6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Btiabliikti itjl PUBLISHED BT Tm TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. k. J. STACK POLE, Preat and Trtmfr. 9. R- OYSTER. Secretary. OOS It STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. ?übllshod every evening (except Sun day), at the Telegraph Building, tit Federal Square. Xaatern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New Tori City, Uaabrook. Story A Brooke. ,"Western Office, Its West Madison •treet, Chicago, 111., Allan Jk Ward. • Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. " Mailed to ■ubacriberi •t 9>.M a year In advance. ■tttered at the Poat Office In Harris burg as second class matter. @Tlm Association of Antr- ! 1 •can Advertiser* has ax- {' amintd and certified to i' the circulation of this pub- / !> Mention. The figure* of circulation i 1 1 nootainod in the Association's re- i 1 1 part only nr* guaranteed. ; AsMditiM if Americas Advertisers ; New 3333 WUMull BM|. N. T. City . Vwnm daily average (or the month el February, 1914 * 22,493 # Average for the year 1913—21,577 Average for the year 1911—21,175 Average for the year 1911—18.851 Average for the year 1910—17,485 TELEPHONES ■ Bell FHvata Branch Exchange No. 1040. I'nlted Business Office, 201. JMlterlal Room 685. Job Dept. tOi SATURDAY EVEXING. MARCH 28 THE KREIDER HILT, THE unqualified endorsement by the Secretary of the Treasury, the Assistant Postmaster Gen eral and Postmaster Sites of the Kreider bill for the further enlarge ment of the Harrisburg Post Office chows how well Congressman Kreider estimated the postal needs of this city when he presented his measure for the appropriation of $75,000 additional for the work of remodeling the local Federal bulling. • Congressman Kreider made a per sonal Inspection of the plans drawn for the improvement of the Post Office and at once came to the conclusion that even with the Increase of floor space for which they provided the postal forces here would be crippled for room, the parcel post having added greatly to the burden of mail matter handled in Harrisburg. Taking up the question with Postmaster Sites he confirmed his own estimates and the bill for an additional appropriation i.s the result. It is altogether likely that the Kreider bill will be passed at an early date. It Is hard to see how Congress could do otherwise, with the proof of the necessity of the appropriation so apparent and endorsement at hand from such authoritative sources. It would be wasteful to spend $125,000 of government money for a mere makeshift, when an additional $75,000 will give the city a Federal building adequate for Its needs for many years. A Pittsburgh thief stole a whole wagonload of eggs. Talk about your get-rlch-quick schemes! THE PRESIDENT AND "GAG" RULE STUBBORN to the point of bull headedness at home, spineless as an oyster abroad, President Wilson has assumed the peculiar position of autocratic dictator at Washington and of a truckling, boot licking Uriah Heap in his dealings with foreign nations. He makes the Democratic platform his fetish when it suits him and rides roughshod over it when England cracks the whip. "I was elected on the Democratic platform,'' he told the suffragists when they asked him to support their cause In Washington, "and I cannot recommend such a law because there is no mention of it in that platform." A few weeks later we find him, at the behest of England and for reasons which he will not make public, at tempting to "boss" Congress into re pudiating a Democratic platform pledge. What, we ask, may we not expect from such a man, and how far Is he to be trusted? As a candidate we'heard him crying from the housetops against what he chose to term "Cannonism" In Con gress, and yesterday we saw him force on the House a "gag" rule of the very kind he condemned so loudly when he ■was an officeseeker; a "gag" rule that not even such teretofore subservient I followers as Underwood and Clark could support. Bearing in mind the united front of the Democratic party following the Inauguration of President Wilson and the readiness of Underwood and Clark to carry - out White House orders, the revolt of these two men and their fol lowers is all the more remarkable. Very politely and indirectly both Clark and Underwood took the President severely to task yesterday whpn he •et to work to "gag'' Representatives against the utterance of things not pleasant to presidential ears. The "gag" rule was purely a Wilson rule, and here Is what Speaker Clark said of It: "You are making a serious mistake if you adopt this rule, and I would not be worthy of the commis sion you have given me as leader if 1 did not have the courage to stand here and say so." Anybody familiar with the manner In which the Wilson Administration treats those who oppose its pet poli cies will agree with the Speaker that It did require some courage for him to stand "up In the House and attack the President. And this from L'ndenvood. first lieu tenant to the President and leader on the door of the House. "Our whole difficulty arises from the un-American . spirit of surrender that some of OUR. SATURDAY EVENING, OWN people have exhibited." Plainly referring to the President as un | American. By the small majority of thirty-one voteß the President won the opening round and forced his "gag" rule on the House. Already he is preparing to punish those who hdd the temerity to oppose him. Administration men are saying that he will depose Under* I wood as leader and will have his own ; candidate for Speaker if the next House i 3 Democratic. IF—that is the big question just i now. Are we through with constant i truckling and shin-scraping to for eign governments? Have we had ! enough of seeing our own business and working people kicked In the face every time they appeal in Washing ton with a protest against some un- American law? Is there going to be another Democratic House? We think not. Underwood and Clark have little to fear at the hands of the President-. He will be shorn of considerable of his power to retaliate before another session op'na, unless all signs fail. DR. DIXON'S TALKS ONE of the least spectacular but most useful of the many goo! works of the State Health De partment Is the weekly health talk Dr. Dixon has been issuing re cently for newspaper publication. For years past the pages of daily papers have been crowded with ad vertisements offering cures for dis ease. Physicians have made fortunes bringing patients back to health. Spe cialists spend years in the study of obscure ailments. All this is vitally necessary lor the relief of the suffer ing, but in the eyes of the most ad vanced thinkers along medical lines, the great mission of the physician is to prevent disease. Dr. Dixon is put ting this idea into very effective prac- using the great prestige of hts office to procure the publication of the articles he so carefully prepares. How to keep well, not how to get well, is the theme of his "talks" and every one of them ought to be in the scrapbook of the man who gives ser ious thought to his physical condition. HIGH TARIFF AND HIGH PRICKS WE very much fear that what our Democratic friends love to term the "pernicious in fluences of the protective tariff," in some mysterious manner, must have been transferred from the United States to Great Britain. At all events the "high cost of living" is not the least of the troubles now confront ing the very much harassed English government, and since what corres ponds to the Democratic party in Britain has no high tariff of its own on which to lay the blame, we must conclude that somehow or other our own burden of tariff taxation must have been tossed clear across the At lantic when President Wilson played football with our long-established business policies. We are impelled to these ob servations by the following news item appearing in a recent issue of the London Times: A conference was held at Toyn beo Hall, on Saturday, to consider the increased cost of living and the question of a legal standard of quality for food. The meeting was convened by the National Women's Council of the British Socialist Party and the Women's Industrial Council, and eighteen societies and organizations were represented. Will Thome, M. P., presided in the morning. Miss Margaretta Hicks, secretary of the conference committee, moved a resolution ad vocating the establishment of a maximum price for the necessaries of life and a minimum wa«e for all workers, and said that the retail price in London of twentj'-three of the principal foodstuffs. Including bread, meat, bacon, butter and eggs, had advanced 17.9 per cent, between 1896 and 1910. Since then the necessities of life had risen considerably more. The latest figures also showed a fall of five shillings in the purchasing power of £1 during the last seventeen years. She advocated an organiza tion of women as buyers, with agents to call at their houses on the lines of the provident clubs. If this were done working women. Instead of trusts, would control the mar kets. The resolution was carried. We leave It to you. President Wil son has assured us that the protective tariff was the cause of high prices in America. Free trade, he has told us, is the remedy. England has free trade and we no longer have a pro tective tariff. Doesn't it strike you that there is something fiendishly mysterious about all this? Wouldn't it be awful if it were found that a Democratic tariff plot had been hatched to "wish on England" the devil of high prices so recently cast out of the United States? The only thing that troubles us In these logical conclusions is that we have failed to note any decrease in the cost of living at home. Anyway, we feel sure our Democratic friends will be able to find some connection between high prices and a high tariff in England. THE IMMIGRANT THE current issue of a widely-read magazine complains becannc the people of the United States rtrn the newly-arrived Immigrant toward the tasks the native-born does not like to do—the hard manual labor of our big enterprises and Industries. And why not? Isn't It right that the newcomer should do the kind of work for which he Is best fitted? Isn't It about time we cease to pity the for eigner among us and learn to admire him for his willingness to work and his thrifty ways? Granted the hard work and the low wages, he Is still superior to th* native-born In more than one respect. For Instance, he knows how to live within his income. The American people owe a great deal to the aliens, or those who quite recently have be come naturalized, for lessons in thrift. The average foreign-born citizen and the average alien Is not a spendthrift, in a single year the foreign-born people of Massachusetts have sent abroad, via one route, over $9,000,000. In addition these same foreign-born people have saved —deposited in banks or elsewhere at home—other millions. In this respect the old-time American can afford to take off his hat to most of the foreign-born, who are among our most frugal people It would bn hard lo say which are the most thrifty. French and Italians stand high in this matter. Thrift is likewise characteristic of the Germans, the Scandinavians and the Scotch, and in countless instances It has rewarded its possessors a thousand fold. Thesfc people have learned that the tlrst essential la acquiring the art of mak ing money is to learn to save. Can not native-born Americans leurn. tills lesson from them? In these days of electric motors and gasoline engines wo don't very often see a treadmill, but most persons know pretty well what it Is—a moving in clined platform geared up so that the weight of the horses walking on it turns the machinery. The point about It is that the horses never get anywhere, for all their hard work. How many persons are occupied in Just the same way! They work hard and they accomplish things for some body else, but they never get any where themselves. There are fow for eigners in this class. Let's stop pity ing our neighbors from abroad and see if we cannot learn a few lessons from them. EVENING CHAT 1 Two hundred and fifty of the 550 buildings in the forty-one blocks of the area to be added to Capitol Park have been demolished or are prac tically out of the way and within a week the demolition of fifty-seven more will be started. The State Is selling the buildings for the material they contain, the buyers being re quired to remove everything above ground and to take away three feet of cellar walls. Only such buildings as can serve the State for offices, storage, garages and similar uses are being re tained. It is the belief that by the end of the year all of the buildings on the 340 properties to which the State has title, except, of course, those in use, will be removed. Properties are being acquired by the State almost daily and two churches have lately been taken over. It is probable that the next Legislature will be asked to take some steps to provide for a study of the park and the extension from a landscape standpoint so that when the properties are acquired in 1916 the State will be in shape to go ahead with development. The park as It stands at present Is unfinished, the stoppage of work on the grounds in 1905, when it was found that the Capi tol was costing far more than ex pected, having caused some parts of it to remain unfinished. Plans for driveways and walks and for a new entrance at State street in place of the unimposing sandstone steps have been prepared for some time, but it has been deemed best to await the time when the planning of the whole park can be undertaken and the best results obtained. Pennsylvania is now going to buy its roadmaking materials in bulk and get the advantage of large purchases at a fixed price and arrange for de livery afterward. Bids have been aslced for as much asphalt as the State will need and the same plan is to be followed with other materials. It is expected that a considerable sav ing will be made. The State did that when it bought machinery a few years ago. Mayor Joseph Cauffiel, of Johns town, who was here recently and who has upon several occasions mado in quiries about matters in this city, has started a move to have the Flood City own its own water works. He has studied water plans in several cities, including Harrisburg. and is convinced that the city plan is fhe best. He faces a big light In his city, as the plant In that section is a big affair and will cost a lot of money. The area way between the Court house anil the Commonwealth Trust Company building, which has been re ferred to upon several occasions as a canyon because the sun shines Into it only a couple of hours a day. Is hold ing up its reputation. The pavep>nt in the section closest to the Post Ofiice has several piles of snow, which havo been there for weeks. Thev are cov ered with dirt, but it is snow all right. The south side of Derry street neai Fourteenth and Fifteenth streets also has snow piles as reminders of the blizzard. "Get your sassafras. This is the time to make tea and to drink It," sung out a farmer in the Chestnut street market this morning. "I'm sell ing a lot of the bark. This bark Is the real biting kind, the kind that makes the tea that clears your sys tem. You'd be surprised at the num ber of people who take sassafras tea every year. There's lots of 'em and It's a great thing for the liver." These tine days have caused a reg ular rush on the Public Library and It is expected that the March book service report will make a fine show ing. The attendance of children has been very large and the juvenile book department looks as though a raid had been made upon it. The library Is reallv suffering from too much pat ronage. Its stock of books has been worked and worked hard. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —William Smith, son of the former mayor of Philadelphia, may become a candidate for senator. —M. L. Van Baman, prominent York resident, is head of the firemen's relief association of that city, which has 700 members. —Bishop Thomas Bowman, of Al lentown, Is planning a trip to the Dakotas. —Ellsht Lee, new general superin tendent of the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington, started in life as a rodman on the Tyrone division of the Pennsylvania. —Joseph R. Grundy, the Bristol manufacturer, addressed the business men of Schuylkill Haven. —A. R. Hunt, superintendent of the Homestead steel mills, will terminate thirty years of service with the Car negie company on April 1. f' NLW WM» I [From the Telegraph of March 28, 1864] Forrest Klren City Cairo, March 26. Forrest, with an estimated force of 5,000 men. captured Paducah at 2 o'clock yesterday after noon, and sacked and fired the city. Colonel Hicks, commanding the post, occupied the fort below the city w'th about 800 men. Lee In Hot Fight New York, March 26. General Lee's forces had a fight at New Iberia, and pursued the enemy across Vermillion Prairie to Vermillion Bayou, a distance of nineteen miles. No particulars have been received. IN HARRISBURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph of March 28, 1864J Count-ll OrKanlzr* The City Council has organized for the ensuing year, by the re-election of William O. Hlckok as president, and David Harris as clerk. Church Incorporated The Second German Reformed Church, of this city, has applied to the Com mon FWs Court for an act of Incor poration. "f>«in* Is believing." quoted the sag* "C'h. I don t know. I see men ev»r<- <la*- whom T wouldn't believe under oath."—Cincinnati Enquirer. Bapjrisburg ftfjjjft? TELEGRAPH ENROLLMENT IS VEBV WIRING Indications Are That Republicans Have Gamed All Along the Lines in the State DEMOCRATS KEEP QUIET Have Very Little to Say About the Disclosures Anent the York Post Offices Republicans are shown to be com ing back into their own as the en rollment figures for this Spring are being scanned In tho various counties and it is expected that the Spring registration In the thirty cities of the State net month will demonstrate a big gain for the Republicans. In Schuylkill county, which was red hot Bull Moose in 1912. the Wash ington party has enrolled but 1,486 voters, while tho Republicans have enrolled 13.265. The Democrats, be cause of the row In their party, have enrolled more than usual, the total being 13,963. In many places the Re publican gain has been strikingly large, especially in the boroughs. Returns of the assessors for tho Spring enrollment of voters In Clear- Held county Indicate that tho Repub licans are coining back into their own and that a lot of voters are not indi cating to which party they belong. The total enrollment for the county is: Republicans, 6,471; Democrats, 6,141; Washington, 1,527; Socialists, 1,252; Prohibitionists, 419. The number en rolled without Indicating the political party preference was 3,201. Fayette county makes the banner showing. In 1912 there were 4,168 Republican voteß cast. This year 11.524 Republicans enrolled. The en rollment of the Washington party is but 696 against a vote of 4,257 in 1912. The Democrats polled a vote of 7,363 In 1912, but thiß year their enrollment is but 5.177 in spite ot' tre mendous efforts to get men enrolled because of tho primaries and to get Bull Moosers to join the ranks of the Democrats. The Socialists polled 2,462 votes in this county in 1912 and have enrolled but 833 this year. The total Republican enrollment tills year is 1.545 more than the enrollment of all other parties. The Philadelphia Ledger of to-day says: "Enough returns have been re ceived in the counties from the en rollment of voters on March 17 and IS to Ledger .Says show groat Republican OKI Parties gains over last year. The arc Gainers Democrats were also very busy on enrollment day and brought out their followers in huge numbers so as to be prepared for the Ryan-McCor mick contest. The heavy loser was the Washington party, and in some counties changes from the Bull Moose and Washington parties to the Repub lican were by hundreds. In the an thracite regions AVashington party men who strayed from the Demo cratic fold went back to their first allegiance." • According to Pittsburgh papers, E. D. Powell, a veteran Republican of Mercer county, is reported ns a can didate for the Repub lican nomination for Lieutenant - Governor Lieutcnant this year. Mr. Powell Governor is is a resident of West Talked About Middlesex and a vet eran of the Civil War. having senved in the One Hundredth Regiment, known as the "roundheads." The name of A. E. Sisson, formei Auditor General, is also being men tioned for the nomination, but he does not indicate what he would like to do. William H. Coleman, former mayor of McKeesport, Is likewise heard of, but In this section Frank B. McClain. for mer Speaker, has the call. McClain's friends are very active in his behalf in this part of the State. Advice to lay low until th© cyclone blows by has been given to the folks connected with the Democratic ma chine and nothing will be done about the scan dals turned up by the Keep Quiet Philadelphia Ledger Advice is over the York county Passed Out post offices. People con nected with tho machine are inclined to resent designation of Wilson Bailey as a bagman and to take the attitude that there was noth. ing wrong. Of course, had it hap pened that Republicans were mixed up in the affair, it would have been something awful. The men on' thb Wilson slate are insisting that they are the only champions of the people and are ignoring a good bit that is being said. This policy will be followed in the York matter. The Ryan men appear to have fallen down in their move to get someone to stand as a candidate against Palmer for the Democratic senatorial Palmer's nomination and three of Opponent the four men mentioned Is Hidden in Philadelphiapapers yes terday as possibilities have declared that they woulo not consider the matter. Ex-Attorney General W. U. Hensel said last night that, he would not consider it: Judge C. B. Staples said he would not be Ryan's candidate, and Henrj» O. Niles, the .York insurgent, said there was nothing doing. This leaves Judge John M. Garman, of Wilkes-Barre. The judge has been talked of a good many times in that connection and he would not mind the campaign a bit. Dauphin county Bull Moosers who are saddened at the small enrollment of voters under the party banner aro somewhat in doubt these days about what to do in connection with the guber natorial fight. Judge C. N. Dauphin Brumin has many partisans Moosest in this city and he will poll Unhappy a large percentage of the party vote, but there are some who cling to Lewis because they think that Flinn is for him, and beside they hear of Plnchot and Lewis on the same platform, and that makes them look on the Philadelphia man with kindly eyes. However, if FUnn does not unbelt and Pinchot keeps his purse strings tight, some of them are just as likely to go for Brumm and to make a noise about it. The Dauphin MooserS are not enthusiastic over Fllnn's notice that the party must find Its own funds. I POLITICAL SIDELIGHTS —Friends of Brumbaugh say that Erie county will give the Phtladel phlan a tremendous vote for Governor. —The local Ryan men say that McCormick will not be allowed to walk away with the cfty committee. —By the way, where is Creasy thib week? He was supposed to be'with the Jersey slate party. Maybe he is not on the slate —-George Wagouseller has an nounced that he will be a sure-enough candidate for Congress on the Wash ington ticket in the Seventeenth. ' —Bern and McGinnis make a areaL federal office holders team for tlic I up-State factional meetings. —J>HtP frosts have been reported | from the northern tier. —William Draper Lewis advocated direct legislation In his speech at Ijan enster last night. —lt is unkind to call Wilson Bailey a bagman. The reorganisation gang sters do not have any officer like that. | seems to have all the old ideas at work again. , —Northampton Bull Moosers have spurned the Democratic: fusion scheme and will run Pro{pssor Edward Hart for Congress If ho ■will stand. —The McCormick party can stock up on facts about the York post offices while here for tlio week end. —James 11. McAndrew, of Locust Gap, landed a federal plum from Fritz Kirkendall yesterday. Wonder-when Vollmer and the others are to get theirs. —The Philadelphia T-edger says that everywhere the enrollment shows a big (tain for Republicans and a loss for Washingtonlans. —April 29 Is registration day in the third class cities. A-uTTLe-nonaeniSe i When she was told that Johnny Duck, tho young insurance broker, had failed, she was sure It was because no one had taken much stock in him. ON THE JOB By Wlii( Dinger Nature's suraly on the job. She sent to-day her showers; By jove, it won't be very long Until we have the flowers. She's donning now her royal robes. Rich in their emerald sheen. The grass to-day was wearln' of A bright new shade of green. You'll see the kiddies, pretty soon, Down on their hands and knees A shootin' marbles, playing jacks, And other games that please. It's getting pretty close to days When everybody scores A heap of pleasure for themselves | In Nature's great outdoors. So, if unsettled weather you Should for a short time strike, Forget it—Nature's using it To make the things you like. Grocer Did that watermelon I sold you do for the whole family? Customer Very nearly. The doctor is still calling.—New Orleans Picayune. PREVENTS FURNACE RUSTING Unslacked lime in small berry baskets, or any dish, placed in furnace, will keep it from rusting during summer in a damp cellar.—Home Department, In National Magazine for March, 1914. THE GREAT RECONCILIATION fFrom the Washington Post.] Tho results of great celebrations like the one held last summer at Gettys burg between the Blue and the Gray usually are intangible. Something quickens in the spirit, something springs to consciousness in the mind, something wells in the heart, leaving no outward sign, but making life better and finer. Major Normoyle's report on the Get tysburg celebration has just come to light in one of the service magazines, and it comments upon tho results of tho great meeting between the veter ans of the North and tho South. The major, who was the quartermaster in charge of the preparations for the great encampment remarks: "The most tangible result of this cele bration was the happiness that it gave to the 65,000 veterans who were able, In their declining years, to meet to gether as brothers amid peace and prosperity, where fifty years earlier they !iad fought each other surrounded by wounded and dying comrades. While it may be true that time has done much to wipe out the resentment to which the war gave birth. It remained for the Gettysburg reunion to make the recon cilllation complete." Better still, as Major Normoyle sug gests. the reunion taught the younger generation of Americans to venerate the soldlerß of the Civil War, regard less of the color of their uniforms, far more deeply than they have ever done In the past. Secretary of War Garrison, in ex pressing his appreciation of the man ner in which Major Normoyle handled the encampment, pointed out that the encampment at one time reached a total of 66,000. There they were—the men who had fought so bitterly against' each other In the war, now locked in each other's arms, laughing or weep ing over the scenes that had been so real and vital, bathed now in sunshine instead of blood. What a picture that was at Gettys burg: Great masters have caught something of the spirit of war in their paintings, but the spirit of glorious reconcilliation which radiated from Gettysburg last summer could never be put upon canvas. OrilßOO KS and irclfg With a feeling of Spring In the air and a copy of the April issue of Subur ban Life —The Countryside Magazine lying before one who could resist the call to go a-gardening? This Issue Is the Spring Planting Number and some of tho principal articles have these al luring titles: "Making the Tennis Court Attractive," "A Squatter Garden and How It Grew," "Farming a Thousand Square Feet." "Beautifying the Home Grounds." "Japanese Cherry Blossoms at Homo and Abroad." "A Red, White and Blue Flower Bed," and so on. Newell Dwight Hlllls" "The Story of Phaedrus," will be published during the Easter season, a most appropriate time for the Issuance of the charming tale of early Christian days. Zane Grey, whose novel, "The Light of Western Stars," was recently pub lished, can soon have the satisfaction of seeing two of his earlier stories, "The Heritage of the Desert" ana "Riders of the Purple Sage," upon the stage. Both of these books, which like "The Light of Western Stars," deal with picturesque conditions In wild parts of the West, Jiave been dramatis ed. Sex, the underworld, white slavery, and all the sordid, depressing subjects ummmi m 1 1 SHIRTS SIDES ft SIDES j» | MARCH 28. 1914 STKAMSHIPH iinJASISHIPS [ARCADIAN TOIUROPE] |L twin scnew. 9.ooo Ton. R«|. t4.i20 Oi«pi lr NORWAY}! D|ft Suites d» Lux* with Private Baths.Swimtalng( %mmer Cruii## Iffl njJJLPoe), Gymnasium. Oreh«»tra end Other ft»tura». » 1 " WONDERFUL RATES J*V Sinjie Bed Room. • It \ ,*THE BALMY SOUTHERN ROUTE* JBIHIIIiW 111 L Hie Royal Mail Steam Packet Company «jn|BHMBIMI BpUIK S\M>K.H.sO\ A SON. General Airnta, 22 State HIBMIIiIuIIIOMI Y Sirw York, or P. l>orne Huuimcll, 103 WHfI|I|IIHI|iBM I W Market Street, Ilarrleburs. WyHtg||||||H|l i— ——n Money Foi Real Estate IgMjiw Transactions Kfl H H Many real estate transacons p| SI M usually take place around /»r.il jJB_HI.jp 1. If you have property to »11, rn* or intend to buy, we can btof ||| service to you. j j Dauohin Money realized from the sie " of real estate can be wisely i- n P nn«it vested in our Certificate's f " Deposit which pay 3 per cen j tp . interest for periods of 4- month *rUSt and longer. | company able, too, for loans «n~fi^t| 213 Market St. mortgages. | capital $300,000 We will be pleased to have you consult us and avtil your- Surplus, $300,000 " r Th 1' I selt of our unlimited acuities. Open for dopuslts Saturday evening from 6 to 8. for fiction uses that attained such a vogue during the past year, seem to have served their purpose among: maga zines generally, and apparently have been definitely relegated to the literary ash heap. From the offices of The Smart Sot comes the following editorial dictum: The Smart Set lias abandoned the jv/n T /r*f ~°°° Sheet Music j ln THE IDEAL MUSIC ST(RE Will Open April 4, 1914 Grand Opening Tuesday, Apri 7 35 South Second Street We will give to each purchaser a sheet of tnusic free on Tuesday, April 14. Our store will be open at night'untill p. m., Saturday until 12 p. tn., "We Accommodate te Public." Mr. Leo Wilson will sing and demonstrate all the W lowing week. Some of our 1914 hits. w | i "Kindly Direct Me to Broadway." | "Swinging Together." f "It's You, Nobody But You." \ 1 "The Rose That Made Me Happy Is the Rose Thai Made Me Sad." "You Arc the Star of My Life, Dear." Cash in your checks when our new song comes out, ''The First National Bank." All of the above arc published bv the J. E. MINNICK PUB. CO. 49 W. 28th St, New York. " Having an iirfividiwl line is such an advantage" Yet, and it cosU very little more thaiithe party line. You can recall the times when you havtgone to your telephone to make a pressing call aifl the line has I been in use by another party. There is no doubt, too, that the people iho call you often must wait for the very same reasei. Telephone service is convenient, but an individual line is ultra-convenient, for it is ready toserve you whenever you want. i Its cost is just a trifle more than you are not paying. It will take but a moment to telephone tlugiusiness Office and learn the exact rate. \ When You Telephone, Smile / The Bell Telephone Co. of P, if wm. Hi S. B. WATTS, Local Mgr. H Jm, ' 210 Walnut St.. Harrisburg, Pa. sort of fiction, though oproved b3' lit erary men and critic! which manv readers last year crltlzed its sordid nnd pessimistic and unlcessarily real istic and plain-spoken.) But we d» not inten to be goody goody nor substitute nnby-pambyism and a colorless negative) rtue for real strength and literary vijllty.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers