""rv";v mm&mommmm rniliTtufemwh wiTai1tnF"'T " iTi iW"H1MmJm liTiiTiMMf T1 JmMMJlMnMriwWiiM 8 EVEttfG LEDOl21l--PHILADBIiPHIA MONDAY SEPTEMBER 21, 1914. EVENING $gai3 LEDGER PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CYRUS It. It, CURTIS. rmtciDE.Ni. Go. W. Ochs, Brtnrv; John C Martin, Trensum;; Chnrlti It. I.tiitlncton, Philip S. Collins, John I!. WH lliima, Dlrwton. EDITOniALBOAUU: Cro II. K. Ccti, Chairman. P. H. WHALtiY.. j-j- ; tiiocutho Editor JOHMOMAnTIN Dmjljliwn(n Mnnijw Published dally. Mctrt Sunday, nt Punuc I.tCKHB BulldlnB. Indopendenca Square, l'hllnrtelphln. I.twim Ck.nttul llroad nnd Chestnut Streets Atlantic CiTt l'leii-l'nlm Bulldlmr Nkw Tohk , 170-A, Metropolitan Tower rjittcAno Sir Homo Inurnne nulMlnjr London 8 Waterloo l'lace, Tall Mall, 3. . NKWsurnKAvoi njnutunuiw lltitrvn The r-afrtoj JJuJii' "5 Waiiin(iton nritnB The rosl nulla n nnf.t ncmuti -o Frl.lrleMtriiwia J.ONDON IICBEAO 2 Pall Mall Eat. f. W, l'ma Bureiu 32 Hue Louis lo Grand sunsr.niPTioN tehms lly rarrler, Ditt.r Only, Ijc cents Mr mall, pontpal.l eutalde of Philadelphia, except where foreign po-tam M required, Iiailt Ost.T. on month, tnly;nA centj: Pailt Only, one year, threa dollara. All mall sulcrlp tlon pajablo In advance. speaking officially, but ho reflected the gen eral sentiment of tho American peoplo In favor of neutrality of thought as well aB of speech ami action, so far as such neutrality la consistent with a man's respect for his own intelligence. HELL, 3000 WAI.MT KnsTO.v: mux noon E7" Addma all rommunieallmi lo F.vtntna Ledger Indeprxdrnce Square, I'Mladdiihta. A Professor Describes a "Machine" POSSIBLY Professor William Mllllgnn Sloano, In lecturing before German stu dents at Berlin and Munich on "Party Gov ernment In the United States," had Penroso Ism rh mind when ho said: "Where the or ganization of paity Is known ns tho 'ma chine,' both place and money bribery abound, nnd the slime of tho serpent Is on every po litical and social Institution because It is on the hearts of tho men and women concerned, tho people who set up and work tho wholo machinery of life. Tho fountain cannot rlso nbovo Its source except by artifice: there are times nnd places where party machinery be comes so foul that it is clogged and stopped." irpuciTioN suns at tub rittuiOEiPtni rostoirlca roa MR! AH rcM-CI.8 Milt MATTtn riUUIir.Il'IIIA, MON1IVY, 5I.ni.MHKU 31, 191 1 Tear Down the Black Flag THE country will not fall to appreclnto whero Pennsylvania stands If Ponroielim is repudiated and Doctor Rrumuatigh Is tri umphantly elected. It will bo a mesEago lo the Union that the Keystone State Is per meated with devotion to Republican prin ciples and her Ideals Imbedded In n morality that cannot be bought or sold. Every hopo of Republican rehabilitation Is fixed on tho Pennsylvania campaign. This Is the crucial State, for here It la that discredited leader ship Is making its flnnl atand for vindica tion. With the disruption of Penroselsm the last of tho parasites will bo torn looso from tho party body. It will at length bo free; free to glow, free to breathe, free to absorb invigorating elements, free to fight, as tho young giant onca fought before, for a great and vital economic program. Penn sylvania Is tho only State left with n bluck nag nailed to tho masthead of the party organization, nnd Pennsylvania l going to tear It down. Tragedies of the Commonplace THE great dramatic moments of life do not ordinarily take place in earthquakes and shipwrecks. Xor aro tho tragedies of normal existence confined to million-dollar thefts, sudden death and bloodshed "Tho great American play must deal with problems that confront every man and woman," declared Miss Helen Waro tho other day, through tho columns of this nowspaper. Miss Ware cited the domestic debacles which result from ex travagant living as being tho basis for mod ern tragedies of Shakespearean calibre. The time has assuredly como when tho se rious dramatist should eschew medieval romance and tragedy for tho even greater romance and tragedy of present-day life. How can the Imbroglio of a 16th century klngdomette compare with tho colossal drama of our national finance and commercial war fares? Tho great drama, the trenchant mu sical comedy, the npropos sketch-satire must deal, if It bo In tho spirit of the times, with themes familiar to everyday life, as Intimate to every man and woman as knives and forks, soap and water, neckties and hairpins. It is in, small things of llfo that aro of prodlclous importance. A fiy in tho coffee may poison the nectar of l've It is not im possible by any means to imagino tho bland, complacent husband, addicted to his evening newspaper, whipped to a truly Shakespearean thirst for murder by tho bridge or etichro obsessed wlfo pestering him nightly to play a game. The egg cooked a minute too long daily and tho neglected laundry persistently lacking buttons might readily bring a bllsi ful couple to tho divorce court, and the want of kitchen or general economy drive an exasperated husband to the saloon, the club or the use of a concrete club; or even murder. One of the leading surfragottes In America was goaded to desert her Hpouse, and thence to become an exponent of militancy, by her husband's failing to agree with her in rogard to the rights of labor unions! Certea, comedy material worthy of a modern Aris tophanes, or the highest flights of Bernard Shaw or George fohan! Spending Money on the Wrong Things THC Municipal Court has made one record which Is not likely soon to be broken: Us extravagance has become a standard of measurement. Not content with tho lux urious quarters now assigned to it, It wants n building of its own. Tho acquiescent Com mittee on Finance has provided in the loan bill tho sum of $400,000 for this purpose. It would bo a line thing for Philadelphia to have n new public building, or several of them, nnd when some of the constitutional lestrlctlons of the city's borrowing capacity tiro removed it might be good policy to build them. Hut just now there are fur more exi gent needs for all the ensh available. It Is very obvious that sound business policy does not dictate In nil Instances tho financial program of Councils. Facts Their Best Argument FACTS will bo fighting on the side of tho Eastern railroads whun, next month, they go before tho Interstate Commerce Commis sion to renew their petition for freight rate advances. If before they could mako a strong showing, they now can mako a brilliant one. Their caso Is substantially fortified. A year ago the main difficulty that con fronted them was Uie high cost of capital, resulting from unsatisfactory net returns. That Is tho main difficulty today; but mean time tho cost of capital has mounted even higher. Not only have net revenues dwindled becnuso of a shortage in import and export traffic; not only have Interest, in general, tralllc; not only have interest rates, in gen eral, risen, but a market for tho sale of new securities is now non-existent, while upon the reopening of the New York Stock Ex ehangu foreign holders of American rails aro likely to flood the market. Higher freight rates point the obvious way out of this dilemma. W2 New Words in An Old Lunuu"c achieves something which is new to the world, it often happens that his name is attached for all subsequent time to the dis covery which ho makes or the theory which he formulates. The namo of Copernicus thus becomes an adjectivo In reference to the Copernican theory. The name of Darwin ac quires a sufllx in discussions of Darwinism. Tho namo of Pasteur Is perpetuated in a verb It Is likewise in philosophy, in politics, In religion, with such terms as Hegellanlsm, Uncolnlan statesmanship, Christianity. A man who makes a great contribution to tho world's thought and the world's history rep resents some idea or principle or achievement which is so distinctively his own that perhaps the language appropriates his name for its special purposes. Sometimes, however, tliero is nothing com plimentary In this philological recognition. To speak of a Machiavellian proposal, for in stance, is not to praise either the proposal or Machlavelli. The gerrymander is not Itself In good repute, though the word has a detl nlto and useful meaning. Another woid of similar origin, one which Is well understood all over the country and even elsewhere, is Penroselsm. So much for future fame! Too Big a Price to Pay WHEN men of the stamp of McKinloy and Dlngley wrote tariff hills there was no doubt of the country's devotion to tho prin ciple of protection. The nation wants pro tection now, but thinks, and rightly thinks, that Penroselsm Is too big a price 10 pay for It. Pennsylvania can pauperize tho party In the rest of the nation if it wibhes, by elect ing Mr. Penrose, but nowhere else do mm believe that progress can be mado by ba k stepplng. An ambassador to Washington who represented motley elements of organ ized corruption InBtead f the people of Pennsylvania might talk loud, b'it he would talk vainly in the I'apitol. There is a Chlnesu wall between tho millions who want protec tion and protection itself. That wall I Pen rnselim, and until it is battered down th free traders will continue their experimen tations at Washington. "To All Lovers of Fair Pin)" Fort a good many years Prof, Huso Muensterberg has been a welcome so journer In thin country. His interpretations of American life from the dual standpoint of a German and a ps chologl.it have been most Interesting und valuable. We know him as Professor Muenstei berg of Harvard" and wish a long duration of hit) ambassadorship, lie has just published a new book, called "America and the War," and dedicated It "10 all lovers of fair play," In it he d- dares thut the American people hae formed i their opinions concerning the European war j with tho unanimity of sheep. He says that j their nnti-German attitude is akin to the , American poncnant for lynching, and that U Is the product of auto-?ugtestion, induced and fostered by colored news from England France and Uelgium- Popular ignorance is j the cause of this boatUUj. Professor $usu- ', htcrberg implies that sympathy with rier- many is the outcome of education and , culture. j Whatever may b the faults of American ' public opinion, this attack on It is iuh likely to further tho purpose of the book. More- I over, it probably would surprise professor ' Muensterberg to know 10 what extent i readers of war news in this iountir Jutv taken into account the sources f it. It is an American habit in forming opinion to consider where the information cumes from, j When President Wilson told the Belgian ' envoys und tabled thf- Uermiti i:mpcror that tho Government in Washington would nut attempt to render judgment on the ques tions that had bexm presented to him he wai "t True to Their Conventions THROUGH tho hideous red war-mist two facts stand out plainly: One fact la that Great Britain, with sin cerity that must be conceded, carried out her written promise, her treaty-plighted word, to Belgium. She knew thero would bo a fearful price to pay; she didn't falter. Tho other fact is that President Wilson, in sisting that this country carry out its solemn promise to Great Britain regard ing non-discrlmlnatlon in Panama tolls, facing honest difference of opinion as to our baslo rights, sot an example of international probity und good faith, of the Anglo-Saxon regard for the sacredness of tho spoken and written promise, which was a splendid fore runner of Great Britain's action. That the two groat English-speaking na tlons hav declared to the world thoy are one in demanding the observance of Interna tional obligations, no matter what the cost, is the strongest guarantee that future agree ments will mean what they say nnd shall not be "scraps of paper," to he torn an4 tossed to the winds at the cynical caprice of any ruler. PASSED BY THE CENSOR THE visit to this country of a special Bel gian Embassy recalls the tlmo spont In tho United States by Ll Hung Chang, Chinese statesman and admirer of General Grant. It was his dovotlon to tho memory of the American General which nearly precipitated International complications between tho then Celestial Empire and old Erin. JLl arrived in New York city and, according to the by-laws of his nntlvo land, was not permit ted to touch his sllk-clnd feet upon heathen foreign soil. So, wherever he went, regal carpots were laid, or tho old gentleman Wns carried in Sedan chairs. It was so when ho visited Grant's tomb on Hlversldo Drive, New York. Stepping- from his carriage, ho entered a waiting Sodnn chair. Four husky Irish policemen stepped forward, red of face and III nt ease. Kor a moment they hesitated, one or two essayed to speak, but emotion ovcrcamo them. They grasped the handles and New York wit nessed tho nmazlng sight of a Chinaman carried to anything but a patrol wagon by four Irish policemen I THERE wns yet another delegation from a foreign nation In this country, tho threo Poors, who sought nld In their war against Urltaln. No sooner had they landed than an enterprising weekly paper commandeered them und brought them Into a special room In their hotel, where the sun wns bright, and had a photographer lake nn even dozen plctuics In various, more or less graceful, nt ttludes. And when the twelve plates were devel oped, Just one pair of magnificent coattnlls appeared to view! The plates had been light-struck, and tho delegates were on their way home: I N THE days when Hrooklyn was yet n municipal entity, David A. Uoody was Its Mayor. Mr. lioody Is a gentleman to his linger tips, nnd was completely out of touch with tho political gang which ruled tho City of Churches. Put as a Mayor he was not al together a success, for tho "gang" took great plcasuto in "putting things over on him." So It wus no wonder that one day tho telephone In his office rang violently and nn excited volco ut tho other end of tho wire informed tho Mayor that at a cer tain number In Raymond street thoro was congregated tho "greatest aggregation of thieves, cutthroats, burglars and criminals ever gathered under one roof. Tho Mayor at once passed the news to Chief of Police Campbell, who sent n wagonload of police men to the place. On a dead run the patrol dashed down Raymond street and drew up before the Raymond street jail! Afti-r all. In falrntns, it should not bs for gotten that there was a time when Klsass and J.othrini;en were original German provinces- It Is not so diilicult to credit louse ru mors of atrocities committed by thai hand of Oermans In Belgium German bands are famous for their atrocious music It Is worth while to swullow a wholesome ivinoirat in order t" secure a wholesome Re publican majority in iOta. The effect of the decreased immediate de mand for cotton is nut localised in the Eouth. It affects the welfare ft the entire l'nitJ States. The buy-a-bole.of-eoiton movununt will not eura tfea situation, bat every littlo bit helps. In these modern 4a it seeius that it would be more uD-t"data fur the armies to i gad wails of Mrs I'aughlln have Uecn un DURING the days preceding our own war with Spain. General Woyler was nearly lynched In a newspaper olllce, only ho did not know it, and it Is doubtful whether his ignorance lias been dispelled even now. It was at tho time when the chrome news papers uorc out-yelloinS ono another to tho fullest extent of their Ingenuity nnd regardless of their financial wounds. The yellowest or them all conceived the Idea that it would he a splendid thing If It could get Woyler Into the hands of the Cuban Insur rectos, obtain his last statement, have him lynched and then photographed. Men were sent to Cuba to visit the revolutionists, and nil the arrangements for the kidnapping were completed, when the proprietor of thf- paper In question backed water, and declined to see the "enterprise" through. When pressed for an explanation, ho gave voice to the follow ing cryptic utterance: "I don't mind being yellow, but I'll bo dashed If I want tho world to think thut I am purple." STILL, being "purple" is not nearly so bad as being born lo tho purple without the needed financial bucking, as was the case nt Fredfilc Lomaltrc, the great French actor. I.emaltro was in debt from the clay of his birth to tho day he died not ordinary Indebt edness, but ovtrw helming financial obliga tions. So he spout most of his waking hours evolving plans for raising money. And even now, In Its spnre moments, Paris remembers his vagarlos. A new play was billed. Lemaltre was the star. At T o'clock in the evening, an hour before the cm tain was to go up, tho manngor received a note from a pawnbroker, informing him thnt Lemnltro had pawned himself for 20,000 francs and that thero would bo no performance unless he was re deemed. He was. Another tlmo Pans was amazed when It saw Lemnltro driving down tho Hols in a magnificent equipage, drawn by four while horses. A friend hailed him from the sidewalk-. "You are a fool, I.emaltre, buying such an expensive carriage, when you are head over heels In debt. Why did you do it?" "1 had to." responded Lmnaltio, sticking a torn shoe out of tho window, "How tho douco could I afford to walk the street looking like that?" A SIMILAR character, but American, was John Stetson, the Boston theatrical man ager. One afternoon he arrived at tho Tremunt Street Theatre and saw a sign reading: Matlneo today S P. M. 8tlA(U. "Who in biases Is Sharp? Put Stetson there," he thundered, and nn amount of ex planation would induce him to change his mind. But it was when Haron de Orlniiu, the artist, stagqd Rider Haggard's "Slio" for (Kelson, that thf latter broke ad grammatical ic-cord. In the play was a line: "She, who must be obeyed," and Stetson anruel for three blessi-4 lu urs that it should have been "lint, wbo must be obeyed." MRS. miwu CAUOHUN, of Monro's Flat. JCevada, l desperately anxious to resign h- Mince, but t'nrle 8am has declined with thanks and so she is still pofctinistltss, a mile from the nearest habitation, i her husband a hundred miles away. The ov erotnent i an get no one else to tab" tho place. which Mays only li a month- There must bu some wie in clutrKv uf the ulllce, s the pleas be uutomubillzed. -Now that tbs New l'ojk police have put a uutetus on that man who was renting babies to criminals for use at their trials, ha will doubtless complain ut it as another blow at our infant industries- Within a year New York city will have between fjO and 60 miles of new subways rtady for updating; within a year Philadel phia will liavt to remove about EO or 60 miles of red tape aod other obstructions between her and the new subways. availing. Now she has induced her Uundara" to withdraw their security, hoping thnt this move Wilt fore her out of on olllce Umt sought the woman and, having gained her. kept her a Pe4ra! prisoner. imAPFOUU CUUIQSITV SHOP The field of Forty Footsteps according to the lc-Keud was- a meadow in old London, on whosu Mit tt.i- l.ni.bh Musi-um now stands. It was also known a.-, Southampton Field. During Die Monmouth rebellion two brothem espouseti opjio.-ne jjiUts and fought a duel oa the meadow Lvih were slain and, accord ing to tho stbry, 40 footprints were visible for many years, for no grass would grow whero tho fratricidal blood had stained the sward. Oxtail soup Is of olden origin, dating back to tho Protestant refugees who flod from Franco nfter tho revocation of tho kdlct of Nantes, In 1C86. In tho extremity of want they bought tho tails of oxon from tanners nnd mado soup therefrom. Accident brought tho edible to tho attention of an epicure, who liked the broth so well that ho proclaimed Its virtues until It became a fashionable dish. Tho title of Prlmo Minister was not officially conferred, but wns given In banter to Sir Robert Walpole. On February 11, 1712, ho said In the House of Commons! "Having Invested me with a kind of mock dignity and styled mo a 'prlmo minister,' tho Opposition imputes to mo nn unpardonable nbusa of tho chimerical authority which they only created and conferred." Somewhere between heaven and earth Is suspended Mohammed's "stepping stone," unless tho Moslem legend Is inaccurate. Ac cording to this source, when Mohammed mounted the benst, Al Horak, on his ascent to heaven, tho stone started to follow him, whereupon tho prophet laid his hand upon It nnd bade It stay whero It wns. Honco, to this tiny, true believers may seo It suspended on high. IN A SPIRIT OF HUMOR The War Game French troops check Germans. German army checks Russians. Austrlajis checked In Gnllcla. Sounds llkq the bnggage room of a rail rood station, We'll Leave This Entirely to Our Headers Correspondent, writing on n lettorhoad of tho mental detention room of a local hos pital, asks whether the following could bo called a "poem": "Give credit whom It duo Is To the whiskers of Ham Lewis." Wo would NOT call It a poem; what wo really think of It shnll go down Into the dark Rntl dank grave with our mortal rcmnnnts. Wonder Wltnt Wns Meant "Tho only homes I want nre Paris and better make the most of Heaven." "Well, you'd Paris." Wish Wc Knew a Caption Harrowing Enough To Do Justice to Thist Some parents think an heir a crying need. And that's tho way he usually turns out. From the News Columns she. The full bride Is a wondrous thing Of furbelows nnd laces. As pretty as tho new blown rose The wedding page she graces. HE. Tho bridegroom docbii't count at all; Tho future, glum he faces; An ordinary mortal, ho. On chocks, his name he places. Hone!, This Really Happened We walked Into a barber shop to have our luxuriant curls denatured, dhnlnuted, singed, massaged and otherwise maltreated. The barber wont to work with a will and scissors. Ho clipped and combed nnd clipped. He spoke not. Then he brushed off the expur gated hair, combed what remained, took off tho towel about our swan-like neck; we paid him and walked out. Strange? Most as suredly, for he never cvon once, much less oftcner, raised a minor behind us and asked whether or no the cut suited our aesthetic Ideas. News Notes From The Aquarium "Principal Fish About to Resign." Wor cester, Mass., Gazette. In The Sanctum "Have you a consulting editor?" "No, an olflcc boy." The niuw-Out "What happened to Babylon?" asked tho teacher of her Hrooklyn class. "It tell!" cried the pupil. "And what became of Nineveh?' "ft was destroyed." "And what of Tyre?" "Punctured." Exchange. A Purist Western Visitor (accosting citizen you toll mo a good place to stop at? Citizen Certnknly: Just before the ' Good day, sir. Hostnn Transcript. Can 'at." His Preparation you had any experience in the "Have movies." "Oh, yes, sli; I was for ten years with furniture vnn." Rultimoro American, I Ideal Husband may say r have an ideal hus- for "Yes, band. "An Apollo for looks, a Chesterfield mnuneis," rhapsodized, the girl, "Tlios-e things don't count In husbands, my dear. Mine stays fairly sober and brings most of his salary home." Pittsburgh Post. I)!i, Phaw ! K. F Slia-. new Chlneja MlnUtcr. urrHes with (lie dilldren anil a retlnu of ttent -seven." Noviapr Item. Poor Persia mourns her awful loss. The Shah no longer rules as boss. He's In this laud, wo read, becauso (Ami here foi rhymes we're forced to paujso.) He represents the land of Heaven Of family (and servants) thoio aro 27. Hurrah for China and Its Shah, Who nf tho children Is the pa! Pronminia to rhyinu ith "Iiom." Generosity -Mr. McNab (lo urchin i What's tht mat ter, laddlo? t'rchin-1've lost my 'openny! Mr. McNab Aye, dlnna gilovo. Here's a match to find It, London Opinion, Neighbor's Children ' What it tb scientific namo of the small creature who in ruining your fruit this year?" asked Mrs. Pobbs, "It has no scientific nninu," replied Mrs. p.lobbs. "Hut it is vulgarly known as Jimmy Pobbs." Washington Star. THK OI.O FLAG lly II. C. riuuurr (iff with your hat as tho Hug goes by, And lot the heart huvo Its say! you're man enough for a tear In your eye That you will not wipe away. You're man enough for a thrill that goes To your very finger tips. Aye. the lump Just then In your thraat that rose Hjwkfc moie than your parted liiw. DONE IN PHILADELPHIA WHEN I rend a few days ago that two lots of the Qlrard Estato In the vicinity of Third and Porter Streets had Just been sold by tho city for moro than ?34000, it Instantly occurred to mo that that was only a little loss than a third of the total vnluo of the realty owned by Glrnrd In old Passyunk township nt tho time of his death, Glrard was ono of tho first men hero to realize tho worth of realty as an Investment. Thoro had been land speculators before him In the field, of course, but ho was cautious and, unlike Nicholson, who, at ono time, had an ownership In about one-sixth of tho State, Glrard, for the great part, had his .holdings In Philadelphia. Ills ventures outside In cluded his coat lands In Pennsylvania, which are still very profitable, and other land In Louisiana. He left to tho city for tho support of his wonderful college for orphan boys somo of tho most valuable land In tho central part of tho city. It Is truo that pieces of this property, owing to tho changes of business centres, arc not now so profitable as they onco woro, yet those properties In tho neigh borhood of tho river, ns Glrard understood, never can cease to bo of value so long as we have nny commerce at nil. WHEN Glrard died ho was the richest man In this country. Tho inventory filed by his executors showed that his total prop erty, rcat and personal and ho had a great denl of both was valued, In 1832, at moro than $0,000,000. AV'c have becomo so accustomed to tho millionaire In our day and, In our conversa tions at least, aro even now flirting with billions, that wo do not reallzo what $0,000,000 meant In 1832. Thero was no other man In tho United States at thnt tlmo who could hold rank nnywliero near Glrard In tho point of wealth. Tho Immense fortunes with which wo aro so familiar aro of much later date: they aro oven of our own times, when the work of exploiting tho resources of tho country began. GIRARD'S fortune was piled up labori ously and slowly. It was not specula tive, lu tho modern benso of tho word. He was a keen buyer; ho know values, whether It was of wines, which ho imported by the shipload and bottled and sold, or of real estate, which ho bought and rented. Ho was constantly Importuned to take stock In the various new enterprises of his time, but where ho merely desired to oblige the seller, ho bought but a few shares. It Is evident that he regarded theso ns contributions and not business. For instanco, wo find his executors enter ing one share each in Lc Courrlor des Etnts Unls, the French newspaper; In the Do mestic Society, in the Susquehanna and Lehigh turnpike nnd in the Downingtown nnd Ephrata turnpike, but they did not place any value opposlto them. These wero not regarded us Investments by a man llko Glrard, but we do find him owning 2200 shares in the Schuylkill Navigation Com pany, and theso were valued In 1S32 at $26-4,000. Ho held nearly a million In Penn sylvania 5 per cents, and SllS.fiOO In City E per cents, His coal lands, which consisted of nearly 30,000 acres In Schuylkill County, wero valued at $175,2-10 at the time of tho Inven tory. Now they return a profit of moro than that every year. His Philadelphia holdings wero listed at $1,189,631, and no other man owned so much nt that time. Tho Glrard Estato has now three buildings worth moro than that amount, to say nothing of the college Itself. & LTHOUGH Glrard's holdings In the south ern part of the city contained consider able acreage, and one of his pat eels of land In Passyunk township contained his "plan tation" or country place, they were valued at loss than $112,000. I should not like to venturo upon nn estimate of their value to day, for on tho slto of part of his plantation rows of houses of tho most modern charac ter have been erected and lentcd. And still theio Is more land to bo improved. Three buildings, now covered by tho Mar iner and Morchant Building, at Third and Chestnut, wore rented in 1S32 at $1603, $1505 and $1005 lespertlvely a year. Ho hud a dairy farm In Moyaiuenslng district that routed for $90i) a year, nnd a wholo row of dwellings on Fairmount avenue, thou Coates stieet, that were rented for $257.50 a year each. For Hie old Dunlap houso, at the south east corner of Twelfth and Market btrects, Glrard lucolved $70S a year. This was re garded as a largo rent for that locality in tho.so days, hut I think any peison would bo willing to glvo a good inuny times that amount for such a corner now. From all his city properties Uliard ic eehod only a little more thuu $-!u,uOO a your In rentals, und ho wiu the richest man in tho 1'nlted States In his du. BY that strange perversity of human na ture that sometimes affects men of great ness, Glrard desued to be lemembercd as a mariner instead of a merchant, although as the latter hu is, of coiiise, butter recalled. It may not bo known that liuoth's greatest ambition was to bo a comedian, yet It Is us a tragedian that he became famous. On tho other hand, his brother-in-law, John s. Clarke, who wus a cotuediun of tho buffo tpe, belloed he hlld failed in life becauso the world would not accept him as a trug dian. Napulenn at first desired to aclilevo fame us a novelist, hut if ho did not achieve that position, ho succeeded in providing at mosphere, for countless pieces uf Union. I feci sme that Philndelphians ate HUely to fors't the mariner in Uirtuil In tho emit ness and far-sightedness uf tho man of bus iness. UliANVlLLE. The Primaries a Vain Hunt! Vtvia Ike MUuttUkec Sentinel. !q beuoflueut feature if tho direct primary js thai it closes an aiauineiit. If Uogw C. Matlivan uere the nominee of a liuuiocratiu fctiiU eanveiitlQli a piotu.st uould mount to the wtl...j fi-..tu T,-trn,kOllK trt ltulvituin ix.i.lno, I. linso struts would be red as the sunset shj? I bstruat of tho plain people, lu tills istse Uio if death could have dyed them red. ' M neupie teem to h,ie iitmo it. Chtcaiw Ko uouni. uui, euiu an argument!' When did a direct Iiritnnrj ever eloxo un argument? Wisconsin lias had much ex.iu lem-e in tliat lias. The um of it Is that the very peoiilu Lift up the boy on your shoulder, high. AnU snow una mo tuuuu oiijku. Those The man that boro it with death has lain These twenty years and more. Ho rtiwl that tho work should not u in vaiii (if the man who boro It before The man thut bears it Is bent and old. And ragged his beard and grai. Hut look at his eye fire onng and hold At the tune that he heais them iday. The old tune thunders through all tho air And strikes right into the heart. If it ever calls for you, boy, be there He there and ready to ttart. t iff with your hat as the (lag goes b i I neover the youngster's head' Teach him to hold it holj and high, rwr the sake of the sacred ilcad. who invented the direct in-imai as tho ono wuv in aeeure an unarguable verditt are always the vr ones to go on ai gulag and kinking una tlJiiiB to unset tho void let overy time it goes (gainst them- They tire doing It now. TIIK IDEAMST Ttto Emperor of China assumetl terrific obligations. Among them was the abspluto guarantee that he would make the tui come up cuch morning. It is not a matter of reiord that the sun eer fulled to put in appearunee. tiut therein lies the reason fur the immeasurable faith which the people wf the land put In their t-ntAt hVl tfiAtn 1lrt 4irna ari AAfil. rt ktav.ie m.i niv.ui nw nna nil CttllH'UUUi 1 RnmA -fnlb- ttifnl.- flirt 41i .-.. - , I wwtu -..,,. ...... "on- mo 1'iuiuunu Try spect Which Is paid a big man Is born bo1pV do things that I cannot do. Ho can swav mob, whereas I lack tho power to change th. mind of a slnglo individual. Hence ha i well entitled to my reverence. H' I have Just read an Intensely Interesting account of ono of tho country's BtromrMf1, public men. It wns. not proven therein thus ho possessed exceptional nblllty. ' " Hut It was proven that ho nov'er broke hl i word. " . ",. . IS oxn?uy wrmt. earned for tho , ancient Chlneso rulers tho terrible fear nfwH worshlnful ronnori ovlollnr. ,,.,-,,, n.-, ""af jepta r " """" ""b v,,clr SUB. f Among us nro Innumerable corrupt mn who nssumo leadership In public life! n02 folks vlow their ascendency with fears o. to what the world is really coming to. Search far enough and you'll find tho reason tat their power. ur In tho obituary of most every Unprincipled man of power you will find a hackneyed "it. novor broke a promise." ") Perhaps he only mado a few. But th.i number does not count. If tho old Chinese Lmperor had only guaranteed tho dally an.'' pourancc of tho sun and nothing more, that i would lmvo been qulto sufficient to Wn him on tho pedestal of roverenco nnd fear THE IDEALIST) VIEWS OF READERS ON TfMFXV TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin. ' ion on Subjects Important to City, Slnlc nnd Nation. To the V.dttor of the Evening Ledger: Sir As an Independent Republican, Inter, csted In having honest men elected to omc and tho standard of my party lestotcd In Penn sylvania, I am writing to commend your oppo. sltlon to PenroBelsm. By so doing, through tht ' agency of your excellent paper you ronder ' great service to the citizens of our Stato. Th nntl-Penroso sentiment Is very strong through hero lu Westmoreland County, and only by th elimination of Penroselsm can our party 'hopj ' totreturn to Its once high standard. S. OVERHOLT. Mt. Pleasant, Pa., September 15, 1011. INTERESTS OF PEOPLE THROTTLED To the 7'iJltor of the Evening Leduer! Sir Permit me, as a reader of your public, tlons, to express my observations of tho sentl luent of tho people of this community. Tho nun-partisan Judiciary and the uniform primary nuts aie rapidly educating the peopla ' In favor of Independent political action nnd non-pnrtlsnu voting. You will recollect that t ,thu latter act provides that a voter Is entitled to a paity ballot where ho has voted for a majority of the candidates of that party at the preceding election. These acts can have no other effect than to place the best interests of ' the Stnte and county before tho people at future elections. Tho Interests of the people of Pennsylvania aro throttled by the fact thnt almost all our largo daily pnpcis are controlled by politicians thnt arc Inimical to tho good government of our Stnte nnd counties. DON G. CORBnTT. Clarion, .Pa., September 15, 19M. THE FUNCTION OF A NEWSPAPER To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir The truo function of a newspaper Is serv ice to the public. I believe that you aro slncoro In your opposition to Mr. Penrose, and I believe that the forceful editorials which have appeared In the Evening Ledger, and those which I be lieve shall come, will contributu to a marked degrr In bringing about bis defeat In Novem ber. Keep up this service! W. II, IC Philadelphia, September 16, 1914. FROM A JOURNALIST To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Ruing a former newspaperman, I feel impelled to wrlto you my congratulations nfter carefully watching your Issues for the first thres days of publication. The physical appearanca of the paper commends itself, It Bcems to me, above everything el&e. The news Is presented not so that tho reuder may road, but so that he mubt read. To catch tho eye of tho reader immediately Is ono thing demanded from an afternoon paper. This you havo been able to do. Tin generous uso of pictures, which seems to bo your policy, almost needs no comment. Plctutes to movit persons convoy a more lasting Impres sion than almost anything they rend, and when the public seo the plctuies, tho paper will Li tlieits. A FRIEND. Philadelphia, September 10, 1911. FRANKLIN'S FIRST NEWSPAPER To tho Editor of the Evt-nlng Ledger: Sir Philadelphia is u vetltable treasuie city fur relies of early AmerkaiK literature. Any one not afraid be may meet the ghost of ona of tho Ridguay family can bco lu tho great Ilbraty down Rroad street original Issues of tho press here, llko Bradford's Mercury (our flist ncwspnppr), Franklin's General Magazine, antl many more. A librarian's card on ono of the old-tlmo publications reads something Ilka thia: "This Is the first number of Ben Franklin's newspaper. It fhows that the newspapers of early times were Just as modett us they ura today." Thnt caul Is misleading, for tho old-tlma publication Is the first number of Samuel Ri'lmer's paper, the L'nlvnsal Instructor of All Aits anil Sciences and Pennsylvania G" Ketto. This paper ctme out on December S, 17?'. nnd ran for three-qunitcrs of a year, and was sold to Franklin & Meredith for a small sum nliout August, 1729. Fianklln cut oft tin "Unlveis.il Inslruutni" line of the heading and called tho paper simply the Pennsylvania IjUSetle. SAMUlll, V. HUSKING. Wi"i Pnrrkdi si., Philadelphia, Sept. is, Wit "Inlulliyent and Forcible" From West Cheater (Pa.) Dally Loeul News Two Issuus of the l-lvenlng Ledger ot Phila delphia have appealed, nnd in ull iu ia"r toaiuKs It demuiixtrates that skilled nc-i.iper talunt l employed lu ll making of .in evening nuwspupcr for thu people. Its It) page rille nil tho news of tii world that h worth leading, and its nurj ill partuumt, nntatd.v those foi ths homo circle, the ladiet,, the spurting f"11- '" carefully conslib-ied with much elaiioi.itin.ss of detail. Udltorl.llly le livelong Ledger Is Intelligent, toieible, itul'Cinli nt und eduiiitioiial. NATIONAL 1'OIA'T OF VIEW The pleasing information comes from Wash ington that tho "pm It" hunting Senators havj been rt pulsed, and that the $93.no.0(W river and harbor Ml! will lie i educed, pmbably as much list one-half, by cutting out of it all "nu' -tion-abif item, both new and old. President Wj Son hai Hppaiently once mure piovcd lmue a much neuter polit'ehin than h- lias ten rotn nioiih credited with helm,, lie rin, not div" In that utmuspheiu of academic aluufne.- ironi eonimio thing that some hne hastilj t,. Iir o.l lilm to. It's "good politics" light now t Hie paildinn Ut f all publli parullv ''n people ure Uloused us m ver before to .n r ivslve ost of a !' of vvliat h.i iJh.-l '" government" in this country. .'hitu,o Hernia. In fbjbtlna against the rivers nnd h rburl bill as It caiae o the Senate, the filibusters, altbOUVh they me Republicans, lmo lealir been ilolns vilhuit service for thu liemoemis. Nothing would have constituted such a mi ncrabn India of attad, against the 'lomlua" pirty la Hits fairs campaign us un M-i-nn kin! rivets and harbors hill-New Voik favm- (n,f Punt. If tfBttor fiaiton ami those ueti.v with '"'" can uefeat ths rivir8 and liaihois bill oi foix a heavy mJgjrtUw Of flip oppiopilatloii. "w will r4r a swat swvue to the c""""' uud alau to the Hsinocratlc party -lii'llaiwl Us evvs. if irHlut U'dson is to beconu tl"" ",dt"'!i aos ot tla Treasury" he will nm' a ,"otl lKJl uf watching ustessory- Wathbieiou &'ar WAU AN1! THK I1QYAL LNVtu: YTlt Otain aot the Christian faith t- tin. l 'vvsi ; l' nli nevei spoke u wonl tint m.ele it i i(i To 'ininlei nun in liittti hat. i i )-'" sht Nnil IUI II U rUII-lil WollJ lo Uai W- i " ,