8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established IS}I PUBLISHED BY TUB TELBCHAPH PRINTING CO. B. i. BTACKPOLE. Pre«*t and TreasT. W. R. OYSTER, Secretary. OUS M. STEINMKTZ. Managing Editor., Published every evening (except Sun-j day), at the Telegraph Building, !ll Federal Square. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building. New York City, Hasbrook. Story A Brooke. Western Office, 123 West Madison street, Chicago, 111.. Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. Mailed to subscribers at 13.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg as oecond class matter. '> /f The Association mi Amor- J 1 \ (f rilSl 'can Advertiser* has ex- JI \|,|f a man ad end certified to I the circulation of this peb- I Kcation. Tli« figures of circulation ! > untamed in the Association's re- 1j 11 part only are gaaranteed. i; Association of American Advertisers ; ; I No. 2333 Whitehall Bldg. K. T. City ! firm dally a?frafe (or the moath of September, 1914 ft 23,252 W— ' Average fop the year 1515—21,077 Average (or the year 1»12—31.175 Average tor the yeer 1t11—18,8.% 1 Aveeage tor the year 1#10—17,495 TELEPHONES I l Bell Private Branch Exchange No. 2040. United Business Office, 208. ■Mttortsd Room (85. Job Dept. 20% MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 5 SIGNIFICANT REGISTRATION STUDENTS of political conditions in Pennsylvania are of one mind respecting the collapse of the third party in this State. For some weeks the back-to-the-party movement has been conspicuous in all parts of the Commonwealth and the last of the registration days on Satur day in Harrisburg and elsewhere has demonstrated beyond any question the trend toward the Republican party. Thousands of voters who were iden tified with the Roosevelt party have aligned themselves again with the Re publican forces and the enormous en rollment on the Republican side indi cates a tremendous victory for the ■whole Republican ticket. Here in Har risburg the returns of the last regis tration show the force of the back-to the-party movement and those who are in close touch with the voters themselves declare that the Republi- can sentiment is so strong us to pre sage a* victory of such proportions as will demonstrate the disappearance of the political hysteria that has envelop ed the country during the last two years. Perhaps nothing so utterly disrupted the Washington party forces as the retirement of William Draper Lewis from the head of the ticket in favor of a Democrat. Practically all of the Mull Moose support in this State since the Wilson election was Republican at heart and these voters will not line up behind a free-trade Democrat, the choice of the White House for Gover nor of Pennsylvania. Business and industrial conditions are such as to still further emphasize the trend toward the Republican party. Thousands of Democrats who are not saying a word as to their in tentions will vote for the Republican candidates. They feel that it is time to call a halt at Washington, and the fault-finding Democratic candidate for Governor is lamentably weak In com parison with Dr. Martin G. Brum baugh, the Republican nominee for Governor, who is making a remark able campaign throughout the State. Republican leaders and workers in this city and county are pressing for ward and are confident of success at the November election. Similar re ports come from all over the central part of the State. Perhaps nothing is so significant of the Republican senti ment as the registration figures of Philadelphia. With a few scattered districts still to be tabulated, the com plete unofficial returns for the three days of registration are as follows: Republican, 183,248; Democratic, 24,- 296; Washington, 16,004; nonpartisan, 45.198. The falling off in the third party strength seems to warrant the state ment that it will cut little figure in the total result this year. It appeßrs that the Democratic can didate for Gov -nor anil the chairman of the Democn lie machine committee spent a day in ""hiladelphia trying to round u~ the ltyan men as the remnant of the Bull Moose party was rounded up. It will be Interesting to study the returns in Philadelphia on the day after election. Ryan supporters all over the State have not forgotten the insults heaped upon them by the Democratic candidate for Governor and his person ally-conducted newspaper. Colonel Roosevelt Is manifestly out of sympathy with the anti-Brumbaugh propaganda, and the machine Demo crats are getting little comfort from his Philadelphia speech. \BVK.imisi\<; AWE TX-KN(OWN educator notes In a recent address that adver tising courses in correspondence schools and business colleges are patronized now more than ever before, and adds that not a few of the students are men owning their own business or managers "who doubtless will never find use for their knowl edge as advertising writers." Possi bly not, but the businessman of to-day who does not have a practical knowl edge of advertising is working under a handicap. How to say the right thing at the right time, in the right VBXM tor instance, is one of the fea-j MONDAY EVENING, • - HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 5, 1914. tures of all advertising courses. The principle of the specific fact and the i specific instance affect all writing and speaking. They make one man's ad vertising a partial failure, while an other's is a money getter. If one man visits a strange city, he I comes back talking something like Ithls: "It was line, grand, splendid." His talk evaporates into vague, gen eral phrases. The people that hear him talk know no more about that city than before. He has few listen ers, whatever his subject of conversa tion may bo. Another man remarks about the same town, that it is full of buildings twenty stories high, that the streets were so crowded he had to wait ten minutes at one cross walk to get over, and that people were always in a hurry and the street railway conduc tors always said "Step lively." After such a man has talked a few moments you get some idea about the place he describes. You see it with your own eyes. Every man who ever made a suc cess as a newspaper writer has learned that you must give personal incidents and actual happenings to make any kind of news article interesting. If the reader can't see the thing with his own eyes, the copy won't sell. Just the same in advertising. If you merely say "Best stock in town" the reader may or may not believe you. Try picking out the best values in your st ire, give a few details about them so the purchaser can get some idea what they are, then name the price. The reader then sees the bar gain with his own eyes, is interested, and feels a desire to buy. That Is all there Is to good adver tising. It does not require wit, nor literary nor technical skill. Just "come down to brass tacks." The advertising course Is patronized by men who want to know how best to do this, how and where to spend their money and how much to spend. They realize that there is no profit in haphazard, hit-or-miss advertising. Our friends, the firemen, have put forward their best efforts to guarantee a fine reception for the visiting fire fighters, and all that is now necessary for the success of the big occasion is a continuance of good weather. Mean while every citizen of Harrisburg should constitute himself a special com mittee on reception to the end that all visitors may be given the very best im pression of Harrisburg and our people. They must see the public improvements and what has been accomplished here during the last few years. NO TIME TO M>SK EVEN now England Is making preparations to capture the foreign trade that Germany has lost as the result of the war. England wants American sympathy but. she does. not want America to profit as a result of the war. We are a great people so long as we do not indulge in a thought above the suc cess of the allied armies. It behooves us, therefore, to move rapidly and along pr-oper channels if we are to capture the bulk of the customers that are now looking for markets from which to purchase. The question is largely whether our manufacturers will take the trouble to adapt themselves to the whims and individualities of these localities. The tendency formerly has been to send these people, not what they wanted, but what we thought they ought to want. Somewhat better results have been had for a few recent years, but our exporters still have a great deal to learn if they are to compete per manently in this field. The reports of our consuls show what stupid blunders have been made in the past. Many goods intended for Portuguese speaking countries would have Spanish labels. Shipments have been marked in feet and pounds for countries using the metric system. Many manufacturers would ship goods In great flimsy cases, tacked to gether with light nails. They might have to he trans-shipped from steamer to harbor lighter, thence to river boat, again to railway, and finally to ox team. They would encounter tropical rains and heat. If they held together, they might prove too heavy for the human carrier at the end of the journey. The business man of these coun tries have the Latin-American love for forms and ceremonies. The ap proach of our breezy salesmen strikes them as rough and abrupt. Social relations precede business in the trop ics. And no matter how well a man can work off goods in Oshkosh or Seattle, if he only speaks pigeon- Spanish in South America, it is like a Hungarian laborer trying to sell grand pianos in Fifth avenue. It is a great field for young men who are willing to grow up with the country, and form a link between our mills and South American customs and ideas. That is the way the Ger mans won the bulk of the business and that is why England will take the bulk of that lost hy Germany un less we move fast and along right lines, for Britain is already extensively in these markets and understands them. Thousands of people walked along the ltlver Front yesterday and saw for themselves the conditions outside the concrete steps. Tons and tons of silt, not to mention tree trunks and stumps and large rocks, must lie removed, and unless Immediate energy Is thrown Into this work the Fall rains will make the cleaning up this year Impossible. The contractors have done so well during the present season on tho general con crete work that it is somewhat sur prising they have fallen down 011 the less difficult features of their contract. I'nless and until some definite au thority is created to look after the trees of Harrisburg, their planting and care, we shall have unsatisfactory tree con ditions. For some reason, not clear to the average mind, there has been per sistent opposition to the acceptance of the Slisde Tree act and the creation of a Shade Tree commission. It would ap pear to be the part of good judgment and good sense to place some authority in charge of the trees. They arc? neces sary not only to the adornment of Har risburg, hut to the health and comfort ol its people. I EVENING CHAT ] If any man had any doubt about Harrisburg being one of the great churchgoing cities of Pennsylvania, all he needed was a view of the streets about the hours for the commence ment and close of worship yesterday. To be sure, yesterday was communion Sunday in practically all of the churches and many of them had ally day exercises in their Sabbath schools to inaugurate the winter work after the summer vacations, and then there was the Interest of I'eace Sunday. But all of these only added to the character of religious observance and enabled one to secure an Idea of the numbers and numbers of people who are in terested in church work and to realize that in Harrisburg, the capital of a State based upon religious freedom, there is an army of folks to whom the church means as much as it did to their forefathers. There are half a dozen points in Harrisburg where some conception of the throngs who attend services can be obtained. Yes terday about noon time it was aston ishing to see the continuo'is streams of people passing on their way home from the churches in the vicinities. The same thing was to be noted, only in a lesser degree, in the evening! when the bells began to ring the call for the last service of the day. To be sure, there were a good many in the streets who were not especially inter ested in churches, but between half past eight and nine the numbers had so increased that it was not hard to tell where a fair proportion came from. The Rev. J. Ritchie Smith, who as pastor of Market Square Church was in close touch with the life of the city, once said that he had never known a community in which so many of the big men, the men of affairs in the city, were so actively identified with church or Sunday school work, while the late Bishop Thomas McGovern said years ago that the proportion of men who took an abiding interest in religious work was unusually high in Harrisburg. And he was as well posted on every denomination's progress as he was on his own. Harrisburg has grown con siderably in recent years and there are some diverse elements in its popu lation, but in spite of all that is said about it in one way or another not necessary to refer to here it main tained, in the language of the late Dr. D. M. Gilbert, long pastor of old Zion, set in the busiest part of Har risburg, "religious impulses which en dure throughout the years." With its almost 100 clwrchcs and thou sands upon thousands of churchgoers Harrisburg compares most favorably with some much larger municipalities. Next to problems of good citizen ship there come mutters of good order and the highways of a city offer a pretty good index of the manner in which law is observed. The police department spasmodically chases the loafers, often referred to as "crows," from the corners and curbs and has managed by dint of hard work and threats of arrest to hammer into the heads of people who walk, drive and ride such things as traffic regulations. But there is another problem coming up and the sooner it is met the bet ter. On certain mornings, notably Saturday, streets in vicinity of mar kets are lined with wagons, most of them without horses, just allowed to remain. On many nights, especially Saturday, certain other streets are lined with automobiles for hours. Market street, for instance, is lined between Market Square and Fourth street with automobiles on both sides of the street, all drawn up to the curb, all put into line and all well watched, but nevertheless restricting available space. The ((ingestion is at the busiest part and the thought nat urally arises whether the oolice could not require certain blocks to be kept clear of automobiles and permit them to be stored in others? The eighth anniversary of the dedi cation ol' the Capitol happened to be marked yesterday by an influx of auto mobile visitors and there was general regret voiced that some provision is not made by the authorities to enable people to see the beauties of the Capi tol building on Sunday. The calcu lations for the pay of the guides and attendants is based on week-days only and they frequently have to work overtime on Saturdays because of the i excursions which have come to the city on so many Saturdays. Experi ence has shown that it is" not wise to throw open everything about the Capi tol without having someone in attend ance and the presence of guides not only affords information to visitors but enables an eye to be kept on things. However, Sunday visiting of the Capi tol by out-of-town people is growing and since the installation of the bat tle flags in the rotunda there have been many folks from Steelton and the Wes! Shore towns joining the Har rlsburgers in going to the State House. Sunday is about the only day of the week some people get to see what there is In Harrisburg and mayhe the next legislature could arrange so that attendants could be present on the Sabbath. No matter what may be saio ■against Sunday visiting of such places, there is a growing demand that public htiildlngs be open on the first day of ♦he week, and it has been growing to an extent that woudl surprise those of us who have been brought up to regard the day as one on which to ab stain from pleasures. .John F. Lowers, member of the last House of Representatives from the Braddock district and now deputy register of wills of Allegheny county, was among visitors here over Sunday. Mr. Lowers was active in behalf of the hunters' license bill in the last session and made the strongest speech in its favor, pointing out how it would enable farmers to "spot" the hunters who trespass oh their lands and en able them to bring to hook people who do damage. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —Bishop Khinelander, of Philadel phia, is on his way home after a tour of England. —A. L. Reichenbach, city treasurer of Allentown for many years, has been made a thirty-third-degree Mason. ' —Philip Rosenbach, the Philadel phia photographer, was the first American layman to receive the bless ing of the new pope. —George W. Norris, Philadelphia director of docks, may hold the job of member of the Reserve Board too. —Henry C. Wrick, of Pittsburgh, is the largest nonresident payer of per sonal property tax in New York. I DO YOU KNOW ?"[ That some of the first bessemer steel blown In this country was made right In Ilarrlshurg? I'KNItOSK AT AI.TOON \ fAltooni} Tribune. | The speech of Senator Penrose, one of tin' ablest be lias ever delivered, dealt exclusively with the business of the country and the effect of th» Dem ocratic tail IT and the European war upon our commercial and industrial en terprises. In the first part of his Hd dress he discussed the sugar problem showing how the Democratic tariff and the Kuropean war have conspired to work harm to the country. Agricul ture. lon. has l>i—n liaildlcapned as lias manufacturing Industry, and the war lias aggravated all the i-vlls produced hy the lowered tariff. This address is a notable production and should be widely circulated. CUMBERUND TOUR BEGINS TOMORBOW * Dr. Brumbaugh Will Be Here to Spend the Night and Will Be in Carlisle Next Day 'PERNICIOUS ACTIVITY' RUMOR i Reports That Complaints Have Been Made at Headquarters Are Denied Today Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh, Repub lican candidate for Governor, and the Republican campaign party will tour the Cumberland Valley this week. He will go through half a dozen counties and there will be numerous meetings. Dr. Brumbaugh will arrive here to night at 10.50, going to the Common wealth Hotel, where he will spend the | night. To-morrow morning at 7.30 he will leave by automobile for Car lisle, where a meeting will be held. The next stop will be 'Shlppensburg and then will come Chambersburg. In the evening McConnellsburg will be reached. Franklin and Adams counties will be toured next. Senator Penrose will spend the early part of the week in Washington. The Democratic circus will divide. McCormick and Lewis will to night in Altoona in an effort to over come the rousing Itepublican meeting and to try and straighten up the Blair county Democratic committee, which has split. Of all the frosty events the at tempted banner raising at Lebanon by the . Demowashycrats was the worst. The banner bears the pictures of Pinchot and Frosts McCormick and neither Fall at Democrats nor Progressives Lebantfti are pleased with it. The banner raising was the oc casion of the gathering of a very small crowd and the remarks of Dean Lewis and Congressman Rup le.v were listened to with silence as chilling as the cold iron and steel about the idle furnaces and mills. The situation in Lebanon is strongly indicative of what a Democratic tariff can do. Dr. J. H. Kreider, the Bull Moose candidate for Congress, gave an extended sketch of himself as a speech. Gifford Pinchot will decide this week whether he will quit or go to the end of the campaign. The candidate is In the western part of the State and in such a weakened condition that Pinchot his physicians" have ' or- Too Sick dered him to remain to Go On Attacks but "a babe in' the on Fusion arrtis of William Flinn," hinting very strongly that the high minded Lewis had been hypnotized into doing what the Pittsburgh boss wanted him to do in order to let go of the linll Moose harness. Mr. Quay says that there will be thousands of Wash ington party men driven back into the Republican camp by the chicanery at tending the nomination of a low tariff Democrat like Vance MeCormick by the Washington party. Mr. Quay also intimated that ?.lr. Klinn had large contracts in New York city and did not care to lie bothered by expensive politics in Pennsylvania. Folks about the Democratic State headquarters say there is no truth in the story that protests have been lodged at Washington against the pernicious Xo Protests activity of some fed \gainst Any eral officeholders in Democrats Pennsylvania. It will be recalled that such activity used to be con demned by certain Democratic news papers when Republicans were in office and that Orover Cleveland, whose name is not in good form at the State headquarters or at Democratic state committee meet ings nowadays, once prohibited men connected with the federal service from playing Democratic politics. However, these are the days of Wood row Wilson and alliances which Cleve land and his friends would have scorned are now smiled upon by the White where the author of a hook on freedom makes slates for the people of sovereign States. Hence, tho revenue collectors, deputies and post masters in this and nearby counties can get busy without fear. POLITICAL SIDELIGHTS —Palmer ought to make that speech about the furnaces and mills being run full time at Lebanon to-night. —As usual the Democrats are howl ing about registration. Are they los ing their nerve already? -r-Ex-Governor Pennypacker has sent an open letter to Dean Lewis advising him to think straight. —One wing of the Ftlair Democracy met Saturday and only 30 of 100 men showed up. —A free dinner attracted quite a crowd of Pittsburgh Democrats to hear MeCormick talk Saturday. —Montgomery county Republicans held a big meeting of committeemen at Norristown Saturday and it was re ported that many progressives had come back. —The Patriot does not give much space to the visit to Ryan. —Henry Wilson Bergey, who was played up by the Patriot as a great man in the last House, is out with a charge that MeCormick Is trying to buy the governorship of Pennsylvania. —The rush of the Kerks Democrats to Ket Dewalt and Sassiiman and Shanaman on the Personal Liberty ballot in their districts appears to have been overlooked in Market Square. • —Pretty nearly time to investigate pernicious activity of federal office holders in this section. —Secretary McAdoo seems to have been beaten in his scheme to set up a ticket in New York. —The Western wage reductions and McCormick's visit to Pittsburgh ap pear to have humped each other. AX EVENING THOUGHT It' the opportunity for great deeds should never come, the op portunity for good deeds is re newed fcr you day by day.—Fur rar. OUR DAILY LAUGH L | AS USUAL. r^i : She: You were I gone some time , * ]k on your wedding : He: Tea, and It \\ developed Into a )/'' lecture tour be- rjrrrT fore we got back, L Lj f LEARNING TO ! DRAW. I hear your boy Is going to draw ing school. You can call It that; he's attend ing a dental 00l- CONSTABITLARY AND LABOR Philadelphia Record: In starting J a crusade against the Pennsylvania | State Constabulary tb~. Central Labor I'nion allows foolish ,prejudices to run i away with its wood ludgments. There j, Is nothing savoring of militarism | about these very efficient troopers, and j the fact that they are held up as a i model throuKhout the country is a matter of which Pennsylvanlans may well be proud. Does the Central Labor Uuion want to so back to the brutal and despotic methods of the old Coal and Iron Police? Before at tacking the Constabulary it would bo ] well to compare their record with ' that of their predecessors. I Philadelpha Ledger: The Central 1 Labor Union of Philadelphia has start ed another campaign for the abolition of the State Constabulary. An effort will be made to obtain a pledge from , every candidate for the Pennsylvania < Assembly as well as the Senate to vote ] for a bill to destroy this police force. , It is a woeful blunder on the part of . organized labor. The State Constabu- ] lary has proved itself to be next to the ( regular army the most efficient protec- , tor of public peace in the United States. It is so regarded in all the ] other States. The constabulary has one mission and only one, which is to preserve or der in the State of Pennsylvania. The j constabulary is here to defend the , 8,000,000 inhabitants, including the j members of all labor unions, against : riot, murder, arson and every form ] of violence. MR. BERRY'S HtJMM.IATION ] [From the Sharon Herald] ; lion. William 1-1. Berry left Pulaski J yesterday very badly peeved. It ap- ] pears that the perennial candidate, j who is now collector of the port of i Philadelphia, was not allowed to en lighten the crowd at the fair, yester- i day, not because Mr. Berry was not willing and anxious to talk, but be- j cause the people there assembled pre ferred horse racing to eloquence. In other words, Mr. Berry was liter- i ally howled down before he had well begun his address. He was mortified, 1 of course, and allowed his temper to ' overflow, which was In quite as bad ' taste as was the attitude of the crowd which refused to listen to him. He. ; made several sarcastic references to the "jackasses" in the throng, but that had little effect on the hoodlums who persisted in interrupting his address. Mr. Berry showed himself to be a very poor politician. Colonel Roosevelt or Uncle Joe Carnon would have smiled Indulgently and assured the crowd that they, too, preferred horse-racing to spell-binding. It is always best to allow the mob to have its way. In struction even in political economy and statecraft cannot be forced into the ears of the common people against their will. Common courtesy should have curbed the impatience of those who were more anxious to see the, races than to hear Democratic doctrine ex plained and defended. The incident is significant, however, in one respect, says the New Castle News. In former years Mr. Berry would have been greeted with enthusi asm in this county, which has long been Considered a nesting place for the politically discontented. The in cident shows that the people are not inclined to be enthusiastic about the Democratic Administration at Wash ington and that President Wilson's hand picked candidate for Governor, Vance C. McCormick, is not destined to be carried to victory on a tidal wave of votes as had been predicted. HATS OFF TO THK FIREMEN By Wins Dinger It's hats off to the firemen. Who ready are to fight The blaze that threatens to destroy Our all by day or night. A service noble, doubly so. Because they ask no pay. But volunteer, at ris.k of life. The fire call to obey. It's hats off to the firemen, We're glad to have them here. Let's all together voices raise In one big, mighty cheer— A hip, hip and another hip. And then a big hooray— We're glad you're here, the town is yours As long as you may stay. I IFTTERSTOTHE £DiTOR~i "UftFAIK TACTICS" To the Editor of the Telegraph: The undersigned entirely agrees with you In your strictures on "Unfair Tac tics," in the Telegraph of last Friday. It certainly "is a matter of sincere re gret" that some overly zealous temper ance advocates injure a good cause by unfair and Indiscreet handling. The temperance question is a question of morals and not of politics, and it is not only unwise, but injurious as well, to mix the two. It was the writer's misfortune to be absent from the morning session of the Kast Pennsylvania Synod of the Luth eran Church, when the resolution, to which you refer, was adopted. We sin cerely regret its adoption, and are sorry we were not present to offer our vigor ous protest. While It was stated In its advocacy "that there were no candidates men tioned,' it is tru«i, however, that the resolution adopted by the Antl-Saloon league, and which the synod endorsed by a small vote ,a candidate's name Is mentioned. And the synod, by such ac tion, showed a political spirit not only, but party as well, and enter ed on the wide field of poll tics. This, we do not hesitate to pronounce a grievous mistake. It Is unwise, as it Is wrong. We wish It dis tinctly understood that the Lutheran Church, as such, does not stand fur such "Unfair Tactics" on the temper ance question or any other. 1 am frank to say that I do not endorse such meth ods. as a member of that body, the synod, no matter how well meant the action taken may have' been. " HOLLOW AY. P. I). Harrisburg, Pa. I HEADQUARTERS COR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES Harrisburg Carpet Co. I We would invite all buyers looking for choice patterns in Carpets and Rugs to call and see our fine display before purchasing. We also carry a full line of Linoleums, Oil Cloths, Carpet Sweepers and Hp Window Shades. ; : ; : HARRISBURG CARPET CO. 1 32 North Second Street ~ NEWS DISPATCHES OF THE CIVI L WAR [From the Telegraph, Oct. 5, 1864] Captures Rebel liattcr,v Fortress Monroe, Oct. 4.—The hos pital steamer from the Point of Rocks with wounded men from the Army of i the James, reports that General Terry , has assaulted and captured a rebel battery in the New Market road. Hob l)cail Soldiers Army of the Potomac, Oct. s.—in passing over the ground where the Second Division of the Ninth Corps met defeat Saturday, our dead werei; found entirely stripped of clothing, and some of the bodies horribly muti lated. Several lof the men had evi dently been murdered after being wounded. HOW THE MEW DEMOCRATIC TAX HITS A 1.1, THE PEOPLE "You will probably remember," said Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh, the Republi can candidate for Governor, in a speech last week, "that about a year ago this autumn we had a change in our tariff policy in the Government of the United States. They claimed goods would be cheaper if we took off our tariff. Even the children that stand before you know that nothing has been cheapened by that. All that has happened is that about $125,000,000, which we formerly collected In the National Treasury and used to support our own Government, has gone abroad into the pockets of foreign manufacturers. t'nder the foolish design of a war tax you are taxed to pay back into the Treasury $100,000,000, so that you are not only taxed by reason of the loss of your in come, but you are directly taxed to make up the deficit. "I want you all when you go to the polls to wipe that out. Support your Congressmen and your Senators so that you can get your people lined up in Washington and change that order of things and bring back prosperity, comfprt and happiness to the people of Pennsylvania." llllillllllllllllH The General says: Before bad weather comes g| irftai y° u s ) ovid | advantage of the S°°d weather to cover your build ings with a roofing that can withstand the elements of winter in any part of the country. It should be Certain-teed Quality "D m W Durability Certified HOOling Guaranteed —because it is made of the Very best materials known for the purpose and will give unexcelled service on all roofs in any kind of climate. —because 1-ply is guaranteed to BEQXTI.ATION BT LAW. last five years, 2-ply ten years, 3-ply fifteen years and this guarantee is Should It* Extension By Government backed by the world's greatest roof- °° n> ing industry. This is an age of regulation The —because our large scale production, growth of National and State regula- J ir .1. J J 11 .. tlon has been tremendous, and if the modern selling methods and excellent proßent rate continues, what la to be shipping facilities enables us to reduce the the result? cost of production—and hence the selling Whether this change from tndivld price— to a minimum. uallsm to paternalism is desirable to . ....... . . . j„.. „_c 'he American people is a great ques- In addition to Crrialn ietd Roll Ro»«» n .' n A iiuhiUt Shingles world's home for individualism and freedom from unnecessary restric ts odo n i) ualit vS toofl n g tlon, and these principles were ln- ShlDKle. corporated into our state and federal Slate-Bur faced Roll Hoofing constitutions as a perpetual Ituaran- Deadenlng Kelt Stringed Felt * ee ? or our welfare. Under this ln- Drv Saturated Frit fluence we have gone forward and Rosln-nlzeil sheathing founded our wonderful Industrial In c,rlam.t**d Hoollng Cement stitutlons. believing in thosa princt pS:S3 Si» t C — nt great progress and cYrtl'in-tl'd Waterproof Liner „ " is with a certain alarm, there- Paper Cmrtain-tmrd Tarred reit government. Regulation seems to Carpet Unlng* Slater's Felt have become a mania—a - profession lllue Piaster Hoard, ©to. — an( j while much of It is good. It There is a dealer in your locality who handle, J}" more than a fair percentage of Certain-Iced Products He will be glad to give «to wm? im* " y ~r— . , . • , ..... forming tne statute books witn un yon further Information and will quote you noceßßary or illogical laws, and reasonable prices on them. drawing large salaries under the r> i o »*r f mask of reform. A regime of this ueneral Kootinp Wllg. Lonipany sort Is fntal to all prosperity, and _ . . , prevents industrial advancement. Wurltf. loriiwt n Perhaps It is time to stop and Roofing and Bulldinu 1 apers take an Inventory of what la going Stock Exchange Bid.., PhjUMp kk. Bell Phone Sofuce 4531 nate the cranks who are making a C K i,y ATT <£& "otT bS" then Philadelphia Atlanta Cleveland Detroit Henslble well informed llniffl St. Loui. Cincinnati Kansas City Minneapolis an(J , hen ~n force them to the gred^ San Francisco Seattle London benefit of the entire population, Hamburg Sydney Jlllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllll Johnston Paper Co., Harrisburg Pa. DISTRIBUTORS OF CISRTAIN-TEED HOOFING L————————- WITMAN BROS., H • WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS OF CERTAIN-TEEI) ROOFING IN HARRISBURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph, Oct. 5, 1864J Rally at Courthouse A union rally will be held In tho Courthouse this evening when Gen eral O. S. Ferry and ex-Governor Johnson will speak. Pickpockets Ilere On Saturday morning in market threes ladies, it is reported, were re lieved of their pocketbooks, one of them containing sl6. BKI-MBAIGH A PEOPLE'S COVER XOR [Philadelphia Public Ledger.] The candidacy of Doctor Brumbaugh rests not upon the pleasure of an oligarchy or a despot, but on the pref erence of 253,000 Republicans expres sed in an open primary. He goes before tho voters of the State on his own honest, open record. There is nothing to hide. There Is no sinister collusion. "We don't fuse, we won't sell out and we don't buy out in Pennsylvania." He cannot he in veigled into an entangling alliance even within the ranks of his own party. He is his own man, and ho will be the people's Governor. The platform is not an amiable cir cumlocution of shopworn, hand-me down phrases that have done duty as party slogans ever since there was a party, it .s not an interstate procla mation, that would serve Oklahoma or Nevada just as well as Pennsylva nia. But its specific pledges squarely meet the present needs of the Com monwealth, and behind them is not the unscrupulous ambition for an of fice, but the determined purpose of a man who has made good in every post of honorable responsibility he has filled.