I'liwii mew unm.iiii'i in iiiMininiiiiiiiTiiiini"" i iniiiniiiiin i in in "r 'i-rr-rpimn r ' '"nr gtsJff.MlllU'l'f 'I''WW') ''- w 8 E LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1914;. ( ; u V l A V MS for the i Ef V IW. -Wll ! js i' :t) n .'i''f i Li i -1 t. i! naiemttg f&m$& nzxiQtv PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CTP.U9 . K, CUItTIS, Pbesipest. Oeo. W. Ochs, Secretary; John C. Martin, Treasurer Charles II. Ludlncton, Thlllp S. Collins, John B. "WU Hams, Directors. EDtTOUIAli BOAHD ! Crncs II. K. Ccbiis, Chairman. P. II. iritALET Executive Editor JOHN C. MARTIN Gcnara! Duslneas Manager Published datlr at Pusuo Lewies Building, Independence Square, Philadelphia. LitMEn CENTitAt Broad and Chestnut Streets Atlantic Cut Prcta-Vnlon Building Nsw Tonic. . . ,...t70-A, Metropolitan Tower Ciiicaoo SIT Home Insurance Building London.. .........8 Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, 5. TV. NEWSBCUEAUS! Ittamsticnn Bcuric...., The ralrlet Bulldlnir WamiinStov Bcreiu The Post Building New Yobk Ilcntiu The rime Building Brnt.tv Bcbeau 00 FrledrlcrntrmM Lovnos liniuuu 2 Pall Mall East. H W. Paris Uircad 32 Rue Louis lo Grand SUBSCRIPTION TKRM3 By carrier. Daily Omit, six cents. By mall postpaid outside of Philadelphia. Kicept where foreign postage Is required. Daii.t O.nlt, one month, twentv-nco cents; Ditt.T Osr.T, one mr, three dollars. All mall sub acrlptlons payable In advance. BELL, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTOM M rK 3000 I E7 JLddmsa all communication lo Evening ' Ledger, independence Square, rhiladclthla i unteied at the rmnDtt,rnu rosTorrtco as secosd- ' CLASS MAIL MATCtB. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, OCTODER 26, 1914. Coming Events Cast Their Shadows THE Evening LEnocn, Is able to nnnoun.ee In Us new columns tho lines which would hnvo been followed In tho senatorial investi gation of tho Penrose campaign had not the Investigation ii&elt been sidetracked and post poned. If Mr. Penrose Is elocted on tho faco of the returns, tho Investigation will bo held. Tho mouths of Democrats are watering for It. In that case. It will follow substantially the evidence as outlined In the Evenino IiEdobr, although, of course, somo corrobo ratory documents and testimony will bo added. The methods by which the enormous cam- line u palgn fund of Mr. Penrose has been and Is ThoL.i .i j, ..,., .... ., ,.. is band s11" tticciiuruu cun uo vunaiuercu oy cne aen- On' ate without regard to tho rules of evidence Th i0r othcr technical objections. Tho recital in han? )tne Evening Lnnonn will bo sufficient to befr convince any open-minded citizen that thero " flu no possibility of the seating in the United Sup; 'states Senate of any man whoso campaign surfer nafl cost so much in actual currency as that TiiviA' engineered by and for Mr. Penrose. Suffrage Seed Sowing THERE Is no immediate way of estimat ing what waa achieved hv thn snffrntrlsts Ttmi' 'n tnelr vigorous city-wide campaign of last nnd pveek. But no advocacy of a cause that is made with directness, sincerity and enthu siasm can fall to bring results. Becauso we rannot poll the Jury In this case there need illje no regrets or thoughts of failure. By slow Impregnation, by tho diffusion of cogent reasons, by tho calm and persistent "claiming of rights, tho causo of equality will ie won. If the advocates continue to keep so'fi A" lhcmse'vcs free 'rom excesses of speech or fnt."c,Tex j iced and confine themselves to nppeallng to rUllldls ,urelv wln- Opportunity COMPREHENSIVE analyses of the politi cal situation throughout the Union, con lucted by each newspaper in its special ter i Itory, convince the San Francisco Chronicle, 'be Denver Post, tho Minneapolis Tribune, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Chicago Tribune, the Cincinnati Enquirer, the Boston filobe and the New York "World that the Re ubllcans are sure to make substantial gains n the lower house and the Democrats just as ertaln to increase their majority in the Senate. They will gain at least three scats nd probably four. An Independent Investigation, conducted by 'he New York Sun, Indicates that the present Democratic majority of 10 In tho Senate "will 'io Increased to 12, and It may go considerably 'ilgher." What an opportunity for good citizens! hey have at last their chance to overwhelm ."enroselsm without Imperiling to any degree hatever the principles for which they sln rely and he politically stands They aro Iready caught In a Democratic majority: ithout loss of prestige they can rid them lves of the Incumbrance which drove them .to this political innocuousness. It is a good thing to strike at Pcnroselsm; t Is a better thing to be able to overwhelm t with no accompanying sacrifice whatever. Testimony by Converts WHEN several hundred men Journey the length of the State to speak to the peo le of Philadelphia concerning the benefits ney received personally from the "Billy" 'unday revival, their testimony Is worthy of ' respectful hearing. If It Is still truo that by their fruits ye shall know them,'" the visitors from Northeastern Pennsylvania who spoke In our churches yesterday pre onted evidence impossible to refute. Men may be deluded by their emotions, as the history of religion amply proves, but any Irunkard who has become sober, any thief who has ceased to steal, any blasphemer vhose lips have become clean, cannot pos Ibly be under an illusion as to what has 'aken placo In his life. His opinion of the how and why may be of little value except to i psychologist; ho himself Is visible and tangible evidence of his faith. " On Velvet" THE boom in velvet, say those who are In terested in such things, has failed to come Itrough. It is seen chiefly In hats. What a ity! It Is a fine, generous and 6elf-respect' .ig "stuff," a raiment unassuming yet proud, nd our lady In velvet need not blush "when a In silks my Julia goes." "Rich but not tudy," said old Polonias, in the days when n wore velvet. Serge, even for men, Is a lal and a provocation. That women should rsake velvet for it, or for any other ma- rial unhallowed by tradition and unen . .wed with the velvet touch of splendor. Is a iiockery to maicmline taste. Chestnut street ay be gayer this winter. But the esthete . 11 shake his head. What Law Means pvOCTOR BRUMBAUQH penetrates to the 'J ery heart of things when he defines the aningof legislation. After reading or hear- - his speeches the special interests need - i)ct no favors. The Doctor pledgee himself to the service of entire Commonwealth and to th passage only such laws as will minister to the ll-belnr of all tho people "The chif asset cb, the law should eonserva, since the law .he expression of the will of the people, is i welfare of the people A law that Is med for the purpose of promoting some .vate interwt or some privileged class la vicious law, and I would oppose It with all my strength. A law that is framed In tho In terest of any partisan concern Is a vicious law, nnd I would resent its enactment and veto It If It came to mo for consideration." In these words Doctor Brumbaugh has em phasized another plank In his platform. "With local option, workmen's compensation, antl chlld labor and good roads promised, I needed only this pledge against special class legislation to make him the embodiment of tho best thought and highest Ideals of the Commonwealth. Lies, More Lies, and Guilt CONGRESSMAN VARE has been held up to tho scorn of tho community. It Is Penrose who is alleged to havo furnished tho evidence on which the accusation against Vare Is based. Mr. Penrose Is held up to the execration of the nation, the charge being his alleged con fession that he personally assisted In de bauching the Reyburn administration, fur nishing $66,000 of a corruption fund which amounted in tho gross to J10S.000. The editors of n dally newspaper which has long preached righteousness and honor able conduct aro charged by a United States Senator with malicious prevarication. Somebody is lying. Rascality is at last In tho open. And to clear the ntmosphcro Sen ator Penrose must act. Ho must know that ho cannot go back to Washington unwashed of the stain of that J66.O00, which Is dally being branded deeper and deeper Into his forehead. He Is either the "ictlm of as mischievous a sot of llbelors as over deluded a credulous public or ho Is himself as merry a buccaneer as ever drovo decent men overboard from tho plank. A Large World Yet GOOD advice was given by speakers who addressed tho Philadelphia Association of Credit Men. This is no time for pes simism In business; it Is time for action. Dependence on Latin America for com mercial salvation Is neither wlso nor neces sary when so many other markets aro open England, Franco, Spain, Italy, Russia, South Africa nnd tho Far East. Philadelphia shares largely In tho great opportunity, for this port is tho natural out lot of Pennsylvania coal and of tho textiles and Iron and steel manufactures which havo helped to mako tho city and the State famous and prosperous. Woman's Part in War REPROVING Mrs. Pankhurst and, through her, nil suffragists, a newspaper opposed to votes for women" makes tho remarkable statement that "this is a time above all other times when the world belongs to men." The editor Is respectfully referred to suffering Belgium. Why America Is IS'ot At War MEN dying untondrtl nnd uncomforted where they fell pierced by bullets or torn by shrapnel, women widowed, little children fatherless and hungry, homes re duced to ruins, cltifs ravished and left a desolation, blood-lust like tho flames of eter nity coursing through tho eins. taxes piled high for many years upon an exhausted l.ind to pay the bill that is war. Boles Penrose wanted the United States to go to war with Mexico. He chided and derided and commanded the Government to send an army of occupation into the Southern Republic. Such a nr would have meant 500,000 men. four years nf guerrilla campaign ing. $:50,000,000 of immediate taxation and a heavy pension list for another half century. President Wilson stood firmly for peace. Thank God for that! Now that America is the only really great nation not freighted with sorrow and crazed with horror, every American can see that tho Administration was right. If Penrose had possessed the de ciding vote crape would be very common on our streets today. A Day of Keystone Football Triumph KEYSTONE football made a clean sweep Saturday. "When the Stato's teams weren't engaged In internecine strife, such as Philadelphia witnessed between Penn and Carlisle, they wero busy walloping what used to bo the first olevens in America. Washing ton and Jefferson gave Yale a decisive de feat. Penn State did almost as much for Harvard. Cripples won't account for It. As the sea pon has advanced the "big" colleges that began overwhelmingly with the old tactics have made a poorer showing each week; while their opponents, who used to stand around to be trampled on, havo developed steadily with each week of practice into swift, sure victors. The answer, of course, is open play. Three ply passes have made the light teams three times as powerful and the game three times as Interesting. Swapping Armies IOSSES estimated at 200,000." The war J correspondents should buy rubber stamps and save labor. The battle of the Vistula Is the latest case, but It Is only ono of many. Those figures have a fatal fascina tion. Every light since the war began has resulted In losses on one side or both of that precise number. Added together, the casualties have long ago exceeded the total forces of all the war ring nations. Tho Allies havo captured the entire Gorman army by now. At least a week ago the Kaiser lassoed and branded all the fighting men of the enemy. And tho war still goes on. The positions of the troops are re versedthat Is all. But what Is the effect on the popular Im agination of these "record-breaking" slaugh ters? Is it anything but hrutallzlng? The war Is not without its uses. It has brought Pattl one mora farewell. It Is now up to the mechanics of the State to demonstrate that alcohol Is not the right lubricant for a machine. The Vtlla-Carranza verbal mix-up has now reached the manifesto stage, The end Is In sight. "Partly cloudy" Is, after all, a very eu phemtstlo description of the lowering sort of weather which greeted the forecaster this morning. In view of the shortage of friendly po. tentatea, the Kaiser and the King of Sax ony take out their decorating mania on each other. A flve-line dispatch from Petrograd sums up better than olums th& cjmo of Russia lack of education. It sets forth that the Czar has called out "all students of high schools " This will Increase the Russian army b" 200. 000. A half dozen largo cities in this country would provide that number of high school students. THE HANDS OF ESAU Presence of Eleven Liquor Dealers in Councils Rivets Attention on Their Business. Control of Rum Selling One of the Strongest Assets of the Organization. Tho Gothenburg System. Stalking Into the Gutter of Practical Politics. "The voice is Jacob's voice, but the hands arc the hands of Esau." FOREWORD And lately, by the tavern door agape, Came shining through the dusk an angel shape Bearing, a vessel on his shoulder! and He bid me taste of it; and 'twas the grape. Omar Khayyam. Better government in Philadelphia is being stowlu strangled. The Blankenburg Administration of a few city offices expresses better government just as completely as an anti-Tammany Administration does hi New York. The cold fingers of "The Organiza tion," Philadelphia's Tammany, twisting dexterously through a pliable majority rt Councils and officials under control, are pressing hard on its windpipe. Unless pried off by the people themselves strangutation of belter government must ensue. In the modest palaces behind the myriad two-story red-brick fronts of working Philadelphia dwell the real beneficiaries of better government. Their support alone means better government. The worst that can be said of people who toil is that they are sometimes too tired to study a public subject SOMETIMES, NOT ALWAYS. NO. X-LOCAL OPTION TV VA.V.Vi.ti milk dealers forcea tncmseivra 1 at one tlmp into Councils the rest of the community would very properly speculate aro thoy planning to havo municipal pumps established along their milk routes? Their very number would suggest that mischief of somo sort was on foot. But no 11 milk dealers of Philadelphia have projected them selves Into Councils; nor havo 11 grocers done so; nor 11 coal merchants, nor 11 bank ers, nor 11 representatives of any occupation except one liquor selling. Yes, thero are 11 liquor dcalcts in Councils. You exclaim that If these 11 liquor dealers were milk dealers, citizens would demand explanation of their presence In Councils; why thoy were put there, by whom, and for what purposo? Grnntcd! But remember, they are not milk dealers. Thoy nro liquor dealers. One is expected to always hnndle liquor dealers as gently as possible, for thoy nre widely reputed to be extremely touchy about their business. Considering that Councils is the municipal authority which not only fixes tho cost of government, but determines how tho city's revenues shall he raised, tho facts for onco will havo to pass rough-shod over this sensi tiveness. Tho names of our 11 Councilmanlc liquor dealers and the wards they represent are: Select Council Ward. Member. Place of Business. 3. Henry J. Trainer, S00 South Front St. 9 James N. Neeiy, 21st and Arch Stn. 14. Harry F. Kennedy, 1300 Wood St. Common Council Charles A. Schwarz, Front and Raco sts. Timothy D. McCarthy, 1001 Falrmount Harry Kecne, 144 "West Cumberland St. Bernard J. McGulgan, 2S01 Kensington John Ii. Dougherty, 3000 "Rorer St. Frank J. Ryan, 1412 South ISth St. A3. John Haney. 2800 North 5th St. 43. Fred Schwarz. Jr., 4744 Richmond St. Tho mere presence of these 11 men in Councils rivets attention upon their busi ness; the rositivo proof of the partnership between rum and "Tho Organization." It Is tho smoke that curling into the sky re veals the location of the hidden campflre. Denials of the existence of a compact be tween tho naloon and the urban operations of Jim McNichol and the Varcs nro futllo In the faco of such Irrefutable evidence. Liquor dealers anyway nre natural poli ticians: their very saloons being places where men aro wont to nsscmblc and grow loqua cious. They sec in the pursuit of polities (business politics) a moving stairway Into tho world of largo public influence, as shown in the careers of Charles I Murphy, leader of Tammany Hall, and the late Anthony N. Brady, financier, both ex-b.irkeeps. Besides, "Welcome" is always written in letters largo on tho mat under tho swing doors of the saloon. Who ever hoard of a saloonkeeper with n mean disposition? They are "hall follows" and often "well met." Their general friendly attitude to tho foot loose public might even be cited as an object lesson of point to tho pastor of tho church who has his sexton turn the key in tho outer door at the close of the Sunday night song service, with the nearby park filled with shiv ering humanity. Instances are known where genial saloon keeper Councilmen gladly havo had streets paved and electric or gas lights established or relocated at tho request of bitter foes of tho saloon. Liquor dealers aro seldom found lacking in tact. They also possess a grim sense of humor. But it Is the utility of the entire liquor business In politics, and not the man with the smile In tho white apron who has becomo a Councilman that concerns the public. For our saloonkeeper Councilmen aro no worso as men than their fellows of higher business station who vote Just as badly upon public matters Let us turn our attention to an anonymous liquor dealer, not a Councilman, but an active worker for "The Organization." There aro about 2000 retail liquor dealers In Philadel phia. This particular saloonkeeper Is an Im portant cog In the political machine. As a centre of election day activity his placo of business, closed for the salo of liquor, is an annual menace to better government. Here rendezvous tho repeaters or "tln-soldlers," thugs, strong-arm men and other super numeraries, hired to assist In tho theft of public office. Observe the picture: Through the gray dawn, before the polls aro opened, we enter tho saloon. In whispered converse, standing along the polished rail of the bar, or seated at the beer-stained tables, aro groups of unkempt, shifty-eyed election workers. No drinks are sold. The men are there for an other purpose. They are of mixed slzo. dress, nationality and degrees of assurance. Some carry In their presence suggestions of New ark, Jersey City and the lodging houses of the Bowery; others call to the mind memo ries of Atlantic City and various resorts on the South Jersey coast. We havo stalked Into the gutter of prac tical politics before us are tho poor Wretches who fill the trenches Far to the rear, away from Immediate danger, are the members of the General Staff, ensconced in bomb-proof headquarters downtown. Orders travel to the front via trusted adjutants First to get tho orders ure the ward leaders at thR ward headquarters, and after them the division leaders at tho division luadquaxters. Listen! "Wo can hear the shuffling of feet "The boys" are moving out from the aoylum provided for them by the liquor dealer. Thus we place the saloonkeeper in bis im portance on Election Day. He is the non commissioned offlwr on the tiring 11ns, the last link In the chain that connects the cast ing of an Illegal ballot or the slugging of a reformer with the long frock coat and silk hat of the well-born candidate for high office put up by tho contractor overlords. As for tho other week days or the, year, th , suiuuu nus unucumuie puiiiitjii """w medium through which to distribute small favors, and clrculato matter calculated to create a public opinion favorablo to tha con tractor overloids. Supremo Court Justice Charles E. Hughes once said that next to printers' Ink the saloon had tho largest audl enco that voted. Ho put tho church Jn third place. In the light of the little band of liquor dealers In Councils ono must consider the organized business of rum selling In Philadel phia as ono of tho strongest assets of Jim McNichol and the Vares. Ethics should deny thU business a placo in government, for It Is tho one business that fills our prisons with criminals, our hospitals with cripples, our sldowalks with madness and our homes with sorrow. But ethics to exist must havo popu lar support. Ever slnco man In some early age discov ered that process of fermentation by which sugar Is converted Into alcohol and carbonic acid, there has been a temperance question. Tho archives of tho ancient civilization con tain many references to tho efforts of priests, sngea and rulers of tho Orient to combat rum-selling and tho evil of drunkenness. Yet the forces of John Barleycorn aro none the less powerful today. In 1804 Dr. Benjamin Rush, a distinguished physician of this city, and a signer of tho Declaration of Independence, wrote a treatise on tho evils of Intemperance that marked tho Inauguration of the temperance movement in America. It seems remarkablo that tho city which furnished tho torch for temperance should provo to bo the stumbling block for local option. If Pennsylvania were cut Into two sections with the Susquehanna Rivor as a dividing line, tho vote In tho present Legislature west of the river would be 58 for local option and 39 against it. In the eastern section thero aro 25 votes for local option and 82 against It. This makes It clear that tho western section of the State Is overwhelmingly for local op. tlon, while the eastern section is made to appear equally strong ngainst local option; and were it not for Philadelphia the Stato of Pennsylvania would probably long ago have secured a modification of tho Brooks High Licenso Law granting the people tho right of local option. No mistake about It. Which is Interesting as showing the value to the saloon of the alliance with "The Or ganization." Thero aro 11,500 square miles, representing 18 per cent, of tho population, of Pennsylvania already under no-license. Tho fight for local option is in the remaining 42,832 square miles, representing tho 82 per cent, of tho population which is under high license. But for Jim McNichol and the Vares, and tho political bosses in the eastern coal fields, tho people of Pennsylvania would bo permitted to determine for themselves whether they also wanted saloons. "Wo elect all of our Representatives and half of our Senate this fall, which fact alon makes the coming election ono of special con cern to liquor dealers. They fear local op tion as tho entering wedge of prohibition, nnd nro concentrating their strength to hold the Senate. Hence tho heavy assessments laid against all branches of tho liquor trade. It Is not nlways temperanco that kills tho licensing of liquor. In a German-American township of Missouri that recently went dry to the amazement of tho temperance people, a resident made this surprising explanation: "Vo simply got tired getting up nt midnight and putting avay the boys' horses. So vo yuht voted the town dry so ve could sleep nights." In Philadelphia besides the 2000 retail liquor dealers thero aro 400 wholesalers nnd bottlers, and 50 breweries. Tho retailers pay a license of $1200 a year and wholesalers nnd bottlers a licenso ranging from J500 to $1000 yearly. Breweries aro taxod on each barrel of beer, porter nnd ale. Originally high licenso was created to check tho evils arising from indis criminate selling, and secondly, (o raise a revenuo from the traffic. That it annually provides the State with nearly $2,000,000 nnd tho city with $3,500,000 Is well known, but tho moral advantages resulting are open to question. Because of the tax they pay, liquor deal ers now assert they are actual partners In government, sharing their profits with every body. Ono of their friends, D. Clarence Gib. boney, of local fame, Is advocating the pas sage of a constitutional amendment to appro priate enough money to compensate the booze merchants for losses they might sustain in the event communities went dry, following the establishment of local option. Mr. Gib boney has not proposed any recompense for near relatives of habitual drunkards cover ing their losses. Briefly scanning the liquor legislation of the United States, Instead of a single homo geneous system, like those In the European countries, we find it embraces a wide variety of systems based on the most diverse prin ciples. The Federal Government first exacts $25 from every person engaged In the busi ness. Thus no State can keep out liquor or prevent Its consumption, but any State can prohibit the manufacture and sale within its borders. In New York, by the Raines law of 1896, the administration of the liquor traffic passed under a Stato commissioner appointed by the Governor with the consent of tho Senate. In Boston the licensing Is In the hands of a police boarYJ appointed by tho Governor; also In Baltimore and St. Louts. In Washington the licensing commissioners are appointed by the Prasldant. In Pennsylvania the authority to sell liquor Is vested in the court, a practice dating back to 1678, and It bears the stamp of English in flaenco. In Philadelphia and Pittsburgh the judicial granting of licenses was for a time given up In favor of commissioners, but the change was declared a great failure and waa abandoned In 1233 Charges are made that tho Judges, through the licenso power, be- como local political autocrats. This Is & matter of opinion. Enforcement of any law rests with the local authorities. Generally speaking, It must be admitted that tho Brooks high li censo statute Is as good a liquor law as ex ists anywhere. Discretion to refuse or revoke a license Is absolute. Tho saloon owner Is under pledge not to sell to drunken men and minors, and on Election Day and Sundays to sell to no one. In nlno States absolute prohibition caught tho popular fancy Alalne, West Virginia, North Dakota, Kansas, North Carolina, Okla homa, Georgia, Tennessee and Mississippi, In 17 other States B0 per cent, of tho popula tion Is under no licenso, while In tho re mainder, Including Pennsylvania, various percentages of tho population less than 50 per cent, have no licenso. Truly we are a people of variable tastes. But curiously enough, no Slate has ac yet tried tho famous Gothenburg or company system of No'rwny and Sweden, under which there havo been noticeable advantages, in cluding: (1) Reduction In the, consumption of spirits: (2) fewer bars, Improved In their character and conduct; (3) discontinuance of drinking on credit; (4) shortening of tho hours of sole; (5) ndded eating rooms wher good and cheap meals nro served, and (6) lowering tho strength of tho liquors. Tho entire rotall trado is handed ovor to company, consisting of a numbor of disin terested citizens, who manago the sales. Proflls above tho Interest charges on the In vestment are divided between tho local au thorities and tho Government. Only spirits are sold, beer being vended In tho ordinary way undor a licensing plan. Tho Gothenburg system has had half a century trial, and, while tho BUbjoot of somo criticism, has been accorded much oulogy. Philadelphia In every line of public interest but tho selling of llqu,or appears to have gone andor the contract system. How docs It happen our distinguished contractor over lords missed tho Gothenburg system? It has decldod benefits for tho public. Oh, well that explains it. VIEWS OF READERS ON TIMELY TOPICS Contributions That Reflect Public Opin ion on Subject Important to City, State and Nation. To the Editor of the Evening htAgtr: Sir Truo democracy Is of the kind that recog nizes distinction both in wealth and in mental endowment, and Is socially indifferent to both. Tho colleges cannot and should not reform tho social system of our lives. They should only Insplro Ideals which will mako our petty com mercial Ideals humble and insignificant In their presence. The duty of tho colleges In this matter Is really very simple. It Is not to force rich A and poor B to llvo together, or to Join In a com munion distasteful to both. It Is certainly not to pamper the poor and to despise the rich. It Is, simply and certainly, to give rich nnd poor alike so wldo a varloty of interests that they will forget distinctions of wealth nnd meet in a truo fraternity of mutual Interest So long as ono man's Interests aro summed up in parties and football, nnd nnother's In honors nnd paying his tuition, no amount of artificial democracy will help them to llko each other. When they have common Interests truo democracy will spring up nnd the nrtlflccs so carefully culti vated will show forth ns superfluous Impor tlncnces. GEORGE B. HASWELL. Philadelphia, October 24. NEUTRAL RIGHTS To the Editor o! the Evening I.edaer: Sir It appears to my neutral mind a bit high handed that Great Britain should selzo an American ship, flying tho American flag, simply becauso Great Britain suspects that her cargo of oil, consigned to Danish importers, Is meant for German consumption. Denmark is a neu tral country, whoso commerce with tho United States is her own business nnd not Great Britain's. What the Danish owners of Ameri can oil do with It nfter it reaches them is none of Great Britain's affair. Britnin is anxious to maintain the goodwill of this country, yet rhe polices our harbors and seemingly does as she pleases with our oom mercc. It la true that the John D. Rockefeller hns been released, but that does not excuse what seems to me a flngrant abuse of sea power. CHARLES M. VERNON. Philadelphia, October 22. WAR'S EFFECT ON SOCIALISM To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: Sir It hns often been pointed out that some of the most Inhuman Institutions have sprung from nn nrdent desire to do humanity good In a way which humanity saw fit to repudiate. Thus with socialism. With tho noblest of Ideals it hns conceived nn inhuman state, tho factitious brotherhood of man, which strikes at the root jf pnttiotism, nnd so nt the instinct which pro duced great men, great art and grcnt Stntes. The present war will expel this monstrous me-ch.-inlc.il illusion. It will. In nil probability, do official socialism Brent harm. But In Inspiring Socialists with a human nnd Inudable sentiment, It will do them great good, nnd make socialism neither so much to be feared nor so unlikely of achievement. WILLARD ROSS. Philadelphia, October 24. CURIOSITY SHOP Next to tho "Marseillaise," the most popu lar French folk song Is tho "Chant du De part," written by Chenler for a festival held Juno 11, 1794, to commemorate tho fall of tho Bastille. The music is by Mohul. A mother, nn old man, a child, a wlfo and three warriors sing a verso In turn. The "debt of nature" Ib original with Quarles, who, In his "Emblems," says: 'Tho slender debt to nature's quickly paid. Discharged perchance with greater ease than made." "Good wine needs no bush" camo into be ing through a sprig of Ivy which formerly adorned tho doors of wlnesellers. Lily, In his "English Parnassus," says: "I hang no ivle out to sell my wine; The nectar of good wits will sell itself." There ore a number of "Last of the Ro mans" recorded In history. The first was Marcus Junius' Brutus, ono of Caesar's as sassins; tho others, Calus Casslus Longinus (d. B. C. 42); General Aetlus, who defeated Attlla In 451; Francois Joseph Terrasse Des billons. In allusion to his attainments as a great Latin scholar; Congreve, so named by Pope; Rlenzi; Charles James Fox and Horace "Walpole. Brumbaugh's Record on Rum Iasue From tho Huntingdon Globe. We recall distinctly the special election of June IS. ISM, when the people of the State voted on nn amendment to the Constitution prohibiting the manufacture and sale of in tnxtcutiiig liquor In Pennsylvania. We recall, also, that M. G. Brumbaugh, then county su perintendent of scIiooIb, was secretary of the Temperance Committee In this county, and made speeches In favor of the amendment In niore than a dozen boroughs, villages and town ships of Huntingdon County. J R Simpson, Esq . one of tho leading temperance men of Huntingdon, an eldrr In the Presbyterian church for more than 3H years, was chairman. Tlu burden of that great campaign rested on the shoulders of these to men. and the car ried It to a successful Is3ue, winning the fight by a majorlt of 705 votes In that contest th Globe donated to the committee two columns of Its space In every issue for over three months, and II- G Brumbaugh furnished most of the copy' Penrose Must Answer From tho Hoaton Tramcrtpt. If tlwee allegations of political depravity are untrue. Senator Penrose owes it to the Repub lican party, whose head In Pennsylvania he Is. to take Immediate step to clear himself . If they axe true, he owes it to his party and to the United Elates Senate to withdraw as a candi date, and to resign the ie&t he now holds. in SCRAPPLE Thoto Cabaret Dinners He What Is tho orchestra pl&yins-t She (looking at tho menu ''Number t , time o iromago uo one. A Serious Cain "What am de matter wld Brtrtder Em. Till III I f- "HO' got aat inclination b n s. ' stah?" "nt sis tab Cause and Effect Her hat was perched atop her tf Ho did not llko to grumble, ' But thero ho stood In trembllnr f That it would toko a tumble. Ho marveled greatly how she keot Upon her head tho bonnet; Ho did not know that she had went Before sho learned to don it - He could not flguro why, at an. It did not tumblo off her; Ho know that long before this fall Sho changed her stylo of coiffure, - And ho had noticed that her hat Had not a hatpin in It, And, with tho new halrdress, that Sho had no way to pin It But ero he had a chance to prate Or with harsh words to paint it' Sho asked him, "la my hat on stralrttr And then, of course, he fainted. An Extra -Territorial Horror A Boston man has lnventod & way of luni lng to play tho cornot for 25 cents. Wo ihiii plooo ourselves under his tootolnge and J MVAn with mil nnlplihni. n t. t.f, . t. SEC a small boy and a drum. Tb.6 Drams "That now play, 'A Pair of Silk StooklnM. Justiproduced In Now Tork, seems likely ta "1 heard it was a success." "But It's on its last legs already." Altogether Different Tho farmer marveled greatly when he reii about his son. And of the football battle that the stalwiri "I guess," ho said, "he's learned to work,' that lazy boy o' mlno; Ho never did at homo, but now he's plowln' through tho lino." On the Firing Line Schell, B, Preston 5189 D. Sword, J. Gormantown 2779. Bulllt, L. Spruce 2170. Death, H Woodland 1116 D. The Result "A week ago my wlfo eloped with my chauffeur and last night " "Sho returned broken-hearted?" "No, he did." ", ButWc Suspect The censor always gots tho blame, Tho correspondents cry "for shame!" But Bend dispatches Just the same And mark upon them "name deleted." Tho truth of It we do not know; We'll take their word; It may be so; Wc haven't anything to show Tho writers' minds have been deplete! Suggested by the New$ The father of the $100,000,000 bab Sought to raco with Jome other hlgh-cl foreign automobile, and $ma$hed up hit ma chine Jo completely that hl$ car wa$ demoi Uhed. It 15 jaid that tho car 11 beyond re pair. HI? $on wa$ not hurt even Jlishtlr, Twice-Told Tales Tired business men. i Bargain sales. I War nows. "I'll pay you next Thursday, sure." ' Bonchcads LONDON, Oct. 16. Tho police have found at Willcsdcn, a suburb of tho northwest of London, a building occupied by Germans with foundations and roof of heavy concrete Associated Press Dispatch. Explained "Why do you hunt for pearls," we asked, "In all tho seas and seasons?" And then, as in tho sun ho basked, Ho said, "for divers reasons." They Are Poor "Tho greatest favor Kipling could do tbl world would bo to quit writing." ,, "nnn't vnn llkn his stuff?" "Intensely, but I can't stand the parodiei." The Reason Ho had the bluecoats clear the street Of all tho yollimr boys, "Because." ha said, "their racketing , Is frightful and annoys." Taking Chances "I think he Is foolish to start buying I TvintnT nnp nn his snlnrv "He's not half so foolish as the agent."'. Vegetables Just like LIFE, isn't it?. Even if you don't know what it meani It's a grand thinn to think about. While tho typesetters' boycott of Miss Ger trude Stein's pluperfect verao hangs heavy, the waiting world must lie content H page 23 of Mr. Allen Notion's "Saloon Son nets''; Here where the Jumping stars shine dovn like fleas Tho vegetables sit themselves at ease. Thinking themselves quite worthy of oodi lap And making armchairs of moralities Here comes the powder-puff with gown M To show the gems that nature neer SM her And there's Religion In her ruby wrap. Poison, If properly applied, could save tier. We havo no wills to make, and poets' wall! Aro pictureless; but when tho genie cam And paints our dragons with his golden geM He gives us gods that never were in greaw. And so we pluck tho purse-strings ol tci heart, Interested only In ourselves and art Allen Norton. THE BABBLING FOOL It Is the easiest thing In tho world to ' tack war; so old is It, but It is so ceneraP" that It should not need defense Warriors do not sit around In their cluM and tell how they aro going to do It. w dlers do not go to tho boss and tell him no to run his business. They strike first, ' afterward. Why not? War Is wasteful' So Its naturt. War Is cruel! So is humanltj. War Is M' barous! So Is Industry. War Is brut lng! Of what? Of a civilisation which "M established? Nonsense. . War Is not wasteful. It kills thousand but It does so with a minimum of Every man counts. War Is not cruel, ea to the weak. War Is not barbarous ;" age of refinement and of the highest cuiiu" has followed after var time. All ".;" literature, all high Ideals and noble asput tions are the result of war "War is the father of all things,'' w J Greek. Of good and el alike, because eu war, the chlefest of blessings, has in " of evil. It has its cowards and Its traiw ana us juuia. Obedience, discipline, unselfishness thti pnnmiPRr nt nrtuprthnHB &f3 in iw , of war. As tho world grows W. nJt crrows civilized, wars will stop. Lei u We live In au ungrateful age. an u,,fll'. fill country. Here, without expense V the world's greatest drama 1 being P' , our emotions are stirred more tnau w play, and for a penny! Eah day w q thrill. And yet we cry for peace, inw "rf fight cry for war. We who look on .on j peace. For shame- Who wants your pe" Let us havo war, bloody warl 'S