6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Bjtabliihtd iSu PUBLISHED BT THE TELEGRAPH PRINTIJtO CO. E. J. STACK POLE Prttident end Edilor-inCkiif F. R. OYSTER Stcrttary OVS M. STEINMETZ Mnnafing Editor Published every evening (except Sun day) *t the Telegraph Building, 21C Federal Square. Both phone*. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation and Pennsylvania Associ ated Dallies. Kastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New York City, Hasbrook, Story A Brooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago. 111., Allen & Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. Mailed to subscribers at $3.00 a year In advance. JSntered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. •worn dally nverasc circulation for the tbree months ending May SI, 1015. ★ 21,577 ★ Average for the year 1914—21,858 Average for tke year 1013—19,963 Ave rare for the year 1912—19,649 Average for the year 1011—17,563 Average for the year 1910—16,261 The above flgnrea are net. All re turned, unsold and damaged eople* de ducted. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 30 There never was a good war or a bad peace. Prank tin. Born of the deep, daily need of a. no tion—l am the Voice of Sow — the incar nate spirit of the Times—Monarch of things that Are. My "cold type" burns with the fire blood of human action. I am fed by arteries of wire that girdle the earth. I drink from the cup of every living joy and sorrow. I sleep not—-rest not. J know not night, nor day, nor season. I know no death, yet I am born again with every morn with every nooh — with every twilight. I leap into fresh being with every new world's event. Those who created me cease to be— the brains and hearfs-blood that nourish tne go the way of human dissolution, yet I live on—and on. I am Majestic in my Strength—Sub lime in my Power—Terrible in my Po tentialities—yet as democratic as the ragged boy who sells me for a penny. I am the consort of Kings—the partner ef capital—the brother of toil. The in spiration of the hopeless—the right arm of the needy—the champion of the op pressed—the conscience of the criminal. I am the epitome of the world's Comedy and Tragedy. My responsibility is Infinite. I speak, end the world stops to listen. I say the word, and battle flames the horizon. 1 counsel peace, and the war-lords obey. J am greater than any individual—more powerful than any group. I am the dynamic force of Public Opinion. Rightly directed. I am a Creator of Con fidence. A builder of happiness m liv ing. I am the Backbone of Commerce. The Trailblaser of Prosperity. lam the Teacher of Patriotism. I am the hands of the clock of Time— the clarion voice of Civilisation. I am the Newspaper. —Address of Joseph H. Finn at the con vention of the Advertising Clubs of the World. FOR RIVER WALK TT THEEL-CHAIRS for the River Front promenade would be not only a novel, but a very prac tical and desirable Innovation. Super intendent Taylor has hit upon a good idea. No doubt the chair concession for the walk at the top of the "Front Bteps" would be profitable, as well as pleasurable for the thousands who unquestionably would use them. With the closing of the gap at Mar ket street wheel-chairs could make the trip from the lower end of the city, or any convenient point, to "Hard ecrabble" and back again. With "Hardscrabble" removed there will be aji unbroken stretch of concrete walk from Paxton street to Maclay. No other city has anything like our river walk. Wheel-chairs operating on It as tljey do on the Boardwalk at Atlantic City would attract the thousands of visitors who annUfelly come to Harris burg as well as many of our own people. The city stands in need of Just some such novel recreation as this and It would be hard to conceive of a better way of advertising Harruburg abroad than as the inland city with the Atlantic City boardwalk. THE MTLK INSPECTION EVERY day brings developments to prove that Dr. Raunick Is more than Justified In conducting the rigid investigation of the milk supply of Harrisburg. "Pasteurized" milk that is not pasteurized, milk sold as pure for use in infant feeding that contains not only germs which have no business there but filth of the most vile kind, milk that Is advertised as above reproach in which flies have been drowned and which Is alive with harmful bacteria, dairies that are dirty •nd unsanitary in unspeakable ways, stables that are unfit for habitation, ■water supplies that are contaminated and cows that have not been examined for tuberculosis In years—all these have been brought to light, and more. Not all milk Is bad. however, and not all dairymen are careless. Many of them are as careful of the product they sell as though they designed to uee It themselves. Not all of those ■who have been offending have done so maliciously or recklessly. Some of them have not understood. They were conducting their dairies as their grand fathers did before them, with the idea, as one milk producer told the in spectors, that "what was good enough for my father ip good enough for me." ,But that Is not true. We understand things about milk now that our grand fathers did not know. In those days, before the discovery of the germ carrying possibilities of milk, if milk looked all right It was regarded as be- WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARRIBBTTRG kTELEORAPH JUNE 30, OTS. Ing »o. and many an untimely death of baby and adult may be traced to that mistaken notion. The dealer who permits dirt, and therefore harmful germs, to get Into his milk becomes a spreader of typhoid fever, cholera Infantum and even of tuberculosis. If he knows h* Is vio lating the laws of health, then he makes himself criminally responsible for the Illness or death of any of his patrons who contract disease through use of the milk he sells. No dairyman wants to charge himself with responsi bility for the death of a human being. The only sure prevention lies in abso lute cleanliness from start to finish in the milk business. Furthermore. It Is not fair to the conscientious dairyman who Jives up to the rules of the health board to permit his careless neighbor to sell milk either below the standard for butterfats or unclean. The milk supply of Harrls burg must be made as pure as the city's water supply and the public will support. Dr. Raunick heartily in what ever he may do to improve conditions. GOOD NEWS FROM BERLIN NEWS that filters through devious channels from Berlin relative to the attitude the Imperial Govern ment will take in reply to the latest Wilson note is distinctly encouraging. Every indication is that Germany will agree to measures that will Insure the proper protection of American lives. That Is all this country can ask In fairness. Germany has a perfect right to continue its warfare on the mer chant marine of her enemies so long as It is conducted with due regard for the rights of humanity and the regu lations prescribed by international law. The most effective means of war fare that Germany has been able to bring to bear against the Allies has been the activities of her submarines against contraband shipping. It would be almost equivalent to asking Berlin to lay down the sword, for the United States to demand that the submarine be ruled out of the European war as a weapon against the uninterrupted commerce of the allied nations on the seas. It Is not the use, but the mis use, of the submarine to which this country has objected- Every American worthy of the name will rejoice that the warclouds which darkened the skies are passing. We do not want to fight Germany any more than, we suspect, Germany wants to fight us. German-Americans have complained that we are selling muni tions of war to the Allies. We would do the same for Germany, if Germany could find a way to import them. We in America, do not hate the German people. If our sympathies have been aroused in behalf of the Allies it has been because we have stood always for fair play, decency and the rights of humanity, and therefore have found ourselves at variance with the methods and practices of the German war ma chine as it has been operated in this war. Doubtless, many of the loyal Germans, down In their own hearts, nurse the same grievances. We would not like to think otherwise. THE SITUATION OF PALMER THE political future of A. Mitchell Palmer, who last November achieved a distinction which some one summed up in the expression, "the worst licked Democrat in the his tory of the State," continues to be a matter of interest to all Democrats, and of anxiety to some. We violate no confidence when we declare that there was a general sigh of relief in the ranks of the Unterrified after President Wilson appointed Pal mer to a vacancy on the Court of Claims. The position is a desirable one and the appointment promised to take the appointee out of politics for the rest of his life. And that would be a condition of affairs much to be de sired from their viewpoint In the case of a man whose distribution of federal patronage split the party wide open and made a farce of the pious pro testations of party virtue upon which the Reorganization rested. But Palmer is ambitious. He also has a pretty good opinion of his own talents, and while he has not refused the tendered judicial appointment his name by some mysterious influence Is mentioned with significant regularity in connection with every promising opening in the federal service. If Presi dent Wilson continues to ignore the hint, why there is the Judgship to fall back upon. A regular pay day, even when acceptance of it Involves closing the door of political hope, Is much to be preferred to the cheerless status of a lame duck. In the meantime the Democracy is very much in doubt as to its internal economy. The leaders cannot be in ignorance of the fact that Palmer is "in bad" with the rank and file, and it is probable that they would be glad to be rid of his dead weight. But on the other hand, if he goes, If he takes a Job that will involve his resignation from the national committee, which position for many years has carried with it titular leadership of the Penn sylvania Democracy, it will be neces sary to call the State committee to gether. And it Is evident that the prospect of this call is associated in their minds with thoughts of the wrath to come. And this explains why there has been so little open resentment with the cavalier course Palmer has been pur suing with respect to the appointment which he has been holding under con sideration for so many weeks. Both sides of the factional squabble are anxious to avoid a showdown as long a« It is possible—the Ins because they are afraid and the outs because they have been unable to get together on a program and a candidate for the party post Palmer now holds. ALL WORK AND NO PLAY THIS from the Kansas City Star: Deacon W. C. Palmer says: "If you want to be an old man at 40 work seven days a week; if you want to be a worthless man at 40 loaf seven days a week." That is the trouble with most men. They are either workers or loafers. Too few know how to vary work with play. "AH work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." How glibly we quote it when we send our sons and our daughters off for a holiday in the woods or at the seashore. We check their trunks, say good-by before the train pulls out, (lance hurriedly at our watches and rush back to our offices begrudging the "lost time." The loafer In America exists, but he Is a rarity. The seven-day man, on the other hand, Is too much the rule. "An old man at forty!" None of us wants to be that, but all work and no play will produce the result Inev itably. Perhaps not at forty, exactly, but at all events much sooner than need be, and of all pitiable objects the man old before his time Is the most wretched. But the signs of the times are hap pily pointing In the other direction. The automobile, the golf dub, the ten nis club and a hundred other influ ences are tempting men to play and physicians are forsaking medicine to preach the gospel of good health through recreation. Employers are coming to under stand that a half-holiday each week Is beneficial to their employes and that they actually get better results from a five and one-half day week than they do from six days. The movement has j pone to such an extent In Harrisburg that some of the big business houses jare understood to be considering a movement for the closing of stores on Saturday afternoon and evening, in place of the present Friday half holi day. This would add an evening of liberty each week to leisure time of all employes. Of course.it is understood thatstore keepers cannot move more rapidly in this direction than the public desires, but as Harrisburg is rapidly becom ing a Saturday half holiday city, the way is prepared for the move now under consideration. If all the stores Join In the movement none will lose and the time of everybody will be con served. It is an open question whether It Is the Czar who is going to the front or the front that is going to the Czar. The difference between Diaz and Huerta is that Diaz not only knew when to get out of Mexico, but when to stay out. Ex-Governor Slaton aspires to the United States Senate. If the decision lay with the country at large his ambi tion would be gratified. "Huckleberries blacken the teeth," says an Item In the woman's column. Bring on the pie. Let 'em do their worst. f teleoraphTeriscqpe —lndiana's political news begins to make us believe that Booth Tarking ton has been mixing his fiction with fact. —May be the Yaqui Indians had read "Dickey" Davis' article on the "Unpreparedness of the United States." —Mexico City has been evacuated again. We suppose this will be fol lowed by another "triumphant entry." —lowa farmers are reported to be wearing garters this summer. Won der If this has anything to do with the way wheat prices are being held up? —Now that Mr. Bryan is outside the circle of influence, who is looking af ter the interests of the "deserving Democrats?" —An optimist 's one who not only sees the good in life, but also the good in the bad of life. | EDITORIAL COMMENT ~ Mr. Bryan is one editor who knows how to make news as well as com ment on it.—Columbia State. The rumor that The Commoner and The Fatherland are to be merged is baseless.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Youthful students of Scriptural and modern history will never be able to reconcile the two Bethlehems.—Wash ington Post. Mr. Winston Spencer Churchill savs the British navy is growing, which must be one reason for being: so care ful of it.—New York Tribune. What broke Constantinople up so completely was the fact that the 13,000 wounded sent back weren't Armenians. —Washington Post. GREATER MEAT SUPPLY [Pittsburgh Dispatch.] When Congress assembles Repre sentative Kent, of California, intends to press his bill for regulated leasing of the Government-owned range as a practical step toward a solution of the high cost of living problem. Tho number of cattle and sheep on the Western ranges has been decreasing rapidly, nearly one-fourth in five years in 17 Western States. Reckless misuse of the grazing lands has been largely responsible, much of the range having been overfed and re duced to almost desert conditions. On the contrary, the range in the forest reserves, where care has been exercised in grazing, is supporting an i increased number of cattle. Expe rience has convinced even the cattle I men who bitterly opposed regulated grazing that it was a short-sighted and disastrous policy to exhaust the range without thought for the fu ture. They are now, it is said, ready to accept such a system of regulated grazing on the 300,000,000 acres of Government land if the Kent bill or one of that sort is passed. The destruction of cattle in the war zones of Europe and the world scar city for meat, leather and wool likely to result, holds out encouragement to the American stock raiser. It is cal culated that the Western ranges properly regulated could support dou ble the stock now there and that within a few years the production could be Increased from 25 to 50 per cent. LIGHT-FINGERED At a dinner given by the prime minister of a little kingdom in Ruri tania a diplomat complained to his host that the minister of Justice, who had been sitting on his left, had stolen his watch. "Ah. he shouldn't have done that," said the prime minister, in tones of annoyance. "I will get It back for you." Sure enough, toward the end of the evening, the watch was returned to its owner. "And what did he say?" asked the diplomat. "Sh-h!" cautioned the host, glancing anxiously about him. "He doesn't know that I have got It back."—Pitts burgh Chroniclo Telegraph. ■* Tdittcc. Ck By the Ex-CommJtteemaa Ex-Representative A. Mitchell Pal mer, mentioned as a possible successor to Robert Lansing as counselor of the State Department, was in Washington yesterday and conferred with Chief Justice Covington, of the District Su preme Court, and a number of other associates and political friends. No an nouncement wa» made whether Justice Palmer was an active candidate for tho place. It Is believed that Palmer went to Washington chiefly to learn just what progress had been made by those who had advocated him to the Presi dent. He declined to discuss the mat ter, but the belief is that he is en tirely in the hands of his friends who are urging, his appointment. Mr. Palmer called upon Secretary of the Navy Daniels. The latter Is believed to be favorable to the appointment of Mr. Palmer as counselor. Pennsylvania Democrats are Inter ested in the story from Washington to the effect that political advisers of President Wilson, have learned de finitely that William J. Bryan will op pose the President's nomination on the ground that Mr. Wilson is bound by the one term plank of the Balti more platform. The President's friends have learned that Mr. Bryan will take the stand that Mr. Wilson as the candidate of the convention which adopted the one term plank, is bound by this in principle and that regard less of the fact that no legislative act limiting the Presidency to one term has been passed by Congress. Mr. Wil son may not seek to become the stand ard bearer of his party in the next national campaign. All of the Bryan influence which has survived his rup ture with the President, officials expect will be exerted to defeat the efforts of Mr. Wilson's managers to secure for him the nomination for a second term. It became known that before his de parture for the Pacific Coast last week Mr. Bryan sounded some of his closest political associates regarding his con templated stand and that as a result the news reached the President's ad visers. There are reasons for believing !hat the President knew of Mr. Bryan's p!ans before he (the President) de parted for Cornish, N. H., last Thurs day. WITH WHOM WOULD WE GO TO WARf [From the Omaha Bee.] Our militarists are busy again, show ing how unready we are for war. Our culpable neglect in failing to provide for arms and ammunition and fortresses and the like is again being reviewed, and the administration of the nation's affairs is seriously criticized because nowhere in its program for many years has appeared detailed plans for a large army and a larger navy. All these charges are well founded. The United States is unprepared to. engage in war on the stupendous scale now being exhibited in Europe. We have 10,000.000 young men who would make splendid soldiers and who would die like heroes in the trenches and elsewhere, but we haven't the 10.000,00 rifles to put into their hands. Wherefore we should go to making rifles Immediately. Why not determine with which na tion we are to go to war. and then make our plans accordingly. A ceu tury of peace with Great Britain may well be followed by another. The tra ditional friendship with the other great powers is not likely to be broken soon. We have no really good reason to look for war anywhere. INTERFERING WITH FIREMEN [From the Providence Journal ] After a verdict of $51,608.4S in favor of a manufacturing company and twenty-one fire insurance companies it is not likely that hereafter the rail road companies in New York State will interfere with the activities of a mu nicipal fire department. According to the testimony in the case Just decided the crew of a freight train refused to break cars at a Syracuse street cross ing for the purpose of allowing the passage of the fire aparatus over the tracks. The delay thu6 caused, it was asserted, was largejy responsible for the lire losses, and parties directly con cerned looked to the railroad for re imbursement. The returning of a ver dict in three minutes showed that the jury was not in doubt as to the cause of the excessive damage. Probably it is understood in rail road offices that highway crossings shall not be obstructed when the nre raen need every second of time and that trains shall not run over hose laid upon the tracks. But this unusual suit indicates the necessity of impressing on employes the importance of giving firemen the right of way. The substan tial New York verdict will be a lesson to all concerned. It is cheaper to break a train than to fight a 6uit for dam ages. LATE| TOO LATE t [From the New York Sun.] We reprint from the news dispatches from Washington the subjoined sen tence: "President Wilson is having the new seamen's law closely reviewed to deter mine whether its effect on American shipping or its relation to other laws on the same subject makes amendments necessary." The law to which Mr. Wilsen is di recting the attention of presumably qualified authorities is the La Folletts statute which was passed by the Sixty third Congress in its last session, and signed by the President, who now seeks light on the effect of its provisions, not yet operative. It has already com pelled the abandonment of the Pacific by one of the few survivors of our trade. The enforcement of its require ments will compel the renunciation of a score of treaties with foreign nations. The ruinous conequences this statute would inevitably have on American shipping were not hidden during the time it was before the House, the Sen ate and the President. Legislators ana Executive alike were warned, solemnly and repeatedly, of the suffocating re strictions it would impose on our merchant marine. Again and again they were informed by the men most competent to speak on the subject that it would effectually suppress the poor remnant of our/orel*n carrying trade. Despite these admonitions, despite the necessity it created for negotiating, new treaties, despite the pleas of men who longed to see the American flag flying from merchantmen on the high seas, the Congress and the President put it pn the books, and now the President is having it examined ny pxperts "to determine whether its ef fect on American shipping or Its rela tion to other laws on the same subject makes amendments necessary!" SOMETHING NEW By Wins Blnger Every year, it seems to me, Brings forth some new 11J Helping those who profit by Sales of drugs, until I am thinking that ere long Every month there'll be Some peculiar ill to bring Pain and misery. Hay fever and asthma, too, Rose cold, with its sneeze, Dread pneumonia, too, I dodged. Then bo, If you please. Just as I thought I was safe For the summer, rip, Some new fangled 111 hit me. Known as "summer grippe." You may talk of aches and pains That you've had before. You may mention ills you've had In the days of yore—r * But for making one feel mean This new fangled ill Be(ter far than all the rest. Brother. OUs the biUr I TWO LIBERTY BELLS WILL MEET gar jgi j^k / \ ' ' f ' •4" : MH^TMMMBM HagMSMHSHBHH^B i«-?- 1 Hf&?j2Sth&i. £MtP ■ •ss» R& Bk r THE WOMAN'S LIBERTY BELL WHILE Harrisburg is celebrating the arrival of the real Liberty Bell in this city next Monday another Liberty Bell will be the center of at traction in Pittsburgh, and early on the morning of July 6 the old Liberty Bell and the new Liberty Bell will meet in the Smoky City. The new bell was cast by the Pennsylvania Woman's Suffrage Associa tion and on a big automobile, driven by John Hall, a Harrisburg boy, and accompanied by Mr 6. Frank Roessing, state president of the suffragists, is touring all the counties of the state in the interest of "votes for women." "This bell," said Mrs. Roessing, "will be rung for the first time on the day that the women of Pennsylvania are granted the right to vote." The bell started from Sayre on Juno 23. It is en route from Union City to Meadville to-day. Harrisburg will not see it until early Fall, when it will pass through the city on its way to close the campaign in Philadelphia with a big demonstration. The bell, which started on its state-wide tour just a week ago to-day, has traversed all of the northern tier counties west of Bradford. In the week that the bell has been on tour it has covered 300 miles and been cheered by more than 50,000 persons. From the very beginning the demon strations accorded the bell party have been so remarkable that those who are traveling with it are more than hopeful of a suffrage victory in November. Why Not Have a Garden? MANY persons who love flowers lament the fact that they live in the city, that they live in an apartment, that they live in a boarding house room, that they spend their time in an office—that they can not have a garden because they have no place to plant it. Two Hungarian laborers who live in the slums of a small manufactur ing town on a canal wanted a garden. On their way to work every day they spied an irregularly shaped plot of ground under one of the piers of the canal bridge. It was walled up with , stone, and it was overgrown with weeds. It was, perhaps, fifteen feet long and seven feet wide. They bought some tomato plants and some young cabbages and some onion and lettuce seed. They bor rowed a rowboat, and rowed out to the middle of the canal one evening, clambered on the deserted little is land, uprooted the weeds, dug up the 1 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR" BOTH WRONG, HE SAYS To the Eiitor of the Telegraph : Having read the open letter in your evening paper on June 28 and the re ply on the following day, I wish to say that both parties are greatly mistaken. When and where did that minister of the gospel find such a little heart | for Italy? Are they the fruits of his life's work and his years of study? Has he no better principle to go by? There is no doubt that Austria wronged Italy, and he ought to know that an unrighteous deed brings its consequences. Does not Steelton need many improvements? Why is he judg ing a land far off when there is much work at his own door? On the other hand, the statement that Italy stands for the "highest civiliza tion" is found on no base. Who gave it the right to enter this conflict? There was revenge and a thought of gain only an 3 there is one thing Italy needs to day, and that is civilization. Those noted men of art; do they make a nation? Have we riot men even greater in every land of the globe? Their fruits do not express horrors like those existing in Italy to-day. Then it says that Italy was civilized when the Getmans were still savages. No doubt the men of the north learneu from the Romans, but they, too, show ed the latter the short way home again? The mission of the Romans was an evil one and was similar to that of Spain and other countries. It sought to conquer and loved the gold. Where are the powers of yesterday. Why did thev fall? What are the beau tiful countries of Europe to-day with all their fancy—and wrong Govern ments? Are we not glad that America stands for us and that we can stano for America? Therefore, whatever trouble or argu ment may arise, here and abroad, let us be Americans. Let us not judge by 1 disadvantages, but let us show the world a better way. It says: "Let us bear one another's burden and so ful fill the law of Christ." Let us not be moved bv international law end other nonsense, nor by our own understand ing. but know that when we "trust in God'' we ® an^nN_EX- GEBM AN. Our Daily Laugh j A FEW CHORDS EMa, FROM CHOPIN, -t . V'* Yes, mum. IJKSI was once quite musician, an' I W WpXtj, : jßj guess I ain't for- -3gU L got all about it Indeed! Wrll. rj—riMri you can take the fSHg®* mWOt axe and chop a 7 few cords out of il% that woodpile. EAST MONET. I' . . writers are well word for my last Dad "Please send NOT OF OUR MAKING [Springfield Republican.] It is estimated by men acquainted with the situation in Pittsburgh that | at least $80,000,000 in orders for -war material is without takers at present in this country. The basis of prosper ity thus indicated is tragic, but the tragedy is not of America's making. soil, and planted a neat little garden. Each evening they row out to it, weed, water and cultivate It. And later on they are going to row out each evening to reap their harvest of fresh vegetables. They wanted a garden and so they found a place to plant one., In the slums of all the big cities vegetables and flowers are grown on many roofs and window sills. The poor who de sire things are satisfied with a simple means of having them. So to them j a soap box on a window sill or a bit ) of filled-In land under the pier of a bridge makes an acceptable field for their agricultural experiments. If you want a garden, plant one now. A box In your office or bed room window can be filled with mar guerites and geraniums, pansies or migonette. A jar on the kitchen window sill can be turned into a lit tle farm to produce chives, parsley, and mint to give enviable flavor to roasts and soup. This is the Birthday Anniversary of—— v ./ Francis H. Hoy, Sr., the veteran of the Civil War, who is 70 years old to j day. He has been a resident of Har- I risburg since he was 15 years of age. !The Telegraph joins with his G. A. R. comrades and many friends in wish ing him many more birthday anniver saries, and continued happiness. AN APPRECIATION (Miss Fannie U Johnson) They counted the years since the path was new, But we of the book and pen Think of a thousand gracious deeds That weie yours to do since then. They named the places your presence filled While the days sped by and then We glimpsed your throne In a thousand hearts. The boys who have long been men. May you tarry awhile, for the world hath need Of those that strlved and won, •Till night Is come and with childlike trust You wait for His clear, "Well Done." MARIE C. HIGGINS. BUYING BACK OUR SECURITIES FROM EUROPE [From the New York Press.] If the "leading financial author ity of the government" who estimates that since the beginning of the war Europe has sold back to us $2,000,- 000,000 of American securities really calculated, or as much as guessed at, that financial and economic result, we wonder how many hundred mil lion tons of green cheese he com putes the belligerents have sliced out of the moon for army rations. How can any man who ever heard of the rule of three imagine that our finan cial market could have taken from abroad since the first day of August $2,000,000,000 of our securities, or of any securities and have an interna tional position, financially and econo mically, what it is to-day? lEtottfatg (£hat At half-pact four o'clock yesterday morning there were three foursome matches under way on the Reservoir Park links and shortly before 5 every tennis court was occupied. For the last week or so, barring Sundays, golf ers have been out playing before 6 o'clock In the morning at the Reser voir. The tennis courts are filled while the hours of daylight last. These are plain statements which can be verified any morning. They indicate the way golf and tennis have taken hold in Harrisburg and the way in which the city's free links and courts are appreciated. Time was not ten years ago when people played golf in Reservoir park to the accompani ment of many jests. Now one has to wait turns to get on the links. Tennis is even more popular and the courts are occupied in relays. A person has to be a real enthusiast to get up to play golf or tennis at half past Ave in the morning to say nothing of half past four. Hoffman's woods will have a grand old-time picnic on July 6. It will be the first real picnic the woods have had in many moons and it is being looked forward to with great interest. The Trainmen's band will hold forth In the erstwhile popular picnic ground that day and many railroad men and their families will take baskets and go to the woods. Time was when the woods was the object of fighting on July 4 and the fire company or organ ization lucky enough to get there first and to hold it was talked of for a year. With the clearing of the muddy water from the river, fishermen are busily over-hauling their tackle in preparation for what many believe will be an unusually large season. The mud which has been flowing along both sides of the Susquehanna since the opening of the season is now clear ing away. The fish forced to feed in the center, rather than swim through the muddy water, old fishermen be lieve, will bite at most any old thing now. It is a well-known fact that bass like to feed along the shore, es pecially near the mouths of creeks and small streams. It is there that scores of fishermen will take their stand. Just how a Capitol park squirrel got on top of the Majestic theater la something that Walnut street people are trying to solve. The squirrel waa seen running about on the roof and the cornice very much disturbed about his lofty perch and uncertain whether to Jump or not. The belief is that it dropped from a wire while taking a trip. Not long ago another squirrel was seen walking about on top of the jail wall. This animal was not concerned a bit, but made the trip along Court Street without much ado and when tired climbed down and disappeared into the prison yard. Advance details of National Guards men may not be numerous about this city this year as the guard officers are planning to have the men put up more of their own canvas than heretofore. The regiments of the First Brigade have been doing that for years and will do so again. The guardsmen say that they believe the same rule is to be applied to other commands. State Zoologist H. A. Surface has completed a work on which he has been laboring for years. It is a bul letin of the birds of Pennsylvania, along the same lines as his bulletins on the insects and snakes. These bulletins which represent years of scientific study and minute observa tion, will become State text books in time. In his bulletin the zoologist says that while bird study is very gen eral tJie birds of Pennsylvania are not increasing the way they should be and that people ought to pay more atten tion to their welfare. • • * Col. Louis A. Watres, of Scranton, former lieutenant Governor and one of the big factors in affairs in North eastern Pennsylvania, was here yes terday to attend a meeting of one of the State boards. Col. Watres is active in financial affairs in the Lacka wanna region and a power in politics. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Charles B. McElhany has been elected vice president of the Cambria Steel Company and will have charge of sales. —J. Benjamin Dimmick will build a summer home near Scranton, the Adirondacks being too far away. —Robert F. Gross, sales manager of the Pennsylvania Steel Company, has been elected a member of the Amer ican Iron and Steel Institute. —Dr. F. P. Garland, city manager of Dayton, is making a tour of this State to tell about the new system of government. —District Attorney I»i. D. Patterson, of Blair, has ordered constables to ar rest joyriders who are drunk on sight. DO YOU KNOW That Harrisburg lias more jit neys than any city of its size in the State? AGAINST GOVERNMENT SHIPS [From the New Tork Press.] No part of our people have a greater Interest in an American merchant ma rine than the businessmen of the Unit ed States, nor so great Manufacturers and merchants are now suffering severe hardship and loss because of our lack of shipping; but they have felt this lack for years. What the business Interests of the United States think of President Wil son's plan for a merchant marine owned and operated, either in part or in whole, by the Government may be judged by a canvass which has been made of the Chambers of Commerce of the United States. The vote on Government ownership of merchant marine was only 82 in favor of but *>9B against. Government ownership with private operation got a vote of 54 In favor of but 711 against. But ships subsidies sufficient to offset the difference in the cost of operation of vessels under the American Flag as compared with deep-sea ships under foreign flags was approved by a vote of 568 to 186. For a postal subvention the vote was "18 in favor of to 48 against. Mr. Wilson is understood to put the United States Government into the shipping business: but from this vote of tho United States Chamber of Com merce it is evident that he cannot do anything of the kind with the approval or assistance of the business interests of the country. LIKE A VACCINATION [From the Boston Transcript.] Mr. Wilson regards a one-term plank as a good deal like a vaccination sometimes it takes and then again It doesn't. CIVIC CLUB Fly Contest June 1 to July 31 5 Cents a Pint Prizes of 95, $2.50 and several SI.OO ones duplicated by Mr. Ben Strouas