8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Jtitablisktd ISJI PUBLISHED BY VBI TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. K. J. STACK POLE President and EJttor-m-Chttf F. R. OYSTER Secretary QUS M. STEIXMETZ SfjHCtint Editor Published every evening (except Sun day) at the Telegraph Building, 21< Federal Square. Both phones. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation and Pennsylvania Associ ated Dailies. Bastern Office. Fifth Arenue Building, New York City, Hasbrook, Story & Brooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago, 111, Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. -VSb:.* 4 " Mailed to subscribers at 13.00 a year in advance. ®Btered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Pa., as second class matter. Imn dally aTrrase tor the tkre* ★ BOithi ending; D«. 31. 1814, 22,692 W Average for the year 1914—58.10J Average for the year 1811 31,577 Average for the year 1012—21,175 Average for the year 1811—1S.S51 Average for the year 1810—17,485 FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 15 BUSINESS LOOKING UP BUSINESS is looking up in Steel ton. Ten thousand tons of steel products booked in one day for early delivery would be subject for remark even in very prosperous times and now. with the plants operating in hand-to-mouth fashion, it assumes almost "scare head" Importance. But better than the work in immediate sight Is the prospect of the near future. "We expect some really large or ders soon." said an official of the com pany in commeuting on the contracts announced this week. Nobody has ever accused any man connected with the steel company of being loquacious. They are not given to talking about the affairs of the corporation, and when one of them so far takes the public into his confidence as to re mark tnat there are better times ahead he must be rather certain of his ground. At all events. It is good news and will do much to re-establish business confidence in Harrisburg, where the merchants depend so largely upon the prosperity of the steel mills for their own prosperity. This optimism is to be noted also in the announcement of the Lal&nce- Grosjean company that the uptown plants will resume operations with much work In sight, and also in the tone of the weekly review of trade in the Iron Age. All told the signs are encouraging to the man who has re fused to trim his sails and disrupt his business organization because of the heavy clouds that have darkened the financial skies the past twelve months. REMARKABLE COINCIDENCE THERE is a peculiar coincidence in the fact that almost at the very hour of the earthquake in Italy, scientists In the employ of; the Italian government unearthed a' magnificent house across whose! threshold no human foot had passed j since the earthquake and volcanic eruption that destroyed Pompeii so! many hundred years ago. While houses of modern construe-! et me know what is re quisite. together with the salarv, and when appointments are likely to be made. Sullivan will be down before lons, and you and ho together ought to be able to bring about such re forms as may be necessary there. Tou will find Sullivan a ' strong, courageous, reliable fellow. The more I have sen of him th<> bet ter satisfied I am that he will fit Into the place there and do what is necessity to be done. Very truly yours. W. J. BRYAN. Appointments: Appointments! Jobs: Jobs! That is the administration's big thought. The campaign of 1916 is ap proaching. you know. WHERE A CODE IS NEEDED r" there is Any one topic in the sta tute Law of Pennsylvania where codification U needed for the guid ance of the lawyer and the salvation of the layman, it is borough law. For over 100 years successive legislators have gone on adding to the mass of law relating to the minor municipali ties and seldom subtracting. It takes a lawyer of vast reading to thread his way through the mazes of laws on boroughs and as for the layman, the small property owner, to find out the provisions on government of borough*, ho is at worse than a disadvantage. When it is realized that there are approximately 900 boroughs in the Keystone State, ranging from big towns like Norristown and Steelton to our own lusty infant of Paxtang, tho number of people vitally interested in borough law is apparent. Incidentally, many of these boroughs are In that stage of development when simple sta tutes are a requirement. Hence, the announcement that the hard working Legislative Reference | Bureau has completed its revision of the borough laws and has prepared a code laid down on the simple lines of the splendid school code of 1911, will be received with pleasure all over the Commonwealth. The problem of com piling codes on corporations and taxa tion was important and the result at tracted attention bocause of thorough ness and simplicity. The borough code stands, however, as one concerning a large number of residents of the State, and its enactment will save time, trouble and money for thou sands. i EVENING CHAT 1 There is a good bit of simple dig nity about the invitations issued by the Legislative Inaugural committee to the ceremonies attending the iuduction of Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh into the gubernatorial office and it is in keep ing with the wishes of the plain Penn sylvanlan who will take up the reins of government on Tuesday. Instead of the rather gorgeous invitations that were the rule a few years back the committee has selected a plain white sheet, somew-hat larger than an ordi nary sheet of note paper and In In dented space has placed tho coat of arms in gilt and then the invitation. This year instead of a legislative com mittee or the Legislature or the gov ernment extending the Invitation the Commonwealth uf Pennsylvania asks the presence at the ceremonies. The choice of words is no less striking. The invitation reads "Tho Common wealth of Pennsylvania requests tTie honor of your presence at the inaug uration ceremonies of Hon. Martin G. Brumbaugh as governor of Pennsyl vania in Harrisburg at noon on Tues day, January nineteenth, nineteen hundred and fifteen." In some years gone by the invitations were heavy with gold and in others they were bright with color, while the wording was in text considered in keeping with the magnificence of the occasion. The invitations to the Tener inaugur ation were simpler than they had been for some time, but the Brumbaugh in augural committee has proceeded along new lines. The plans of Governor Tener to leave the city after Dr. Brumbaugh has delivered his address as governor will take him away about the usual time the retiring governors have left. It has long been customary for the governors retiring to leave the city as.soon as possible so that their suc cessors may have their day. Gover nors Stone, Pennypacker and Stuart left almost within an hour and a half of the inauguration of their succes sors, being escorted to the station by personal friends. The statement by the minister of King Peter In London that the real name of his country was Serbia Is In line with what the people from that land #aid when the Balkan war broke out. At that time we were all call ing the people Servians and speak ing of their land as Servla. A resi dent of Steelton who came from Bel grade sent a letter to the newspapers calling attention to the common er ror and to the national dislike of the word Servia with its similarity serve. Somehow or other It wa; v made much of, but the Steelton niiiii was a couple of years ahead of his home government. The National Council of Industrial Safety, which has a council here, has added another to the slogans which it has been sending along and which Harrisburg people have received from time to time. A year ago windows in this city and Steelton bore the posters with the words "Better Safe than Sorry." Now the council has sent this placard for Harrisburg: Better Careful Than Crippled. People who will be at Enola to-day will recall what the place was like a dozen years ago, when the first steam shovels had commenced to dig into the fields and the picnic place above West Falrview was disturbed from its slumbers and foiks from Harrisburg had to go farther afield for their wild loses. Work began on apparently a smail scale where the great yards now stand and it was not until fall that the real organization was effected. As the winter was open work went ahead and visitors swarmed over the place front this city on Saturdays and Sundays. It happened that one sightseeing day some officials came up from Philadel phia to observe the work. They came back to this city for rest and refresh ment and when one man, now dead, was asked what he thought about the place he said: "It's the site of the muddiest mud I ever saw and unless it dries out they wiil have to put down the tracks with safety pins." Dr. T. E. Munce. deputy State vet erinarian and well-known to many residents of this city, because of his active work for the State in the pres ent outbreak, has been elected a direc tor of the Real Kstate Trust company, of Washington, Pa., his home town. Some of the materials taken from the Federal building in the rehabili tation afford interesting ideas of at tempted fireproofing used in the eighties when the Post Office was con structed. In those days a slow burn ing building, one with thick walls and with cement and ash«s between floors, was thf chief form of "safe" construc tion. When ttif Post < "ffice was built they used hollow columns set in plan ter and seine of the beams and joists taken out were armored with somo of a cross between sheet Iron and ex panded metal. Bunching the Advertising Hits The team that led the National League in batting—did not win the pennant. It did not bat at the right time or in the right direction. There is a lesson In this tof every national manufacturer. It Is not a question of how much advertising ammunition you tire a» It Is how you make your shots count. Newspaper advertising proper ly placed always scores. The hits can be bunched at the right time. Results are certain. Manufacturers interested in getting better results for their advertising are Invited to com municate with the Bureau of Ad vertising. American Newspaper Publishers Association, 406 World Building. New York. WINDMILL WILL BE OPENED ANEW Will Be a Rett House For the Dem ocratic Legislators Daring the Coming Session BOSSES HEAR FROM RANKS Democratic Workers Decline to Have Philadelphia For Their Political Mecca Dissatisfaction with the removal of the Democratic headquarters to Phil adelphia in order to accommodate State Chairman Roland S. Morris has been so great that tho bosses of the machine have arranged to reopen the Market Square windmill during the legislative session. It is said that this reopening of the rooms here will be to enable members to have a place to meet and to gather to talk over things. Enough funds aro said to be in sight to pay the rent until the session ends. —As a matter of fact, headquarters or rooms run by the machine would be about the last place that some of the Democratic members of the legis lature would want to visit, as they were elected by elements antagonistic to the present bosses. It Is said that one of the impelling causes was that Morris and others were hearing from men who reminded them that one of the trump cards of the reorganizers was the contention that if they won the headquarters would be here in Harrisburg and not in Philadelphia, where wicked influences might be felt. —The scheme is to have the head quarters in charge of Resident Sec retary Van Dyke until he Is named as revenue collector and then to bring some one of the staff here. Whether the rooms will be open to the frag ments of the Washington party re mains to be seen. —The lists of committees and place holders for the two houses of the log islature are not likely to be named until Wednesday. The committees in charge of patronage have been unable to make ipiueh headway and it is like ly that it will be Monday night before work can be finished. A lot of pulling and hauling is under way with more applicants than ever known. Sena tor Sulus is to be chairman of tho Senate law and order committee and Representative Williams of the House committee. Three Vare men. Wilson. McXichol and Cox, are to head the House committees on judiciary gen eral. special and manufactures, ac cording to rumor. As Gans is slated for health and sanitation, it looks as though Philadelphia was faring well. —Democratic legislators are said to have been assured that they will be given proportional representation on all committees. —Philadelphia dispatches say that Representative A. C. Stein has been asked to take charge of the workmen's compensation act in the House. —Congressman W. D. B. Ainey, who has just returned from Japan, predicts trouble between the United States and the empire. —"Dirt Road" Jones ie to be chair man of the House roads committee In the coming session. He has held the place for several years. —Reading people are apparently as much opposed to the commission form of government as they were in favor of it two years ago. Erie is not alto gether pleased with it either. At the time of the hearings Harrisburg offi cials opposed the change, but have apparently done better than any one else. —Montgomery county manufactur- I prs say they welcome the probe into their industries and decline to be Muffed by the Democratic scheme to inflict punishment because of criti cism of the president. —Huntingdon county Is said to have applicants for many of the places on the ••Hill." [ DO YOU KNOW —1 Thai Harri.«burg ie so favorably situated that it seldom gets de destrwtive storms which sweep otlier parts of the Statr? I WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —Levi I*. line has been re-elected I head of the Philadelphia Clearing House committee. —Congressman Sherlv. of Louisiana, is to be one of the speakers at the Pittsburgh Business banquet. —George Stineman has been elected president of the Lancaster County His torical Society. —Dr. Brumbaugh is to address the Neutrality League of Philadelphia in the latter part of January. —Ex-Chief Justice Fell has been chosen a member of the board of trusts of the Glrard estate. —Paul M. Reed Is head of the Read ing high school alumni. TO A CHIID EMBRACING HIS MOTHER Love thy mother, little onel Kiss and clasp her neck again— Hereafter she may have a son Will kiss and clasp her neck in vain. Love thy mother, little one! Gaze upon her living eyes. And mirror back her love for thee — Hereafter thou may'st shudder sighs To meet them when they <-annot see. Gaze upon her living eyes! Press her lips the while they glow With love that they have often told'— Hereafter thou may'st pr»>ss In woe. And kiss them till thine own are cold. Press her lips the while they glow! Oh. revere her raven hair! Altho" It be not silver grs-- Too early Dfath. led on bv Care. May snatch save one dear lock away. Oh. revere her raven hair! Pray for her at eve and morn. That Heaven may long the stroke defer— For thou may'st live the hour forlorn, When thou wilt ask to die with her. Pray for her at eve and morn! —THOMAS .^jD. Keep Your Lungs Strong This advice is doubly important with the knowledge that every three minntea some one in the United States succumbs to consumption and many refuse to realize they are afflicted until it is too late. It is after colds or sickness, from over work, confining duties or when general weakness exists that tubercular germs thrive because the resistive powers of the body are weakened. Only with fresh air, aonshine and abundant rich blood can one hope to txreat their progress, and the concen trated fats in Scott's Emulsion furnish fuel for rich blood, and its rare nourish ment helps strengthen the lungs while i it builds up the forces. If yon work indoors, tire easily, feel languid or run-down Scott's Emulsion is the most strengthening food-medicine known and la free from alcohol or stupe* tying drags. Avoid auhstitntea. Its .fcHttfc-.Mwm.Ejj | OUR DAILY LAUGH j »- 1 HARD LUCK W\{ stories. 1 / Jyp-A Has De Broke ftf VJ told you his last j V hard luck story? || y II I hope so. ril t WEDDED LIFE. Did your wiU ever get the best Yes; didn't sh« marry me. OBSTINATE. Did the dentist >^W\ drill your teeth? / M \ Yes; but he Yfl can't make them I \ act right. NO POEM TODAY Br \Vli( Dinger I've tried all morning to get time To strike oft some cute little rhyme. But every time that I've sat down To pen my words, someone came roun' And busted ap my train of thought. As a result of which I've not Been able to command my wit— But that don't count a little bit With editor and foreman, who Complain because the poem is due And absolutely will not wait Another moment, so they state. So Just because they act that way There'll be no Wing Dinger to-day, "TOMMY" By Hudyard Kipling I went into a public.'ouse to get a pint o' beer. The publican 'e up an' sez, "we serve no redcoats here." The girls be'ind the bar they laughed an' giggled fit to die. I outs into the. street again, an' to my self sez I: O it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' "Tommy, go away;" But it's "Thank you. Mister Atkins," when the band begins to play, The band begins to play, my boys, the band begins to play. 0 it's "Thank you. Mister Atkins," when the band begins to play. 1 went into a theater as sober as could be. They gave a drunk civilian room, but 'adn't none for me: They sent me to the gallery or round the music-'alls. But when It comes to fightin', Lord! they'll shove me in the stalls! For it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' •"Tommy, wait outside;" But it's "Special, train for Atkins" when the trooper's on the tide. The troopship's on the tide, my boys, the troopship's on the tide, O it's "Special train for Atkins" when the trooper's on the tide. Yes. makin' mock o' uniforms that guard you while you sleep Is cheaper than them uniforms, an' they're starvation cheap; An' hustln' drunken soldiers when they're goin' large a bit Is five times better business than pa radin' in full kit. Then it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' "Tommy, 'ow's yer soul?" But it's "Thin red line of 'eroes" when the drums begin to roll. The drums begin to roll, my boys, the drums begin to roll. O it's "Thin red line of 'eroes" when the drums begin to roll. We aren't no thin red 'eroes, nor we aren't no blackguards too, But single men in barricks, most re markable like you: An' if sometimes our conduck isn't all your fancy paints: Why, single men in barricks don't grow into plaster saints: While it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that an' "Tommy, fall be'ind:" But it's "Please to walk in front, sir,' when there's trouble in the wind. There's trouble In the wind, my boys, there's trouble in the wind, O It's "Please to walk In front, sir," when there's trouble in the wind. You talk o' better food for us, an' schools, an' fires, an' all: We'll wait for extry rations if you j treat us rational. Don't mess about the cook-room slops, | but prove it to our face The Widow's Uniform is not the sol dier-man's disgrace. For It's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' "Chuck him out. the brute!" But It's "Salour of 'ls country" when the guns begin to shoot. Yes, it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' anything you please: But Tommy ain't a bloomln' fool—you bet that Tommy sees! What We Say It It, IT IS It Is Easy to Buy a Diamond You can acquire a Diamond of any size you wish without a strain on vour pocketbook by the Diener "Grow a Diamond" plan. If you are not ready right now to Invest in as large a stone as you de sire, don't miss completely the pleas ure of owning a stone. Come In and select a Diamond at the price you want to pay now. Then when you want a larger gem, you can turn in the one you buy now at the full pur chase price as part payment for your new Diamond. In this way you have the pleasure of wearing a Diamond while you are "growing" a larger one. Every Diener Diamond Is guaran teed as' to quality, color and weight. We have stones of sll slses, both ■nounted and looire. to select from, at prices representing the greatest pos sible Diamond value. Diener, 408 Market Street H. MARKS & SON 4th & MARKET STREETS CLEARANCE SALE $12.50 Balmacaan Overcoats, $8.75 (< >nljr 2 to Ml) $16.50 English Model Suits, $lO (25 to sell) sls Black Silk Faced Overcoats, $9.50 (3 left to sell) $25 Tartan Check Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits, sls (4 ink terns—2o in all to wll) S4O Marmot Lined Overcoats, Persian Lamb Collar, $23.50 (Only 2 left) $lB Sunproof Blue Serge Suits, $11.50 (44 to sell) S3O Silk Yoke Double-breasted Hart Schaffner & Marx Overcoats, $16.50 (2 to sell) $5 to $7.50 Short Storm Pea Jackets, $1.50 (Only 7 left, sizes 85, 36) $75 Muskrat Lined Overcoat, Persian Lamb Collar, $37.50 (Only 1 to sell) S3O Braid-bound Suits (Hart Schaffner & Marx) $16.50 (Only 2 to sell) S3O and $35 Quilted Satin Lined Russian Collar Overcoats, $18.50 (8 to sell) Any Shirt in the house, including Full Dress Tango, Plaited, % stiff fronts (silks excepted-), 950 Imported Silk Ties, very swell styles; former price $1.00; now, 550 $5 to $6.50 "Jumbo" Knit Sweaters, now $3.50 (Only # to sell) About 100 Fancy Vests, $2 to $5 values, 990 Ladies' Fur Department 1 Beaver Ret. former price $65: now $35 2 Black Wolf Sets, former prloe $18: now $10.50 t Black I DOUTRICH'S Big Shirt Sale Begins Tomorrow Read Their Ad. on Page 7 I MSWATI [From the Telegraph, Jan. 15, 1865] War Items Washington, Jan. 15.—A Rebel fleet has been sighted off Wilmington. Grant's trains have been kept busy lately, but the cargo is not known. Fire in Equador New York. Jan. 14. —Esmeraldas, Ecuador, has been completly destroyed by flre. Army Quiet Washington, Jan. 13.—Quiet ha» prevailed over the Army of the Po tomac for several weeks. Even picket firing has ceased. i [From the Telegraph, Jan. 15, 1865] Suubury Courthouse The contract for the new court house at Sunbury has been awarded at ?94,000. Lecture Tonight The Rev. W. W. Hicks, of Bait!- more, will lecture in the Locust Streel M. E. Church to-night on "British Rule in India." PROVED HER WORTH "Boston people are very literary, 1 believe." "Urn." "And extremely cultured." "Cut it out. I think all these slams at Boston's culture are In very bad taste since Boston grabed off the world's championship."