e sale, One trip to a new farming country. One trip back again, One start all over. Wall street JojjrnaL The Railroads ami Washington There Is no possible doubt that In many In stances the tax (the proposed tax on freight traffic) collected from the shipper will reach the ultimate consumer as a double market price of the articles so taxed; there l no possible doubt that In all Instances it will mean final costs very much higher than they are now. New York Frets, NOW that Baltimore hns had its Star-Spangled Banner cetebratlon, In commemoraUon of the 100th anniversary of tho writing of Key's Immortal song, let us glanco a moment nt Phila delphia's sharo in popularizing that anthem. Whenever a song nchloves enormous popu larity there usually appears on tho untroublod waters a controversy that Is carried over from one generation to another. So It has been with Key's song, which, llko Hopklnson's "Hall, Columbia!" did not originally bear the Utle by which It Is now known to countloss millions. Tho controversy In this Instance, however, does not reflect upon Francis Scott Koy, but rages around tho identity of tho composer of tho music. Llko many nnothor controversy of similar character, this ono has boen settled a good many times to tho satisfaction of some of U10 disputants; nevertheless, thore seems to bo a good deal needed to entirely clear the ntmosphere. A Phllndclphlan, too, has engaged In this entertaining occupaUon, but It ta not about him thnt I wnnt to chat today. It was In tho pages of a Philadelphia maga zine, tho Annloctlc, which In Its tlmo was the foremost monthly In this country, and not sur passed by any In London, that Key's poem first received a printed form that might bo called permanent. At that tlmo, also, It still was unnamed. Key wroto his poem, ns Is very well known, white he was on a British ship that was en gaged In tho bombardment of Fort MoHenry In Soptember, 1S14. It Is -dcscrlpUvo of his thoughts nnd feelings, nrousod ns thoy wero to a high pitch of patriotism, and when ho roturned to Baltimore after tho unsuccessful bombardment he gavo tho manuscript to a friend, who soon had It put in type in ono of tho Baltimore nowspnpor ofnees. It wns entitled "Tho Dcfonso of Fort Mo Henry," but oven this rather weak title for so lusty n song could not destroy Its Influence It wns by nil odds the best poem produced during tho Wnr of 1S12, nnd, ae usual, Koy did not know that ho was doing tho best thing of Its kind ever penned. Genius noarly always falls to recognize Itself. Somo ono has to place tho wreath of fame on their brow before thoy understand. Tho poem was printed In nearly every news paper of tho tlmo ns soon ns It come to tho editor's hand. But when tho editor of tho Annloctlc, nt that tlmo Washington Irving, saw the poem In the newspapers, ho did tho best ho could to bestow tho wreath. Ho placed It nt tho head of tho poetry in tho November number of tho Analectlo, 1814, nnd introduced It with .1 description of tho circum stances under which It was written. At tho same time ho wroto that It was far too valu able a piece of verse to permit to be lost. Thus It onmo nbout that the Arst literary recognition of tho Star-Spangled Banner camo from a Philadelphia magazine. But thoro Is another chapter to this. The first man to sing tho Star-Spangled Ban ner also wns a Philadelphia, and his descend ants have aroused a great deal of controversy because of ono slight remark ho mndn nbout tho circumstances of this Arst public singing of tho Immortnl song. To be exact, thero was not ono who sang tho Houg Arst, but two, tho bi others, Chnrlcs nnd Ferdinand Durang. Thcso young men, who wero tho sons of a performer In tho old Chest nut Street Theatre, also wore connected with tho theatrical profession. Charles Durang wns n dancing master hero for years and wroto a history of tho Philadelphia theatres. Both of tho Durangs enlisted In tho Harrlsburg Blues when there was a call for volunteers to repel the British, who wero going strong in tho neighborhood of tho Chesapeake Thoy wero In enmp near Baltimore nnd stationed at Foil's Point. They were In Baltimore soon after tho nt tack on the fort nnd thero wero handed a copy of tho poem. Now, hero Is wheo tho con troversy beglnB. ' According to Charles Durang's version of this event, ho rend over the song nnd said to his brothor, "This would mako n good national pong." And thorcupon ho begnn to senrch for a plcco of music that would lit tho words. He said thnt ho wont through his trunk nnd pulled forth a well-known song, then very popular, entltlfd, "To Anncroon In Heaven," and dc elded thnt It was Just tho thing. Of course, tho words did fit. Thoy fltted to a nicety, because evidently Koy had tho motor of tho drinking song in his head at tho time he wrote. It was not tho Arst tlmo tho same music had beon used to tho words of an Amer ican patriotic song. Thoro was "Adams and Liberty," written by Robert Treat Palno 11 years previously, and at this tlmo widely known. It Is probablo that Key know It bettor than ho did tho original "To Anacreon In Heaven," which was an English song Bung by the Anac. reontlc Society, which ho thought w.13 the air to which his song Miould bo suiur. Yet, on tho strength of that remnik nbout Audlng a ploco of music to At, homo attempts have beon mado to bollttlo Durang's version of how the song was Arst sung In public. It is well to remembor Hint those who would duny Durang tho honor ho clalrnH for hlmsolf and brother have not attempted to designate any othor place or circumstance under which the song Arst received Its public presentation. In his valuable trentlso on our so-called na tional songs Mr. Sonneclt, of the Library of Congress, glvos a list of moro than 40 books, nrtloles and other material that lofof to tho history of that one song. Mr. Sbnneek's book was printed flvo jears ago, nnd I believe ho would now bo compelled to ovon doublo the length of his list. As to tho real authorship of the music, tho result of the various controversies thus far has been to even further obscure tho point. Tho Rev. Or. II. T. lionry. president of the Catholic High School for Boys, and Dr. Orat tan Flood havo been engaB.-d In one of the most eluborute controversies nbout tho origin of the ulr of tho Ktar-Hiwnsled liannor that has yet been waged. Both aro regarded highly as authorities on general hymnology, hut jq far as I mn 6an from their articles the ques tten of tho outhoruhip of tho tune is stm 0n Oshatsbio ground. There Is a great deal of literature yet to bo Written aaoiu Key's utile neotn, which lie wrote on ttw hack of an envelope, THBT.VUSJMN Usury Van Ukc In iljo QiulnnJi Wast is Fortune, what Is PamoT PutUo gold und phantom nam, ltth8 buried in a cave, Olury written 00 a grave. What la Friendship? BumstWag flsen That the heart ctm spend b4 jmp Wealth that grttm white give, Praifte that heartens i (a Uv. Come, my friend, and Hi m PX8YU Lift's tiu tullsman Is love! By thi 1 harm we shall elude Poveity and solitude. TUo Hague, mi. VAST VOLCANIC CHAIN LINKED COASTS OF U. S. Geologic Proof That In Prehistoric Times America Seethed With Activo Craters from tho Atlantic to tha Pacific. That tho compleUon of tho Panama Canal should bo signalized by the bursUng fortii of a volcano-tho only Uve one L-. ine United States-was as etarUIng as It was tinexpeoUd says M. C. Frederick, In the Boston Transorlpt! To thoeo familiar with the geology of the Pacific coust, howover, the manifestation occa slons no surprise. It ia a strange story geologists tell ui 0f the California coaot-that ages ago Us moun tain peaks, more reefs In a great expanse of sea, rose to such a height that Santa Barbers Channel was a vast valley, over whloh doubt less roamed tho elonhant, camel, Hon, saber toothed tiger and othor animals whose fossil remains are scattered ovor the country ana somo of which aro found on tho islands. Then the land again sank bonoaUt the sea and again arose, and marine fossils aro found in atmn donco along the shore and on the mountain tops many miles from sea. Imagine the ur. prlso of tho old gold huntors to find thi skeleton of a whalo nt on olevaUon of a thou sand fcot and two hundred miles inland. And ages ago, as wo havo seen, tho land alee had its baptism of Are. Radiating from mlddis California In soparato streams, scientists tell us, tho lava flowing north bocamo n flood, burying tho smaller Inequalities and encircling tho larger, until It covered tho greater portion of northern California, northwestern Nevada, nearly all of Oregon, Washington ond Idaho, and reached far Into Montana and BrlUah Columbia. Arizona and New Mexico were alio Involved. Tho Columbia River cuts through lava thrco or four thousand feet thick, and in a cut In tho Deschutes Rlvor thirty successive shcots of lava may bo counted. But that wns many thousands of years ago, being at Its holght In tho Miocene period, Slnco then ncUvIty In tho United States has gradually diminished until It pracUcally ceased within tho lost fow centuries, with occasional belated manifestations, as at present Even In historic times thoro has ovIdenUy been a marked diminution of suoh phonomena on our Westorn coast Spanish explorers exprcssod tho belief that thoro wero volcanoes In tho const rango of Southern California. This may not havo been so ontlrely Imaginative as Is generally supposed. In tho desert east of Daggett lava beds and craters hava been; reported, of so recont a formaUon that some bellovo them to bo not moro than 100 years old. For somo tlmo after tho sottloracnt of Banta Barbara thero was a "volcano" on tho sea shore, clUier tho gonulno artlclo or burning petroleum. At tho tlmo of tho earthquakes of 1912 a now volcano was reported back of Pine Mountain. An old geography of 1S15 calmly remarks that "California Is a wild and almost unknown land. In the Interior aro volcanoes and vast plains of shifting snows, which sometimes shoot columns to great holght. This would scorn near Incredible were It not for tho well authenticated accounts of travelera." Tho entlro region of Yellowstone Park, Wyoming, was In remarkable volcanic activity at a comparatively lato geological period, nnd the lingering phenomena still produced consti tutes tho most remarkable series of natural wonders of nny equal nroa of the globe. There Is nlso a small goysor region, of a hundred or two boiling geysers, with tholr accompaniment of sulphur, salts and nlkalls, In the mountains of central California. In time, no doubt, tho rnclflc coast will become ns settled ns the Atlantic side, which In early geological times, wo are told, appar ently had outbursts on a grandor scala than nnythlng known In historic times, for example, tho enormous floods of lavns which with tufas nnd sandstones form tho copper-bearing aeries of Lnko Superior, which havo a thickness of thousands of feet Tho coast of Mnlne, tho region of Boston, ths Connecticut Vnlloy, tho PnllBndo of the Hud Fon. through Pennsylvania, nnd clsowhere, show traces of ancient volcanic action, and tho same may bo said of many countries of Europe whore volcanic llfo Is now extinct Alnskn, Mexico and South America still show mote or less volcanic nctlvlty, but In all the known world there Is but ono Stromboll, In the Mediterranean, which has been constantly discharging lava for more thnn two thousand years. THE IDEALIST Due to the grace of God most of us are whole limbed. Do you know what it really moans to be abl to walk along with your legs doing their full duty, with full-grown and unimpaired arms swinging In hnrmony with your Btrlde, with cjes seeing overy passing thing, with ears hew ing all sounflB? You will not know until you are deprived ol ono of them. Those of us who nro wholo-llmbed have won out In our chances Those who are not have Inst. And tho most matter-of-fact men on earth will ndmlt that life docs contain a huge degree of chance. A crippled mnn-a bright, cheerful chap-on" pave tho reason for his extreme nnd continued etate of happiness. His reply made stronger men of hla hearers. "Because nil of my friends treat me as on of themselves. They offer me no regrets, which, after nil. are useless. They never refer to mr misfortune. They talk freely with me as If I wero ns well equipped physically as any om of them." Thero is the secret One of ourselves' Thin of It when rude Instinct prompts you to stare nt a cripple passing you on the street There exists among most folk who have been deprived of a partial use of their bodies a Mi degree of sensitiveness with respect to a dls cueMon or their particular ailment. The sUsM est mention of the topic often sends the mind of such a one Into a season of brooding Under this comes the too fiequent extendrol of sympathy, the too much offered hand of help. Note how your unfortunate friend proud to do things which you were not ' ho could do. Suffering humanity needs all the help " ln SlVC. But do not forget thut In extending hIP 4 mental attitude must be taken Into iowmlr' tton, as well rs a physical deflclcno Do not permit your helping efforts to mph' Sire the lh Ideal gulf between vou and the on you help. TUB IDEALIST Tho Wastes of lYuce The war lias brought Into a whiter light thw ever the Immense waste that goen on ' s' eminent In times of pouee. ivngr-n "" play a high card by looking this iiuestlon 'lrl tn the face now. whon world-wide econoin) the watthword. MinneujiolUi Journal WuuU'll Of Cour.e Vun Short ulll Ah' Nu toMtrss' you like to be a nmir' MU3 Swift-Of course! Wouldu I you JuJfc