6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established 1831 PUBLISHES? BT THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. 11. J. STACKPOLE, Pres't and Treas'r. F. R. OYSTER, Seoretary. OUB M. STBINMBTZ, Managing Editor. Fußllshed every evening (except Sun day), at the Telegraph Building, 211 Federal Square. Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Building, New York City, Hasbrook, Story 4 Brooks. Western Office. 123 West Madison Street. Chicago, 111., Allen ft Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. Mailed to subscrlberi at 18.00 a year In advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg as second class matter. 'l jjTfS The Association of Amor 'i (filial 'can Advertisers kat ex -1 \iyir amked and certified to 1 1 the circulation of thi» pab (l lication. The figures of circulation 1' { I contained in tho Association's re- 1 11 port only are guaranteed. 1; Assertion of American Advertisers ; ■ •worn dally average for the month el December, 1913 * 22,210 * Average for the year 1018—21,577 Average for the year 1912—21,175 Average for the year 1011—18,851 Average for the year 1010—17,485 • 1 TELEPHONES! Bell » Frlvata Branch Exchange No. 2040. United Business Office. 203. Editorial Room 685. Job Dept. 20J. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JAN. 7 FREE SPEEOH AS the result of a resolution adopted by the American Poli tical Science Association at its tenth annual meeting in Wash ington, there has been considerable discussion in Philadelphia and else where as to tho right of college pro fessors to enjoy liberty of thought and freedom of speech. Thla is a subject upon which every American citizen is arrayed affirma tively, at least as an abstract proposi tion. The right of free speech was written into our Constitution. It was one of the basic purposes of our gov ernment, and It is still one of our dear est prerogatives. However, it was never meant to apply to men's relations with their employers, but merely to men's rela tions with their government. It was not the intention of the framers of our Constitution to compel a man to hire another man who is hostile to him, or to keep on hiring a man after his views and conduct have been such aa to place him entirely out of harmony with tho persons and projects he was chosen to assist. Employes are supposed to repre sent those who employ them. This is a legal as well as an ethical sup position. An individual employer is responsible before the law for any carelessness or negligence or failure of duty on the part of those whom he pays to represent him. Corporations, whether they be com mercial, industrial or educational, are similarly responsible for tho conduct and views of men and women whom they employ. As a whole, the college professors who have come into prom inence politically have done so be cause of their college connection, rather than because of any extraordi nary individual merit. Unless the colleges with which they are identified are prepared as institu tions to indorse their views, it is not only their right, but their duty to rid themselves of instructors who are di rectly or Indirectly misrepresenting them. As a matter of fact, common sense is not at all Incompatible with perfect freedom of speech. The judge on the bench enjoys the same constitutional and legal rights In this particular as the social agitator, yet ho would be universally condemned if he were so far to forget his position as to plunge indiscriminately into the discussion of any and all social and partisan sub jects. As Americans, we expect him to remember the fact that he is a judge. In like manner, we expect a college professor to bear in mind the fact that he Is a college professor, and that he is supposed to instruct the sons of followers of one political faith, as well as of another. If any of these pro fessors feel that their political mission Is larger than their educational mis sion, they should cease to be professors and devote themselves to partisan work. We believe in free speech most thoroughly, but we also believe that there is still some virtue in the pro prieties of life. Skaters on a lake at Ossining, N. Y., found dandelions abloom along the shore. But do not despair, our own Dr. Fagcr may be relied upon to dis cover the first Spring violet. DON'T BE AN OYSTER OHN BOWEN died in his little J mountain home In Fulton county the other day. He was born there, lived all his life there, never mar ried and passed away alone there. A little handful of neighbors followed his body to the grave, and nobody wept. Bowen was a type of tho human oyster. Bright in his youth and giv ing promise of an active, useful life, he suddenly turned recluse, and In stead of going out Into the world to make It yield its good things to him, he settled down to be content with what life brought to him. Scientists tell us that long, long ages ago the oyster had means of lo oomotlon and a little sense. It could move from place to place and went about seeking its own livelihood, mov ing hither and thither as need or de sire prompted. Then en me ti period of ehanne upon the earth. The oyster WEDNESDAY EVENING found it more convenient to limit Its habit. It did so, and the result 1« the oyster of to-day. In its youth it is a free agent, but soon It attaches Itself just above the mud of the stream's bottom or to a sunken log or other obstruction. There It lies with mouth distended, eating such food as the wa ters In their course from higher lands bring constantly down. It has lost Its ability to move. It has just sense enough to close its shell when danger j threatens. It is hardly conscious of its own existence. So it is with the human oyster. Life is progressive. He who would get most from it, give most to it and leave it better than he found it must be ever ready to grasp the opportuni ties that aro constantly presenting themselves, or to make them when they do not come to hand. It is easy to be an oyster. He who follows John Bowen's example may gain ease and avoid trials, temptations and sorrows. But he misses the thrills; he never knows the joys of victories won, of heights attained, of rest after labor and the rainbow colors of dreams come true are not for him. Don't be an oyster. How Huerta would sympathize with President Carpenter. "STUNG" AGAIN THE barefoot boy who steps on the business end of a bee yells quite as loudly as though ho had not been stung innumerable times before, and doubtless the pain is as aijute as when he experienced it for the first time. Probably that is why Dauphin county Democrats are making such a noise over the an nouncement that the local party Boss has given the line fat job of clerk to the poor board to a Socialist. The fact that they have been "stung" re peatedly in the past does not lessen one whit their pain over the pres ent performance. Republicans may be permitted a smile or two over the situation. It is charged that the new clerk never did anything for the Democratic party that did not come within his line of duty as a paid reporter for the Patriot. Yet when the plum dish Is passed around who gets the largert, sweetest fruit? Is it gdven to some worthy Democrat who has honestly striven for the election of the men who have turned the poor board over to the Democrats? No, indeed; it goes to the member of another party. And why? For no other reason than that the Boss of the local Demo cratic machine desires to have his own personal representative in the office of tho poor directors. Mr. Guyer himself is not to be blamed. He is a mere pawn on the political chess-board of the Boss. He was told to transfer his activities from the personally con ducted newspaper to the office of tho poor board, to the end that it, too, fnight be personally conducted, and, like a loyal employe, he has done so. But it must not be forgotten that he does not take office as his own man, but as the personal representative of another who has assumed the dicta torship of the Democratic machine here, even to the point of appointing Socialists to office over the heads of anxious Democrats. In making this selection Directors Charles L. Boyer and Harry A. Wal ters lay themselves open to tho charge of submitting tamely to the dictation of this same Boss. They are plainly "taking- orders" as passively as though they, too, were employes of tho local dictator. But critics should not be too hard on them. "The party wishes it and I am the party," says tho Boss and they jump at tho "party's" command. There was once another arrogant gentleman who delivered himself of tho high sounding declaration. "I am the State." Can it be possible that history in a small way is preparing to re peat? The Government mint experts report that the half-dollar Is no longer popu lar. Now, who put such a fool idea into their heads? Just drop one on a crowded sidewalk If you want the truth üboutit. THE UNDEMOCRATIC DEMOCRACY IT Is a very difficult matter to put your finger on a Democratic prin ciple these days. Democratic prin ciples are being revolutionized and evolutionized and turned inside out so rapidly that the human eye can hardly follow their kaleidoscopic changes. Here is a turn of the wheel from that staunch and tried Democratic or gan, the Philadelphia Record: A special commission appointed by the Secretary of Agriculture at Washington Is going to find out the causes of the high price of beef, but there is a consensus of opinion that the main cause is a growing deficiency of cattle. This is as serted to be a fact by the Beef Trust, and tho high record prices recently paid by the packers for cattle on the hoof would seem to support their contention. Profes sor Severson, of the Pennsylvania State College, says that between the census years lnoo and 1910, while the population of the United States increased 24 per cent, there was a decline of 20 per cent. In the number of our beef cattle. This by itself would be a sufficient explana tion of the phenomena of beef prices. It would Indicate that the supply per capita had decreases i. < about 65 per cent, of the normal. AVhat haß taken place within thf last year to make the Record altei Its views so completely on the sub ject of meat prices? Why, it seems only yesterday that the Record was "pooh poohlng" iden tically this explanation by Republlcar newspapers and government statist! ciana. It was quite confident that the trouble was not with production, but with the machinations of the Beel Trust, and the enormities of the pro tective tariff which barred out Argen tine beef. The Record's present position in this matter Is undoubtedly the correct one, but It is very slow in arriving at It and by confessing it the editor repudiates the cheap food promises or his party. AS EVENING THOUGHT Where'er a noble deed Is wrought, Where'er is spoken a noble thought, our hearts in glad surprise To higher levels rise. ■«—. Longfellow. j Brining (Eljat Tearing up of the, tracks of the trolley line in Meadow lane, which was noted In the columns of the Tele graph last night, may not seem much to the average Harrisburger. but it Is really the passing of one of the very oldest, perhaps the oldest, thorough fares in Pennsylvania's capital city. This ancient highway is to give way to the march of railroad improve ments necessitated by our increasing I freight traffic and before long it will be obliterated and cars will roll and shifters, hump over tracks where homes formerly stood and where the business of the city used to ebb and flow at a rate that would probably surprise the man who is not familiar with Old Harrisburg. or "down town," as the section below Mulberry street used to be known in contradistinction to Sheesloystown. Meadow lane has furnished many an episode for Har risburg and the houses which lined its sides made the homes for ft num ber of people that would rather amaze the mail who lias known it only in Its forlorn condition of the last decade. While once In a while there might have been complaints that some few of its folks were always not law abiding:, yet in the vast majority the lane was tenanted by substantial, hard-working people whose sons and daughters fill responsible places in Harrisburg to-day and who will recall many happy days spent in that por tion of the city. Meadow lane was originally an In dian trail that led to the ford which made Harris' Ferry and which con tinued on out to what is now Pen brook and beyond. The man seeking history from highways and byways has but to look at an old map and find the lane starting at the junction of Front, Paxton and Vine streets, the eastern landing place of the ferrv, the space in front of the old Black Horse tavern, and then to trace the roadway on over the line of the Pennsylvania railroad to what was later Chestnut and other streets and find that, it runs into the Jonestown road, which still reaches down from the bluff just north of Market street to meet Cameron street. Old Jonestown road is now merged ill city streets except for the little portion that sprawls over the hillside, but beyond the city limits it runs on out to the ancient Lebanon county town which gives it its more than century old name. Meadow lane onco had an official extension in the shape of Canal street, which, like the lane, has been all but wiped out by the encroachments of business and survives only on a few signs on the sides of the Hickok works and on old maps or perhaps as a city right of way jealously guarded. Back in the days when Harrisburg was a trading post the "station" of John Harris, the point where Conrad Weiser used to come to talk over the "frontier sit uation" in and about what is now our city, Harris found the Indians using the line of the lane. They used it to come to trade, to cross the river and at ttmeH on errands of grim character. When the town was laid out Meadow lane was preserved because it was there and in use and the old maps show it cutting diagonally across Har risburg, just like Broadway cuts across Manhattan. Meadow lane was used extensively In old times and even fifty years ago was a thoroughfare that was well known for traffic. What made Meadow lane and which Is proving its undoing was traffic. «It started with trade and it will end with trade. The Pennsylvania Railroad people with considerable foresight placed their freight warehouses along its eastern side. Beforo that there were iron works and lumber yards and various other enterprises lining the thoroughfare. Tradition even has it that the first Iron manufacturing plant of Harrisburg, a "nailery," op erated by one lienry Fulton, was located along the lane back about 1786. This establishment, which was a small affair, and probably run by a man and a. boy, is given by James M. Swank in Ills notable historical work "Iron and Steel in All Ages," as the beginning of the State Capital's promi nence in the basic industry of civil ization. Fulton made nails and shoes for the horses of the traders. There were lots of other enterprises along Meadow lane from time to time, iron, wooden, warehousing, broom, smith ies, stables, coanhshops, vlnuous, spir ituous and malt, grocery, coal and other establishments, which have passed away and which would not be remembered by many even if they were set down here. The Pennsylvania erected its big freight station and it was at the sid ings and platforms of this plant that the freight business of the city was handled. Then the trolley came along In the shape of a part of the Citizens line's devious route to South Harris burg. Allison. Hill, East End, Steelton and Oberlin. It passed down the lane and into -Washington avenue, as it used to be called long before Councils changed the appellation of the nar rower thoroughfare to that high sounding name. Meadow lane never got paved, although it was provided for. The railroad marked it for its own a score of years ago. Just like the Slate marked out the Capitol Park ex tension, and while it has been a long time getting it, Meadow lane is doomed to pass. But it will live in a good many memories, not the least in those of firemen who used to load hose car riages and engines at its wharves when summoned to fires in other places which generally called for help about 1.30 a. m. and lay the boys, now among the prominent men of Harris burg, who used to gather around those freight cars that brought the water melons from the South, the melons in whose luscious contents you could 'taste the sunshine of Dixie land. DOSE NAUGHTY COPS By Wing Dinger By golly, flat's Rn awful chob Dose Couneilmen have got, Dey had a battle yesterday, All afternoon dey fought You see, dere vero two little cops Dat John K Royal hired, Und someone resolutloned dat Dose two cops should be fired. Vot is de matter mlt my cops. Mayor Royal vlshed to know. And some asked veil, vot vas wring Mlt dose two vou let go. Oh. dey vere naughty boys, he said, In politics dey mixed, And dat's not nice, so dat vas vy Dere clocks I promptly fixed. Aha! If dat's de vay he feels Mit politics, beware, Or some sweet dav he may wake up Und find he Isn't Mayor. 1 WELL-KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —Dr. John Kearsley Mitchell, son of the late author, is a physician widely noted in his special line, —Lieutenant E. V. Armstrong, the cavalry officer injured in a polo match at El Paso, Is a Philadelphian and member of a prominent family. —Scott Nearlng, who is figuring in affairs at the University of Pennsylva nia, Is an authority on child labor. —Burgess J. Elmer Saul, of Norrls town, thinks that because he is a magistrate he iH entitled to a seat on the borough police committee and is saying so. —Thomas Evans, the new burgess of Phoenixville, is one of the old resi dents of that borough. —Mayor Harvey, of Hazleton, is out with • a statement in which "-he says ihat physicians should be allowed to exceed the speed limit while Kolnsc to accidents and emergency cases. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH BERRY MEN 808 UP WITH HIS BOOM Want Ex-Treasurer and Defeated Candidate to Be Standard Bearer Again PALMER IS STILL VERY COY Pinchot Afraid That Fusion Will Be Worked Out Without Himself in It William H. Berry, although planted in an ?8,00i) job with little to do In Philadelphia, is said to have a hanker ing after the gubernatorial chair, and some of his friends throughout the State are commencing to put up their hea.ds and howl for him as the man best fitted to head the Democratic ticket next Fall. The bosses put Berry In his present berth in the hope that he would cease from having ambitions, and are said to have told him that he fared well after the beating he had received for State Treasurer. Berry's friends aver that he would heal the division In the party, although exactly how they do not say. They claim he is less unpopular than Pal mer and that he has friends among the Old Guard who would never stand l'or Palmer even if he was nominated. The foxy movement in favor of Jo seph O'Brien, of Scranton, for a place on the State ticket In the hope of splitting- the Ryan strength is attract ing much notice. It is as cute a trick as Palmer has ever started. The announcement by ex-Congress man B. K. Focht, of Lewisburg, that, he will be a candidate for Republican nomination In the Sev enteenth district, and that he proposes to Candidates win, started things in Are Making the "shoestring" dis- Dines Keady trict and there will be, some lively politics in that section. Senator C. W. Sones, of Williamsport, is a candidate for re nomination on the Democratic ticket and will not be opposed, although ho will have a stiff flg,ht at the polls in November. Representative Ansel Ul man, Williamsport; Charles A. Shaffer, Berwick, and George B. Mellott, Mc- Connellsburg, > all Democrats, will be candidates for re-election. Democratic State bosses are discour aging the booms of a. number of ambi tious followers of the reorganization banner to become nomi nees for Congressman - Democrats at-large, and there are Bothered already rumblings being by Booms heard against continu ance of the rubber stamp regime in the party. Half a dozen men are said to have been throwing out lines to see how they would be taken fofr the four places on the State ticket, but have been rebuffed and told to watt. It is understood that the bosses want to hold off the selection of their slate until the last minute and to attract some men of wealth to the ticket. Gifford Pinchot, who is now in Pitts burg discußsing matters with the leading lights of the Washington party, is be'ng quoted as say ing that there is no hope or prospect of fusion be- Gilford tween the Republicans Gives an and the Bull Moosers. Opinion The wish, of course, is father to the thought with Gifford. Ho says the Progress ives will not and the Republicans do not want to effect fusion. However, in a number of counties in the State leaders of the two parties are getting together and there is a disposition to plainly disregard the orders from the generals. If there should be fusion it would end Pinchot.'s ambitions In the direction of the United States sena torial nomination. PotfrjC/». SIDELIGHTS | —Perry county Democrats nro troubled with a multiplicity of candi dates for tho legislative seat. —J. C. Sutherland, recorder of Washington county, may be a candi date for Congress in the district for merly represented by tho Governor. —Something seems to be wrong about that Carlisle post office appoint ment. • —York county Democrats are de manding some revenue places. —Burnett seems to be slow about rewarding Democrats with assistant district attorneyships. —Scoutmaster Morris is going west to meet Pittsburgh insurgents among the reorganlzers. —Palmer is expected to say whether he is going to run for Governor or not within a week. In Washington they say ho will not. —People in Sugar Notch are now trying to throw out their burgess. —Pottßville's troubles will come up in court on the 20th. —H. D. Loveland Is the new mer cantile appraiser of Clinton county. —Senator Varo is out for harmony in Philadelphia and says it's no use baiting the Mayor. —William Abbot Witman will make a canvass of the State for the Demo cratic nomination for senator. —Wilkes-Barre seems to have trouble to find out whether the in itiative in the Clark act is worth any thing. —The postmasters for Glen Lyon and Macungie have been chosen and more enemies piled up for congress men. —That boom for Berry I'or Gov ernor at Scranton has a few ear marks about it. Tailored to Measure Suits For Gentlemen JANUARY CLEARANCE At a Third Off All Winter Woolens Including Tweeds, Castimeres, Cheviots, Serges and Worsteds Designed, draped and constructed to your personal measurements wit \ the same care as if original prices prevailed. Original prices were S3O to SSO, now one-third off. $20.00 to $33.33 31 TAILOR I pSfefl 22 North Fourth St. KALBFUS URGES CARE EOR BIS If People Want to Hunt They Should Provide For the Birds in Wintertime HOW THEY CAN BE SAVED Practical Plan Suggested by the Active Secretary of State Commission Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, secretary of the State Game Commission, has Issued his annual call to the farmers and the sportsmen to save tho birds. The secretary says people are all very willing to hunt, but not so careful about looking after the game. In his circular the secretary makes a unique plea. Here are some o£ his Ideas: " 'Pity tho needy and the helpless these cold days,' 1b an expression often heard, and some of those voicing this sentiment mean just what they say, and stand ready to do what they can for those who may be Buffering. To many men these words are meaningless, and so long as they themselves are well fed and clothed they care not what may happen to others. The poor, half-clad child In the street corner bluo and shivering and starving is Indeed a piti able sight, but the mumbling of words of pity brings no relief to such a one at any time. You remember the story of the merchant who, while journeying from Jerusalem to Jericho, fell among thieves and was left wounded by the roadside. The priest, from whom be cause of his position most was expect ed, passed by on the other side. Tho another of the leaders of public thought, failed to extend the needed help. No one even had a kind word until a Samaritan, from whom appar ently nothing was expected, came that way. You remember what he did and the Master said. 'Who was neighbor to that man?' "To b« wet and cold and starving is, Indeed, r. terrlblfe thing for any crea ture. and perhaps there Is some excuse for men who almost rebel against God when such conditions are forced upon them. Have you ever seen men on the verge of starvation? Have you ever seen four-footed animals and birds starving? If not. you may well bless God for sparing you this ordeal. I have seen both these conditions and have been wet and cold and starving, and know whereof I speak, for I was in the mountains of Colorado the winter of the Chicago flro when the snow fell unex pectedly to a great depth, just as it fell a few weeks ago. Camps with limited supplies were caught, game could not be found, for weeks, and how some of us lived the Almighty alone knows. The snow that winter after falling to an unusual depth Instead of disappearing under the influence of the west wind as was usually the case, leaving the south side of the mountains and the plains hare so that grazing animals could feed, settled to about eighteen or twenty inches, and then froze, forming a cov ering of heavy ice, against which the winds were powerless. Before Spring time came 1 saw tens of thousands of cattle, and horses, and antelope, and elk dylnK from starvation. For weeks and months, day and night, I beard the low, piteous call of horses and cattle begging for that which could not be given, calling, calling, until not one was left. T traveled among herds of ante lope. with here and there an elk, so emaciated that they hardly moved out of one's way, but 110 call for help from men came from those wild creatures, no complaint, no sound at all. save per haps a plaintive bleat .as the rushing pack of wolves bore them donwn. Have you ever noticed the wild bird, wounded almost unto death, sitting on its perch without a sound of complaint, nothing to break the stillness of its retreat, save the tap, tap. tap, of its life-blood striking on the leaves below? Have you ever seen the birds starve? Well, I have, and I never see the snows come without going back in memory to those (lays of long ago, and I cotne to you now In this letter in behalf of the birds and bee of you to do something for them. They are wet, and cold, and help less. The snows have fallen. The birds have no stored supplies. They have no fellows, who better oft than they, might give them even crumbs from their table. They have 110 organized chari ties to whom they can turn for succor. They must have help or they will surely perish. "You perhaps are wasting every day more than enough to keep the birds in vvur community Iti food for many days, and I beg of you to see to it that this is done: Grain scattered for Bob-White or other same hirdfc a lump of suet, or fresh pork hung up In some place where the downey woodpecker or the kinglet or the nuthatch may find It; crumbs and small seeds for the little ground feeding birds, will surely be appreciated by thetn in this their time of need, and will bring to you a return through the llfework of these birds that cannot bo expressed in words or figures. You may not be ablo to do much in yourself, but you can do some little thing. "I have a friend In Western Pennsyl vania who has his heart in the right place, and when the snow fell out there last week be used Ills telephone in starting Ills neighbor In tho work of feeding birds. One neighbor called to another until the whole community was interested. The Boy Scouts took up the call, and the fields are now daily filled with men and boys, each one bent 011 showing through works that he truly pities the needy and helpless these col»l days. Who will he neighbor to the birds in your community? A prayer or kindly spoken word means something, for they may reach some listening ear, but neither prayer or kindly feeling amount to much with out accompanying works. One bushel of grain placed where Bob-White and his family can get it means more to them than all the kind words that could be spoken in the county, where they are about to die of starvation." Letters to the Editor THIS UOLUEN Yld Alt 3 Ol<' I,IKK To the Editor of The Telegraph: It is both beautiful and inspiring- to come in contact witli the snow-while bearded railroad pensioner who not only by length of service, but having rounded out his three-score years and ten, has bequeathed his railroad inter JANUARY 7,1914. $lO Cloth-Craft sls to S2O Suits and Overcoats The suits are in fancy blue serges, dark worsteds and fancy mixtures. Overcoats in black with silk facing. Other dark patterns, and blues and grays, three-quarter lengths, made up in medium and heavy weights. Hart Schaffner & Marx and Society Brand Clothes at Clearance Prices. FURS REDUCED H. Marks & Son Fourth & Market Sts. ests to the world of succeeding: men; ho retains, however, that bright sparkle of the eye and familiar nudge of the elbow when relating: some Inci dent of shop or cab. T° I>B Bare his life now is one of a different following: and interesting va »" oty. but after all, nothing on the out sido is half so dear, so attractive, nor interesting, as to engage In reminis cences of the early Sixties, with Scott, 1' ranciscus and other heads, who were important factors in creating the great Pennsylvania system; the great oaks in the forest of that magnificent cor poration. Theso beloved pensioners will tell you frankly, and with pride, tUlngH they have seen, great as they are, may be insignificant contrasted with the unseen and yet to bo developed. It is Inspiring to hear them-relate now they have been encouraged in their life's work and given stimulus to greater effort by coming in contact with employes of courage, endurance, persintc • and other qualities. Such ii in their retirement, these Veterann of the rail, carry With them the good will of Innumerable friends and admirers. Are we then not con vinced that after all. with the heart mellowed, mind matured, the spirit sea soned, with memory a storehouse of Joys; that ripe old age is the best estate of > all. To such pensioners with snowy crowns, wo bequeath the happiness of old age; that they may havo the love and Kratif.de of their children until they fall asleep. H. J. BABB. SIX TICKETS 1o the Editor of The Telegraph: The person who wrote the letter to the Telegraph last night about the lack of supervision of ventilation In the traction company's cars was exactly right and I think some of our vigilant State health officers ought to warn the managers to instruct the men how to control the ventilation. Cars with windows covered with moisture are common all over the city and you will find ventilators so little used that they are hard to open. But what this city should have in return for Its liberality to the traction company is six tickets for a quarter. The recall of the six tickets for a quarter privilege was a big mistake and the company, now that it Is helped by the new State law which shuts off everything free and makes our politicians pay or walk, should start, selling half a dozen for a quarter again. AMICUS. NEWS DISPATCHES j OF THE CIVIL WAR j [From the Telegraph of Jan. 7, 1564.] Bntlcr On Kxchnnne Mltnlon Baltimore, .lan. 7. General Butler passed through this city last night, oil Ills return to Fortress Monroe. It Is understood that he in. clothed with ample powers relative t<» the exchange of prisoners, and is confident of suc cess. Sum June* Winn Cincinnati, Jan. 7. A special dis patch to the Commercial says that a force Tinder Samuel Jones attacked out troops at Jonosvllle, Va., Sunday, con sisting of about SOO men. After respei ate resistance our troops surrendered, losing thirty killed and thirty wound ed, one gun and two smal Howitzers. EDITORIAL TIDBITS As in a trevlo'us instance, most of the interest in Colonel Koosevelt's present trip relates to what he proposes to do when he gets back. —Washington Star. As wo understand it, every Mexican rebel is endowed with certain Inalien able rights, among them being life, lib erty, and the pursuit of lluerta.—Co lumbia State. It is perhaps more than a mere co incidence that the gentleman whom Huerta has dispatched to Japan with a view to arranging an alliance is named Nervo.—Boston Transcript. A scientist predicts an Interplanetary congress in the next few hundred years. Think of the mileage!— Columbia State. tf} TifTl Those Odd Sums 1 il I 11 *>— L \ which your little boy or girl puts Into \s pflfr this bank will grow and will go a long v> 1 impKU way towards self-help as they get 'V \ /savSolder. The day wll} come when they Sm Y \ will look back upon their early saving flays with gratitude and delight. Start T# to-day—NOW! If It's only a dollar, make a start. Tour bank book Is \ %V First National Bank How to Save For Christmas Do you want to save for the Christmas Holidays? You I may deposit any amount, at any time daily, weekly or monthly—in The Sixth Street Bank, and receive interest at the rate of four (4) per cent If so requested, the bank will send you a check for the money deposited, together with the earn ed interest, before December 15th. Should you miss pay ments you will not lose the interest on the money deposited. In case of sickness, or actual need for the money deposited, you may withdraw upon short notice. START NOW! THE SIXTH STREET BANK SIXTH and MACLAY STREETS HARRISBURG. PA. AT THIS TO OLD CAMP OBHTIII ROBERT A. HnDEHR LEWIS BALSBK P. I* A. fRdEHUCH Preilient Vlm-imMint CaahUr IN HARRISBURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph of Jan. 7, 1864.] Pray For Afflicted Exercises this evening In the Old School Presbyterian Church, Third street. Prayer for the afflicted and oppressed; that slavery and oppression may cease, and that Christian love may reach the destitute In all lands. Mayor liauei Proelainatioi^^ Proclamation—Mayor's Office, Harris burg, January 0, 1864. After a care ful survey of the city the Mayor re grets to find the generally liad condi- 1 tion of the pavements, which are cov ered with a rough and uneven surface of frozen snow, (langerous to the safo progress of pedestrians. A. 1,. RUMFORT, Mayor. Well Worth The Effort It may cause a little effort to lay aside at regular intervals a sum of money that may be for those who some day you may leave behind, but It's well worth that effort. You may rest In the 1 assurance that no matter what may befall you In business, your family is at least protected to the extent of such amounts as you may thus lay by. May we tell you more about It? COMMONWEALTH TRUST COMPANY 'Z22 Market Street r=^=n HKAU«tIJ AUTKItS FOR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES * Scratch Pads I. ..IB have a lot of scratch pads |IAI| put up, about 100 to a pack- I" I age, that we are selling for 60c per package. Just the thing for office work, ar.d you'd better order NOW lr you want any as they won't last long at that price. THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Printing, Binding, Designing, Phntu Engraving HARRI9BUIIG, PA.