10 EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, SATUBDAY, JANUARY 29, 191G. -a 4 ) Ml e" ou if BrSr ,'P7 :: i PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CtrtUS It. K. CUIlTlB, ratiiDKtx. "A Cfcsrlea It. Ludlncten,VlcePrtdnt: John C.Mtrtln, Seerttar? und Treasurers rhlllp 6. Collins, John B. VniUsms, Directors. EDITOniAIi DOAnD! Cues It. K, Ccjiis, Chairman. IV It. wnAt.Er....... ...n. ,i ...FjKutlTt Editor JOHN oTmAUTIN.. ...... .General BuTinitt Manactr JE ''''' ' ' ' I((, Published dallr at Pustto Tiuxitn ttnltdlns;, ,, Independence Square, Phlladclpt'a, . X.ora CrNTiut, ..... ...Dread nnd Chestnut Street " Aw.itetrt r". . .......... t ATUNTtd Cltti. .I'rrMWitton nultdlnc New Toiic.tt... ITfl.A. Mfnnrt1ltrtM Tnm- "DrrtoiT.,.., , .. 820 rord Building Hi. Mill ,,, 400 UIODc Democrat nuilinnR Ciltcioo. 1302 Tribune Uulldlne NEWS nunEAt.'Ss tTuniNaTDn IlrjRiuD tiles; nulldlnc Ntif Touk. IlCRtAU. . The Time.i llnlldlni mills iiuxmb... (10 Frlsdrlchstmsse Pitts Duitnu. , .12 Bus Louis la Qrand stmscntPTioN timms Br carrier. l rents per week. lly mall, poitpald outside of Philadelphia, eieept where forelsn posts ,(,,! required, one month. twenty-fUe, cents; ono year. ... threa dollars. All mall subscriptions payable In r advance. '" ' fcoTtcs Subsc-lbers wishing address chatised must 'o sjlta old aa wen as new address. , BEI.t. MOO WALNUT KEYSTCNF, MAIN 80 ' C Jdrei all communication to Evtnina i Jjtdgtr, Indep,tdenoc Square, VhUadtlphta, 6,. - jwtmid at ina fmt.nxrritu ro'dorrici is siscond- 5l class m it. units. (,,. THE AVEItAGE NET PAtD DAILY CinCUL.A- TION OP THE EVENtNO I.CDClEn FOIl DF3EM11EII WAS DS.I85. xrlll .tf j. PHILADEUyilA, SATLIIDAY. JANUAI1Y 29. 1916. -" ' ? ,b9 Some people arc so fond of III luck that they s'lfun half way to meet It. Douglas Jerrold, No ono had to ask who Brandeis Is. A bathtub has been given to "Billy" Sun day. For his vocabulary? .. It will take more than a groat white way anto make Camden resemble InTow York, If . "Y Of tho three "ps," preparedness, prosperity noS.nd peace, the first must precede tho others ."-Just as in tho three "rs." '( Perhaps thoso explosions in tho du Pont '.powder mills were caused by tho heat goncr Ivlfited by friction among tho shareholders. Something to be remembered: There Is no embargo on goods for Philadelphia, and Phil adelphia can transship every pound that comes through for Europe. ' Tho city employes who couldn't make a 'jrnonth's pay last thirty days will now have 'n jOn opportunity to test their ability to stretch it two weeks' salary over a fortnight. Moro than half a million tons of British iu merchant shipping havo been sunk since tho "'beginning of the war. As sho has 20,000,000 "tons left, sho Is still in pretty good shape. - "When you see a blazing thing in the sky Kdinbout the middle of February do not mistake "3t for a Zeppelin dropping bombs. It will bo .only Taylor's comet on its quinquennial visit. jn.ir The rules of tho House of Representatives ,ihust be respected. "Cyclone" Davis has -i been ordered to address the Chair hereafter before he says "Amen." The rule does not apply to the chaplain. Tho report from Washington that the ilo-nlf1T,f Vino pluon flflrmnnv until nnvt aturday to state Anally whether sho Intends b disavow tho attack on tho Lusltania ought be true. The Boy Scouts of Philadelphia have or- ganlzed an employment bureau. There Is -no stopping theso youngsters. Presently , they'll be after honesty In politics and civic '"'improvements and then what will tholr jr-eldcrs do? Ik it The discussion by the men attending the SS Association of College Presidents of Penn II sylvanla developed the fact that abuses in J college athletics can be removed as soon as J ,tho college officials stop talking against them M and begin to act. Tho President will find many believers in preparedness in his audience in Pittsburgh '! tonight; but Mr. Bryan will say that their t enthusiasm ought to ho discounted about as J! "Wilmington powdermakers. Are you getting reauy 10 tei your Dusmesa t, correspondents In other cities know that S I Philadelphia week Is to be observed by the J ''members of the Associated Advertising Clubs Jj throughout the country from February 21 to 28? Mayor Smith has betgun to do his share i by writing to the mayors of all the cities ii Interested. ii ! The ehadow of City Hall seems to be dark enough to cover any amount of theft. Wed J nesday night four motorcars were stolen jj .there, making a "grand" total of eight cars lixthtj week. Two mysteries at least must be jusolved. Tho first Is. What are the police do- lnp in tho neighborhood of tho hall? The jpjecond Is, Why steal cars when they can bo '' bought with so much less risk, and so jjcheaply? nt !ll WtintftViii. Intitnllnnq T'rl,lflnt Xrilsnn lind , la the appointment of Louis D. Brandeis to the Supreme Court bench, he certainly had 'no desire to be obscure. Mr. Brandeis stand j on nearly every matter of public Importance Is not only known, It has been hammered in ifcy the legal activities of this extraordinary ! person, for many years. There will be objec- ! tions and there will be praise for this ap pointment. But there will be no doubts. 1 Hospital statistics were not needed to prove that the grip epidemic is passing. But the ;ngures are interesting, .mere were -la cases I'lln the Jefferson Hospital during the week ( CMUIUB uci.uituFi at uuu umy a lit kib wtett 'ending yesterday. The figures for the Eplsco j(pal Hospital Jwero 21 and 9 anti for the )'Frankford Hospital 36 and 3. SY. Joseph's iijhad 81 cases and now has only 7, and the flg Uures at the German Hospital are 55 in the i'llast week of December and 10 "now, and so ijlun throughout the city. i f ' JJ, Six years after its founding, tho Settlement "JMuslo School is to have a building com ;;TOensurate with its neetla. Those six years jijhave been times of unflagging energy on the jjpart of the directors, of tireless enthusiasm iLon the part of those who benefited most by $U6 work. The teaching of music to those "wham fortune shuts out from expensive in jjtiiuctors, and giving of great benefits wlth ttiwt th3 suspicion of indelleate charity, are .' uofalevenienta in thsmsslvee. The greater "liapptus toward musical appreciation which ' ; he Settlement School gives Is of absolute lu to the city Wruver iioulits the generoalty of the j, ucnn people ahuuJd read the reports of '.'ytau'lui-m coliiWa o uujiwy Sot (tie ttiivt I of tho Jewish war sufferers. This city con tributed $50,000 to the young women who stood on the street corners with their collec tion boxes. Fully a million was raised in New York, and Chicago raised between $75,000 and $100,000. Tho comtnlttco esti mates that tho fbtal will not bo far short ot $2,000,000, or an averago of about thrco cents for every man, woman and child. Tho President, who fixed tho date for tho collec tion, gavo $10. "MANY INVENTIONS" "(Soil linth in n dp ninn upright," xnya KcrlrolnntcK, "lint thcr Iinp huukM out in nn j- Intention." The Intention of war lire nninnit tlii-ac. It In eien ponllile tlmt the iit-enent vrnr liecnnie Inrt Itnlile tThcn the Wrlctht lirotliern tnnile their NiieeedN fnl lllalitj, nt Kilty llnuk nnil nhen the ntoilrrn atthmnrlnc yjnx perfected, NO ONE cares, nny more, about the great question ot 18 months ago: "Who started tho war?" It Is tnoro Interesting to speculate ns to who will stop It. It Is more important to decide what caused It. The first crying out ngaltisl Germany came because tho world believed that Germany had caused tho war by her magnificent prep arations for It. Pacifists argued that arma ment drags nntlons into war, ns ono might Insist that If there were no boats there would be no drownings. By this time the world has regained Its balance. It does not believe that things nro the first causes. It knows, had there been no will to conquer, that all the siege guns and all tho Zeppelin In the world wouldn't havo provoked a war. But that Is not all. Why did the war come precisely at tho tlmo It did? Why has It taken precisely Its present course? These things are dependent upon things, upon tho "many Inventions" which tho Preacher wild men havo sought and found. Tho war would havo come :f It had to he fought with battle axes, but it would not have come nt this tlmo. Tho contributing causes of tho great struggle aro tho Inven tions of warfare and a book. Tho book Is tho work of an American. Ad miral A. T. Mahan, who believed that s,ca powcr was tho determining factor In virtually every war. His first book was "Tho Influence of Sea Power on History," and from the moment It was published It became tho text book of the German Kulser and of the British Admiralty. Wllhchn ordered every magnzlnc article of Mahan's translated and given to every officer of his navy. Tho British Ad miralty repeatedly has asserted that Admiral Mahan was the guide of British destinies. Mahan pointed out that tho terrible victories of Napoleon ou tho Continent were nullified nnd made futile by British control of the sea. Ho showed that the same held true in tho Civil War. Before he died ho saw what ho thought was tho beginning of the end for Germany, because Germany had lost the use of the sea. Yet, when tho war began, the Kaiser had no Intention of losing control of the sea, and ho owed his Illusion to two Inventions, the submarlno nnd tho flying machine. A mero comparison of dates will Indicate how subtly and how surely the German directing mind has worked. The first naval program of Ger many was framed In 1893. Tho Kiel Canal was opened two years later, and up to this time a water-power was intended. But In 1901, when France was yielding to the same belief In the submarine, tho Kaiser defied Britain with theso words: "Our future Is on tho water. The more the Germans go upon tho water the better It will be for us." In July of that year the English newspapers told England that France had the most powerful navy In the world, because of her submarines. "Where Is Britain's naval supremacy now?" was a frequent question. Germany has not yet been accused of being blind. When Winston Churchill proposed a ratio of 16 British battleships to 10 German, Admiral von Tlrpltz was reported as agree ing. Why shouldn't ho agree, since, eight months before Germany had passed a bill for a fleet of 20 Zeppelins capable of remaining In flight for 96 hours at a stretch? That was in 1912, Forward from that time German defense centred on the two arms by which tho Kaiser and his councils expected to break England's sea power. It is amusing, in the light of events, to note how Germany b.UUed the world. While Trance announced that she would havo 76 submarines ready at the end of 1914, and England S3, Germany contented herself with the modest word that sho was building "several each year" to add to tho 20 sho had. As for aerial fleets, these wero hardly mentioned. From the moment when OrvlIIe and Wilbur Wright made their successful experiments at Kitty Hawk, from the time when submarines became perfected instruments of destruction, the war became an Immediate thing. It had to be fought whllo Britain ruled the waves, and Germany could creep unawares beneath them or swoop inaccessibly above ships and battlements. Whether Germany wanted to do these things or was compelled to do them, whether she or any other country Is the "aggressor," are separate questions. Tho cer tain thing Is that tho historian of the future will not neglect the inventions of men In selecting tho factors which made for the Great War. ONE DAY IS BETTER THAN NONE BIUGHT and early next Thursday morn ing every Philadelphia Is expected to wake up with the determination to save something. It will be Thrift Day. It does not matter what is saved so long as the saving is effected. Tho small boy may begin by getting dressed for breakfust more quickly than usual and thus save a little time. If ho should discover that ho had more time for play and get Into the habit of speeding up in the morning ho might find when ho gets to be a man that he has more time to work. The mother may use half a spoonful less sugar to sweeten her coffee and then com pute how much she would save In a year if she continued to be so economical. If she has mastered short division she will discover that it would be 182, spoonfuls in ordinary years and 183 in leap year. The father muy go to business without smoking his cigar and plan to reduce hla allowance by 365 a year, which at the rate of 5 cents apiece is 5 per cent, interest on $365. And the daughter may resolve to cut down her expenditures on caramels and face powder. It Is not necessary to suggest any further waya to save. There are few persons who could not put a tidy sum in the bank each year if tbey set about It. Few, however, who begin to practice thrift next Thursday for the first time will held out until Friday. Those who do and keep it up even on every Friday will be surprised to discover how rapidly their savings will ac cumulate and may get into the fixed h-bit of mutting their money work f r them to such good purpose that the uu n tire at SO art a competence. ' Tom Daly's Column As to Urandeis We know of ono trait tchlch alone ' Slioutd account for this man's clcvalion! That having a mind of his own He has something to give to the Xatlon. And tho bono of contention, by tho way, Is usually tho head solidly built of that ma terlal, ijAvan and iw Mimnr Laugh and bo merrv: remember, better the tcorld idii a song, licttcr the world with a btow in the teeth of a wrong. Laugh, for the time Is brief, n thread the length of a span, Laugh and be proud to belong to the. old proud pageant of man, Laugh and bo merry; remember, In o'hlcn time God made heaven and earth, for Joi) Itc took In a rhtme Made them and fitted them full with tlic strong red iclnc of Ills mirth, The splendid fan of the stars, tho joy of the earth. Ho we must laugh and drink from the deep blue cup of the sku. Join the Jubilant song of tho great stars sweeping by: Laugh, and balttr, and work, and drink of the vine outpoured In the dear green earth, the sign of the joy of the Lord, Laugh and be merry together, Ilka brothers aktn, Guesting awhile In the rooms of a beautiful Inn, Glad till thr dancing stops, and the till of the music ends. Laugh till the game Is played, and be you merry, my frlcmU. JOltX MA8VFIELD. That's tho poem from "Tho Story of the Hound House" that C. E. H. dared us to print at the head of our column. romi: COPY. Itnxt VOU henril nhnitl tlin ....... T- ., , Copy Writers' Club, tho Pen Sinn of the, p,irr,i Circle? .Much, rmntery eurrounda ilil nrnni,.. tlon. This much Is known: i :, ,wr,,.lcr" of "n itlnnnlly known successful mnV.r""i,Bi nro c".Blhlp fnr ""mherahlp. Turthor' nETi 'fJi'"?niwn t,m,t ,.ll" '' ln " officers, no will ho held In Philadelphia next June Ad Club Crier, Los Angeles And, besides the mystery, there nre some thing elho surrounding tho organization, such as bad wrltln' and spellln' and some of It are shown above. Also In another paragraph tho name of Wilbur D. Nesblt aro mis spelled. pntv writers of "n itlnnnllv m,t!ay ln soak tho Bpccd-crazcd blurb (Ho 1 feci a sickening thutl), ho drives his car close to the curb And splatters me with mud. Cincinnati Enquirer. And in your strange misuse of "blurb" l ou ve clone a deed that verges On murder. Gee! how you disturb The meaning of G. Burgess. All-Year 'Round Spugs Dear T. D.-As the S. P. U. G. (Society for Prevention of Useless Giving), operates only around Christmas time, why not let It get busy the other 11 montlm ns n Society for Polscmlmr Useless Ginks? Their first Job might be to yislt haberdasheries and inject rough on rats Into tho persons behind tho counters who will insist, when showing neckties, in snatching them out of one's hands, and nfter wrapping around their dirty forefinger, concoct a fearful looking knot, mumbling something about tho "pretty effect." Probably som of your other constant readers can suggest other undesirables who could bo eliminated to the general piofit of the com munity. Purple Pete. "Before tho Doctor Comes" Dear Sir Can you diagnose theso symptoms? A searing flame lights my very brain, My pulse beats hard and fast; I long for the ease of the cooling breeze Of the springtimes that have passed. And the Icy breath that comes with death In the shadow of fir and pine, But ndds to the pain of the mortal flame Whose fingers clutch my spine. I can't figure out what It's all about I'm either in Ioe, or I'm ulck; I've known love's ways In my youthful days D'ja think I'm getting tho grip? Yours, In distress, JO. Your symptoms indicate a very serious condition. Your nttempts to rhyme "flamo" with "brain" and again with "pain" might bo merely an acuto lapsus auriculae, but "blck" and "grip" O! my poor, dear fellow, nothing but a steady diet of prose will Bave you. Served Him Right He thought he'd ho shrewd And marry for money, Well, now he's beshrewed Ha! Isn't that funny? 'IHICK AS MOSqi'lTOKS TOO TIIINI "The lakes nro freezed tight, and skaters are as thick as mosquitoes on a hot summer's night," says the Camden Courier. This Is not only bad grammar, but hyperbole as well. Preferable Though poverty is nowise base I'd rather, I'm afraid, Bo guilty of tho deep disgrace Of riches made In trade. Hick. Dear T. D In thanking; jou for your commendation of my verses on "Seeta Itlia," let ma tell you a Joke ou jouraelf. You must know, as a starter, that what ever gift 1 hae ln tha v.ay of Italian dialect phraslne has been developed entirely through a close study of jour "Cansonl " Iteieml), I recited In public one of my tery best Imitations of our "Giuseppe da Ilarber" being Introduced to tho audience as the "man who re cites what he writes." As I took my seat, a knonlne Inciiwduul edged toward me and whispered. "Mr Q'I.oufihlln, purdon me, but there's a guy conducting a column In the L:Kl.u Lkkolu every day who Is coby. Ing your stuff. You ought to get after him." . Dan O'JAUsblla. Jflnxima of tc gouf 3nst On Ye btartllur Surprises In Ye Natural Order, "Funny men" are dull; Fighting men are gentle men; Others are most empty when -They are pretty full, Yonder sad-facd gent Generates hilarity; ' And Familiarity Sometimes breeds content. A. Ai HOW CAN HE WHEN HE'S DEAD? Dear Jlr Thomas B. Hill remarks in the interesting extract from his valuable com pendium of etiquette, which you print, that the fork instead of the knife should be used in conveying food to the mouth because the food is not so liable to fall from the fork. Do you think that he will issue revised in structions when the leguminous experi menter has succeeded In developing a breed ut square peus and rectangular beans? garget &&$ MWZ tbAlttgbj, CONGRESSMAN MANN DROPS NO STITCHES Became a National Figure Through Mastery of Details Started Out From the Famous Lit tle Red Schoolhouse I T ISN'T only the President who Is nble to change his mind. Philosophers, from tlmo Immemorial, have set tho seal of approval, as It Is called, on tho act or process of changing one's mind; but not ull of us arc philosophers. Sc sometimes It seems that n President's lot may not bo an entirely happy ono. Tills seems true, more or loss, of Congress men. And, ln, certain con cclvablo nnd actual cir cumstances, of a Minority Lender. Jlr. Mann roso tho other day nnd ex pressed his views on tho subject now chiefly en grossing tho interest of "JIM" MANN. tl0 country. Ono com mentator remarked on "tho patriotic speech of Mr. Mann, of Illinois, for non-partisan support of preparedness," another on Mann's "crafty utterances," and still another writer described tho speech ns an out-and-out bid for tho pro Gcrmnn vote of Congressman Mann's homo district. Yet only ln a frenzied Imagination aro England and Germany tho horns of our Amerlcnn dilemma. There's only a straight course of American duty. So Minority Leader Mann, known heretofore as a "small army and navy man," roso in his seat nnd said: "Mr. Speaker, In tho quletudo of my garden last summer and autumn I reached certain conclusions which I have hes itated to express, thinking that I might modify them. But ns tlmo has gone on and events havo occurred, It has seemed to mo oven moro certain that my conclusions were right than when I first reached them: and I think, In justlco to myself and, I hope, with some slight benefit to my country, I ought to express those conclusions to tho House." Ho did express those conclusions to the Houso and to his country. Tho Illinois Congress man, the so-called "titular head of tho Ilc publlcan party," evidently sees something else In minority leadership than service as tho Administration's thorn In the flesh. Mann's Favorite Words His cordial support of ample preparedness, be It noted, comes from a man whoso favor lto words aro said to bo "I object." Tho point was reached long ago where that constant Iteration and reiteration, "I object," convinced Congressmen that the Illinolslan's vocal cords would atrophy If he didn't say it several times a day. Mann used to be regarded as one of Uncle Joe's lieutenants, but Uncle Joe had to admit that ho couldn't make tho fellow mind. Mann was a Ueutennnt of latitude, and when he chose would object to Cannon himself. Bvon his enemies quoted the poet thus: "No favor sways him and no fear shall awe." And tho Cannonltcs smiled sadly on occa sion, "Oh, well, Jim must havo his little fun." And so saying spoke truly. Speaker Clark: "I always thought that I was the most Industrious man on earth until I met Congressman Mann. He is tho most industrious, persistent, pestiferous man I ever met. He Is the ablest parliamentarian on tho American continent and the ablest Republican." Taft called hlrn the "ablest parliamentarian of tho age." An anonymous journalist: "He Is an able citizen, with a big grasp on public questions, a clear view of the needs of the country and a mind that works accurately and quickly. He talks well, is an adroit debater and a persistent and Intelligent investigator. He takes part in most of the big discussions in tho House, and tackles anybody or anything that comes along." "In the quletudo of my garden," said Mr. Mann in his preparedness speech this week, 'I reached certain conclusions." Before Con gress opened he had spoken of the need ot preparedness, of national organization for the emergency of war, and his recent speech was Important partly on account of the time and the place, and especially in view of tho Presi dent's tour. But in that garden he has dpne a good deal of thinking. Ho has a farm In the corporate limits of Chicago, and In vaca tion time, if the weather Is anywhere near favorable, he's out in the garden at 6.-30 In the morning with rake or hoe or spade. Aa evening approaches he goes down to Lake Michigan for a swim. He likes the roads, afoot or aboard his automobile; likes to be out ot doors. He was born on .an Illinois farm Ave years before the Civil War began. Not Just a farm, but the farm of an enter prising nurseryman- The boy grew up with trees and flowers and bushes and shrubs and such like things They were companions to ium, and he loves them still. He wfe& (4 tho famous hule red. Behoof 4 ALL READY house. At 20 ho was graduated from the University of Illinois. After completing his course In tho Union College of Law ho went to Hydo Park and married and opened a law office. When Hydo Park wns adopted by Chicago, Mnnn becamo Us first representa tive on tho Chicago Board ot Aldermen. In dustry nnd sociability won him a reputation ln tho community, and ho was soon sent to Congress. That was In 1897. Mann's self written biography In tho Congressional Di rectory Is perhaps the briefest In tho book: "James It. Mann, Republican, of Chicago, was born In 18SC: was cicctcd to tho Fifty fifth and each succeeding Congress." Never Caught Napping Congressman Mann's personality 1ms not appealed to tho Imagination of tho country. Ho Is not ono of the got-fnmous-qulck per sonages, but, ns a notional figure, the product of the process of hustle nnd attention to de tail and political efficiency. That Is the method that brought Piatt and Quay and Cameron Into power, also tho method followed by Lodge and noot. Mann is about the most careful attondcr to details that Congress has ever known. Ho is never caught napping Ho drops no stitches. Ho Is always In his seat ln tho House when tho House Is ln ses sion. Fewer absence marks have been chalked up against him than against any other Congressman ln tho last quarter of a century nt least. He hits gone ahead, care fully and laboriously attending to his duties. Duty ho spells with a capital D. Somebody has called him, with some flippancy, tho Sov ereign Grand Commander of tho Congres sional Sacred Sense of Duty Association. It's something to havo a senso of duty In Con gress, so we'll let tho flippancy pass without remark. Mann doesn't caro much about tho galleries. Ho has little use for anything theatrical, whether on tho stage or In Congress. Straight ahead with the business In hand Is his motto. If tho House gets Into an uproar, as It some times does, with members hollering at ono another, Mnnn, If he has started out to make a speech, makes that speech. Ho walks over to tho stenographers and delivers tho speech to them, and If tho other folks don't want to listen they don't havo to. Usually, however," they listen not because of his great ora torical gifts, but because thoy know Mann has gathered some Interesting and Important facts and has done some thinking about them before ho gets up. Sometimes ho Is animated In delivering an address, sometimes not. Gen erally tho address Is peppered and salted with a sprinkling of sarcasm and several grains of sardonic humor. "A Shavian smile, a Shavian beard and a Shavian tongue," and ho never loses his temper. NATIONAL POINT OP VIEW Universal military education would be n social disciplinarian. It would bring youth early to a maturity of Ideas of responsibility. It would consolidate tho conceptions of duty, law and nationality, Chicago Tribune. Tho people of the West and the South will not stand for this action by tho present Ad ministration or any other Administration of any party. They believe In tho gteenbacks, and want more of thoin instead of less, Cin cinnati Enquirer, Tho majority docs not always control expendi tures, and, not controlling, It is tempted to shirk responsibility. Under a budget system, this responsibility would be defined, so that the majoilty could neither evade it nor permit Congressmen to abuse their privileges. Indian apolis News. Blectlons aro not stolen from tha good citi zens by bad citizens, but nro handed over to bad citizens by tho good citizens. Far every illegal vote caet for a bad candidate or a bad "crowd" there are hundreds of good people's votes cast for the bad candidate and tho bad "crowd." Kansas City Journal. It Is an opportune time to create a com mission of experts, as free as possible ot parti san influences and of preconceived theories, whose duty shall be to put schedules under the microscope and advise Congress as to changes which should be made In order to bring the tariff law into tho service of every American. Cleveland Plain Dealer. EMMA GOLDMAN To the Editor of Evening Ledger: Sir In Its article reporting Emma Goldman's lecture on Tuesday ou the "Misconceptions of Free Love," the Evening, Ledour deserves to be heartily applauded for raising Itself above the low standard of veracity followed by most newspapers In covering Miss Goldman's lec tures. Philadelphia should congratulate itself upon having a newspaper that is unafraid to truthfully report the lectures of a woman who Is so sedulously misquoted. Emma Goldman is beyond doubt one ot America's most brilliant women, but as the chief exponent In this country of a philosophy that Is milltantly adverse to most of our ac cepted doctrines of life sho has always been subject to a malicious campaign of libel. Were it not for the antipathy that anarchism holds for law based on force pr vlolenco newspapers throughout the country would in all probability have long ago been forced to stop this un called for method of opposition. It would be well for tbo community If all Its newspapers would meet the hUh standard of journalism which has been tot by the Evknino Ledokk. And if, because of economic or social policies, they find themselves unable to truth fully report a radical address or lecture, let them follow only the only alternative of which this standard permits--make no report at all. Pteiladelghl January. il,& LOUIS BRANDEIS, "PEOPLE'S LAWYER".?. . Jew Named as Successor to Justice Lamar Has Never Held Public Office His Own Views of His Work fTUin Jew Is intense. Louis D. Brandclj - has been described as nn Intenso altruist Ho has been described ln other terms. He lias been culled tho worst and tho best names pretty nearly that can bo set in type,. Ho is much hated, much loved. Ho comes of Idealistic J stock. Ills maternal 1 grandfather took an ac- ' tive part In Poland1! struggle for freedom ltt ( 1S30. His father, a small manufacturer, partjcl. ' patrd ln the Bohemlaa'"' movement of 1848. Ha later moved out of Bo hemln. and camo to : I,. D. HIIANDi:iS. America. Louis was born v in Louisville, Ky In 1SB6. In 1872 the Branded family went to Europe and Louis was trained with German thoroughness In a roalschuleln ) Dresden. Ho never had a college education, so named. But ho wont through Harvard law School in two years, and tho authorities had to suspend tho rules In order to let him graduate. Then he took a year's post-gra4-uato course. Tho Civil War had played havoc with tho Brandeis fortunes, and Louis earned his way through the law school by tutoring. He had $1QOO left. Some time after graduation ho was elected nn honorary mem ber of Phi Beta Kappa. Brandeis began practice In St Louis, but soon moved to Boston. There ho speedily won n high reputation ns a lawyer. But as 1 his reputation ns "tho people's lawyer" grew- his popularity declined in somo quarters and A inoreaseu in otners, until 110 ucl-uiuu uiuuu-tsj jeet of moro bitter denunciation and enthusl- astlo praise than is usually tho lot of nnyt ono man. . Problems as His Teachers Peoplo havo said so many different thlnsi j nbout Brandeis that perhaps It may bo in- 5 foresting to quoto hero scmo of tho things he-; has said about himself, his work ana nu 1. ..it-... a i..i .n... v. lino fMitifl tlmn fnrm3 4 many tasks, ho replied: "I havo learned ho JJ to work with others. As a beginner I toolcJj any honorable business that offered. I hay -walked ten miles to collect a ?10 collection , nrrnnnt. Tint T havo never wanted to con- i tlnuo in nny lino of legal work longer than I K found It instructive. When tho development 1 It afforded ceased I withdrew, turning th j Job over to somo Junior, over whom I merely i kept sympathetic watch." Ho disclaims having a completo philosophy of life. "I um not n doctrinaire," he says., "My habit of mind has been to move from ono problem to another, giving to eacn, wans If la linfnrn tlin ,11V undivided StUdi' I ftOt tt Democrat, but I havo laid most stress on the-"; lltUn fl. nivn men a freo field. .ITOViu equality of opportunity and wo attain thj ma n.inii works bv "hunches," tiulckljVd "Tho right or wrong in a case Is evident to jj mi. nt n piniico. ns soon as I havo the laClJ.iJ Then it is only a task of arranging tha fact and digging out tho law.' Ho belloves in property rights! "The Fed eral Constitution," ho thinks, "needs pot'l bo amended. Nor should our Judges M courts be ussailed. Our Judges ure as m' as you can make men." Further "Laurnas always been a narrowing, consen atUlos pro fession. In England it was always ""' a Tory Government to find great lawyers NT i...ni.,i m i,f tr.. n T.ihfrni Governinn it u lianl. Ami sn it has been througHous , history. Nearly all of England's great Uw yers woro Tories." . The tendency, as Brandeis sees It. steadily toward increasing governmental crag . 1 rnui l ..,,.-, Vin onfllll ttS Well Hj nK..alnnt lnnn..on AnnroOtll fit! Of tllO IRUl J vldual, against which government Is an signed to protect Its citizens, Is no WMj physical oppression, but a more subtle " of social and industrial oppression. The -..i.n,in,.u ,a i,ntii must receive ao5 quate legal expression. The people feel th9 Inconsistency existing today "Dctw . Htical democracy and industrial absolu'r3 Tho people aro "beginning to douui u""3 there is really a justification for the urea Inequalities In the distribution 01 ""' T, ji.. !,.. 1.1.1 nnhlll 0.iCC. vn-.i nniu nni tifo" hn once said, 'And trj short enough. Why waste It on thins Ml I don't want most? I don't want prtw ,,-.,. mnat T ivnnt to be frC" AnlJ ...t. T.nnI,l tooo nalrixl fnr 111 PI" " . ,-. -, . 1, , f. west .na Ariiii ..,ij.i - oart he repltea. "Thert U no 1 A' oX a plan ot mine," 1 ,-t, "dj- J I t n&,7