[G TELEGRAPH uhtd ISII SHED BY PH PRINTING CO. •ACKPOLH i Editor-in-Chitf OYSTER rttary 3TEINMETZ iHg Editor ivenlng (except Sun egraph Building, 214 Both phones. . Newspaper Publlih » Audit Bureau of Pennsylvania Assocl fth Avenue Building; , Hasbrook, Story A Advertising Building, en A Ward. vared by carriers at cents a week, ailed to subscribers advance. ost Office In Harrls ond class matter. Be circulation for the IIIIOK July 31. 1915 ,084 ★ s year IM<—!l^M ! year 1913—19.DM 5 year 1912—19,649 s year 1911—17rfi63 i year 1910—10.'-Ol •e» are net. All re -1 damaged copies de- IVENING AUG. 11 ;ver alters his opinion ■ater, and breeds rep —William Blake. IBRJE CHANGE OF PEACE ■?H as the world may desire It, Ihjere Is Uttle chance that peace vju he an outcome of the I Oerman prosposals to Russia. ■Ut Is doubtful if any direct looking; to that end have But, as the New York ■ Post puts it, "the thing is in the most significant signs is of tone of the German comment upon the Russian At the outbreak of the war Hnan public was told that* it Germany to stem the tide of Hbarbarism that was sweeping Europe," that the Mus- Bower must be forever broken" Safety of Europe waß to be in ■ Every German newspaper ■ with hatred violently expressed B Russians and everything Rus- Bof course, this was with the ■al of the imperial government, ■German newspaper in war times Ho other than voice the kaiser's B matters of national policy. I all is changed. Germans are ■at "Germany really has no quar fch Russia" and the question is Ijwhy should it not be better to U the advice of Bismarck and Hfor the friendship of the czar? Bin all this Russia must be taken insideration. The czar is in honor ■to stand by his allies, to the end leace be made only by consent of llso, the Russian empire's gigantic irces have been scarcely more touched. Fresh armies are in (.ration and thousands of tons of unition are being poured Into the :ry from America and Japan. In nd the Warsaw victory may cost ;alser more than it is costing the The German commanders are 3 means conquerors of Russia as In the loss of her colonies Ger ' has yielded more territory to the !than she has won in Poland and 11m. This will be one of the fac n the settlement of the war. along Germany has striven to iss upon the world that hers Is . war of conquest or oppression, s wants peace, then, let her make just proposal for the freedom of id and Belgium, and the world rge may be Inclined to believe her leaders are sincere in their stations of international honeßty. at state of mind, however, appears as far distant in Germany as it is le countries of the allies. Evl y the end of the war is not in . No basts of settlement has been ssted whereby the warring forces lkely to reach an early under ling. PRESIDENT'S POPULARITY SMOCRATIC leaders are placing too much Importance upon what they are pleased to term the tonal popularity of the Presi- All of them who have spoken itly upon Democratic prospects iext year dwell upon the popular ort the President has received le past few months as the big r in national politics as they af the coming Presidential cam >. In this they see signs of a acratlc victory next year. They mistaken, good American could do other men of all parties have done In past six months. They have d by the President." They have backed him up in his decisions upon international questions. They have dcllned to make his difficult position harder by bickering with him over trifles. They have refused to nag. But for all that they differ Just as widely with him on matters relating to the tariff and the general conduct of the government as they did up to the time when these issues were tempo rarily obscered by the grave interna tional problems that have arisen out of the European war. Questions of a purely national char acter have not been forgotten. It is as Important that the relations be tween our own people and our own government be harmonious and that » capital and labor be assured of mu tual prosperity as It Is that we remain *t peace with the world at large. "WEDNESDAY EVENING, And it is quite evident that whatever they may think of his international policies, thousands of Americans doubt the ability of the President to •conduct the affairs of the nation economically and are convinced that the Wilson theories of tarlfT and busi ness legislation are fundamentally wrong. No foolißh sentiment will govern the people In the selection of a Pres ident and a Congress next year. They are now experiencing direful effects of the folly of allowing blind passion to take the place of calm Judgment In the selection of men to conduct their affairs at Washington. They will not repeat the mistake* of 1912. The foreign policies of the President have not been above criticism. There lb Mexico for Instance. At the proper time these matters will be discussed. The Democratic leaders must not la bor under the delusion that those who have been quietly supporting presidential notes and decisions be cause trfere was nothing else left for them to do, will help to hurrah Pres ident Wilson into the White House for a second term. They are simply biding their time to register their protest where it will do the most good—at the polls. IN LEAGUE WITH THE FLY THE housefly has been pronounced by scientists the most deadly enemy of man—the typhoid fly, as It Is now more generally term ed. Everybody knows that It carries disease; that it is responsible for much sickness and many deaths every summer. It flits about from filth to food and leaves Its trail of deadly germs wherever it goes. The merchant or dealer who thoughtlessly or carelessly leaves his meats or other provisions free t.o its ravages Is In league with the typhoid fly. He Is criminally negligent and guilty of as grave an offense against the public welfare as the man -who sells milk that he knows has been ex posed to Infection. Dr. Raunlck, city health officer, has threatened prosecution of those who do not protect their foodstuffs from flies, and he has all power to do so under a newly-enacted State law which the State Livestock Sanitary Board is about to enforce insofar as it applies to meats. But there Is a better way than that. Don't buy from the merchant or the butcher who lets flies crawl over the provisions he offers for sale. Also, be sure to tell him politely why you no longer intend to be a customer of his. The dealer who finds trade slipping away from him because he is careless of his patron's interests will very soon take steps to limit the promenades of the ever present fly. THE WAR IN EUROPE THE operations of the European war are too vast to be caught, analyzed And described by even the noted writers who have attempted to set them down In black and white. It Is only the occasional incident, the fleeting flash of an event, trifling, per haps, in relation to the gigantic whole, a glimpse of the conflict as it Is brought home to the Individual, that gives us some understanding of what the catas trophe of war means to the people of the continent. Take, for Instance, the following letter, written to his little son from his deathbed by Lieutenant- Colonel Negrotto, one of the most popular Italian commanders, who fell mortally wounded' when leading his men on the bank of the Isonzo: To you. Enzo, my son, at the mo ment 'of his quitting this life for ever, this is the message and legacy your father bequeaths you: Be ever obedient and dutiful to your mother. She, who will now be alone In the world clinging to the name and to the memory of your father, has a right to find her conso lation in you, our dear son. Be always and In all places, hon est, hardworking, and brave, and proud of the name of an Italian. See that all you do helps to in crease the power and glory of our people and tends to honor the un spotted name which I leave you as p.n heirloom. I close with a kiss. From your old father, who has been very fond of you always. There we have It! The glory of war. forsooth! Heartbreaks, the wrecking of family ties, the leaving of a beloved son and his mother to the mercy of a cold world, the sacrifice of glorious manhood! And for what? That the tottering thrones of a half-dozen self ish, murderous monarchs may be propped up for a few more years. And this. In the final analysis, is the war in Europe—-the death of the individual for the perpetuation of an obsolete type of government. PLAYGROUND RESULTS A FOURTEEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL yesterday played the holder of the city tennis title for the 1915/ championship. She was beaten —but only after one of the warmest matches ever seen on the Reservoir courts. Never, perhaps, since the establish ing of public playgrounds In Harris burg has there been a more striking example of the good done for the youngsters of the city by these In stitutions. Miss Ruth Starry, the fourteen-year-old tennis player, Is a direct product of the Reservoir play ground. When Just a little tot she romped under the watchful eye of the playground Instructors. She was taught to use her muscles and before the little girl was twelve years old she was a wonder at tennis and basket ball. This year she defeated all the older girls and won the summer's tourney. Only the champion hersplf was able to defeat her. But the physical prowess of this lass is no exception to the rule. Dozens of fourteen-year-old girls who have been fiequenters of the city's playgrounds are nearly as strong on the courts as' Miss Starry herself. And the boys who have been romping and racing under the city's supervision are nearly always able to defeat elder brothers who had no playground opportunities In the lighter lines of sport where skill and endurance rather than weight are the deciding factors. The lessen to be learned is this: Harrisburg can not have too many playgrounds. TELEGRAPH S PERISCOPE —Says the Baltimore American: "Pennsylvania Imposes a tax on anthra cite coal." Imposes, yes; but there Is a difference between that and collecting It. —William Howard Taft and Uncle Joe Cannon have approved President Wilson's latest German note. Come on, now, Teddy, make It unanimous. —Dr. Raunlck is going to have pure milk If he has to fight for It. —One of the most delightful features of a vacation Is getting back home. —Slowly, but surely, the snout of the Bull Moose Is developing Into the trunk of an elephant. —As a picturesque addition to the na tural scenery of the resorts the Palm Beach summer man has the summer girl backed Into an obscure corner. 1 EDITORIAL COMMENT"! But how can a nation that has a Roosevelt be called unprepared for war?— Columbia State. The main trouble with Russia ap pears to be that it has no standing army.—Washington Post. As to the Invaders wiping the Rus sians off the map—there is too much map.—Pittsburgh Dispatch. The Russians now seem to be In for a -series of games on the home grounds. —Philadelphia Inquirer. Trip to Market Ends at Altar.— Headline. Nevertheless it will have to be resumed.—New York Tribune. Roumanla and Bulgaria are having a mighty hard time trying to pick the under dog.—Honolulu Star-Bulletin. When it comes to being captured, Mexico City Is three or four laps ahead of that Arras cemetery.—Nashville Southern Lumberman. OF COURSE IT IS A NECESSITY [From the Wilkes-Barre Record.] The Philadelphia Evening Bulletin states the case plainly. The tariff must be revised according to a plan that will take care of American industry in years to come. We quote from that news paper: An Intimate and familiar example for Philadelphia Is in the hosiery and knit goods industry, the local plants or which are now enjoying a rush of or ders to meet the demands of local trade. Every manufacturer and every buyer in the trade knows, however, that this condition is abnormal and'that it ex ists only because the great factories of Northern France and Belgium, which, under ordinary conditions, ship their products into the United States at ? rices with which the American manu acturer, paying the American standard of wages and subject to American labor laws, cannot compete, are out of commission on account of the war. And it is an equally simple matter of ap preciation that when the war is over and the work of rehabilitation begins —which will not be difficult because the actual industrial destruction has been comparatively small—these goods will again pour Into the United States and take away the demand for home labor. The knit goods industry is but one. The glass industry is another. The prospective dye. industry and other de velopment of coal-tar products an other. And the list might be continued j at great length. Nothing but a pro tective tariff barrier can avert suen an Invasion of foreign products, and It Is none -too early to emphasize that fact In anticipation of the next campaign for the election of a President and Congress, and even as an indirect con sideration of importance In earlier campaigns. Whether the war shall end this year or next, the Interest of Ameri can Industry must be the keynote of the next campaign. If our Democratic friends attempt to delude the people with the argument that returning prosperity is due to the excellent working of the. present tariff system, by Itself considered, thev will run up against the common sense Judg ment of the people. Every person who Is capable of obseving the course of events must know that present condi tions are temporary—that they are de pendent upon the stagnation of foreign industry. If it were not so, why were there Indications of a turn for the bet ter soon after the war broke out, and why did the nation suffer so serious a period of depression soon after the new tariff was enacted, when before it en joyed full and plenty, compared only with the best times we have had In a generation? There Is a reason, and the reason is not difficult to find out. We do not need a tariff of the old kind, protection sky-high and all-Inclusive. But we do need a tariff different from the kind we now have. LOAF, BROTHERS, I/OAF! (New York Sun) The subjoined wrath inspiring de liverance from the headquarters of modern sociology defaces the press: "Henry Ford, of Detroit, thinks that a work day shorter than eight hours would give too much time for loafing." He is completely, fundamentally, longitudinally, latitudinally wrong; wrong generally and wrong specifi cally: wrong in his head, his heart and his gizzard; morally, physically, intellectually wrong. There never was and never can be a work day short enough; no man, regardless of the situation in which he finds him self, has sufficient time to do all the loafing he wants to do and should do. Loafing is the one thing for which most men are Ideally equipped; the one calling in which they might be reasonably efficient; the one art in which each and every one of us re gardless of birth, education, previous condition of servitude, prenatal Influ ences, environment, economic condi tion, domestic obligation or taste In the selection of necliwear might at tain eminence and win the bays. Through the malevolence of such men as Mr. Ford the true beauty, tJ.e sterling virtues of loafing are ob scured and hidden. He and his fel lows—his friend Edison likes to work ( twenty-eight hours out of every twenty-four.—by their wretched per sistence, by their false standards, by their malignant assaults on man's best friend, have distorted public opinion and enforced acceptance of a vicious theory thßt gating might ad vantageously be dispensed with, and certainly should he taKen in small doses. A citizenry trained to labor meekly assents to their demoralizing doctrines, and sees Its most precious privilege curtailed, snipped oft and utterly destroyed. There should be no* work. AH hands should loaf all the time . All men are created loafers. The fall was from luxurious Idleness, unvexed by alarm clocks, factory whistles, ma tured notes, engagements that must be kept, to the present servile and task ridden sltuatloh of Adam's un fortunate sons and daughters. HERE'S A CHANCE FOR JIM FOTJST [From theWllkes-BarreEvening News] From the pictures of "The Chocolate Venus" that John P. Rockefeller pur chased. we take it that the lady is not very heavily coated. SALT AND FRESHNESS [From the Pittsburgh Bun.J The per capita consumption of salt In this country Is about 100 pounds. POB slbly that accounts for the crime con dition of the innumerable fresh Indi vidual on* encounters. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH "poitttc* IK ""PtKKOtjkranZa By the Kx-Committeeman Candidates for judicial nominations In various districts in the State are commencing to file their papers, al though the time Is not up until August 24. There are as yet no nominating petitions on file for Superior Court, although twenty sets of papers have been sent out, mainly to committees. Among the papers filed to-day were Samuel Anspyker for judge In Wash ington, and J. W. Ray for judge in I Greene. N. R. Beemer filed a petition [to be a candidate for associate judge [in Adams. 1 An interesting story comes from the Lykens Valley to the effect that Dr. C. A. Frltchey, candidate for the Dem ocratic nomination for recorder, tour ed the towns in that district. While In Lykens It is reported tht he was "shown around" by County Commis sioner John H. Eby, who is a candi date for renomination. The nomination petition filed at the Capitol yesterday In behalf of the' renomination of Judgw W. H. Shoe maker, of Philadelphia, is » notable tribute to the Governor's appointee. It contains the names or ex-Attorneya General Carson and Beil, ex-Secretary of the Commonwealth, William S. Stenger, ex-Judge James Gay Gordon, John G. Johnson, Congressman Gra ham and many othe>- men. In all 3600 men signed the paper of whom 600 were attorneys. The paper at tracted much attention at the Capitol because of the eminence ot the signers and the tribute to the judge. Harry A. Mackey, a member of the Workmen's Compensation • Board, 1« Out with a statement in Philadelphia that the mayoralty contest will be con ducted without a breaK in the Re publican party and that he looks for the next mayor to be a politician. Such a man Is needed after the Blank enburg regime he contends. H. I. Seidman, Btate Deputy Fire Marshal for Scranton, who has been talked of as a possible candidate for alderman, denies that he will run for any office. Philadelphia suffragists are holding nightly meetings to boom the cause and to prepare for thw coming of the Liberty Bell in the Fall. C. 8. Keefer, of the upper end, is making things hot for County Com missioner John H. Eby's campaign for renomination. He Is going on the assumption that Eby is stanatng on his one term one platform of isll. Keefer is very active in the Lykens valley dis trict. Dr. Garber, assistant superintendent of schools, is booked to succeed Dr. W. C. Jacobs, who took the place of Governor Brumbaugh. The West End Republican Club en tertained candidates for city and county nominations on the roof garden of its North Third street clubhouse with a crab supper. President Harry Douglass introduced the speakers. An orchestra played during tne serving of refreshments. There was an unusually large attendance. Congressman J. Hampton Moore Is I strongly urging the nomination of a Republican upon whom everyone can unite for mayor of Philadelpnia, point ing out that defeat In the Philadelphia j mayoralty this year will have a na tional effect and revive Democratic hopes. He says that as far as he is concerned he will only be a candidate i on a square deal basis. According to rumors going the rounds Representative W. H. Wilson, of Philadelphia, the Republican floor leader In the last House, is being groomed as a candidate for recorder in the event, of a new harmony deal going through. Benator McNichol is said not to be lieve that Congressman Vare will he a candidate for mayor in Philadelphia. Judge W. Rush Giilan and his rivals for the Franklin judgeship, Senator John W. Hoke and D. E. Long will speak at the Red Bridge picnic on Saturday. THE PENALTY OF BEING UNFIT (Kansas City Times.) Under the title, "The Ordeal of the Unfit British," Collier's Weekly speaks of the difficulties of the British sol diers on the 40-mile front assigned to them in Flanders. They are mostly raw recruits under green officers. "It probably will be eight months or longer," says Collier's, "before they are as fit for fighting as an equal num ber of Germans." Military unpreparedness does not keep any nation out of war. It means only that when it is In war It loses unnecessarily many thousands of men because of that unpreparedness.' If the war is sharp and cruel hundreds of thousands are slaughtered because they are "raw" and are commanded by "green" officers. Our Daily Laugh Farmer Bug: I * wish we could ' buy some peanuts at this Zoo. OVER THE 7r ■n. FENCE. Ji JO* > Mrs - O'Brien— mm Children are a 4 S'-' great care an' a great expense. iifh Mrs. O'Toole—• 'i DJyJI They are that. Shure Oi some all times think it'a happy the parent* do be that niver had anny. THE GROCERS' PICNIC By Wing Dinger If you didn't plare your order For some groceries to-day You will hungry go to-morrow Unless you have stored away What you'll need, because the grocers Will to-morrow close up shop And go picnicking to Hershey And all cares of business drop. There'll be lots to eat, I'l bet you, 'Cause It won't coat them, you know, For the'eats, because they'll take it From their stocks, but listen, bo, I'm afraid in ham and pickles, Cheese, and other things galore There will be famine Friday . That will make the prices soar, - THE CARTQON OF THE DAY | WHEN THE ICE MAN .»-•. - Summer scenes like tnls are frequent In Harrisburg streets. The pic ture Is one of a series by L. R. Ney, a young Harrisburg artist r ; Self-Support For the Cripple By Frederic J. Haskin k J EUROPE is attempting to find callings i that are adapted to the possibili- 1 ties of its many varieties of war i cripples and then to fit the cripples to i follow those callings. There are, for i Instance, many occupations with which the loss of a leg would not interfere. Other tasks may be performed as read- i lly by a man with one hand as two. , A night watchman may need no hands i at all. There is much work that the i blind may do, sometimes better than those who see. To fit maimed men in to work that they may do and thus ac complish their Independence —this Is a new task brought forth by the war. Already thousands of men have been discharged from the hospitals armless, legless, or blind, yet with physical health practically normal. Under ordi nary conditions these men must be ex pected to subsist partially upon future charity, the small pension paid them by their Governments being insufficient t for their needs. Instead of supporting their families, they must be supported. For the last ten years educators and physicians in different countries have been co-operating in their efforts to make cripples self-Bupporting, and the results of their studies are now to be concentrated at the war centers for the benefit of the convalescent crip ples. Shops For Cripples Impromptu shops of various kinds are j being fitted up for these cripples, and , men are being fitted with work where , their injuries will be the least possible Inconvenience. Light work is selected in most cases, but not always. There is In a London hospital, for instance, a blacksmith shop which has lately-been fitted up, and in which five crippled men are already practicing with a view to overcoming handicaps due to wounds. Two have lost their right arms, one a left arm, one his right fingers, and the fifth a leg. , , , . . The men who have lost their right arms are learning to swing the ham mer dexterously with the left, while a hook, attached to the artificial right arms which have been furnished, will enable them to hold the iron on thw anvil ready for the blow. When they have become dexterous despite their in juries, the phases of iron working best adapted to their qualifications will be selected and they will be aided to em ployment. In France, arrangements have been made for a number of war cripples to enter Industrial establishments to re ceive special instructions which will qualifv them for future independence. Men who are minus fingers are learn ing to handle tools in a tin shop with rapid dexterity. A man who has lost a leg and three fingers is working in a tin shop. He has learned to use the soldering iron In making tight seams and corners. A special hook adjustable to the end of his "peg leg" enables him to place that firmly upon the round of a ladder so that he may be able to climb up and do work upon house roofs as safely as before his war experience. For Inventor* Men who have an Inventive turn of mind are giving attention to the de signing of special forms of machinery and tools which will offset physical de fects. More men have lost their right hands than their left, so a slight modi fication of the usual patterns for vari ous implements is being made to over come this lack. The fingerless man will soon be able to secure planes, saws and chisels devised especially for him. In a number of Instances crippled men themselves are at work in shops mak ing tools to meet the needs of com rades who have been similarly unfor tunate. . , . Because the majority of crippled men naturally will turn to occupations call ing for little or no physical exertion, special efforts are made for those who prefer the active work to which they had been accustomed. But a large num ber of convalescent soldiers are plan ning to enter into clerical work ana are devoting their convalescent stage to study along those lines. Many of the Red CroBS nurses have had sufficient training in these lines to start them effectively and many volunteer teachers | are contributing their services. Nurses Aid Them A number of hospital wards have the appearance of school rooms. Sketch boards and portable tables in front of the men afford writing space. Black boards in the center of the room pre sent lessons and the teacher goes from one patient to another, guiding stiffen ed fingers and aiding them In every conceivable way to the desired pro gress. * The materials for this work have been secured chiefly through private donations. An American typewriting manufacturer last month shipped a dozen typewriters to Paris to be used for the instruction of convalescent sol ' dlers in this useful occupation. The number of men who are trying to learn typewriting Indicate that the girl typist in Europe may soon be supplanted by 1 the war cripple, but as women are i taking men's places as street car con ductors. railway porters, and other fields not open to crippled men, perhaps the exchange will bring no undue hard ship. Problem of the Blind The thousands of blind men present an even more serious problem than do the cripples to those who are bent upon aiding them to be self-supporting. Last March the French Government set aside a large building as a refuge and school for blind soldiers In which they could be trained In some of the Indus tries open to them despite their condi tion. The first teacher was himself a blind man thoroughly familiar with the Braille system of reading and writing and skilled In a number of handicrafts. Before the shops were in readiness for work he put the most hopeless of the men to work at brush-making. Within a few hours the psychological atmosphere of the building seemed changed. The men lost their despou dency when confronted with the possl bllty of being useful. Now over 300 blind men are working Industriously ea«si day at such occupations as basket making, brush and broom making, lace making, chair caning and light car i jptntry. Id adtUUoih souie tip^wfUsrs, AUGUST 11, 1915. specially designed for the use of the blind, have been secured which will add another possibility. A regular schedule of ten hours* shop work is now in ef feet. The men are increasing in skill and the products of their labor will soon render them self-supporting.' Most of them are spending their leisure in mas tering the Braille system of reading so that this pleasure will be within their reach. An account of this work for the blind soldiers in France was given ft the International Congress for the Blind held in San Francisco last month. As a result, many contribu tions have been sent from America, not a few coming from blind people who have themselves had their darkness lightened by similar instruction. Self-Supportlnu (ripplrit The problem of rendering cripples self-supporting in spite of their physi cal handicaps, is receiving considera tion from educators, physicians and sociologists as well as by Government authorities in all of the more progres sive countries. It is claimed that in some respects the provisions made for crippled children in a Minnesota insti tution is superior to that anywhere else in the world. It was brought about chiefly through the indefatigable verence of Miss Jessie Haskins, a slen der crippled girl, who appeared before tne State Legislature pleading for an appropriation which would establish an institution where crippled children children could receive special training to enable them to become independent. The Minnesota Pediatric Institution is the result. Crippled children are received here and, at the expense of the State, given every possible remedial advantage to lessen their deformitory. At the same time each is being trained In some industry which may be turned Into profit in the future. Under the direc tion of Dr. Arthur J. Gillette, of St. Paul, an orthopedic surgeon who has fiven his services gratuitously, many evlces provided in that institution have been copied and applied to similar cases in different parts of the world. New York, Nebraska and Massachu setts have also made provision for aid ing cripples at public expense, ana other States are preparing to do so. From an economic standpoint this provision Is well Justified, according to those who have studied the subject. An average of forty years of wage pro duction at sl2 a week gives each man a value of $25,000 as an average. If he is left dependent the State and the public loses the benefit of the sum he might have earned. If he Is taught, at a mere fraction of that amount In expense, to earn money so that he is not a dependent upon public or privatu charity, the State and the public share In the benefit, leaving aside the mental benefit the cripple himself derives from his independence. Letter List LIST OF LETTERS REMAINING IN the Post Office, at Harrlsburg, Pa., for the week ending August 7, 1915: Ladies' List Miss Marie Barr, Mrs. E. C. Bretz, Mrs. Harrison Clymer Miss Anna J. Fisher, Miss Anna and Eliza beth Frye, Miss B. M. Giles, Mrs. Ray mond Haines (D. L.), Susie Hogan, Miss Hutchison, Mrs. Frances Jefferies, Mrs. Edna Louis, Miss Madge Markley, Mrs. Esther Messer, Mrs. Mary Pitts, Mrs. S. D. Plank, Miss Helen Richards, Mrs. William Rose, Miss Pauline Saunders. Mrs. N. 8. Schlffer, Miss Pearl Sherlock, Miss Emma Smlts, Miss Alice Snell, Miss Edna M. Stahler. Miss Annie Sum murs, Miss Mary Taylor. Gentlemen's List Carlo Amablin, S. Benhayon, W. H. Brown, Barnard Cortrite, A. C. Craddock, W. J. Craive, John Freeman, H. W. Gummoe. C. M. Harris. R. H. Hess, Prof. Ray G. Hul ing, J. F. Hyde, R. E. Kiester, Fred Laßrun. T. M. Levgan. John S. Mayer, H. J. Miller, George C. O'Bryan, H. A. Roberson, D. Harry Robinson, George Shmltt, Leon Smith, M. Sorkln, William Stanton, Oliver G. Swan, Samuel Ty son, H. B. Walte, J. W. Watts, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Weaver, S. R. Willis, H. F. Wills. Foreign Florlta Anoka, W. Holder, Miss Elizabeth P. Milllken, Franchl Prest. Persons should Inval-lably have their mail matter addressed to their street PIKI runibe.". thereby insuring prompt delivery by the carriers. FRANK C. SITES, Postmaster. IN HARRISBURO FIFTY YEARS | AGO TO-DAY | [From Telegraph, August 11, 1865.] Peaches High Peaches are selling from four to six dollars a bushel In this city and vi cinity. To Examine Pupils Pupils who are applicants to the city schools will be examined to-morrow morning in Miss Bishop's room in the building at River Alley- and Walnut street. On Excursion A number of members of the Friendship Fire Company and their friends left this morning for their an nual excursion to Womelsdorf. MAY AND AUG. It Is not always May For time doth onward jog. And I am glad to say it Is not always Aug. —Louisville Courier-Journal. "FOR THESE SMALL THINGS" [From the Louisville Courier-Journal.] Why should prudish critics rail about white stockings being worn on the beaches? Be glad, nowadays, of any thing that'* WOCA on the beaohaa. Stoning (Efyat Harrlsburg Is mtghty proud of its river front, and Justly so. There are few cities In the whole country that have preserved water fronts for park purposes and prevented railroads from gobbling up the lowlands and shore for sidings and tracks. The park sys tem, the walks, the "front steps," the dam, the whole scheme of river front Improvement, is something which arouses the admiration of visitors and the pride of the residents of the Capi tal City. And yet, any person walking north of Maclay street must wonder wby the city authorities who are so zealous for the betterment of con ditions from aesthetic and sanitary standpoints do not get after the city. Property owners who have vacant lots have been required to cut down the weeds, as they should be called upon to do. and yet for blocks and blocks along the fine river front the weeds are breast high. Some of the vacant land above Woodbine and other up- • town streets has a fringe of weeds abutting rows of corn or vacant lots, but the display on the privately owned land is nothing to what Is shown along thu riverside. There are to be seen burdocks, Jlmson. In short every kind of weed that a man labors to keep out of his property. If they were golden rod or some other kind of flower it would not be so bad, but the white of the wild parsnip, the queen's laco handkerchief and the bright blue of the chicory, none of which has a good reputation among gardeners, Is now blooming and will soon be casting seed upon the winds to blow over lawns, flower beds, grass patches and dear knows wllere. Indeed, outside of tho Federal building lawn there is hardly a finer collection of native weeds and useless plants to be seen anywhere in Harrlsburg. It would afford a splen did object lesson to the children so that they could readily recognize the plants which are nuisances and which should receive the attention of . the man with the grass hook at an early stage of the summer, not In mid-Au gust. This is one place where the en terprising city is remiss, and tho sooner a good set of sharp scythes is introduced among the screen of weeds and reeds the view of the Susquehanna will be improved. • » * "It's a matter of some surprise to me." said a man interested in trolley matters in other cities on a recent visit to this place, "that your traction com pany does not try express cars to re lieve the traffic. I have taken a num bei of trips to the outlying towns reached by your system as a means of killing time while here on business and awaiting my turn and I have found the through cars filled when they leave the terminal and about two thirds full when they have gone fifteen or twenty blocks distance. It strikes me cars run as express for a certain distance would soon educate the people to using local cars and make the through trips not only pleasanter for those who take them but quicker for the traction company. A stop every block or so is not a quick way to get cars out of town." • • * Trolley car men call the front seats on the open cars the "shiver" >row nowadays. In ordinary summer weather, the kind we have not been enjoying this year, the front seats are in demand and the motormen have to umpire sometimes between rival claimants. These cool evenings the front seats go begging and thos? who sit on them shiver. Hence the name. * • ♦ "It would improve the looks of things a good bit, In fact it would add very much to the river front, if some electric lights were to be placed on the coal hoist on the city's island," said a man who gets about different cities and who keeps his eyes open. "That hoist house, or whatever you may call it, is not a bad-looking affair. Now, | suppose the electric company should , put some strings of lights on it or out , line the building with bulbs or put on i some colored lights or have a fountain on it with some electric lights about M. What an addition It would make to our river front: It would be an added charm and it would not cost the elec tric company much. Outside of the rows of lights along the bridges and 011 the park front there is not much Illumination on the river. Let the elec -1 trie company put a couple of score of bulbs on the plant and see how , much it would be appreciated. James C. 'Watson, who was formerly one of counsel for the Public Service Commission. 1s now Republican county chairman of Lycoming and is stirring up things as he can do. He is having frequent meetings of Republican can didates and has the campaign In excel lent shape. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Dr. G. J. VanVetchen, the Scran ton health officer, expects to have the new municipal hospital in that city opened soon. —Harry C. Parker, the anthracite authority for the governmemt, will have charge of the coal operators' publicity. —Harry C. Thayer, of Philadelphia, han returned from a trip to south western states for a syndicate of Phlla delphlans. —William Burnham, of Philadel phia, Is spending the summer In Maine. —Henry J. 'Carr is receiving con gratulations on the reopening of the Scranton public library. —Mayor J. G. Armstrong has iHven the new Pittsburgh Policemen's Union quite a boost. —W. Heyward Meyers, vice-presi dent of the Pennsylvania, will go--to Maine this week. | DO YOU KNOW That Harrlsburg Is one of the centers of coal dredgin# In the country? / SECOND FLY CONTEST of the Civic Club for 1915. August lit to September 25th. Five cents a pint for all files, and many prises In cold. Pullers In In the old days along the Bowery storekeepers Kad what were known as pullers In" who grabbed passers by and en deavored to sell them by main strength. Happily this style of merchan dising is no more—but It left be hind the germ of an Idea. This Idea is that an attractive store front and an Interesting window attract customers. To-day every one reads the newspapers and alert storekeep ers put to the front In their win dows the goods which manufac turers are advertising in the newspapecs. These goods are In the public mind. Their presence In the store window attracts attention and they bring people tnsld* to look and buy. i ir