P. 1-t.UHPWH- J ' -JWUli .1 j-ww" O'TSW EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA', SATURDAY, OOTOBEB 10. 1914,, 8 ' EVENING LEDGER PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY T CTBUB It. K. COHTIS, FstosT. Ow, W. Ochn. Secretary: John C. Martin. Treasurer t than ir. Ludlnston, Philip S. Collins, John B. Wll llnmi. Directors. I EDITOnfAtiBOAnD! I Ctans It. K. Coins, Chairman. r. H. WnAI.ET..,i Executive Editor ' ' JOHN C. MAnTIM gir-l Hulnt Mngr rubllhd dftllr at rcLtc t.epr.R tt'illainj-, Indepndnc6 Squnr Phlladflphl. t,nnt Cc-nit, Broad fin Chestnut Streets AiLtxm Cm... preas'Vntm nulldin iVToSic7"............lT0-A Metropolitan .Tower CBWino.. 81T Home Insurance HulMlnR London... ...... ..8 Waterloo Place. Pa" Mall. 8- w- NEWSBUnDAUS! mnaUBBRn UraitAU iSSHM nniMInf WjunlNOTOV BCIIRIU..... Th-,'f R imiSJ ncatt.1 ntmmu fVi"!-'.' i w I.ONM1 nunnAD 2 Pall Ma" East. 8. W. Pabis 13uain H2 Hue Louts le Grand i'iir.nirTK)NTrnis By carrier. Dau.t Om.t, It cent j. By mall. P"P'2 rutnlde of Thlladelrhla. except where fore Rn P"'1"; l required. Di.r Ovlt. one month. -Yi'mJl'l ISbacrlDt DAH.T ONt.r. one Jpar, three dollars. All mall subscrip tions payable In advance. I1ELI, 3000 WAI.MJT KnSTOH MAIN 9000 ET Address nil eommunlenttons to Evening Ledger, Independence Square, rmiaaeipnm. NiraiD at mi riiiLAnrLriitA rosiorrics vs second' ctAss mail surrrn. rillUHLLPIIL,S.VTtlnn.OCTOIlKH . 19U Pillar of the People's Hope WHEN' Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh says ho is ti'ibossed ami unbossnble he not only speaks the truth, but all the blK and little political bosses know that he Is speaking tho troth. Hence the professional bosses nnd their satellite are not wildly enthusiuH tlo over the Brumbaugh candidacy. They support It, of course, but only because It Is so strong and popul.ir thut their one chance of continued tenure of offlce Is to hung on to tho Doctor's coattalls. And when Doctor Brumbaugh says that he has no open or underground alliance with tho Interests that Jeopardize the stability of our Commonwealth ho not only speaks tho truth, but all tho interests know that he Is speaking tho truth. Behind his words there aro nearly SO years of life In the public eye a life so frank and clean and beyond reproach that it gives tho lie to any statement or In sinuation that he shares with Penrose the support of the liquor dealers and the under world. Doctor Brumbaugh believes that State anrt national issues have no vital connection, and logic Is on his sldo when ho goes his own way. making his own platform, outlining his own policies and conducting his own cam paign. Only a strong man, a genuinely strong man. conscious of his own rectitude and ability to serve the Commonwealth, would daro to take such a course. And It Is tho way to victory. Clear "Up the New Haven Scandal HOW deeply submerged in financial scan dal the Now York. New Haven and Hartford Railroad Is may never bo fully known by the public. Almost every day some new evidence of reckless financing comes to view, even to the extent of discovering notes nnd collateral in dead men's lock boxes, with no explanation of how they came to be there. . ii.... in.iii.n.i,inn win nnt h sn keen as ruaaiui) iuwim". - -- . when tho management made a shambles of their lines, but as a salutary and deterrent Influence upon all public and semi-public corporations every questionable and Illegal phase or tne rauroaus uuuua nuuuiu uc ...v, known. Neither should there be any degree of Immunity for those who plunged tho system Into such lmpotency and Infamy. Whether their guilt be traceable to personal greed or careless negligence, the law should take Its due course, whatever tho social prominence of the offenders may be. This country need3 a restored confidence In the capability and Integrity of railroad management. Until that arrives It is futile for the roads to expect a whole-hearted government redress of their grievances. Man Whom Penrose Championed WILLIAM LORIMER, stripped of his toga by vote of the Senate, Is under Indict ment for misapplication of bank funds, lend ing money on unsecured notes and to officers of the bank, and for wildcat financiering. The news Is Important to Pennsylvanlans, fcecauso Lorimer Is tho man for whom Penrose stood sponsor In Washington and whose causa he championed In tho face of the nation. Some men are loved for the enemies they make nnd others are despised for the friends they have. Sympathy Is an Index to charac ter, and tho things for which a man will fight re a revelation of the standards he holds. Bryan Embarrassed Never ! NOT even the clergymen of Ohio, deter mined that tho Secretary of State shall make a pronouncement upon prohibition, can really embarrass him. They may put him in a passing predicament, they may annoy him by their unsophisticated zeal, they may make it hard for him to be passionately and con vincingly eloquent; but they can no more embarrass him than they could the Delphic oracle. No public man ever had a readier fluency in ambiguities, such finesse in phraseology, huch adroitness in platform mechanics. Jn some delicate way or another, Mr Bryan will placate the Prohibitionists, cajole tho local optlonlsts. satisfy the ministers and yet allow the whisky Democrats a right of way in the State fight. Japan Reawakening China CHINA once more Is rubbing Its eye3 over the astounding prestige and progress of Japan. When Nippon defeated Russia the Chines first realized tho value of western civilization. Under Yuan Shi Kal the new republic has been slowly slipping back Into its age-long somnolence. Now that Japan Is taking a place of parity with Great Britain, France and Russia In the world-wide struggle, the Chinese patriots are wondering why their great land with four hundred million people cannot have an equal standing. This Jealousy will mean more schools and colleges, more newspapers and telephones, more railroads and trolleys, more liberty and justice for China. As a by-product of the war it may well be by far the most Important. Hope for the Merchant Marine SINCE the new registry law went Into effect 6! foreign vessels have been added to the American merchant marine. This is a hopeful sign for the future of shipping Inter ests la this counlo, and what U aow ur gently needed is a definite governmental policy by which the advantage already gained can be kept and increased, bo far bo good, but for the re-establish- ment nnd dfcvelopment of tho American mer chant marine tho navigation laws must ba so revised ns to enable our ship owners to compete on equal terms with the carriers of other nations. As to tho proposal for Government-owned ships, Its adoption would mean, among sev eral evils, a competition which would dis courage prlvnto capital. Congress should roeognlzo tho political Inexpediency of a $30,000,000 appropriation for such an experi ment, on top of Its unpopular levy of $100. 000.000 In war taxes, and decide after all to give a real Impetus to the upbuilding of the merchant marine by liberalizing and rectify ing the present hampering and antiquated navigation laws. Penrose Playing Samson MAD with pain nnd humiliation, with vision gone and strength sapped, Penrose Is trying to win revenge nnd a last personal triumph before ho goes to his doom. Like Samson of old, he has put his arms around the columns supporting the Repub lican home thnt has sheltered him for years and with one final desperate effort he would pull It to the ground to cover his own ruin. Penrose Is under suspicion In the supremo legislative chamber of the nation for his use of campaign funds; everywhere his name Is linked Ignominiously with Lorimer and Sul llvan, of Illinois, with Barnes nnd Sulzer, of New York; evidence has been published that his campaign draws Us chief and most dis reputable strength from the liquor makers and dealers of Pennsylvania. He claims that tho fortunes of tho Repub lican party depend upon his re-election. This Is so far from being true that tho success of Penrose In November will prove to be the Worst disaster Republicanism has suffered. Neer In the hlstorv of the party has It had a moie vulnerable candidate n man who Is a tangible contradiction and negation of everything honorable and noble In the tradi tions and spirit of the party of Abraham Lincoln. Wait for the Second THE first act Is over and tho heroine Is In tho clutches of the Red Indian. But, mind you, tho villain Is only temporarily trium phant. Tho second act Is on this afternoon. Watt for tho hero to get In his licks. A good play Is a better play for a desperate start. Whoever saw a really good melodrama that didn't put virtue In a pretty bad fix at tho stnrt-off? That's where the hero comes In. Keep your eye on Cornelius and his trained elephant. They will rescue Miss World's Pennant yet. They will get her down from tho stronghold of Beandnm with a rope ladder of four stout rungs, and bear her away to a happy year of residence In Philadelphia. Meanwhile, let who will be tearful. Rome was not built In a day, nor a world's cham pionship In three months' practice at ladder climbing. Back to the pit with you, Evore and Emerson! Pennsylvania Itself the Judge THE Norris resolution Is not dead. It has merely been put to sleep. Meantime tho people of Pensylvanla have an opportunity to set themselves and this great common wealth right before the nation by repudiating utterly the system against which the Inquiry ts directed and the man who is Its champion and Its leader. Slake Health Contagious IN CLOSING the silver Jubilee celebration at Johns Hopkins, Doctor Flexner made an announcement of fitting importance. He gave assurance that Infantile paralysis Is caused by a germ organism, which he has succeeded In Isolating and by means of which he has proved Infection to be spread. It Is the first step toward a dependable cure. Prevention Is already In sight, for it Is now clear that the dis-ense Is transmitted through respira tion and that adults carry the germs which may Infect children. Almost every day brings some such new hope for the health of the world. Only a short time ago came the announcement from Doctor Mayo of his advances against can cer. The peaceful war against disease goes on In America, while malevolent Mars ab sorbs nil the energies of Europe. Yet how much swifter might be Its progress If tho millions spent in a single day of European conflict could be devoted Instead to the cam paign which alms. In the words of Dana, to "make health contagious." Continue to Pray OBEDIENT to President Wilson's request, millions of prayers were offered to the Almighty and All-Father last Sunday on behalf of peace. Prayer, In Its deepest and truest sense, Is not a formal act, performable only In specific places and at regulated hours. Prayer Is a mood of the mind, an attitude of the spirit. It is the soul of man seeking harmony with the will of God. Therefore, if prayer were, proper last week it is appropriate this week and always. Where the object sought is so disinterested as the restoration of human peace and good will, every one, everywhere and at all times may pray In pure sincerity. "More things are wrought by prayer than this world dreams of." What could you expect on a Friday? When is a speculator not a speculator? Ask Judgo Martin. The speculators have nothing on the Braves as scalpers. No "slush fund" inquiry till winter, when the slushing la good. Mexico is indefatigable. When the centie of revolutionary difficulty removed Itself to the North, Mexico City promptly supplied a riotous strike of its motormen. With the speculators' tickets all sold, this keeping up the ratn-game bluff seems a little foolish What everybody wants Is a clear, sunny afternoon The white elephant needs no mist to hide behind. The London Morning Post ts authority for the statement, under a Cape Town date, that "a German patrol has raided Walflach Bay, capturing a police sergeant.'1 Could daring and heroism go further? Tha first step In the much-needed revision of our patent laws appears to have been taken in Representative Edmonds' bill to compel the owner of a foreign patent to license tho manufacture of his invention if he himself is not putting it on the market. Now It Is known where Harry K. Thaw has been all this time Sojourning In New Hampshire. Jerome wants his case disposed of. This is just the time, when Europe Is so busily engaged that it cannot pay attention to this disgrace of American jurisprudence. PASSED B? TIIE CENSOR PLUTARCH, who had ns many "lives" as a Tlpperary cat, says In ono of them: "A prating barber asked Archelaus how he would like to be trimmed. He' answered: 'In silence.' " Percy Standing, tho nclor, had his hair cut In silence last Saturday In tho Hotel Lincoln, Pittsburgh, barber shop. It cost him (9.75. Standing Is ultra-English, deueedly so, ye know. Ho Is also anti-German, tremendously so. The barber Is German; also ultra antl Engllsh, Standing sat himself down In tho chair and suggested that tho man of shears trim his hair slightly, especially in tho back, afl his part required that ho wear tils hair rather long. Then ho uttered somo rcmntks nbout tho Kaiser, the Kaiser's army and the German nation In general. Then ho began to rend a paper. After a while- he found that the barber had finished his task. Ho looked nt himself In the glnss. Revenge! Desperate Desmond In his most fiendish moment had never perpertrated so scurvy a trick! For that German barber had deliberately and with mallco nforethotight clipped Standing's back hair with a horso clipper In the style so much In vogue among ofllco boys. What followed, especially tho verbal por tion, must he omitted. But that night a policeman called at the theatre to arrest Standing for alleged high treason, lese majeataet. mayhem, Incendiarism nnd frac ture of King George's English. The case was settled out of court for $9.75. There Isn't any moral worth chronicling to this hair-raising tale. STATIONED within a square of City Hall Is a policeman who has certain political views which ho does not always caro to have made public. "Safety first," he said. "My Job wouldn't bo worth much If it became known how I feel on polttlcnl matters." And then ho told this tale to Illustrate his viewpoint: Ho dreamed that he died nnd had gone to "war," where Satan was In full charge. Tho devil was polite and sought to mako him at home. First, he took him Into a room, moderately warm, along whose slde3 were hung various spirits In human form. "This Is the room where Progressives are kept," tho devil explained. Then he took him Into a still warmer room, also occupied by spirituous no, spiritual shapes. "This is tho Democratic storehouse." The third room was sizzling hot. In It were numerous shapes, dancing about In the heat. "What are those?" asked the dreaming policeman, "They're Republicans who nre going to vote for Penrose because of .the tariff," ex plained tho devil. "They're too green to burn." FOR many years engineers and Inventors puzzled their collective brains over tho question of casting high temperature metals. They hiid cast Iron and lead and zinc, but bronzo and steel had resisted their efforts, try ns they would. A Belgian Inventor did succeed In evolving a furnace which would cast bronze, but tho process had no. com mercial value, being too costly. At about this time Samuel P. Wetherill. Jr., of this city, was graduated and entered the world of business with his father and namesake. Then he decided to Invent tho furnace to cast bronzo and steel. For months he worked; for months ho failed. Asso ciated with htm was a practical engineer, ono who had had vast experience. No one had much faith in the proposition; everybody predicted failure. But young Wetherill did not know enough to quit. He kept on, night and day and week nnd month. One day he announced that he had perfected the electrical casting furnace. And now the steel companies are forced to pay royalty to tho persistent young Phllndel phtan, who Just wouldn't stop trying. IT WAS just before tho war. Tho British militants were smashing up things in gen eral and shop windows in London in par ticular. Mrs. Michael Morton, wife of the dramatist, happened to live in London at tho time. As she was packing her belongings, prior to her departure for this country, she needed the services of a hammer. So she went to an Ironmonger's, which Is "hard ware" In American, and asked for the Imple ment. The head of the store stammered a negative. "I'm very so sorry," he said, "but we haven't any ha hammers at present," "No hammers?" asked Mrs. Morton Incred ulously. "No, we're all out of hammers," ho de clared, and seeing himself between the Scylla of a broken plate glass window and the Charybdis of an enormous He, ho hedged by adding "but perhaps wo could er let you have a little hammer," "But 1 don't want a little hammer," ex claimed Mrs. Morton angrily. "I want a big hammer, one with which I can hit hard!" That ended the controversy, for the shop keeper and his clerk escorted Mrs, Morton to the door, with the admonition that she quit being a "fury." NOW that there Is a possibility that the great cathedral of Strasshurg may again come Into the limelight, it is of interest to recall that its historic clock dates back only to 1838. The original clock was made 218 years ago, but the mechanism wore out In 1S3S, and a French clockmaker named Schwelgue replaced practically the entire works. Noon hour is the best for seeing the clock "work." Promptly at that time an angel strikes the time on a gong, tha while Father Time reverses his hour glass. There are also symbolic figures for each day of the week. Sharp as the first stroke of noon rings out a figure of the Saviour appears. The Apostles pass around It and a wooden rooster flaps his wings and crows shrilly and loud. Incidentally the clock represents a perpetual calendar, BRADFORD, SOUL OF A TOWN From tha Indlanapolla New. The Rev. Krnest (-'. Warelnr. an editor of the Western Chrlatlan Advocate, is convinced that a city has no eoul. So, at least, he records him self in a recent address before the Zlon Park Assembly. Those who feei inclined to dispute the Rev. Mr. Warelns's judgment, however, may not be entirely without reason on their side. A good deal depends on what is meant by "soul " Cltle differ, and tho difference Is not merely one of physical aspect. It la deeper and less obvious, and not so readily analyzed Towns differ, and even hamlets, and size hu as little to do with It as physical atpeU. Wide streets or narrow, crooked or straight, tall buildings or low, aro not the things, after all, that make one city more desirable than another They are source of pride or of regret, an expression of necessity or a msXwlallzatlon of advantage, but they do not give a city Its character. That arises from Its citizenship. Psychologists have dealt with tho matter from various points of view, seeking. In one way and another, somo tenon to account for the radical differences ll observe. There Is little reason, for example .hy Indianapolis should differ from Cincinnati. A navigable river at Cincinnati's door Is not sufficient to account for the variation. If It Is, then Cincinnati should not materially differ from St. Louis. Yet It dees Qeogiaphlcat situation has, to be sure, Its effect, and one would reasonably expect to observe a difference between St. Paul nnd At lanta, but whnt Is to account for the difference between St. Paul and Minneapolis? On the whole, It Is not at all unlikely that tho Rev. Mr. Wnrclng Is wrong. What ho says nbout cities, goncially speaking, we would not s.ty even about New York. Light, shallow, frivolous ns It Is In a sense, big, complex, heterogeneous, It has Its own Individuality ns a city. Its own communal spirit, lis own civic diameter. Indeed, for most of our larger cities It would be Impossible lo devise some distinc tive nnd Interpretative symbol, each differing from the oilier to give In this form a graphic substance to municipal spirit. CURIOSITY SHOP Both England and Prussia have been desig nated as "Aaron's Serpent" (Ex. vll, 10-12), tho former because she absorbed India and the latter because sho did likewise with the small German States. James Buchanan was the only bachelor President, nnd was so nicknamed. Grover Cleveland was unmarried v hen he entered the Presidency, but ho married Frances Fol som In tho White House June 2, 1SSG. The word "cabal," meant to designate an Intriguing party, was formed from tho Initials of Clifford, Ashley, Buckingham, Arlington and Lauderdale, all members of an English Ministry under Charles II. The word "dago," now applied to Italians, was orlglnnlly mennt for Spaniards, being a corruption of "hldnlgo." Philippe. Due d'Orlenns. was called "Ega llte," because he sided with the revolutionary party whoso motto was "Llberte, Egallte, Frnternlte." Despite his republican leanings, he was guillotined In 1793. "Faint heart ne'er won fair lady" dates back to 1B69, when It appeared In "A Proper Now Ballade In Prnlso of My Lady Marques": "Then havo amongst ye onco again, Faint harts falro ladies t euer win." The Straits of Bab-el-Maniob are often ro ferred to ns the Gate of Tears, this being a nearly literal translation of the Arabian term. Moore, In his "The Flro Worshipers," says: "Like some lll-destlned bark that steers In silence through the Gate of Tears." HUM OF HUMAN CITIES Music is not a problem for Philadelphia; the city hos its orchestra and its operatic visitors. And music Is not a problem for Keokuk. But In between Ho cities like St. Louis, which appreciate and desire good music, but which find It very difficult to obtain. Just now St. Louis Is waging a broad, popular campaign to save Its Sym phony Orchestra. The orchestra found Itself this year facing a deficit of about $ir..000, which oven the gifts of rich supporters did not meet. Tho appeal for a popular subscription to cover this went out from all quarters. The weekly Mirror, of St. Louis, wrote characteristically: "The Symphony Society must not be nllovved to go to the wall, after 30 years of splendid esthetic ministration to our spirits, for need of $15,000. Man does not live by bread alone. M'usic feeds the senses and tho soul. Music makes for social hnrmony. Tho Symphony is the city's bent card ns an In tellectual and artistic centre. Let us all get together and pitch In to keep the Symphony going. It Is worth everybody's while. To save the 'Sundays Pops' alone would warrant a sacrifice by every believer In education and culture. And hero's a chance to democratize music, to make it a venture of nnd by ns well us for the people. Tf every one whose In stinct is to indorse this suggestion wore to subscribe from 51 to $'. the 'U. Louis Choral Syniphonv season for 1914 would be mng nlllccntlv assured, obey that Impulso now." Letters came to the newspapers In great numbers commending the orchestra and pledging suppoit. Nothing in months had evoked so many mls-lves "to the editor." Tho emphasis was mainly on tho esthetic and democratic sides of the i Hitter. The Post-Dispatch, however, found an as pect to touch tho business man: "Apart from the question of culture, thero is a great utilitarian purposo served by the Symphony Orchestra advertisement of tho city. "A great musical organization on tour, as ours has been, Is a traveling salesman and, as Oliver Richards has aptly pointed out. It is tho only municipal institution which can be sent out 'diummlng.' St. Louis cannot end out Its parks or boulevards or archi tectural beauties 'on tho road' and It has not even a world's champion ball team! "Last vear the orchestra on tour did much to counteract In tho country the bad linpres hlon disseminated by our unfinished free bridge. We can't afford this year an un finished free orchestra, abandoned, on top of tho unfinished free bridge for want of $15,000. mONALPOINT OF VIEW There is a pronounced difference between total milltnry debility and a top-heavy mili tarism which crashes over into a war with its own weight, and this is Just the time for tho American people to tincture ideals with common sense. Now York Evening Sun. Great Britain has taken a reasonable atti tude on the matter of American shipping des tined for neutral ports, and has given assur ance that there will be no interference with vessels flying our flag that carry conditional contraband to Holland or other countries not nl war. Chicago Evening Post. Indications that the upper classmen at the Johns Hopkins University havo resolved to du away with hazing at Homewood suggest a definite improvement in the tone of the student body and promise to place the dignity of the Institution upon a plane commensurate with Its Importance. The community will heartily In dorse the movement understood to have orig inated among the students and will hope that thero will be no recessions from Its laudable purpose. Baltimore Star. The several boards of tho Rockefeller Foun dation have done and are doing such scientific, thorough and valuable work that the announce ment by the foundation of an Inquiry Into In dustrial conditions, relations and problems can hardly fall to cause Interest and lively expec tation of real benefit In thoughtful circles. That the Rockefeller inquiry will be Independ ent and efficient may be taken for granted. Chicago Tribune. Let Democrats try aa they may to shift the blame, tho fact remains that the fulluro of the Wilson-Underwood tariff as a revenue provider was apparent and admitted long before there was any thought of a general European war. Conditions were bad before tho war; the war has merely made them worse, that la all, Springfield IMass ) I'nlon. The President and Congress have done well to take time for further discussion of fae Gov ernment ship purchase bill. The emergency aspect of the measure has steadily lost Im portance. When first proposed It seemed that prompt action by the Government would be necessary to protect the business of the coun try. Almost two months have passed and the emergency. If any exists, Is not grave enough to be reflected In the demands of t.ie great body of producers Chicago Herald. Our Mexican Prisoners Yrota th New Tork World. An incident of the Mexican war almost for gotten Is tho internment at Fort Wlngate, N. M., of a Federal army of several thousand men and women which nearly a year ago sought refuge on our soil when closely pursued by the Constitutionalists. We have held the whole crowd as prisoners, charging their board bin to the new Government which is soon to be inaugurate. As showing how both sexes participate in Mexican wars, it Is noteworthy that since this refugee camp was established in New Mexico W children have been born. Is thero a future President among them! IN A SPIRIT OF HUMOR The'fieal Strain World's Scries games are a tcrrlblo strain on the norves of tho spectators, and also on their pockctbookB. Pity Doth Pity tho Boston gentleman supplied with a dozen wads Offered a chance to back his team and back It at mounting odds; , Sure of tho nine's ability and the strength of Its fighting lunge, Who didn't play the Initial game-who simply would not plunge. Pity tho fan of tho Moulin Macks, who splurged with his llttlo all; Backing tho elephant to win, sure of tho Kings of Maul; . Alas, his pocket Is flat today, cleaned of the needed "tin" But ho Is willing to bet his shirt that the Mncks go In and win. Caught "I was looking nt somo $20 hats today," said his wife, "and I brought this one homo to seo whnt you think of It." "Frightful," said her husband. "That's what 1 tho"ght. This la a cheap $5 hnt; let mo have $15." Suspicious "He's a great man for economy. Finds It cheaper to move than pay rent." "Yes, and you may notlco that each tlmo he hires a different company to move his stuff." Defined "Pa, what's a statesman?" "A politician of our party, my son, The Reason "He's rather old-fashioned; positively won't trust a bank with his money." "No. he never has enough to start an ac count." The "Worker ' "Does your furnace work?" "No, but I do." The Topic of the Day n Now ho whoso talk of battlo tires Whose shop and business chatter wearies, Beforo a rush of words rotlrcs And all the talk is of tho scries. And men who like to talk of clothes, And men who llko to talk of eating, Must all make place for him who knowg, Or says ho docs, Who'll got tho beating. In car, on sidewalk and In trolley Tho scalping visitors aro talking; Seo how they bulldoze, coax and Jolly To help along their ticket hawking. Who trios to start a conversation On other subjects finds no tenant In hend of friend or near relation, Who're wondering who will get the pennant. On Iler Feet Mabel "Harold says he doesn't Ilka the new dance floor." Graycc "No, I guess' ho found It leathery.' Fixing the Blame "What nre you crying nbout, Jennie?" "My my teeth stepped on my tongue." Gridiron Notes News from tho hot place. Higher Mathematics Based upon figures furnished by the Inter national press agents, Lie Lalk Blaizes, the noted Chinese calculator, estimates that the German army, consisting orlglnnlly of 3,200, 000 men, has lost 4..3B7.992 men, and thnt tho Allies having 4,007,137 originally, have lost 6,029,3S7,65t in dead, wounded and non existent. Slow in Emigrating The "Safety First" movement has not yet made Its appearance on those extended battle lines in Europe. It Is Quite Likely There Is little doubt that these bullets fired across the frontier by reckless Mexican sol diers were "made in America." Germs Germs In your foods and tho air you breathe, (Sernis In your mouth and your nose; Germs on your lips. In your whiskers, too, In fnmllle.s, classes and rows; Germs In the candy you give to your gill, Germs on the stamps that you lick. Eat, work or sleep without killing them off, And you nre hound to be sick. So do the doctors. In perfect nccord, Mako all humanity squirm, Till everyono wonders, but dares not to ask If there are germs In a germ. Why Railroads Pay Dividends A Kansas railway, In a burst of undue generosity, which is expected to lead it Into Insolvency, announces that owing to a grain dealers' convention In Kansas City, the road will sell round trip tickets for "double the one-way fare." Convincing Proof German culture has restrained itself after nil. Teutonic war poets haven't committed one war poem that we know of, at least not In English. . The Lay of the Gourmand Thero aro some who believe that table manners were Invented by one who never felt the pangs of hunger. Descriptive "How did you feel when the whirlwind caught you up and carried you away." "Like a fly in a glass of soda water." An Eye to the Future In olden days they had a sign reading: "We who nro about to die salute you." Nowadays, the sign, In Lowvllle, N. Y. reads: "Asbestos Burial Casket Company." Imaginary Polyandry "I'm awfully worried since you told me to put a piece of wedding cake under my pillow to dream of my future husband." "Why?" "I dreamt of the State Fenclbles." J Revised Version "Know thyself" was all very well In days gone by; today you've got to know others better than yourself to make good. THE IDEALIST Few people will deny the character-building virtues of hard work. Quite often, how ever, a. very low rating is put on these virtues. For instance, it is a common thing to hear thut hnrd work serves as a means of keeping one out of trouble. If one remains busy, one has little time to devote to unprofitable pleas ures and mind-destroying occupations. This concept, however, Is a very low valuation of work. A point which Is often lost sight of is that continued application to the serious business of llfo Jesuits In surrounding a man or woman with other men or women whose habits aie Industrious and honest. Hard work creates an uplifting environment. In this sort of society a weak man dovelops strength; a strong man is made stronger. You will seldom find a man who is an idler serving as the companlqaof a man who is a worker. Idlers seek the company of their own kind. The pace of the worker is too fast for the idler to follow. Invariably the idler Is thrown into the company of men whose sole object is the pursuit of demoralizing diver slons. This sort of association never permits of hard work or development. No Time To Stop Prom the Chicago Tribune. A little wholesale grocery house in a southern Illinois town bought five carloaxU of sugar a few day before the war sent prices soaring Jhls sugar was bought at 1 centa a pound and U being sold at 8 cents a pound. The head of the firm Is now leisurely looking over plans for a reiHdence, garage Included. Tho sudden overturn of the stigAr market la working other Wonders as well. Those Louisiana sugar producers who were disman tling their great mills and talking of going Into tho livestock Industry will frenp a harvest on their 1914 crop. Tho beet sugar producers of the West will profit tremendously through the sudden removal of all competition with tha Austrian, the French and tho Russians. The tariff will still glvo them a measure of protec tion until May 1, 1916. Tho 1-cent a pound tnrlff covers both tho cane nnd the beet sugars, With England buying sugars In the United Statc3 and many sugar-producing countries gelng Into American markota and Cuban and West Indian centres for largo quantities, this would appear to be a poor time for1 the Amer ican planter to dismantle his mills. VIEWS OF READERS , ON TIMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin. ion on Subjects Important to City, State nnd Nation. 4 To the Editor n (fie Evening Ledger! Sir As you say In your editorial under the heading, "Brumbaugh Qualified by Experience," "to picture Doctor Brumbaugh as a mere pedagogue Is to fly as wldo of tho marls ns possible." This statement Is easily corroborated by glancing down the list of his associates In the present campaign. You also say that "He must bo a political economist and a trained diplomat" Granted but, what reason has tho public to believe that the "Every power and quality that he has displayed so conspicuously In the paat will shine more brilliantly for tho public weal"? The thinking public can hardly be flim flammed Into believing that with his political affiliations ho can stand for nnythlng but "Pen roselsm" and nil thnt It represents. And If the voters nt the coming election do not stamp out the disgrace of the past Pennsylvania will fully deservo to have her sister States draw their cloaks about them and "pass by on the other side." It hardly becomes the Evening Ledoer to appear straddling the deep chasm between "Pcnroselsm" nnd decent Government by up holding Doctor Brumbaugh and crying "Wolf"! at Penrose when they stand for ono nnd the same thing, H. F. MONTGOMERY. Philadelphia, October 8. SUFFRAGE WINNING THE WORLD To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Please let mo congratulate and thank the Evening LBDOEa for Its clear, strong editorial on woman suffrage In tho October 7 Issue. I congratulate you becaueo your unequivocal stand for a great reform, which Is sweeping the entire world, shows that your now evening paper la progressive In policy and has the courago and foresight that augur succeas. I thank you for befriending a cause that la working not only to secure a majority vote on tho sldo of justice, but nlso to educate our whole people to tho truo meaning of democracy. CAROLINE KATZENSTEIN. Executive Secretary, Equal Franchlso Society of Philadelphia. Philadelphia, October 8. NEW MEN IN NEW TIMES To the Editor o the Evening Ledger: Sir May I congratulate you upon the stand taken recently In your columns on the subject of suffrage for women? It looks as though this new dally would be up to date, and a leader of thought In these new times which demand "now manners nnd new men." MARY E. MUMFORD. Philadelphia, October 8. HELPS TAXPAYERS TO DISCOVER To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Your articles on the "Hands of Esau" are well written nnd very Interesting. More than that, they reveal to tho taxpayer the truo naturo of the Organization, so that he learns moie nbout its methods, somo of which he hardly thought about before. I hope you will print tho articles In pamphlet form when the series Is completed. J. D. TURNBULL. Philadelphia, October 8. FOR WOMAN SUFFRAGE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir Good for tho Evenino Ludoer and Its definlto stand In favor of woman suffrage. Philadelphia, October. 8. F. R. COMMENDS STAND ON SUFFRAGE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir May I express to you the gratification that wo feel In learning that your paper has taken a stand for tho enfranchisement of women. With best wishes, EMILY SARGENT LEWIS, President Equal Franchise Society of Phila delphia. Philadelphia, October 8. American Atrocities From the New York Times. T.ie mutilating, maiming nnd killing of chil dren, while not put in the category of atrocities, continues in the streets of this city. The Na tional Highways Protective Society reports that in the month Just closed 35 children were slain by automobiles, as aRalnst eight by wagons and 2 by surface cars 15 In all bringing up the total for the year In Greater New York to 123 children killed by motor cars out of 215 that met death in the streets from all causes. JEALOUSY She leaned from out her casement wide, And watched below tho human tide Flow, as tho night drew nigh. I Bitter the thoughts her fancy snan. And black the thread that through them ran As the hurtled feet swept by: For, like a poisonous seed wide-sown, Her base Imaginings had grown And o'er her heart had crept; Till on the ono who loved her best. Who strove to hold that love, hard-pressed, Her ceaseless watch she kept. Days, gray with brooding and mistrust, Nights fraught with fears, wild and unjust Slowly Love's courage waned; And toward the dreary length of years' to come The one who loved her once gazed, tearless, dumb Duty alone remained. Love could not stay alone when Faith had gone. But long his feet her threshold lingered on Life's solace she had lost, and nothing gained. Ethel H. Wolf, In New York Times. TIIE BABBLING FOOL Politics is a disease which causes honest men to become machine adherents. Anybody can be a politician; It takes statesmanlike qualities to rema.n a voter No politician over sprained his ankle run ning from olllce. A political oftlceholdo.- Is a man who would rather hold down a position than a Job. A machine is a political trust meant to stille competition of Independent rivals A political complexion consist- of machine talcum, spellbinder's rouge and Jobhunters enamel. Some political leaders can't make their I's behave. A good mixor Is a politician who does not mix honesty with politics. Some politicians hold office; others work for a living. Insolence of office consists of not con tributing to the slu h fund. "Public offlce is a public trust" until the campaign opens in earnest. A platform consists of loose planks so laid that the unwary voter may tread without teeing the politicians hiding underneath. A voter is an innocent animal, with long ears, who brays between elections and munches political piffle. A nominee is one who has sacrificed him self In his own cause, and who Is willing to extend the slaughter to the voters. The political game is played with stacked cards, with five aces which the voter never has dealt to him. A ballot is a supplication from the voter asking th gods to deliver him from polities! bondage. Direst prlrnarlti are nu always direct.