y,KHf R EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1914. Bfc -I' m l'MMliKMWIilllHlllaMWpMW ' v '. -" fit' '' sb P -:-i ft & S i ''-& Itirtimii) jffi 'HHrasffi?" ft Po atei W i HW" $acr PtlBUC LEDGER. COMPANY ctmrs ii. K. ct;tiTis, rtwimtst. Geo. W. Ortm. Heeretftry ; John r. Martin, Treasurer II. Lndington. FhMp 8. Collins, John S, Wl Htw, Directory BDWottUt,OAnD: ' drvtin tf If rtrBtn rnlHA JfclvHAhBt' ftttetilltre Maltor 0, JMAnTlM .General foulness Maneger Wbllshed dally at Pcntto Limistt imildlnff, tneVnnffn 9taMr fMI.lJnMa ti tfcidMt,bit:ttiut. Bread and Chestnut Btreeta ' AtWijge Cm PrrM-Vnlm BulMlna 5ff TSttit ITO-A. Mr trepolltan Tower CKltUe SlTHWtto Insurance Iluttdlnir KWK 8 Watetloo Place, Pall Mull, 8. Vf. NKWSBUIU3Att8i riWSCj9 Bluett; The Pnlriot TJul Win WAiaSior IlnnaAi; The 1'eU llulldlnS Ntsw res niij tm rimes Building Bmr.1 B8SAtj . no FriertrlehstratM lost, ntrRB a Pnll itntt Bast, 8. W. mis Mcfclt) ! Ilua Louie la Uratul H& subscription teium Arrty, fojUi.T Ostt, lx rents. a of Philadelphia, except wh Ijred, Dni.t Onm, on month, By mall. nostniiM ro forelrn pomiiirs I rwiuli twenty-five. eenmt DjItLt OVI.T on Jltt Ost.T, on year, three dollars. erlptloitii payable In advance. jiii i mall aub BEIX, 3000 WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 3000 I W A.ddn all communication io Evening Latgir, tndtstndencis Squan, rMlaMpMa. ' i. i . I xntcikb at ins ritiUrirxrnu ros-rorricu ax bpcond- ' CLASH MA It, lUTTtn. ' " " - j i .. PHILADELPHIA. SATUHUAY, 1WVEMDEII 21, 1914. Cniel Humor of n Statesman -, COUNCILMAN1 CHAItt.ES SKGEU Is too KJ busy to look at pictures allowing typical Scenes lit tho slum district, for Councilman Hcgor, It seems, Is a humorist and a wit, ns his acquaintances would havo discovered long ago had they not taken him so seriously, Yps, Jlr. Soger Is a humorist do luxe. Listen to him whllo ho explains "without cracking a srnllo that tho Legislature of Pennsylvania did not know what It was doing when It passed tho housing law, and tho 'Governor was deluded when ho signed It; wherefore, ' that tho dignity of government may bo pro nerved, ho and his fellow Councllmon, states men extraordinary, will modify tho mensuro and sco that Us "drastic" provisions do not go Into effect, A law which provides that every living . room must havo a window Is obviously "dras tic" And who oro tho poor that they should ejepoct their roofs, when thoy havo tiny, not tb leak? Really, tenement dwellers might bo nblo to resist tuberculosis In habltablo quar ters, and what would life bo without funerals to break In on tho dull monotony? Mr. Segcr reasons Hko a buzz saw nnd an undertaker's assistant. How different from Mr. Soger Is Mr. rtans loy, presldont of Select Council! Mr. Ransloy had tlmo to look at two pictures, but "re fused to bo drawn Into print." Tho avoldanco of publicity has becomo ono of tho greatest problems with which our public mon havo to contend. They will not "leak" even If tene ment houses do. A gentleman suggests that If somo of tho Councllmen spent a few days and nights ln flldo of tho houses In tho slums they might quickly chango their minds. Such an ex perience would bo Instructive, of course, but order from tho Organization, wo surmise, would bo ton times more effective. Fair IJlay for City Employes THAT the interest of Mayor Blankonburg In tho city's omploycd Is equal to his In terest In tho unemployed of Philadelphia Is shown In a message to Councils. Tho Mayor seeks tho passage of an ordinance providing for tho payment of the regular wages of per diem employes whenever they are absent from work on legal holidays, or on account of Injury or sickness, and providing also for a -week'a annual vacation under pay. In a further message ho requests legislation Which would rellovo tho Society for Organiz ing' Charity of tho financial burden of con ducting tho two "Wayfarers' Lodges. In sup port of this recommendation he urges that the municipality lias dono too little In aid of those temporarily out of employment. Calling- upon Councils to pass tho ordinance providlne for tho substitution of gas for gaso line lamps, tho Mayor includes among the reasons for Immediate action the fact that digging the trenches and making tho plpo connections would give employment to a largo number of men now out of work. In a variety of ways ho has shown tho same con- "aideration for the laborers who need Jobs, or, naving Jobs, need fairer treatment. Osborne: "Warden Instead of Prisoner TROUBLE-RIDDEN Sing Sing is to be put In the hands of a practical student of prison, reform. From gross mismanagement which had brought rebellion among1 tho pris oners, and very nearly complete demoraliza tion, it is to turn to a reglmo of enlightened , prison, management under Thomas Mott Os fcorne. No gTeat prison in America has yet beon , eiven such a trial of the "new penology" un der so well reputed an advocate of prison . reform. Mr. Osborne is mora than an acad emician. Last fall he put himself through n. week of imprisonment at Auburn to learn the practical effects of discipline and punish ment as then dispensed. Ho makes no con cealment of his intention to alter a great deal or tho antiquated and cruel routine of Slnff Sing. In the face of the demoralization in Sing Sing at present, it will be no surprise if Mr. Qsborno fails, Yet the fact that the "new penolosy" Js getting anything but a fair trial will mean only the mora credit for It if it succeeds. Suffragists to Play tho Game UtrUltt0 F KT0W and then a political result Is obtained - J.N by a spontaneous uprising of the people. fiut wi a 2un gffiouuauuu ia ueoBtiimi io auc- eeaa. Male reformers have not yet learned that they must meet Byatein with system, nd that great ends aro seldom achieved and yirely retained by spasmodic or hysterical ;airts. : -; Sagacious plans have . Just been made by Suffragists of Pennsylvania to create an - rjfanteatlon as thorough and effective as any that the politicians have ever made. They w(U raise $160,000 and assign duties to 60,000 iirra8B, The State will be divided into 13 "ltrits with 13 leaders. The 67 counties will (eh have a ohalrmanj every city, borough, swfwliip or rural district will be under an eitfwtlve; each ward and wen eaah polling tiiktelot will have a worker; indeed, the entire iwifa voting population will be divided into imlte tt 19. and eaah 19 men will have a suf- itsW aU&ofetd whw duty It shall be ta tiM the individuals and sew re thir If thla plan la carried out the Issue b in doubt. The Crime of Being a Commuter ;iff CHAKLES LAWB could write as linuior jL UU JMay upou "l'k iucocvHiiturvcan Arla- :te $Mm Beats Ha4,u what coU4 U not MJ uuou tb MtJet, "9b Otima at CteouHuter'T Thousand eJWty maa r)w miiMM & : MKaHisEr'rflE MEH - ' LeKStV K2 -...s .-fcJ!.--si country, bteauso of their own frayed nerves and mined digestions, or because of tho frailty of. their wires, or tho need of frosh air and space for exercise for their growing chil dren. Kveti where physical necessity has not been laid upon them, a temperamental" con straint has led them out Where they can hear the birds and see green grass, and grow flow ers and know that there are still stars In tho sky. For years the railroads have encouraged this trend. Now the necessities of tho men who need the heallnn of God's meat Unspoiled world will be lined or their preference penalized. No wonder they feel the Increase of rates to bo utiJtiBt, and that thoy stand In rovolt against the Imposition. For many of them, particularly those who havo children who must come Into tho city to school, tho In crease Is big enough to blot out tho bluo sky, wither the flowers and drive them back to the Imprisoning tcnomenls of tho noisy, nar row nnd beautllees streets. Tho country may linger In their dreams, their hearts may hun ger for It, but the rallrond toll will be an In surmountable barrier. The Cily Holds the Club PHILADELPHIA Is now In a position to establish adequate rapid transit fnulll tiers Director Taylor. Tho Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company cannot survlvo the ruinous competition of an Independently oporntcd nnd city-owned high speed system. Such n solution of the problem would wlpo out tho valuo of tho Union Trac tion Company, destroy tho largo roventto yield to Its stockholders and leavo Its property a whlto elephant on Its handa". To prevent so calamitous nn Issue, tho Union Traction Company, through tho Phila delphia Rapid Transit Company, Is offered terms that protect It absolutely. Tho stock holders nro not being nsked to sacrifice any thing; on the contrary, they nro being urged not to commit liarn-klrl. So obvious nro tho benefits lo bo derived by tho Union Traction Company from tho ar rangement, and so apparent Is Its helpless ness In enso tho city goes abend with tho program anyhow, Hint the roluctnnco of cer tain stockholders to participate In tho pro posal can bo based only on tho assumption that In somo way tho cntlro rapid transit schema may bo defeated and Philadelphia left for nnother decado with wholly Inade quate transit facilities. Such nn assumption Is absurd In view of tho status of public sentiment. No Councils would daro fall to meet tho people's wishes on this Issue. By tho very forco of circumstances tho city holds a club over tho Union Traction Company, a club not of Us making, but nono tho less real on that account. Tho Union Traction Company faces tho alternative of coming In or being frozen to death on tho outside. Progress nnd prosperity nro forcing themsolves down Us throat. But why delay? Tho Union Traction has had ample tlmo In which to decide Thoro should bo no further hesitation. Tho city Is restive. It wants to sco tho dirt fly; It wants to sec tho beginning of tho Greater Philadel phia. If the Union Traction Company docs not act within a specified period, Councils should Ignore It entirely and get down to business. Put a Full Cargo in the Orn A CENTRAL committee In Now York an nounces that 17,000 tons of food havo been sent to Belgium, thnt 30,000 moro nro now afloat, and that 40,800 are In sight. And yot "In splto of tho subscriptions to tho Bolglan relief funds, the efforts of tho Rockofellor Foundation and of many other organizations at work In the "West, Belgium cannot bo fed at this pacp." The terrible fact stares America In tho face that tho stricken country will need half a mil lion tons of food before spring. It Is no tlmo for lying back on tho oars. One ship Is gone, but tho second should bo flflcd quickly and mndo ready for sea. Philadelphia must bo truo to its traditions of two centuries of wholesomo generosity. Saving the Saloon From Within mi JLs HE saloon3 must reform from within or be so drastically dealt with by statuto as to suffer something very closo to confiscation. Nobody knows this better than tho saloon men themsolves. Whllo California wlno In terests plan a "clean-up" campaign, the Na tional Browors' Association, In annual con vention at New Orleans, speaks as unmistak ably for measures of reform to savo the beer trafllc. President Schmidt, of Philadelphia, struck tho keynote of tho meeting In his plea for the "bier hallo" of Europe. The selling of malt liquor Is a very different matter from tho "boozo business"; tho drinking of beer and alo, from the drinking of spirituous liquors. Presldont Schmidt wants to seo tho shutters, tho blinds and alloy entrances torn away, tho saloon mado ns open and friendly a place of general refreshment ns a soda foun tain. Nothing elso will savo It. Joy-tnkers From Fun-makers HAPPINESS is tho inalienable right of every one. Sorrow, sadness, gloom, pain and misfortuno must come, but it wast never the Intention of the Creator that thoy should dominate life. The capacity for happiness, always found In little children, should persist through each succeeding ago. Men and women who accept a melancholy theory of living and only snatch a furtive Joy now and then are wronging themselvos and others. To take tho ills as exceptional and to bear them bravely, but believing always that happiness belongs by birth to all and is obtainable by all, is the spirit each should cultivate. Among the indispensable benefactors of hu manlty, not the least are the fun-makers. We can ill afford to lose one of them, especially when his humor was so clean, healthy and In vigorating as that of Robert Burdette. His genial wit filled multitudes of homes with wholesome merriment, and he pricked many a bubble of human vanity with good-natured satire. The man who teaches others to see the beauty and feel the Joy of living has made a distinct contribution to his age. If Mr. McAdoo 1 elated over the new cur rency system, isn't that satisfaction enough for the rest of the country? Anybody can guess whleh part of Napo leon's earr Villa Is thinking of as he marches on Waxioo City, taking n Carrania's ex-soldiftni on the way. Th weather of the pat 24 hours has hen spaetaular from tho profewional point of view, at any rate. The South went 1 far p freoaliur ". aaA white PWtadsJnhJa sut feredwltb br, SaMport, Me., shot up to H and Beyr to K , Chair aunt Cw thinks the Republican Or ganisation needs bin'nUu mug in Penn sylvania. Hector brumuduvn replies by ask in hW CitlwajT ConintiUe ty continue la of ftce in order to givo bint the Utckin of a mmS 1idMant Santo. Ha may need it a ;.-.,'.- ftfe&feiafeisaki ijfci?,.. ., iMi...- waiVBHsjtnnnsa"NSBiv3?' BiastsOHHiv SUBURBIA, PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE, IN ALL ITS INFINITE VARIETY Living in the Open a Professorial Cure for Slums and a Pleasant Personal Dissipation Will the Futuro Sec One Big City or Ono Big Suburb? Tho Endless Joys of "Roadtown." By KENNETH MACGOWAN HOltACK, so far as we moderns can learn, never commuted. Ho loved his Sabine farm with tho passion of a denizen of. the Main Lino. Luxurious as It was, it rejoiced In no moro of "all tho modern conveniences" tlinn any dwelling in Jcnkliitown or Cynwyd. Vet ho did not dosort It dally for tho marts and thentrcs of Rome. And so Micro was no commuters' crisis In thoso days over a threatened ralso In railroad rales. But it tho commuter and his problems nro a very modern matter, thoy nro Important and absorbing In Invorso ratio to their ngo. Whllo tho ordinary citizen feels that ho wants a bit of open nlr nnd acts on that feeling, tho professors aro busy backing him up with the best of reasons. University stu donts can toko no course In city government without a lengthy disquisition on tho evils of urban housing conditions and tho neces sity of drawing tho poor out Into the suburbs by lowering tho transit rates and increasing tho facilities. Somo of tho professors find themselves Indorsing municipal ownership as a means of bringing down fares and di recting, dollberntoly and wisely, the planting of tho human snpllugR out In the open where there Is a real clmnco of lite. At this point, hoWovcr ns tho professors nro forced to admit tho real cstnto man steps in. If ho owns property in tho slums, ho objocts to tho city "going In for rnnk paternalism." If ho owns property In tho suburbs, ho puts up his prlco when rapid transit brings Ills' land into hnbltnblo rango. Meanwhllo tho city has to faco tho fact that it has reduced tho assessed valuo of Us own urban nrea, nnd Increased that of outsldo villages. Not every city Is rfo luclty ns Phila delphia In having largo portions of tho "suburbs" within Us own limits. Comfortnblo Country Life But what docs tho commuter care? Tho man who discovers that ho wants a llttlo clean air lo breath or a bit of garden to chnso tho bugs off, sets himself down by tho sldo of a railroad or tho end of a subway, and enjoys' life. His Is tho pleasure of green things and a look-off. Ho can mess round with a bit of land and produce n string bean crop or a tennis court. Over there a mllo away ho has a golf courso. If ho owns a car, tho Inviting country roads run right up to his door. And at night ho sleeps after ho gets used to tho unearthly quiet. Just now sleeping porches aro stylish as well ns hygienic. But nils' tlmo tho stylo seems to bo the result of a genuine liking, nnd tho ends of sclenco nro secured by tho ordinary prejudices of man for making him self comfortable. Tho suburbanlto tries tho screen porch somo hot summer night, and after that ho is an open-air victim. His re sistance to tho bad atmosphere of the a-er-ngo bedroom is so broken down that ono night Indoors means a "head" in tho morn ing. Even tho city fellow Is beginning to try It. Tho result in health well, aslc any specialist In lung troubles. Social Sides Of courso there aro drawbacks. Butchers and grocers and even department stores aren't so easy to get at. Schools and doctors' nre a llttlo of a problem. Worse still, all that communal fellowship of the city goes glimmering. Man loses a bit as a social animal. Certainly, theatre-going Is placed under n handicap. MusoumS nnd libraries aro not to be so easily enjoyed. Thoy are Btlll accessible by long distance, if only tho wholo population doesn't movo out or If thoso who remain aro good enough to pay for these luxuries of tho commuters. But It is such things, as well as tho still laggard transit facilities, that givo the city Us charm. Back in Centennial days, somo now name less person took tlmo by tho forelock with a Utopia that pictured something very closo to present suburban development. He had airships ornamenting tho skies and supple menting tho trains, and ho didn't dreani, with Director Taylor, of high-speed subways. But In the main his outlines were right. He drow present-day Philadelphia. In tho same way, a lot of peoplo nowadays are busy with tho future of suburbia. The results are delightfully and encouragingly diffuse. Somo of them seo a reaction to the cities again. Water-mado olectrlclty will J CURIOSITY SHOP Tho result of careful observations mado nt battlefield hospitals by ono of the lead ing surgical authorities of tho French gives tho relative frequency of wounds not In stantaneously mortal ns: Slight, 60 per cent; sorlous, IB per cent.; vary serious, 25 per cent. Tho experience of recent wars shows the head and the right nrm as tho most frequent lodging places of projectiles. Collop Monday is tho Monday before Shrove Tuesday. The namo refers to the dinner which In somo parts of England Is almost universal on that day. It Is cus tomary to have collops of bacon and eggs for dinner. Go into somo districts In Eng land at dinner time on Collop Monday, nnd you will be sure to be saluted by the smell of fried slices of bacon and eggs. The expression "sardonic smile" Is as old as Homer. It means literally to "grin like a, dog," and bears reference to the hideous contortion of tho facial muscles produced by eating the sardonlan, a plant of Sicily, which was said to screw up the face of the eater, giving It a horrible appearance. Mahan, In his "History of England," says: The island of Sardinia, consisting chiefly of marshes or of mountains, has, from the earliest period to the present beon cursed with a noxious nlr, an Ill cultivated soil, and a scanty population. The convulsions produced by Its poison ous plants gave rise to the expression of "sardonlo smile," which Is as old as Homer. "To meet one in the Duke's "Walk." This is an Invitation to fight a duelt In the vi cinity of Holyrood House, Scotland, there Is a place called the Duke's Walk, bo called from 1U being the favorite promenade of the Duke of York, afterwards King James II, This walk Is said to have been the com mon rendezvous for settling affairs of honor, as the slta of the British Museum was in England. TOE coanc SINGEH The Veil before the mystery of things ihall stir for him with iris and with light; ntiiana mhall have no terror in his slzht i. Nor earth a bond to chafe his urgent winss Wltn sanaais pesii irom w womw vi k"S3 tifea.ll he tread down the altars of their nleht, And stand with SUenee on her breathless height To baar what song the star of morning sings. With perlshtd beauty in his hands as clay, MhaU lie rsstora futurity its dreani. Behold hu feci shall ttXa a heavenly way Of uhurlc silver and of e banting lira, TlU in his hands unsbspta plaaals 1uh, StW murmur froas tha XJoo and the km- $ Stafhax jptfaaO the BflE aad UyMHiJ. Jt oust tho smoko nuisance. Commercial life will settle down to a less hurried way.. There will be more time and appreciation for. the theatre, museum, lecture hall and library, upon which bo much of civilization rests. Some, llko Lady Warwick, building on swift and practically free transit In what they call the Great Stato of tho future, expect tho cities to disperse -into many smaller towns, wllh a very closo interrela tion, By this means they expect to seo the advantages of city llfo tn education and amusement brought to every one's door, even to the farmer's, and the city population put within reach of the fields', Everybody will Hvo in towns nnd everybody will live in suburbia. Philadelphia With Forty Millions Another "dlffuslst," H. O. Wells, goes oven further. These "railway-begotten giant cUIcb" aro "destined to such a process of dissection and diffusion as to amount almost to obliteration." Philadelphia ho thinks, will reach forty millions: but, by aid of wider gaugo and much swifter railroads, as well as motor ways, It will be spread over somo thirty thousand Bquaro miles. Facto ries will not congregate In ono spot. Such business! ns book publishing and a hundred other smaller enterprises will bo operated, by tho aid of cheap telephone and messenger sorvlco, from suburban houses. Tho "city" that remains will bo a centre for great stores and tho fountain head of recreation: "essen tially a bazaar, a great gallery of shops and places of concourso and rendovouz, a pedes trian place, Us pathways reinforced by lifts nnd moving platforms, nnd shielded from tho wenther, and altogether a very spacious, brilliant and cnlortalnlng agglomeration." Ono can't help feeling, howover, that there Is a flaw In Mr. Wells' telescope" It produces nn nffoct of magnification. Railroads of tho futuro may run with tho speed of 200 miles an hour, but that- enforces, rather than alters, tho fact that suburban llfo will ray out llko tho spokes of a wheel In long lines, spreading rapidly away from ono nnothcr. High speed prevents branching: both by tho Imposslbllty of Btops and Blowings down nnd by tho fact that there must bo very thickly nettled strips alorgslde Ho terminals to mako It pay financially. Every mllo out from a city means great areas between tho few spokes of transportation, nnd thoso great areas, If filled, becomo virtual cities' in them solves. If mon then find themselves living In tho crowded llfo that they once left tho cities to avoid, nothing on earth will prevent them from becoming permanent commuters to tho Middle West. Tho Shoestring City Still another vision of futuro suburbia has como out of tho last few years. More re mnrkablo than any of the rest, and far moro bizarre and Impossible-appearing on tho faco of it, Edgar S. Chambloss' "Roadtown" docs take notice of that tendoncy of rapid transit to distribute population In straight lines. Indeed, his scheme seems to havo gono mad on tho subject. For It Is nothing more nor less1 than a city ono houso thick nnd as long ns a river. Yot Edison has donated his cement-pouring patents to Roadtown and the Boyos Monorail has offered Itself os tho moans of transportation. Tho practical part of tho proposal Is )to build these Roadtowns out from tho edgo of a great city; tho Inventor's ideal of seeing it wrlgglo endlessly over hill and dale a city In Itself may bo dropped for the moment. Mr. Chamblcss proposes a sort of Intermina ble row of houses end to end, with a high speed and local subway In thp basement, nlong with sewage, water, gas and electric ity, with factories, stores and common dining rooms on tho first floor, apartments abovo, and on tho long roof n promenade and bicycle path. With all the services of tho city within, It will havo tho fields and woods of tho country stretching beside It, clear to tho next Roadtown. Mr. Chamblcss proposes to wed tho city apartment and the farm house. Tho hopes of suburbia cannot go farther. Meantime, Philadelphia makes a dash for the 6:03 or hangs to a strap for throe-quarters of nn hour with a hopeful eye on Director Taylor. HUM OF HUMAN CITIES "Tho biggest business In Los Angeles" la what tho Los Angoles Express calls the city government. Tho biggest employer, tho big gest purchaser, tho largest agency for pro moting the health, safety and convenience of tho people, the greatest educational insti tution, the greatest provider of recreation the greatest owner of land, buildings and equipment, the greatest builder of material works in this community is the city govern ment Itself, Six million dollars from the general treas ury and four millions moro from Bpeclal as sessments were expended last year to fur nish water, clean streets, inspect milk, con struct sewers and perform the hundreds of other kinds of special service that make ud what wo vaguely think of as the government of tho cltyr To perform this service 4000 officials and omployes are engaged in the 80 or more departments and bureaus. To arrange the work of this vast army; to assign definite duties to each employe and each group of employes; to relate properly the work of each to that of all the others; to prevent overlapping, duplication and confusion of duties and authority; to establish standards of service and distinct lines of responsibility these problems require tho highest type of ability in management. Such problems will not solve themselves. So long as they remain unsolved there wilt be lost motion, waste and Inefficiency in the city's management. The fact is, however, that there Is no cen tral officer or authority whose business it is to mako these adjustments; to insure the smooth running of the municipal machinery. The result Ib Just what It would be in any business .enterprise run without a well de vised ane! well-managed business organiza tion. Of the $10,000,000 a year spent by the city, It la safe to say that 10 per cent. Jl.000.000 Is absolutely wasted. In private business, a ten-mllllon-dollar business would Justify the employment of trie highest ability obtainable In the man agement. The difficulties and technical problems Involved in city government are in no way different from those commonly dealt with In private business. And yet the city'a organization for doing business la unsys tematic, incomplete and defective In moat glarlntr ways. CRISES IN GREAT LIVES The career of AlelbJadea, the Athenian, is one of the most fascinating in all the Greek' annals of heroes. Handsome and rich and ambitious he waa, and undoubtedly arrogant and headstrong. But he attached to him self the popular affectum which waa so Mceeeary at Athena, aad eves when he lost It by his revUeeaiMMui be NimUad an tmnor Jat $xm fc H ?" aIrjt was aftar gB-Sln&iiSE hs had been exiled from Alhetfs that he showed himself n great man. Ho had gono to live with TIsaphernes, tho Persian satrap. Still friendly to the Athenians, ho arranged to help them ny keeping TIsAphcrnes from attacking tnetn. His secret negotiations were not kept in confidence; Intrigue after Intrigue threat ened to placo a pries on his head among Persians and Greeks alike. Alclblades was too gaily impudent to worry about this. Athens had, at his Instigation, jmade Itself into an oligarchy. Then it repudiated him. It was enough to mako a merely selfish man tho enemy of his country forever. Not so with Alclblades. Ho was called to Ramn ntirl nulnrl in land Ihn I1A.VV flGTalllSt tho Athenians. Suddenly exalted by tho !-,,.. r.f l. ,,.llll..,1 nt,lnff nmlllrl hflVO :: j.': "" '.'.v"v .u" .r.";" r- ,iT,,t,i r UtCIl IIIU1U UtlLUIill I HUH llltlV IJ -- his head and make tho attack. But he re fused. His wholo future was nt stako, but ho resolutely turned hln face against tho attack on his country. Ho knew that onco ho sailed ho would disrupt Athons and mako all Greece a prey for Sparta and Persia. It was Alclblades alono who prevented Buch a disaster, and tho fact that ho did It ngalnst his own natural Inclinations adds greater glory to his name. Inaction was tho course of Alclblades in a crisis fraught Hvlth dlro possibilities for all Greece. And inaction was bettor thanxuiy action would have been in that crisis. U VIEWS OF READERS ON TIMELY TOPICS ContrihutionsThat Reflect Public Opin ion on Subjects Important to City, State and Nation. To th$ EdUnr of tH Euenln? Lcdptri Sir Goodwill and gratltudo nlone stir the hearts or tho honest citizens of Philadelphia toward Mayor Blankcnburg in Ills gallant cru sailo against corrupt municipal politics, nnd his term ns Mayor of Philadelphia will slilno resplendent In the annals of this city, n beacon light of hopo to thoso who may In after yearn grow weary In tho fight for honest govern ment. It was loyalty to thin sentiment and not any baser reason, as Intimated by tliftso Interested in giving a wrong impression of her addrtiss, which actuated Mrs. .1. V. Thomas, president of the County Suffrage Society, when alio asked for a confereiH'o of tho Mayor, His Honor's Cabinet, clergymen Interested In organized charities ami members of Select and Common Councils to force the Issuo on the question which had been hurled by sinister Influences In hypocritical rcproiichfulncss nt Mayor Blaukcnburg, viz., the forced unemployment of thousands, who, In all sense of civic respon sibility In thoso who control municipal gov ernment, havo tho right to expect somo action for speedy relief. . "I speak not to disprove what Brutus spoke. But hero 1 am to speak what I do know." At tho conference the County So ciety's prcoldent expected to meet Ills Honor, the Mayor's Cabinet. Select nnd Common Councils, clergymen Interested In organized chanties nnd nowBpniicr men. Nor did sho re ceive any Information which would have made known to her tho fact that there wero not present representatives of all tho bodies whom clic had Invited to bo present. It was to this nudlcnce her petition wns addressed. For, out Blila of Mayor Illankcnburg, Mrs. Thomas wns not nwaro of tho Identity of the other gentle men present. So it was not only unjust but untrue to construe her petition Into nn attack on the Mayor, nnd In thlo matter Mrs. Thomas was not "lll-advlscd," as ono woman crltlo says, but serenely persuaded sho was In tho right. Sho may bo accused of ultra-enthusiasm, "yet enthusiasm Is tho genius of sincer ity, the real nllegory of the luto of Orpheus," and without tho agency of the surrounding atmosphere oven tho luto of Orpheus had ac complished no magical result; but neither can moralists "with axes to grind" nor the merely vulgnrly Insolent sway the crltcrlons of cour ngo and character to any othnr decision than that tho courso she took was tonic to tho apathetic stuto Into which tho question was drifting, tho history of human achievement Is tho record of conflict. I would further add that In the action taken In tho recent meeting of certain officers of the County Society on tho only courso left open for Mrs. Thomas by thoso misrepresentations, her letter of resignation, neither tho sentiment of tlio majority of the Executive Committee nor tho Society as a body was represented. Philadelphia, November 10. SUFFRAGIST. ERROIt OF THE ADMINISTRATION To tho Editor of tho Kvtnino Ltdaer: Sir It Is a principle of true democ racy that a buyer should be as untrammoled nB a seller. Yet Attorney General Gregory pro posed a clinrgo of "Conspiracy" becauso cotton seed was selling nt half tho price of last year. Should cotton seed sell high bocauso it is prin cipally used by the people? Tho Jacobins of the French 'Revolution were tho first to try with wheat to regulato prlco by law. The Standard Oil, In Now Jersoy, was to be pur sued for lowering tho price of oil again In the Interest of tho peoplo. I3urke held that "lawyers nro naturally bud statesmen." Mr. Wilson began as a lawyer, and If ho wishes to forco tho people to pay high prices It may bo because, as Jeremy Bentham says, the "opin ion of lawyers is- that cheap Justice la bad, nnd dear Justlco good." Montaigne says, "Tho world's errors nre chiefly grammatical," and tho Clayton anti-trust act Is mostly remarkable for Us "split infin itives." Yet tho first administrative measure after its passago was a Government cotton pool. Thus confirming Montesquieu: "Of what use in law? Almost all cases are hypothetical and outside of a general rule." LESLIE. CHASE. Atlantic City. November 18. PAYING FOR THE RAILROADS To the Editor of th Evening Ledger: Sir The commuters who aro organizing to protest against tho raise In passenger rated are wasting their time. They should not direct themselves to the railroads, but to that group of hard-headed Individuals now sitting In Wash ington as the Interstate Commerce Commis sion. Let them go there and mako their plea, not for restored passenger tariffs, but for an equitable freight tariff, which will permit the railroads to do their business on a profitable basis. If the Commission had shown sense last July and awarded tho Increase asked for, there would not be this Intolerable condition of af fairs. Somo one has to pay for the railroads. PANTAGRUEL, Philadelphia, .November 19. WANTS J3ETTER TRANSIT SERVICE To the Editor of the Evening Ledger: -. Sir In connection with the proposed tralse of railroad rates for commuters, It Is distress ing that Philadelphia should have suah poor ccnnectlons with its suburbs. For e. distance of five and a half miles we must rldo either 3(t "minutes or more on the surface cars, or else take a train coat Ins: 11 cents. Compare tnis situation wnn jiew low, wnero you can ride a similar distance in the subway for E tonts within about 20 minutes. Would it be possible for Philadelphia to learn something from her neighbor, or might she not be a bit original and try a municipal undertaking- as a real public service? JOHN UNDERHILL. Wayne Junction, November 19. AUTO LINES TO TIIE SUBURBS To the Editor of the Evening Ledger t Bt- In some parts of tho country automo blle busses aro being operated in lieu of trol leys or as competitors to trolleys. Would It not be quite feasible for some of the suburban placaa to eatanlUh suoh routes In competition with the railroads that have so unjustly raised the oommutars,' rates? GRIFFITH THOMAS. Philadelphia, November 80. Open Wall Streot From the Vtm Ywk un. Thsre s goad hope for lh speedy openlna nf all tho Bxehaaaas. The first etsp has been taken and presently, when the euess of the experiment la established, the linanolal world will be ready for another. The consummation to be reached Is the resumption of trading on the Stock' Exchange so that fluidity may be restored lo iuvc&tiuitu securities and lh values tUty revreeaut UntU this occurs business and finance uiuat roiutlu senouate hampered and eoUBXled The event t Mr Mwre nearly la ' i1? . V" ? fcaiiae Knti illn Ii 1 1 il tv Wsa guuBMeasBhsMikm ,. A w !i4t by avert a paaje. I SCRAPPLE Hollo Learning to Work finis dav when Rollo was about 9 yfi" otHlM'Sald to nollrt matter gat It was about tlmo that tho boy was uegm "'when atearfthls. livery-. plcasd, and so expressed himself. Because. If there was anything J",4"0'? I ,,- it foods which ho liked less than ll tho teA" was salt. Therefore, ho reasoned wltii mm self, if 1,1s salt waa all ho was wPft'cd earn, ho could amass enough of that to m him all his life, mere y by work ng between ' Wl JJ n "hc0 was tired of thinking what times, WI1CH "" "J " . ., i io woum into 3 WOUIU 1IKO ID V'V-S " - ,1,-Knfnr,. ivin,n,i) divine nil his reasons, therefore. Hollo said to his father that he wfj glad indeed It was tlmo for him to earn hlH salt, an ho thought, perhaps, ho might uo less of It If ho had to earn It. His father looked nt him earnestly for a tnomenn as though ho was undecided whether to reply to his ltl ""Jj-mMK-o Bomothlng. He decided upon '0tift'!;cf11aJl" nnd bndo Rollo company lilm.--l' rom "Chimes From a Jester's Dells," by tho into Bob' Burdette. The Siren There was a man named Jacques Do Hntnm, Who snug so very well, To henr his volco the festive clam Would crawl out of Us shell. Once, as ho sang pathetic songs In earshot of tho deep, An oyster ducked the catcher's tonga And camo ashore to weep. But sllll ho sang in doleful tone, This operatic lubber. Until tho ocean wavo did moan And e'en tho wlinlo did blubber. Double Trouble "Spell your name!" eald the clerk sharply. Tho wltnoss began: "O, doublo T, I, doublo V, E, doublo L, doublo " , "Waltl" ordered tho clerk; "begin again. Tho witness repeated: "O, doublo T. I. dou ble U, E, doublo L, doublo U, doublo O "What is your name?" Mkctl tho Judge, "My namo, your Honor Is Oltlwoll Wood, nnd I spell it O, doublo T. I. doublo V, E. dou ble L, double V, doublo O, D." Ladles' Homo Journal., A Certain Supply "Why, man, you enn't raise chickens on ground llko this. It's nil rocks." "I know what I'm doing. Brown hna clear ed tho adjoining lot for a truVk patch. Buy a Mine and Help tbc Consumer Somo of tho Mayors at tho recent confer ence tried to piungo tncir cities uuo huuu in teresting occupations ns buying lco cream cones. Why not purchnso a mlno Instead and pcddlo coal at something near producing cost? Watson, tho Needle nnd Thread I found a button in my hash, But when my lro I loud expressed. Tho waiter said my words wcro rash, Tho beef tho cook had used was dressed. Well Done I It is told of a group of actors that thoy wore onco nt tho Lambs' Club on a rainy day and vero feeling very blue. There wasn t a smllo in tho place. Wllllo Collier, tho comedian, camo In, breezy nnd cheerful as a spring lady, and looked nbout. Georgo M. Cohan wns scowling. David Wnrflcld looked llko tho third act of ono of his plays. , , "How nre you?" Collier asked Leo Dletrlch stcln. "Rotton." , . , Collier wont on nnd asked Richard Carlo how ho felt. "None of your business," was tho reply. Seeing that the glooms had como for keeps Collier looked about nnd then with an air of profound relief ho said: "Well, I'm glad to seo tho Ink-well." Somo dayw later an English friend was tell ing tho story of this occurronco to Georgo Arllss, nnd when ho camo to "Woll, I'm glad to seo tho ink-pot," ho didn't seo why "Dis raeli" refused to laugh. Close on Its Heels First Father What? Your son is an un dertaker? Why, I thought you said ho was a doctor. Second Paternal Rolatlvc No; I said that ho followed tho medical profession. Harvard Lampoon. Allies Somo notion of tho harmony with -which Generals Joffro and French work together may bo gained from tho following discovery by J. W. B.: ;JOFFRE : PRE NCH : That Is, they work together, either offens ively or defensively. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Tho New Contraband Macsle Teyte. tiny song-bird, Is back Europe and without her riding- breeches, lritlnns crot them no fttie Bays. Nawi item. from Hark to tho press agent, gleefully gubbllng, "Poor Miss Teyto Is back from tho war; Back from tho war and nngrlly bubbling, 'I can't go out riding ain't it a bore?' " Why did tho Uhlans captu-a her breeches? What had breeches to do with their fight T List to tho tiny songbird's screeches: "They took 'em they took 'em, because they were Teyto." The Tortnro of Silence "I did not think I should live to toll It. "How you must havo suffered!" Another Siamese Twins Evidently For Sale An electric suitable for a lady with two bodies in good condition. Sign on Woodward avenue, Detroit. Tho Popular Course The way of tho transgressor's hard (At least I've heard them say); The path's been packed down, yard by yard, By others on their way. A Rejection Slip Tho Editor's Daughter No, Mr. Perkins", X can never be yours but tho rejection of a man does not necessarily imply that ho Ih lacking in merit. Any one of a number of reasons may render you unsulted to jny present uses. Life. The Tailor Wins . Now, the careless young man's fancy Sadly turns bsfck to the spring. When he bought a suit, and on It Paid the tailor not a thing. Now he needs an outer garment. When the blizzard starts to blow; But tho pallor, when he orders. Mutters, "Pay up what you owe," " The Babbling Fool Emerson, who occasionally said things he hardly meant, onco wrote an epigram to tho general effect that Heaven forgives every thing except awkwardness. This Is a vary true saylntr, because It Indicates how much more Important manners are than morals. Morals can be taught, but manners must bo inherent in a mans soul. It la very easy to be good, hut very hard tp bo graceful, if ono isn't naturally pos sessed of grace, A man may laa4 a wicked life and reform, but there is no case on record where a man led a Ufa lacking lri "it3f ft? rf,rormedV -Children often are "awful llttlo llara" when they are young, yet grow up to be even stupidly truthful--they can t tell a lie even when they should. Whereas children who do not know how to stand like Greek statues, or who. insist on walking bow-legged whan they are young; never grow np to look like Apollo. This U very bad for morals, but H is true. The consequences of this profound and overwhelming revolution In our Ideas of w i?l ls ?" what isn't Important hTllfa. will be above all, that we will stop tiiuhlna gaud, who wiu, efSrsir cZZZZLri'l rac of mttfig! SSffiVi important th tmlm&k- S3flxlsl9HHHtlHsaHiHB&lBBSB Y i Mm 'ill 'Isllll HlliW I W I II