10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established lljl ' I PUBLISHED BY THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. E. STACKPOLE, Prea't and Treae'r. F."R. OYSTER, Secretary. Que M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. Published every evening (except Sun day), at the Telegraph Building, 216 Federal Square. Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Building, New York City, Hasbrook, Story & Brooks. Western Office, 123 West Madison street, Chicago, lIL, Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week Mailed to subscribers at J3.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harrls burg as second class matter. ®The Association of Amer- , 1 lean Advertiser* has ex- ( ■mined and certified to i 1 the circulation of *,hi»pub- i' I lication. The figures of circulation i 1 ( l contained in the Association's r«- I 1 1 port only are guarantned. 11 Assotiation of American Advertisers ;» Iworn daily average fur the raouth ol March, *914 Average for the year 1013—21.577 Aitrsge for the year 1012—21.173 AverHKe for the year 1011—18.N51 Averaiee for the year 1910—17,485 TELEPHONKSI Bell Private Branch Exchange No. 1040. United Business Office, 203. Editorial Room 585. Job Peot. 203 THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 9 HARRISBURG'S FIREMEN IN the inelegant but expressive lan guage of the street, "you've got to hand it" to the Harrlsburg Fire Department. Seldom have firemen been called upon to fight flames under more ad verse conditions than in the case of the old State Printery blaze last night. Between high buildings, in narrow, smoke-filled streets, and facing a sharp breeze, they confined the fire to the building in which it started — and that was all any tire department could have accomplished under the circumstances. The wonder is that they did so well. They scarcely could have been blamed if tlie fire had swept over and destroyed some of the ad jacent property. That it did not is due wholly to the splendid work of the volunteers who manned the en gines and the hose lines. So long as fire-fighting is as well done as it was last night, Harrlsburg is not in serious need of a paid depart ment, in the sense that the volunteers arc not capable of coping with the situation, but. it is not fair to ask men to rlslt health and life without pay to save property in which they have no financial interest, no matter how willing they are to give their services. The death of William H. Harris Is an example of this. Harris was a fine type of the volunteer fireman. Reck less of self, he rushed to the fire last night and gave up his life for the work. The point we wish to make is this —that the city has reached a point where it ought not to ask men to take the risk Harris ran unless they are paid and their services come with in their regular lines of daily occupa tion. So far as actual efficiency is con cerned we doubt if there is a better volunteer department in the country. Certainly none could have done more than the I-larrisburg firemen did last night. v PROPERLY NAMED THE Harrlsburg School Board has done well in deciding to name ihe new Allison Hill school- for the late Dr. L. S. Shimmefv The a. * school will be a model of mod<\* construction. It will be a worthy monument to a man who represented the very highest typo of instructor and scholar. The per petuation of such names as Foose, Day and Shimmell in the history of the city by associating them with the school system Which they did so much to develop, is a proper recognition of work Avell done and service well ren dered, THE NEW RULES THE Philadelphia Inquirer, in an editorial on the new rules of the Republican party, promulgated yesterday, and which beyond question will be adopted by the party organizations of all the States, points out that the one hope of those Pro gressives who want to see Colonel Roosevelt re-elected to the presidency is tc return at once to the Republican party. The Progressive party was formed by Roosevelt and has depended upon his personality for Its existence. It has been demonstrated conclusively that the third party can never be more than an aid to Democracy and that It is becoming weaker with each cam paign The point the Inquirer makes is this —that the new rules of the Repub lican party grant every one of the changes for which Roosevelt and his friends contended in the Chicago con vention. With the new regulations in force it will be impossible to have the national committee play the dominant part it did when Colonel Roosevelt used his road-roller methods to nomi nate Taft in 1908 or four years later when Roosevelt himself complained so bitterly against those very same methods. There will be no possibility of ques tioning the next Republican nomi nation. It will be made by the rank and file of the party without the possi bility of outside influence. The next national convention will be no more than the voice of a majority of the members of the party speaking their minds as to the best man for the jwesldency. Republican voters will THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 9, 1914. elect anil Instruct their delegates In accordance with the primary laws of the several* States and no delegate will be seated in the national convention who does not bear the credentials of a regularlyconstltutpd ofllc&s-of the law In his home district. Thus it will be seen that there can be no interference by the national committee or anybody else. There will be no possibility of contests. The voice of the voter will be the voice of the convention. . If. therefore, the Progressives, who arc for the most part merely Roose velt Republicans, are earnestly and honestly desirous of submitting Colonel Roosevelt to the people again in 1916, they will do the logical thing and make their fight through the medium of the Republican party. Of course, the Pinchots and other opportunists of the sort will not agree in this, but they hjive been using Roosevelt simply as a means of furthering their own desires for political power and would desert him as quickly as they did the Republican party if they thought they could profit thereby. They are not the rank and file of the Progressive party, and their little day of leadership is well nigh done. The big thing in. the adoption of the new Republican rules is that the Re- I publican party has removed the last bar to the return of those who bolted in 1912. There can be no possible further excuse for a Progressive party. COSTLY METHODS IF one thing above another has been demonstrated during the present campaign leading up to the pri maries In May it is that our meth ods of submitting the candidacies of voters to the people are extremely expensive. Under the uniform primary law, un less a man has no opposition for the lomination he seeks, it is almost im possible for him to make the run without the expenditure of thousands of dollars. Just how to overcome this condition is not very apparent, but certainly some means of removing the handicap against which the man of comparatively small means labors ought to be found. It ought not to be, after all our labors in the interest of fair election laws, that nominations should go to the candidates with the largest bankrolls. MEMBER OE THE "GANG ' RANK G. HOHL, the former FHarrisburg lad who yesterday confessed to the robbery of an Altoona bank, waa once a mem met - of the notorious "Tin Can Aiie.i Gang" that drove the police to desper ation by their petty crimes in the upper part of this city some years ago. Nearly every member of thai "gang" has developed into a bad man. One of .nem was killed by a police man and several others are either in jail or the penitentiary. Hohl's crime was only a little bolder, only a little more desperate than those of his fellows, but it was the spirit of the old "gang" that drove bitn to it. It was the things he learn ed iri "Tin Can Alley" that formed the foundation for the career of crime that has brought htm to a felon's In there, were no public playgrounds' Worthy of mention in Harrisburg. The boys of the "Tin Can Alley" district congregated there because they had no other place in which to meet. They did not choose it of themselves. It was forced upon them. And surely such a place as "Tin Can Alley" is not, to say the least, conducive to the development of good boys. The "gang" was the result of the bad environment the community forced upon Hohl and his little companions and to that extent the community is responsible for the failure of Hohl and the others of the "gang" to make good in after life. Intolerance of youth by persons no longer young and who cannot remem ber that they ever were young is re sponsible for the "gang" boys, accord ing to E. M. Barrows, special investi gator for the People's Institute of New York, who spent seven years In New York's "Hell's Kitchen" studying how criminals are made. And what is true in New York is true in Harrlsburg, Possibly Hohl was inately bad. Pos sibly he would not have made a good citizen even with the, utmost care and the best of surroundings. But at least we owed him a chance—and we didn't give it to him. That is the reason why the Tele graph is so earnest in its advocacy of public playgrounds and many of them. The more playgrounds we have, the more social centers the city supports, the fewer will bo the opportunities for our boys going astray. Wholesome sur roundings keep a good boy good and often make a good boy out of a very had boy, for in nine cases out of ten a lad Will live down even the evil ten ancies of inherited traits if he Is ?lven a chance and shown conclusive ly that it pays to be goocj, SAUCE FOR TITE GOOSE Fan enlisted man of the United (States Navy were caught with a bottle of wine hidden away in his locker he would he punished. But for years and years the officers In command of the rank and file have been privileged to take their "nip" when they so desired, and some of them took more than a "nip." What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander, and it Is difficult to see why a privilege that Is regarded as harmful to the men should be per mitted the officers. Secretary Daniels has scored a point for temperance in his order forbidding the use of intoxi cants aboard vessels of the navy, but he has done more than that. He has added to the general efficiency of the service after the mahner that large Industrial corporations have found it necessary to do—by the elimination of alcohol. No man even only partially under the Influence or drink lias any busi ness trifling with such a valuable piece of apparatus as a war vessel, heavily freighted g.e it is with human life. EVENING CHAT Father Petin will celebrate the sec ond of the arbor days proclaimed for this Spring by Governor John K. Tener by planting about fifty trees. These trees will probably be set out on the 24th of this month and the stakes are now being driven by a corps of State College men who have come here for the purpose. Native Penn sylvania trees, to be selected by Pro fessor Charles Colwell, of State Col lege, will be planted and it is likely that an occasion will be made of it and that Governor Tener may be in vited to plant a tree near the south wing of the State House. Superin tendent Samuel B. Kambo has been having professors and students of Stqte College handle the horticultural work in Capitol Park tnis year instead of hiring "tree doctors," the services being given by the college free in re turn for the appropriations made by the Legislature. Ail of the "surgery" now in progress on the older trees in tnc park Is being done by students under the direction of George H. Johnson a senior in the horticultural work of the college, and the selection ol' the places for the new trees has been made by Professor Colwell. Trie tree planting this year will be the most extensive ever undertaken at the Capitol and the trees will be specially chosen because of conditions. One man who did not ask for a special number in the issuance of automobile licenses has secured a tag which is out of the ordinary. There have been about 400 applications for special numbers, freak numbers, num bers corresponding to post office boxes, nouse numbers and the like, but this number just went, naturally. It was received by R. W. McFarland, Park ivenue and Jefferson street, Philadel phia. It is No. 41144. Harrisburg boys have gotten a bad ittack of stiltitis since Wflvert started to walk across the continent with the Harrlsburg Telegraph sign on his back ind there is hardly a section of the ity in which some young hopeful is Kit looking upon the passing show from a greuter height than usual. The other evening, just about the time '.oiks were going home to supper, there were half a dozen boys noticed within two blocks, all on stilts and all aaving a lot of fun. Stilt-walklng is something that appeals to every i oungster and the boy with a tall pair s one to be much envied. The trustees of the Harrisburg Academy have elected John Boyd, Jr., son of the late John Y. Boyd, to suc ceed him as a member of the board and in so doing have not only rec ognized the alumni but the memory ot one who was deeply interested in the affairs of the venerable Institution. Young Mr. Boyd attended the Acad emy and was for a time an instructor in the Academy. He was instrumental n the development of the athletics of the institution, especially in the forma tion of the classic division of the Greeks and the Romans. The board also selected Edwin S. Herman, one of the city's best known business men, as a member of the trustees to suc ceed the late E. B. Mitchell. Mr. Her man has been much interested in the school and has been active in pro moting its welfare. Miss Josephine Rathbone, who is in charge of the noted library instruction class of the Pratt Institute In Brook lyn, has written a very complimentary letter to Miss Alice R. Eaton, librarian of the Harrisburg Public Library, ex pressing thanks of the class for the courtesies extended on the recent visit of inspection and praising the beauty, appointments and system of the library. People who ride on the Hummels town and shorter division cars which traverse Derry street have taken to paying an extra nickel instead of hav ing,.to wait. Owing to the reconstruc ion work on the Derry street tracks, he cars have to run single track be ' ween Thirteenth and Nineteenth and oftentimes there are waits until the line is clear. The other evening some one spied a Nineteenth street car 'eading into Berryliill street with very few people it. In a minute two men were off'the delayed cars and heading for the Berryhill street line. They got to the Square five minutes ahead of the those who did not spend the extra nickel. The_ stops along the Derry street ine of the traction company because of the rebuilding- of part of the double track east of Thirteenth street have been the occasion of a good bit of growling, but there Is a lot of fun to be had In observing. Saturday night :ne car lingered and lingered long, awaiting the coming of a car to let it go In on the single track. Suddenly there was rapping at the door and when the conductor opened a childish voice asked "Got change for a five?" The lad came from a store which had run short on change and the con luetor who had been reaping a har vest of one dollar bills made the exchange. Then the overcrowded car became hot and a window was opened to furnish ventilation in addition to the ventilators. Immediately there was a protest about "drafts." And while the car was waiting a lady of mature years and much weight got on the car with two market baskets. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —Warren A. Wilbur, South Beth lehem banker, is interested In a big coke plant being erected near Buffalo. —Jacob Rlis, the New York jour nalist and reformer, has given up smoking, to which he had been de voted from the days when he worked at a furnace in Clarion county. —Wallace Rowe, head of the Pitts burgh Steel Company, has formed a new selling corporation to handle for eign business. ' —Henry Budd was assistant city solicitor in Philadelphia for a time. —James M. Laird, the veteran editor of Greensburg, will be a candi date for Congress. —Dr. Dunlap J. McAdam has com pleted forty-two years' service as a professor at Washington and Jefferson. —Judge James H. Reed has been elected president of the Pittsburgh Bessemer and T.ake Erie Railroad. EASTKH NAZARETH Little town of Nazareth On the hillsides Galilean, Oh, your name is like a poean Rising over dole and death! I can see your domes and towers Dazzle underneath the noon, An ' your drowsy poppy-flowers In the breezes sway and swoon. I ran see your olives quiver With their sheen. Like the ripples of a river Gliding grassy banks between. I can see your graceful daughters Poise their slim-necked drlnking-jars, With their hair like twilight waters, And their eyes like Syrian stars. I can see your narrow byways Where the folk go sandal-shod— All your dip' bazars and highways, Every path that once He trod. And I know that waking, sleeping, Until timo has ceased to be, You will hold fast in your keeping His beloved memiory! Littie town of Nazareth On the hillsides Galilean, Oh. your name Is like a p'oean Rising over dole and death!" —Clinton Scollard in April Llppln- Cott's. LEGISUME IS , (OIL OF PARTIES Five Sets of Candidates Likely in Dauphin's Two Districts j MEYERS TO MAKE SPEECHES Will Go About With Ryan and Budd; Meeting Probable on •the Eighteenth Dauphin county's four seats in the lo er house of the State Legislature are attracting much attention these days and the chances are that there will be five sets of candidates. The presentation of the name of John C. Nissley as a candidate for the Re publication nomination in the Second district has enthused Republicans as he is very strong all over the county, especially in the lower end. Several names are mentioned in the upper end. The Democrats are having troubles of tl\eir own as opposition to Doc Shaftner, the Enhaut poor board phy sician, is expected. The doctor has started an automobile canvass and it is said the going has not been good. In the upper end Pat Craven persists in refusing to get out of the way of Sassaman. Bull Moosers last night decided to name two legislative candidates in the city, the county nominations being con ceded to Martin and Lenker. The So cialists will have a full ticket, Edward L. Rowe, Lykens, having filed al ready. William K. Meyers, candidate for the Democratic nomination for congress at large, will take the stump next week and be with Michael J. Ryan when he goes into Meyers will Clearfield county, make speeches according to state- with Ryan ments made last night. Mr. Ryan will speak Monday in Philadelphia and Delaware coun ties and Thursday will be in Clear field and Center counties, coming here on Saturday, according to present plans. Henry Budd. candidate for senator; John E. Jenkins, candidate for lieutenant governor; Senator Richard V. Farley, who appears to be somewhat of an annoyance to cer tain candidates these days, and Mr. Meyers. The Palmer party will all be here Monday for the Jefferson day dinner and will make a valiant effort to turn the tide with Secretaries Dan iels and Wilson. Cumberland county Democrats are considerably disturbed over the fac tional warfare which is disrupting the party in the state and are afraid of a reflec- Cnniberlund tion in the campaign Democrats now being waged for Quarrelling the nominations for the Legislature. Represen tatives Barner and Burnett are finding the path to re nomination to be very thorny and A. M. Bowman, of Camp Hill, has been making things very lively all along the line. In the other end Dr. Peters, of Boiling Springs, is taking advantage of the row to get into the game. It Is probable that any man advocated by the bosses vill have trouble. The Republicans will revise their rules at a convention next week and at that ttnw It is probable that legislative candidates will appear. Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer's dare to his rivals for senatorial hon ors has been received with a good bit of amusement here be cause some time ago prop ositions of that character Anxious were generally rejected, da's f>r Palmer's boom for the Palmer Democratic nomination was in fine shape around here until Henry Budd announced his candidacy and he will have to do some stepping. It is said that after the Jefferson day dinner here next week Palmer will go back to his district to mend his fences as he recognizes that he will have, to fight for liis very political existence at home. Later on he will go to Phila delphia to help his friends who .ire in trouble all along the line because of the appearance of Budd as a can didate. TPOUTICAL SIDELIGHTS"! —The other day Palmer appealed for votes to support Wilson and now he says that the Democratic defeat In New Jersey should not be interpreted as a slap at the administration. Oh very well. —Ex-Congressman Bon Focht, Jerry Light and Ex-Marshal Yeager are having a real nice sociable fight for the congressional honors. —Central Democrats say that the Jefferson dinner will beat that of last year. —Harrisburg Republicans are planning a big club event in May. —W. M. Bertolet and J. K. Stauf fer are being talked of for congress by Berks Republicans. —A whole day has gone by with out a speech by C. S. Prizer, the sin gle taxer who Is running against Kaufman for the Democratic nomina tion for congress. —Pinchot had only fifty men out to hear him in Dußois. —The adding machine is an im portant part of the equipment of the McCormick campaign party. —Grover C. Ladner, Palmer can didate for the state senate, was beaten in a fight for director of the Demo cratic club of Philadelphia. —Palmer says that Budds are apt to be nipped by spring frosts. —Dimmick's friends are making a battle for him in Schuylkill. —The Young Men's Democratic so ciety, of Lancaster, died yesterday, aged thirty-fivf? years. Internal com-1 plications killed It. —The news of the defeat of the re-organization candidate for Demo cratic chairman in Lycoming has not yet reached Market Square. A PORTRAIT Loving the elms Into a rustling cool ness, The breezo upon her shining tresses plays; Beauty of the noonday in midsummer fullness Marshals her musings into olden ways. Old hopes, old Joys, old friends, are in her dreaming, She whoso gray eyes are still so finely young; As if a lake should find in its breast gleaming A star at noon; a rose where dew has clung. —Samuel McCoy, in March Ainslee's. AN EVENING THOUGHT If we confess our sins, he is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.—l John 1:9. | Jerauld Shoe Co. 1 | "This Will Be a Big | I Oxford Season s it / And the new shade of brown will be very popu- H L >d|Jp lar," says the style makers. Our patrons are ♦♦ delighted with this new shade. "Just what I ♦£ || have always wanted and couldn't get," many || ii Men have a wide range of styles to select tt ♦f j from this season from the high toe, short vamp, tt tl to the narrow toe, longer vamp, English. |J tt As usual you'll find all the NEW THINGS here in stylish dependable shoes, || ♦♦ both high and low cut in button, lace, blucher in black, white and tans; leather £$ and rubber soles; with sizes and widths to fit every normal foot. ♦♦ 3 Prices $3.00 to SB.OO Per Pair. • U Our windows give a hint as to the proper thing this coming season 0 tt Hosiery, too. , tt | Jerauld Shoe Co. § | 310 Market Street p ■KmmmsrnmramummttttnttmtmttmmtmmiKsttumsb A-Lirae- nonseqse SIC TRANSIT Jeuks —You say you sounded the horn just as the machine struck tlie man? Binks —Yes. Jenks—Was the victim killed instant ly? Binks —So instantly that he must have heard the echo of that horn in the next world. HIRRAII! FOB THE VOLUNTEERS By Wlhk Dinger That was really a dangerous fire We had in the city last night, And as flames leaped from windows and doorways It gave nearby dwellers some fright. But Harrisburg's volunteer firemen, Just as they have done times before, fought like demonds and stopod It from spreading, They couldn't have done any more. Once more in the heart of congestion, Where fire much havoc could work, They rendered invaluable service, Not a one from his duty did shirk. But as I stood watching them fighting I couldn't help think what a crime That this city should call on Its people To risk their lives at such a time. I think that a paid fire department Should now by the city be run, And the volunteers, who long have be Relieved with a crown of "Well Done." THE PORTS OF PE ICE Now what care I what woe may be So long as Dreams remain? The days of Youth that used to be In Dreams come back again. The voices that I used to hear In hours now long gone by Re-echo through those visions clear As bird-notes in the sky. The high hopes of the days of Youth Now shattered past repair— A sorry wreck are they, in truth, All burled deep in care— In Dreams —ah, they are realized In measure running o'er, And I, the failure, the despised, Hold close to them once more! And then the Love my heart doth hold A secret sweet from all! Ungratifled forever, cold, Gone ever past recall. When stars are whispering above My cot. stark and alone, I dream, and dreaming find my love Hath come to be mine own! Ah, blessed Dreams! God's kindly gifts To ease the heart and soul! Mid clouds of disappointment, rifts That open to the goal! Oases they In desert hopes; Sweet harbors of release Where for the lost the gateway opes Into the ports of peace! —"The Ports of Peace." John Kendrlck Bangs, in National Magazine for March, 1914. WILSON'S MEXICAN POLICY IFrom the Philadelphia Public Ledger.] Our relationship to Mexico is rapidly becoming a scandal, and no one ean foretell what our superfine dalliance may cost us In lives and money during the next three years. The trust 'ues tion is as chaotic as it his ever been, and the admin stratlon has given us nothing but hazy hints of its possible lines of action. An Indiscretion at this time may dislocate business and plunge our Industries Into a long period of de pression. Our relationship with Japan in the matter of the treaty Is still pre carious. Various extensions of govern mental action, of a socialistic or semi eoclallstlc type, like the Ahyikan rail road scheme, may carry us far bevond the recognized limits of the Constitu tion. And with the President compelled to keep peace with Secretary Bryan in order to nold the Western Congressmen In line, no one can say what policies will be forced upon Mr. Wilson. UKAUttUAHTKR* KOM 1 SHIRTS , SIDES & SIDES NEWS DISPATCHES I OF THE CIV L WAR | [From the Telegraph of April 9, 1864] Forrest Trying to Escape A dispatch from Cincinnati says: Philadelphia, April B.—Notwith standing the Rebel Buford's assurance that he intends to remain permanently in Kentucky, it is reported that For rest is maneuvering to get out of tho State by dividing his forces Into small 1 detachments, and slipping them off by byways. Hangs Robbers Cairo, April 6.—lt Is reported that | the Rebel General McCrea hung a number of robbers and murderers who infested ills neighborhood and robbed friend and foe alike. EVERYBODY LOVES CANDIES Few of the great Industries of this country have come to the front through the favor of public demand as rapidly of late years as the busi ness ol' making and selling confection er;.. Few have successfully overcome s<* much of old prejudice upon the part of the medical profession, and | none other among all of the food pur- I veyors coming under the regulation of ! the general government have gone so | far In advocating and applying good j sanitary conditions in workshops and in avoiding the use of any ingredients injurious to the human digestion. Leading physicians all over the world now generally concede the fact that the love of sweets is a natural craving and that in the form of can dles it presents its most palatable and attractive guise. Candies which were formerly regarded by most people as a luxury are now considered In mil lions of homes as a highly condensed form of food and thus a staple com modity. Good candies are cheaper now than ever before. This Is due in some de gree to the low cost of sugar, but to a larger extent to the introduction cf much ingenious machinery and the manufacture of special varieties upon a much larger scale than formerly. The people of the United States use far more chocolate than those of any other nation, and it forms a leading element in a very large percentage of the candles retailed everywhere. It will be used to a still greater extent as the world's supply of cocoa beans be comes equal to the normal demand. We will learn, as the French people have done, to "nibble" chocolates be tween meals as a sustenant. All fla vorings and colorings now employed by American confectioners are used by authority of the government, whose pure food and drug experts constantly analyze samples of candies and forbid | any introduction of such Ingredients as are harmful. Tn addition, pure food laws are now enforced by the State bureaus In all of the Commonwealths. The confectionery Industry in the United States has an annual output which long since passed the $100,000,- 000 mark. There is nothing else which so brightens up the home of tho wage earner as a pound of candies for the children and grownups of the evening circle. "STECKLEY'S" Let Us Show You the New Styles While They Are New Surely, you'il want a new pair of SHOES FOR EASTER. BREEZY styles for the young, conserva tive models tor those who prefer them. STECKLEY'S,4O4 Broad St IN HARRISBURG FIFTY • YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph of April D, 1864] Presbytery to Meet The Presbytery of Harrisburg holds its semiannual meeting in the borough of Carlisle on Tuesday next. Refugees Hero , During last night, refugees from the horrors of rebelion, . comprising twelve men and women, and the rcmaindor helpless children, I arrived in this city. 1 BOOKS and I HI MAGAZMiE^yI I Young people whose interest in Mexico lias been stimulated by tin i'continued disturbances in our nelghboi : country will find both entertainment and information in two stories writtel' I by Nora Archibald Smith and Frances .Courtenay Baylor and published ft few I years ago by Houghton Mifflin Com i pany. . Miss Smith's story, "Under tilt .'Cactus Flag,' gives the experiences ot I i an American girl in the State of Sonora '.a section which is especially prominen ;! at the present time. "Juan am i.Tuanlta," by Miss Baylor, is the storj II of a little Mexican boy and girl wh< [ | are captured by Indians and called ou [ i of tne country, and of their many ad i The 77th birthday of John Burrough: ' 1 is marked in his career as a writer b> .'the third printing of his latest book, , j "The Summit of the Years." j Many authors are Idolized in then • I own country, but few are admlroc '! equally by home folk and foreigners > To Kate Douglas Wlggln, however . falls the good fortune to have acquired I an English audience almost as lurgf find enthusiastic as her following lr 'j America. Her new book, "The Story ot | Waitstili Baxter." although it might b« l, considered oulte locally American, is • selling largely in England and calls i! forth most favorable comments. ij A DESERT EVENING Dusk, and the purple shadows glldi j 1 o'er the desert land, . Qooling the dust-parched cacti, hiding r 1 the sun-white sand; ; The scent of the palo verde is sweet oil the twilight air, L' And the yucca palms are stirring, slen i der and frail and fair. . A weary pack-train, ghost-like, halts by the water-tank. I Where the mallow flowers blossom, bole and (laming and rank. ■ j The brown bees circle the greasewood -' and a lonely outcast cries, i i The howl of a lean coyoto raised to the saffron skies. , Distant the ragged foot-hills, searei ■ | and scorched by the sun, ' i Walt the caressing darkness, after the II day is done. j'And sweet from the pale mesquit trct>| I j song of a feathered throat. , Haunting and wild and tender the thrll; of the- mocking-bird's note. • j Draw near to my arms, beloved! Out camp tire Dickers and falls, II While the great stars lean above us hero where the rock-owl calls, i Stretches of shimmering silver, and wo and the desert moon, Alone with the scented night-wind and ' the peace of a gray love's croon, r —Jean Brooke Burt in April Lippln- I cott's.