10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established 'tj' PUBLISHED BT THE TELEGRAPH FRINTIWO C». E- J. BTACKPOL.E, Pres't and Treas'P. F. R. OYSTER, Secretary. OUS M. BTEINMETZ, Managing Editor. Published «v«ry •▼•nine («xo«pt San day), at the Telegraph Building, 21* Federal Square. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building. New York City, Hasbrook, Story « Brooks. .Western Office, IJ3 West Madison street, Chicago. 111., Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a KJISi Mailed to gubscrlber" at SB.OO a year In advance. Entered at the Post Office in Harrla burg as second class matter. ®Tha Association of Amor- , 1 ican Advertisers has ox- , tmktd and certified to i tho oircalatioa of tW»p«b- i ' | lication. Tho figures of circulation 11 I contained in tko Association's re- i , I port only are guaranteed. i[ Association of American Advertisers > |> No. 2333 WhitehallßM|. A. T. City | •worn dally average (or the nSitt of May, 1914 ★ 24,402 * Average for the year 1913—21.WT Average for the year 1812—21,1T8 Average for the year 1911—18,851 Average for the year 1810— 1T.488 TELEPHONES I Bell Private Branch Exchange No. 204#. United Business Offlca, 203. JMitorlal Room 586. Job Dept. SO*. SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 6 IN PENNSYLVANIA A MILLION dollars a month is what the pig iron industry in this country is losing, according to the report of John A. Penton, of Cleveland, secretary of the Ameri can Pig Iron Association. Many fur naces have shut down, he says, and plants are in the hands of receivers. Thousands of employes have suffered a cut in wages due to this condition and more reductions are to follow. "We have now confronting us one moro hardship," says Mr. Penton, in his report, "in the shape of the knowl edge that foreign countries, owing to the abolition of our tariff and because of their lower cost of production are going to be able to ship, and are even right now shipping and arranging to ship, quantities of foreign pig iron Into our country when the whole in dustry here is operating at a loss of millions of dollars a month." The pig iron industry i 3 not the only example of the effect of the Democratic tariff law. Employers and employes In industrial establishments the country over are feeling the force of a general depression. Readjust ments made necessary by the new tariff law have caused a general slow ing down of business. Reports from many industries indicate a business de pression which has thrown thousands of men out of employment. That the unemployed are holding the present Democratic administration responsible for present conditions is eliown by the overwhelming Republi can victory in the seventh New Jersey Congressional District, not long ago. In that district, Republicans made the tariff the issue and the Democrats ac cepted it. Evidently the unemployed of that district hold President Wilson nnd the administration's supporters responsible for bad industrial condi tions, for the President's popularity in his home State could not withstand opposition to the administration's policies. Jl nd that is the issue on which the Coming battle in Pennsylvania will be fought. In the Senate yesterday Senator Heed, hailing from the largely agri cultural State of Missouri, said: The Democratic party seems to me to be In this situation at the present time. If it passes a bill restoring confidence to the financial situation and tile stock market re sponds and shows Improvement the gentlemen on the other side of the aisle rise up and roll their eves nnd froth at the mouth in a line frenzy and declare that it has sur rendered itself to the great finan cial interests. But if a trust or other combination sets up a wail we are immediately denounced as enemies of all legitimate business. Will the Senator please quote for ©ur own benefit one law generally beneficial to legitimate business that the Democrats have enacted since President Wilson took office? W r ill he tell us how the Democrats have bene fited the country by the passage of a tariff law which has cut the props from beneath our Industries and un der the provisions of which prices of household stuffs have continued to ad vance? Does the Senator object be cause workmen complain when Demo cratic legislation has thrown them out of work? Or does he expect us to smile under the lash and applaud the man who cracks the whip? We don't know what the people of Missouri may think about it, but in overwhelmingly Republican Pennsyl vania next Fall the Wilson administra tion is going to get a line on public eentiment that it is hoped will knock eome sense into its perverse and stub born head. BACKYARDS AND FIRES THERE Is a side to backyard gar dening beyond the transforma tion of unsightly premises Into productive, well-cultured beauty ►pots. A well-known insurance agent Bays that the city that boasts of back- Sard gardens has fewer fires than the town in which the rear lots are given ever to the garbage can, the ashpile, rubbish and tin cans. Insurance risks ere better in such a place and property Is safer. These are considerations the Civic Club did not have in mind when It Introduced gardening in Harris burg, but they are well worth while, Nevertheless. I I ■ SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JUNE 6, 1914. THE ANGELS OF REFORM PALMER - McCORMICK machine is in trouble at Wilkes-Barre. The Record, always fair in po litical matters, charges the local end of the reorganisation machine with deliberately maneuvering 'to cheat the anti-machine candidate for the State committee out of his certifi cate. The Record says: The gang and its satellites have stooped to everything disreputable to save something out of the wreck, but have been defeated at every turn. And now the question is, who stuffed the ballot box after the vote was counted? Will this crime go unpunished? Will the gangsters probe this evident fraud and get its friends in trouble, or "lay down?" Let us wait and see. And this by the angels of reform! PERSONAL ECONOMY WITH hard times knocking at the door, many are now em barrassed by inability to meet current expenses. To thousands of people loss of work means immediate suffering and the accumulation of bills that prove handicaps for months, if not years, to follow. Personal economies now en forced should to a less extensive de gree be made permanent. If you doubt that the nation needs such a new birth of thrift consider these facts: We spend $8,400,000 a year for clg arets. We drank 70,000,000 gallons of whisky last year. We chew up over $25,000,000 worth of chewing gum annually. Last year the American people paid out $90,000,000 for candy. These figures and many more like them are the measure of what is largely popular extravagance. We could do without a very large part of the things represented by those enormous figures, and be just as well off —yes, a great deal better off. But it would be useless, if it were possible, to shut off such foolish ex penditures suddenly unless the money so saved by individuals were put to good use either by the savers them selves or by the bank in which they deposit the money. This brings up the point which is so often raised by persons who fail to see any economic good in saving. They say that the spendthrift gives employment to others and that his money gets into the bank eventually even if he deposits none of it there himself. That is all very true, but how much better it is to have the money used constructively in ways which mean i sobriety, industry, h6me ownership, integrity, good citizenship and educa tion of children. Saving just for the sake of saving is not advocated, j Thoughtful, purposeful saving is the thing. Genuine, constructive thrift has an important bearing upon industrial and national progress as well as upon the material success of the individual. Here are a few examples of what is meant by constructive thrift: The invention of the engine burning oil instead of coal. Intensive cultivation of land as con ducted by a Maryland family that makes SIO,OOO a year from twenty acres of flowers and vegetables. The school, back yard and vacant lot gardens, which help lower the cost of living. Applying the principles of thrift to methods of bricklaying by cutting out superfluous motions, as was done by F. B. Gilbreth. The new "scientific management" of business generally, including the es tablishment of bureaus of standards by municipalities to save the people's money in buying supplies for public use. Irrigation and other conservation projects as conducted by the govern ment. A LEGEND A MEDIAEVAL general who was forced to flee from the enemy passed through a little village and saw a tea house and he said: "Well, a man can die only once, and I must have a cup of tea." So he sat in the shade and cool of the tea house and sipped his tea and when he had finished, said: "Well, I almost hear the enemy's footsteps as they come, but I think I will have a sec ond cup," and even that did not sat isfy him, for he said: "If lam to die, I will die at any rate at peace, so I will have a third cup," and as he sat and drank his third cup of tea, calmly and quietly in the shade of the tea house, the enemy rushed by and he was saved!" Even so does Opportunity—often spelling her name with a capital O— go rushing by the cool corridors of the cafe in which the young man sits languidly over the glass. The moral of which is,—Don't stop unless you wish somebody to pass you. WHERE OUR GOLD IS GOING THE National Foreign Trade Con vention, representing a hundred leading commercial and indus trial organizations of the coun try, has just come to a close in the National Capital. This suggests a timely inquiry: Which side of the foreign trade ledger is America going to be on— the credit or the debit side? For years, under a Republican protective tariff law, the United States has been on the credit side, with plenty of gold piling up in our vaults instead of in foreign banks. But now! Reports show that America is send ing a great deal of gold across the seas. Whether this gold is going to pay for the heavy Imports under the Democratic tariff law, we must, with perfect fairness, say is yet to be seen. But this is true right now: We have plenty of gold here in America and the reason we have plenty of gold is because we have been selling Amer ican-made goods to Europe and tak ing their money for It. Now, under the Wilson tariff, we are buying for eign goods and paying for them in American gold. And, with the tariff as it has been fixed by the Demo cratic party, we can no longer expect to concel the charges for American made goods. Lincoln said: "I do not know about the tariff, but I know that if you buy a ton of steel rails abroad you have the rails and the foreigner has the money; if you make a ton of rails here, you have both the rails and the money." So, while we are talking about ex tending our foreign trade, we may ex pect to hear further reports that our gold is being shipped to Europe. When we hear these reports, perhaps it will be just as well to bear these facts In mind. 1 EVENING CHAT 1 Without making much fuss about it the State's Public Service Commission has been accomplishing a tremendous amount of work and while it has not rendered any momentous decisions yet the number and diversity of the cases piled up—and piling up—for the com mission is something worth noting. When the commission was formed it was thought by some unfamiliar with the act that there would not be much more than the recent State Railroad Commission was called upon to han dle. However, those "in the know," as they say on Capitol Hill, just wait ed until things got started. Now they have started and the dockets of the commission are full of business of every kind and the demands on the commissioners are such as to keep them occupied practically aU of the time. This week the commission has held five big hearings, not ordinary small cases, but real big ones involving enormous interests, and about a dozen small hearings. The commission has been in session all day and most of the evenings since Tuesday morning at 11. Monday it spent in Philadel phia visiting the proposed grade cross ing abolition work and last week the members were out on inspections and hearings and there are more to come this week with slim prospects of va cation ahead. Just to show the kind of cases handed to the commission to settle it may bo cited that the State, the city of Newcastle, the railroads and other corporations were unable to agree about apportionment of the cost ol' a bridge in that city So the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings pass ed it on to the Public Service Com mission. Some people have an idea that the 1 offices of officials on Capitol Hill are meant for the Instant transmission of information on everything from kill ing waterbugs in a kitchen to making a drunken foreigner put his. cornet away and go to sleep. The other day a man who had called half a dozen officers and pestered the Capitol tele phone exchange secured a connection with a telephone in one of the finan cial departments. A wag happened to be near and seeing the amazement on the face of the man who received an agricultural problem of large dimen sions, asked permission to answer it. He was handed the telephone with some misgivings. But he rose to the occasion and said with the utmost gravity. "Please write your troubles and mail them to Pouch A." It might be added that the pouch is that which receives the mail for the State hos pital. District Attorney Michael E. Stroup has not forgotten his football days and how he used to circle the end at Franklin and Marshall. He was much interested in the Kunkel campaign and when things got hot he announced that he was going to form a "flying wedge" on a county. When the re turns came in it was found that he had "broken the line" of a combina tion and aided materially in carrying the county for Kunkel. Governor Tener has almost com pletely recovered from his recent in jury to his back and has been able to walk good long distances and to indulge in his customary exercise. The Governor hopes to be able to play golf with his customary ginger in a short time. To-day he was in Pitts burgh for the first time in three weeks and will jump from this city to State College and then to New York and Philadelphia and back again to Har risburg from Monday to Thursday. The commission which has had charge of the formal transfer of the battleflags has had its own troubles with the picking of the men to bear the flags, but one of the funniest inci dents was when a man wrote to one of the officials protesting against the selection of another man. He was told that the choice had been made by regimental officers in the absence of an association, but fired back that he and a neighbor had formed an asso ciation and proposed to be recognized. In another instance i\ man who was president of an association of a regi ment's survivors found that a man in another part of the State claimed to be holder of the same office. The commission left them to untie the knot. Francis H. Bohlen, secretary of the State Industrial Accidents Commis sion and well known in this city as an authority on the law of damages, has sailed for Sweden with Mrs. Bohlen on a visit to Mrs. Bolilen's parents. While abroad Mr. Bohlen will continue his investigations and then make a tour of Germany and France. Among visitors to the city this week was Helnrich Buch, of "Alt Berks." Mr. Buch was a regular attendant at State conventions and political gath erings and to show his acceptance of the new order of things attended all three big State committee meetings impartially. He only tried to make a speech at one. f WELL KNOWN PEOPLE"I —Albert Rosenthal, the Philadel phia artist, has been able to find a portrait of Mayor Fox, of that city, and the gallery of mayors is being ad vanced toward completion. —George W. Elkins, of Philadel phia, has gone on a yachting trip up the New England coast. —Thomas A. Beck, the new Chester 6ounty school superintendent, Issued certificates to 232 graduates as his first duty. —Theodore Voorhees, the new pres ident of the Reading, was sixty-seven on Thursday. —W. L. Danahay, of Pittsburgh, elected secretary of the Manufactur ing Confectioners' Association, is one of the active business men of the Smoky City. IN HARRISBURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph of June 6, 1884.] Muster Four ltcKlment* We learn that the First, Second, Sev enth and Ninth regiments of the Penn sylvania Reserves, will proceed to Philadelphia, to-morrow evening, to be mustered out of service. I.flrigc Mreti Here The Pennsylvania Grand Lodge, I. O of Good Templars, will hold its annual session In this city during the present week. TEN TIES BROKEN IT THE CAPITOL Lots Are Cast For the Determina tion of Legislative Nomina tions For This Year DEMOCRATS ARE AT ODDS Morris Seeking to Overcome Ef fect of the Machine Methods of State Committee Ten nominations for member of the State House of Representatives on which there were tie votes have been determined by the drawing of lots in the department of the Secretary of the Commonwealth and it is expected that when the complete returns from Phila delphia, Allegheny and LUzerne coun ties are in hand there will be more to decide. Under the law all persons for whom tie votes have been cast for nominations which are certified to the Capitol are required to be notified to appear eighteen days after the election and draw lots. They very rarely ap pear and the lots are drawn by officials. The ties which were drawn resulted in the selection of the following nomi nees for the House: Carbon, Socialist, B. V. Kennedy: Blair, Second district, Prohibition, Simon F. Zook; Chester, Prohibition, J. Coulson Reece and G. A. Hoffman; Clinton, Prohibition, J. F. Good; Lancaster, Second district, Socialist, Samuel Haymaker: Mifflin, Prohibition, W. F. Eckbert; Montgom ery, First district, Socialist, J. Pfan steil; Tioga, Prohibition, H. J. Beal; Wayne, Prohibition, H. R. Samson. A number of ties for members o-f Prohibition and Socialist state com mittees, instances where two or more men received one or two votes, are to be drawn. The timo for filing accounts of com mittees in the interest of candidates at the recent primary will expire on June 18, according to statements by officials at the Capitol. State officials Must File say that every candidate Statements for a state-wide nomi- By .Tune 18 nation appears to have filed a personal account and several committees organized in the interest of candidates have made inquiries as to forms. As soon as the remaining returns are received at the Capitol the official count of the vote at the primaries will be made. Three counties are to be heard from and no certifications ot nominations will be made until all I figures are verified. Gifford Pinchot, Washington party candidate for United States senator, will visit Snyder county next week in his handshaking tour of Pennsylva nia. Eleven stops will be made in Snyder next Tuesday by the candidate with the Roosevelt endorsement. The party will leave Lewisburg early that morning and after traveling over Northumberland and Snyder will con tinue the next day in Mifflin with a night meeting in the courthouse at Lewistown. State Chairman Roland S. Morris will get Into touch with Candidates Palmer and McCormick within a day or so in an effort to plan the campaign, so that Must Plan the effect of the blunder to Offset caused by the display the Break of bossism and denial of the State committee of the right to pass on the platform will be overcome. It is said that the criticism over the platform making blunder has been so general that the friends af the twin candidates want to offset the evil result. This break comes right on top of the re fusal of the bosses to allow the Ryan men to have any say in the framing up of appointments to Federal places, and there are some anxious times ahead for Palmer and his two pals when he hoped that he would be easy in mind. Now that the cruel war is over for a time, it is expected that Fritz Kirk endall, the revenue collector and dis penser of patronage, will give his attention to the merits of the Kirkendall Dauphin Democrats. Will Name The men who held the Men Early home town and helped the numerous "watch ers" to keep Dauphin county in line for the Little Boss are seeking action on their claims. It was expected that Fritz would give attention t r the Dau phin situation before the primary, but the Little Boss figured out that he could do better by keeping some men up in the air by hopes of jobs. Kirk endall has some fnt places to give out and to avoid further trouble will soon fire a few Republicans and put in Dau phin Democrats. LAST LETTER BY JOHN BROWN Martyr of Harper's Ferry Felt No Degradation Over End on the Gallows in Cause of Humanity • The little city of Tabor, lowa, was once the temporary home of John Brown, the emancipator, and he lb re membered by the older citizens as a most kindly man. Recently a lettei written to the Rev. Luther Humphrej, of New York, now long since dead, a cousin of John Brown, lias come to light, being in the possession of T. H. Read of Shenandoah, a relative of Brown. The letter is given to the pub lic for the first time. It shows the deep interest the abolitionist hero had in freedom and his abiding faith in the saving grace of God. The letter was written thirteen days before John Brown was hanged. It will be recalled that he attacked Harper's Ferry Oc tober 16, 1859, and that on October 18 he was captured, and tried on October 27 on the charge of treason and con demned to hang December 2. It was while he was awaiting execution that he wrote the following letter to his cousin: Charlestown, Jefferson County, Va., November 19, 1859. The Rev. Luther Humphrey: My Dear Friend.—Your kind letter of the 12th inst. is now before me. So far as any knowledge goes as to our mutual kindred, I suppose I am the first since the landing of Peter Brown from the Mayflower that has either been sentenced to imprisonment or to the gallows. But, my dear friend, let not that fact alone grieve you. You cannot have forgotten how and where our grandfather. Captain John Brown, fell in 1776, and that he. too, might have perished on the scaffold had cir cumstances been but very little differ ent. The fact that a man dies under the hand of an executioner or other wise has but little to do with his true character, as I suppose. John Rodgers perished at the stake, a great and good man, as I suppose, but his being so does not prove that any other man who has died in same way was good or otherwise. Whether I have any reason to "be of good cheer," or not, In view of my end, 1 can assure vou that I feel so, and that I am totally blifitled If I do not really experience that strengthening and consolation you so faithfully implore in my behalf. God of our fathers, reward your fidel ity. I neither feel mortified, (leg-railed, nor In the least ash«med of mv Im prisonment, my chain or of mv near prospect of death by hanging. ' 1 feel assured that not ome hair shall fall [ OUR DAILY LAUGH J S.'iXIAI; OCCASION Tramp—Have you a piece of cake to eat with this here milk? . Kind Lady—Cake! Isn't bread good enough for you? Tramp Ordinarily, yes, ma am; but this is my birthday! CAN By Wing Dinger "Success comes In cans," reads a card which I saw In a business man's office to-day, And I thought how important those words to a man As through life he is making his way. The chap who's contented to sit 'round and wait For something to turn up, dear knows, Is likely to find to his sorrow, some day. That the something is Dame For tune's nose. And then there's the fellow who's down in the dumps, To everyone daily he cries Because things won't go just to suit him, but he Never sticks to the thing that he tries. Just pick out a chap who's successful in life, And you'll find he's the kind of a man Who takes up the work that confronts him in life And adopts as his watchword, "I can." POLITICAL SIDELIGHTS —As a student of history Roland S. Morris probably recalls what hap pened when triumvirates were formed. —Wonder how Dauphin Democrats like being rated at 30 cents per head. —Apparently other newspapers do not share the same admiration for the handling of the State committee as Is held in Market Square. —The Central Democratic Club got into the high brow class last night when it discussed "Social Economy." However, most Democrats prefer that there shall not be any economy this campaign, especially after the lavish primary expenditure. —The list of contributors to the Palmer-McCormick campaign fund will be interesting. It will enable some computations to be made. —Under the law contributions to campaign committees must be set out. —Democratic candidates no longer reckon campaign expenses by hun dreds. The thousand is now the mark. —Dr. Brumbaugh will speak at Val ley Forge on Flag Day. —Ryan and McCormick men have presented candidates for the fat Fed eral jobs at Philadelphia. Wonder who will get left? —Roland S. Morris, however, is not yet Attorney General. THE DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM AND WILSON POLICIES [Philadelphia Press] The Pennsylvania Democrats open their campaign laden with the handi cap of Wilson policies. Their platform Indorses them all —the low tariff, the income tax, the tolls repeal, tho Mexi can policv and all the pending bills which under the pretense of regulat ing business have cast a paralytic blight upon it. _ . . Does anyone expect the State ot Pennsylvania to approve these policies under any possible conditions? And yet this Democratic platform is a di rect challenge to the voters of the State to express a judgment on these vital issues. It asks them to approve policies which at the present time have so depressed industry in the State that f'o,ooo freight cars of the Penn sylvania Railroad, one-third of Its total number, are standing idle and 300 of its locomotives have nothing from my head without my heavenly Katlier knowing it. X also feel that I have long been endeavoring to hold exactly "such a part" as God has chosen. See the passage in Isaiah, which you have quoted. No part of my life has been more happily spent than that I have spent here and I humbly trust that no part has been spent for better purpose. I would not say this boastingly, but "thanks unto God, who glveth us the victory through infinite grace." I should be 60 years old should I live to May 9, 1860. I have enjoyed much of life as it Is, and have been remarkably pros perous, having early learned to re gard the welfare and prosperity of others as my own. I have never, since I can remember, required a great amount of sleep, so that I conclude I have already enjoyed full an average number of waking hours with those who reach their three score years and ten. I have not as yet been driven to the use of glasses, but can still see to read and write quite comfortably, but more than that I have generally en joyed remarkably good health. I might go on to recount unmerited and un numbered blessings, among which would be some very severe afflictions, and those the most needed blessing of all. And now when I think how easily I might be left to spoil all I have done or suffered in the cause of freedom, I hardly dare risk another voyage if I even had the opportunity. It Is a long time since we met, but we shall now soon come together In "our Father's house," I trust. Let us hold fast that we already have, remem bering that we shall l-Pap in due sea son If we faint not. Thanks be unto God who glveth us the victory through Jesus Christ, our And now. my old, warm-hearted friend, good by. Your affectionate cousin. JOHN BROWN. * ■ /■ 1 \ ■XADHUARTKBI FOB 1 SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES * Tii h i n i n ir : : A gentleman is a human bein' of the male persuasion, with all the qualities of a shore enough man, only them qualities is gentled a little to 2 smooth out the rough -l ness. VELVET is a J "gentleman" tobacco. J¥? L ] s**[ VELVET, The Smoothest Smoking Tobacco, has all the pipe qualities of Kentucky Burley de Luxe "gen- J tied" by ageing-. Full weight 2 oz. tins, 10c. ■' " iH to do. party with defeat In this State as i( This mear)s thousands of men out did in nearly every nor'hern State and of employment and slack business kept it out of power in the House ot generally. It is the direct fruit of Representatives for sixteen years. Democratic legislation. It is a repeti- tion of the Democratic policy which tic-tai* — paralyzed business and improverished NL W UIDKAI vn Lo labor in the last Cleveland Adminis- OF TnL CIVIL WAR tration and was so thoroughly rebuk- , T , " ~ ' ~~~ „ . , ed at the polls at the flrst general [From «t of .1 uno 6 1864.] election held after that Democratic Washington. June r». A lot of wo tarifr was in operation. men refugees caine in from the front History has a way of repeating it- this evening. Five rebel deserters were self. By their indorsement of the sent here this evening by the provost Wilson policies that are depressing marshal of the Potomac, the business and impoverishing much Grant Flehtlne of the labor of the country, the Dem- Washington, June 6. —To Major ocrats in Pennsylvania are doing what General Dix, New York: AVe have dis they can to secure for themselves such patches from General Grant's headquai another catastrophe as in 1894, fol- te ,rs down to 6 o'clock last evening, lowing the enactment of the Demo- 6 ° n n ° cratic tariff act of Cleveland's Admin- KDWJN M. STANTON, istration, overwhelmed the Democratic Secretary of War. The Personality of Any Institution Is the Personality of the Men Behind It 'T*HE directors of this company are successful, con * servative business men who unitedly pass upon every question of importance. Being in close touch constantly with financial affairs, they know the best class of securities, so that the trust investments will be more wisely selected than those made by an individual. Our Saviags Department Now Open 3% interest compounded every four months. MECHANICS TRUST COMPAJJY HARRISBURG. PA CAPITAL, $300,000.00. . SURPLUS, $300,000.00. «L- -- J- - ----- - - - - l\ f The New Style Rope Awning 5 Weiblcy ' s Clinch Pulley Little Clinch Pul leys Used Along the Rope Line Like Illustration The Harrisburg Awning and Tent Works §has adopted this now style Rope Awning and Ilecomtflrnds It to all people who are having awnings It will not only prolong the life of the awning but takes all friction of the rope from the cloth and al lows the awning to draw up easily. The Harrisburg Awning and Tent Works is equipped to do a large awning business and solicits orders from all parts of Pennsylvania. This is a new Industry for Har risburg. is located In the rear Mors. Patent Appiteil For. 320, 822, 324 and 326 Woodbine street, and is conducted by Charles E. Weibley and Simon N. Cluck ESTIMATES CHBERFIILLY GIVEN Harrisburg Awning and Tent Works 320-26 Woodbine Street, Harrisburg, Pa. PHONE m7J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers