Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 29, 1915, Page 16, Image 16

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    16
\>goiv)en«lnreßfeST^.
The Eternal Conflict Between
the Sexes
BY IJOR.OTHY DIX
In a recent divorce case a letter was
introduced in the evidence In which
the man wrotes these words to the
woman:
"You ones told me that the reason
that you hated me was just because I
was your own husband. I now think
that the only reason that I hated you
was just because you were a woman,
and that the things that I objected to
in you were merely the faults of your
sex."
I wonder if this man hasn't diagnosed
not only his own case, but that of most
of the unhappy married, and if the
lonrce of the discord between practic
ally all warring husbands and wives is
not due to the eternal conflict between
the sexes?
In tills case the woman's grievance
against the man was not so much what
he had done, or left undone, but that
he was her husband. She chafed at her
bondage to him. She rebelled at being
dependent upon him. and subject to his
whims and caprices. His society got
upon her nerves because she had It In
overdoses.
>f he hadn't been her husband, if
he had been a neighbor, or a guest,
she"would have liked him well enough.
"Wife" and "husband" are either the
sweetest words or the bitterest that we
ever take upon our tongues, and their
flavor depends not upon what the wo
man or man that we are united to may
be. or not, but upon our own state of
mind.
Marry a woman hates a perfectly
good man. for no reason on earth ex
cept that he Is her husband. Many a
man hates a woman who is little short
of angelio Just because she Is his wife,
and that is the reason that so many
married couples go about with chips
upon their shoulders and pick quarrels
with each other on the slightest pre
tense.
In reality these people's grudge is
rot against the Individual to whom
they are united In the holy bonds of
wedlock. It is against matrimony as
an Institution. It Is the sense of bond
age that thev cannot endure with pa
tience. not the faults of a particular
individual.
Also what many men and women ob
ject to in their wives and husbands is
not some personally disagreeable qual
ity, but the peculiarities of the oppo
site sex.
For Instance, there are women whose
ideal of a perfect husband is a man
who neither drinks nor smokes nor
uses any expletive stronger than "Oh.
fudge!" and who conies straight home
from the office at •? o'clock and spends
the balance of the evening in wiping
the dishes and mending the wall aper
and straightening the pictures.
Such a woman would be perfectly
I apny If united to a man who would
fill in his leisure time by crocheting
pink babv socks, and whose Idea of
enjoyment would be to go tn a Brown
ing society or a mothers' .meeting with
DELEGATES AT COPENHAGEN
Copenhagen, via London, Mav 29,
II P. M.—Miss TCmllv Batch, of Wel
lesly College, Miss Chyrstal McMillan,
of Scotland. Mrs. Raymont. of Hol
land and Mrs. Rosika Schwimmer of
Hungary, were received to-day by Pre
mier Knudsen and Minister of Tforeign
Affairs Ihlen. The delegation present
ed resolutions adopted at the recent
international Congress at the Hague,
urging the co-operation of all neutral
nations In efforts to secure peace.
Concrete
Are Cheapest by the Year^®
Figure the cost of repairing or replacing any
■F kind of walk, and you will see that the concrete walk
Wm will save money for you. It is smooth, neat, easy to V
B clean and lasts like solid stone when you use
( ALPHAtrCEMENT I
■ "Many brands of Portland Cement are on the market," ■
V »ays the U,S. Government, "and the user should select a make B
guaranteed to meet the government standard." We warrant m
ALPHA to more than meet this standard. It is stronger, K
% finer and greater in binding power than ordinary cements,M
% because it is mixed, burned and ground unusually well. M
M J "Alpha Cement—How to use it" explains how i m
M to make walks, steps, posts, hot-beds, of \M
ALPHA and sand and gravel. Call for it; it is
I free and you will find it valuable.
COWDEN & CO., Oth and Hecr Streets, Harrisburg
JOSEPH BURKHOLDER. HimmeUlown CEORCE S. PETERS. Palmyra
H. R. DURBOROW, Highapire MUTH BROS., Eiizabcthtown
fAMUEX. DULL. New Cumberland J. W. MILLER. Machaniciburg
WEST SHORE-SUPPLY CO.. w«at Fain Hew A. J. SPOTTS. Carli.la
S. E. SHENK. NawrilU
r —————
King Oscar 5c Cigars
/There's many a cigar bought
/ that a smoker wonders if he's
/ going to enjoy before he
/ lights it.
/ certainly is an anti
/quated way of buying a cigar.
' Spend your nickel for King
YV Oscar quality and- know that
\\ y° u §£® g° in g to enjoy your
\ \ smoke.
\ the safe, sure and sens
\ ible investment for your
\ nickel.
\ Because—
>King Oscar quality has been
Regularly Good For 24 Years
SATURDAY EVENING. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MAY 20, 1015.
Hut whm a •woman of this type mar
ries a rough, rude, male person, with
strictlv masculine tastes, who comes
home smelling: of tobacco and beer, and
who can't be brought to see how much
more pleasure he would really Ret out
of soendlng his money for lace cur
tains for the parlor than for cigars,
why. trouble begins.
Personally the man may be good and
kind and generous and tender and trua.
As an individual she can find no fault
with him. but what she doesn't like in
him are the faults of his sex. It shocks
and disgusts her that he wants to go
to prizefights, and likes to shnot things,
and thai lie occasionally stays out too
late and drinks more than Is wood for
him. In a word, he Isn't ladylike and
congenial to her.
And there are many men who object
to their -wives on exactly the same
ground. They find fault with the ladies
because they have the qualities of wo
men. not of man.
For example, when a man derides
nis wife for her Ignorance and accuses
her of being a halr-bralned Idiot, it is
alwava because she doesn't know the
same line of things that he does. She
may be a model housekeeper, a man
ager that can get five times more out
of a dollar than he can. and able to
construct her gowns and hats with a
skill that deceives even her best friends
into thinking they are imported. But
he considers her lacking In Intelli
gence because she looks blank when he
talks about a holding pool, or about
underwriting a new bond issue. Yet
heaven help the Morgans or Rocke
fellers If they were put to It to work
out a cut paper pattern that any little
girl can do with one hand tied behind
her back!
Probablv every man secretly regards
himself as a martyr and thinks he
must be married to the most extrava
gant woman on earth when he Is called
noon to pay her mHllnery bills. To htm
that seems money wasted —absolutely
thrown away—yet very women spend
as much on their clothes as their hus
bands do on drinks and smokes.
It 's literally true that what the
average man dislikes in his wife are
the faults of her sex. He dislikes her
fierce possession of him that makes her
tyrannize over him for fear somebody
will get him away from her. He dis
likes her lack of promptness and de
cision of character. He dislikes her
Ignorance of the things that he knows
and her lack of sympathy with the
amusements he enjoys, and above all
—though he never acknowledges this
to himself—he dislikes having to de
ny himself pleasures he craves and
things he wants because he has to pay
her bills and suoport a family.
It Is the Ineradicable differences be
tween the sexes that make them repel
as well as attract each other, and that
Is why matrimony Is always bound to
be the most hazardous enterprise in
which human beings can ever engage.
ITALIANS OX MOUNTAIN'S
By Jstociatrd Prist
Brescia, via Chlasso and Paris, May
28. 11.3 5 P. M.—After crossing the
frontier over the bridge at Caffaro,
Italian troops moved against the
mountains on both sides of the Chlese
river, aiming for Tione to the north
and Riva and Areo to the east. The
last two places also were threatened
from the opposite bank of Lake Gar
da by Italian troops posted on Monte
Altisslmo.
pouLTßy^nevesi
Only Moderate Care Needed
In Raising Summer Chicks
1 llllllll!!!!!!,;
COPYRIGHT. 1915.
CREVE COEURS
It is generally admitted that the i
Creve Coeur owes some of its charac- I
terlstlce to Polish ancestry; but, like 1
all breeds existing prior to sixty or |
seventy years ago, its exact origin Is .
obscured. Definite records of 1852 re- j
port the Creve Coeur to be native to j
certain sections of France and to be
considered of great value as a layer
and table fowl. Splendid specimens
have been imported to Great Britain
and to America, but Its breeding in
these countries is chiefly confined to
fanciers. On the other hand, it is yet
considered one of the finest utility
fowls of France, and there it is widely
bred, both for eggs and meat.
This fowl Is one of the ancestors of
the famous Houdan fowl of France.
I considered by many as the best of
French utility poultry.
No Cause For Anxiety If the j
Amateur Will Adopt Cer
tain Well-defined Prac
tices
Avoid Overcrowding and
Provide Shade —Two Nec
essary Factors of Success
By Michael K. Boyer
Poultry Editor of the Farm Journal.
Copyright, 1915.
Amateur poultry raisers attribute
the many failures to raise summer
chicks to a variety or causes, most of
wiiioh have little or no foundation in J
fact. i
"Prevent overcrowding." says Mr. I
Boyer. "Give them plenty of fresh air ]
and shade and water. Feed them sens
ibly and according to prescribed for
mulas and you'll have no trouble."
Head what Mr. Boyer has to say on
this subject In to-day's story.
THERE Ls profit In summer
hatched chicks if they are care
fully and economically raised. |
But there are obstacles in rearing
chicks during hot weather that do not
present themselves In the cooler
months of early Spring. If these,
drawbacks are met at the right time
and in the right way it is surprising
what good stock can be secured, and
that, too. at a season when eggs are
very cheap.
Where on© has a large, old orchard
he has an ideal spot for raising sum
mer chicks, and an excellent way is to
set hens right out under these trees,
in barrels laid on their sides, with a
lath-run in front. After thff hatch is
over the barrels can be cleaned out.
new soil thrown In, and the hen and
her brood can make this their home
until large enough to be moved to
other quarters. On this shady range
the youngsters will not mind the hesjt,
and they will secure grass and Insects
galore. Everything else being equal,
chicks are bound to grow rapidly un
der such circumstances.
Where the old orchard Is not avail
able, a cornfield will serve the pur
pose. After the corn Is about three
feet high the coops can be scattered
about the field, same as In the or
chard.
Canopies Can Be Used For Shade
Now where the land is more limited
—where the old orchard does not exist
and the cornfield would be out of
question: in fact where the territory is
very limited and where natural shade
is not extensive, canopies can he
erected—practically only a roof sup
ported by four strong posts, one in
each corner. This contrivance should
be not more than two feet high, and
since there are no sides, the cool air
will come through, if there Is any air
at all. Shade is one of the greatest
factors in raising summer chicks.
Without it failure Is sure to come.
Next in Importance to shade comes
fresh air. Begin right. Grow the
chicks out in the epen. Housing in
close-fitting coops at night will not
successfully raise summer chicks.
Where there is danger of night prowl
ing animals it is best to have the
fronts of these sheds composed of one-
Inch wire netting. This will keep out
the enemy, hut allow plenty of fresh
air. I don't believe in raising chickens
to roost on trees all night to endure
all sorts of weather. T never yet heard
a sensible argument in favor of such
a practice.
A mistake so many beginners make
jis In overcrowding the flocks. Over
| crowding is the direct cause of many
I vices, such as toe pulling, feather-eat
ling, etc. Leghorn -alsers have much
trouble with this toe-pulling habit, and
Sure Death to lice &
mites—all vermin and disease germs if you use -
Drafts* Powdered Lice Killer
, | S5e anW 50c
A great money saver. Lousy hens cannot lay
neither can lousy chicks grow. WVjjuMy
Pmu Poultry Regulator 1B the bent tonic and developing \Vj, ' TWf
help. Pkga. I6e, 60c. 60c. tl.00; 25 lb. pail $2.80. Refuse
■ubstltutea; Inalat on Prmtte.
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Back
i£ Get Prnttt IK) pao» Poultry Book \f —-
CONRAD BROS., WALTER S. SCHELL, ELK VtEW POULTRY
SUPPLY HOUSE, HOLMES SE ED CO.. MOCK & HARTMAN AND
ALL FIRST CLASS DEALERS I N HARRISBURG AND VICINITY;
O. S. EBERSOLE, PENBROOK —6170.
I It is possibly for this reason that
| Creve Coeurs have had a diminishing
j popularity as the favor of Houdans in
creased. The hens are splendid lay
j ers of large, white eggs, and seldom
! tecome broody. In this respect they
may be considered non-sitters. A
I French writer claims that this fowl is
| very popular and widely kept by farm
i ers, market gardeners and others in
I certain designated sections of France,
who breed and fatten this fine Creve
I Coeurs fowl for the Paris poultry deal
j ers, and the sale of these birds brings
I good prices.
( Although the breed has never gained
j popularity among the utility poultry
! men of Kngland or America, it is
'| claimed by the French that they are
quick in growth, fatten well and make
' | splendid birds on the table, both as
ito size and quality.
hundreds of chicks are lost In conse
quence—where overcrowding Is per
mitted. The same can be said of
Wyandotte raisers when they have too
many chicks In a coop—only it is
feather-pulling instead of toe-pulling
that the latter must contend with.
Overcrowding produces sickness, and
it makes weak chicks.
I'se Tobacco Stems and Disinfectant
But the greatest drawback to sum
mer chick culture is vermin—unless
proper precautions are taken from the
start. I believe that one of the great
est insecticides is tobacco stems. I use
them freely. They are used exclu
sively In the nests of the laying hens
as well as in the nests of the broody
hens. The heat of the bodies of these
hens sends the tobacco fumes up
through the feathers, choking to death
all insect life. Contrary to the opin
ion of some people, the tobacco fumes
do not in the least hurt the egg or
the chick. But I do not rely entirely
upon tobacco stems. Once a month I
use a disinfectant, which I spray into
every crack and crevice, including the
roosts and the nest boxes, of every
house on the place. It destroys ver
min not reached by the fumes of to
bacco, and besides, it kills such germs
of disease as may be lurking about
the premises. I might here state that
in this spraying the floor should not
be forgotten. Fumigation among the
litter and droppings on the floor is
dealing destruction riglit in the
i enemy's camp, for it is there that the
bulk of the trouble lies.
For years I have used the above
method for destroying Insect and germ
' life, and in consequence my chicks are
I not only free from vermin, but they
are strong- and active. Stamina is a
great tonic for chick growth, and In
no season Is it more desirable than
during the hot months.
The old-time practice of setting hens
In the regular laying houses had the
result of Infesting the houses with
thousands of vermin. These killed off
old fowls and harried the young. But
the more experienced among amateur
poultrymen have learned their lesson,
and hens are now set outdoors, In a
barrel nest placed in a shady spot.
The war against vermin should begin
with the old stock in January and
continue throughout the entire year.
It is a mistake to wait until the grand
army arrives—kill the sentinels, the
spies that are in hiding during the
winter and early Spring months.
Correct Diet For Summer Chicks
The next important point to be con
sidered is the feeding.
The diet of summer chicks is prac
tically the same as that for winter
chicks, excepting that less corn (a
heating food) should be allowed in
the ration. There must be some corn,
however. Put in just enough to bal
ance the ration The three grains im
portant for chick growth arc wheat,
on.ts and corn—ln the proportion (In
summer) of two parts cracked wheat,
two parts oats <either cracked hulled
oats or oatmeali and one part finely
cracked corn, all by measurement.
These are mixed and placed in boxes
withfn easy access. After the chicks
are a few weeks old give them a mash
composed of two parts bran (by
weight) to one part each of middlings,
oatmeal, cornmeal and meat scrap. Of
this only enough is given each morn
ing that the chicks will eat up clean.
One of the greatest dangers is to al
law mash to stand around to sour.
Sour food kills hundreds of chicks an
nually, and too much care cannot' be
given to prevent this loss.
Fresh Water Necessary
Fresh water must be constantly be
fore them. Tt is wonderful how fre
quently these little youngsters run to
the drinking vessels. They have hab
itual thirsts, and to deprive them of
water, if even for only an hour, gives
them great distress.
I like the plan best of constantly
keeping a cracked grain diet before
the chicks, so they can help them
selves at will. Their little crops hold
but a teaspoonful of food at a time,
•\nd as they are continually exercising.
Dives, Pomeroy CO- Stewart
Business Building
This store is striving for a permanent success, and can only hope to have
this permanent success through the one channel—satisfaction. We call this
business building.
The management of this store insists that every trade with a customer
must have a'conscience. Nothing in all the store service troubles us more than
knowledge that some customer has reason to complain.
The management will watch, wait, and do everything within reason to
make amends for a mistake, no matter how trivial the mistake may be.
Any store can sell once, but selling the second time tells how you sold the
first time.
The profits on a single trade are nothing as compared with the advantages
of a satisfied customer telling friends where to trade.
The Store Will Be Closed
ALL DA Y MONDAY
In Observance of Memorial Day
running to and fro, their food soon di
gests, and they become hungry again.
Where chicks are on range they will
secure plenty of green food, but where
they are kept on more limited space it
is Important that they receive some
green stuff daily, like lawn clippings,
sprouted oats, or lettuce.
If these instructions are carefully
followed out, there will be very little
trouble raising summer chicks, and
pullets from that flock will be ready]
to lay during the latter part of Janu- !
ary or during February. Much de-1
pends upon the care given, bearing ]
In mind that they should have all the j
freedom possible.
Summer Care of
Pallets and Cockerels
Success with poultry depends I
largely upon the ability to keep i
the voung stock growing properly.
Prof. Harry R. Lewis, of the De- |
partment of Poultry Husbandry, |
New Jersey State Experiment Sta
tion, will tell next week how to !
feed pullets so they will mature in
time to ratten surplus cockerels
quicklv and economically.
Watch for his article, exclu
sively in the Telegraph next Sat- l
urday.
New Schoolma'ams
Receive Diplomas
Dr. William M. Davidson, superin
tendent of the Pittsburgh schools,
spoke last evening to the 18 members
of the graduating class of the city
Teacher Training school at com
mencement exercises in the Techical
high school auditorium.
An interesting feature of the even
ing program was the execution of a
drill on the stage, in which the young
women bad charge of a number of
youngsters, showing the practical
training in the course. Harry A.
Bover. president of the school hoard,
presented the diplomas. In his pres
entation speech he paid a. tribute to
Miss Anne U. Wert, principal of the
school. The girls who received diplo
mas last night were: c „
Misses Kathryn Aldinger, Sara Ban
nan. Jane Blalock. Miriam Britsch
Frances Oelwicks. Anna Harris, Ruth
Holbert, Susan Kurzenknabe, E'sie
Landis, Ida Marcus, Edna
baugh. Esther Parthemore, Ruth
Parthemore. Gertrude Pendergast, Do
lores Segelbaum, Martha Treiman,
Elizabeth Workman and Annie Zud
rell.
Ask Newsies to Help in
Safety First Movement
Commissioner John Price Jackson
enlisted the aid of every newsboy and
carrier in the city In the Safet> I* irst
movement" following a lecture before
the Harrisburg Newsboys' Association
last night. ...
The boys promised to keep their
eves open and warn careless pedes
trians and children from stepping in
front of automobiles. Commissioner
Jackson was the principal speaker.
Others who addressed the boys were
E P Robinson and Leon Lowengard.
After the meeting President Wag
ner announced that the new home of
the association at 304 North Second
street would be completed in time to
hold the next meeting there. A. H.
Hossler, Joseph Scott and Arthur
Koplovitz were appointed on a com
mittee to see that the home Is proper
ly furnished. Samuel Koplo\itz,
Charles Ellis and Calvin Frank will
select colors for the association.
17.78 Inches of Space
on Car Seat For Nickel
Special to The Ttltgraph
New York, May 29.—The Public
• Service Commission, after an exhaus
-11 tlve investigation, adopted to-day a
resolution setting forth that every
. passenger on New York's elevated,
, subway and surface cars who gets a
seat Is entitled to 17.78 inches of
t space. The transportation companies
were notified that in future they must
allot this much seating space to a pas
sender.
Before reaching this conclusion the
commission conducted 800 experiments
to determine how much space a pas
senger needs.
Plan Improvements
at Baltimore Terminal
Announcement was made yesterday
by the Pennsylvania railroad that ne
notlatlons for the Baltimore terminal
improvements are still In progress,
hut that plans and proposals on behalf
of the company have not yet b<*en
completed. When they are completed
the company will follow the coApe It
has previously pursued of Immediate
ly submitting them to the Mayor of
Baltimore.
This statement followed a report
that the company ha<? decided not to
electrify Its Baltimore terminal.
PUBLIC SERVICE
MEETS NEXT WEEK
Interesting Cases For the New
Commissioners When They Start
Their Sessions
The new Public Service Commission
will meet Tuesday for its first regular
session with a calendar of cases to
hear and It is expected that when it
assembles Governor Brumbaugh will
designate the chairman and that most
of the officers of the commission will
be re-elected. The commission will
also adopt rules of practice and as
soon as the act authorizing appoint
i ment of examiners to take testimony
any place in the State is approved ar-
I rangements to expedite some of the
pending cases will be made.
The commission will have five ap
plications for approval of articles of
incorporation, all being for separate
lines, there being bridge, telephone,
electric, automobile and jitney com
panies asking for letters patent. An
other Interesting application is of a
resident of- Lancaster county who de
sires to secure the right to furnish
electric current for light and power.
Complaint as to the rates of the Phila
delphia Electric Company is also to be
taken up. Another Philadelphia case
is that of the Philadelphia milk ex
change against the rates of the Penn
| Roof 1 |
( of Your Home |j
'lt you want a roofing that will last and one that will keep your iV
If j Home warm in winter and cool in summer —an attractive .11
fl| roofing that cannot break, rust or leak. You get all this in 111
__ Pronounced'RlT as In BUBT_ _
I RH-.BEg-.Qin I
VW COSTS MORE - WEARS LONGER 111
W We recommend PU*BKR*OLO be- PU-BER-OIQ Roofs applied more «
|V( cause we fenora that it will give you than 20 years ago are still giving f/i
\\ lasting satisfaction. It costs more perfect service without repairs. You f/,
VV than ordinary prepared roofings. end roof troubles when you use it. //
yj but it is cheeper by the year. Our The U. S. Court of Appeals has //
W customers who have used it know en j oined i m i tatorß f rom usinß the //
|X| lU worth and long life. word "Rubberoid or any similar //
SS RU-BIR-OIQ is solid through and name as the trade name or brand" Y
SN through. It is permanently water- °* l " e ' r roofing.
proofed with a compound of high- There are many imitations of
\ grade animal and vegetable sub- RtJ-BER-010- We sell the genuine. K
stances. It contains no coal-tar or which has the "Ru-ber-oid Man"
asphaltic oils that might crack in (shown above) on every roll. Come
Cj cold weather or run in hot weather. in and examine it.
| Henry Gilbert & Son, hirri«! pa.
Sister: Read My Free Offer!
| am ■ woman.
If you, my slater.are unhappy becausoof til-Health,
» Ton feel unfit for household duties, social pleasures, or
Tk daily employment, write and tell me just how you suffv.
B j and ask for my free tea days' trial of a bona treatmeb*
A suited to your needs. Men cannot understand women's
a sufferings. What we women know from experience, we
3 know better than any man. I want to tell you how to
"». -31 cure yourself at home at a cost of about 12 cents a week.
."?}* " . «. you sufff from women's peculiar ailments caus
mg pain in tbe bead, back, or bowels, feeling of weight
-• t '■ and dragging down sanaation, falling or displacement of
WBBBjr / Pelvic organs, causing kidney and bladder weaknais or
wwSK V / constipation and piles, painful or irregular periods.
'* ■ IJiaß/ catarrhal conditions and discharges, extrame narYous
\ ■Bkto , iiiv, Bess, depreased apirits, melancholy. desire to cry, fear of
something evil about to happen, creeping feeling alone
"-X . ,p ' n ®' palpitation, bot flaabaa, waarineia, sallow com*
'"~w plexion with dark circles under tbe eyea.psie in the left
breast or • general feeling that life is not worth living,
I INVITE YOU TO SEND TODAY FOR MY FREE TEN DAYS' TREATMENT
end learn how these ailments can be easily and surely conquered at home without the danger* and
expense of an operation. When yea are cured, and able to enjoy life again, you can pass the good
word along to some other sufferer. My home treatment is for young or eld. To Mothers of Daugfe.
tars, I will explain how to overcome green sickness (chlorosis), irregularities, headaches, and lassi
tude In young women and restore them to plumpness and health. Tell me If you are worried about
your daughter. Remember it coats TOT nothing to give my home treatment a ton days' trial, and
does not Interfere with daily work. If health is worth aiking for. then accept my generous offer «n<l
write fe* tbe free treatment. Including my illustrated booklet. ''Women's Own Medical Adviser.*
send all in plain wrappers postpaid. To save time, you can cut out this offer, mark your feel
ings, and return to me Send May. as you may not see this offer again. Address,
MHS. M. SUMMERS, Box H, SOUTH SfclVD, IND.
sylvania railroad. Crossings in Potts
town and New Castle are listed for a
hearing together with applications of
the Delaware, Lackawanna and West
ern railroad for approval of location
of stations in Susquehanna countv.
The Pittsburgh Crucible Steel Co.
complaint against rates of the Penn
sylvania company is also listed.
Capt. Grant in Charge
of American Submarines
Special to The Telegraph
Washington, May 29.—The sub
marines of the United States, which
have not been performing well and
appear to be far behind those of other
nations, will be brought to the maxi
mum state of efficiency. Action look
ing to prompt Improvement and the
| eventual addition of submarines to the
I navy by the next Congress was taken
I to-day by Secretary Daniels in tha
appointment of Captain A. W. Grant to
liave full charge of the submarine ser
vice, with instructions to report defi
ciencies and reorganize the submarine
flotilla. He will have 'large power 3
in the construction work and In tha
development of the organization.
MISS M'ALAHXEY WILL SPEAK
OX SUFFRAGE AT LEMOYXE
Special to The Telegraph
Lemoyne. Pa.. May 29.—Miss Em,ma
L. McAlarney, of Harrisburg, will g'» e
an address on "Woman Suffrage" in
the Lemoync high school building on
Monday evening next. At that tlrnu
| an effort will be made to organize it
| branch of the Woman's Suffrage Asso
| elation in Lemoyne.