L- 8 EVENING LEPGEB-PHILAPEkPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, JOU stro ,ouP i Por; EVENING $sHj LEDGER PUBLIC LEDGKIl COMPANY CYntJfl II K. Ct'UTIB. rnMIDRKT. Geo. W Octn. Secretary; John C Mnrtln, Treasurer! Chrle H UidlnKlon. l'hlll .. Collin. John 1! Wll lim Director. EDITORIAL HOARD: Ctnus II. K Curtis. Chairman. T. ti.JVIIAI.Kr . . . K,frutlve TMItor JOItNT C MARTIN .OenrM HulnpMMiit!SRp Published dally, ecrnt Pun.tay. nt I'lini to t.nxiEn riiillillnr. Inilrpenilenri- Hiiunrr. Phllmlrlphln. Ltpnin CrntdaJ , ...llroacl and Chestnut Pt reels Atlantic C'lTr i'rrs-l'iiIon Ilulldlnn Nrw Yon 170. A. Metropolitan Tower ClitCAoo R17 Homo InMirniire lliilldlnir Lo.NDo.1 8 Waterloo 1'lnie, 1'all Mall. S. V. KKWSUflinAUS: HRRtnrro IIi-isfad The iMfrfY HntM n Wjmiiimiton ItinRlU The Voit ttiilMlnn Nrw York Hireau...... The Times llullillns; llRRti.N UtiRFtu IVI Krleilrlihstrasso London JiiniK.it; 2 Pnll Mali East, 8 W. Piui IlfctAU ,12 Hue Louis le OranJ SI IlfCllll'IIDSTKIIMS Tlrparrler. DttY cim.1, six rents lty mall, postpaid cutslilc of Phllnileiphla. rxcrpt where foreign poems') it required, luit.T nu. one month, tcnt-llte irnts; Dailt omi, one Sear, three dollars. All mall subecrlp. tlons payable In nilvuhce. nut, nono wu.Mrr KinstOM mum nt'"" IK" aiWiess oil rommiiiileafioHS In Kirnlnjr Ledger, hiilritrmlrnrt Sqnnrr, rhllnd'lphla -ITLlCAltnN MIHE AT TUB 1'Illl.ttiP.l I'UIA fOT0lrtCE lOlt IVIKt IS SFlOD-it IS MAIL MAtTlR. i'iiiui)f.ipiti, wi.tiMisim, m i' mini, it 2.1. I'll i Pciiroscism is Democracy's Chief As?ot THERE will be no weeping In the White House if Penfoselsm In Indoiscd In Penli b iMitiiu. Tlio Demmi'itc) Is quite ready to do without one vote in the Henute In teturn lnr the continued use nt t'cnrosplsm tin enitl paign material. It Itu8 n uinjorltv, unjliuw. T1h President knows, and hl. advisers know, that l'.i liner victorious will not he worth hale so much to tin party ns Palmer defeated. If the Ui-puhliinns In this Stnto wish to deul the Administration u mighty Mow, they cun do It by eliminating Penroseism ns nn Issue In AmeiiLnn politics. Intoxication of the I'diiocius Pilaccus No, THIS is not a new cocktail nor a cor dial of monastic inanitfncliirc. For this devotee of the "gluss that cheers" many and various huvc been the sulwlltutes devised, but it has remained for modern science to discover a stimulant more potent than alco hol and. if leports are correct, with no nftir depression. The lmnoelus pllaceus Is wild to confer upon the partaker thereof :slonn ns radiant, ns exhilarating, ns lltirly hallucinatory as those of hasheesh, as subliminal as the men tal v.iporliiRB of opium and u fecnsc of super-woll-lielng and Ilt-feellng transcending that nffoided by tho vintages of Burgundy or John Barleycorn. The panoehts pllaceus Is a mushroom. Its dlscovny is announced by no less ii savant than rr. A. E. Verrill. of Yale I'lilversity. In the current number of Science ho de scribes tho "case of Mr. AW," a middle-aged man, vigorous, strictly temperate ami a bot anist, who experimented with the hilarious f uncus According to tho description, the panoelus pilnceus Is delicate, umbrella-shaped and will prow In any garden. Possibly with (leld, gardens and flower beds given over to n fond and assiduous cul tivation of the newly discovered fungus, the reign of Bacchus) may be over! Imagination Lifts Up Posterity WH, TUB people, need to have eyes of imagination in order that wo may be ' riuud citizens. A voter with sulliclent ability to see the rest of mankind and the genera tions et unborn will sacrifice his conven ience, and even much more, to go to the polls. The In tter we come to know mankind the actual character and lives of ppople whom perh.ips we huvc never f-een or never will see the stronger grows our altruism, which Is a normal quality of human nature. Tho literature of the magazines Is rendering an invaluable service. It Is forwurding 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 human reality. The pscho!ogy that tells us clearly how we are separated by time, rather than space, from those who will bo alTocted 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 on the stat ute books by tho Legislators that wo elect, for every vote that Is cat at the polls, we nre answerable to future generations. Without Imagination it is impossible to comprehend our civic responsibilities. Young Men Will IN'ot He Tricked TIlli; was when men voted as they wor shiped, as their fathers did before them. Example was everything. 1'arty lines were rigid and men voted blindl, as they wero told, for tho parties' candidates, irrespective of tho merits of tho other sidu. Times are changed. That's trite, hut true. We live In a different day and generation. Today tho Intelligent man who is not tied down by paid party ervice owns his own vote, lie and his fellows have begun to weigh men, methods and policies. They are thinking for themselves. Their ranks are in creasing daily. You see It in the revolt at tho Progressives, in their return to the Repub. lican fold whon they found themselves tricked by their leaders and deluded by false prom Ises. Thtso are the men who count, tho men who think for themselves. Through them tho hope of scotching the snake of Penroaeiam comes. Worth tlio Purchase WH1LK Congressmen are busying them selves over a bill fur emergency taxa tion. It may interest others to take a little historical excursion buck to February 10, 17S3. cm that Jty Peluuah Webster published In Philadelphia, at the very doors of tho Congress of the Confederation, an entirely new plan of federal Government One of the basic principles involved was tho indo. pendent authority of the Federal Government to levy taxes. No Federal system that had ever existed had been armed with the power to tax, and Pelatlah's proposal was without a precedent in history. In the Constitutional Convention of J7ST it was adopted, though writers of text-boobs have been in the habit of giving the credit to other men- The power of taxation." Webster said. "Is a dreadful engine of oppression, tyranny and Jnjur. when til-used, yet ... I do can lend that our Vnion ts worth this purchase." Socialists Flirt Willi War ACCOUUING to the reports of American .correspondents, the Socialist movement in Germany has disappeared in these times of war. Vorwaerts, the famous Socialist paper, bus turned patriotic and for the rim time In Its history xny e sold on Government property and even In tho army A few weeks ago the Socialist deputies In the Reichstag oted unanimously fo'the war credits. In V Franco, Mnrccl Sembat and Jules Gucsde joined tho Cabinet, abandoning their part In petty political quarrels. Gustavo Herve, called by somebody "nntl-mllltnrlst, anti-par-liamcntnrlan, nntl-pntrlot," naked the French Minister of War to send him to tho front with the llrst regiment of Infantty. In the mlntls of these men there Is no Isstlo now, It there ever was, between so cialism and patriotism. Only the weakest thliikcru among tho socialistic groups sco nn antagonism between tho two. Patriotism, moreover, is rooted far deeper In human na ture than socialism, with n possible exception In tho caso of the Inferior socialism of tho very smallest men. Patriotism Is -no oJ tho highest expressions of the human trait of loolt. It is loyalty to "all we have and arc." It Is really conservatism. Using Childhood to Muddy the Waters mill: massed cohorts of tho Organization JLwero able by tho slender margin of one vii to to override the Mayor's veto of tho Municipal Court grab. In explanation of this notion, .lohn P. Connelly, commander-in-chief of Penloselsm in Council!-, declared, so tho report runs, that "It comes with exceedingly bad grace from tho gentleman on tho second Hoor (tho Mayor) to obstruct tho efforts tho Municipal Court Is making to help tho delin quent child." The Municipal Court has been chiefly noted up to th's time for helping Itself to the funds of tho municipality. The solicitude of Mr. Connelly for childhood might have aroused thn sympathy and support of all good citi zens hmt they not read elsewhere, In the same Kue of the Kvr.Nt.vo I.KPorm, tho declaration of Paul N. rurmnit. secretary of the Child Labor Association of Pennsylvania, that cer tain deplorable conditions In tho matter of child labor In Pennsylvania arc "due entirely to tho Influence of tho Penrosc-controlled political machine" It Is bad enough to have such ti grab ns this Municipal Court adven ture will be.- if achieved, put through, but 1 Is positively nauseating to have the re sponsibility for It placed on children who cannot speak for themselves Things That Abide In a Changing Order TIMi: never halts. War or nn war, the seasons come and go. Tho rose withers on the stem, and already the pencils of autumn begin to tint the leaves. The guns of Hurope do not stop the sun, though they may smash tho clok. Time moves on like a liver. It Is n satisfaction to know that some things are above tho might of man. The Imperishable forres of life abide abovo the danger line of rust and moth and gunpowder. The Uhelms Cathedral may bo laid In ruins, but the devotion that built It Is everlasting. In the world clash between materialism nnd Idealism it Is well to lay hold of the best things the indestructible forces of truth, true love, friendship and every reality of life. These realities are like blocks of granite in a sea of changing conditions. Tho fact that others have gone mad Is only another reason why the rest of us should remain sane. In Reply to Gerhardt Ilnttptinann NO OSU will dispute Hnuptmann's conten tions that Germany, the Germany of "Kant nnd Schopenhauer," Is tho great bea con light of civilization. No one will dispute that she has brought immortal contributions upon the altar of art, science, Industry and literature. Uut all, all who think in the light of Inexorable historical facts, will dispute the brazen claims of the ruling clu&s of Germany that German Industry and the feudal ideas of government nnd administration should dominate the rest of the world. This Is not it right for the "preservation of German culture." It is rather a battle for the libera tion of German culture and all culture from military nnd financial I'russlnnism. Tho defeat of Geimuny will bo tho victory of Geimany and the victory of the entire world. jN'efarious Political Brokerage POPULAR government consists In tho con trol of political utTiiirs by public opinion. UossiMii and popular government are incon sistent. The boss,," says President Lowell, ol Harvard, "does not act mainly as an expo nent of public opinion or frame tho issues theiefor. Ho cares little for public policy or legislation relating to the general welfare so long as he K allowed to pursue his trade in peace. He is a political broker, but ono whose business relates far less to subjects of a genuine public opinion than to private benefits." The reason why the boss has been allowed to continuo at his nefarious trado is public indlfforonce. So declares James Rryce, whoso Judgment comes of long and close observa tion of American politics. How long ts this indifference to continue? How long aro tho voters to ovorlook tho weapon which lies at hand? Unlesa all signs fail they are going to use It in Pennsylvania on next olectlon day. Indlfferenco to public welfare Is a crime of citizenship. The "safety first" program is not making much headway In I'urope. Everybody except the Interstate Commerce Commission thinks the railways are entitled to relief. Doctor Brumbaugh Js confounding hli critics nnd he will confound Penroseism be fore he gets through. N'ow Jersey has a habit of standing by tho Presldont, The Democracy gets the credit for Woodrow Wilson's personal victories. Herman Ridder 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 ps etiological theory? '"' ' 'p i " iwi' mn New York's 1100,000,000 loan overstibscribeJ three times by private Investors and a tidy bit of the money from Philadelphia! We still have a few pennies to rub together in splto of the pessimists. It would have been a fine thing for Penn sylvania If Mr. Knox had offered for the Senate last spring. It would he a finer thing if Mr Penrose would retire In his favor now. Cm such things do not happen in Penroseism. The world does move. It seems but yeiter. day that universal excitement was caused by a successful aeroplane flight across tho Chan nel from Franco to England. Just a few days ago JS British army 'plunes were reported to be making the passage from England to France at one time Thirty-six thousand tons of British ar mored cruisers are at the bottom of the North Sea 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 nrtlst, married a Philadelphia girl shows his good sense! that ho was chased a couple of thousand miles by nn earthquake is Indlcatlvo of his ability to dodge trouble. It begnn In San Francisco, whero lllrt was more or less busy drawing cartoons for a dally paper. It so happened that ho was not busy on tho night In question, thnt Is, not until the earthquake started then he became extraordinarily so. In fact, he never stopped being busy until ho reached Oakland In safety, minus cloth ing nnd money. For three weeks ho lived In the refugee camp, awaiting a remittance from his family In this city. Then, dis gusted, ho became a passenger de luxo on a freight train for Los Angeles. Hut work and money wero even senrcer there, nnd so ho continued In haphazard fashion until Chi cago wns reached. , There he heenmo chef In a quick lunch room for a week, but, having higher aspira tions, ho started onco again, this tlmo for Htiffalo. 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 the postolllco nnd Inquired nt the general delivery whether any mall bad been forwarded to him via L03 Angeles, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, etc. There wns, said the man. In tho letter, which wan from home, was nn express order for J200. lllrt says that ho dined that night nnd tho nfter effects of thnt dinner will bo his death somo day, but he doesn't care now, for ho Is wed to that Philadelphia girl nnd has moio oi tiers than he can fill. I HAVE no desire to claim credit for the discovery, but I have found tho champion fisherman, nnd ho halls from To ledo. His nnme Is Howard Welgle nnd he dates his fish story from Frankfort, Mich. According to this modern Izaak Walton, he went fishing near Frankfort during his va cation In 1913. In the course of time he hooked a huge pickerel, which, nfter a long struggle, got away. This summer Welgle went to the same stream and dropped his lino Into the hole loft In tho water by tho dropping of the escaping fish. A cast wns made, a bite and Welgle had caught the .same fish, so he says. In Its gill was fast ened the selfsame halt which Welgle had lost tho previous summer. Which proves that, nfter nil, somo fish aro honest enough to return things which do not belong to them. TAKING breakfast with a real, live Presi dent Is undoubtedly nn honor, but some times there are drawbacks, ns in this In stance. I had been In Johannesburg, South Africa, for well nigh a year, when Wllllnm J. Leyds, Secretary of State, Invited me to par take of a frugal morning meal with Presi dent Kruger. So to Pretoria, the capital, I wont by stage coach, 35 miles In six hours, and cnlled upon the Staats-Sckreiaer. "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 before that," leplled Doctor Leyds. Regretfully I retired, sleepily I arose, dressed and went to the little cottage which frerved for the Uocr White House. It was still dark, but the President, surrounded by Generals Joubert, De Wet, Uotha and Doctor Leyds, was awaiting my coming. For ten minutes Oom Paul cross-examined me on America; then A'row Kruger brought hugo bowls of steaming coffee and black 'bread, covered with real crenmery butter. And at 4 n. m. sharp tho Boer Cabinet went Into session with prayer. DO YOU recall that when you went to school you were Induced to learn some thing about Peter tho Great and Catherine nnd how wicked and cruel Catherine was? Well, she wusn't so bad ns you imagine, for Diderot, tho encyclopedist, says she wns not, and ho knew. Desiring to provide a dowry for his daughter and not having tho means, Diderot decided to sell his magnifi cent library. It enmo to Catherine's cars nnd she sent for Diderot. Then she showed how cruel sho could really bo when the occasion offered Itself. She bought tho library at Diderot's own price, made him the librarian of her new purchase and Paid him 50 years' salary In advance! IT IS a considerable step from Presidents nnd Empresses to n mere Mayor, but there was ono Mayor who wns as autocratic in his way ns wus Oom Paul or Catherine the late William J. Gaynor, whose lost offi cial words wero, "I have been Mayor." In contradistinction to some of his predecessors, who wero mere tools of Tammany, Mr. Gay nor was recklessly fearless in his outspoken opinions. He cured not whom he hit nor what tho consequences might be. Ono Inci dent shows this clearly. He had been in ofllco two days when a friend called on him. After tho usual preliminaries, Mr. Gaynor commented upon previous administrations and their lock of common sense. "My predecessor in this ofllce was the smallest man who ever sat in the Mayor's chair!" thundered Mr. Gaynor, bringing his first down on his desk. That predecessor was George B. McClellan, son of tho Little General, who fought Tammany furiously and wns crushed beneath the claws of the tiger. Not thnt there was ever a breath of suspicion of wrong against Mr. McClellan, but ho played politics Instead of governing the city and paid the price. ONCE upon n time there was a political boss in Philadelphia, and there are more of them now. A reporter asked him one day whether Jones, which wasn't his name, would be nominated for Congress. "If WE think our opponents will win, Jones will be nominated; If WE think WE will win, then I will be named." Jones was nominated. If this were a short story or a play, Jones would have won, Just to mako a dramatic climax. But this being a true tale, Jones was everlastingly licked. BRADFORD. CURIOSITY SHOP The famous Salic Law is a chapter in the Salian code regarding the succession to Salic lands, which were limited to male heirs, chiefly because certain military duties were connected with tho holding of those lands. In the fourteenth century females were excluded from the throne of France by the application of the Salic law. "Jerusalem" Whalley walked from Dublin to the Holy Land and back in one year, on a wager of nearly $100,000, a large sum In the days of 1758-80. Being asked in Jest where he was going, he replied "To Jerusalem" and then and there the wager was undertaken, the condition being that the Journey be made on foot, save where it wtvs necessary to take a ship. He started In 178$ and nniahed la Juno of tho following year, winning In addi tion to tho money, tho sobriquet of "Jeru salem," "Fleet marriages" wore so common In Eng land at one tlmo that between October 19, 1704, nnd February 12, 1705, thero wero con tracted 2954 marriages In Fleet prison, Lon don, from which the ceremonies derived their nnme. Twenty to thirty couples were wedded In n day, their names being concealed by prl 'ate mnrks upon payment of nn extra fee. Tho first marriage net of 1753 stopped this abuse, The English word "lullaby" Is thought to have a strange origin. It la snld that LUIth or Llllls, the first wife of Atlnm, nccordlng to the legend, haunted tho abodes of men, seek ing to kill their children. So wncn mothers lulled their babies to Rlcep they exclaimed, "Lllla, nbl!" ("Begone llllth"), this being con verted Into "lullaby." IN A SPIRIT OF IIUMOR Why Exchange Editors Die With a daring worthy of a better cause, the editor grasped his shears, adjusted his eye glasses, nnd from the heap of newspapers before him extracted tho following gems: Adclbert Fuller Is back nt homo from Pltts flcld, where he nttends school on nccount of illness. Miss Vera Cnstner returned to tho hospital In Grand Rapids after nearly two months' vacation. G. R. Clifton, Third, nnd Lowell Boncwcll have gone to Grand Rnpids, Minn., for u visit with those who havo gone before. But Not for Father LOTT-HAUDER Caption nf rtultalo ucddlng report. Fair Warning Maid nt Country Hotel "Please, sir, will you use tho hot wnter soon, ns thero's an 'olo in tho can?1' London Punch. Internal Strategy For Idiotic strategy why not have the French name ono of their towns Ipecac and let the Germans tako It? It would bo all up with them. Chicago Tribune. A Burning Question Parke Is your house Insured ugninst fire? Lane I don't know. I've Just been residing 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 nny good,' replied the local politician. "What you want Is n lot of relations right here In your own country that'll vote the way you tell 'em to. Wash ington Star. Wedded Persiflage Miss Fluff Mr. Deepthought, do you think marrluge Is n failure? Mr. Deepthought Well, tho bride never gets tho best man. ludgo. International Diet It Is reported that the animals of tho Ber lin zoo havo been killed for food, whlcb may explain why tho Germans have latelj taken to eating crow. War Fever I used to think that Jones was strong Within the law's domain. But now I know that 1 was wrong Ills forte's Alsace-Lorraine! And Smith (another sudden blow) His hobbles, r wns sure, Were golf anrf cigarettes, but no! They're Brussels and Namur. And Brown, so reticent before. Now keeps waylaying mo To mobilize whole army corps Of words on strategy! And Green, who thought tho one best bet Wns peace. Is now nlas! Continually storming Metz Armed with n demi-tasse. And Johnson but enough of splto! The worst of all I am, For on a tablecloth last night I drew a diagram! New York Times. The Inquiry Courteous Exasperated telephone subscriber (having found six dlfferont numbers engaged) "Well, what numbers HAVE you got?" London Punch. The Horrors of War Ethel (In npprehenslve whisper which easily reaches her German governess, to whom sho is deeply nttached) Mother, shall wo havo to kill Fraulcln? London Punch. To Cover the Ground Tho grent American novel that Tho nation still expects Will have to bo, experts agree, In 40 dialects. Louisville Courier-Journal. A Man and His Money A Scot of Peebles said to his friend MacAn drew: "Mac, I hear ye have fallen hi love wl' bonny Kato McAllister." "Wcel, Sanders." Mao replied, "I wis near verra near daeln' It; but the bit lassie had nne siller, so I said to maself, 'Mac, bo a mon.' And I wis a mon, and noo I Jist pass her by." Ar gonaut. The Retort Frosty "I suppose, captain," said tho Inquisitive ocean voyager, "that the passengers make you dreadfully tired with the questions they "Yes, Indeed," replied tho captain. "What else Is It you want to know?" Funny Turkey protests ngalnst the Jests In American newspapers at her expense. If Turkey will stay out of the wur 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 tlmo thinking what a good time sho would have If aha wore hav ing It." Boston Transcript. STAIN NOT THE SKY Ye gods of battle, lords of fear. Who work your iron will an well As once ye did with sword and spear, With rifled gun and rending eheli Masters of sea and land, forbear Tho fierce Invasion of the inviolate air! With patient daring man hath wrought A hundred cars for power to fly. And shall we make his winged thought A hovering horror in tho sky, Where flocks of human eagles sail. Dropping their bolts of death on hill and dale? Ah. no. the sunset is too pure. The dawn too fair, the noon too bright! For wings of terroi to oUicure Their beauty, and betray the night That keeps for man, above his wars, Tho tranquil vision of untroubled stars. Pass on, pass on, ye lords of fear! Your footsteps In the sea are red. And black on earth your path6 appear With ruined homes and heaps of dead. Pass on, and end your transient reign, And leave the blue of heaven without a stain. The wrong )e wrought will fail 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 prajer Will fall like dew from the Inviolate air -Henry Van Dyke. In the Nw York Independent. DONE IN PHILADELPHIA AN INSTITUTION thnt enters upon Its 91st year of activity, It seems to me, might very well b'o called Venerabl6, but knowing tho enterprising character of the Franklin Institute ns I do, tho term voncr ablo docs not exactly fit. It Implies weakness nlong with respectability; It scorns to echo tho past. But, whllo 90 years ngo tho Instl tuto was the most progressive organization m Its own field In this country, so It Is tho very Inst wotd in modernity In sclcnco applied to mechanics today. And I write this Just because I had my at tention called to tho reopening of tho schooli of tho Institute last week. I BELIEVE that probably half tho popula tion of Philadelphia, If nsked, would con fess to n belief that tho lnstltuto wns founded by" Benjamin Franklin. I do not know how this Idea got nbrond, but I find thero Is n strong Inclination to nttrlbuto to Franklin even more numerous achievements than ho claimed for himself. But when it Is realized thnt the lnstltuto Is only now entering upon Its PlBt year It will bo needless to nssuro nny ono that the Immortal Ben had no hand In Its organization. How over, I feel suro that It was out of compliment to tho vnlimhlo contributions to science mndo by Franklin thnt tho group of young men who formed tho lnstltuto took prldo In nssoclntlng his nnmo with their movement. IN 1S24, when tho lnstltuto was formed, an Inspiring movement among young me chanics spread over tho enstern part of the country. It led to tho formation if mechanics' Institutes. I believe thero wero several of them In this city nt tho time. But It wna rather exclusive. Becnuso of the stringency In their qualifications for membership, tho very names of these organizations nro forgotten, but tho nnme of tho Frnnklln lnstltuto Is held In high repute by scientists all over tho world. Samuel Vnughan Merrick, nfterwnrd one of Philadelphia's most noted Ironmasters, found himself, ns ho once mentioned, tho owner of a workshop nt 21 years, but without a. mc chnnlcnl education or with scarcely a me chanlcnl Iden. He believed ho could lmprovo himself In order to properly superintend his foundry If he could become a member of a mechnnlcs' Institute. Ho nppllcd for ndmls slon to one of them. But Mr. Merrick wns promptly blackballed, becnuso ho was not n mechanic. He was an employer. HE COULD not say in 1824 what a mnn In n slmllnr position today could say; ho could not take his rejection lightly nnd turn his steps to a technical school. If ho could not sharo tho Information with theso young mechanics, he must Bettlo 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 nn Institute that would bo founded not only upon more democratic principles, but nlso would considerably expand the original Idea of mechanical Institutes. THERE nre not many young men of 21 with the force of character or the neces sary Initiative for organizing such nn nsso clatlon. But young Merrick managed to interest such men ns Matthias W. Baldwin, who. It must he remembered, had not yet built his first locomotive; James Ronaldson, tho typo founder; Dr. Jnmcs Rush, who founded tho Rldgway Library; William II. Kncass nnd Samuel R. Wood, among others, In his plan. Consider tho method by which theso organizers obtained an audience for their meeting. They held It In what we now nllude to ns Old Congress Hall, nt Sixth nnd Chest nut streets. They selected nnd sent Invita tions to n list of 1500 names taken from tho directory. Unless you realize that In 1821 thero was no postal service such as wo now enjoy, you cannot appreciate the magnitude of this nttempt. Tho meeting was attended by n large num ber of young men, and within two weeks thero wero enrolled between 400 and 500 members. IN ITS declared object to promote nnd en courage tho mechanic nrts tho lnstltuto even in Its Infant days was true. It hold tho first Industrial exhibitions in this country. Small ns theso wero nt tho start, thoy grad ually becamo moro Important, and for many years wero continued nnnually, attracting manufacturers and Inventors from all parts of the United States. Tho exhibition the In stitute held in 1874 in the old Pennsylvania Railroad freight depot, on tho site of Wann maker's. Is remembered with plensure by many Phlladelphians. Tho Electricnl Exposi tion which the Institute held at 32d and Mar ket streets in 1S84 was the first universal Bhowing of the mysterious now force that tho world had seen. THERE aro half n dozen medals and pre miums at the service of tho Institute to bestow upon Inventors and discoverers, and I need not tell you that thoy nre prized fnr abovo their monetary value by their winners, who are not always Americans. They aro not bestowed until a committee thoroughly examines the claims for tho Invention or dis covery enterod for the prize, and tho nward in itself Is proof everywhere of the value of the idea that Is accepted. In tho weekly lectures nnd meetings of tho various sections of the lnstltuto each winter the visitors will hear the last word on tho latest contributions to tho mechanic arts. I know of no Institution that Is so young nnd modem In spirit nnd feels so little tho effects of nge when passing its 90th birthday ns the Franklin Institute. ORANVILLE. Ethics and Politics From the New York Herald. Statesmen of past generations always sought to conceal tho hand of the tax gatherer, but our Washington bolons of today, having cut down the levy concealed In the tariff schedules, seem determined to let every citizen know and feel where tho Federal Govrnment pinches him. It's good tbics. Uut Is it good politics? THE IDEALIST Every display of valor, from football to warfure, brings out a curious trait in tho human make-up. Shortly, the feeling, the discussion, tho enthusiasm incident to tho present conflict will resolvo themselves Into a ery definite human desire a desire as old as tlmo. The mob wants a hero! A contest proves listless unless It un covers an 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 the eruptions of history. Tho Individual, calm and cool, away from the crowd, well knows that Just so long as the laurel wreath is placed upon the brow of those that malm and kill, Just so long will blood be spilled in war. And he abhors the reflection. But the mob spirit alters him. Ha be comes a weakling. We bje succeeded In educating the Indl- virtual nf. this hftnrfh nt lilo lmn,A 4. .. found wisdom of neace. Wo still hnvi'n'i ui iiiuiviuuuiB, ino moo. - u', Europo'B delugo of blood nnd pain . rtnVAlnh nnlff nnn rim h.. it. -.J..1." Will man who changes It to peace. n THE IDEALIST. VIEWS OF READERS ON TIMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin. ion on Subjects Important to City State and Nation. y' To the Editor of the Hventna Ledger: Sir England did not envy Germany her won earned commerce, nor was she Jealous of nil' many's army for defense, nor of Qcrmanv small but efficient navy. r' But Germany violated the neutrality of Bet glum, and England, nil at once, bocamo horr U fled nt such a breach of International faith and declared wnr on Germany or rather on Germany's commerce nnd navy, primarily and on her nrmy, but with less alacrity about facing It. Why couldn't France, Russia nn her (England's) numerous other alllos face ,. German cannon? She would rather th. would, for Englishmen would rather n!a cricket nnd football than faco cannon n i cause. "' Docs England forget tho world does not-h., own orlmo at Copenhagen, In Napoleon's tlnw which tho Japanese 'nation used as a precedent to excuso Its nttack on tho Russian fleet with out n declaration of wnr or other warlnng? Has England forgotten, too, her part In th. Pnoll, tho Cherry Valley nnd tho Wyomlnr Valley massacres, and In the battle of th Cowpens, whero no quarter was given th wounded Americans, still brave, but too weak to resist their Blaughtor hi cold blood? And has England fitrthor forgotten her prison ships In which many bravo Amctlcan patriots were doomed to starvation and death? And Is It, ns a memorial to England's own past good faith with other nations, that the Hollander, tho Belgian nnd tho Frenchman hcr nearest neighbors aro nllko always ready to exclaim, with feeling of contempt, "oil thou perfidious Albion!" ii Philadelphia, Septombcr 21, 10U, READER. ENTITLED TO APPROVAL To the Kdttof o tho Evening- Ledger: oir ouitu ina html mnuo or your paper 1 B have taken It each ovcnlng and studied It win, 1 Interest. Tho opposition that Is mado In your columns to Penrose nnd all that he represents Is of Itself enough to earn the approval of overy right-thinking citizen In this bosq-rldden State. GEORGE Z. ILLINCJTON. Philadelphia, September 21. 1914. STATE IS TIRED OF ROSSES To the Editor of tho Evening Ledger: Sir In my view tho State of Pennsylvania Ii tired nf Boles Penrose as Its representative In tho United States Senate, and moro tired of n corrupt Stnto Government known oa "Penroseism." Patriotic citizens want to de feat both. Tho Evenino Ledger will be powerful aid In that righteous work. T. KITTERA VAN DTKE. Hnrrlsburg, August 31, 1914. WILL NOT VOTE FOR PENROSE To the Kditor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I havo been a lifelong Republican, hut I won't vote for Penrose! And thero nro a lot of us who feel tho tamo way. It riles mo when I get out of the State to hear the choice sluri that are cast at the quality of Pennsylvania Republicanism which will nominal o Rolej Penroso for United States Senator. But I have to swallow tho pill and reply, "Ho Is not elected yet." L. C. DENISE. New Kensington, Pn., September 21, 1DU. An International Police Force From the nichmonil Tlmes-Dljimtch. The war of nations in Durope has revived tho talk of n combination of tho forces of the nations to police both land nnd sen, and keep tho peace among nations Just as our present pollco forces keep tho peace among Individuals. Tho Idea Is nn old one, but has never mad much progress until recently. Now oven f conservative a writer as Henry Clews accepts it, saying In his latest report that Its adoption Is necessary to permanent peace. It Is hardl to be supposed that so radical a change In cus toms nnd tho point of vlow will be brought about soon, If at nil, but It Is certnln that without practical disarmament there can never be a permanent peace in Europe. If the war result In that consummation. It will havo been worth while. If the Powers that win Insist upon It ns a precedent necessnry to tho end of tho wnr, those Powers 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 From the New Vork World. Tills war Is not our war. Wo did not make It and wo cannot end it. If wo mind our own busi ness, however, we may bo able to (.mooth th pathway to peace when blood nnd Iron hart determined tho main issues. If we do not mini our own business, wo shall bo regarded as Impertinent meddlers and shall have no influ ence for good whatever. Tho President hns been petitioned enough and nagged enough. Ho knows the situation better thnn nny of his self-appointed counselors. IIU motives nre quite as exalted ns those of hit volunteer advisers. Let him alone. Looking Toward Peace Sunday From the New Haven (Conn.) Journal-Courier Wo may well bo thinking during the coralnj days how we nre going to mako of "Pence Sun day" something better than n perfunctory p formance, something Infinitely liner than rotrs llp-servico. To add to our supplications for happier days nn offering for tho relief ol afflicted nations will put our lcllglon to practical and blessed use. Asking Too Much From the St. I.ouls Post-Dispatch. Apropos tho Incident of tho steamship Robert Dollar, it may bo remarked that, with all due respect nnd regard for England as the land J Shakespeare, wo really cawn't, you know, oil chap, udmlt that tho Atlantic Ocean, or MI other, Is an English lake. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Sir. Roosevelt Is correct In announcing thil ho Isn't a candidate. But wait until 1J" Sprlnglleld Republican. Tho railroads can hardly be do bad as tbf have been painted, If Presldont Wilson M comes one of their advocates. Baltimore Even ing Sun. In comparison with the present European .. , .. II..I v0Tt war, uaesar, Aiexuncier nnn itninuuai guilty of nothing more serious than disorder' uuiiuuui. jvunoas wily oiar, Tho Government omjht to show Its sppre- .... . ...i . . . t. ,-i. i, a rinnl ciauon oi wnai vmoussuaor iiernva --- i ..-. .., i.. . nrtbtr ana avail iiseu cu ma capiicux i" , 7 , service of the same general kind Charleston, icna mm v,uumci. Reports of the first football Injuries, broke collar bones and tho like, cause tmall thrill protest this year. Thero aro too many worw thinss going on behind tho veil of the fcu' pean censorship. Springfield Republican One small, Imagined sigh from sweet Cor delia, one fancied smllo upon the Hr Imogen, one fleeting dream of Juliet fiom r' window leaning, brings England closer to i land of ours, than Kipling. Pinero, Do)1 Bridges and all that list of authors ever "" Chicago Herald. The President's remark upon the a""'i of certain professional Jingoes vho are w crazy for peace that their program I r piaotical and sllly"-is mildly true Wn " might have said If he had been In l";bu would have been much more to the point--'' York World. Senator Burton's brilliant struggle lia,.b, amply repaid, and the admirable ruUs "nl. Justice to the taxpayers possible hae " abundantly Justified. New York bun. 1.A ntlal. ........ t.M.. nnn nnthlnr SO 1 Inir ia th Kxnlnlt nf th Herman SUbn1"" One of tho oldest lessons of hwran w. rfi York, World. J.SKgBlJl'l. ' ' Hi,iti,dMmmmmll0ima