8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A h'BWS PAPER POR THE HOME Founded lljl ■Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Sguar*. !E. J. STACKPOLK./Vfj l and Ed\tor-in-Ckiei ►F. R. OYSTEK, Business Manager. 'GUS M. STEXNMETZ, Managing Editor. a Member American rl Newspaper Pub llshers' Assocla iijt tion. The Audit 1 jBSKfiflM Bureau of Oircu ! latlon and Penn *k| gt jfjgf X sylvanta Associat ed Dallies. ggggßl M Eastern office. Has- I®* S $Sa Brooks. Fifth Ave -BBS m mle Building. New ern o'flce, Ha<- - Gas Building, Cht cago. 111. the Post Office in Harris- Durjr, Pa., as second clasn matter. By carriers, six cents a week; by mail. $3.00 a year in advance. •worn dally average circulation for the f hree months ending Dee. 31, 1016. ★ 22,412 These figures are net. All returned, •Mold and damaged copies deducted. .THURSDAY EVENING, JAN. 27. . Much talent is often lost for want of a little courage. — GEOßGE EI.IOT. DAUPHIN COUNTY ROADS UNDER an act of the Legislature of 1913 authority is granted to boards of county commissioners, townships, boroughs and incorporated towns of the Commonwealth to incur such indebtedness as may be neces sary to reconstruct sections of State highway. This local aid is provided so that sections of the great highway system of the Commonwealth which cannot be improved owing to the present lack of funds may be put into condition through the co-operation of the State Highway Department and the local authorities. Dauphin county must do its share in this respect, as other counties are now doing, and we believe the County Commissioners are leady and willing to co-operate with ihe State Highway Commissioner in improving a number of the important highways which enter tne city. Several of the counties already have done a great deal in this direc tion and Dauphin county, as the seat, of the State government, must not fall behind in this important work. Gov ernor Brumbaugh and the staff of the State Highway Department have for mulated a cohesive and intelligent program; it is the duty of the local authorities to show proper interest by earnest co-operation. It were folly to imagine that a sys tem covering more than 10,000 miles of highway could all be improved by the State within a few years without enormous and almost impossible ex penditure of public funds. It is mani festly the duty of the counties and townships to assist in this work. Good roads are no longer regarded as the luxurious expression of an extrava gant idea. They are the essential lines of communication between cities and towns and communities, and Gov ernor Brumbaugh is determined that there shall be no lack of energy so far as the administration on Capitol llill is concerned. Dauphin county can afford to pro vide for more good roads and it is to be hoped the commissioners will lose no time In taking up this subject and agreeing upon a reasonable plan of action. With respect to the Narrows be tween Clark's Ferry and Dauphin it would appear to be up to the North ern Central Railway to provide the remedy. If it has encroached upon the established highway, as now ap pears, it is clearly the duty of the railroad corporation to provide a safe and adequate road in that particular district. REAL ESTATE IDEALS • ANOTHER of the get-together meetings which are making Harrisburg known far and wide as a llvewire city was held at the Har risburg Club yesterday when a dis tinguished real estate expert ad dressed the noonday luncheon meet ing of the new Harrisburg Ileal Estate Hoard. This speaker brought a mes sage of good fellowship and service such as has actuated and emphasized all that has gone before along this line at the various public functions of the Chamber of Commerce, the Rotary Club and similar organizations. •He gave expression to his pleasure over the cleanliness of the city, Its unrivaled river front, the evidence of civic pride and public spirit every where manifest and in eloquent phrases dwelt upon the other many good points of Harrisburg. Every member of the organization and the guests, who included the City Planning Commissioners and * mem bers of the City Council, gathered from the address and the incidental good fellowship fresh inspiration for the attainment of that greater Har risburg toward which every loyal citizen Is pressing. This city is peculiarly fortunate in the fine spirit of helpfulness which pervades all classes of the com munity. The civic bodies," the news papers, the religious and other organ izations, the fraternal societies all are doinp their part in fostering the i community feeling; which has already accomplished so much in recent years. Those who visit the cily al ways leave with n fine Impression of the physical attractions of Harrisburs snd what is still better Its increasingly fine type of ond attack of apoplexy. THE CARTOON OF THE DAY THE PEDESTRIAN'S TURN TO LAUGH —From the Dei Molnea RefflMter. i DODGING THE LIGHTNING By Frederic J. Haskin V J THERE Is only one peril that is shared by everyone in practic ally the same degree, Irrespec tive of age, sex or occupation. That is the danger from lightning. You can avoid the risk of being run over by keeping to quiet streets, yon can shun all chance of contagion; If you fear railway accidents you can abstain from travel, but when the lightning begins to flash and strike, everybody must run a certain risk. It is possible to minimize that risk.however.by knowing what to do in a thunderstorm, and that is what gives a wide interest to the results of a searching investigation lof lightning just completed. Every year at least 1,500 people are struck by lightning, to a greater or less, degree. It may seem anamolous to speak of some one being "slightly" struck by lightning, but as a matter of fact the popular idea that lightning never has to strike twice in the same place is largely erroneous. Only about one-third of the 1,500, or 500 people, a year are killed outright by the thunderbolt. The remaining, 1,000 however, are subjected to grave injuries that often prove permanent. Most of them could have saved them selves by taking proper precautions. There is no place in the path of a thunderstorm that is not liable to be struck by thunderbolts. It is possible, however, for people to be absolutely secure from lightning- stroke even though the bolts fall about them, if the shelter which surrounds them is of such a nature that they will be protected even should the shelter it self be struck. Any spot that is com paratively rflirrounded by a network of metal is absolutely safe, and hence a steel-frame building obviates the need for anxiety during a thunderstorm. An underground chamber of any sort is also absolutely secure, but wlthjlhe exception of places such as these, tffere is always some slight risk. The degree of safety is found in houses properly protected by lightning rods. If the protective system is properly installed, a high degree of safety can be attained, though for the person troubled by an instinctive fear of lightning, there is enough risk left to make things interesting. Any sort of a house, protected or unprotected, is better than a shelter under a tree or in a barn, or a position out In the open. Even when lightning hits a house, there is at least one chance in two that it will not hurt anybody Inside. Even If the occupants are hit, they are more likely to be injured than killed. On the other hand, if you j OUR DAILY LAUGH j PAYS TO AD VERTISE. V Then you don't ATr believe in busi i Jness men getting A I didn't eay ■[ But I do ly'believe that one Y 1 \ f inch of adv^rtis \ \ lng -will bring in • I 1 \ more actual busl r'nP* ness than four banauets. LOME FIGURE. ' l"T~l j By Gol! I must be a fine figger at _ a man! Every girl X passes smiles at / me like the dick- *7^^ TEMPERANCE A lengthy discussion relative to the temperance question would , be un profitable here. As a general rule, however, it may be said that for a healthy person whisky and other strong drinks are bad. There Is no doubt but that less alcohol is being consumed every year; people are gradually getting away from liquor. This Is so because through popular education people are beginning to [realize the harmful effects of strong drink; employers .take it for granted that their workers are temperate, and finally, the number of States in which liquor is being legislated iigalnst is constantly increasing. There is no real strength In alcohol despite the belief of some to the contrary. Liquor may brace tip a person temporarily but it is like whipping a tired horse, and there is bound to be a reaction. —From Good Health shelter under a tree and lightning gets that tree, your chances are slim. They are still slimmer if you happen to be walking about in the open, and play a leading part in conducting the Hash from the cloud to the ground. it is possible to minimize further the risk you run inside a house, by keep ing away from dangerous places. A draft is bad, as almost everyone has heard. JS'ear the telephone is a poor place to be caught during a thunder-' slorm, and unless there is something particularly urgent to communicate, it had better wait ,until the Hashes are over. Perhaps the most dangerous place in the house is one whose ex istence you hardly suspect. It lies be tween some mass of metal on the out side of the building and some mass on the inside; for instance, the line between a waterspout and a radiator. IThts is dangerous because the light ning will probably strike the water spout if it strikes the house, and run-* ning down the metal, it often leaps to some other nearby path, such as that furnished by the radiator. If you are In between the two, you may regret your intrusion. Chimneys are also danger spots dur ing a thunderstorm, and it is best to keep away from any metal that, com municates with the exterior of the building, such as a ventilator pipe or a screen door. Lightning is a freak ish and eccentric phenomenon, and its path through a building may include almost anything, but these are the channels it is most likely to follow. In any event, the chance of being injured while sheltered in a house is so small that it is hardly worth worrying about. Those who arc constitutionally timid in the matter can reduce the slight hazard by bearing in mind the facts mentioned above, but most of the lightning-risk coipes out-of-doors. The statement that a house is a safe place in a thunderstorm must not be taken as applying also to barns. Lightning seems to have a particular fondness for trying its hand at long range shots on barns. Some experts claim that this is due to the fact that warm dry air in a barn favors the pas sage of electricity. At any rate, a barn is a very poor shelter. Even worse is a tree that stands out. by it self, In a meadow or on a bald hill side. If the lightning hits anything in that neighborhood, it will probably pick the tree. For the same reason, it is poor policy to wander around In an open field, or even a treeless plain when lightning is abroad; for in that case, you yourself have the doubtful (Continued on Page 11.) [THESTATE FROM DOT TO DOT Irish maids down along the main line of the Pennsylvania railroad are knitting socks for soldiers over in old Ireland and the Bryn Mawr branch of Queen Mary's Guild is sending the fin ished products over to Erin's men who are at the front. Sweet, slim sewers sending socks to soldiers! One of the bundles reached a French instead of an Irish regiment and the appre ciative reply mentioned that the re cipient has a brpther in America who is very prominent—he keeps a saloon in Jersey City. t The Mittoon garage—Mittoon, by the way, is>the name of the owner and not a species—in Lansdale, had a crepe hanging outside the door the other day, indicating death. Worried neighbors investigated and discover ed that "business was dead." so the owner's wife did the conventional thing. The man with the cold In his head, who recites James Thompson's famous poem as follows (you can get the ef fect from the original by closing both nostrils with thumb and first finger) —"Cub, gettle Sprig! Ethereal bllddess, cub!"—will be glad to hear that a little robin redbreast has made its appearance in Erie and that the people of that city have been tricked into the belief that the seasons are in terchanging. An Ell wood City trolley car has no terrors for the deer out Newcastle way. Said trolley car was forced to slow down to stop while speeding along the country because a deer that had been planted in that section by the Wild Life League developed bovine tendencies and stood obstinately on the track till the last minute, when it struck off at a biplane clip across country. Greater Altoona, through the agency of the Knights of Pythias, is to have an adopted baby. The committee will receive exhibits, photographs, descrip tions and pedigrees of children till I the right one be found. The temple jgoat will be turned out to grass, and the real mascot tjike Its place. Won- Jder how the knights will hold the baby ] when it is passed around for inspec tion. Burning Olljat Millersburg people are In high (flee, over the prospects of a good road be tween Harrlsburg and that place. The developments at the hearing before , Corn "ilssioner Cunningham «u ay 'o. whlch It was indicateil that the State and the railroad com- Fv?r? a^fi° n the ver K e of an agreement that will remedy the dangerous and almost impossible conditions existing between Speeceville and the upper end town, were the subject of discussion on trains and wherever upper end peo ple got together last night. Discussing this matter Harry Falrchild, recently appointed to the county prison board, and who is a booster for everything of Interest to the upper end? recently said. "A good .road through to Mil lersburg from Harrlsburg would be helpful to both towns. Many of our people who own automobiles "and who are in business will not run the risk of a trip through the dangerous nar rows and practically everybody stays at home during wet weather. 1 believe that the business interests of the two towns would be greatly benefited by a , road and the railroad company would not be the loser for more of our peo ple would deal In Harrlsburg if the relations were closer and the freight shipments would be increased thereby. Millersburg is also in need of a bridge, and a good road to the lower end of the county would be the first step In that direction. Unquestionably we in Millersburg are so situated that we could become a great center of freight and travel if we had good roads to Harrisburg and a bridge over the Sus quehanna, and indirectly Xlarrisburg would be the gainer." • • • Elizabethville, which is planning to celebrate its anniversary next sum mer. is one of the livest communities of its size In the whole of Central Pennsylvania. It has a camp meeting annually which draws thousands of people, an athletic association that puts many winning teams into the Held and a town spirit that makes it the cleanest and best kept borough In that section of the county. Through all of the recent depression it went calmly on its way prosperous and con tented. So, when it sets out to have a celebration it is but natural that the whole upper end sits up, takes notice and prepares to attend. • • « Much of interest to Harrisburgers was brought out yesterday in an address to the State Board of Agriculture by Qeorge G. Hutchinson, of Warrior's Mark, who told about the organization of the Board in this city thirty-nine years ago. The Board, as everyone knows was the outcome of the State Agricultural Society, which had head quarters here for many years. This organization was started in Philadel phia about seventy-five years ago and held fairs annually, the first being in Philadelphia, but in the late fifties some of the prominent men of Cen tral Pennsylvania got control and Harrisburg was the place where fairs were held. They used to be given up where Cottage Ridge is now located and were great events. However, inter est waned largely due to the growth of other fairs and the Board was or ganized as a means of developing agri culture In ways other than exhibitions. This Board has had Harrisburg as its headquarters and its meetings have been very well attended. * • » One of the men in attendance at thr meeting this week was Cyrus T. Fox, of Reading, who was one of the men at the meeting to organize the Board on January 26, 187 7. At this meeting there were sixteen persons present, including Governor John F. Hartranft and James P. Wickersham, superintendent of Public Instruction. Thomas J. Edge was elected secretary. He was the first secretary of the State's Department of Agriculture. A»r. Fox was also nominated for secre tary of the Board. Yesterday he was greeted as one of the veterans of the Board. He was one of the delegates from the State Horticultural society of which he has long been- an honored member. Col. h. A. Watres, former lieutenant governor, who was here yesterday is about to take a trip to the West In dies. He will spend a few weeks among the islands. I , 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE | —Representative John W. Vlcker man, of Allegheny county, active in local option affairs, is a newspaper publisher. —John Ferguson has been re-elected president of the Philadelphia Drug Exchange. —John N. Jacobs, the retiring con troller, of Montgomery county, says he is proud of its report. It shows a balance of $190,000. —General C. B. Dougherty is urging military training in Wilkes-Barre schools. —Henry C. Mercer, who designed the tile pavement in the Capitol, is the new president of the Bucks Coun ty historical society. | DO YOU KNOW 1 That tlic llrst railroad bridge at Rockville was long considered a wonder in its day? HISTORIC HARRIS BURG .William Penn's sons used to stop at Harris' ferry on their tours of the province. FRENCH STILL FRIENDS Whitney Warren, who went to France "as one who would go to his friends in trouble," declares that the French "are our friends, you know, in spite of what some people say." It is a welcome reassurance, for we have been somewhat oversupplied (as Mr. Warren seems to realize) with as surances that French sentiment to wards us had progressed through the stages of affection, expectation, and disappointment, to disaffection and despise. Mr. Warren won't have It so. He says: "The fact that the United States did not protest when Belgium w«f violated is a question they consider a Government 'one and not in any way reflecting upon our friendliness, The people are deeply thankful foi the interest that we have manifested in their sick and wounded. They know the people of this country art with them at heart in their fight for the right."—Life. When Mother Bakes She knows that right results cannot come unless she uses the right materials. The wrong baking powder, poor flour, bad shortening, or a poor stove, will spoil everything. The good cook proves her ma terials by experience. But she must know what to try and for that reason she likes to keep posted. She finds It pays her to read the advertising In a good news paper like the Telegraph. It tells her from time to time of the new food products and the stores that sell them. In fact t|ie advertising col umns are an educational course In .domestic science.