l ft EVEtflsm LEDaBR-PHlLADELHIA. TUESDAY, SEPMMBEB 22, lb"fi. ifc I IS I ,1 r 5- J k ; . EVENING fts LEDGER PUBLIC LliDOEIl COMPANY ernes it. K. ct:nxis. rnssme.vT. Oeo.W Och. PwretAf.v; John 0 Martin, Treasurer Charles II. LtMlnston. I'hlllp s. Collins, John H. WIN tlnmit. Director. EDITORIAL r.OAIUI: Ctnus It. K. Curtii, Clinlrmnn, P. II. WHAt.EV Hwutlve n.tltor iOlttf 0. MAttTlN. . .Uenernl lluslncM Mutineer Publth1 ilnlly. cccopt Ruwtay. at Pi nt.tc Lriw:n TlulMlnR. Independence Sounrc Ptillmfelphln. trroRit CENTBAt, Prond and Chestnut Street Atlantic Cut Vrr-Vntn nulldln New York ....170-A. Metrepnlllnn Tovver Chicago SIT Home Inurnnro Uullitlng London 8 WnteHno Place. Pall Mall, S. W. NT.WHUL'ItEAt'S! mnntmttirt rtrttEtt; The Patriot HnlMIng Vasiungtox !lrnt:.tt The Pof itullillnic New York rirtinu The Tinei UiilMIng HKnt.t.v HfBEAti HO Frlilrtc1ilri"i Ln.tDON III Bc 2 Pall Mall KnM. S. W. I'Anis IIciujai; .12 Hud Louis le llratid si'nw-imniiJN'rKtiMS rtVMrrlcr. Iim.t nvt.v. ilt ml. ttv mall. tuvtlMlit etiuide of Philadelphia, fxrppt where foreign nitaKi l ifrjulroil. Duly mt v. one month, twenty-five emu; Dailt O.vr.Y. one year, tlireo dollars. All mall Milwcrtp tlon payable In ndvanrc. tlon In ono of his poems. Tho fly, however, fared somewhat belter In General esleom until science and education changed the alti tude. Fifteen or twenty years ngo children In kindergartens sang llltlngly of "tlio II y In baby's milk." Selected by Professor CJulllcr Couch for "The Oxford Rook of English Verse1' Is an excellent poem Of William Oldys, beginning Rusy, curious, thirsty fly! Drink with me and drink as I! Freely welcome to my cup, Couldst thou sip and sip 11 up. .Hut the II y is now our enemy, and the rat Is more knowingly dreaded than ever before. There la safety in fear. PASSED BY THE CENSOR IltXL, 3000 WAt.MIT kbmmiiM: main nono K3" Addrrsi nil rnnimiinfrnefoiM fo Bmifrttf frfgn , lndrpnd'-nre Square, Philadelphia. XVVLU ATtON MADE AT Tlltl Mlll.AtlKI.I'IIU MSTOFMCB Wit RNTKTA9JIVO0.l-lAil Utll, MATTEII. rillLAIlELl'IIIA, II'tMUV, SM'I tlMUIlll 22, I'll I "They Who Oircr Carrion for Aleut" PENROSE organs, whose iiinrul perspective is so blunt that it might us well not exist, are attempting to persuade their readers that the Kvns-lN-n Ll:rriEll has become Democratic, Was there ever a candidate who hid so closely behind the party emblem as Mr. Pen lose? "I nm a Republican." he says, and all the little satellites solemnly echo; "He Is a Republican." .Apparently Kepiibllrnnlstll Is a cane without which the senior Senator could not hobble twenty yards. Yet he is not a Republican. His organisation was denomi nated by that true Republican. Senator Root, "a criminal conspiracy," a masquerade. It Is a trim garment in which this eoterlc of poli ticians have wrapped I'enroselsm, n pretty dress. Tear it aside and n stencil of corrup tion deadens the atmosphere. There are tho trembling limbs of rraft, the tricky Angers, the dripping revenue from rum, tho long Capitol scandal, the vicious debauchery of voters, tho tndescrlhable alliances with vice, the whole composite body of social parasites nnd hangers-on, combined in a vast con spiracy of loot. If that Is Republicanism, then America is done with Republicanism: and the world Is done with it: and decent men and women are done with it. But it isn't. Not a bit of it. On the contrary, the vital principles of the party that saved the Union, first from dis solution and then from economic calamity, still live. They are the principles that thou sands of men want to vote for, but will not vote for if at the same time they must be put on record as approving as Immoral a set of political adventurers as ever gathered to pother on the public highways or in tho back rooms of corner dens. This nation wilt have Republicanism with out the fraud that I'enroselsm attaches to It or it will not have Republicanism at all. That Is a patent, obvious fact. Men who Imagine that the destinies of this notion will ever ngaln be entrusted to statesmen who cannot stand daylight are eternally mistaken. Men's Patience is in Tlicir Pocket? IT IS n mania of t'ongress to play with dy namite. The American people will never "TnTcnntrnt with war taxes In time of pro found peace. In a year when nature has been magnificently prodigal and bumper crops are tho rule. Millions which were formerly got from the customs houses were being taken directly from tho pockets of citizens before the European war broke out. Now It is pro posed to secure millions more from excise taxes. From being the most proline Source of revenue, the tariff Is rapidly being made to assume a minor role In national finance Direct imports are taking tho place of In direct levies. American history and American temperament are against this procedure. The Administration Is preparing to drive itself Into an Inextricable labyrinth of unpopularity. SF League Island Gel: i- it Chance 1HIPWAYS at League Island will enable the Philadelphia Navy Yard to demon strate absolutely its superiority over every other yard In the country. AH things that go into the buiidinn of ships are centralized in this city. Private shipyards along tho Delaware testify to the unexcelled advan tages here offered. When next t'ongress is asked for un appropriation the Philadelphia delegation will be armed with so formidable an array of facts that opposition to support of the local yard will be swept away. A be ginning has been made, nothing more, but it is a beginning that Is a promise of far greater things to come. Open Markets Are Checks anil TSnlances THE open mark"ts recently established in New York city may be made perma nent, though there is some opposition from the middlemen, and there is complaint from other quarters that the market privileges have been abused by vendors who are ma furmers. Kn far as the abuse of privileges is concerned, the remedy lies In u system of careful regulation, and un for the middlemen their just profits cannot be. at all endangered by any number of open markets. On i bo consumer's side, only a compara tive few of the housewives of a large com munity can utilise open markets. It is a question of convenience and carfare, and the corner grocery & not menaced beyond the limits of reason. Open markets, the parcel post and similar tihort cuts, which reduoe several transactions to one transaction between una seller and; one buyer, will never apply to a very tares proportion of tho business of marketing pro. duce, but they will 1ms exceedingly valuable Hon. restricting tho middleman to such profits ployuvill compensate him for the service which actually performs. They win serve both INSe producer and the consumer as an alter uive when the middleman becomes too uting a. tollrajuter. They ara checks b4 ances. Threi i Our liuomy iho Hat Her r AH has been declared on th rats nc'?tr of Philadelphia. They have Rt jt hood irged this city with tha bubonic plague, of evfscience and education have convinced tba "'aiern age thai they are menaces to the tlon. ' Ith o' am' community- Philadelphia will gwornbably do at once what ?'ev Orleans did n w the rats had been the moans of destroy. Atti man' human lives. This is a wis roajtfm took cities, "to take warning from others of court;at may be to your own advantage." The rat ntver enjoyed the popularity witli i which the fly used to be tavored. Shaktspeara I and Cervantes both referred to him in slight- Ing metaphorical phrase, and Browning gava i him prominent but not complimentary men- i Knincshcd in a Definition TttK most brazen of nil the nntl-mornllty organs In Pennsylvania said this morning: Tacltig defeat in their Various districts, the pitiful appeal of Congressmen, "Let Us Have Pork," has changed to tho Insistent demand, "Wo .Must Have Pork!" It Is a tough outlook for mushroom statesmen whose only stock In trade is a faked prayer and a trunkful of broken promises. Pork or no pork was the question before tho t'nltcd States Senate yesterday. Hy soine strange freak of fortune, Mr. Penrose happened to bo in his seat. Putting himself In a class with "mushroom statesmen whoso only stock In trnde Is a faked prayer and a trunkful of broken promises," ho voted for the pork. Checkmate lite Municipal Court Grab A.VHW Municipal Court grab, Involving i a. eventually a million Instead of half a million dollars, Is In process of 'accomplish inent. The Mayor bus boldly chalk nged the men who propose to put this burden on the municipality at a time when common sense requites the husbanding of resources in order to make the way clear for transit. The Mayor's veto of tho ordlnnnce condemning ground as a site for the projected buildings should be sustained. His argument against it is conclusive. There can bo no satisfac tory answer. The city cannot be loaded down with white elephants at this time without the people understanding clearly tho purpose of the program. New Ilosc Must 13c Got. THK lire underwriters have sustained Di rector Porter's charge that a large part of the hose owned by the city Is unfit for use. It would be Idle now to quarrel about who is responsible for the situation. The thing of Importance Is the fact itself. It must be remedied, not next year, but this year. There is no other mntter which so urgently requires tho attention of Councils. Art "Made in America." THE European cataclysm has at least tem porarily affected the buying of books and attendance at the theatre. Book publishers and play-producers are unanimous In their opinion on that point, but they predict a "boom." American novelists and dramatists will have the field to themselves. Xo ono has ever contested the supremacy of Prance In the short story; yet tho much-vaunted French writers, such as Flau bert and Gnutler, acknowledged their In debtedness to Edgar Allan Poe. The short story has reached a more perfect form In America today than It over has In France. AVe have not yet produced a Shakespeare, a Mollere or an Ibsen. Nevertheless, England. Franco, Germany and tho other continental countries can boast of no living dramatist whom we may not hope to duplicate, if not surpass. "The adulating Imitation of Europe's middle-age art has brought about mediocrity in our own," recently declared America's famous sculptor, Cutzon Borglum. "There Is no reason why we in America should not produce an Angelo or a Da Vinci." Lot us have a declaration of independence in art. .Roll of the Thunderbolt THE history of representative government is tho history of the gradual assumption of power on the part of the people. Tho French Revolution, which Victor Hugo called "tho most profound thing in all history," would never have left Its imprint upon the social and political soul of mankind had It not been for the current of life nnd action supplied by tho people. They made real tho teachings of tho French materialists of the 18th century. Rousseau and Diderot and Voltaire, and the entire coterie of Philosophers and thinkers of that period, would havo remained dead letters had It not been for the dynamic power which tho revolution supplied for the realiza tion of their ideas. Their thoughts were but tho rustling murmur of a new day. The power supplied by tho people was a thunder bolt that has since rolled nround tho earth. No Quarter to Political Plunderers OCT in Kansas City the friends of good government are quoting what Hugh O'Rrlfn, a, former Mayor of Boston, said in an olllclnl message after his reelection In me: If political parties put tinserupulau men to the front, they ought to be voted down. If political parties make combinations with men whoso morality and integrity aro ques. tionable, such combinations should be ills eouragert and dltcounlenaneed by every good citisen. Jf no qusrter Is given to men who have no moral principle behind them. who connect themselves with leading parties merely for plunder, thty should be stumped out, and then the bufcinexs of the country wll be conducted, like any other large corporation, on business principles. These words apply to all combinations for plunder in municipal, State or national poll, ilea. They point to tho responsibility of every American citizen. Doctor Brumbaugh is immune to spttballs, A man with a feather in his cap usually has an aagle In his poehet. Was the recent eclipse of the sun an King, lish plot to deprive Germany of her well, known place therein? Tb Mayor has done his duty In the mutter of tho Municipal Court grab. Councils will have another chanco this afternoon. Ther Is no question about what air. Pen. roao stands for. Tho record shows that through his Organisation he has stood for anything. jU minimum -H "' WUt'" ")' JU N ' BIr. Roosevelt sys that Mr- Plnchot will not retire, but wtiat doe ?lr. Roosevelt know about It? A man Is not addicts?! to coffee If be has never been ahlo to got a first cup. Regular steamship service frujn Philadel phia, to the Pacific is a gooij sign. Shipping goods from so fine a port as this to New York to be loaded on vessels wa$. a kind of extravagance which sound business could not long endure. This war tax on gasoline Is a direct blow at the poor, down-trodden automobile owner THE wonderfully bluo waters of. tho bay of Funclml, off tho coast of Madeira, glit tered translucontly. In smnll boats a party of American tourists landed from the steam ship. McNab, who had a mania for collect ing otitro things, announced that ho would buy the finest old Aladelra win on the Island and, with that, he disappeared on his hunt, the while the others saw tho sights, And then the iinregcneratcs laid a deep and wicked plot to commandeer that wine. So they got back to tho steamship well In ndvlinco nnd awaited events. Just as tho Whlstlo blew Its "all aboard," McNab hove In sight In a smnll boat, lovingly caressing a basket. Ho tied It to a rope, mounted to tho steamship's deck and began to hoist Up his precious burden. Rut the wicked ones were prepared and when the bnsket was passing a certain port hole, n hand protruded and two bottles, cob webbed and ancient looking, were lifted bodily Into tho Inner recesses of the steam ship. Whereupon the ship's surgeon brought fine cigars and tho first mute nuts and bis cuits. Then the purlolncr, after a more or less neat speech of triumph, pulled the cork and poured out the clearest, nicest water ever seen! JlcNnb had paid $5 each for the bottles, but he never knew the iinregcneratcs had Just enough self-respect left not to tell him the awful truth. IT HAPPENED last week, when the sun shono brightly and the poesy of autumn was In tho air. I wandered far afield Into the lands beyond Collingdalc over the "tills and far away, until I came to a tumble-down stone building, decayed with age and redo lent with historic memories. There arose visions of Washington, of Grant, the heroes of our wars. Memory painted pictures of love and Intrigue and bloodshed and tho pur suit of peace and then camo the most an cient inhabitant. "Pretty old building?" ventured the writer, seeking Information. "Pretty old." responded the man. "It's probably played an Important part in our country's history?" "Not that I know of," responded the old man; "It's been a cow barn nigh all Its life." Whereupon I bent a masterly retreat. HEINRICH HEINE, the German poet, lay desperately 111 In Paris, an exile from his native land, shunned by members of his race because of his change of faith, disliked by those of his now religion. But though paralyzed, his mind was us clear and acuto us ever and his wit as cutting. Dally ho wrote for a French paper; incisive, rnpicr Uke, cutting nnd sharp were his remarks. And the butt of his dally joke was one of tho Rothschilds. For months this had continued, and then Rothschild could stand the jibes no longer. He sent a friend to Heine to offer him a life of ease if he would forego his satirical attacks. "Stop?" asked Heine. "Stop the attacks on Rothschild? What other pleasure havo I left In life? Tell Rothschild that all his millions could not buy health for me. Tell him that my lampooning pleases mo more than It hurts him." So to tho day of Heine's death, Rothschild had to endure. IN PARIS, Hclno had married a French woman of dubious antecedents nnd utterly at variance with the spiritual nature of tho poet. She was a good nurse, however, divid ing her time between Heine and her parrot. One day she disappeared and a friend, con doling with the sick man, suggested that she had eloped. "Is her parrot still here?" asked Heine. "Yes." "Then she'll como back." And come back she did. ROMANCE Is a thing of the past. Our childhood dreams and fancies havo bcon relegated into tho scrapheap of materialism, Tho thrill of old is replaced by the certainty of knowledge. What Is It all about? Oh, yes, Robinson Crusoe's isle has been connected with tho rest of tho world by wireless! Can you conceive It, Robinson signaling to Fri day to como to his aid? Or some ono far away punctuating the air with electric flashes to warn him that tho savages were coming? Gone aro tho days of the buccaneers, the rovers of tho sea! Robinson Crusoo's Isle has been annexed to tho rest of the world! BENEATH tho great St. Stophen's Cathe dral In Vienna, which may yet bo taken by the Russians, Is a labyrinth of catacombs, nearly equal to that of Romo. For miles the subterranean passages twist and turn In Cimmerian darkness. When a very small boy I was taken Into tho depths by my father, accompanied by a guide who carried a torch. Somehow or other, I went astray and wan dered off. The reflected light of the torch showed skeletons of Capuchin monkB, nr rayed In the hooded vestments of their order, standing in silent, gruesome rows ngalnst the damp walls; horrors were multiplied in my childish brain. "Papa!" I yelled, and the echoes sounded and resounded In quavering tones, dying away In ghostly whispers. And when I was safe with my dad. a moment later, I was the happiest youngster In all Europe. WHEN William C. Relck was editorial manager of tho New York Herald It was well-nigh impossiblo for any one from the outside world to see him. But Harold J. Llt tledale, an English newspaperman, accom plished tho seemingly impossible, and hero Is told how he did it. He sent word into Mr. Relck that he had a story which he would tell only to him. Mr. Relck sent a reporter to see Llttledale, who declined to reveal his story to any one save Mr. Relck. After a long wait he w-as taken Into the august presence, "Well, young man, what's your story?" asked Mr- Relck. "It's a hard-luck story; I want a Job," said Mttledale, and then he was ushered out. BRADFORD, CURIOSITY SHOP It was John C. Calhoun, who In a speech delivered May 27. 1S36, coined the phrase, "cohesive power of public plunder," saying: "A power has risen up In the Government, greater than the people themselves, consist ing of many and various and powerful In terests, combined Into one mass and held to-, gether by the cohesive power of the vast surplus in the banks." That other well-known phrase, to "die In the last ditch." originated with William of Orange, who, on being asked by Buckingham whether he did not realize tho Inevitable ruin hanging over the Commonwealth, replied: "There Is ono certain means by which I can be sure never to see my country's ruin. I will die In the last ditch." Dorrs rebellion took place In Rhode Island la 18i, the bone, of contention bein? a de- aired change In the old Constitution, tvhlch daled back to Charles H. , Rival factions wero formed the "Stiff rago" nnd the "Law and Order" parties. Each elected a set of State olllclttls and each sought to gain con trol of tho Stnto Government. Thomas W, Dorr was chosen Governor by tho Suffrngo party and attempted to seize tho Govern ment, but Was sentenced to Imprisonment for life, being pardoned subsequently. Cold slaw, a dish essentially Amorlcan In Its popularity, Is said to havo been Invented by the early Dutch settlers, who called It kool-slaa. John Bull's sister reg Is really Scotland--a poor girl raised on porridge and water aha quartored In a garret exposed to the north wind. In Arbuthtlot'B satirical "History of. Europe" she is represented as madly In love with Jack John Calvin. IN A SPIRIT OF HUMOR Popularity Assured That proposed 'bun line on Hroad street should become Immensely popular with the young folk, for bussing has ever been a popular pastime, A Bitter Dose l'etrograd and Jnroslaw, Budapest and Crecy, Kaiser WUhelm, General Pau Drive me nearly crazy. But the worst Is yet to come, Tasting rather plll-y, Reading like prescriptions all "Tnko some Przmysl-y" l Choose your "Take some Przymsl-y" i own "Toko somo Prmzsvl-v" 'Spelling. Twoultln't be Tolerated Here From the Huenos Aire Standard. "Again I was welcomed by my cheery host ess, and once more purtook of her simple yet palatable face." Casualties From Allied sources we learn that l,."irr,,7U Germans wore killed, ll,(!99,3fi wore wound ed nnd 000.-I67 wero taken prisoners, In tho last four days of lighting. From German sources we learn that the total German loss to dntp was 11 slightly killed, 43 seriously dead and 68 compre hensively wounded. Fowl Play "Why havo you given your hen such an outlandish namo as Footpad, Jinks?" "Bocauso she's laying for me," The Natural Sequence It now behooves nil good exchange editors to dig up tho Ingoldsby Legends and reprint "The Jackdaw of Rhelms." Heartburn, Probably From the nikton (Md.) Democrat. "Flro of an unknown origin totally de stroyed tho contents of Clarence II. Krauss ono night last week." Huh! Mary had a llttlo lamb, And then I heard her holler: "What does that waiter think I am? Ho charged me half a dollar!" Cincinnati Enquirer. Domestic Discord "My husband used to call mo his lovely lute." And now?" "Now he picks on me." Louisville Courier Journal. What's In a Name? "We're giving our pastor a now drawing room carpet on tho occasion of his jubilee. Show mo something that looks nice but Isn't too expensive." "Hero Is the very thing, madamc real Kidderminster." London Punch. Altruism Teacher Johnny, you have been writing your own excuses. Johnny I know, mum; It takes all pa's time to think of his own. New York Sun. A Fall Time Singer , Golden punkins gleamln' bright Ynndcr in de patch. Never seed a purtier sight Laying In a batch. Trouble (lis way's frald to steer "Como right In nn' have a cheer." Dixie Land's do Innd fo' me, No whar else I'so boun'. Possums roamln' roun' so free. jSjJuff to make a darky grin "Bring yo' folks an' call agin." Jacksonville Times-Union. Sign of the Times A Baptist Church In Paterson has spoken the last word in business administration of religion. This is the sign erected in front of the edifice: Love and Sunshino Company, Wholesale and Retail Christians: Distributors of Joy and Goodwill. In Essentials, Unity; In non-Essentials, Liberty; In all things, Charity. The Church with tho Royal Welcome, A Villainous Joke Who 13 tho Villa of Europe? Which of the embattled emperors Is the friend of tho Euro-peon? This is Too Punny Wo labored hard to pen a pun, An hour passed, nnd It was dono; Wo nearly died of sheer surprise; Wo pinched ourself nnd rubbod our eyes; For. as wo looked on It In pride And, as wo said, so nearly died Wo found we'd mado a double hit (Of wisdom. Infamy or wit) For then wo saw, and not till then. We'd penned a pun that punned a Penn. A lot of fuss over n little thing, perhaps, but it occurred to us that William Pcnn looks rather Inky compared to the rest of the City Hall tower; One Bad Turn Brown (whoso new cook is worse than the last) It wus you who recommonded that new cook to my wife, wasn't it? Jones (with diffidence) Yes, old man. Brown (vengcfully) Then. I must ask you to come home to dinner with me tonight. London Sketch, A Prayer God of the warring nations, God of the ways of peace, Hark to the pleas of women And bid the warfare cease! Hark to tho prayers of children, Their small hands lifted up, And from the world forever Remove this bitter cup! In years of peaceful living Thy servants have forgot The grief that follows carnage, And now, their blood grown hot, They challenge each the other, And with no heeding for The necklaced arms of loved ones They clatter forth to war. Oh, God, remove this madness, And make Thy servants sane! Remove the fields of carnage, Where wounded and where slain Are trampled to gory remnants! Our God, of war and peace. Remove from men their blindness And bid the warfare cease! A wife stands all forsaken And peers Into the storm, Above tho smoke of battle She marks the vultures swarm. No loved one hears her pleading And to her succor flies Beside where she stands weeping A baby starves and dies. God, lift the burden from them Who bear the burden mostjj God, touch the hearts of rulers! God, turn each warring host From ways that lead to slaughter Back to the paths of peace! God, hear the plaints of women And bid the warring cease! Judd Mortimer Harris, in Houstem Pwrf. - DONE IN PHILADELPHIA AF"RIND put into my hand tho other day an old pamphlet written by John Roach, tho shipbuilder of Chester, which describes rather fearlessly the causes of tho decllno of tho American merchant marine and denounces In poslllvo terms what has been called free ships. Both theso ques tions are Uppermost In the minds of tho peo plo at tho present time, and It la curious to note that they occupied o, somewhat similar position 40 years ago. 'Roach was an Irishman, who came to this country as a boy early In tho 30s, and first went to work In it foundry for 2S cents a day. In the courso of his long career as a ship nnd engine builder he failed four times, and, had ho survived, undoubtedly would have successfully passed through his fourth failure to fortuno again. He built four of the warships which wero known as tho Whlto Squadron, tho beginnings of our present mod ern navy, and It was duo to his suggestion nnd ndvleo that tho United States ventured upon tho development of Its navy along mod ern lines. IT WAS this venturo that finally caused the death of John Roach. First he aston ished tho Naval Advisory Board by making his bids on four ships far below their esti mated cost. When tho Dolphin was com pleted tho new Secretary of tho Navy, William C. Whitney, Would not accept It. Although another board conducted a strin gent test and also rejected tho vessel, Sec retary Whitney changed his view. His notion camo too lato. Roach, with so much of his capital tied up, stopped business for the benefit of his creditors. Ho declined In health from that time, and two years later, or In 1SS7, ho died, a broken-hearted man, Roach was responsible for a largo propor tion of tho Iron steamship tonnage which carried tho American flag after tho Civil War. It is said that his yards built lift all 114 ships of tho most modern typo for their day. Ho was naturally a stem advocate for tho protection of tho ship Industry In this country, nnd ono had only to mention Clyde built ships to him tp start him off on a tirade. IN ROACH'S pamphlet which my friend handed me, I find an explanation of the dis appearance of our flag from tho morchnnt marine of tho world. "When our Civil War began," tho shipbuilder states, "wo had a largo commcrco but a smnll navy, and tho latter, to protect national life, purchased 215,978 tons of our best stoam tonnage. Tho War Department absorbed, by charter and otherwise, 757,011 tons more. Of tho re mainder, to avoid war rates of Insuranco or destruction by Clyde-built cruisers, under tho rebel flag, SOI, 311 tons sought refuge under tho flag of England or other European bunt ing, while 101,005 tons were actually destroyed by tho Alabama and other pirates. "Of tho ships of all sorts employed thus by our Government few were afterward of any commercial value, though resold at compara tively low rates, partly bocauso of tho altera tions they had undergone In tho process of adapting them to war uses, but more on account of tho revolution which had taken placo in commercial naval archltecturo and In tho application of motive power." ROACH comments upon this procedure as ono of tho most extravagant and ruinous methods that could havo been devised for supplying tho United States with a navy. But at tho opening of tho Civil War, as at tho beginning of every other war In which this country has engaged, something llko this has had to bo dono. We always have been unprepared. Indeed, tho method appears to bo the approved method of augmenting naval services all over tho world. We chartered ships during tho Spanish War, and Eng land, Germany and Japan, with their subsi dized lines, also have found it convenient to tako over certain vessels from their merchant marino In war times. It has been generally understood that It was during tho period of our Civil War that England and to a lesser degree Germany took advantngo of our preoccupation to snatch away from us the commerce-carrying trade of the world. From 1S30 until the open ing gun of tho Chil Wnr was fired our for eign trado Increased regularly and enor mously, nnJ In 1860 It was questioned whether the United States merchant marino was not first. In any case, It waa a close second to that of England. DURING that long-continued strife, how ever, England had her opportunity nnd was keen to take advantage of It. Some per sons may have thought that our present con cern to regain our proud position on tho seas while Europe la busy Is a trifle unethical, but to the persons who feel that way about it Mr. Roach 40 years ago supplied the answer. Listen to this: "England saw the oppor tunity thus afforded her and availed herself of it to tho utmost. She spent millions on millions In subsidies under various forms; sho used oven the agonies of our strife for her own advantage, and tho Clyde builders were enriched In the construction of blockade runners, not to speak of tho Alabama and other representatives of tho 'British neutral service.' Unobstructed and unrivaled by tho only pcoplo who had shown a capacity for competing with her upon tho sea, she made tho first fruits of the great naval revolution all her own." IT MUST be remembered In reading that sentence from Roach's pamphlet that It was written less than ten years after the Civil War, when the wounds nnd prejudices of that strife had not yet been effaced; nov ertheless, It Is likely to make us feel a little more comfortable about seizing the present opportunity to get our flog on the sea again. GRANVILLE. THE IDEALIST Did you ever tell a "whlto He"? After you had told It, did you feel any less mean, small and disposed to creep snake-like into the nearest hole than when you had told a real substantial one? It la rurlous how we grease our con sciences In tho ''white lie" hahit. I sat in a man's offlee when his messonger presented a visitor's card. After a quick glance he returned It to tho boy with the trite In structions to "tell him I'm out." This follow forthwith established his repu tatlon for wilful Inaccuracies among two people, the boy and myself; perhaps In It self not a serious handicap to his standing but just as a drop of aniline dye will tint a hogBhead of water this man's lack of re spect for pure truth will gradually permeate his entire environment. This Is as Inevitable as the law of gravitation Is Inevitable. Doubtless the mental process Is: "Well I don't want to see this visitor and I don't want to Insult him by telling him so. Hence. I abstain from making him angry by leading iiuii m Miimi u i nm jiui m my otnee. Did you ever see a sli marching alone? never' -"iwaya u is lound In the companj T of its own bene nd marrow. The thief becomes a murderer; tiio drunkard bee-II! u. imr; vno imr Becomes a coward, rl Benedict Arnold did the most convoni. Al thing; It took too much courago to Ho itll Inconvenient thing, And ihatS i JK H 111 situation with tho teller of the "white llel" .f J VIEWS OF READERS OJN TIMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin. ion on Subjects Important to City State and Nation, To the .Mllor of the Evening Lrdptrt In reading your efficient newspaper I and artlclo entitled, "British Diplomat Crlllcl.,2 Wilson on tho Mexican Policy." The IJritUh Ambassador, Sir Llone, Garden, was nolhln but a warm partition of the Huerta reitlm. At ono time I was a Huerta sympathizer uniii after he committed murdcr-the killing t Francisco I. Madcro. s of Sir Lionel Cardon cannot by nnv meant compare with tho great President Wl'lsotr thl troops were ordered from Vera Cruz. wh? Because tho President knew that he w,l leaving tho situation to nn honorable ami edm catcd man. Sir Lionel's statement Is against Sonor Carranza, because he ordered that ho (Slf Lionel) should lcavo tho republic for belne L Huerta partisan. So let mo explain, In n few wordB, that Sir Lionel contradicts himself hi saying that Carranza has no sort of Govern. ment. Ho must know that If Scnor Carranza had no sort of government he would not have told Sir Lionel to leavo tho republic. J. R.-MEXICAN CITIZEN, Philadelphia, September 21, 1914. Praise From Sir Hubert From tho Boston Transcript. George W. Chllds himself might have issued tho order under which, with the beginning of tills week, an EvnNtNO LEDOEn flashed upon tho Philadelphia public and tho community at large. It was a liberal move to extend In thess hours of retrenchment tho oxpenso of publica tion. A false Idea prevails that In "war circu lations" thero le great profit. Circulation In Itself Is of no valuo. It Is only as It command! respect and thus advertising patronage that It Is even self-supporting. Thus tho expansion of tho rt'nr.tc Lunona at this tlmo Is purely for tho advantage of Iti readers, though lot us hopo In the lone run Its publishers, too, may roap their reward. Tho Infant marches llko a veteran. It Is edited by a "distinct organization," which o may bo suro in this caso docs not mean that pleaso-ovcrsbody policy "support" in thj morning, "opposition" ' in tho evening fo "catch thorn coming and going." A newspaper "without a history" is as happy as tho proverbial "country," For tho cara of its existence tho 1'um.ic Ledoeo.'.s lins been most brlof. It was conceived a thoroughbred and thoroughbred It has temnlned In spitu of tho temptations of monsrollzatlon by voting contests, money prizes, tango teaching, etc., etc. Its history Is tho personality of a few clean minded, public-spirited Individuals with a tru sense of what "enterprise" really Is. Never has it been nearer its best than today. Silence Not Golden From the Chambersburg (Pa.) Valley Spirit. A strange, weird silence fatls upon the lips of the Republican candidates when the nama of Penrose Is mentioned. Xot ono of them has so far dared to declare himself cither for or against tho machine that seeks to continue its corrupt management or this State for Its own advantage. Welcomes Evening Ledger From tho Jewish Exponent, The Even'INo Ledoer is a welcome addition to the ranks of Philadelphia newspapordom. There Is no better paper in the United States than the Pubmq Ledoer, and few as good. 1' the evening edition keeps up the fine tradition that the Public Ledoer has established, will bo a potent force for good. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Along with tho day of prayer for the peace ot Europe it might with propriety be 6UgBteJ that a day be set apart for a popular m-tnuriai to the Interstate Commerce Commission for a Just rendering of tho public account with the railroads. Chattanooga Times. Nothing can bring back the glory of RheinH. Imagination is touched with tho heat of pas sion when armies heedlessly deflower a rounir of its noblest church, and It recoila with scorn and loathing from the guilty horde. New lora Tribune. The struggle In Colorado Is sure to be J' newed, unless the State takes back Its aidicatea authority, resumes its forgotten duties, ana both makes and enforces laws which wil pro mote peace in tho mlnins regions. Chicaa Journal. Every well-informed commentator on th problem of building up our trade with Souin America agrees that it is mainly a question establishing a proper system of et'n,a"v, j whereby ample credit facilities may be W'" to tho Latin-Americans and payment or ir' actions carried out with faclllty.-St. u' Pioneer Press. Railroad men should lean on themselves men and on the Government less. They shouia nj stand back helplessly without ecouomUing w ask tho Government for a licensed shippers and railroad passeueers.-Mllwau" Journal. . The extension of American banking faci'iu to South American cltle3 should be follow ' ea jt tho establishment of cheaper rates of posias New York Times. . If President Wilson and the Iro'f,"a leaders desire to go Into the """'"f.'S with an Indefensible grab even a J-0-:'.. appropriation to their discredit, they hSi is. denly beepme less careful of the Pmr"J:ea peets of administration than they have ' heretofore. New York Tribune. FIGHT TO THE FINISH To the Editor of tha Evening Ledger: Sir A campaign Is on In this Commonwealth which is being watched throughout the length nnd breadth of our land. It Is a fight to a finish between tho discredited old machine nn 1 the forces which must provall If the old Keystone, u,"'u '" "" n.-u miu lliu lliuvu It mUft occupy If we as Pcnnsylvanlan3 nro to stand erect as mon worth while. v Tho Issue Is Penrose as the embodiment ot practices which no longer havo any proper placo In our political nnd Industrial life. These arc the days for tho valiant on both sides ol tho ocean, nnd tho call of duty la Just as clear as If It wero "To arms" Instead ot to tho ballot box. When tho Evenino LEDacn enlists In this campaign, aggressively opposing this blight on our national life, It, In my Judgment, performs a great public duty and makes a contribution to tho causa of good government second to none. DAVID J. PEARSALU Mauch Chunk, Pa., September 15, 1314. GIVE HONEST POLITICS A CILVNCE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I have read for many years and have appreciated deeply tho splendid work which tho Pubmc LEDOEn has dono toward tho puri fication of Pennsylvania politics. Another great opportunity has now arisen for It nnd the Evening Ltmann to continue this service, to the advantngo of both State and nation. I refer to tho opportunity of defeating Mr. Tcnrose for re-election to tho United States Senate. WILLIAM I. HULL Swarthmorc, Pa., Scptcmbor 14, 1914. WESTMORELAND AGAINST PENROSE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir As nn Independent Republican, Interested In raising my party to a higher standard of citizenship, I nm glad that you arc opposing Penroselsm. You deserve tho gratitude of the good citizens of Pennsylvania. Our county was strongly antl-Penroso nt the last primary, and tho sentiment against him continues to Increase. E. E. ZUCK. Mt. Pleasant, Pa., September 14, 1314. PENROSEISM NOT REPUBLICANISM To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I am a reader of tho Evenino Ledger and llko your papor, but I nm a Republican. As I believe that is your policy, I cannot see how you can consistently support Palmer and n Republican platform nt tho same time. Ho does not stand for Republican principles nnd, therefore, should not bo supported by an Republican. JOSEPH RICHARD. Slatlngton, Pa., September IS, 1311. ykfttejpfl f.Viit i i .. safe? "SSisSCSs MA A