Ir I' EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1914, F Jl'i EVENING d LEDGER PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY cvnus ir. k. cunns, pumioent. Geo. V, Oehs. 8retry; John C. Martin, Treasurers . CJmrlM II. Ltidlngton, Philip a. Collins, John 13. WIN IUm. Directors, EDITORtAt, IiOAnDi Ctc II. K. Cciitis. Chairman. P. H. WHAtET.. . ... Executive Editor JOHN C. MARTIN General lluslneas Msnsger Published dally at Pcblic I.eihikr Dullrllng, Independence Square. I'hllailelphla. I.motA CtNTnAt Broad and Chestnut Streets ATLANTIC ClTT Prm.llnin rttilMlne Niw Tonic t'O-A, Metropolitan Tower unit-Ann. hi? iiome insurance iiunaine IrfJMHj.t 8 Waterloo Place. Pall Mall, S. W. NEWSBL'IIEAUS: HAaisaonn BrRKAC The VitHflt nulMIng Wasminoton HiBEAU The Post llulldlnir Nriv York ntnitAl' The Times llulldlng IUsmn Bitun ilu fr'rledrichatrasse Lonpon lie Br a i' 2 Pall Mill East. S. W. I'asis licniiu 32 Hue Louis le Urand sunscnirTioN terms By carrier. Daii.t Oni.t, sit cents, lly mall, postpaid outside of Philadelphia, except where foreign postage ! required. Daily only, one month, tnenty-flve cents; DULY Oxlt. one year, three dollars. All mall subscrip tions payable In adtanrc. I1EIJ, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE MAIN 3000 Cy Addreat all mmmunlcaflons to Evening Ledotr, Independence Square, Philadelphia. iNYtncD at tub rnlUDsi.rittA roitorricK as second class HAIL MATTES. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER. 3, 1914 "The Hands of Esau" T HE Evening Ledger publishes this nfter- ,noon the first of a series of articles de vised to show the small taxpayer how to ; ; deliver, himself from the inequalities and ; , burdens of which he is tho unnecessary Victim, la simple, language the whole organization ef tho machinery of public plunder will bo explained. It Is a business, not a. political, corporation conducted for profit: operating through a core of subsidiary allies; levying its toll, directly and indirectly, on every homo-owner and every home-renter, on every dweller In a flat, on all men alike. It has no politics, although for expediency's sako It appropriates a political name. It dips its wasteful and prodigal paws Into cellar, kitchen and parlor. It contaminates good men. blackmails others, drives its merciless machinery faster and faster for meaner and meaner profit. On some it puts silvered Hverlea and to others gives only drippings; but ultimately the cash It gets, no matter how used, comes from the victim mass of citizenry. This newspaper is dedicated to tho servico of Philadelphia. It will perform that serv ice without fear or favor. It will tell the truth, no matter what name or man shrivels up under It. It will picture and vlsuallzo the parasite which has fastened itself on this municipality; not In the spirit of a muckrakor, but solely for the purpose of assuring honest government in this city and relieving Its citizens of burdens which they should not and will not bear. India's Troops in Alien Europe OUT of India, from. Mysore and Bombay, from the Punjab and the hill-country, to swarm battling across tho countryside of France. From the ghats of the Ganges and the "tlnkly temple bells," to march slug ging past the gray roadsldo crosses of the ..Champagne. It is a strange touch to a J strange war. The fighting flower of the old Orient, product of tho warring tyrannies that brought down the proudest of dynasties, is flung Into a terrific, stunning duel of mil lionsmillions of men and shells and dollars to fight the newest of battles, hard, stratcgyless pounding. Perhaps the Indian army wonders at this new war and at whether its outcome will be the same dry-rot and decay that has taken its own land. There they fought by the rule of personal encounter and personal tyranny; here, by the machinery of masses and social order. What of the outcome? Commerce and Commercial Egotism WHEN manufacturers In this country, after the European war was under way, sraaped the fact that "South America needs our trade" and coupled it with tho other fact that "We need South America's trade," they saw great business opportunities ahead. Some of them saw a chance to unload and hoped for Immediate returns, but they have been undeceived. Trade between tho northern and southern Americas Is destined to have a splendid future, following certain necessary adjustments. It must not be forgotton. how- ever, that while commerce and trade may be an effective means of promoting inter national amity, the commercial egotism of nations has exactly the opposite effect. Imagining a Vain Tiling WHY should the middleman worry? It 's certain that his legitimate profits are not endangered by open markets or parcel post, and It Is equally certain that the pro ducers will avail themselves of his services whenever it Is to their advantage to do so. In proportion as he continues to make him self useful he will be compensated. There is, it must be admitted, a confusion of terms on the part of many urdent reformers who , .would change the economic order by putting th'e middleman out of business. What most of us want Is not his elimination, but tho pre vention of waste. The difference has been made very clear in the public statements of Professor Carver with reference to his work as head of the Rural Organization Sen-Ice. Eight Million Women at Work THE Intimate association of woman with the economic fabric of society has never been so glaringly exemplified as in the part played by her in the present war. Thousands of women are gathering in the harvests, tak. Ing charge of important business interests, keeping alive the industrial activities of the war-stricken countries. Emperor William re. futed his own theory that the duty of woman consists only in "kitchen, church and chil dren" when he called upon the women of Germany to take the places of their husbands in the fields and factories. The thing to do, therefore. In approaching what is called "the woman question" is to deal with It as It Is, from the point of view of reality. To say that woman's place is In the home When eight million women In this country alone are engaged in innumerable industrial pursuits Is to fly in the face of facts, This puts our Intelligence on the level with that of the ostrich when It tries to solve a problem by burying Its head in the sand. Take Profit Out of Armument THERE shall be no more private munition factories. On one result of the war men of the most diverse viewpoints seem agreed. H a. wells was naturally among the first to condemn the private exploitation of national . tlve as President Nicholas Murray Butler, of Columbia. They nnj their many supporters, here and in Europe, agree that the manu facture of munitions of war mutt hereafter he a Government monopoly, with an embargo on International trade. It has proved a ter rible thing to put In the market place of gain this making of cannon. The agents of the Krupps and other manufacturers have fo mented wnr: there Is aurtlciont proof of that. The temptation has been huge enough to drag down practically every armament Arm to such practices. The general note of com ment demands that governments themselves) take hold In order to keep the business at nn efficient minimum and to let the taxpayer know exactly what Is being done and how. If the present conflict does not end war, nt least It seems sure to take from armament tho temptation of private profit. Loathsome Odor of the Dive MEN differ as to the wisdom of prohi bition. There Is no room, however, for difference as to the necessity of closing In famous dives which breed crime and scandal. The saloonkeeper who drives his customers to the polls, who sends his dollars Into political treasuries, who subsidizes ostensible representatives of tho people, who buys Illicitly the right to ply his trade, in de fiance of decency and public policy, Is an enemy to man and woman and child and State. Tho leader who dickers with him, bo it directly or Indirectly, through his own party or through the contaminated elements of another party, stands spotted in the lime light, naked of virtue, repulsive, un-American, unworthy of consideration. It Is an omen of the crisis Pennsylvania faces that pictures' of a candidate for tho United States Senate are Haunted in such haunts. It Is humiliating to nil citizens that tho nominal owners of these habitations, by tho "we positively Insist" of breweries, meet on Sunday afternoons to determine modes nnd methods of perpetuating their status. They may well beware. Such tactics may goad to prohibition a Stato which Is sen sible and sane enough now to want ohly local option. And no man can float on tho foam of a glass of beer to Washington. There are too many mothers In Pennsyl vania for that, too many wives, ton many sisters, too many God-fearing and honest men. A Job for Every Alan THE question of unemployment Is a social question. It is not tho result of the shlft IesSnesa, laziness or Intemperance of the thousands of workmen who, at certain periods of the year, nro compelled to lay aside their tools and walk the streets In search of employment. Abraham Lincoln said that tho greatest crime of any country Is to permit a condition wherein men able to work and willing to work are unable to find work. It Is gratifying to know that the National Administration has taken steps toward the solution of this1 grave problem In the con templated establishment of employment bureaus throughout the country. Tho Stato and the municipality, however, shoutd also take a hand In the matter. Tho French Revolution began with the cry of a woman for bread in the streets of Paris. There should be no one crying for bread In the streets of Philadelphia. Tho city should take some definite steps toward the scientific solu tion of the problem. Martial Munchauscns THE French have stolen a Journalistic march on Germany. Sorao one spreads a story of a terrible new weapon that they are using. It Is a shell scattering a deadly gas Whole regiments have been found dead in their ranks without mark of a bullet on them ergo, asphyxiation. Such news must bo heartrending to the German General Staff. Until now theirs have been the stories of secret submarine terrors, new powers launched "unbeknownst" In tho deep, 17-inch siege guns cropping up out of the ground. Tho German has always been tho martini In novator. Back in the war with Austria it was a Prussian army that threw the enemy Into wild rout by tho mere sound of tho first machine gun. But perhaps France has not developed a gas shell, after all. She may merely have added H. G. Wells to her press bureau. To the Level of Prophecy A LITERARY renaissance follows great . wars. After 1SC0 North and South bore literary fruit. After 1S71 France enjoyed a literary revival. Zola and Daudet head a brilliant list of writers. The American Rev olution marks a distinct era In American literature. War appeals to the imagination. More than one poet is now being rocked In the red cradle of Europe. Tako out the soldiers of Shakespeare, the vivid battle Bcenes of Thackeray, Hugo and Carlyle, the shining armor and Bteel of Tennyson and Byron, and you leavo a great gap. Already the imagination of Great Britain and Europe is on lire. We may with con fidence listen for voices of more than con tinental range. When the poet rises to the level of prophecy, and Interprets, he rises above flags nnd thrones and speaks for humanity. If European Idealism has col lapsed, as some pay, not tho least among tho duties of tho seer Is tho rehabilitation of this priceless asset of civilization. Registration Is vexation to Penrosclsnv Clothes do not make the man, and In this era neither docs the man make the clothes. Carranza agrees to quit If the army says so. But whose army? Hatchets and cocked hats were burled at the White House yesterday with affecting ceremony. WHHam of Wied is busily engaged In look ing for a Job In the king business, and has no references from his former employers. , , . c It's said they are now canning whale beef In Alaska. 20 tons to the whale. A whale of a fish story, if true or not. Suppose we give both sides permission to recruit a regiment or two of croakers over here. They would be agreeably missed. Not a living soul will worry even if the strike of the Wood Workers' Union does boost the price of coffins. Industrial pessimists will read with regret that the grain exports from the port of Phila delphia for September showed an increase of a million bushels over last year. The German retreat from the environs of Paris was said to have been followed by gen eral confusion. Not to mention General French and General Jo ft re. The Chicago proposition to use police sta tions as employment bureaus has at least one merit It would bring the bluecoat into the uiiUuv$ a in; a punitive influence underdogs life as u helpful instead of a THE HANDS OF ESAU First of n Scries of Articles Showing the Methods by Which the Organiza tion Betrays the Taxpayer Wholesale Misrepresentation Used to Discredit Honesty in the Public Service. "The voice is Jacob's voice, but FonEwonD Better government in Philadelphia Is being slowly strangled. The gaunt fingers of "The Organttatlon," twisting viciously through a pliable majority In Councils, arc pressing hard upon Its windpipe. Unless pried off by the people themselves, strangulation must ensue. The Organization" Is Philadelphia's Tammany. Republican principles mean no more to Jim McXichot and the Varcs than Democratic principles do to Charles F. Murphy, of Tarn' many Halt, Any community can rise in wrath to overthrow professional politicians who, massed under the banner of this or that party, have become a scandal Put only an Intelli gent community can sustain the substitute better government The Blankenburg Administration of city affairs expresses better government in Phila delphia just as completely as anti-Tammany administration expresses it in New York city. Revolt Is never complete reform, but It is a radical step in that direction. Better government Is progress toward perfect government. It must be upheld and believed in, or it falls. Across the path of the Blankenburg Administration arc drawn up the blocking members of Councils a cluster of jiggling marionettes at the ends of a network of wires running out from the main switchboard of "The Organisation." Puppets, dummies, rubber-stamps, pawns, calt these controlled Councllmcn what you will, they form the Importanfbrldge over which Jim McNichol, the Varcs and their more aristo cratic associates aim to chasm public opinion by obstruction tactics. Watch these Councllmcn well, for they arc betraying Philadelphia. In the modest palaces behind the myriad two-story red brick fronts of working l'hlladcl phla dwell the real beneficiaries of better government. They pay the taxes, ll is for them to say If better government shall fait, for their support alone means better government. The worst that can he said of people who toll Is that they arc sometimes too tired to study a public subject SOMETIMES, SOT ALWAYS. NO. 1-PUBLIC SERVICE THERE Is nothing particularly plcturesqtio about an honest oilictal. He goes about his work quietly, almost forlornly, for there nro no "chowders" or "outings" to Illuminate his public service; no "tin soldiers" or "place-holders" to make noisy demonstra tions on nis goings nnd comings. He Is often sovero to people who use much of his time In frantic efforts to procure special favors. They go from his presence with empty hands, vowing vengeance. Influences, deep-seated and powerful, fol low him Into the privacy of his home. Popu larity often Is tho price of a weak con science. Reform first hands back what wns wrongfully taken, and then coldly refuses to glvo wrongfully. Oliver Cromwell in life cast a gloomy shadow, and ho died un mourned, yet ho left behind a better and greater England. Before certain members of the Blankenburg Administration wcro in olllco 30 days they had an enemy for each finger and toe. -Mayor Blankenburg lost a whole section of his pre-election support when he refused to put a man at the head of the police department who was willing to obey the dic tates of tho ambitious leader of a new political party. Included In this early de fection was a great newspaper that for more than a decade had championed reform. Tho Mayor will probably tell the whole story to any good citizen who asks for It. It Is well worth listening to. Beforo tho present campaign of widespread lying began against tho Blankenburg Admin istration, there was tho usual scramble for offices. Tho standard method for the Mayor would have been to compromise with tho op position nnd conciliate tho men behind Coun cils by dividing up the city Jobs, as1 did those good business Mayors of the Quay days, Messrs. Fltler and Stuart. Or he could have struck palms with some Individual politician, either of the disgruntled majority stripe or of the unsatisfied minority pattern. A choice variety of courses to pursue was of fered by the public careers of Mayors War wick and Ashbrldge, Weaver and Reyburn. Instead, tho Mayor selected only men of the highest efficiency, without regard to their political affiliations. "Why rehearse all this now, when tho municipal campaign Is next year?" some one may remark, with that flno American disregard of everything except the practical side. Because politics han noth ing whatever to do with this account of a public Stewardship. I'nder our vaunted city charter, the esteemed Bullitt law. oven if a man shows himself to ho a good Mayor, he cannot suc ceed himiolf. Ho must quit at the close of a single term. All that Philadelphia In size tho third city of the United States, and the ninth In the world can get out of its Mayors Is servico for the four years they aro elected to office. If a bad Mayor drops Into City Hall we must grin and hear him; If a good Mayor hy accident comes along, wo must tamely sit by nnd watch a subservient Councils stab him In tho back, nnd when his term, as well ns his hopes, have finally expired, let the men who pulled the wires of Councils select his successor in tho namo of a great political party. With n full year of guaranteed public serv ice nhrad, .now Is tho time to talk about Mayor Blnnkcnburg and his nets, and Coun cils and its acts. The first represents a past servico to tho taxpayers, while tho sec ond Is tho present bold carrying out of the ordors of a corrupt political machine. Why mince words? Truth can only sting tho wrongdoer. Of course, the Blankenburg Administration has made mistakes. They are admitted. But tho service has been honest, It has been sin cere, nnd it has been fairly effective, up to the very doors of the Councllo. Vienna, pos sessing Dr. Karl Lucger as Mayor a for tunate man who lived to see his glad dream of civic betterment come true could boast of no better champion of the right than Phila delphia has In Mayor Blankenburg. Even the eye of the Mayor's worst detractors says; "He Is Industrious, has n dignified, stately appearance, can laugh, and be stiff. Some what dangerous, but a good clean man." Mnyor Blankenburg Is neither a rigid Cato nor a stono Roland. He can speak well In stuffy halls. For years he faced the smoke curiosity snop Once, when Rabelais was a great distance from Paris and without funds, he prepared three packages of brickdust, one labeled "Poison for the King"; the second, "Poison for Monslgnor." and the third, "Poison for the pauphln." His landlord at once informed the police, and Rabelais was shipped to Paris, where the affair ended in a laugh. The "Paphlan Mlmp" was an expression of the lips much in vogue a century ago. Lady Emily told Mlsa Albcrlp. the heiress, that it was acquired by placing one's self before a mirror and repeating continuously the words "nimini pimlnl" "when the lips cannot fail to take the right pile." In olden times a grasshopper was known aa a "grig," hence the expression "merry as a grig." Tennyson In "The Book" refers to the grig: "High-elbowed grigs, that leap In summer grass." Sir ChiUtopher Hatton, who died In 1591 and the date of whose birth Is unknown, danced himself into the favor of Queen Eliza beth, who made him Lord Chancellor and a K G He vvai known tut the "Dancing Chan- sailor" the hands arc the hands of Esau." and smell of the strongest cigars, campaign ing for better government. Ho drove homo the cry of "graft" when other lips wero silent. By showering tricky criticism upon this conscientious man and hnmpcrlng his work, Councils seeks openly to discredit the better government he wishes to provide for Phila delphia. Hirelings issue long statements which are treated with smug dignity by or gans of the machine. The Mayor's np polntees are sneered at In cafe gatherings, and their well-meaning efforts In the public weal aro distorted, garbled and falsified to the people. All the way up from n Common Councilman provided with a $1200 county clerkship and tho lumbago, to a silk-stocking United States Senator with a steam yacht, nnd a robust constitution, there Is now In progress dellberato and wholesome misrep resentation of Mayor Blankenburg, his ap pointees, their purposes nnd their works. Lincoln Steffons somo 12 years ago said that municipal government was an unstudied art in America, and ho claimed that so far thero had been no market in this country for experts willing to do the people'H business well. He forecast the defeat of Mayor Low by Tammany, after tho head of Columbia University had faithfully served New York city for two years. People thought Mr. SteffenS wns mistaken, but when tho returns camo In, Mayor Low was burled under an avalanche of misrepresentation. "Tho Organization" of Philadelphia has studied well tho events leading up to the de feat of Mayor Low. Tammany conducted Its shameful campaign against Mayor Low In the Board of Aldermen, where un scrupulous henchmen nroso and made major events out of minor mistakes. Economy was the cry then raised by the human spots on the tiger's skin. Note tho similarity of method and place. Oh! they exchange mi'ch, these men who make a business of embrac ing tho opportunities in a control of public offices. Now York city Is rolyglot. It Is tho metropolis, and, like Paris and London, at tracts the over-fed crushing rich and holds fast in Its maw tho weak alien poor. Yet New York soon repented of its defeat of tho better government of Mayor Low, It had tasted of decency, and has since returned to n government that represents the people, and not tho political contractor. Half of the population of Philadelphia Is native-born. We aro a city of homes, with lelsuro, repose and roomy backyards. We havo space to think In, and we know how to think, and wo know when wo nre being exploited. This is our chief advantage over New York. Men In politics as a profession are In variably clever In the sense of sllckncss. They Improvise Instantly. "Oh! Director ! Ho wnnts to be Mayor next year. The organization Is thinking seriously of taking him up, and nominating him," said one of theso contractor lords this summer nt Atlantic City In the presence of the relative of another Director than tho one mentioned. It was a shrewd move. The barb was planted dexterously to arouse jealousy In the official family of the MaS'or. It may surprise the politician to learn that tho shaft went wide of its mark as the two supposed rival Directors dined together the next night and agreed that private life was Infinitely pref erable to the stigma of indorsement by "The Organization." Why was this? Because these two Directors for nearly three years have had first-hand knowledge of the vicious features of machine rule. They know from tho in side of City Hall all about the systematic assessment of officeholders, tho barter In franchises, the waste of public funds, and other signs of the cloven hoof In public af fairs. Iri fact, the chief reason aside from the obstruction tactics of Councils why Phil adelphia's "better government" has not ad vanced more rapidly has been because its representatives have had to devote their Initial efforts to the repair and correction of evils that went before. But the honest men are In office In Phila delphia. They are about as upright a body of men as any city could hire. They may bo hobbled and embarrassed In their work by the fetch-and-carry underlings of the con tractor overlords, but the honest men aro there, on the Job, nnd no calumny or canard can destroy their public service. HUM OF HUMAN CITIES If the vaudeville comedian, current melo drama and the magazines are gospel, the police of America are the greatest menace to peace, civic morality and political righteous, ness. The Becker trial has daubed the whole Institution with the tar of New York's gam bling squad. A little investigation, however, puts a more encouraging complexion on pub lic matters. Louisville (Ky.), for Instance. Is bragging that its officers of the law not only "get" the criminal, but that the police department has been taken completely out of politics. In the face of approaching registration and election not a charge Is made by either political fac tion that the police are to be used unfairly The Evening Post calls this "the greatest ad vance Louisville has seen in the last decade Only a few years back the police were busy at registration time planting repeaters and at election time piloting the fraudulent voters All this has been swept away. Two months' ago a stormy primary campaign came to an end in Lou svllle, but there was not one corn, plaint made of pernicious activity bv the police," '"" Of course, all is not so satisfactory In our big cities, and evil finds Its way Into print Jet it is relatively seldom that one reads of conditions such as In Kansas City. Mo., whero the press complains that mac1""6 corruption has so crippled the department in funds that the average citizen finds it im perative to hire a private watchman for ms house. The Btar assert that "to got the necessary funds to maintain the police de partment the Commissioners have had to sua the Mayor nnd Council In the Supremo Court1 In general, tho signs nro far brighter. The pollco departments seem not only more efficient In tho pursuit of crime; but they are beginning to broaden their labors, to try to do the big, valuable, social work that s worth far more In the end, Cleveland is Instituting lectures by city officials and prosecutors, by prominent lawyers and social authorities, to show tho policeman what his attitude should be toward the public. This effort to make him a friend of the citizen, a helper, Instead of a spy, Is widely com mended. Tho Ohio Stato Journal says! "Iho policeman is tho servant of the higher ends of communal life. His duty is a broad one, nnd Just as respoctable as a preacher s. in line with such a conception, Chicago talks of using its police stations ns employment bureaus. VIEWS OF READERS ON TIMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin ion on Subjects Important to City, Stale and Nation. To the Editor of the Evening Ledotr! Sir-In Jttstlco to tho facts as to the appoint ment of tho chief probation officer of the Municipal Court in Philadelphia, I bbIc that the following statement bo printed In the Evcni.no LEDORrt: Some time tast spring the Presiding Judgo of the new Municipal Court Invited the rep resentatives of IS or more charitable agencies nnd Institutions for f.ie care of children to meet with him for a discussion as to tho quali fications for n chief probation officer and to make suggestions of persons who seemed to meet theso qualifications. At that time It was specifically Btatcd that tho appointment of the chief probation officer of tho Juvenile Court wns not to be In any sense a political appointment. At the conference abovo mentioned I sug gested for consideration In connection with tho appointment of chief probation officer T.iomns u. rams, wlio hart Blnglcd himself out nmong tho principals of tho public schools In this city ns nn able executive and r man who under stood children. Several other names wero sug gested at tho same conference. The Presiding Judge of tho Municipal Court nppolnted an Advisory Committee of seven to aid him In the selection of a cvilef probation officer nnd In tho formulation of tho policies oi me juvenile court. In this Advisory Com mittee were Included such persons nH tho presi dent of the United Jewish Charities of Phila delphia, the superintendent of Girls' House of Refuge, who is now president of the State Conference of Clarities and Corrections, the chairman of the Executive Committee of the Society to Protect Children from Cruelty nnd a distinguished representative of tho Catholic charities In Philadelphia. After a cnreful con sideration of tho needs for the position In question nnd of the qualifications of numerous candidates, this Advisory Qommlttce, with Its full membership In attendance, unanimously voted to recommend to t.ie Presiding Judge of tho .Municipal Court the appointment of Mr. Parrls ns chief probation officer. Not only was Mr. Pnrris thus approved, but ho was strongly recommended for tho position by Dr. Martin G. BrumbaiiRh, Superintendent of Schools; tho district superintendent of schools under whom no sorvco; Henry J. Gideon, chief of tho Bureau of Compulsory Education; members of tho Board of Education, nnd others who know of the man and would seem entitled to express nn opinion as to the needs of tho position to which ho was appointed. My relations to the whole matter are such that I spenk with some knowledge, nnd I make bold to say thnt tho appointment of Mr. Parrls was absolutely an appointment on merit. , , CHEESMAN A. HERIUCK. Glrard College, rhllndclphln, Octobor 3, 1914. THE ISSUE OF PERSONALITY To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir The American peoplo nre not so obsessed with the doctrine of "measures not men" that they cannot give It n liberal Interpretation. T.io Issue of personality looms largo in the political thinking of today. It Is not personal power Itself that menaces. In tho church, In rural life, the great need Is for leadership, for jii-iBuuui icnuuranip wmen is genuine self-expression. Modern philosophy la permonted with t'.ie Idea of personality, Just as personality Is the dominant forco In social activity, In poll tics and government tho danger comes from the motives and methods of false prophets and hireling leaders; and the philosophy of per sonality gives added mennlng to the saying of Carlyle and others that "history is biography." In Judging candidates for public office the American peoplo are more than ever inclined to accept r.io doctrine of "measures and men." Philadelphia. Octoher 3. 1914. L. R. SANITARY SWEEPING To the Editor of tho Evening Ledger: Sir-Is there no way to compel storekeepers to sweep sidewalks before tho rush of morning pedestrians arrives? And If that Is impossible. Is there any way to force these storekeepers to wet the walks before sweeping? In many other cities there is a law, strictly enforced; which makes It a misdemeanor to sweep sidewalks nfter S n. m.. or to shako a rug or bertclothlnc out of windows at any time. It seems to me that for sanitary and hygienic reasons, Philadelphia might well copy such an ordinance. But, of course, wo havo Councils over with us! AC Philadelphia, October 2, 1911, ' ' THE IiRAVES' WINNING AVERAGE io tne Kiiltor or the Evening Ledger: S!rT"r,U'mk.1 can Blve "G- s- M-" the figures which ho asked for In tho Bve.viKo i lS concerning the Braves' phenomenal spurt. Since July 6. when they occupied the foot of t.ie adt der. with X victories and 40 defeats, they .,? won to games ami lost only 10. The latter I???8 LlV0. ,he noaton tcn" "" average of .T18 for the last three months .r .?BO,.of H, K. M. Philadelphia, October : 91J. APPROVES OF VILLA To the Editor of the Evening Ledger- Slr-I want to say that I am sure many read era applaud moat heartily your orn.mlnrt.rt stand on Villa. Give him a chance Philadelphia, October 1, 1911. E. W. II. THE BABBLING FOOL Anybody can bo good. A cabbage is good Goodness Is a negative virtue All you have to do to be good Is to vece. tate; do nothing; think nothing; be nothing It takes persistence and practice to bn genuinely bad. Wickedness is to goodness as forco is to Inertia. "tM ns All great men have been unoreclnhi ,,i Therefore, badness la greatness y ad Nobody appreciates a good man; the flntrer of suspicion points to him as a hyprlte When a man is superlatively bad. th? world views him with sub rosa excitement ? I Clares that he Is the wiclSt man ?n ? Penury1"011 b6Uer th3n bA ,.nYshcna.nKg0ttmn,TotnfsTtsPrlntten When a bad man Is caught, he gets n. column on the front page, proving that wickedness is more Important to the world?! progress than goodness. "nas Woman is mentally wicked; she is too much of a coward generally, to be physically Fear of the law restrains humanity from giving vent to Its Inherent and Inborn naughtiness. Remove legal restrictions that we may all be natural again. The caveman wins even today. Ask tho average woman. " Nero was bad and Is remembered to this day. Can you name one good man of hl era? Which proves again the value of bad ness. u' v Tho clam Is superlative In its virtue who would be a clam? Tet See Colorado First From th IJoiton Tranacrlpt. According to news from New York, John D Rockefeller has decided to devote a large .bare of his millions to solving labor problems. Well th'S Pldld openly JusVnow in Colo- IN A SPIRIT OF HUMOR Brothers in Misery "I said something to my wlfo a weetc ng nnd Bho hasn't spoken to mo since." "Bill, you're a friend of mine try to r. member what you said." The Placht That Failed A sailor shanghaied on a yacht, Wns nacht satisfied with his lachtj llti planned to desert But tho mato was alert And he stopped the poor man with a shacht." No Eye to Beauty "Ephralm Bones done gono an' married, a ynller gal," said Itostus Johnslag, "an when Ah tole him dat Ah didn't think h wus purty, he up an Bays dat Ah mus b color Win'." Tho Bravest of Them All Of heroes who deserve high pralsa Tho bravest ono Is that True hero of tho autumn days Who wears tho lost straw hat Fttn. And he Is bravo beyond compnro Who scorns the urchins' yaps. And Is the first, each year, to wear In public view, car laps. But wo the laurel wreath must hand Unto the tranquil goat Who first sets forth In tho outland ish new stylo overcoat Greenwich Time "Gol durn that clock!" exclaimed Farmer Blinks. "Whdt's wrong now, Obadlah?" asked hli wife. "It's ono of them French clocks. Whon th minute hand Is at 4 and the hour hand Is at 9 and It strikes 11 I got to stop work and flguro out that It's 17 minutes to 8." Class Extinction A high born young Miss of Manasses Fell Into a cask of molasses; And tho folk who gave aid Got so stuck on tho maid That she came out as ono of the masses. Tho Zero of Meanness "He's awfully small!" "Small? He's smaller than tho West Phil adelphia apartment In which ho lives." Song of the Middleman When tho cost of living rises and tho cash supply Is low; When the populace Is hungry and tho wintry breezes blow; Whon the chickens are not laying. When tho business Isn't paying, When the wolf Is madly baying . At the door. Then the peoplo seek my gore and the world nt mo Is sore. Thero la many a scheme and system, there Is many a clever plan Just to fret mo And to get me, For tho peoplo won't forget me; So I get the blame for everything I am tho middleman. Oh, the business has Its drawbacks, I am everywhere reviled; I am scorned nnd called "oppressor," but It doesn't get mo riled. Then tho public talks of fight To eliminate me quite. But I haven't said "good night" Not as yet, I should worry, care and fret, say the people i i have met; But In confidence, old fellow, for I'm any thing but rash ' Trade Is snappy, I am happy; I am anything but scrappy; For, although I get tho public's knocks, I nlso get the cash. Verbal Shot and Shell The fact that they fight on Sundays Is proof that the European concert Is not a sacred one. Cable dispatch says that General Wing, Boer war hero, hns been Injured, but falls to elucl dnto whether It's the right or left of that Justly celebrated family. I We must positively decline to print wha Penrose and the Colonel think of each other. Without intending to bo the lenst officious, we desire to call attention of tho proper parties to an evident oversight Emperor Franz Josef hnsn't died once during tho last week. The Perversity of Woman Though Virginia Is a dry State, Mss Ruby Wine still keeps sober house at Brandy Sta tion, that State. Ornithological!)- Speaking Boarder I don't cat enough to keep a bird auvo. Landlady An ostrich? Why Not Try Dynamite? "Girl finisher wanted" sign on a Chestnut street store. We Play it Safe Connie's bludgeoning Athletics Have a cpmbat almost due With tho hired men of Stallings; With tho Boston baseball crew. Will they put the ruo In Rudolph? Will they mnke a Jay of James? Will they tie up knots In Tyler? Walt until you seo the games. The Song of Gambrinus "Though sadly out of tune, an officer ,tt On a keST nf beer wnfl nvnldnr a nMe ... I..'. battered keys nnd to Its accompaniment some ' FOldlers were bawling lustily." The Outlook. Classified Thero are thiee kinds of people; Those who interest us, Those who amuse us, Those who bore us. And tho alias of tho last Is Legion. A Fall Delicacy "Father, what do you Know about the Diet of A orms?" naked young Mr. Callowhlll, who was Etudyiiift his history lesson. "7.''S hapn.ast have been eang chestnuts." replied Mr. Callowhlll. who was busy with, the war news, and did not wish to be bothered. THE IDEALIST A great American railroad king Bat at hia desk going through his morning mall. Now and then he would open an envelope con taining circular matter; to this he gave onlv cursory attention. " only But a visitor, sitting In his office and awaiting an interview, noticed a very curion. tiling In his disposal of this mail. curloua If the circulars, booklets, form letters or whatever the advertising rnaterial happened to consist of were cl nDed toirth... .wVlVr1 t' road king would detach the clip holding , matter together and dennBi i. . .J?!"? V1 I lng other clips. ' " a KU no- This procedure struck the observant iriMr., as rather an odd thing for a man whoI wealth was computed high up in the muii to do. He ventured to question him abi. in." F"Habit?'ly h reCe'Ved Bl"' tseb0wUord; Surely 'this bundle of human efficlenev whose name was not long ago a. hySSS? ,y any discussion that touched upon lSL and whose great wealth was commTI08 eage, could gain nothing by savins , '" paper clips from the f Ji? & w hOtlrH " "0 waste- No! but the habit our nf .,1.1.1. . been unable to grow had h t?. ne. hf een unania to grow had bPn nw ita. factors ,n ,, dev&U'n? JSV2? wealth. Sometimes we are given to eaiiin rich people "mean"-wa often o!!!Ss ceraln persistently economical haoltsTith",, thelr right Btlnginess. ' wltn down- Success does not He In tha di.. waste-and this Is one of the flict,,on that the man who hppes to "arvIS1, Ie8600 The habit of miserly hoaSE- learna removed from the habit of 'on mP ta rar economy and elimination of was?f Ku J19 practiced by the normal-mirM2 e that 's habit that takes notWaw""" a plness or possessions of other T,m the hap- a i L R 111 Jkwl Jj ' mjmm anaaMtfnfciAMHiiiiH fcT3 flllrffffTl SSEaEBIESllHsatSHHssssVIISMtiiSHBififi&l .SSSSjPsstafeMiijflB iM