WY hf- 8 f EVENING LEDGEE-PHILADELPHlA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1914.. m P At. EVENING Ma LEDGER PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY ' crnus it k cunns. piDtNT. Clttt.Vf Orh. Secretary! .tohn r Maitln, Treasurer: Charle H. l.udlngton, l'hlllp S. Collins, John B. Wll Ham, Director. . 1 ft I A 8 ;V TtoucS 7 ' 'loat t aendlf '1 Quenf M-1 "w, I K prise V ll prlvaf R 1 up if t , t card i lI-'i bl6 Jl M 1 1 head) ft ' 1 van 9 jtp ' f ' seat SI & J I BothE iT ' I Frenf ! $" 1 11 baUIiff ft : 1 fords fjf ffl my fit Ji radesf j unsude f I sun. B ft 1 dcrlnjl ' also rl? W force P. 1 they l iff KUnn.f ll Si phra!i w 1 t0 a ' 1 i$ sentcf f . f M themft , t drink! ni 1 "Wf r? I tr,Ctl t ft- undoil :'c w furthHfi lK E' road 1 1 R E "hog $ I they I 3 M point fS' r anll 3 1 thlrstl At r"A4 n a f?r 'I ,, W glvenj , t- m memtf ' j after M Theyfe I' m, at Rcffl was rjj j flrst-cl yjj and, n ' jfl teredl C & see. m "Bel ; flj that W j ffl going! f 8 'Iami! " Bl surrov 4 j col oral eg ll the w5 . 'hi j the gi ' a ! on thS d ju Germif jj f them I ' K, 1 1 to sw fcfll while I' few few ffl K liandsj ' k J" advnnM !' Bomofi 5 J, on btW I jsurprLlf 1 1 towel J onets.n SlSS 200 tcffi W In th(H : W "Thfl, f H tin? :W VSl and tie ears lift UK tut '1 iJJj ivouncffl jh contlrm lijHfi tlon wl! 'll All thi "jUral except Wi Ml Prl fat jP' ill "" IS HJ aald. j of theM ' si returrjf i i even fruit iS m withoS m to liaH Hi be KaX u DOMl Stenn Gen Eve Line with bef?ni cargo here Eur-1 aie U kins Leu ea'S" one lH "lepti: mens of On name Is on TOI Sl.th.l nj Ail itura ml Mi Jame A.blrj Xlla 'rl John ! IVallH IlrriiiS W'llrcJl Alphol Chsrl-J Rl liJ A'M' J We'll G-rgal utll Janifri 1 k!i li John Mosfl John H K'mJ I'rr.(li Jd'U HorJ t W i Kathirl TnW 141I&IW . lbM Ury i Uor t'W, ttutl B1 S. I IfLFas OtS, i ssr itana. 1 KDtTOniAt tfOAItD! CTnrs It K. Curtis, Chnlrmsn. P. n WIfAt.KT... facgnllvfjmnf JOHN C MAUT1M tffnorn! nulncs iIon.'J! TubllshH dally, except HmMay. nt rmtto tr.DOKa HtilMlnir In.lepemlcnce Pniiir Phll.ulrlphm. tton CK.NtBAt, Broad (inil Chtnut Ftrf't ' ATtANTI- "in Vrrat'Vnlon nultdln Nkw York.....,,,, lTn-A. Motropolltnn Tower Cmcioo SIT Home lnurnnce llulldln ; tOMio." 8 WatcMoo riaee. fall Moll, S. W j NKWSlmilEAVS! JjAnnnsrnn rirnsAC The rnfrlol null'J n i J'Aitls()TON ni'RFitt The Iot HulMlnn Hr.n York llrnuc The rimr TiulMltiR Errn-is HCRRAP (H) rrinincniin"i ONnov ItBRRto 2 J'nll Mall Hat, S. V. Paris UcnaAU 32 Hue Louis lo Grand MHI5ni!IITIO.VTKn.MS Hr rarrlpr. DAit.r OM.t, It eent Uy mail. polpild rutMde of rhlladelnhl.t, except where forclsn potn required. Dui.v o.vl, on month, twenty-fivr cental Dailt Onu-. one far. thrco dollars. All mall subscrip tion1! payable In advance. llEtU 3000 WAtMTT KnTOK MAIN nooi) C? Addrrst atl commutileatian 16 Evtnlnp Ltdfirr, Imteti'tidrnef Square. Vhiladrlphla, S.MEREU AT THE Pint tntlPIIIA ro'TOFflCB AS SECOND CUM Mill. MlTTFH rilltAnCtt'lllA.TUESIUl, 5EI'lllMUi:R 2', 1U14. A David Heady for Goliath SENATOR PENROSE Is a big mntwi very Oollath. There Is no doubt about that, and his bigness 13 not only physical. He Is bis with tho potentiality and actuality of political and economic evil. There was a tlnio when Pennsylvania's voice ran? through the nation. There was a time when the Republican party in this State, atandiiit; for economic truth and political decency, possessed at its head, in every , crisis, an honored leader who could Interpret properly and effectually the beliefs and tho teachings of that party. That condition does not exist today. Saddled by n master who is riding for a fall, who in blind selfishness is spurring madly and ruthlessly toward the stone wall of disaster, the party has one obvious moans of escape. Let it take tho bit In its teeth. Let it win Its head. Let it U'iefc, and buck and bolt if need be until tho Goliath is thrown. Then the course wilt be free nnd open. Democrats Tear a "Scrap of Paper' FROM Washington comes the interesting news that the Alexander bill, which pro poses a Government controlled steamship line, is not having clear sailing nnd that the war tax bill is likely to run aground in the Senate. Democratic opposition to the chipping bill rises largely from recognition of the- fact that a $30,000,000 appropriation on top of a $100,000,000 emergency tax is not likely to improve the party's chances at the polls. Two years from now will come the real judging of the Wilson Administration. Political soothsayers hue declared that the European war is a great blessing to the Democratic party. Inasmuch as it will ob scure the effects of tariff, currency and other legislation. But there is already one very cleur issue which need not be confused by conditions arising out of the war, and that is the question of extravagance and wastefulness in appropriating and spending public money. Tho Democratic platform called for drastic economy. The pledges made at Baltimore have not been kept. Is a political platform a contract or "a mere scrap of paper"? expressing to Charles Sumner his sorrow over tho possibility of war between England and America and his intention to retire from public life If such an event should coma to pass, was filled with a sense of brotherhood which left no room for personal or national narrowness. The creators of art, against bitter calumny, have worl cd in the service of mankind. "Art for art's rako" does not produce great art. Our good will toward our fellowmen Is public spirit. To search out the effects of our nets as citizens and voters Is to prove ourselves public-spirited. Good will Is made efllclcnt by knowledge. "It Is a home-bred right, a fireside privilege," said Daniel Web ster, "to canvass the merits of measures and public men." But it Is more thnn a right, mora even than a privilege. It is a duty. Wo are all of us responsible for tho acts of our public men. Wanted : Tire Protection FtRIJ and rotten hose ngalnl It Is be coming an old story, a sickening, mad dening story: fire that destroys property and rotten hose that bursts. Today, tomorrow, or some other time. It may bo more than property that will be destroyed; it may bo human life. Attention lias been called often enough to the fact that a largo part of the lioso owned by the city Is unfit for use. Something must be done Immediately, not by and by. Councils have a way of financing land grabs with the public money. Couldn't it finance a little public safety? PASSED BY THE CENSOR Getlinp After the Coal Einharpocs NEW laws and regulations have not put an end to railroad rebates and dis criminations. Even a college economist can testify to new ways of turning old tricks. By pro-rating spur-lines and half a dozen other means and methods all the essential practices of rebating are still possible. The Interstate Commerce Commission thinks It lias spotted a new ruse. It is tho so-called "embargo" placed by coal-carrying railroads on the fuel. Informal complaint alleges that they have been used to discriminate against certain shippers. v Though it is evident that coal-owning roads might be sorely tempted to such action, tho truth of the matter is not yet at i"sue. The commission simply considers the charge serious enough to Justify some action, and it has summoned representatives of all the roads affected to appear before It In Jan uary. If It finds evidence to support the complaints, nobody will applaud its enter prise more loudly than the consumer who will then be burning that steadily advanc ing fuel. FOR ways that arc dark and tricks that arc vain, tho Pennsylvania machine- poli tician is tho veriest tyro compared lo his Texan prototype, if reports from Delhi In tho Lono Star State be correct. According to advices received In a letter, Mayor Walker, who Is a candidate for re-election, addressed a town meeting tho other evening In tho Op'ry House. At the end of an eloquent and lengthy speech, ho played Ills trump card by passing Interstate cigars lo the men. Hero bo It explained that Interstate cigars aro of the kind which, when smoked In Texas, aro Btnelted as far North us West Virginia, the wind holding right, as they say at sea. To double cap tho climax, as It were, ho passed chocolate candy to tho women in tho audience. Then tho troublo began. "Dey's pepper In dla candy," howled a woman. Just then one of tho gift cigars ox plodcd with the "dull, sickening thud" of which cub reporters wrlto so eloquently. Then another popped, and soon there was a fusillade akin to the battlo on tho Mnrno. Tho Mayor, aghast at first, spotted on enemy In the audience and seized him as perpetrator of the outrage. Tho constable sought to ar rest the conspirator, and soon there was as nice and pleasant a fight as ever enlivened a political meeting. The letter vouchsafing all this Information winds up: "There is much indignation here." THAT unreasonable panic seizes even tho bravest Is borne out by brief dispatches from the war, which somehow or other have passed the censor. It Is related that one of the French army coips, possessed by some psychologic fear, on a wholesale scale, bolted, causing a retreat of tho French army from Alsace. But the strangest fear that ever seized a body of armed men was In the war of 1SCC between Prussia and tho German States. A regiment of Bavarian cavalry had been retreating before onpressing Prussians for days harassed and hammered at inces santly. At Inst the Bavarians found rcfugo in a dense copse of trees, where they rested their weary horses. Suddenly a shot rang out: then another. "The Prussians!" came a cry and the Bava rians bolted at top speed, never stopping for ten miles, the while two poachers gathered In the rabbits they had shot. License of Diplomatic Guests COl'RTESV has generally been regarded as one t the essential qualities of diplomacy. Despite the strained relations of European governments immediately preced ing the outbreak of hostilities, diplomatic communications among them were marked by almost excessive courtesy, which was doubtless merely formal. The American and broader idea is that the flrst and highest function of diplomacy is the promotion of genuine good-will among nations. This con ception wiuj wonderfully exemplified in the Xlt of John Hay, It seems that Ambassador Kustem Bey, Baron von Schoen and Sir Lionel Carden aro not diplomatic In any true sense. Sir Llunel is not an accredited representative to this country, but h does bear the offlclal credentials of the British Government, It has been suggested that President Wilson should not press his demand on Great Britain for an "explanation" of the Carden erltl. cisrn, now that the Mexit an p..t is bollinjr ovor again, as Sir Lionel predicted. That prediction, howtver. is not what President Wilson and the American people object to. From Genet to f'.irden, on Schoen and Ruatom livy. there him been too many so. called diplomats who have made the inex cusable mistake of talking m the United States as if American liberty infant license, even for guests. The thrne iU.t offend era should be tuueht that uovernmental and popular tolerance does not extend to insult or to the attempt tu sUr wp prejudices, enmities and hatreds. " I UU 1114 Every City Has o "Big Stick" IK TEN yers, according to a. report of th United States Census. Bureau, the number of municipally ownt-d pubU- utility pUttUs In thU. country hv wnwoij si rr .er.t .,. jet the movenv-.,c f r min.-ipal ownership has scarcely ...iche,i trar-p .n-uion. th.mjjh pome cities h,.ve Jyiir and own .-u vays which are o.i..i. i by lfjUt,. compun', ,. The only ,, ummii is hw bst to ubierv the public :r.ire The .akwg i)f prl, vate inauucd publi. utilities ,,r, r,Pjn, cipaily two. 1 -u.tia of sr.ti.raj , aj ncPj, and Mil mid .. -istu.iv ., tnvatc profit. The flrst f "'. is apt 1,1 take the fornt of un obstruct 11 i .,.Iu- Und ,,'ten I.nJa to inunU'fpal owe. r-i'p, the establ.sh.lk nt ,,f Which Is uU4lh Ki.rniii.et by h,cal roitfi, tlons It is Pi ly more Important to City to l.t,es.-i !' ,..P U (tWniug am operating Its tram.i .-jteW taa Q &&& It; for it is wl that private companies FlwulU be reminded occasionally 0 t fat that this power fan b exercise) by the peo, pl when they are driven tu it by the cun, vktion that public Mnt) social interests ar cot boiiij; properly res 1 c ted. Good Will is Public Spirit Q CHILLER hai for ths whole human race "Button, Button'' TTTHOLESALE grocers think that house- V V wives have raised tho price of sugar. Housewives, or those with enough ready money to buy a barrel at a time, blame It on the grocers. They saw the price rising and they laid in a supply. So nobody gets tho blame for what seems an unjustifiable situa tion. It is the old story of no responsibility. Biamo it on those venerable scapegoats. Supply and Demand, and let somebody pocket the profit. The ultimate consumer must look with en y on the citizens of thoo "war-ridden" countries where the food sup ply Is under a le&pnnsible. if official, thumb. Verbal Atrocities THERE are atrocities and atrocities. Ono o them is a name like Kluck (we prefer the common or barnyard spelling). Half .1 dozen more are the "sweezes" such a cog nomen draws from the professional humor ists. A man has a right to any name ho likes, or any his great-great-grandparents choso for him. But that privilege entails duties. He should not thrust himself reck lessly into public view If the result is going to be such remarks as "Kluck counts his chickens before they're hatched," or allu sions to his battle-cry as "Lay on!" The only alternative to changing his name or re tiring from the army is to copyright tho word and prosecute any breach of the peace, such as "General Kluck's right wing smashed." Tho horrors of war aro bad enough without verbal carnage. THIRTY-SEVEN years ago A. II. Ray nolds, of Denver, a banker of that city, cashed vouchers amounting to $2250 for a contractor doing business with tho United States. The banker obtained the necessary proofs nnd submitted them to tho Depart ment of tho Interior, where they lay for four years without action. Since then Congresses have come and gone; statesmen big and little have espoused Mr. Raynolds' cause: Sena tors and Representatives have worked in his behalf and the claim is still unpaid. A week ago the attention of Joseph P. Tumulty, private secretary to the President, was called to tho matter, and he Interested himself to such an extent that Cato Sells, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, who has tho claim under jurisdiction, took prompt ac tion. But ho was as unable to pay the claim as were Ills predecessors, for under tho law it will require an net of Congress to reim burse Mr. Raynolds for money legnlly due him. So the matter rests once more. AH of which reflects little credit on tho business methods of tho United States. I War Is Gethsemane N explaining why Christians go to war it should be understood that when the com mand is given to fight a man's faith counts for nothing. He mutt answer the call. Chris tianity is not discounted by the European war, any more than the multiplication table is destroyed by shooting it full of holes. Truth is eternal. Man is still Imperfoct. The world Is pusslng through the throes of evolution. Civilization does not move In a straight line. European political ideals are, for tho time, predominating ovor the Chris tian idoals of the !0th century. Tho conflict wU result in a new enthusiasm for those moral forces which are the leaven working GENERAL RENNENKAMPF, who, al though of German ancestry, is lighting for the Czar, is inordinately proud of his huge mustarhios, which divide his face into two distinct entitles. Once, during the Man churlan campaign, an Ameilcan photogra pher named Rogers pursued him across the steppes until lie overtook the Cossack com mander at Tchita. He explained Ills quest to the general and 'soon tho cntlro corps was ready to parade before the camera man. "Now, my friend," thundered Ronnon kampf, as ho gave tho "forward march" order to his men, "take all our faces and don't forget my mustache." And every olllcer saluted tho American as though he had beon a king personified. THE man who gives out carriage checks at ono of tho principal hotels in Philadel phia is Inclined to bo ifosent-mlnded. Whether It is love or flnnncinl worry that causes this stato Is not known, but it was productivo of troublo for him n few nights ago. Mechanically he gave out checks. Me chanically tho chauffeurs and drivers took tho slips and tucked them in their pockets. Suddenly ono of the drivers camo back. "Say, boss." he asked, "what's this for'.'" "That's to got your faro when he's through eattng." "Eat!" exclaimed the driver. "He'll got darned little to eat from my wagon. I drive a garbage cart." mHE Bryn Mawr horse show recalls n slm- slowly In modern life, There is a comfortable I JL ilar event In New York held some years I optimism in the conviction that good things work together for good to them that believe I them. The end of tho world Is not yet, and I the path of progress leads through the Gar- den of Gethsemane As a man of experience. Villa distrusts the military politician. New York's primary purpose was evidently not the defeat of Tammany- 1 "Penrose, at Pittsburgh, says voters aro ) aroussd" Fatal confossion- 1 ' " ' " ! Pretty soon wo shall be well enough 1 acquainted with fall to call it autumn. ArwJ now nine out of twelve Kenmclsy counties join Virginia in weeding out tho mint. "Jimmy" Bennett reports a qerman army telephone In e, (lower befl. rjyt Derbapg it js only one of his flowers of speech. If Congress wants to win tho praise of a grateful public, it rolsht place a ta on war poetry. ,TOr Adding up the total of tho daily retreats of the Germans, it is clear that by now they have Jt gtuiut reached, the Pacific ccat. About this time let us recall that the Braves once went by the tail-end title q the Puves. What's in a name? As a good many suspected, it took John SUseftfcld to write "the" English war poern-s and It is more poni than war. "s Wh n, 1,. t, i , -----" --- 1 vance jicuariiucK uouutiess cans aers lie O a Ktadlj feeling. hkh might almost be 3 vanced a bit. but the enemy, firmly in- i.u 1 1,1 lnlnn.b TV,. 1.., ...... ......-, 1... called intonae The tnstol ol atatikinunshlu U not dev.'id f natuey which aland for ut terly unst'iristi devotion. t- tho public good One tt them Is that rt fcir Robert Peel, who tiroKoi wth his party lffeSJG and dff lared his sense of unfitness fotShe task C forming g, lett centre" organization, Joan, Bright these days. 4 treuchtd, doesn t seem to mind it. President Wilson requests that American neutrality be preserved, but any housewife can tell him that with sugar selling at war time prices it's dimcult to preserve anything ago. The creum of American show horses wero ontered. Society flocked to Madison Square Garden as never before Down in the old Jefferson Market Court house, S'xth avenue and Ninth street, on the top floor, is tlte offlcn of a paper box manufacturer with a keen sense of practical humor. So It was not surprising that ho should take advautage bf the horse show to play a trick on worldly-wise Now York. First of all, ho bought a discarded ear horso, one that hart drawn a Chambers street ark for some twenty-odd jours. Then ho sent it to his stublo to be fattened up. Next ho groomed it for the show by feeding It oats. Interspersed with ginger, sleeked its coat with crude oil, tied a beautiful bluo ribbon to its tail, which had been lengthened with artificial hair, and then enterod It as Pull deear Orphan, by Metropolitan (the name of the street car line which hud once owned tho animal), out of Bella. And that horse, ridden liy Brian Q, Hughes' daushtor, wun third prise. BRADFORD. CUIUQSITV SIJQP A Sabbath day's journey was estimated at 7U furlongd. or two. yards. Tho Rabblna fls'ed it at S00O cubits, or 1350 yards, Jo scphus says that the Mount of Qlivoa was five stadia, or 028 paces, from Jerusalem, which would make the allowable Sabbath day's Journey about 1050 yards. The Hindu system of mythology has a tisll so comprehensive that Its nethermost realms have never been measured or even described. Naruka is the generic name. The Purana gives 2 divisions of Naraka, besides which, we are told, "there are hundreds and thousands of others in which sinners pay the penalty of their crimes." The Lover n Le ip, to which Bj-ron refers to Don Juan, li in re.-illty Leucadias rn 1, a promontory on tho pouthern e-ctrrtmt- . t ttw iKrd cf Jy 1' i in tho P-'m f- Spp'o. th p'-'-B, Is aH to hav JcutM Into the sea from this reck fceous" . r i r- qultcd love. At tho annual festival of Apollo n criminal was hurled from the rock. Various living birds were fastened to him to break his fall, and If ho survived, freedom was his. Colonel Blood, a disreputable nnd cast-off member of Cromwell's pnrtj', seized tho Duke of Ormond's coach on December 6, 16T0 and carried tho Duke to Tyburn to hang him. Tho Duke escaped through tho nld of friends. On May 9 of the following year Blood tried to steal tho crown jewels from tho Tower, For neither of these offenses was ho pun ished. There Is triorc than one "City of Palaces" Rome, which was converted from a city of brick huts Into a "city of palaces" by Agrippa; modern Paris; Calcutta, with lta Milcndld European residences. Edinburgh Is sometimes given tho title. DONE IN PHILADELPHIA IN A SPIRIT OF HUMOR The Knock Subtle. A certain man makes hats and In them advertises as follows: "New York and big cities." Yes, Who? We do not like McGraw to win, And j"et his losing makes us sigh; Just think of what we'll miss this year In alibi? When Connie's demons get to work And ono by one the foemen die, Who'll tnke tho place of Mathowson To tell us why? And Matty's famous yenrlj' song, This year for Boston who shall alng, To toll the pitchers how to foil F. Baker's swing7 Easy Money Three minor political workers whoso party lost an election found It necessary to do something to keep the wolf away and np plled to tho boss. He got them work as con ductors on the local trolley line. Somo weeks later one of the three hap pened Into tho car barn after Ills' run and found his two pals dancing about in high giee. "Whassa matter?" ho asked. "Tomorrow's paydajV chorused Ills' friends. "Payday holy smoke, do wo get that, too7" A Kindred Feeling Fighting aboard ship nowadaj's, with at tacks from beneath tho sea and from above the clouds, Is very much like going through a gravej-ard at night you're upt just to feel that something's going to grab j-ou from be hind. The Hiplicr Explanation "Father, what is this 'higher criticism' I read so mucli about?" "It is a method by which a man convinces himself of tho falsity of something wHcli he knows is not true." Our I osilion is Impregnable. Say that our jokes aro shy of point And our verso is lame and halt; Spot, if j-ou will, and show the world Our every slip und fault. Rant at our stuff in sheer disgust, E'en to tho smallest wheeze; Poke it as full of gaping holes As an ancient Schweitzer cheese. Roast, if you must, but play us fair And herald It near and far. From the Ice-bound shores of the Arctic Sea To tho glades of Zanzibar; That we, alone of a horde of bards, Hold not a line in store, Nor have wc written a single line Of verso about the war. Quite Damp Hokus I never know such a wot blanket as Flubdub. Pokus That's right. If that fellow should Jump from tho frying-pan Into tho flro ho would put the lire out. Life. Of Course Barney Phelan, Father Hcaley's servant, was celebrated for his ready wit. Ono daj. while lie was serving a dinner, one of tho guests said to him: "Barnej. why Is my ankle placed between my calf and my foot?" "Uogorru, I dunno," replied Barnej" "unless It is to keep j-our calf from eatin' j'our corn." Boston TransciipU The Impossible War has been able to do everything except push the pretty girl from the trout cover of tho populur magazine. Chicago Herald. MANY of the big events In tho world's history como to America flrat from an Unexpected quarter and In an Irresponsible, mysterious manner. I recall that a week before we received tho official account of tho result of Dewey's battlo In ManllA. Bay, a brief dispatch camo from Paris to the effect that tho battlo had been fought nnd tho American flcot had not lost a single vessel. Tho astonishing character of the Informa tion made most peoplo loath to believe It until a weok later, when the regular dis patches from correspondents verified the fact. How did Paris recelvo tho first word? It has always been suspected that it got It from Spain before Dewey could cut tho cable. And this appears to bo tho only reasonable theory. THE first report that tho Treaty of Ohent had beon completed and peaco estab lished with Great Britain reached Phlladcl phla in a most mysterious manner and fully a week beforo Washington had ofllclal ad vices. As wo expect to eclobrato tho con tcnnlal anniversary of tho conclusion of tho peaco of Ghent this year, this llttlo known story may bo of Interest now. The treaty was signed on Christmas Eve, 131 1, but sailing vessels did not cross tho Atlantic In those daj's with tho speed of modern ocean liners, nnd there was neither cablo nor wireless to transmit tho nows. However, onrlj' In the year 1815 a mysterious stranger called upon President Madison at Washington one evening and brought him the news. That night this same mysterlotu stranger sent a letter to John Blnns, who published the Democratic Press In this city, giving him tho same news. Probably no modern newspaper owner would havo dono what Binns did. Any newspaper receiving such important news today would Instantly got out an extra edition, for the whole country was waiting patiently for word that peaco had been concluded. B' news came, and fearing that It was a minor Intended to Influence prices of cotton, rice and other home products, hesitated. The letter, which was anonymous, reached tho editor one morning. Ho read it and then meditated upon his next step. Ho feared that the Information was so Important that It would bo riskj to consult any person as to his next step. He had visions of a specu lator booming tho prices of somo homo products or causing a fall In tho prices of those imports sucli as tea, sugar, coffee and other goods which had been laid awaj' In largo quantities by some of our long-Tieaded merchants. No person in Philadelphia had received oven a suggestion of the news. Binns made it his business to mix umong men likely to have heard such a report, but no one ap proached him with rumors of that kind. Late In tho afternoon, however, ho sent tho let ter to tho Merchants' Coffee House, and had it placed in the coffeo house books, with his namo as authority-. In no time the wholo water front was busy getting ships In readi ness to send them to tho South for cotton and rice. Tho merchants were readier to accept the news than was Binns. He printed tho news in his paper tho next daj'. at a German Health Hint Never sing the "Marselllalso" picnic. Cincinnati J.itqulrer. A Cubist Poem (Composed by Celesta l.cona Goble, of Tepper- town, ind.) A year ago, on Labor Daj', (Sept. 7, 1913), there came an awful whack, A thousand llerj- thunderbolts nearly scooted the barn olf the track; The lightning a board off sent, part of it In tho sorghum patch If the lightning burned tho barn down, wo would havo to dig and watch. Tho lightning hit the top and ran to the ground; I think that barn must bo sound. Mrs. Goblc and her daughter were tho only ones at home, Tho absent one had Just started in tho good old road to roam; The absent one had gono to see her old friend. Blnncho Mudd, When sho heard that loud clap of thunder and wondered If tho lightning struck my old cat Ted. Tho Lord kept tho barn from burning He kept tho barn from burning becauso Ho lovus us so, Harrison News. A Natural Query The Flirt Oh dear, what a lot of people will bo unhappy when I get married! Tho Other Why. how many aro you jimrrjing'.' Exchange. What's in a IS'pinc It must bo difficult to find a prouder man than Grant B Peacock, tho Princeton golfer who beat Champion Onimet 2 up nnd 1 to play at Greenwich. New Yorl; Sun. ON SOME .HUMAN BONKS (Found on a Headland in the Ray of Panama,) Vague Mystery hangs on nil these desert places; The fear which hath no namo hath wrought a spell; Strength, courago. wrath, have been nnd left no tracoe; They tamo, and llvd; but whither? Who can tellt Ve Itnow but that tUoy tvere-thst once, Jn days When ocean wu a bar "twist man and man, Stout spirits wandered o'er these tapes and bays And nerlkhsd where these river waters ran. Methinks they should have built some mighty tomb Whose granite might endure the century's rain. Cold winter, and tho sharp night whujs, that boom LiKe spirits in their purgatorial pain. They left, 'tis said, their proud, unburled hones 'ji wluteiA tu Hue mittcl.uuwltttljcut ioie; Yet nauKh' l-kle the tucks and worn soa stuitea Now aner ta the great Pacific's roar. A mountain stand where Agamemnon died, nil t'lieops hath derived eternal fame II. diiK he made hi tomb a place of pride, . v 1 i-J. there the U al MtttlU eurncd a name. I'm thcie -they vju T 1- ro"" '! ' v 1 n- hi - w t V ' 't t ' IT I ni- as V e lightnings die, effrishted earth, tn trie bKy f- TiRESIDENT MADISON received the news I Lin the same manner and spirit. One eve l ning a person, not known In Washington, presented himself nt the President's House. He was met by Madison's private sccrotarj', Edward Coles, afterward tho second Gover nor of Illinois, who listened to the strang er's storjv Tho private secretary asked tho stranger to remain seated until ho carried his message to tho President. Tho latter was much surprised at both tho information and the method by which it was brought to him, and then told Coles to admit to him the mj'sterious courier. Madison wnnted to havo a look nt tho man, and to determine If ho was worthy of belief. He also called to his aid the Postmaster General, R. J. Meigs, and tho two questioned the stranger closelj'. After a long conversation, tho President seemed satisfied, j-et no information on the subject camo from the President's House until tho confirming official dispatch arrived somo daj-s later, by which time the news had already penetrated through a largo part of tho countrj'. BINNS, who relates tho incident in his iccollectlons, declared that ho never was nblo to learn tho identity of his mysterious letter writer, whom he believed to have been tho same person who called upon President Madison that evening In tho winter of 1815. In view of how the news of the peace of Ohent was first given to the American pub lic through the ngency of a Philadelphia nowspaper. Dame Rumor may not he so faithless a jado. Whllo It is a good plan to ho wary of tales of a surprising character, It does' not necessarily follow thqt all ru mors aro untrue, no matter how extraordi nary they may appear. Big news does not nlways come first from tho fountain head. GRANVILLE. The Ethics of Sniping From the; noston Transcript. "Sniping" Is n comparatively recent addition tc the red lexicon of war. Originally or on Its fir.st appearance It signified shooting from am bush or nt a great distance. A soldier under this definition might bo a sniper. The current definition, however, apples only to civilians who take part In lighting and are therefore not eli gible to tho consideration accorded to those who light in uniform an members of a recog nized military organization. Though the -word may he new the action It describes is very old. Sniping ran be traced far back In history. j existed when organized armies were few and vry fmall, and by tho commanders of old times wn regarded as simply one of the iisks of war Snipers were not worse than any other flghteis in the era beforo the war became a profession apart. The defenders of Jerusalem against tho Ho man legions were almost with out exception In the category of snipers. The men und women who manned the walls of Sara gossa to reinforce its scanty garrison subjected themselves to the lex tallonis. wrong, for instead ho caused tho car to iv. j tho carriage a substantial Jolt. 8 1 According to precedent, the policeman n the corner, under tho patronage of hlg ,, perlor In tho carriage, should have forthwith hurled strdng verbal hot-shot at the motor man. But ho did nothing of tho sort Ho took tho horso by tho bridle, turned hl & head around In tho right direction and otart i ed him orr. Then ho waved to tho motorman to proceed down tho street. And ho had hot spoken a word, You mo tho point. "Thinking on your feet' Is really a matter of keeping your head In the midst of excitement. It Isn't spoken words that aro essential. It Is tho thoughts and actions that a calm, cool polso prompts In you.- VIEWS .OF READERS ON TTMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin. j ion on Subjects Important to City State and Nation. ; To the Kdttor 0 Ins Evening Ltdger: Sir As a newcomer to Philadelphia, I watit ' to express my satisfaction with a novel featurs 1 o( your city. Its one-way 'street car lines, At ' first they may bo a llttlo hard to learn, tliouth the straight streets and right angled corners '! greatly simplify tho matter. But the singular I value of -our arrangement of routes seems to ' bo tho way It facilitates traffic. Tho can move much more swiftly and with far leu danger to pedestrians and vehicles than In any American city I know of. In this respect, at least, Philadelphia Is neither "slow" nor "dead." ,, p. Philadelphia, Soplember 29, 19H. ANY PROFIT IN "BUYING A DALE"? To the Editor 0 the Evening Ltdgen Sir I wish somo Southern render of th EvnNlNO Ledoer would bo good enough to cx plnln how the purchaser of a bale of cotton Is going to profit, or even how ho Is going to "break even?" I hear It said that ho can keep tho cotton In storage and sell It at an ndvanc next year. But by that time, It seems to me, another new crop Is going to drive the price down Instead of up. Am I right? And If I am right, why not call the "buy-a-bale" movement a legitimate- charity and not try to make people think It is a profitable philan thropy '' H. L. HUSKINS. Philadelphia, September 23, 1514. JUSTICE FOR VILLA To the L'ditor of the Evening Ledger: Sir I am glad to see tho entire fairness with which j-ou treat Francisco Villa. CUhcr papers label him on every occasion with all possible derivatives of 'Jthlef," and "bandit," while you Inqulro only Into the sincerity with which hs backs what seem excellent prnclplcs. Certainly Mexico will never bo at peace so long as an officer of the army Is In the saddle. Villa knows that, and he is trying to' eliminate all soldiers, himself as much as Cnrranza. In such a work he should havo tho sympathy of every American. C. K. H, Camden, September 2S, 1DH. SARCASTIC IN REGARD TO PENROSE To the Vditor 0 tho Evening Ledger: Sir I 11m heart and soul for Boles Penrose. Senator Penrose Is a gentleman sul generis. Hs Is a professional office-seeker, and a profes sional 13 always more competent than an ama teur. You abuse tho Senator for adhering to ths machine. But this Is the day of machinery, Wry, In some States they have voting ma chines. I understand' thnt In this State ths machine has done tho voting whenever neces sary, but this may not be true nfter all. TIIEOPHRASTUS CLUTTEBIiUCK. Philadelphia, September 25, It'll. A NEW COLLEGE DEGREE FOR PENROSE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir The colleges give honorarj degrees each spring. If a fovv more men'ilko Penrose (Har vnrd, 'SI) develop his fnlllngs, their alma maters will have to Join us in administering the sort of dlshonoiary degrees that the State of Penn sylvania is going to bestow on Penrose and his crowd this fall. ALBERT WELT. Philadelphia, September 29, 1911. Ferocious Pacificists From the Springfield Republican. It Is strange to find some of the fiercest ad vocates of a light "to tho finish" among th advocates of peace, j-et tho reason Is slmpls enough. When an English exponent of pacific ism l found demanding that Germany must bo crushed, and Its Emperor, perhaps, tent to St. Helena, what seems llko viudlctiveness h explains as really due to a deslro for peace. This must be tho last war. To make sure o( It Europe must destroy militarism, and to de-stroj- militarism it Is necessary to destroy Ger manj It la simple logic, as wimple as that of Torqucmnda, and those who apply it do not think of themselves as Inhuman, or recognlts their likeness to the ferocious Cato the censor, with his Cnrthaglnem esse delendam. Ilanning u Banc From the Augusta (Oa.) Chronicle. School Is on in tho big cities of the East And "war" ill school has been tabooed. In I'lilla ilslplua the acting superintendent of the schools, Doctor Brumbaugh being busy on the hustings, has baniud all war discussions, all geographical stutlloB pertaining to the battle lines and all nairntlves of thrilling experiences had by teachers before their lllght as refugees ThU Is sound procedure. Playing Both Ends From the Sprlnsflcld Union. Tho Krupps have contributed l.OOO.COO marks to the Red Cross fund, but their contributions In cannon ami the ammunition that provldt woik for the Red Cross run up into the hun dreds of millions of marks. Model Malthusianism From the New York world. How Mnlthus would have delighted in tbli war, cheery old soul! Hy which Can you THE IDEALIST Can J'ou "think on your feet"? I do not necessarily mean. stand. up and make a speech, without previous notification, on any given subject' Those that excel in the art of quickly think ing out a situation and putting it in a sys. tematlo order of presentation do not always come within that class we term "extempora neous speakers." A man can handle a situation with marked skill and precision, can convince those within sight or hearing of the wisdom of his atti tude without saying a word One day a high official of the pellce de partment came tearing down one of our prm cipal streets Jn a carriage. At an Intersecting street his norse grew unruly Just nt , n r whe -no their moment nX trolley car pissed and in the con I fusion ttr motorman attempted to run hj fpr rfiicK Kepubiicia. I car oyt Vt the horse's course. Ho figured fcZ nW. m. , tisfte--rt 1 i.. , ,. NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW It is to bo hoped that it Is not too latj for the Mexican factions to get together ana prevent a fresh carnival of blood. New Or leans State. Tho most Intelligible complaint of the tier man sympathizers In this country is that our newspapers print too much war news obtain" from Engll.ih and French souices. New VorU Times No sensible or fair-minded person wants to have the railroads oppressed und crippled mere ly because somo rallioad directors have beta remiss or unfaithful and somo railroad rres' dents have been overnmblUous. SprlngfleM (Mass.) Union. When Congress meets next winter, H should make a careful effort to revise tn patent laws. Our present patent system has become an aid to trusts, both foreign fl"a domestic, a check to Inventors, nnd a mar velous promoter of lawsuits. Chicago Jour nal. ' Secretary McAdoo is acting most com mendahly in beginning a movement J bringing to time national banks which max be piling up unnecessary teserves in "eir vaults while refusing legitimate requests ioj loans or which may be taking advantage o prevailing conditions to charge excessive in terest jates. Los Angeles Express Unlike John W. Griggs, counsel for the Mar con! Wirclet.8 Company, President Wilson ne" was a Mark Haniu Attorney General of United titates. but he huppens to tie c" inander-lu-Chlef of the army and navy. and hie Intrrnrotaltmi nl tlio law hearlnit upon r'v communication with belligerents is likely to V"' vail New York World. Minister Pczct, of Peru, believes not oajf that lack of good American salesmanship South America U the principal cause cf " failure to compete successfully with Europe tho past, but that, unless we Improve our maushlp, even the European war will r"t able us to get and keep South American tr" Charleston News and Courier. -"r-rr- -n ifiri h ii.ii,iii in, 1 . -'r?SEa b: - - -