8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH EtlablisHti lSjl PUBLISHED BY THE TEI.EGKAI'II PRINTING CO. E. J. STACKPOLE. Brest and Treaa'r. P. R. OTSTEB, Secretary. GUS M. STEINMETZ. Managing Editor. Published every evening (exoept Sun day), at the Telegraph Building, 211 Federal Square. Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Piilldlnß. < New York City, H&abrook. Story A Brooks. Western Office. 123 West Madison * street. Chicago, 111.. Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at ~ | fftnijij 1 * six cents a week Mailed to subacrlbera. at $3.00 a year in advance Entered at the Post Office In Harria- j burg as second class matter. t /fIS Ai»ociation of Amor- > S l|||||] ican Advertisers bas ex- ) > Valr aminad and certified to |' 1 tho circulation of thit pab- i' l lication. Tho figuraa of circalatian i[ J aontained in the Association's re / port onljr are guaranteed. i < Aviation of America# Advertisers '! Ivror* dally avemgr for the month of February, 1914 * 22,493 if for the year H15—31,577 Averaire for the year 1912—21,175 Airerase for the year ltlll— lS.Ssl A»era*e for Ibe year 1910—17,4»5 | TELEPHONES l Bell Private Branch Exchange No. 1040. I'alted Business Office, 703. (jattorlal Room 585. Job Dept. 103, MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 1« WILSON AND BUSINESS WRITING of the general busi ness conditions, an expert analyst of the Philadelphia ledger gives the AVilson ad ministration a severe jolt. He says: There is a growing danger that the upshot will be disastrous alike to labor, to investors, to employers and to the administration. Capital has made up its minrl not to submit meekly and silently to any more governmental misrepre sentation or unjust attacks. President Rea. of the Pennsylva nia Railroad, voiced the new atti tude last week in a formal state ment heavy with underlying signifi cance. He warned the authorities that antagonism and burdensome legislation, if continued, might drive the country into an abyss, lie spoke thus gravely, he said, "to prevent calamity." The hoped for revival in general business has not yet made satisfac tory headway. Unemployment Is rife and is exciting uneasiness in certain cities. I'nfortunatelv. em ployers—particularly the railways and the hundred and one industries affected by them—do not feel en couraged by events at Washington to adopt any conspicuously optimis tic course that would heip to pro vide additional work. .Anti-business legislation propo sals are being hashed and rehashed daily without any manifest master mind to guide the rank and file toward any definite sensible goal. Notwithstanding the manifest desire of all classes of people to avoid what might appear as a calamity attitude with respect to business conditions, there Is a growing conviction among those in position to understand the ! situation that the radical legislation which has already been enacted and | much that is proposed is responsible in i a large measure for the lack of conv tidence and general hesitation to push ahead under full steam. President Wilson and his associates must realize that a more conservative attitude is necessary for the restoration of confidence and the building up of the broken business lines. There are those who will be ready to believe that the Groundhog is disposed to make a hog of himself. PAYING TRIBUTE TO BRITAIN THE one great effect of the repeal i of the free tolls clause for United I States shipping through the! Panama Canal would be to force ' Americans to pay tribute to Great; Britain and other maritime nations for j alt time on every shipload of goods j sent by water from points to and from i the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. The cost of upkeep and a fair re- | turn on the money invested should not j be charged up to the American people. ! No man builds himself a house and f then charges himself rent for the use of it. If there is any rent to be paid, he makes the other fellow pay it. The real estate owner who would agree to pay half or more of the lease price of any of his properties would be laughed out of business. Yet that is just what President Wilson proposes in the mat ter of the Panama Canal. If there be any treaty rights in question—Etnd there are many eminent statesmen who believe that no foreign relation is involved —let the matter be settled by The Hague tribunal. It wil" be time enough in the event of an adverse decision in that court of last appeal to place the shippers of tho United States on a par with those oT foreign nations. Surely, if the people of the United States were willing to spend their money to build the canal, the. combined nations of the world ought not to object to paying for it upkeep English authorities claim that they are powerless to keep suffragettes in prison, due to their adoption of the "hunger strike." Why not let one or two of 'em continue to strike? RUFFLES! THERE is more than a grain of truth in the thought expressed by Professor Maria L. Sanford, of the University of Minnesota, who said the other day that "children are spoiled by frills and ruffles; let the modern mother put less embroid ery on her child's body and more on Its mind." Correct Bpeech Is an asset of no small value. There is nothing more Incongruous than line clothes and bad grammar. Even the boy and girl In school know the advantage of mental training over rich clothing. The child who knows how to use English, whose MONDAY EVENING, thoughts are well expressed, who has a store of useful literary knowledge, has a handicap over his less cultured fellows that not only obtains for him leadership in school affairs, but gives him a poise and a self-confidence that extends to his advantage in grown up years. Our schools have improved so rapid ly and life of to-day is so strenuous that the modern parent is apt to trust too much to the teacher. It might be well, as Professor Sanford advises, for the mother of to-dav to send her child to school with a little less embroidery on its dress and a few more trimmings !on its mind. ! The baby intellect is so easily led. |lt is keen to learn. Put the good in 'its way and it will absorb it. Let it ichoose for itself and it will gather 'much chaff with the grain. The mother lias it in her power to put pure, ele vating thoughts into Its mind that will go with it all through life. The embroidered dress will wear out. Ruffles will go out of fashion. And at all events a taste for costly dress Is to be discouraged rather than engendered. But fair speech and a knowledge of the classics are always in style and are helpful in whatever walk of life one finds oneself. It is now apparent that Colonel I'oosevelt had nothing to do with the revolution in Brazil. It lasted only three days. OI K MINING OPERATIONS FAMILIAR as we are with the gi gantic mining operations of the Pennsylvania coal fields, it never theless is surprising to learn that the hard coal miners of this State are better diggers than those of the Pana ma canal zone, in that they excavate every year more than the total amount of the entire excavations nec essary for the construction of the big ditch. The figures just issued by the pub licity department of the anthracite companies are highly interesting and apparently authentic. The average number of net tons of coal produced from the anthracite mines during the years 1904 to 1913, inclusive, was approximately 5i,000,000. Each long ton of this coal measured at least one cubic yard in the vein. A long ton of 2,240 pounds is over ten per cent, more than a net ton of 2,000 pounds. The tonnage of coal therefore ac counts for at least 90,000,000 of the 195.323,000 cubic yards of excavation originally necessary for the Panama Canal. Add to this the fact that more rock and refuse than coal is hoisted out of the anthracite mines, and this accounts for another 100,000,000 cu bic yards. Finally the gigantic strip pings. estimated by one contractor at 12,000,000 cubic yards a year, and the miles of drainage tunnels cut through the solid rock easily bring up the total annual cubic yardage of excavation to a total equal to, if not greater than, the total yardage of the Panama Canal. It should be remembered in addition to this that the Panama Canal is being dug in the open sunlight, while the vast majority of the work in Pennsyl vania is done in dark, narrow passages, far below ground, and the material has to be transported greater distances and hoisted from 300 to 3,000 feet. The thicker veins are being rapidly exhausted and the proportion of rock and refuse to the amount of coal hoisted is increasing steadily year by year as the narrower veins are worked. If the companies are able to maintain the present rate of produc tion of coal the annual amount' of excavation will far exceed the Panama Canal In the next few years. "What are political conditions in Pennsylvania to-day?" asks the Phila delphia Press. Doesn't the Press know what General Sherman said war is? Well, then, that's it. EXPRESS CO. LIQUIDATION THE Harrisburg representative of the United States Express Com pany expresses astonishment at tHe reported liquidation of that corporation. He says that receipts here show an increase and that the outlook for a prosperous business year is bright. He expresses the belief that it will be a long time before the office of the United States Express Company in this city is closed. In this belief many others are be- | ginning to join. When the directors of the company announced that they would "go out of business" it was gen erally conceded that their given rea son —the encroachment of the parcel post —was the true one. But since that time developments have been such as to arouse the suspicions of those who are familiar with Wall Street transactions of the kind. In the first place, it is to be noted that the Harrimans control the United States company. It is also the Harri ) mans who own a voting majority of the shares of the Wells Fargo Com pany. The express companies are in bad repute with the government and the public. What better business than to sell the property and franchise of the United States company to tho Wells Fargo, with the statement that th" parcel post had forced the United States company out of business'.' Liquidation would drive down the stock valuations and let those in con trol buy in outstanding shares at a fraction of their former value —and there is pretty good evidence that somebody has been a very ready buyer of the United States stock as it came to the market in the past few weeks. None of the other express companies has displayed any signs of serious dis tress, and while the government has no right to enact any legislation that will be confiscatory to legitimate in dustry, we should pause a moment be fore extending a full measure of sym pathy to the Ilarrimans and their United estates Kxpress Company liqui dation. That neighborhood meeting for Judgo Kunkel affords you opportunity for a pleasant evening. WP trust that our friends who pro fess to he fond of "old-fashioned winters'' are fully satisfied. lew Din- cbai There's a very plain, ordinary look ing poster in the window of the public waiting room of the Harrisburg Rail ways Company in Market Square and because it appears like an advertise ment of some form of amusement probably the average passer-by has not stopped to read it. Yet that pos ter is a part in a humble way of a campaign that is being conducted all over the United States and Canada for you and yours and your neighbors and which will be In full swing in this city before many months through the interest of the industrial and utility corporations and the public-spirited men and women who have been think ing about physical welfare when a good many have been devoting time and thought to dollars, dividends, food and amusements. This poster is only half a dozen lines long, but it winds up with these words: BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY. In short, it is one of the "safety posters'' that are now so common in New York and Chicago, the cities where it has been charged human life and limb is at matter of minor con sideration. There are probably tens of thousands of posters of similar im port staring into the eyes of people in those cities and maybe a million or so in the country. It is part of a great campaign that was beglin years ago and which has enlisted the earnest consideration of thoughtful men. It is an outgrowth of the work of that little understood official, the efficiency engineer, the speed man, the fellow who hunts up lost motion. Ten years ago the placing of such a poster would have been regarded by the man in charge of a works, a factory, a trol ley line or anything else as something altruistic, a charitable act. Now it's plain business. Loss of skilled hands, damages and, above all, public opinion, have impelled employers or managers to regard accidents of a preventable character exactly as the grand scheme of nature makes them: sheer waste. The poster over in Market Square contains the advice not to attempt to cross a street behind a car. The reader is told to be sure that there is no car or vehicle coming in the oppo site direction, or. in other words, to see that the coast is clear. It brings to the mind of every reader that strik ing sign with which everyone who has traveled along the Reading railway is familiar, "Stop, look and listen." It. has been said that those words, at tributed to Judgo Paxson, have saved many lives and no end of dollars, if the two could be mentioned in the same breath. The Reading's signs have been up for half a generation, but it is because their warning has been burned into the minds of so many people that there are not more acci dents in the midst of the great growth of automobile traffic. It's going to take years to abolish the grade cross ings. but so long as the traveler on wheels is accustomed to regard a cross dog and a grade crossing with caution, the signs serves its purpose. But to get back to the that poster on the Railways office window. One of these days, through the co-operation ol the trolley officials and persons in terested in cutting the number of accl dents in the United States, Pennsyl vania and Harrisburg in half, there' is going to be posted all over this com munity stinilar warnings. Over the East river the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company has placed in every Brook)vn schoolroom a calendar showing twelve ways in which a pupil can get hurt by a trolley car. Some of the pictures are pretty crude, but the very look of terror on the faces of the victims strikes the lesson home. For each month there is a separate illustration showing a kid being thrown Into the air because he dodged behind a car and was hit by a car coming from another direction in just the manner that the liarrisburg Railways poster seeks to warn against: or showing how a roller skater can go into the jaws of death by reckless curves on the asphalt: how jumping cars will bring injury or death, or some other form in which the trolley car can harm those who do not use the care dictated by modern traffic conditions. It is sought to instill into the minds of those voung Broklynites that they have got 'to be careful not to get hurt. Now the Har risburg poster with its "Better Safe Than Sorry" means the same thing and the railways company could do nothing better than hammer that phrase into the minds of the children of Harrisburg. There are ways of reaching the schools, the homes and the playgrounds of the youngsters Some of the advertising space in the cars might be employed and there is always the billboard and the news paper. Great industrial plants like the Pennsylvania Steel Works spend thou sands of dollars every year for safety of employes alone and the works are full of warning signs. You can't roam about the great plant like sightseers used to do with imminent risk of life limb or neck, and John Hunk is apt to get a verbal ripping up the back from his boss if he disregards a sign or warning that he is not to go some place where he is liable to be hit on • the head b> a chain from a crane or where he might be in the position of trying to buck a dinkey. The work of the Pennsylvania Railroad for safety is famous the world over and no more magnificent project was ever launched by a transportation company than safetj first, although stockholders have moaned, according to some rumors, over the money it cost. It was adherence to such propaganda, as they used to be called a few years ago. that enabled the railroad to make that showing for 1913 in regard to mishaps to passengers. So that posting of the poster with its striking coupling of safety and sorrow means the localizing of the safety movement here. And it's the duty of everyone to help it along by doing what he or she was intended to do in this world: Ixiok Out. YESTERDAY WD TOD V V Yesterday I took a stroll. Out to the park I went And sat me down upon a bench —An hour there I spent. My coat I peeled off quickly. And laid it by ray side, And in the balmy sunshine Myself I fairly fried. flut gee, I wish 1 hadn't Done all this yesterda> . Because to-day I'm feeling Like what some folks would f,aj. My head feels three times larger Than what it ought to be, M.v eyes are swelled so badlv l That I can hardly see. 1 have a splitting headache. With medicine I'm filled; .1 feel as if somebody Had me about half-killed. 'Twas fine, I thought, when I went Out yesterday to roam; To-day. though, I am wishing That I had stayed at home, THE CLARION CALL "I got up with the robins this morn ing," said a charming young society woman, to her fiancee, "and wrote some letters." "You mean, dear, he said, "that you added spots Into one."—ln National Monthly. AN EVENING THOUGHT y Even so it is not the will of your Father who is in Heaven, j thai one of these little ones should | perish. Jesus. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPEC KUNKEL FAVORED IN MANY COUNTIES Greensburg Newspaper Endorses Him and Lawyers Are Every where For Him PAPERS ARE IN CIRCULATION Philadelphia Press Shows Pennsyl vania Democracy Is Divided Against Itself Keporta received here by members of the Dauphin county bar committee favoring the nomination of President Judge George Kunkel for the Supreme bench indicate that the candidacy of the judge is supported in more than half the counties of the State and that hie papers are being signed in Frank lin. Adams. Cumberland. Lancaster, Lycoming. Luzerne, Westmoreland, Mifflin and other counties. The Judge is being supported by many men who are familiar with State taxation business, which is the big .end of the business appealed to the Su preme Court from the Dauphin County Court, and his splendid record in the Capitol cases Is remembered all over the State. The Greensburg Tribune, edited by Robert W. Herbert, one of the best I>ostecl men on political conditions in Pennsylvania, says editorially: "George Kunkel, president judge of the Dau phin county courts, has thrown his hat into the ring and will be a can didate for a place on the Supreme Court bench at the May primaries. Judge Kunkel was exceedingly capably as a lawmaker and he has been won derfully successful as a law dispenser. Therefore, if not, why not?" The Lewistown Sentinel says: "Mem bers of the Mifflin county bar are signing a paper indorsing the candi dacy of George Kunkel, of Harris burg, president judge of the Twelfth judicial district, candidate for justice of the Supreme Court." The Socialist State conference at AVilliamsport concluded its work on Saturday night and recommended this ticket for the May pri maries: Governor. Jo seph Allen, of Montgorn- Socialists ery county; Lieutenant- Select a Governor, F. J. Scholar. Full Ticket Altoona; Secretary of In ternal Affairs. Robert B. Ringler, Reading United States .sen ator, F. W. Whiteside, Philadelphia; judse of Supreme Court, J. J. Kint ner, Clinton county; judge of Superior Court, A. M. Fuller, Allegheny county; congressmen-at-large, Edward Hayden, Allegheny county; Charles Sehl, Phila delphia; Charles F. Quinn, Luzerne, and E. D. Fulton, Fayette county. Charles Maurer, of Reading, was named for State chairman. The liquor question caused a spirited discussion, several of the delegates urging that the party take a stand in favor of local o.ption. The majority, however, voted for the committee report declar ing the present economic system to be the cause of intemperance and urging the abolition of private ownership as a means of promoting temperance. While admitting that a fight in the party for a nomination was a good thing, Dauphin county Bull Moosers Saturday neatly sidestepped declaring for either Brumm Dauplitn or Lewis and will await the Moosers word from the source of Sidestep supplies before taking any part. The Dauphin county people lined up back of the conference when it declared for Lewis and Dr. J. H. Krelder, the late county chairman, who took part in the slate making, was for Lewis a while ago. There is no question but that Brumm is strong in this county and the men who have favored a militant candidate rather than a man like Lewis will line up back of Brumm. The friends of State Treasurer Young are keeping quiet, but do not conceal their dis appointment that he declined to be a candidate. Some are expressing the hope that tilings might so shape them selves that he would enter the field as a compromise. Just at present the popular pastime of men in politics appears to be talk ing about invasions of Pennsylvania by men active in affairs. It has been stated that Senators Borah and Invasion Cummins would come Popular into this State to speak Just Xoiv for Dimmlck. To-day it is stated that Borah will not come here. Secretaries Daniels and Wilson are to come to boost the Jersey ticket for the Democrats. Os |car King Davis says Col. -Roosevelt will give three weeks to Pennsylvania. Senator Penrose remarked on Satur day that he would like to have some candidates stand on their own bot toms. The Philadelphia Press in a series of articles to-day makes a startling statement regarding the policy of President Wi 1 son, accusing him of in ! Interference terfering in the : Irritates the Democratic politics Democrats Mow of several States de spite promises of neutrality in local affairs. The Press says the interfer ence was open in New Jersey and Ala bama and is but thinly veiled in Penn sylvania. New York and Illinois. In some instances the inteference has been so raw as to cause protests from national committeemen. The Press makes a poll of the State on the Democratic row and finds the Demo crats split everywhere, the presiden tial interference being one cause of the dissatisfaction that exists. Nominating petitions for Superior Court Judge Frank M. Trexler for the full term are in circulation in many parts of the State. Following the dec laration in behalf of the judge by his home bar committees nil over the State took up his candidacy on a non partisan basis. I iroLiriCAbsioeEiSßfgl —St. Patrick's day will be a great occasion for orators. •—Edwin O. Lewis, eminent Phila delphia reformer, is out with a strong speech advising Democrats to nomi nate Ryan. —Senator Penrose says that Dim mick should not hide behind Borah's coat tail. —McCormick and Berry start on an invasion of the northern tier to-mor row. —William T. McMullen, of Sha - mokin, is .a candidate fo»- the House ; in Northumberland, s —Congressman Palmer says he will not do any Chautauqua debating un -1 less all senatorial candidates go on the .1 platform with him. —A. H. Ladner, counted upon as a reorganizer, is out for Ryan in Phila delphia. —Thus far no great enthusiasm over Marshall's boom for the House has been shown iri .Market Square. It's all l.ybarger there. —V. K. P. B&rltntlti Ims been ■Mia^SDSI, T km im kmiN prima an lawcr, ta( kecaoae «ulNlea ara >««ta.=s=ini a An Important Announcement! fQ flig Pponle of f Nf*# H • k J V •-i Hamsburg and Vicinity a people who have learned to depend upon this store for the major por- !> | |M I tio'n of their household and personal wearing needs have at various times | | fcSBHI urgently requested that we add to our stocks certain articles that would fill | | Ranis' in some of our lines, but which could not be sold between one and twenty- Q | five cents. [j| 3 For instance in dress goods, better grades have been wanted than could be sold | | at twenty-five cents or less a yard. Likewise petticoats and other articles of wear, [j] ■ household articles, and other needs were sought which could not be supplied within | II our price limits. a m So we conceived the idea of |i 1 TWO PIECE PRICES | ICI For SOme time we have put them int ° prac ~ CI The plan will in no way effect the original | I Til tice in certain departments. For instance, Til purpose of this business. We will in the a Q certain dress materials have been sold at 15c, future, as we have in the past, devote our en- j | 20c or 25c the half yard. Combination Suits, ergies to supplying to the public dependable I |] petticoats and other articles have been sold at, merchandise of better quality at prices rang- I | say 25 cents for the material and 25 cents for ing from lc to 25c. It is only in a few in- E the making. Two-piece kitchen utensils at so stances to complete certain lines that we will |jl | much for the one piece and so much for the conduct the two-piece price plan. |'i j other and so forth. Our advertisements each week will carry jn | The success with which our plan has work- TJI mention of a few items which come un- If : J ed out has been sufficient evidence of the der the two-piece pricing system, but for the W j public's approval of our desire to make this most part will be devoted to articles at 25 m ] store more beneficial to them, and we have, cents or less the idea on which this business therefore, decided to continue the idea per- was founded—the keynote of its gratifying q I manently in certain lines. growth during its existence in Harrisburg "[j 1 lc to 25c DEPARTMENT STORE j Where Every Day Is Bargain Day a 1215 MARKET STREET Opp. Courthouse fi Pl==^Bl====Jßl^^3E]t=Slßl^^=]Dl^^3Bl==irir====l[^^=][3[^^=lß(^^3Cll^=lEl[===inr====rir|t=^ ]nC i- elected chairman of the Bedford Democrats. —William Flinn says Brumm can stir up a fight that will help the Pro gressives in their campaign. —Senator Penrose plans a series of speeches this week. The Jefferson dinner committee will outline work at the Central Democratic club to-morrow. —Dr. Isaac. Sharpless has declined to run for Congress in the Delaware- Chester district. —Bedford and Greene Democratic committees have endorsed McCor mick. Ryan seems to be gathering in the Philadelphia committees. —The row among Allegheny Demo crats is the most bitter in years. —District reports show Bull Moos ers returning' to the Republican party. —Oh, laws. The primaries are not until May 19. either. f/WeUrKDQWr^PeQPL&M —Dr. Jesse Cope Green, the oldest man in West Chester, celebrated his birthday by taking a long walk. —George Wharton Pepper, distin guished Philadelphia lawyer, is cele brating his birthday to-day. —John A. Topping, the western Pennsylvania steel manufacturer, says all business wants is to be let alone. —Judge C. N. Brumm, who enters the race for the Washington nomina tion for Governor, is over 74, but mighty active. —J. T. Richard, tile Pennsylvania s noted engineer of way, made an ad dress to the P. R. R. Y. M. C. A. in Philadelphia last night. FOR REPRESENTATIVE « [ Prom the Halifax Gazette.] So manv personal and political friends of Harry M. Fairchilds, of Mil lersburg, have been urging him to be come a candidate for Representative in the State Legislature from the upper end of Dauphin county, and have been so insistent in their urgings that he may be induced to stand at the pri maries in May. Mr. Fairchilds is a native of Halifax, a business man of good repute, a worthy citizen in every way. As Bur gess of Millersburg for a term of four years he served so acceptably that had a succession to the office not been pro hibited by law he would have been elected for another term. During his administration, and great ly through his influence, 'a mile of the streets of Millersburg were paved with brick and other needed and substantial improvements were made. He has been earnestly and thorough- j lv interested in every forward move ment in the interests of his home town and the general community. Of good moral character and most excellent reputation, he would make a most ex cellent member of the legislative body of our Commonwealth. We need men of business experience and ability to represent us. and Mr. Fairchilds fully meets these requirements. i Should he consent to stand for the nomination, his election would be be yond the range of possibility and would assure to Dauphin county an honest, painstaking and intelligent represen tative. lIHOIvKN PROMISES [From the Scranton Truth. I Now the voters are beginning to ex hibit uneasiness. They are putting forth the question: "Why should these unhappy conditions exist in face of all the rosy promises of prosperity made by Democratic spellbinders during the campaign of 1912?" When a newspaper writer or an orator ventures to talk upon the subject he Is at once dubbed a "calamity howler" by the Democratic organs. That is quite an argument from a Democratic standpoint: but it does not prevent the people from thinking, 29H1 MARCH 16, 1914. news*DißP&rcf> es~ CIVIL* VEA.R [From the Telegraph of March 16, IS64] II ring In Primmer* Fortress Monroe, March 14.—'Twenty three rebel prisoners, captured in the recent raid on the Peninsula, reached here to-day from Yorktown. About fourteen others were brought from the same place yesterday. Hflcasf Deserter.* AVasliington, March 15. This morn ing eighty-six deserters from the rebel army were released from the old Capi tol prison upon taking the oath. They desire to go Nortli and were according ly furnished with transportation. in-hARRISBURfe-fMPTy- y&ARS • AQ-0-rO-DA>- [From the Telegraph of March 16, 1864] Want FlrebnKN The City Council offers a reward of SIOO for such information as will lead to the detection and conviction of the person or persons who caused the re cent conllagrations in our city. To Nominate The citizens of the Sixth Ward will hold a meeting at the Marcella House this evening, at 7 o'clock, for the pur pose of nominating a candidate for Councilman. All the voters of the ward are requested to be present. PRESIDENT REVS WARNING [From the Lancaster New Era.] The note of warning sounded by President Rea, of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, against the very apparent tendency to hamper the coun try's railroads by various forms of leg islation, both State and national, will be carefully considered by every right thinking person. The trend of nearly all legislation latterly has been against the large corporations, both transporta tion and productive, the lawmakers evidently trying to appease what they are led to believe to be a deep-seated public antagonism against large indus trial organizations. In their eagerness, however, to satisfy this demand to "get back" at the big capitalizations, the legislators have been overreaching themselves, and have been passing laws and adopting regulations that have re sulted in hampering the operations of these corporations and have greatly de creased their earning capacities. This has been especially the case with rail road legislation, notably the passage of the full-crew laws in several States, which, according to President Rea, have required the expenditure of very large sums, whicn have, of course, cut down the road's profits. If you have any doubt I about it, let our illu* J ninating engineer * place a few Edison Mazda Lamps m your store and show windows, and watch the result. i In the meantime ask him to give you the latest facts about light and lamps. He will tell you how to increase the attraction of your store, without increasing your present light bill. Harrisburg Light & Power Company ™ 1 Letters to the Editor HOUSING CONDITIONS To the Editor of The Telegraph: As your newspapers always seems ready and willing- to agitate a question or further a movement that is tor th& welfare of the community, X would sug iv™ 1 , f ~l no. s t, Important question that should be taken up is housing re nown 'though a large number of people are deeply interested in the mat ter, and see the urgent need of active steps being taken in the matter, thev llliL m llelßy to P usll the movement , Tll f press is always the most ! a ,M, voca ting a move lnent of this kind. The first step should IYL se P ure , fat ;ts of existing condl ions, and make them public; this would June a tendency to create a strong pub lic sentiment 111 the communitv for housing reform. The recent investiga tions made by Dr. Raunick and party, did not half tell the tale. Homes just : , ,0,. f 3ad .P 1 " worse are to be found in all parts of this city. A HARRIS BURGER. ■BAD«UAHTEns POM 1 SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES AFTER YOU DIE AV ho will take care of your family? You cannot afford to carry the risk. A SIO,OOO policy at age 30 requires but $129.90. Dividends reduce cost after first year. Assets $140,000,000. Organized 1847. Write for sample | policy. PENN MUTUAL LIFE 103 N. Sround St. Isaac Miller, Local F. O. Donaldson, i Agents.