8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established lljl PUBLISHED BY THE TELGORAPH PRINTING CO. E. J. 6TACKPOLE, Pres't and TreasT. T. R. OYSTER. Secretary. GUB M. STEINMETZ. Managing Editor. Published every evening (except Sun day), at the Telegraph Building, SIB Federal Square. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building. New York City, Hasbrook. Story * Brook*. Western OfTlce, 12J West Madison atreet. Chicago, 111., Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at Six cents a wee*. Mailed to subscriber® *t $3.00 a year In advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harrl»- burg as second class matter. ! /fK Tks Association of Amor* ( 1 'i |f fill) lean Advertisers has si- / i VyV emitted and certified to i Jl the escalation ef this pab- I lication. Tho figures of circulation 11 contained in Iks Association's ro- i , I part only are guaranteed. i| Association of America! Advertisers ;i | No. 2333 Whitehall H. T. City / •worn dally average (or the month of May, 1914 * 24,402 * Average for the year 1815—21.5T7 Average for the year 1912—21.175 Average for the year 1911—18,851 Average for the year 191*—11.495 TELEPHONES] Bell Private Branch- Exchange No. SO4O. United Business Office, 203. Bdltorlal Room 085. Job Dept. SOB. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNK 3 ONI/V QUESTION OF MAJORITY THERE exists among the Repub lican district leaders here to-day for the meeting of the State committee a degree of confi dence in party success at the polls next Fall such as has not been mani fest for a decade. In the opinion of every one of them It is all a question of how big the majority will be. This is not the over-confidence or false optimism. In every quarter of the State the candidates nominated at the May primaries made wonderful runs. 3n many cases they polled twice and three times as many votes as the combined vote of the Democratic can didates, although there was every at tempt to get out the Democratic vote hy the opposing candidates and little effort put forth by the Republicans. ' The splendid showing of Senator Penrose and Dr. Brumbaugh are etraws in the wind. Their vote in the country districts was quite as remark able as that In the cities, where the Penrose strength especially was sup posed to lie. The Democratic nomi nees are candidates of a faction and the primary fight has put them into hopeless plight. Then, too, they fear the stamp of President Wilson and as the "White House twins" they will not cut a very large figure in a State where the people realize that the hard times they are now suffering are di rectly traceable to the meddling and the blundering of the Wilson Adminis tration. There are those who pretend to see In Colonel Roosevelt a grave factor In the political situation in Pennsyl vania next Fall, t>ut Roosevelt plead ing for votes for Roosevelt and Roose velt asking Pennsylvania to support Plnehot, the "occasional visitor," and Lewis, as great a theorist as President Wilson himself and about as efficient in practical government, are not the same. Nobody denies that Roosevelt as a candidate for President could at this time cause considerable stir in this State, but there is no indication that the voters are going to get very much excited over him in the contest 'now pending. The most that he can do will be to make the campaign a ilittle hotter and possibly cut a little ►into the Republican majority. The whole future of Republicanism !5n Pennsylvania is rosy w'th hope and ■the best sign of the times Is the universal optimism of the district leaders and State committeemen —the men who come Into every day touch •with the mass of the voters, who know •what the trend of sentiment is far in advance of any election and who one and all now predict an old-fashioned Republican victory in November. Arthur Ingersoll Hoe asserts in a court trial that a young woman who has sued him for breach of promise Beared him into big gifts of money. He declared, however, that the costly friendship was marked by strict propriety, and in timates that he was a good Samaritan. This seems to be another of those psychological affairs. GREAT PAVING WORK v THE action of Steelton council the other evening, asking the State Highway Department for aid in paving the road between Steelton and Highspire, will result in a continuously paved street from Highspire to Rockville, a distance of more than eleven miles. When the condition of the River Road and the highway between Har risburg and Mlddletown a few years ago is considered, this Is indeed a re markable achievement. Harrisburg pet the pace in tho fnatter of good dtreets and Steelton was not slow to follow. The result is that while Har risburg has more streets paved than any .other city of its size in the coun try, having now a yardage of con siderably over a million, Steelton is Ithe best paved borough in the United ;Btates. Like Harrisburg, it is anxious for more and will not be content rAintli It ha* been connected by paved (thoroughfares with every other near ly town with which It does business. Penbrook's council also has taken a step in the direction of betten streets ,by -asking for State aid in the im i provement of the main street through r .. ' v t > ft-+\.j* 1 i%,f , l2r " - „ , >* '" • . t ': T • +■' ■'•''■ r; *- - i\ -*«FvT* ■'"/■ r .' ;>« 1 vyj ' * .--.r^. TvWV . ■ T--'Y» w? w^ WEDNESDAY EVENING HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JUNE 3,1914 that town. The granting of this peti tion will make possible another con necting link in the chain of good high ways about the city. The remarkable sentiment for pav ed streets that at present exists in Harrisburg has resulted in the use of every penny available for the paving of intersections and the big program of street work has been held up on that account. It may be possible that a paving loan will have to be asked next Fall in order to gratify the con stant demands that cannot now be met. THE ROTARY CLUB THE Harrisburg Rotary Club, which last evening closed the third year of a very successful career, occupies a useful place 1 in the life of the city. .Made up of many of the "live wires" of the busi ness community and bringing to gether every two weeks men who otherwise might never learn to know each other, it makes for better and harmonious trade conditions In Har risbuix. The club has a higher Ideal than that of mere sociability, how ever, and it is apparently trying as best it knows to live up to its motto— which, by the way, is the new «.nd prevailing idea in modern business— "He profits most who serves best." The organization, under the direc tion of President John S. Musser, with the assistance of Secretary Howard C. Fry, has had a remarkably pros perous year and the election of Wil liam S. Essick to head the club dur ing the coming twelve months assures its conduct along dignified and pro gressive lines. The club has stepped out of its ordinary activities to take up several tax reforms advocated by City So licitor Daniel S. Seitz, of Harrisburg, and the solicitors of the other third class cities of Pennsylvania and has other matters of public importance under consideration, one of them the publication, at an expense of some $1,200, of a Harrisburg number of The Kotarian, a magazine with an international circulation and which goes into the hands of live business men the world over. Kooseveit's declaration that the pinch of poverty is felt In many a household and that "we cannot ignore the condi tions which have brought about this state of things," and his further state ment that "the ('er mother never kiss a girl before dressed the way he's engaged to you girls do to iler?" day to catch a "Well not till husband, he's engaged to Daughter—Yes|, ! her or some other but look at what girl." she got. H's Argument Didn't Minn Any- Mr. Greene—So thing you put In a good He Did you word for me to see the whole your sister? game to-day? . Willie - Yes, I She No, but told her I thought I saw all the im you'd make a gen- portant parts. I erous brother in- go there in the law - ninth inning, but not a run had been made up to that time. SEND US A COP Hy Wing Dinger From a friend, who lives In Park street. Came a note to-day to me, Saying that he and his family Would the cops' suits like to see. "But it's not an easy matter," His note then goes on to say, "For my folks to come in town, and Cops ne'er come out our way. "Every night, In fear and trembling, Wet get on our knees and pray That our house and all Its contents Won't be swiped ere break of day. | "Then we place beneath our pillows A six-shooter, loaded tight, And prepare to be our own cops If a thief gets gay that night. "But we'd surely like to see those Brand new suits we helped to buy. Won't you ask the Chief to send a Sample cop out to walk by?" DISASTER. INVITES PHII.OSOPHY [From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.] The appeal of President Wilson to psychology recalls the remark that philosophy Is the last resort of those in trouble. When everything is as we wish, with disease held at bay and death hidden by dim distance; with Fortune bountiful and our environment to our liking, wo rarely philosophize. It is when disaster dogs our best efforts and the irony of uninvited de feat eats into our souls that we cast about for some intangible and inscrut able cause of our miserable estate. Success never needs to be ex plained; victory needs no elucidating or extenuating commentary. If the measures of the Democratic Adminis tration had set every wheel turning in every mill, every chimney belching on every factory, every builder busy in every community, our scholarly Presi dent might have allowed psychology to have hobnobbed In peace with astrology and necromancy. «HOLD FAST YOUR PURSE STRINGS When you're clothes buying let economy rule, not false but careful economy economy that is as averse to paying too little as it is to paying too much that demands in every event a full return for every dollar invested. Copyright 1914 Kuppenheimer Come here with a preconceived idea of what you should spend for a suit that will serve you well ... a suit that's styled to insure a perfect appearance tailored to hold its style and fabriced inside and out to withstand all the wear and tear you may put upon it. If your standards are as high as they ought to be you'll have no fault to find with the prices we ask. You won't expect us to meet your requirements at nine-ninety-nine or thirteen-thirty-three, but you'll be pleasantly surprised at the volume of value we offer in KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES at $15.00 $20.00 $25.00 $30.00 To-day's best demonstration of our greater value-giv ing will be found in an especially selected lot of plain blues, pencil stripes, two-tone and broken check patterns in the British and Chester styles at $25.00 304 MARKET STREET Harrisburg, Pa. M _JQLH»I]L_ TH* feller thet comes a vißitin, when I'm busy an* sets fr a spell, might jest as well put his hand in my pocket an* take mon ey outer it—'r else time ain't money. : VELVET, the Smoothest Smoking Tobacco. Full weight 2 oz. tins. It's the best ten cents' worth that 10c. will buy in pipe tobacco. „ W HI inr M irT Landing Troop* # [From the Telegraph of June 3, 1861.J Washington, June 2. Troops were still being landed at Port Royal as late as Sunday and Monday last. These troops will no doubt march overland to Grant's support there. Attack llutler Fortress Monroe, June 2. The steamer John A. Warner, from Ber muda Hundred, which she left at 4 o'clock p. m., yesterday, brings the fol lowing report: At 2 o'clock the enemy attacked General Butler's left wing and a spirited fight with musketry and artillery was kept up till 9 o clock, when the enemy were again repulsed. DID YOIII Did you give him a lift? He's a brother of man. And bearing about all the burden he can. Did you give him a smile? He was downcast and blue, And the smile would have helped him to battle it through. Did you give him your hand? He was slipping down hill, And the world, BO I fancied, was using him ill. Did you give him a word? Did you show him the road, Or did you just let him go on with his load? D o you know what it means to be losing the fight, When a lift just in time might set everything right? Do you know what it means —just a clasp of a hand— When a man's borne about all a man ought to stand? Did you ask what it was—why the quivering lip? Why the half-suppressed sob, and the scaldingtears drip? Were you brother of his when the time came of need? Did you offer to help him, or didn't you heed?—Tit-Bits. LEGISLATION AGAINST TIPPING [From the Lebanon lieport.] The Canadian Parliament is passing a bill imposing a fine of SIOO for giving or receiving a tip, or permitting an j employe to receive one. If this law ! works well, there will be a move to [ place it on the statute books of our | States. The Canadians are more tract- I able and phlegmatic, and take more kindly to State regulation than do our people. But our tipping system causes intense Irritation, and is a heavy tax on salesmen and others whose business requires constant travel. An unenforced law is not merely dead wood, but it tends to make a joke of all law. It will not be the least use to enact statutes against tipping unless the American people really mean to end the prac tice. IN HARRIS BURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph of June 3, 1864.] Bank Stockholder* Meet There will be a meeting of the stock holders of the Harrisburg Bank on the sth of July, for the consideration of Im portant business. Knlarice Capitol The time for receiving plans and pro posals for the erection of the extension of the Capitol buildings will close on the 15th inst. The Governor and other State officers have the matter ill charge. PUBLIC ALSO PEEVED [Philadelphia Bulletin.] The State Department at Washington is reported to be "real peeved" at the action of the captain of the German steamer Ypiranga in quietly landing his cargo of war supplies for Huerta, after wo had sent a battleship fleet and taken Vera Cruz at a sacrifice of nine teen lives to prevent such succor of our beleaguered enemy. The public also is beginning to get somewhat "peevish" over the incident and the whole Mexi can situation, and the continual watch ing and waiting, and backing and fill ing, on the part of the Administration is getting on the national nerves and threatens an outburst which may eomo as a result of some minor incident. GIVE THE VOTERS A CHANCE 1 From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.] The President is right. There is noth ing more dangerous for business than uncertainty. Even annihilation, if cer tain, is sometimes preferable. "But," the President says, "the conscience of the country must be satisfied." Can it be that he has mistaken a spirit of vengeance for conscience? Thero ' is more of the former than the latter in Uie bills now before Congress. Business needs a rest. It has been goaded and buffeted about until it Is as timid as a rabbit. If the President thinks radicalism is growing and that this legislation is requisite to ward it off, let him postpone action until the next session and observe how his be lief will be vetoed by the people in November. f \ ■IAMUARTEIU roa 1 SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES