riafl 8 Vi ftVENItfG LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPSMBEB 23, 1014. 'r.i idanS II Ttilf spu EVENING tMi LEDGER PUnLlC LEDGER COMPANY CYItUS It K. Ct'IlTIS. rntMDItST. Gtfi. XV. Ochu, Secretary: John t Murtln, TreaMirerl Churl II I.uJlngton. Philip S. Collins, John B. Wll llm. Director , CtMTOKIAL UOAnt)! Crnns II. K. Ocnim, Chairman. P.JI WHALKV Kwultve TMltor ttltttt c maiitiv rinArrti tinMinp Mnnieer fir Published rlnlly. txcrnl Pundny. nt 1'rni.io T.EtxJBn minninjr lnurpemlence squire rnuRtieipnin. I.trmtn CrNTRL tlroml nnd Chestnut Street Atlantic Citi Press-Union Hulliilnir New Yobk..... 1T0-A, Metropolitan Tower Cuti-itm Of? TlAmA IniiiMnrn Tttlllilltlff ft- London 7.8 Waterloo Place. Pall Mall, 8. vv. NKWsnonuAUS! JlARfitimiiiTii ItrnEin The TnfHot Ilullil n; Wasiii.noton Hlrbab The Pot Ilulldln New Yonic IliKKtC . The Tlmrs IJulldlng HtRM.v llijRBtu no Frlilrlchtrn;'i LONDON IIUrkiu.... 8 Pall Mall Kant. H. Wi l'isia Dcrkau 32 Hu3 Luuls Ic Urand StilSCIUPiiON Tr IIMS I1y carrier. Diii.r Oni.t, fix cents By mall, rotp.i!J entlde of Philadelphia, except where foreign potne la required, IUit.v oxi.t, one month, twenty-five cent. Daily Onlt, ono enr, threo dollars. All mall subscript tlon payable In advance. tiF.u, anno waijnut mastom-: mvi.n aooo C7" Address nil rommtinlrnfiont 0 Evening !'tdoer. Indrpendrnee Square. Vhllndrltihla. itlicatiov mdk at tub riiiLtDLLriliA rotoric tor . ENTRJT AftSKl-nlD-CIAKH MAIL MATTElt, riiiLAin.t.i'iiiA, vv i:im.siuy, m;pti.miikii 2.1, vjh ; Yle m: tioH to rea llbe had tin? optf the? .4 f po 1 ?, the' deal No? lt r ll Wf 'th Pcnroscisin is Democracy's Chief Asset THERE will bo no weeping In the White House If Penrnsolsm la lmlorscd In 1'etin eylvanla. Tho Democracy is unite ready to do without ono voto in the Senate In return tor tho continued use of Ponroselsfm as cam paign material. It lms it majority, anyhow. Tho President knows, and his advisers know, that Palmer victorious will not bo worth half bo much to the party ns Palmer defeated. If tho Republicans in this State wish to deal tho Administration a mighty blow, they can do It by eliminating PenroseNm as an Issue in American politics. Intoxication of the Panuclus Pilaccns NO, THIS is not a now cocktail nor a cor dial of monastic manufacture. For the devotee of tho "glass that cheers" many and various have been the substitutes deviled, but It has remained for modern .science to discover a stimulant more potent than alco hol and, If reports are correct, with no ufter dcpresslon. Tho panoelus pllaceus Is said to confer upon tho partaker thereof visions as radiant, as exhilarating, ns finely hallucinatory as those of hasheesh, as subliminal as the men tal vaporlngs of opium and a senso of snpor-well-belng and fit-feeling transcending that afforded by the vintages of Burgundy or John Barleycorn. Tho panoelus pllaceus Is a mushroom. Its discovery is announced by no loss a savant than Dr. A. E. Verrlll, of Yale University. In the current number of Science ho de scribes the "case of Mr. W.,"a middle-aged man, vigorous, strictly temperate and a bot anist, who experimented with the hilarious fungus. According to tho description, the panoelus pllaceus is delicate, umbrella-shaped and will grow In any garden. Possibly with fields, gardens and flower beds given over to a fond and assiduous cul tivation of tho newly discovered fungus, the reign of Bacchus may bo over! Imagination Lifts Up Posterity WE, THE people, need to have eyes of imagination In order that wo may bo good citizens. A voter with sufficient ability to see the rest of mankind nnd tho genera tions yet unborn will sacrifice his conven ience, and even much more, to go to the pulls. The better we como to know mankind the actual character and lives of people whom perhaps we have never seen or never will see tho stronger grows our altruism, which Is a normal quality of human nature. Tho literature of the magazines Is rendering an Invaluable service. It Is forwarding a grad ual reconciliation of classes and races by its vivid portrayal of what people really are. It is bringing our conception of "the rest of humanity" nearer to the humun reality. The psychology that tells us clearly how wo are separated by time, rather than spuce, from tho-fe who will be affected by our acts, Is important in the development of civic Imagination. For every ton of coal that wo mine, for every beautiful hillside that we rob of its forests, for every law put mi the stat ute books by the Legislators that wo elect, for every vote that is cast at the polls, we are answerable 10 future generations. Without imagination It Is impossible to comprehend our civic responsibilities. Young Men Will Not Be Tricked TIME was when men voted as they wor shiped, us their fathers did before them. Example was everything. Party lines were rigid and men voted blindly, as they wero told, for the parties' candld.ite, irrespective of the merits of the other side. Times are changed. That's trite, but true. We live in a different day and generation. Today the intelligent man who Is not tied down by paid party s-ervlce owns his own vote. Ho and his ft-llowa have begun to weigh men, methods and policies. They are thinking for themselves. Their ranks are in. creasing dally. You see It Jn the revolt of the Progressives, Jn their return to the Repub lican fold when they found themselves tricked by their leaders and deluded by false prom ises. These, are the men who count, the men who tMnk for themselves. Through them the hope of scotching tho snake of Penroselsrn comes. Worth tho Purchase WHILE Congressmen are busying them selves over a bill fir emergency taxa tion, it may Interest others to taUf a little historical excursion back to February 16, 1783. On that day Pelatlah Webster published In Philadelphia, at the very doors of the Congress of the t'onfed-ration, an entirely new plan of Federal Government. One of the basic principles involved was the inde. pendent authority of thf Federal Government to levy taxes. No Federal system that had ever existed had been armed with the power to tax, and Pelutlah's prcjujsal was without a precedont in history. In the Constitutional Convention of 17S7 it was adopted, though writers of text-books have been in the habit of giving the credit to other men. "The power of taxation," Webster said, "Is a dreadful enjrlne of oppression, tyranny and Injury, when Ill-used, yet ... I do con' tend that our Union is worth this purchase." Socialists Flirt With War ACCORDING to the reports of American .correspondents, the Socialist movement in Germany has disappeared In these times of war. Vorwaerts, the famous Socialist paper, has turned patriotic and for the rtrst time In its history may be sold on Government property and even In the army. A few weeks ego the Socialist deputies in the Reichstag Voted uuanlmoualy for the war credits. In France, Marcel Sembat and Jules Guesde Joined the Cabinet, abandoning their part In pott political quarrels. Gustavo1 Herve, called by somebody "anll-mllltarlst, anti-par lliimentnrln.11, nntl-patrlot," asked the French Minister of War to send him to tho front with tho first regiment of Infantry. In tho minds of those men there Is no Issue now, If there ever was, between so cialism and patriotism. Only the weakest thinkers among the socialistic groups sen nn antagonism between the two. Patriotism, moreover, Is rooted far deeper In human na ture than socialism, with a possible exception In tho caso of tho Inferior soclnllsm of tho very smallest men. Patriotism Is ..no or tho highest expressions of tho human trait of loyalty. It Is loyalty to "nil wo have nnd are." It is really conservatism. Using Childhood to Muddy the Waters THE massed cohorts of the Organisation were able by the slender margin of one vote to override the Mayor's veto of tho Municipal Couit grab. In explanation of this action, John P. Connolly, commandor-lti-chlef of Pcnroscisin In Councils, declared, so tho report runs, that "It comes with exceedingly bad grace from the gentleman on tho second floor (tho Mayor) to obstruct the rftorts tho Municipal Court is making to help tho delin quent child." Tho Municipal Court has been chiefly noted up to thin time for helping itself to tho funds of tho municipality. TI10 solicitude of Mr. Connelly for childhood might have aroused tho sympathy and support of all good citi zens had they not rend elsewhere, In the snme Issue of the Evunino Luoonit, tho declaration of Paul N. Furman. secretary of tho Child Labor Association of Pennsylvania, that cer tain deplorable conditions in the matter of child labor in Pennsylvania arc "due entirely to tho Influence of tho Penrnse-controlled political machine." It Is bad enough to have such a grab as this Municipal Court adven ture will be. If achieved, put through, but It Is positively nauseating to have tho re sponsibility for It placed on children Who cannot speak for themselves. Tilings That Ahide In a Changing Order TIME never halts. War or no war, tho seasons come and go. The rose withers on tho stem, nnd already tho pencils of autumn begin to tint tho leaves. The guns of Europe do not stop tho sun, though they may smash the clock. Tlmo moves on like a river. It Is a satisfaction to know that some things are above the might of man. The Imperishable forces of life abide above the danger line of rust and moth nnd gunpowder. The Rhelms Cathedral may be laid in ruins, but the devotion that built It Is everlasting. In the world clash between materialism and Idealism It Is well to lay hold of tho best things the lndestructlblo forces of truth, true love, friendship and every reality of life. These realities are llko blocks of granite in a sea of changing conditions. Tho fact that others have gone mad is only another reason why tho rest of us should remain sane. In Reply to Gerhardt Hauptmann NO ONE will dispute Ilauptmann's conten tions that Germany, the Germany of "Kant and Schopenhauer," is tho great bea con light of civilization. No one will dispute that she has brought Immortal contributions upon tho altar of art, science, industry and literature. But all, all who think in the light of Inexorable historical facts, will dispute the bruzon claims of tho ruling class of Germany that German industry and the leudal Ideas of government and administration should dominate the rest of the world. This is not a light for the "preservation of German culture." It Is r.uher a battle for the libera tion of German culture nnd all culture from military and financial Prusslaiilsm. The defeat of Germany will bo tho victory of Germany and the victory of the entire world. Nefarious Political Brokerage POPULAR government consists In the con trol of political affairs by public opinion, liofiiism and popular government are Incon sistent. "The boss," says President Lowell, of Harvard, "does not act mainly as an expo nent of public opinion or frame the issues therefor. Ho carus little for public policy or legislation relating to the general welfare so long a.s he is allowed to pursue his trade in peace. Ho is a political broker, but one whose business relates far less to subjects of a genuine public opinion than to private benefits." Tho reason why the boss has been allowed to continuo at his nefarious trade Is public indifference. So declares James Bryee, whose Judgment comes of long and close observa tion of American politics. How long Is this Indifference to continue? How long are tho voters to overlook the weapon which lies at hand? Unless all signs fall they are going to use It In Pennsylvania on nest election day. Indifference to public welfare is a crime of citizenship. The "safety first" program Is not making much headway In Europe. Everybody except tho Interstate Commerce Commission thinks the railways nro entitled to relief. Doctor Brumbaugh la confounding his critics and ho will confound Penroselsrn bo. fore he gets through. New Jersey has a habit of standing by the President. Tho Democracy gts tho credit for Wooijrow Wilson's personal victories. Herman Rldder explains that the war is "an expression of tho acute neurasthenia from which tho nations are suffering." This, of course, makes It entirely plain: but isn't It stealing Mr. Wilson's psychological theory? New York's UQ0.0O0.0Q0 loan oversubscribed three times by private investors and a tidy bit of the money from Philadelphia! We still have a few pennies to rub together in spite of the pessimists. It would have been a fine thing for Penn sylvania If Mr. Knux had offered for the Senate last spring. It would be a finer thing If Mr- Penrose would retire in his favor now. Out such things, do not happen In Penroselsrn. The world does move. It seems but yester day that universal excitement was caused by a successful aeroplane flight across the Chan nel from France to England. Just a few days ago 38 British army 'planes were reported to be making the passage from Engjand to France at one time. Thlrty-slx thousand tons of British ar mored erutittrs are at the bottom of the North Hea as the result of a submarine attack Measured in dollars, there is no comparison between cruisers and submarines, measured in results, the little fellows have nothing to be ashamed of. PASSED BY THE CENSOR THAT Joseph lllrt, the artist, married a Philadelphia girl shows his good senBe; that ho was chased a couplo of thousand miles by nn earthquake Is Indicative of his ability to dodge trouble. It began In San Francisco, where lllrt was more or less busy drawing cartoons for a dally paper. It so happened that ho was not busy on the night In question, that Is, not Until the earthquake started then he became extraordinarily so. In fact, ho never stopped being busy until ho reached Oakland In safety, minus cloth ing and money. For three weeks he lived In tho refugee camp, nwaltlng a remittance from his family In this city. Then, dis gusted, he became a passenger de luxe on a freight train for Los Angeles. But work and money wore even scarcer there, 'and so ho continued In hnphnzard fashion until Chi cago was reached. Thcro he became chef In a quick lunch room for a week, but, having higher aspira tions, ho started once again, this time for Buffalo. There, too, work was unobtainable. For two weeks ho managed to eke out a de cidedly precarious living. One day, Just by chance, ho sauntered Into tho postofilco and Inquired nt the general delivery whether any mall had been forwarded to hltn via Los Angeles, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chlcngo, etc. Thcro was, snld tho man. In tho letter, which was from home, was nn express order for $200. Itltt says that ho dined that night and tho after effects of that dinner will be his death some day, but he doesn't care now, for ho Is wed to that Philadelphia girl and has more orders than ho can fill. rt I HAVE no ilesiro to claim credit for the discovery, but I have found tho champion fisherman, and he halls from To ledo. His name Is Howard Welgle and ho dates his fish story from Frankfort, Mich. According to this modorn Iznak Walton, ho went fishing near Frankfort during his va cation in 1913. In tho course of tlmo he hooked u hugo pickerel, which, nfter n long struggle, got away. This summer Welgle went to the same stream nnd dropped his lino Into tho hole loft in the water by tho dropping of the escaping fish. A cast was made, a blto and Welgle had caught the same fish, so ho says. In Its gill was fast ened tho selTsamo bait which Welgle had lost tho previous summer. Which proves that, after all, some fish arc honest enough to return things which do not belong to them. TAKING breakfast with a real, live Presi dent Is undoubtedly an honor, but some times there are drawbacks, as In thl3 In stance. I had been In Johannesburg, South Africa, for well nigh a year, when William J, Leyds, Secretary of State, Invited mo to par take of a frugal morning meal with Presi dent Krugcr. So to Pretoria, the capital, I went by stage coach, 35 miles In six hours, and called upon the Staats-Sekrotner. "I suppose 8 o'clock Is the breakfast hour?" I asked. "The President has a Cabinet meeting at 4 In the morning, so you'd better come half an hour beforo that," replied Doctor Leyds. Regretfully I retired, sleepily I arose, dressed and went to the little cottage which served for the Boer White House. It was still dark, but the President, surrounded by Generals Joubert, De Wet, Botha and Doctor Leyds, was awaiting my coming. For ten minutes Oom Paul cross-examined mo on America: then Vrow Kruger brought hugo bowls of stenmlng coffee and black bread, covered with real creamery butter. And at 4 a. m. sharp tho Boer Cabinet went Into session with prayer. DO YOU recall thnt when you wont to .school you were Induced to learn some thing about Peter the Great and Catherine and how wicked and cruel Catherino was? Well, she wnhn't so bad as you Imagine, for Diderot, the encyclopedist, says she was not, and he knew. Desiring to provide a dowry for his daughter nnd not having tho means, Diderot decided to sell his magnifi cent library. It came to Catherine's ears and she sent for Diderot. Thon she showed how cruel she could really be when the occasion offered Itself. Sho bought tho library at Diderot's own price, made him tho librarian of her new purchase nnd Paid him 50 years' salary In advance! IT IS a considerable step from Presidents and Empresses to a mere Mayor, but there was ono Mayor who was as autocratic In his way as was Oom Paul or Catherine the Into William J. Gnynor, whose last offi cial words wero, "I have been Mayor." In contradistinction to some of his predecessors, who wero mcro tools of Tammany, Mr. Gay nor was recklessly fearless In his outspoken opinions. Ho cared not whom he hit nor what tho consequences might be. Ono Inci dent shows this clearly. Ho had been in otllco two days when a friend called on him. After the usual preliminaries, Mr. Gnynor commented upon previous administrations nnd their lack of common sense. "My predecessor in this oilice was the smallest man who ever sat in tho Mayor's clmir!" thundered Mr. Gnynor, bringing his first down on his desk. That predecessor was George H. McCiellan, son of the Little aeneral, who fought Tammany furiously and was crushed beneath tho claws of the tiger. Not that there was ever a breath of suspicion of wrong against Mr. McCiellan, but he played politics Instead of governing the city and paid the price. ONCE upon a time thero was a political bobs In Philadelphia, and there are more of them now. A reporter asked him one day whether Jones, which wasn't his name, would bo nominated for Congress, "If WE think our opponents will win, Jones will bo nominated; If WE think WE will win, then I will bo named." Jones was nominated. If this were a bhort story or a play, Jones would have won, Just to make a dramatic climax. But this being ft true tale, Jones was everlastingly licked, BRADFORD, CURIOSITY SHOP The famous Salic Law is .1 chapter In the Saltan code regarding the succession to Salic lands, which were limited to male heirs, chiefly because certain military duties were connected with the holding of those lands. In the fourteenth century females were excluded from the throne of Franco by the application of the Salic Jaw. "Jerusalem" Whalley walked from Dublin to the Holy Land and back In one year, on a wager of marly $lw.0Qo, a large sum in the das of 17&&-VJ Being asked In Jest where he n us going, he replied "To Jerusalem" and then and there the wager was undertaken, the condition being that tho Journey be made on foot, save where It was necessary to take a ship, lis started In 17S3 and finished in Juno of tho following year, winning In addi tion to tho money, tho sobriquet of "Jeru salem." "Fleet marriages' wero so common In Eng land at ono tlmo that botween October 19, 1701, and February 12, 1703, thero wero con tracted 2954 marriages In Fleet prison, Lon don, from ,whlch the ceremonies derived their nnme. Twenty tn thirty couples were wedded In a day, their names bolng concealed by pri vate marks upon payment of an extra fee. The first marriage net of 1753 stopped this abuse, Tho English word "lullaby" Is thought to have a strange origin. It Is snld that Llllth or Lllll.i, the first wlfo of Adam, according to tho legend, haunted ttfo abodes of men, seok Ing to kill their children. So when mothers lulled their babies to sleep they exclaimed, "Lllln, nbl!" ("Hcgono llllth"), fills being con verted Into "lullaby." IN A SPIRIT OF HUMOR Why Exchange Editors Die With n daring worthy of n better cause, tho editor grasped his shears, adjusted his eye glasses, and from the heap of newspapers before him extracted the following gems: Adolbert Fuller is back at homo from Pltts flcld, where ho attends school on account of Illness. Ml?s Vera Castncr returned to tho hospital In Grand Rapids after nearly two months' vacation. G. R. Clifton, Third, and Lowell Boncwcll have gone to Grand Rapids, Minn., for a visit with those who have gone beforo. Hut Not for Father LOTT-IIARDER Caption of lluffalo wedding report. Fair Warning Maid at Country Hotel "Please, sir, will you use tho hot water soon, as there's an 'olo In the can?" London Punch. Internal Strategy For idiotic strategy why not havo tho French name ono of their towns Ipecac and let the Germans take It? It would bo all up with them. Chicago Tribune. A Burning Question Parke Is your house Insured against fire? Lane I don't know. I've Just been reading over tho Insurance policy. Life. For Home Industries "What Is your opinion of our foreign rela tions?" asked the patriotic citizen. "They don't do you any good, replied tho local politician. "What you want is a lot of relations right hero In your own country that'll vote the way you tell 'cm to. Wash ington Star. Wedded Persiflage Miss Fluff Mr. Deepthought, do you think marriage Is a failure? Mr. Deepthought Well, tho brldo never gets the best man. Judge, International Diet It Is reported that the animals of tho Ber lin 200 havo been killed for food, whlcb may explain why the Germans have latelj taken to eating crow. War Fever I used to think that Jones was strong Within tho law's domain, But now I know that I was wrong His forte's Alsace-Lorraine! And Smith (another sudden blow) His hobbles, I was sure, Were golf and cigarettes, but no! They're Brussels and Namur. And Brown, so reticent beforo, Now keeps waylaying mo To mobilize whole army corps Of words on strategy! And Green, who thought tho one best bet Was peace. Is now alas! Continually storming Metz Armed with a demi-tasse. And Johnson but enough of spite! Tho worst of all I nm. For on a tablecloth last night I drew a diagram! New York Times. The Inmiiry Courteous Exasperated telephone subscriber (having found six different numbers engaged) "Well, what numbers HAVE you got?" London Punch. The Horrors of War Ethel (In apprehensive whisper which easily reaches her German governess, to whom she Is deeply attached) Mother, shall wo have to kill Frauleln? London Punch. To Cover the Ground The great American novel that Tho nation still expects Will have to bo, experts agree. In 40 dialects. Loulsvlllo Courier-Journal. A Man and His Money A Scot of Peebles said to his friend MncAn drew: "Mac, I hear yo have fallen In love wl' bonny Kate McAllister." "Wee!, Sanders," Mac replied, "I wis near vcrra near daeln' It: but tho bit lassie had nae oilier, so I said to inaself, 'Mac, be a mon.' And I wis a mon, and noo I Jlst pass her by." Ar gonaut. The Retort Frosty "I suppose, captain," said the Inquisitive ocean voyager, "that tho passengers make you dreadfully tired with the questions they ask." "Yes, Indeed," replied the captain. "What else Is It you want to know?" - , Funny Turkey protests against the Jests in American newspapers at her expense. If Turkey will stay out of the war she will not be a Joke. Washington Post. Super-Optimist "What a cheerful woman Mrs. Smiley Is," "Isn't she? Why, do you know, that wo man can have a good time thinking what a good time she. would have If she were hav ing It." Boston Transcript. STAIJN NOT THE SKY Ye gods of battle, lords of fear, Who work your Iron will as well As once ye dirt with awoid and spear, With rifled gun and rending shell Masters of sen and land, forbear The fierce Invasion of the inviolate air! AVIth patient daring man hath wrought A hundred years for power to fly, And shall we make his winged thought A hovering horror In the sky, Where flocks of human eagles sail. Dropping their bolts of death on hill nnd dale? Ah. no, the sunset Is too pure. The dawn too fair, the noon too bright! For wings of terror to obscure Their beauty, and betray the night That keeps for man, ubove his wars, Tho tranquil vision of untroubled stars, Pass on, pass en. yo lords of fear! Your footbteps in the sea are red. And black on earth your paths appear With ruined homes and heaps of dead, Pass on, and end your transient reign. And leave tho blue of heaven without a stain. The wrong ye wrought will fall to dust. The right ye shielded will abide; The world at last will learn to trust In law to guard, and love to guide. The peace of God that answers prayer Will fall like dew from the Inviolate air. -Henry Van Dyke, In the New York Independent DONE IN PHILADELPHIA AN INSTITUTION that enters upon Its 91st year of activity, It seems to me, might very well bo called Venerable, but knowing the enterprising character of tho Franklin Institute as I do, tho term vener able does not exnetly fit. It Implies weakness along with respectability; It seems to echo the past. But, whllo 90 years ngo tho Insti tute wits tho most progressive organization in Its own field In this country, so It Is tho very last word In modernity In sclcnco applied to mechanics today. And I write this Just because I had my at tention called to the reopening of the school of tho Institute Inst week. I BELIEVE that probably holt tho popula tion of Philadelphia, If asked, would con fess to a belief that tho Institute was founded by Benjamin Franklin. I do not know how this idea got abroad, but I find thero Is a strong Inclination to attribute to Franklin oven more numerous achievements than ho claimed for himself. But when It Is renllzed that tho Institute Is only now entering upon Its 01st year It will bo needless to nssuro any ono that the Immortal Ben had no hand In Its organization. However, I feel sure that it was out of compliment to tho valuablo contributions to science mndo by Franklin that tho group of young men who formed tho Institute took "prldo In associating his namo with tholr movement. IN 1S24, when the Institute was formed, nn Inspiring movement nmong young me chanics spread over tho eastern part" of the country. It led to the formation 1 f mechanics' Institutes. I believe thero were several of them In this city at the time. But It was rather exclusive. Becauso of tho stringency In their qualifications for membership, tho very names of these organizations are forgotten, but the namo of tho Franklin Institute Is held In high repute by scientists all over tho world. Snmuel Vaughan Merrick, afterward ono of Philadelphia's most noted Ironmasters, found himself, as ho onco mentioned, tho owner of a workshop nt 21 years, but without a me chanical education or with scarcely a me chanlcal Idea. Ho believed ho could Improvo himself In order to properly superintend Ills foundry If he could become a member of a mechanics' Institute. Ho nppllcd for ndmls slon to ono of them. But Mr. Merrick was promptly blackballed, becauso ho was not aj mechanic. Ho was nn employer. v - HE COULD not sny in 1824 what a man In a similar position today could say; ho could not tnko his rejection lightly and turn his stops to a technical school. If ho could not share the Information with those young mechanics, ho must settle himself to learn his trade and Its secrets by tho slow process of observation In his own foundry. Mr. Merrick did not choose to do that, but deter mined to Interest others In the establishment of an Institute that would be founded not only upon more democratic principles, but also would considerably expand tho original Idea of mechanical Institutes. THERE aro not mnny young men of 21 with tho force of character or the neces snry Initiative, for organizing such nn asso ciation. But young Merrick managed to Interest such men as Matthias W. Baldwin, who, It must be remembered, had not yet built bis first locomotive; James Ronnldsnn, tho typo founder; Dr. James Rush, who founded tho RIdgway Library; William II. Knoass and Samuel R. AVood, among others, in his plnn. Consider tho method by which those organizers obtained an audlenco for their meeting. They held It In what wo now nllude to as Old Congress Hall, at Sixth and Chest nut streets. They selected and sent Invita tions to a list of 1500 names taken from tho directory. Unless you realize that in 1824 there was no postal service such as we now enjoy, you cannot appreciate the magnltudo of this attempt. Tho meeting was attended by a largo num ber of young men, and within two weeks thero were enrolled between 400 and 500 members. IN ITS declared object to promote and en courage tho mechanic arts tho institute oven in its infant days was true. It held tho first Industrial exhibitions In this country. Small us thnso were nt tho start, they grad ually became more Important, and for many years were continued annually, attracting manufacturers nnd Inventors from nil parts of the United States. Tho exhibition tho In stitute held In 1874 in tho old Pennsylvania Ralhoad freight depot, on the site of Wnna maker's, Is romembered with pleasure by many Phllailclphians. Tho Electrical Exposi tion which the institute held at 32d and Mar ket streets in 1884 wns tho first universal showing of tho mysterious new force that the world had seen. THERE aro half a dozen medals and pre miums at tho service of tho Institute to bestow upon inventors and discoverers, nnd I need not tell you that they are prized far above their monetary value by their winners, who aro not always Americans. They nro not bestowed until a committee, thoroughly examines tho claims for tho Invention or dis covery cnteied for tho prize, and the award In Itself is proof everywhere of tho value of the idea that Is accepted. Ill tho weekly lectures and meetings of the various sections of the institute each winter the visitors will hear tho last word on tho latest contributions to the mechanic arts. I know of no Institution that Is so young and modern in spirit and feels so llttlo tho effects of nge when passing Its 00th birthday as the Franklin Institute. ORANVILLE. Ethics and Politics From the New York lltral.l. Statesmen of past generations always sought to conceal tho hand of the tax gatherer, but our Washington colons of today, having cut down the levy concealed In the tariff schedules, seem determined to let every citlien know and feel where the Federal Govrriment pinches him. H's good thlcs. But Is it good politics? THE IDEALIST Every display of valor, from football to warfare, brings out a curious trait In tho human make-up. Shortly, the feeling tho discussion, tho enthusiasm Incident to tho present conflict will resolve themselves Into a very definite human desire a deslro nt old us time. Tho moli wants a hero! A contest proves listless unless It un covers nn Individual star. A battle is only a free-for-all unless a hero emerges Few folks realize the tremendous 'part this instinctive mob-craving has played in tha eruptions of history. The Individual calm and cool, away from tho crowd, well knows that Just so long as the laurel wreath U placed upon the brow of thos.0 that rnalm and kill. Just so long will blood be spilled n war. And ho abhors the reflection But the mob spirit alters him. He be comes a weakling. " "" We have succeeded la educating the IndU vidua! at tho hearth of his tiom6 to Ihn tW ' found wisdom of peace. Wo still hnv "St our hands tho task of educating a coli?ii:rt of Individuals, tho mob. cocctlon Europe's dolugo of blood nnd palh ,m 1 develop only ono true hero. Ho will L vi1' man who changes It to peaco. Ul4 i TUB IDEALIST. J VIEWS OF READERS ON TIMELY TOPICS Contrilmtions That Reflect Puhlic Ophv jou on oiiujcms Aiiiporinnt to Cliv'. State nnd Nation. To thi r.Mlor of the Kventnu trdoer! Sir-England did not envy Germany h6r wll' earned commerce nor wns sho Jealous of n many's army for defense, nor of Uermntiv small but efficient navy. r' But Germany violated tho neutrality of Bi glum, and England, all at once, becamo horrl fled nt such a breach of International faith nnd declared war on Germany or rather 0 Germany's commorco nnd navy, primarily n3 on her army, but with less alacrity about facing It. Why couldn't France, Russia ma hor (Englntid's) numerous other nlllcs face lh. Germnn cannon? She would rather th. would, for Englishmen, would rather nt.. cricket nnd football than faco ennnon ..L cnuse. n a"lr Does England forget-tho world does not-n.. own crlmo at Copenhagen, In Napoleon's tlm which the Japaneso nation used ns n preeenW to excuse its nftnek on tho Russian fleet w ih out a declaration of war or other wartime) Has Englnnd forgotten, too, her part In it, Pnoll, tho Cherry Valley nnd tho WvomlnJ Valley massacres, nnd In tho battlo of hi Cowpons, where no quarter wns given tha wounded Americans, still brave, but too weak to reslat their slaughter In cold blood? And has England further forgotten her prison ships in which many bravo American patriots were doomed to starvation and death) And Is It. ns a memorial to England's own past good faith with other nntlons, that th Hollander, the Belgian and tho Frenchman her nearest neighbors aro alike always readV to exclaim, with feeling of contcmnt 'm thou perfidious Albion!" ' un' Philadelphia, September 21, 1914. ' ENTITLED TO APPROVAL To tho l'ditor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Since tho first lssuo of your paper I have tnkon It each evening and studied it with Interest. Tho opposition that is made In your columns to Penrose nnd nil that ho represents Is of Itself enough to earn tho approval of every right-thinking citizen In this boss-rlddn Stnte. GEORGE Z. ILLINGTO.V ' Philadelphia, September 21, 1914. STATE IS TIRED OF BOSSES To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir In mv vlow ihn Rtntn ,f li..t..,..i. ...-, , -.. -.. .... ..... ..u.v A .iiiioj 1, rtula IS tired of Boles Penrose ns its representative In tho United States Senate, and more tired of n corrupt State Government known as "Penroselsrn." Patriotic citizens want to de feat both. The Evening Ledger will be o powerful aid in that righteous work. T. KITTERA VAN DYKE. Harrlsburg, August 31, 1914. WILL NOT VOTE FOR PENROSE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I have been a lifelong Republican, but I won't voto for Penrose! And thero are a lot of us who leei me snme way. it riles me when I get out of tho State to hear the choice slurs that are enst at tho quality of Pennsylvania Republicanism which will nominate Coles Penrose for United States Senator. But I have to swallow the pill and reply, "Ho Is not elected yet." L. C. DENISE. New Kensington, Pa., September 21, 19H. An International Police Force From the Itlclimond Tlmes-DIspatch. The war of nations in Europe has revived tho tnlk of a combination of the forces of the nations to police both land nnd sen, nnd keep the peace among nations Just as our present police forces ktep the peaco among Individuals. Tho Idea Is an old one, but has never made much progress until recently. Now even so conservative n writer ns Henry Clews accepts it, saying In his latest report that Its adoption is necessary to permanent peace. It Is hardly to oe suppcseil mat so radical a clinnge In cus toms and tho point of view will be brought about soon, If at all, but It Is certain that without practical disarmament there can never be a permanent peaco In Europe. If the war result in that consummation. It will have been worth while. If tho Powers that win Insist upon It as a pieccdent necessary to the end of the war, those f'owcrs will havo justified their entrance Into It. If they do not. they will havo to fight another war at some future time. Let the President Alone Trom the New York World. This wnr Is not our war. We did not make It nnd we cannot end It. If we mind our own busi ness, however, we may be able to bmooth the pathway to peace when blood and Iron ha8 determined the main Issues. If wo do not mind our own business, we shall bo regarded as Impertinent meddlers and shall have no Influ ence for good whatever. Tho President hns been petitioned enough and nagged enough. He knows the situation better than any of his self-appointed counselors. Ills motives nro quite ns exalted ns those of his volunteer advisers. Let him alone. Looking Toward Peace Sunday Trom the New Haven (Conn.) Journal-Courier. We may well be .thinking during the comic days how wo are going to make of "Peace Sun day" something better than a perfunctory per formance, something infinitely finer than mere lip-service. To ndd to our supplications for happier days an offering for the relief 0' afflicted nations will put our religion to practical and blessed use. Asking Too Much From the St. Louis Poal-Dlspatch.' Apropos tho Incident of tho steamship Robert Dollar, It may be remarked that, with all du respect and rogard for England ns the land 01 Shakespeare, wo really cavvn't, you know, oil chap, admit that tho Atlantic Ocean, or anf other, is an English lake. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Mr. Roosevelt Is correct In announclnff that bo Isn't a candidate. But wait until U" Springfield Republican. The railroads can hardly be so bad as "ftf have been palmed, If President Wilson be comes ono of their advocates. Baltimore Even ing Sun. In comparison with the present European war, Caesar. Alexander and Hannibal guilty of nothing more serious than illsoroerir conduct. Kansas City Star. The Government ought to show Its appre und avail Itself of his capacity fpr '"rtj1" 8 service of tho same general kind Chariest" g iicna uuu iuuiit:r. Reports of the first football Injuries, broken collar bones and tho like, cause small thrill w piotest this year. Thero are too many '" tilings going on behind the veil of the fcu' pean censorship. Springfield Republican One small, Imagined sigh from sweet Cor delia, one fancied smile upon the HP' ' Imogen, one fleeting dream of Juliet from n flnrmwr lannlnt, liplnira lTflnnil closer lu ' ........... . , .,..,.-..... -"- n D0)lft COUli land of ours, than Klnllng. Pinero, Bridges and all thut list of authors ever Chicago Herald. The President's remark upon the acUvl''" of certain professional Jingoes who are crazy for peace that their program ' hl practical and sl!y"-ls mildly true MJ " might have said If he had been in "'-""r would have been much more to the point-"' York World. Senator Burton's brilliant struggle ha b amply lepald, and the admirable rules ana , toms of the Senate which made hi slaDab.,a Justice to the taxpayers possible have ubundantly Justified. New York Sun. The British navy has done nothln ? .JT Ing as the exploit of the German "-0Brf3Uf One of the oldest lessons of human bw, i .t i,.. . j ,, .,. inerfly-'' L a mv tuny ui ueyiM jww - York World. j j.. ,j Aj..-..wr llfllmn .!'..I"..T1 . " wtmmttmiM