10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH BsPabluHtd 1831 i ■» PUBLISHED BY TUB TELEGRAPH PRINTING (* E. 3. STACK POLE, Prei't and Treasl\ F. R. OYSTER, Secretary. BUS M. BTEINMETZ. Managing Editor. (Published every evening (except Sun l day), at the Telegraph Building, 11C / Federal Square. [■astern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New York City, Hasbrook, Story A Brooks. EWestern Office, 12S West Madlso* street, Chicago, 111., Allen tt Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cente a wee*. Mailed to subscribers at $3.00 a year In advance. | m Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg ae second class matter. ®Th» Association of Amor- , 1 lean Advertisers has ex- / amlnad and certified to / , th* circulation of thii pub- i 1 , 1 Heat ion. The figures of circulation 1 1 ! 1 aontained in the Association's ro -11 port only aro guaranteed. 11 Association of American Advertisers i 1 No. 2333 Whitehall Bldg. N. T. City !| •worn daily average for the month af August, 1914 24,039 + inns* for the year 1913—21.HTT Average for the year 1912—31,175 Average for the year 1911—18,8(11 Average for the year 1910—1T.458 TELEPHONES! Bell Private Branch Exchange No. MM. United Business Office, SOI. Editorial Room 685. Job DeyV )ft, FRIDAY EVENING, KEPT. 25 PEOPLE ARE THINKING DR. MARTIN G. BRUMBAUGH has been provoked sufficiently by the petty mud-slinging and pea-shooting of his Democratic rival to take the aforesaid rival over his knee in schoolmaster fashion, but he simply passes him up by reference to the fact that the Democratic ticket was first named In the White House, then brought into Pennsylvania by interstate commerce and now ratified in part by a section of the Bull Moose contingent. Dr. Brumbaugh does not mention his opponent by name, but in a speech at Lock Haven his reference to the large coffers of corrupt politicians evoked recent memories of the war chests taken into Clinton county be fore the Democratic primaries, when every third Democratic voter was a watcher or a paid worker. All over the State the people are thoroughly awake to the Importance of the campaign and the utter unfit ness of the little men who are berating Pennsylvania and misrepresenting in dividuals for the achievement of their ambitions. Dr. Brumbaugh is point ing the way to a new day in the Com monwealth and through his splendid addresses men of all parties are seeing the murky haze of hysteria dissolve and roll away while confidence and appreciation of the real greatness of the State are gripping the public mind. The Colonel says ho is coming into Pennsylvania next month to campaign for Gilford Plnchot. Meanwhile A. Mitchell Palmer, one of the White House twins, is denouncing Mr. Pincliot as utterly unfit to be United States Senator. Meanwhile It is the hope of \ the other twin—McCormick—that he may be able to slip In between the open -ranks of the fusion forces under the dust of the conflict. COMPARISONS THOSE who are familiar with the fact that the. Democratic candi date for Governor is heavily interested in West Virginia coal mines cahnot help wondering whether he Is moitt concerned about the work ers snd the working men in Pennsyl vania for his own political purposes than he Is regarding the welfare of those in the mines of West Virginia. These same persons are. likewise won dering whether he is better fitted to deal with the welfare of the children of Pennsylvania than the distinguished Republican educator who has given more than thirty years of his life to \ the best interests of the boys and girls of this State. Between now and election day the voters of Pennsylvania are going to sift the wheat from the chaff and when they shall have done that there will be no question about the tremendous vote that will go to Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh and his colleagues on the Republican ticket. Senator Elihu Root has declined to be a candidate for re-election to the United States Senate from New York, owing to the fact that he Js now about three score and ten. At the same time Simeon E. Baldwin has been nominated by the people of Connecticut for Sena tor, although he is about 75. Mr. Root may find the people of the United States calling upon him as a safe and sane statesman to tuke the lielm at Washington and occupy the White House for the four years nuxt succeeding March 4, 1917. What this country needs to-day is not blather and the propaganda of unrest, but con structive sanity In government, and Senator Root is the type of man who is needed In the counsels of the nation. BOWING Tt) FASHION SOME one has said that men are largely creatures of the calendar and judging by tho apparel men wore this week while the mercury soared at ninety and above, we won der If it Isn't true. Yes, the thermometer was at ninety and above. But did you see any straw hate on the street? Did you se>e any men without coats? Did you see any body dressed to suit the weather? Of course you didn't! And why? The #j»ww la simple. When tho mercury FRIDAY EVENING, &XRRISBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 25, 1914. was highest, ninety-three, the calen dar date was September 23. And on September 15 fashion decrees that men lay away their straws, don waist coats and wear Kail suits. And nearly everybody obeyed fashion's decree. Those few who didn't were marks of ridicule as they passed down the city streets. Then came a hot wave equal to any of July and summer. Did we set out the old straws again and lay away the warm Fall clothing. We didn't, did you? ! Twenty-four vessels which carried J foreign flags a month ago have been transferred to the American flag and j twenty-seven more are on their way, | applications for the transfer of registry ! having been made. It seems to be now 1 more a question of finding business for the ships than of securing ships for the business. KUMiEL AND M'CORMICK THOSE adherents of the Demo cratic candidate for Governor who are endeavoring to secure support for him *ln Harrisburg and Dauphin county on the ground that he is a native of this city prob ably wonder why there Is so little enthusiasm aroused by their special pleading on this score. They seem to forget that Judge George Kunkel, whose admirable service on the bench of this county assured his election for another term of ten years with practical unanimity and who is now a nonpartisan candidate for Justice of the Supreme Court, Is also a native of Harrisburg and a lifelong "resident of this community. But the Harrisburg Patriot, owned and conducted by the Democratic candidate for Governor —his personal mouthpiece—has not uttered one word of commendation of the able and high-minded nonpartisan jurist, who is being supported by thousands of fair-minded Democrats throughout Pennsylvania. It is "patriotic" in William Draper Lewis to retire in the interest of Mr. McCormick for Gov ernor, but it is manifestly not "patri otic" for either the Democratic candi date or his newspaper to aid in the election of Judge Kunkel to the higher court, notwithstanding many Demo crats and other newspapers and indi viduals are doing their utmost to ele vate the eminent Dauphin county jurist to the higher court. PROGRESSIVES PROTEST EX-REPRESENTATIVE C.TYSON KRATZ, the stalwart Montgom ery county reformer who has be come a serious thorn in the side of the Bull Moose bosses and the unwise leaders of the temperance movement in Pennsylvania, declares that 90 per cent, of the followers of Colonel Roosevelt are now earnest supporters of Dr. Brumbaugh as a result of the Flinn-McCormick deal a few days ago. Mr. Kratz was a delegate to the Chi cago convention in the interest of Roosevelt and until the deplorable and disgraceful dickering between Flinn and McCormick with a view to turning over the votes of the Wash ington party to a free-tra<|e Democrat he was hopeful that there might soon develop-political sentiment so strong that Colcnel Roosevelt would be the choice of the Republicans in 191fi. He feels now, however, that the friendly feeling of thousands of Re publicans toward -Roosevelt has been alienated by the acts of those who have presumed to speak for him in this Slate. Albert R. Moore, an Indiana county leader in the Washington party ranks, declared that "Flinn In two State offices has trodden under foot the great principles of tho Progressive party." Charles Kerler, editor of the Blalrs ville Courier, one of the main Pro gressive standbys in the 1912 crusade for Roosevelt, is daily urging Progres sives to vote the Republican ticket, assuring them that in so doing they will not be deserting Progressive prin ciples, but will be repudiating Flinn. He says "the principles of the State wide primary for which the Wash ington party contended have been flagrantly disregarded." From every quarter of the State protests against the sell-out of the Washington party to the Democrats are voiced in the newspapers and otherwise. WHITE HOUSE TWINS STILL referring to the officials of Capitol Hill as "political crooks," the Democratic candidate for Governor, who is trying to ride two horses with indifferent success, charges these officials with "waste and extravagance by providing soft jobs for favorites." Mr. McCormick, the hand-picked candidate of President Wilson, is so busy filling the air of Pennsylvania with his venom and malice that >he fails to note what is being said by men of national promi nence and newspapers of his own party regarding the broken promises, the extravagance and profligacy of the Democratic administration at Washington. Nor has he one word to say of the fourflushing economy of that same administration which re duces the force of one department only to create a new division and more places in the same department. It seems to be the whole effort of the Palmers and McCormlcks and other men of that stripe to create an im pression of sincerity when every move they make is characterized by duplicity and political effrontery. One of the serious defects of the present laws affecting the highways of Pennsylvania is the omission of the boroughs In the taking over of the various main roads. There is not a line highway in the State that Is not spoiled at frequent intervals by the rocky sections through the boroughs. A few towns have been enterprising enough to improve their own sections, but these are exceptions. All the people of Harrlsburg should gld in making the convention of the firemen a great success. Every flag and streamer ought to be displayed, and the whole city should be In an attitude of welcome. EVENING CHAT I We have all been so busy in fur nishing cause for the general em ployment of the slogan "Watch Har risburg Grow" that we have not been paying as much attention to the growth of the city as we should and it is doubtful if there are twenty people in the whole Harrlsburg dis trict who can sit down and tell what progress has been made. Steelton, Penbrook, Paxtang, Riverside, Camp Hill, New Cumberland, Lemoyne, Knola and other towns where, people live who work in Harrlsburg and transact business here are just as much a part of Harrlsburg as the Thirteenth ward or the Cameron ex tension when it comes down to gen eral interests and only an imaginary line and different columns for taxes and election returns are about all that separate them. How many people are there in Harrisburg, for instance; who can tell • what part of Steelton or Highspire grew most this year or how many new houses were put up in New Cumberland or Knola or Camp Hill, or, coming down to dots, how many are there who have been down to look over the districts opened to house building in the First ward or who are familiar with the way the Tenth ward has built up along Sixth street? Har risburg people as a rule are very proud of their city and have a right to be, but they are shy on knowledge of what it has. How many have gone through Bellevue Park or the district between State and Herr streets east of Fifteenth or are familiar with the development of Derry and other Hill streets and of the Riverside section-? This is a nice time of the year to take walks and it would be a good thing for Harrisburg people to get around over their city and note how it has grown and to take some trolley trips to the nearby towns and look them over. Steelton will surprise the busy man who has not been down there for five years and he will be surprised if he goes over along the West Shore, while Paxtang and Penbrook have just been marching along. Along this line it will be Interesting to quote a man who has been here for the last three and a half years, who belongs to the government and who has been observing the city. "I have been watching this city expand since I came here and I tell you it has grown out in all directions," said he. "Most towns have a boom because of some big industry or development, but this has gone on without such incen tive. The development has been more or less individual, and while many of the houses lately built are not occu pied now 1 have no doubt that there will be children looking out of their windows this time next year. The city has grown, spread out and be come some place. 1 have seldom seen any place that grew so rapidly and yet so quietly." "One of the lines of goods that we have had to buy by the bale and which we never had to keep in stock before this year have been props," said a Market street business man yesterday. "Just plain props, the kind your mother used to prop up the wash line, only they want them for the peach and apple trees this year. There have been such big crops that many men have had to support their trees and the result has been that all of the handy sticks were used up and they had to come on us for props. The big crops are certainly helping things out in a dull year." It happens that both Senator Pen rose and Congressman Palmer, whose verbal passages at arms have been furnishing very interesting reading in this campaign, took prizes as orators at college. Roth were noted for their ability as speakers and came out into the world with laurels. The senator was one of the best debaters at Har vard and the Monroe attended Swarthmore. Speaking of collegiate men, it Is in teresting to note that the candidates for the two Important offices on the state ticket are college-bred men. The three senatorial candidates have "sheepskins" and all have honorary degrees. McCormick is a Vale man and Dr. Brumbaugh, like Dr. Lewis, won his degree by hard work at the University of Pennsylvania, although it was at Juniata that Brumbaugh worked his way to his first degree. The three candidates for Lieutenant- Governor did not have the luck to get to i ollcge and took their degrees from the wide world. Representative S. Taylor North, who is running for Congress in the Twentv seventh district, writes to a friend that he is touring the four counties of the district and that running for Congress is not like campaigning In old Jefferson. He says lie only gets home to Punxsutawney once in a while. f WELL KNOWN PEOPLE"! •—Senator C. H. Kline Is running the Republican city campaign in Pitts burgh this fall. —Theodore Voorhees, the Reading's head, is of the opinion that the trans portation business Is picking up. —Richard T. Cook, the Philadel phia banker, has returned from New Hampshire after his vacation. —Dr. Hitchin, the new president of Washington and Jefferson, is a Pres byterian clergyman and was head of Central University at Danville, Ky. —Dr. P. D. Schaeffer, of Allentown, has finally secured a roof garden for the hospital in that city. —A. S. McSwigan, state deputy of the Knights of Columbus, is on a visit to eastern districts. 1 DO YOU KNOW n That 'Harrisburg water tube boil ers lieat many schoolhouses and public buildings In the western states? I liTTERSTOTHEEDITOR I THANKS OF CHAIRMAN MONTGOM ERY To the Editor of llie Telegraph: As chairman of the local committee, X wish to thank you and your co-labor ers for your aid In securing popular at tention for the offer made by the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, to form an extension class in Harrisburg. I say as chair man of the local committee, rather than representlng'tlie alumni of the in stitution, for this project was specially Interesting to me as a Harrlsburger, and I am delighted that the young men and the young women of this vicinity are to have the privilege of meeting the full faculty in this school. In this project no one Is hurt. The school provides instruction along lines that are not touched by other courses, and therefore the formation of this class will simply provide one more edu cational advantage for the people of this district. Yours, very sincerely, THOMAS L. MONTGOMERY. SENATOR HEN HOSE ON THE DECK EASING REVENUES "Investigation shows that the deficit In revenues has been Increasing every day since the Democratic tariff law went Into effect," said Senator Penrose "This condition cannot he attributed to the war In Europe because that has only Intensified It. When the Ameri can people realize the character and ex tent of the direct taxes about to he imposed there wil he an Indignant pro test throughout the country, which will lead to a. Republican landslide. We are at peace with the world, and vet we are to be burdened with war taxes." , "Trade-Marked" Have you ever asked for a In our store you will find the certain make of anything time after best makes of shirts, hats, gloves, un time and been unable to get it? derwear, clothing, etc. You can rely on their trade-marks for quality and satis- Maybe the dealer would say faction. "We have something here, etc." The T> SAME OLD STORY, BM YOU KNEW .HAT .HE ' Furthermore, you know that goods you asked for by name were ex- prices on such goods are standard, actly what you wanted. TT « I rr i -iv/r Hart Schaffner and Marx You had used them before and Clothes are an old established line, made knew how good they were. popular by years of satisfactory service. When you buy a suit or overcoat you Well-known, advertised goods can be sure ? hat >' ou are & ettin s st y le - TT fit and wearing qualities. The makers are the customer s protection. He . ... , r,, - 1 guarantee this, so do we. lryonaHart, knows alter once trying them whether Schaffner & Marx suit or overcoat next they are good or bad, and he's not tak- time you're around this way. Prices ing any chances the next time. from $lB to S3O, and value uppermost. Clothcraft Guaranteed All Wool Suits and Overcoats $lO to S2O H. Marks & Son 4th & Market Street NIK SQUINT JTV.CJ'COiIICK Dauphin Progressives Not Inclined to Line Up For Him Just Because He's Rich "In my platform I took a posi tion. 1 think I had a perfect right to take the position I did on the question of local option, for I believe the people in the differ ent counties of the State are cap able of settling that matter for themselves, therefore I approve and advocate, a local option law and advocate, a ocal option law for the State of Pennsylvania."— Martin G. Brumbaugh. Dauphin county Bull Moosers are not united in their support of Vance C. McCormick as the nominee of their party for the governorship and efforts to stir up enthusiasm in behalf of the wealthy Democratic coal land owner have been a& dismal as the at tempts to hold lively meetings of the Palmer-McCormick Ijcague in the Good Will engine house and other places about the city. To begin with, it was apparent, at last night's meeting of the Progres sive League, which is the talking end of the Progressive party, that many men who were Roosevelt followers from principle could not understand why the State committee of a party pledging support, to the protective policy should accept a rich man and an ardent supporter of the Wilson low tariff. Thsre are some very straight laced Bull Moosers who are outspoken In calling the nomination of McCor mick a surrender, just as did Judge C. N. Brumm, and who denounce the whole business as treachery to the. "cause." Then there are quite a numerous body, for Bull Moosers, who fail to understand what their party is going to get as a result of the fusion dicker and why Pinchot is not endorsed by the Democrats instead of being flouted by Palmer. Finally, there are some keen-witted Progressives who argue that it Is rather singular that McCormick is constantly prating about bad con ditions on Capitol Hill and declaring that if he goes in he will stop certain expenditures. They point out that the Auditor General's and State Treas urer's departments, which hold the purse strings on Capitol Hill, are con trolled by Washington party men and remark that if things are as rampant in the wrong direction as argued by McCormick there must be dereliction on the part of Young and Powell in failing to check them. This whole line, they say, shows the caliber of McCormick, who, it will be recalled, has for years been berating the Auditor General's department. A final effort will be made within the next twenty-four hours to get the fusion game into shape in the two legislative districts of Dauphin county so legislative that when McCpr- FuHion Not tnick comes marching Working Well homo next time there will be something to * tell him. The two Democratic legislative candidates in tho Second legislative district have been hearing from Democrats about their surrender to the Bull Moosers and are anxious to get the whole business ended. In the city both Barker and Crow, the Progressive candidates, have definitely refused to quit, and as Lybarger, the Democratio candidate, is the man picked out to be elected by the McCormick machine, he is not going to quit. So it is put up to John A. Marshall, the other Democratic candidate, and they are working on him good and hard. Efforts to have a meeting of the Democratic State committee that will he a record breaker are being made at the Democratic, State windmill and it is the hope that the attend- Meetings to ance at the session on Ik- Made a Tuesday will be a rouser Big Noise so that W'jrd can be sent out over (he State that McCormick Is the man the party workers cry for. Ringing remarks and reverberating resolutions endors ing the young millionaire are to be put through and under cover the bosses will learn just how far they ran push Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer toward the jumping off place. If it is found that the sentiment will i stand it, there will be some adroit speech or smooth motion to "con vince" the congressman that the best interests of the party require him to surrender to Pinchot. If it is found that sentiment is the other way, there will be compliments for Palmer. The meeting will sound out sentiment on the senatorship and will be used to sound out the Democratic cry for MeCormick and the plethoric cam paign chest. State Chairman Crow says the fusion deal is helping Republicans. In Philadelphia he said yesterday. "The retirement of William Draper Lewis as gubcrna- Crow's torial candidate on the Wash- Ideas ington party ticket has caused Given a veritable stampede among Republicans who left their parity to follow Roosevelt back into the old party. The effort to force on them a Democrat is too much for their independence to stand. Then, too, many wage-earners, Demo crats who knew of depressions under Democratic rule in the past only by hearsay, are now experiencing the effects of the policies of that party and are coming over to the Repub lican party as being always identified with prosperity. "The bitter factional light in the Democratic party before the May pri maries is still slumbering and there is no enthusiasm for candidates who represent exclusively one wing of the party and who have made no over tures toward the other. There will be an astoundlngly large Republican vote cast in Pennsylvania this Fall, mark tjiy words." The outlined itinerary arranged for the Republican campaigners next week follows: Monday. Clearfield county, with night meeting in Dubois; Tuesday. Ridgway, Elk county; Em porium. Cameron county, and Cou dersport. Potter county; Wednesday. Galeton, Potter county, and Wells boro, Tioga county; Thursday, Brad ford county, Towanda at night; Fri day, Tunkliannock and Scranton; Sat urday, return to Philadelphia. • 1 POLITICAL SIDELIGHTS i —Wonder who is putting up the money for the Palmer-McCormtek League hereabouts? Js it MeCormick or is it wrung from federal officehold ers and those who hope for prefer ment? —Anything bearing the name of Republican is wicked in the eyes of the Patriot. —Clyde Kelly, the Washington party congressman, yesterday de nounced the action of the leaders of the party which MeCormick repre sents as rank "gag law." —Homer Burlingame, a Blair county Washington party man, addressed the Progressive leaguers last night. —ln the opinion of Market Square, the only kind of a "league" that goes is a Palmer-McCormick league. Re publican and Progressive leagues will not be given editorial support. —The Philadelphia North American says that the Democratic "war" tax is an unnecessary burden. —For the sake of Wilson Bailey, the Democratic State machine col lector, the Patriot ought not to discuss leagues of other parties. -—The contributions of federal office holders and those who hope to be federal officeholders in this city will bo interesting to read—if they are ever published. —ln the eyes of the strabismatlo MeCormick newspaper a State em ploye who gives to a Republican cam paign fund is a scamp, but- a federal officeholder who comes across at the demand of the Democratic State ma chine is entitled to a crown. —Dr. Brumbaugh will lay the cor nerstone of a high school in German town to-morrow . —There are early frosts this week in the northern tier counties. —The returns from New Jersey Progressives do not get much space in the Patriot. The Test of a Man . | -» Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh, the Re publican candidate for Governor, sftys: "It Is said that the test of a man in the last analysis is his power to appre ciate the good that others have pro duced for him. The man who enjoys in a wholesome way reading good litera ture. listening to good music, going out and meeting his fellows and under standing them, who has been trained to enjoy In a large way the good that Ills race has thrown about him, is a cul tured and an educated man. On the other side of the problem, his value to society lies in his ability to give things as he is capable of consuming. If we oonsiim* more than we produce we check the progress of civilization. We put the brakes on the wheels of pro gress. "I think the men here to-day under- | stand the meaning of that, and in one I way or another are trying to give a j larger service to society than they take from society. The net product of I the good we give above the good we consume is our contribution to the j progress 0 f the world. "In our own city we had a place at Seventh and Lombard streets that was known as 'Hell's Half Acre.' 1 do not know why they limited it to a half acre. We took possession of that place, tore down all its buildings and made it a playground for children and erected ,in the center of it a house where the people of that neighborhood could gather In the evening and listen to lectures, play chess, checkers, pitch quoits, and a thousand other whole some, helpful, happy things. At once the neighborhood broke out Into thirty | seven separate clubs, and then massed once in a while, all together for glori ous civic celebrations." OUR DAILY LAUGH I \ -yr L QUEER. Is a funny , 1 Ov ® world, I /" Vjv swear, ( ' fj" Wt§ The wise ob Army of Potomac. Sept. 25—.501-' diers are unable to buy whisky. One j was seen to offer JIOO for a canteen I but was unable to purchase any at I that price. BOOKS and ll! OLD FRIEND IN NEW GUISE Under the title, "The Countryside Magazine and Suburban Life," a new magazine, or rather, an old and estab lished magazine in a new and enlarged form, was born to-day. The old Suburban Life, which for just tin years has been one of Harrisburg's best products, has been merged into the larger and broader publication. U is issued under the same management and comes as usual from the press of the J. Horace McFarland Printing Company, known all over the land as the Mt. Pleasant Press. The Country side Magazine undertakes to cover a new Hold, while maintaining all of its old interest to residents of suburban communities. Its publisher, Frank A. Arnold, thus explains the objects and Intentions of the enlarged magazine: "Suburban living is now a recognized feature of modern family life. It has been tried out, has made good and is hero to stay. In a modest way Sub urban Life has been a factor in this development, and has kept fully abreast of, and a little ahead of, tho movements of the past ten years. And now, on what is practically our tenth birthday, we take another long step forward. The suburbs are already crowded. Already, singly and in little groups, families are seeking the coun tryside, where an acre is available at the price of a suburban lot, and whero there are no restrictions on the full enjoyment of country life. Moreover, the great vital questions of the next ten years will be those that have to do with the open country; the devel opment of rural communities Into suburbs; the intensive cultivation of the ten-acre farm, owned perhaps by the city businessman; the conserva tion of natural resources; reconstruc tion of the social life of individual communities; in a word, the many problems which have to do primarily with the land and the human Interests Identified with it." The Countryside Magazine and Suburban Life is to be the voice of the countryside as well as of the suburbs and it has enlisted in Its ser vice, as contributing editor, a no less personage than Dr. L. H. Bailey, per haps the leading authority on agri culture and kindred subjects in the whole country, and certainly the lead ing writer on those topics in which Tho Countryside Magazine and Sub urban Life readers will re v el. Dr. Bailey was for ye.ars assistant .at Har vard to the great botanist, Asa Gray, and for still more years was the big agricultural authority at Cornell, re tiring only recently to devote himself to writing along agricultural and gar dening lines. Any magazine that, boasts of him as a contributing editor may expect to draw to Itself all those who are Interested In hearing the last word on the many topics of which he is a master. The Countryside Magazino and Sub urban Life is bigger and better in every way than was the old publica tion. Harrisburg was always proud of being the home of Suburban Life, and to a commensurately greater de gree will be boastful of the fact that this larger, broader publication has had Its birth here. The Telegraph hopes that it will prosper and enjoy the growth to which its new aims and past accomplishments entitle It. I DR. BBIIMBAUtiH'S KI.OQUKIWT PI,USA FOR STATU LOYALTY "It Is a source of gratitude to be a citizen of a great community." said Doctor Brumbaugh one day this week. "To say. 'I am a citizen of Pennsylva nia' should carry with It the firm reso lution on the part of the citizen to up hold the honor of the State, to stand for its great historical past and to strive to add one more chapter of dignity to its already fair annals. Out of this campaign 1 trust there will come good to the name of Pennsylvania and that we shall continue the record of achieve ment and honorable service given to the State by our forefathers. New oc casions teach new duties, liut no new situation can ever be properly met without a reverend regard for the fine service and sturdy character of the great, good people from whom we have sprung. If we live as well as they lived and serve our Commonwealth as they served it. and give to society at large an intelligent endeavor, single ness of purpose and fidelity to duty and service as fine as theirs we shall have the right In the long perspective of time to be regarded as worthy sons of Pennsylvania." SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES