6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established ISJI PUBLISHED BY TH« THT.KGIUPH PRINTmO CO. K. J. STACKPOLH President and Editor-in-Chief * F. R. OYSTER Secretary aUS M. STEINMETZ Mmat<"t Editor Published «Tery evening (except Sun day) at the Telegraph Building, 211 Federal Square. Beth phones. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation and Pennsylvania Associ ated Dailies. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, Xew York City, Hasbrook, Story <& Ttrooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago, 111., Allen & Ward. ' Delivered by carrier* at six cents a week. ' wssilw*' Mailed to subscriber! at $3.00 a year in advance. Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. . - Swnrn dally average for Ike threS ★ months ending Dec. 31,1011. 22,692 * Average for the rear 1814—23,213 | Average for the year 1913—21,r,77 Average fop the year 1912—21,17.1 Average for the year 1911—18,851 Average for the year 1910—17.498 TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 19 THE INAUGURAL GOVERNOR MARTIN G. BRUM BAUGH'S inaugural message Is! characteristic of the man and prophetic of the administration which to-day opens so auspiciously. Jts incisive literary style is in keeping with its crisp analysis of the issues as; they present themselves to the mind of the incoming executive. Governor Brumbaugh at the incep tion of his administration is an inau gural message in himself, just as in the campaign of last Fall he was a living platform. The brevity of his inaugural, therefore, is entirely appro priate and to have been expected of him. in his few words, however, the new Governor says much, and to the point. He reiterates his entire endorsement of the important planks in the party platform. Ho is for good roads, work men's compensation, the conservation of men and material resources, better regulation of child labor, the submis sion of women suffrage to the vote of the people, a more equitable and per haps economical dispensation of State charity funds and increasing advance ment in popular education. He has lost none of his concern for local op tion and sustains tlie anticipations of those who know well the resoluteness of his purposes by pledging himself anew to the achievement of that re form. Governor Brumbaugh rightly ac cepts the vote of more than half a mil lion of his fellow Pennsylvanians as a commission to himself as well as to the Legislature to enact the laws for which the people have expressed their desire. There need be ho fear of his disregarding to the slightest extent the right of the General Assembly to en tire freedom of action, but while an executive may not drive, he may. with eminent propriety lead. The administration of Martin G. Brumbaugh is most happily launched. It gives promiso of great things, and the plaudits of men of all political per suasions is altogether genuine. A VALUABLE PUBLICATION UNDER the title of "Department Reports of Pennsylvania," the Telegraph Printing Company has begun the issue of a weekly publication that promises to fill a growing need in the State. It will cover in a comprehensive way all of the activities of the governmental de partments and the courts in impor tant rulings, opinions and decisions. Particular attention will be paid to matters pertaining to the Public Service, Department of Labor and In dustry and to the Attorney General's Department.' It will be of particular value to lawyers, heads of corpora tions-of all sorts and public officials, keeping them fully abreast of the times in the latest developments of Stato regulation and control. Every day brings the government and tho people into closer relation ship. More and more business is being made to conform with regulative laws and rulings. It is therefore Important that the attorney and the company manager know just what has been done in this respect or is in contem plation. It is to meet this need that "Departments Reports" is designed. HERE IS A MAN EXPRESSIONS of regret among Senators and public men gen erally that the retiring Lieuten ant Governor, John M. Rey nolds, could not, on account of ill ness, ha present to-day to induct his popular successor into office, were undoubtedly from tho heart. In his modest way this par excel lent gentleman has in the past four years achieved increasing respect without diminution of the warmest personal popularity among his asso ciates in the Senate and others who have had the good fortune to be brought into contact with him. The prayer of the Senate chaplain last night for the speedy recovery of their presiding officer of the past two ses sions undoubtedly brought forth many silent amens. In every capacity, private and pub lic. John M. Reynolds has made a rec ord of high minded capacity. As dis trict attorney. Congressman, Assistant Secretary of the Interior of the Unit<*l States, his response to the popular call has invariably been whole hearted ser vice. and his election to the less stren uous, but no less honorable, position of TUESDAY EVENING, Lieutenant Governor was a graceful mark of recognition on the part of the people of his native State. It was characteristic of John M. Reynolds that as president of the Board of Pardons during the past four years by virtue of his elective office, he did not miss a single session of that body, and from another angle of his makeup no less typical of the man that every dollar of the contin gent fund of his office should go back into the State Treasury. It has been the same throughout his career. When appointed to the insu lar affairs committee in the House of Representatives at Washington, he devoted months of time at his own ex pense visiting the island possession of the United States, in order to be the better equipped to deal justly with leg islation affecting them. Once when the Democrats of his district wished to nominate him he agreed to run only on condition that all should know he I differed from the party on the subject of the tariff. As an official ofNhe Cleveland administration, he did not hesitate to stand between the Union veterans and unfriendly fellow offi cials who would have deprived the soldiers of much that was their due. The retiring Lieutenant Governor enjoys the well earned esteem of a host of his fellow men. THE FIRST APPOINTMENTS GOVERNOR BRUMBAUGH HAS made capital appointments at the start of his administration. In Francis Shunk Brown he will have an attorney general of national fame, who possesses wide learning and who accords in every way with the traditions of the office and the long line of eminent men who have sat at the right hand of the governors. Cyrus E. Woods is a legislator of ripe ex perience and achieved note in his pro fession and one who has, moreover, served the country abroad with credit. In James S. Hlatt the Governor will have with him the man who was clos-j est to him from the time he became a candidate, who for years has been identified with the educational work wherein Dr. Brumbaugh has shone. Mr. Brown comes of ancestry dis tinguished in the service of the com monwealth from revolutionary days. Two were governors and his own life has been filled with public service. His career as a lawyer is known to people all over Pennsylvania and ad dresses he has made here, especially before the last Legislature, attracted wide attention. Few men in the State have his grasp of the intricacies of taxation and other problems which form the great bulk of the work of the law department, and his force of char acter and learning make him an ideal law officer of Pennsylvania. Cyrus E. Woods is too well knbwn to Harrisburg people to be praised. From the days he worked as a re porter on this newspaper he was re garded as a man of high attainments and his legislative service was carried out in our midst. It is like welcoming a former resident back to Harrisburg to note his appointment to his high office. The new secretary to the Governor knows what the new executive wants and has 'he ability to carry out his delicate duties, as well as a most pleas ing personality. PRACTICAL TRAINING PAYS THE Harrisburg Young Women's Christian Association does well to supplement its physical, spiritual and social uplift pro grame with practical instruction in every day duties. A. study of the work being done by the association shows that nearly 2,500 girls are being taught things which will be of great value to them in the workaday world, including such branches as millinery, cooking, cm broidery, painting, English, German and French. Hundreds are being trained to do things which will enable them to earn more money or to be more capable wives and mothers when once the "right man comes along." The spiritual and social work is per haps most important of all, but the benefits derived from doing tilings of a practical nature in the various study classes are easiest seen by the girls which the association aims to reach. And once interested in the practical, the girl is much more easily influenced in a spiritual and social way. COCKILL'S DEPARTURE THE Tri-State League will lose an able manager and the National League will gain a fair-minded, honest umpire by the appoint ment tendered George Cockill by Pres ident John K. Tener yesterday. Harrisburg never had a better nor a cleaner baseball leader. Cockill is, by long odds, the best man that ever had charge of a league team in Harris burg. Lnder him the local nine has been consistently a winner and de serving of much better support than it received. But had it not been for the excellent material he selected in the raw and developed into high class, finished product, the Harrisburg hack era of the game would have lost thou sands upon thousands of dollars. The sale of players to the big leagues has been one bright spot in recent baseball finances of the Cockill team. ( ockiil is a level-headed, up-stand ing, courageous baseball man and it is the belief of his friends that he"wlll make good in the trying place to which he has been assigned. TRUE HARRISUIHK; SPIRIT DA\ ID KAUFMAN, whose depart ment store was wiped out by fire last evening, displayed the true Harrisburg spirit when he an nounced, before the firemen had sounded the "under control" signal, that he had arranged for offices and would open temporary stores within the next few days. It Is hard to see the fruits of years of toll blotted out in an hour, but it Is harder still to (stand up courageously beneath the blow and resolve to begin all over again. This Is the type that has made America. It is the spirit that survives nil disaster. Every Har risburger will sympathize with Mr. Kaufman in his great loss and con gratulate hliu upon his enterprise. J 1 EVENING CHAT I Simon Snyder was the first Governor °f Pennsylvania to tako the oath of office in Harrisburg. This ceremony was performed over 101 years ago and tl ]® third inauguration of the sturdy Governor. General Snyder was elected for three terms, taking the 5? , ' or the third time on December -o, 1813. The ceremony took place at tne old courthouse, as the seat of gov ernment had only been removed to Harrisburg the year before and the foundations of the Capitol had hardlv Tr e .n n n ,',.'? re JL' lan 'narked out on Capitol Hill. J lie Dauphin County Courthouse was the temporary Capitol and on the morning'of December 20 the members of the Legislature, the principal offi cials, the judges and citizens to the number of several hundred proceeded to the residence of the General, said to have been at the. time in Front street near the Kelker mansion, now the home of the Dauphin County His torical Society, it was war time and there was a military escort, but not a KVe ?-\ one - Snyder disliked ceremony and the whole affair was very simp!.-. He was the first Governor to read his inaugural address, as he was not a speechmaker as were his predecessors Un l h „ c ' h; ! ( ' his remarks all written ?u t . larr1 ar rl !,bur g newspapers note the fact, actually devoting more atten tion to the news of the war of 1812 and European dispatches than to the inauguration which was destined to be first of a long line of such cere monies. There is mention of con- Bratulations being* extended to the new Go\ el nor and of a dinner in the even in?,' and there are some extracts from the speech. Since that day in 1813 Cl ii > " two nien have taken the oath of office as Governor Of Pennsylvania and Dr. Brumbaugh .makes the twenty third. Some of these Governors, like Snyder, served three terms and some served twice, succeeding themselves. One man. Pattison. was twiee Gov ernor under the present Constitution. In this connection it is interesting to note that Harrisburg has been the state capital only since October, 1812, although .John Harris laid it out to be Capital of the State, donating: four acres and more March 4. 1785. The act making this city the capital was passed in I- ejmiary, 1810, and the capital came here from Lancaster two years later. T ne cornerstone of the old State House was laid May 31, 1819, and the Legis lature occupied it for the first time •i"" l ' arv 2 ; »»*; This Capitol burned * ebruary 2, 3 897. T T . h S reported financial troubles of Joslah V. Thompson, of Uniontown. a traded wide attention among: men active in politics throughout the State as he is well known to thousands of people because of his activities in busi ness and politics. Mr. Thompson was much in Harrisburg several years ago and when a candidate for the Repub lican nomination for Governor had headquarters at the Commonwealth Hotel. "It s a wonder that a city so full of historic associations as this does not take some steps to have the places of interest marked so that visitors could understand where history was made," said one of the men here to attend tlie inauguration. "For," said he. • £ do not know of any place outside of Philadelphia which has so much of real state interest. The. site of the old Courthouse, which was the first t'api here, assuredly should be marked." A good many visitors to the city who would otherwise have come here yesterday did not arrive in Harrisburg "i.i.i morning because of in ability to get accommodations. This is growing to be the case more and more and entails a hardship upon people from a distance. One man from Scranton came here last night and went to Steelton to find a place to sleep. Another man said that lie had gone to Carlisle. Apropos of this condition a funny incident occurred Sunday at the cor ner of Third and Market streets V man asked a newsboy "What's that hole in the ground over there"" indi cating the site of the old Grand Opera House. "That? Oh. that's the site for the new hotel we're going to get when Capitol Park extension is finished " re plied the youth. William Perrine. editor of the Phila delphia Evening Bulletin and one of the most widely known newspapermen in the country, is here to see the inauguration. When Governor Tener left his office tor the last time late yesterday after noon he placed two keys on the desk. They were the only keys to the offices, but they opened pretty nearlv every thing. a tjonal Guard officers coming to the city say that there is considerable vim being shown by commanders of companies in the organized militia because of the orders to recruit to the minimum. The orders were noted in the Telegraph last week and it Is an interesting fact that the two infantrv companies here are not onlv at their maximum, which Ihev have held for several-ears, but that they have a One of these days there will be an infantry companv in Steel ton. too. I WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 | —Dr. B. C. Hirst, Philadelphia phy sician. has returned from Florida. —The Rev. C. 11. Stein, of York, has taken a charge at Braddock. o. — A L" s - Humphreys, head of the State firemen, was one of the speakers at the Pittsburgh firemen's memorial service. —Herman Cron, Johnstown coal man, has received word that he has lust seven cousins in the German army —Major C. J. S. Miller, of Franklin Is serving with a British ambulance corps. —Theodore Voorhees, president of the Reading, will go to Florida Thurs day. I taWi<HCW=i That Harrisburg and Steelton can make everything needed for a ship? TUB 01,0 At 10.V The old men beat the voungsters And they arc some surprise- ' The old men with the laughter Of the young dreams in their eyes The old men sing the gladdest, The old men dance the maddest The old men won't DO laid aside. Because they're swimming with the tide, As young as all the youngsters! The old men win my heart each time And how I love to praise them- They sevson songs of life with rhyme And troubles never fease them' The old men trust the longest, The old men dream the strongest, The old men live in dreams, indeed, ' Hut, ah, what tender cause and need, And it's hats oft from the youngsters! The old men love the sweetest And they can tell it best; The old men with undying dreams That lead to lovely rest. The old men whistle sweetest. The old men waltz the neatest. The old men headed for the stars. With heart's love to their avatara The blithe, brave, smiling young youngsters! —Baltimore Sun. AN EVENING THOUGHT We hand folks over to God's mercy and show none ourselves. —George Elliot. HARRI6BURG TELEGRAPH NEW SECRETARY OF STATE GQNGRITUUTED Many Former Legislators Pay Re spects to Former Senator Cyrus E. Woods GOVERNOR'S FRIENDS HERE Many Prominent Figures of This and Other Days on Hand For the Inauguration Many former legislators were among the visitors to the Capitol last night and among them the new Secretary of the Commonwealth, ex-Senator Cy rus E. Woods, who was heartily con gratulated. lie was surrounded bv a crowd all evening. Ex-Senator Walter McNlchols, of Scranton, was also here. —ln the House there was on hand John R. K. Scott in white spats and wearing a large smile. Ex-ltepresen tatlves McDowell, Chester; Carothers,- Washington: Swift, Beaver; Claycomh, Blair: Lowers. Allegheny; Ulman, In coming; Speiser, Philadelphia, and Pusey, Delaware, were also on hand. —George Hutchison and a bunch of i Huntingdon countians were on the sidelines wearing badges inscribed, "Dr. M. G. Brumbaugh, our boy, our friend, our neighbor and our gover nor." ( —John Swan, 'former member from Allegheny, and a member again, was welcomed to the House by old friends. —T. Larry Eyre, former superinten dent of public grounds and buildings, was among those on hand. —According to the legislative com mittee "dope" that is going around the chairmanships of the elections com mittees will go to the two McN'ichols. The Philadelphia senator has headed the Senate committee for years. —R. S. Gawthrop, former district attorney of Chester county, was among the inauguration day crowds. —"Dirt Roads" Jones was congratu lated on reappointment as chairman of the committee on public roads in the House, a post he has held for sev eral years. —Governor Tener's office was tilled with friends until a late hour and con gratulations were extended to him. The Governor went from his office to the mansion and then to the home of Spencer C. Gilbert. —Colonel "Bill" Adams, of the iColdstream Guai-ds, was congratulated last night on the statement that he would head the military committee. He is a real veteran and an author. He served in the Spanish, Philippine and Boxer wars and in the navy and marine corps for good measure. —Prominent among the visitors here is J. Lee Palmer, chairman oof the appropriations committee of the House in years gone by, and one of the big men of Blair county. He was Republican county chairman last fall and did much for Mr. Brumbaugh from the time his name was mention ed. Mr. Plummet - is being talked of for State Treasurer. —Representative G. W. Williams is being congratulated upon his selection for the chairmanship o fthe law and order committee. —James B. Sheehan, register of wills of Philadelphia, is here for the ceremonies. He met many friends about the Capitol. BEX TAIIB'S DIAGNOSIS There's some that it's natcherel to grunt an' complain Whenever there's snow or whenever there's rain: In summer an' winter an' Spring an' in Fall, They wrassle with Heaven an' l>lanie it for all: I've noticed that fhem fellers never git rich. An' most of 'em is pestered with .lan ders an' sich. There's others that's srnllin' when everything's wrong— An' sijeeial bad fortune will egg 'em to song! It's never so wet an' it's never so dry It drives out the twinkle that hides in their eye, An' sich fellers, mostly, has money to lend, An' doctors don't ginneralljA count 'em a friend! I ain't over-posted, nor p'tendiu' t' be. On things appertainin' t' folks, but I see A moral in this that'll half-way ac count For the world's good an' bad,' a per dig'us amount!— Contentment does more than your pill boxes kin, Whilst the art of complaint is as pi7.en as sin! —.TOHN.D. WELLS. Southern Pines, N. C. A Pit AVER (By Ella Wheeler Wilcox) Copyright, 1914, Star Company Master of sweet and loving lore, Give us the open mind To know religion means no more. No less, than being kind. Give us the comprehensive sight That sees another's need. Ami let our aim to set things right Prove God inspired otir creed. Give us the soul to know our kin That dwell in ilock and herd. The voice to light man's shameful sin Against the beast and bird. Give us a heart with love so fraught For all created things That even our unspoken thought Bears healing on its wings. Give us religion that will rope With life's colossal woes, And turn a radiant face of hope On troops of pigmy foes. Give us the mastery of our fate In thoughts HO warm and white. They stamp upon the brows of hate Love's glorious zeal of light. Give us the strong, courageous faitli That makes of pain a friend, And calls the sacred word of death "Beginning," and not "end." THE OPEN DOOR (By Grace M. Chapin in the Sunday School Times.) High up beneath the cobwebbed eaves, At a close-barred window-pane, A little bird in anxious fear Beat quivering wings in vain. Yet the bird was not a prisoner! A humble door swung wide, Leading to the sunlit air And the whole sweet country-side. Would I could show you, little bird, liow freely you might go Out to your life and swift-winged sons. If only you dared fly low! Renting an Underwood Typewriter a sountV investment, certain to increase your income. "The Machine You Will Eventually Buy." 25 N. Third St. — Advertisement. { OUR DAILY LAUGH 1 AN OLD SAY- Penny * or y° ut Poet —What do J you mean? J Postman \ 5\ m J There's a cent; i due on 111r9 ' turned man u•' GOLF CRANK. j Evelyn—Devot- ' ed to golf, isn't should say so; j Why, his walk in \m M j life is mainly Kll \ ! around the golf IPI \ course. NEUTRAL. 1 f, How will you i have rour ha,r ! v yljf cut > sir? jlaHy ;' Without any ■Ahh' ' \M mention of the FIXING THE BLAME A teacher, instructing her class in the composition of sentences, wrote two on the blackboard, one a mis statement of fact. and. the other wrong grammatically. The sentences were: "The hen has three legs," and "Who done it " "Harry," she said, to one of tho youngsters, "go to the blackboard and show where the fault lies in those two sentences." Harry slowly approached the board, evidently studying* hard. Then he took the crayon and wrote: "The hen never done it. God done it.".—Milwaukee Journal. APPARATUS FOR RECORDING TELEPHONE CONVERSATION An interesting addition to telephone equipment is an apparatus described, with Illustration, in the February Popular Mechanics Magazine, by which telephone conversations may lie recorded for future reference. This apparatus consists of a small metal box which contains a set of dry bat teries and an extremely sensitive tele phone transmitter. Roth ends of the telephone conversation are taken up by this receiver and retransmitted by the dry batteries to an electric record er that acts on the wax-cylinder rec ord of a phonograph. In using, the regular receiver of the telephone is taken from the hook and placed, with I the earpiece down, on the socket of the recording instrument, and in this position sends to the transmitter I within tlie box all sounds that pass through the telephone. To use the telephone receiver in this way, it must be* wired to both circuits in the tele phone. The user then talks into the telephone in the usual way, but uses a small receiver attached to the rec cording instrument. The phonograph can be started and stopped at will by means of two pusl> buttons. "IjKT IIKH VOTE" If she really wants to vote. Here is hoping she will win It: IAIOU about you and take note Who's ag'ln it: Every low saloon and dive. All t lie vicious white-slave dealers, Firms that on child-labor thrive. And ward-healers. "In the home is woman's place," And these forces there would keep her, While graft's crop grows up apace, For the reaper. Should she vole, crime still would lurk In the smoke we've left unliglited; But she might do lots of work We have slighted. She might clean the city hall. And with soap and water might wash Spots where our committees all Have used whitewash. "But." you cry, in great distress, "All these lasks from home might win her!" She's be back in time. I guess To get the baby's dinner. —Walter G. Doty, in Farm Journal. A GREAT MUSICIAN'S HAIR SECRET It was a man musician to whom we were talking, but every woman will realze the value of his answer to our question, "What makes your hair so abundant and so lustrous " "Just simple care, madam. lam as good to it as I am to my hands." It was just iiis way of saying, "1 keep it perfectly clean. Since then wo have found that regular care and perfect cleanliness means hair health and beauty. It is not advisable when shampooing to use a makeshift, but always use a prep aration made for shampooing only. You can enjoy the best that is known for about three cents a shampoo by getting a package of cantlirox from your druggist dissolve a teaspoonful In a cup of hot water and your shampoo is ready. After its use the hair dries rapidly with uniform color. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear. Your hair will be so fiufty that it will look much heav ier than it is . Its luster and softness will also delight you, while the stimu lated scalp gains the health which in sures hair growth. *2# EVEN i F YOU HAD A NECK If IS At LONG AS THIS UW jf FELLOW AND HAD ill SORE JJ TH R ° AT (lltonsiline M ll WOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IY, A nuick, »«f«, «oothlnf, heslinjr, nntl>«t>ttc relict i for Sore Thro.), briefly dMcridfi TOMMLt**- A imall Inltl* o» Tonrlilne !»it« lon«r than mo«t «ny OmTo? Threat. TONB:LIfc« Bore Mouth and HMmmni aM pr«v»nt« QutntT. 2Sc. and He. HMpltilSiMll.il. All Pr«rf»«t». THE TOW»ILWC COMTAMV. . - CWIM, »W«J JANUARY 19. 1915. GENUINE The Food Driuk for all Ages—Others are Imitab'ons NEWS DISPATCHES ! OF THE CIVIL WAR IFrom the Telegraph of .Tan. 19, 1865.] ' Guerrillas Altai'k IjOillsvllle. Jan. 18. A small band of truerrillas attacked Bardstown, but was repulsed. Kxpect a Crlala Charleston. Jan. 1!). The people of the Soutu are expecting a crista In Confederacy.. ItefiiMe Permit* Washington, Jan. lit. Permits to trade in Havaii/halt have been refused. DEVICE RECOVERS ARTICLES I.OS! WIIEX BOAT UPSETS On of the unyleasantnesses some times experienced by sportsmen, that of losing' a valuable gun or favorite Ashing rod in the water, is eliminated through the application of a simple mechanical devices which has recently been patented. With it an article which drops to the bottom of a lake | when a canoe unexpectedly capsizes may be restored in a few minutes' time. The instrument is made of brass, in cylindrical in shape, weighs 3 ounces, and may he screwed to the end of a fishing rod or clamped to a sun so that it is not. cumbersome. Its mechanism consists of a strong spring, a cork spool carrying from 40 to 75 feet of silk line, and a perfor ated cap which is held in place by a fiber cord. Within a few seconds after it- is submerged in the water, the fiber string give way under the pres sure exerted by the spring. This pushes off the cap and liberates the cork spool, which unwinds the line wrapped about it as it rises to the surface. When the cork appears at the top it holds a strong line, the op posite end of which is attached to the sunken implement or package, that may be pulled from the bottom with out difficulty.—From the February- Popular Mechanics Magazine. THE RETIRING GOVERNOR [Pittsburgh Gazette-Times. 1 To-day John Kinley Tener closes his four-year term as governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and gives way to Martin Grove Brum baugh. Mr. Tener's service in that high office has been coincident with a period of extraordinary political tur |moil throughout the country and of corresponding partisan and factional upheaval in this State. The shadow of coming events was cast over his campaign, and there have been condi tions of strife, in which all the pas sions ol' politics were let loose, during practically the whole time he has been ||§ See the Famous "jj New Orleans Mardi Gras With Its Mirth, Fun and Frolic— * N ' Marvelous for Ita Richness z" / * T ; '/; Beauty and Uniqueness * / , \^<pi Go via. tHe Water Route Five days of perfect rest. A Midwinter Vacation - with - time and facilities lor lounging. reading, walking; to enjoy deck games and to reap the full benefits ot an ocean trip. g Southern Pacific Steamships (Morgan Line) New YorK to New Orleans 'w The quickest way to escape frost and snow; You're in the Warm Golf Stream in a few hours. SAILINGS EVERY WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY Sleamnhlp CREOLE leavesi New York■ February'lolb; Arrives New Orleans February IStli (belore MARDI GRAS on the totn) ROUND TRIP FARE 575-00 Berth and meals on ship included Return by tail if you wish You my make the ship your hotel from February 16th to 17th for SIJ.OO additional. At New Orleans, board the Sunset Limited iM (Every Day in the Year. No Extra Fare> ' EN ROUTE TO THE CALIFORNIA EXPOSITIONS New Orleans Los Angeles San Diego San Francisco For literature. fares and all other information write, phone or call R. J. SMITH, D. F. & P. A., n:i:> < lir-tiiMi str.N-1. I'liilailHpliin. Tn. There's a reason for the perforated name on King Oscar 5c Cigars^ It's the sign that means something—the pledge of a satisfying smoke—the assurance that you are getting genuine King Oscar Quality—the evidence that you are handed what you ask for! You are entitled to King Oscar Quality for your nickel! All you have to do is ask for it and look at the wrapper! A Regularly good for 23 years I 1 at, Harrisburg. But always he has maintained his poise, and exercised his tact, and employed his energies with an eye single to the interests of the commonwealth. So he comes to the end of his incumbency with thow satisfaction of knowing that he has been able to register definite progress for the people, while the Republican party, to which he is a credit, emerges from the four years with a larger vote of conlUlence as of 1914 than it re ceived in 1910. IN HARRISBURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY i [From the Telegraph of Jan. 19, 1865.] < llllplniu of limine The Rev, Bryan H. Hill, representa tive 'from Erie, has been appointed chaplain of the House. Vlnir Ilnlf-Mawteil Tiie flag was placed at half-mast nn the Canitol dome in honor of Kverett. Mayme iat the store the next morn ing!: "In the first reel he choked her twice and threw her down stairs to show Ills love for her!" Clara (listening to the description of the picture play): "Ain't that grand? But there ain't no earnest love like that in real life, is there?"— Photoplay Magazine. ei-Sic Such distinctive jLii : * , ill jjjjj goodness is only | possible through II! the use of finest i ' lie materials. 'ii.C : i ISe II I 1 riiSSU tyLRY J/OL it 111 I i • Our Sales Agents in - 1 Harrisburg Are ; I J. H. BOHER § F. J. ALTHOUSE ;
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers