10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Bttablishtd itji PUBLISHED BT THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. E. J. STACK POLE, Pres't and TMMT. F. R. OYSTER, Seoratary. OUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. Published tvtry evening (except Bun day), at the Telegraph Building, 11* Federal Square. Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Building. New York City, Haabrook, Story m Brooks. .Western Office, 123 West Madison street. Chicago, 111., Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at •WflJnliMP six cents a weeK. ' "iflU — Mailed to subscriber at $3.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post Office in Harri»- burg as seeond class matter. ®Tfc« Association of Am«r- , 1 ican Advertisers baa ax- i' amfaad and certify to , circulation ef this pnb- i 11 lication. The figaras of circulation i I contained in tk* Aaseciation's re- i ! > port only are guaranteed. i jkajatm ft lm*km Mmftttt ]i , No. 2333 Whitehall BIHg. N. T. City •worm, daily average for the month of May, 1914 * 24,402 * Average for the year lIIS— W.W7 Average for the year 1»1S—-31.170 Average for the 7ear 1911—18,381 Average for the year 1910—17,4#® TELEPHONES! Bell Private Branch Exchange No. M 4». United Business Office, 203. Editorial Room 685. Job Dept. MS. SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 13 PROGRESS OF IMPROVEMENTS ELSEWHERE in The Telegraph to-day appears a pictorial repre sentation by this paper's camera man of the various public un dertakings in this city. These big projects are giving employment to day to many men who would other wise be idle owing to the general de pression in business. In this re epect, Harrisburg has been extremely fprtunate this year. With extensive paving operations, the construction of large and important sewers, the build ing of subways in Second and Front streets at Mulberry, the resumption of the concrete work along Paxton creek, the river wall and the dam un dertakings and the many nrlvate en terprises, not forgetting the work on the enlargement of the Federal build ing, labor conditions are somewhat unusual. There is increasing interest in this city in the development of the great plans for public improvement which have been adopted from time to time during the last twelve years. Keep ing pace with the public spirit which has pervaded the city, individual citi zens and corporations are likewise p.shing forward the important inter ests with which they are identified. Also, it is interesting to note that dur ing the last year many of the over head wires in the central business dis trict have gone with the unsightly poles. Harrisburg continues to be a beacon light of progress for the other mu nicipalities of the State and strangers never cease to sing the praises of this pivotal city of the Commonwealth. All the -work is going forward in a way that indicates the early com pletion of a number of the more im portant undertakings, and it so hap pens that much material from the excavations for the subways is avail able for the filling out of the River Front. It was the good fortune of the city that the railroad companies decided to proceed with their im provements at this time. Senator William E. Crow, chairman of the Republican State committee, Always frank and above board in his attitude on party questions, declares In a statement to-day that the commit tee of which he is the directing head •will conduct the campaign from head quarters in the interest of all the can didates. This is in response to a sug gestion that Senator Penrose would be the favorite. Senator Crow is always fair, and there need be no apprehension j as to his best efforts being put forth i In behalf of the whole Republican j ticket. BUSINESS AND POLITICS THOSE politicians of all parties i who imagined that the business j men of the United States were going to permit the wholesale destruction of their Interests without protest will discover that business can come back and come back hard. Dis cussing "Business and Politics" in a speech this week Frank A. Vanderlip, B. prominent banker, said: Instead of denouncing politicians I tell you you should become poli ticians. If intelligence, experience, success, proved genius for adminis tration, trained executive powers— and these are the qualities business men are supposed to have—are not to rule in a democracy, then so much the worse for the democ racy. I believe in solidarity of effort en the part of business nien, In their organizing effectively to im press upon the public and upon Congress their views in regard to legislation. We have heard much of the desirability of not mixing politics and business. Why should we not'mix politics and business? What greater duty have you to per form than to give the best you have of wisdom and judgment to the direction of political currents, and to give your wisdom and judg ment effectively, not merely to stand aside in the role of dissatis fied critics, but rather by fretting truly and effectively into the or ganization and machinery of no litlcal life. These views are practically those of business men all over the country, who hava watched the legislative bod ies pass one measure after another antagonistic to legitimate trade. They hava seen prosperity fly out the win dow while doubt, uncertainty and loss of oonfldence entered the door. Theory has taken the place of experience. Idealists are occupying high places and things are going to smash because man who know have been permitting those who think they know to run SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JUNE 13, 1914. ] the country and establish its policies. Not content with upsetting the confi dence and the prosperity of the peo ple at home, the accidental adminis tration at Washington has made us the laughing stock of the nations of the world. Commissioner of Public Works Lynch is an extremely practical man, and he is not likely to permit the city to lose the great quantities of filling material that will come from the downtown subways when this material is so much needed along the river wall. FLAG DAY TO-MORROW will be Flag Day. The whole nation will pause to pay homage to the Stars and Stripes. tt is entirely proper that this should be so. Indeed, due respect for the Flag is essential to the welfare of the country. He who has no love in his heart for the Starry Banner is a poor citizen, Indeed, and not fit to exercise the functions en trusted to him as a citizen. Rabbi Freund, in a sermon on the flag at Ohev Sholem temple last even ing, struck a true note when* he said that "unless we at home respect the flag we cannot demand respect for it at the hands of other people." The Stars and Stripes have a herit age as honorable and as glorious as there is in the world. The flag of the United States led the way to popular government as wo know it in America to-day. Its history has been one of splendid progress. It dealt the death blow to slavery and beneath its folds as noble sacrifices have been made as the battlefields of any nation can boast. It is worthy "the full measure of our devotion" and every house to morrow should display the colors and every parent should teach to his chil dren the lesson of the Star Spangled I Banner. A correspondent of the New York Sun wonders whether President Wilson has not at times In his secret soul wished that Mr. Bryan had really been "knocked into a cocked hat," as he re cently suggested. PAYING THE PIPER PRESIDENT WILSON has pleased Great Britain in the Panama Ca nal tolls matter, but he has lost the popular respect and devotion which should be the dearest possession of one in his exalted station. Senator Borah expressed the whole situation when he declared that it would be a signal triumph for English diplomacy when this bill shall have become a law. It is going to be extremely diffi cult for the President to escape the conclusion that he was deceived by the English diplomats who achieved their purpose by demonstrations in Mexico. There has never been an instance in the history of the United States where an administration surrendered to a foreign power without feeling the lash of the people at the succeeding elec tion. Whatever may have been the motive of President Wilson, the fact that he has forced a subservient Con gress to do his bidding against the pronounced sentiment of the country has angered and disgusted a patient people with his spineless foreign poli cies and they will express their dis approval In November. Perhaps the most humiliating of the spectacles that have been presented by the Democratic Congress is the shirk ing of responsibility by the legislative department and its willingness to per mit the President to usurp the func tions which reside in the two law making bodies. From the political standpoint it is certain that the whole matter will re turn to plague the Democratic party and shorten its brief span of power. More and more it is being impressed upon the public that President Wilson, as has been sugegsted by Senator Clapp, is out of sympathy with popular goverment. His head is in the clouds and his theories have already over turned policies necessary to the up building and prosperity of the nation. How much farther he will be permitted to ride his hobbies remains to be seen. It is marvelous that he has been allowed to go so far without an ad ministration collapse. PRACTICAL EDUCATION THE first step in one of the most important educational develop ments which New York city has ever known, and one which may lead to developments of the greatest importance, has just been completed with the commencement exercises in I a factory in the clothing manufactur- I ing district, at which thirty-five girls j employed in the factory received their j diplomas from the co-operative class, which was established there last Fall. The class was started by the officers of the company in co-operation with the Board of Education and is said to be the only one of its kind. Just what this means in the way of possibilities among the illiterate is indicated by the statement of one of the officers of the company that within the last few months they have been able to elimi-* nate 10 per cent, of the illiteracy said to exist among the foreign born, so far as their 500 employes are con cerned. A neatly printed diploma tied with red ribbon was presented to each of the thirty-five graduating girls. It is hoped that the success of this first experiment may lead to its more general adoption throughout the country. If that could be done It is believed that it will mark one of the most Important advances yet made In the history of educational progress. Farmers of Pennsylvania and else where who voted two years ago for a change at Washington are beginning to wonder whether really wanted It, in view of the fact that prices of farm products are likely to take a tumble by reason of the reduction of the purchasing power of the consumers through wholesale idleness of industrial communities. Thanks to the esteemed Patriot for Its first-page publicity of the fact that the general printing department of the Telegraph was chosen by the Superin tendent of State Printing as one of the printing plants In this city equipped for doing emergency work following the recent destruction by fire of the Aughlnbaugh plant. These little neigh borly courtesies are appreciated , 1 EVENING CHAD Lew "freak" voting than usual ap pears to have occurred at the recent primary election, according to the returns of the May primary filed at the State Capitol. Ordinarily the re turns are filled with instances where people wrote in the names of friends or of some person whom they desired to compliment or to annoy, but this year the scattering vote is devoted more or less to voting for men not on the party ballot which the voter had to mark. In Philadelphia and Pitts burgh there was some writing in of names of men known locally, but not to the exten noted in 1912 or 1913. Gubernatorial Candidates Brumbaugh, McCormick and Lewis received votes from most of the parties other than their own and some men declining to accept the men who had filed nomi nation papers voted for others. For Instance, State Treasurer R. K. Young received a Washington vote In Dau phin county and ex-State Treasurer William H. Berry got a Democratic vote in Monroe. M. T. Stokes, who ran for Congress on the Washington ticket in the 16th district, also got a Washington party vote for Governor. Penrose and Palmer received votes for Senator on the Washington, Prohibi tionist, Socialist and Keystone tickets in addition to sixty-two Democratic votes for Penrose and fourteen Re publican votes for Palmer. Pinchot got votes on all tickets and Dimmick on all but the Socialist. Dauphin county had very little jumping of the traces. A couple of Democrats voted for Brumbaugh and some Republicans for McCormick, while both got Washington votes. Pal mer picked up two Washington votes and Pinchot a lone Republican. Some Democrats voted for Dr. Houck and for Prank McClain, but "Farmer" Creasy did not attract any Republicans or Washingtonians. In Cumberland county Penrose got a Washington vote; Pinchot three Republicans and Dimmick and Pinchot each a Repub lican. Harrisburg will be well represented next week when the eastern circuit shoot is held at Bradford. This shoot always attracts the crack shots of the Atlantic States. H. B. Shoop, of this city, will be one of the men to go after trophies, of which he already has a number. It's rather amusing the way people utilize a street when it is once closed off from traffic. Take Vernon street, for instance. This street begins at 13th, on which the Harrisburg Rail ways Company is reconstructing its double track. street is closed at Thirteenth and people who want to enter It must go around a block. So the good ladies of Stevens church, having a festival scheduled, just used the temporarily closed end of the street and decorated it with elec tric lights and lanterns, spreading their tables where the automobile or dinarily honketh. During the rather heated argument between Attorney John Fox Weiss, counsel for Edward G. Smith, and District Attorney M. E. Stroup in June quarter sessions yesterday, Mr. Weiss was explaining some of the testimony with which the defense expected to prove that the accused murderer was insane. "Why, Your Honor," declared Mr. Weiss, '"this man won't say a word — he simply doesn't talk." Perhaps President Judge Kunkel was a trifle weary of the word battle between the attorneys. At any rate he sighed when the former district attorney made the statement as to Smith's taciturnity. Then to the evi dent amusement of the other lawyers within the bar railing, he gravely ob served: "Well, failure to talk isn't necessar ily an evidence of insanity. Sometimes those who talk the most are more in sane than those who talk the least." Five hundred women, —to tell the plain unvarnished truth, —were glued to their seats in Chestnut 6treet audi torium Wednesday night when the Central High School Seniors gave their annual class play. The production was "Jedbury Junior" and the fine English comedy held the attention of the big audience from start to finish. And it was at the finish that the ladies found themselves glued to their seats whether or no. The night was hot and the thin dresses stuck to the var nish onvlhe seats. Bits of fabric was found after the crowd filed out on nearly every other seat The men in their heavy suits escaped. A good story of efficiency is told by the work of the operators on the Eastern Pennsylvania circuit of the Associated Press yesterday. This cir cuit includes thirteen of the cities in the eastern end of the State and al though 14,000 words were sent and taken by the operators in those cities there was not a single "break" or interruption on the wire throughout the seven hours' work. The Associated Press operators are noted for their excellent work and the performance of yesterday is only an illustration of how service can be kept right up to the top notch. [ WEILL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —E. M. Herr, head of the 'Westing- J.ouse company, is mingling among the people on strike and talking it over with them. —Magistrate James Gorman, of Philadelphia's municipal court, adopt ed a plan of going to schools where there are boys addicted to stone fight ing and telling them the dangers. —John J. Crout, the Bull Moosers' chairman in Philadelphia, will retire from active management of the com mittee and get a dinner when he does. —John A. Fairman, the new depart ment commander of the G. A. R., is coming here for the flag transfer ceremony Monday. —Captain W. H. Baublits, com mander of C&mpany A of the Bth in fantry at York, has been elected head of the new camp of Spanish war vet erans at that place. —Penrose Robinson, newspaper edi tor, has been elected chief burgess of Hatboro. BUSINESS DEPRESSION T FCUGB tFrom the Philadelphia Bulletin.] If the stock is down to twenty that you paid a hundred for, If the butcher and the grocer will not trust you any more. If you've given up your stateroom on a transatlantic ship, And are going down to Coney for your next vacation trip. Do not fuss or fret or worry, but be patient and resigned, For it s merely psychological—which ' means it's in your mind. If the foreman comes and tells you— that the shop is going to close, If you cannot take the children to the moving picture shows. If the Interest on the mortgage Isn't anywhere in sight. And the sheriff is expected to foreclose it any night, It will cher you to remember the de pression that you feel Is merely psychological— which means it isn't real. Therefore let your hopeful bosom give a psychological throb, Ask some psychologic brother for a psychological job, If your savings have been scattered in a psychologic crash. Pay the grocer and the butcher with some psychologic cash. And you speedily will find yourself in psychologic health And possessed of an embarrassment of psychological wealth. , CITY COMMITTEE TO MEET TONIGHT Republicans Will Re-elect the Of ficers of Their Committees For the Campaign CROW MAKES STATEMENT Says State Headquarters Will Run the Campaign Despite Re marks to Contrary The Republican city committee will meet at the party headquarters to night for the annual reorganization, and City Chairman H. F. Oves will be re-elected, according to present indica tions. No opposition to him has been mentioned. The Republican county committee will meet next Saturday and the re election of County Chairman W. H. Horner is a foregone conclusion. This meeting will be attended by prominent Republicans from all over the county who will come here to show their In terest in the campaign start. The Republican legislative candi dates are expected to address the members of the committees. Congress man Krelder may be here next week. The Washington party county com mittee last night took care of most of Its members with some party office or other. The com mittee was long in session and had nu- Bull Moosers merous speeches. Have Heap making up for the Big Talkfest slimness of the membership by the ginger of the speeches. Resolutions were also adopted. Ira J. Mosey was re-elected chairman with these vice chairmen to help him: S. H. Garland, D. M. Hatz, J. A. Fackler and Dr. G. W. Schminkey. R. M. Dunlap was re elected secretary with some bouquets and W. E. Lewis was elected treasurer. The question of the organization of a city committee was laid over after some members thought it was not needed any way. The following ex ecutive committee was chosen: First Legislative District, J. W. Storey, L. C. Stephens, D. E. Taylor, Charles Coo- P6r, George L. Reed, W. L. Vanaman; Second District, Representative J. B. Martin, William I. Eshnour, H. H. Walborn, W. H. Kell, Representative W. W. Lenker and R. G. Alleman. Speeches were made by tho Rev. Charles F. Swift, a member of the last House; Representative Martin, J. A. Fackler, George L. Reed, ex-Chair man J. H. Krelder, candidate for Con gress; R. D. Relder, Wilmer Crow, can didate for the House; S.'H. Garland and Ira Reider. State Chairman William E. Crow, who Is expected to name the commit tees on platform and rules for the Republican State com mittee to-day, said last Crow Says night in Philadelphia Campaign that work .would be Will Rush started at once on the preparations for the campaign. Incidentally the chairman added these words, which will send some carping critics to the woodpile for the rest of the campaign: "The Republican State committee will conduct the campaign for all of the Republican nominees. It will not speak alone for Senator Penrose or for any one of the other candidates. It will be, so far as we are concerned, 'One for all and all for one.' This cam paign will be conducted from the head quarters of the State committee. We will arrange the itinerary for the speakers and we will determine the personnel of the speaking forces." United States Senator Boies Penrose sounded the call of Republicanism and the keynote of the coming campaign last night as the prin cipal speaker at a notable banquet given Penrose at the Philadelphia Sounds the Yacht Club, in Essing- Keynote ton, by the Lincoln Club in celebration of its twenty-fourth anniversary. There is a concensus of opinion throughout the country, he said, that the Demo cratic party has proved Itself incom petent to handle either this nation's foreign affairs or its home industrial policy, and he added that the Pro gressive party, attempting to sail a middle course and prescribe remedies for existing evils, is in fact partially responsible for the conditions it de cries, in that a majority of its mem bers in the House and Senate voted not only for the Underwood tariff bill but for the so-called "pop-gun" tariff measures as well. Ex-Governor Sam uel W. Pennypacker, William T. Til den, president of the Union League, and State Senator William E. Crow, chairman of the Republican State committee, were among the other speakers. POLITICAL SIDELIGHTS —Governor Glynn, of New York, has not yet accepted any invitations to speak in Pennsylvania. —Ex-Governor Pennypacker last night said that Wilson had picked Mc- Cormick to run for Governor and that there was not any excuse for the big primary expenditure. —Luzerne Democrats appear to be pretty well' split up again. —The Washington party county committee does not mind hours when it has a meeting on hand. It had three sessions to pick officers yester day. —Detrich is still using his pea shooted on Brumbaugh, but the doctor does not seem to care. —Something must be wrong with those Federal appointments for this county. —State Chairman Morris Is rather slow about naming his finance com mittee. Maybe he will not need any. THE STATE PRESS A Rural Developer [From the Chester Times.] The predictions of Edison and Stein metz, the wizards In the domain of electricity, that the storage battery car will soon displace the trolley car have been made so often, with the trolley car still dominant in the realm of tramways, that the public has ceas ed to be seriously moved by the proph ecies. The public trusts that these promises can soon be realized, for It will be a glad day when all the net work of overhead wires and cables and the. forest of poles can be removed from the streets. The Unknown Unit [From the WUllamsport Sun.] The bones of an old soldier, presum ably a Confederate, for It was In the line of Pickett's charge, have been un earthed la an unmarked spot on the field of Gettysburg. A battered bullet lying among the remains Indicated plainly the manner of his death. An other war unit who was probably re turned as missing on the rolls of his company In those days of half a cen tury ago when death gathered its har vests In wide swaths and war got its name of Hell. OUR DAILY LAUGH ] ' True to >atnr« r,,t«ln K It OIT I went to an "Ever y body open-air perform- should lay up ance of a Shake- something for a speare play the rainy day." the other after- "True, but too °i n i'w if 9- £ lal ] y wait u »tU it • Pt Th fJ T y ca .^ ar - the woman who They d do eStl °Be- of^e™* 6 a f ° ol cause where Very well Just there's R caba V? t fiance at the next lessen tnt usua ' ,y good-looking one 3 to ea '- you meet. EXASPERATION By Wing Dlngrr What's your idea of the Height of Exasperation? —"Froth," in the Patriot. I'v® thought of quite a lot of things, And I could name a few. That irritating are to me And would be to you, too. For instance, there's the printer man, Who'll take my verse some days And set it up so badly that Most sane men it would craze. And there's the foreman, who 'twould seem Takes diabolic glee When he says "Kid, the dead line's passed, Tou get no space from me." And many other things occur That stir up lots of strife And wreck the peace and happiness Of our daily life. But what is worse than all combined And soars to touch the height Of all exasneratlon Is To make a so-called "fight" And spend some thirty thousand bones To nominated be For Governor, and a few months hence A "peaceful twilight" see. A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE OF ECONOMY [From the Philadelphia Inquirer] From that wonderful platform that Mr. Palmer and Mr. McCormck pre pared for the use of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania undef the eye of President Wilson, we learn that Pennsylvania is "the most conspicuous example of misgovernment in all of the Union." Dear, dear! Now It seems that a good many Pennsylvanlans have been under the impression that for some years past Pennsylvania, on the con trary, had been affording a conspicu ous example of a State that could hold her head up above most if not all of her sister States. To think that it has remained for the free trader and Brit ish apologist Palmer and his million aire political colleague McCormick to discover otherwise! But then, being in a way a part of the Wilson Admin istration, since he is the Administra tion's patronage dispenser for Penn slyyania, it may be that Palmer has shifted his habitation to the dreamy cloudlands of theory among which diiir genial but doctrinaire President dwells, and has become a student of psychol ogy. Surely his description of Penn sylvania as "the most conspicuous ex ample of misgovernment" is "merely psychological." For Pennsylvania has been' pursuing the even tenor of her ways happy, con tented, prosperous—at least until a Democratic administration came Into power with a deadly tariff law which has assailed her industries and sent tens of thousands of her workingmen hunting jobs upon the streets. Her progressive legislation has been a model for other States. Her elec tion laws have put the control of her affairs Into the votes of her people. She gives more to schools and chari ties than any other Commonwealth. But the remarkable platform de clares that she is "extravagant," and if the Democratic party Is only given control, why, we are to have all ex travagance and inefficiency abolished and we are to substitute "economy." To be sure we are to economize. It seems that somewhere we have all heard about "extravagance" and "economy" in the recent past. Was it not in the Democratic platform adopted at Baltimore? It was. The Republican administration at Wash ington had been "extravagant." All this was to be changed. And the result? Why, no Congress on record has been so extravagant as the present Wilson-controlled body. And not only extravagant, but it has created a deficiency in the Treasury where there was, only one short year ago, a surplus. The State of Pennsylvania, under Republican jurisdiction, is now with out debt. It does n»t owe one single cent! With the "conspicuous example" of economy of Democratic Administra tion at Washington before us, is It wise to take chances with a Democratic ad ministration in Pennsylvania? And especially with a Governor who ex pended $33,000 of his own money to secure the nomination alone? PRESS COMMENT We venture to predict that the next really great step in governmental reg ulation will be the regulation of the executive. We believe it is almost in sight; of the dire need of it no doubt now remains. Unless the restoration of the constitutional apportionment of powers among the three departments of the government is undertaken soon, by heroic and patriotic spirits, both the Legislature and the judiciary are doomed to atrophy. History has shown over and over again how the unchecked extension of executive power brings ruin upon the State. There Is for Americans no higher enterprise of public service than the bringing back of the execu tive to constitutional bounds. New York Sun. y" " 1 \ ■KAD4IIAKTBU MB 1 SHIRTS SIDES ft SIDES I % / r This company's policy is to give de positors satisfaction, and above all, cour teous treatment. OUR CHIEF AIM is to handle each account in the way that distinctly meets the special requirements of the depositor. Cultivate the saving habit. It will make great things possible for you. Small beginnings are often responsible for large re sults. We pay 3 per cent, inter est on savings accounts, com pounded every four months. MECHANICS TRUST COMPANY HARRISBURG. PA. Capital.. $300,000.00 Surplus . . $300,000.00 IN HARRISBURG FIFTY I YEARS AGO TO-DAY I [Frm the Telegraph, June 13, 1864.] MUSTER OUT RESERVES The Twelfth Regiment Pennsylva nia Reserves were mustered out of service yesterday by Captain Robin son, it being the first regiment of that famous organization mustered out at Camp Curtin. CANE FOR CAPTAIN The Reserves In Camp Curtin yes terday presented to Captain J. A. Ma jor, commissary of the camp, a splen did gold-headed rosewood cane. THE PRESIDENT ON THE STUMP [Front the Philadelphia Bulletin] The intention of President Wilson to stump the State of Pennsylvania in the State and congressional campaign, bringing with him the members of his Cabinet, Congressman Underwood and other leaders of Congress, suggests the appreciation at Washington of the necessity of an extraordinary effort to stem the tide of public opinion in this State now running against the Ad ministration. Mr. Underwood is coming to demon strate the mental processes by which the decline in hob-nails, steol nroducts and metal furnishings may offset the continuance of high prices of food stuffs and make the cost of living un der his tariff a joy and a delight in spite of idle time and the loss of wages. Secretary Redfield may be brought along to tell the locomotive builders and the textile mill workers that when they get out of a job they only get a vacation, if they choose to look at it Where mjm There Is jlli Security ' 0 Jijj M£E ; If you leave important papers *~Ti and valuables at home when you go on your vacation, or Dauphin close the house for the Sum mer, you run the risk of having Deposit them stolen or destroyed by fire. If you take them along Trust again there is the chance of loss. Company r Why not place such possessions 213 Market St in a safe deposit box before you go away. Capital, $300,000 Boxes rent for only $2.00 and Surplus, $300,000 upward a year. Open for Uepoalt" Saturday evening* from A to 8. $lO IN GOLD We will give $lO in gold for the best letter of 50 words or less, describing our store orders. All letters must be submitted on or before June 16, 1914. We reserve the right to print prize-winning and other letters submitted in the contest. Contestants desiring full information can secure same by calling, writing, or phoning to Yow CREDIT Whore You Vfcnt It. BELL PHONE 2749R f that way. Secretary Daniels may in terest Philadelphians with the story of the disappearing drydock, and Secre tary Bryan ought to he in good ora torical form after the Chautauqua sea son. But what is the President expected to add to all this? He can't make black take on a rosy hue, and he can't make the vision of prosperity do full duty for the realities of business de pression and lack of work. The re sources of thought transference and psychological control must yield a power yet undeveloped if the state or mind of Pennsylvania is to be re deemed and brought again into har mony of vision with the dreamers at Washington. But the President and his friends should recognize the fact that the stump in Pennsylvania this Fall will not be a favorable place for the discussion of the issue of Psy chology vs. Protection. i [Frm the Telegraph, June 13, 1864.] DEFEAT REBELS J Lexington, June 12—A dispatch from i Captain Dickson to General Carring | ton, says General Burbridge gave the rebels a total defeat at Cynthiana yes terday morning. The rebel loss was 300 killed and 400 prisoners, besides the wounded. CONFEDERATES SCATTERED Lexington, June 13.—General Bur bridge is now here and reports the rebel force out of ammunition, scat tered and utterly demoralized in the fight at Cynthiana.