8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Pounded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THE TKI.KCJRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Square. E. J. STACKPOLE. Frest and Editorin-CkUf F. R. OYSTER, Businest Manager. GUS M. S"N2INMETZ, Managing Editor. * Member American Newspaper Pub • Ushers' Assocla sylvanla Associate Eastern «fflce, Has- Brooks, Fifth Ave nue Building. New Qcs Building. CM ' - cago. 111. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Pa., as second class matter. Bv carriers, six cents a week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. Snpra dally evfrmr circulation for the three months ending February 20, 1916, if 22,785 it Theae flgnrea nre net. AH returned, unsold and damaged copies deducted. MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 20 Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement; nothing can be done with out hope. — KELLER. GET THE MEN "HIGHER VP" THE community rejoices that the police have rounded up another of the wretched parasites who ; eke out a miserable existence selling habit-forming drugs in violation of j Ihe United States law. Ordinarily the] "third degree" method of obtaining information is to be frowned upon, but in this instance no stone should -be left unturned to bring to light the criminals "higher up" from whom this agent received the "dope" he sold. By hook or crook he should be com pelled to reveal the source of his supply. The rascals who are smuggling these drugs into the coun try must be caught and imprisoned. Making a scapegoat of one retail agent is not going to break up the practice. I)l{. M AKSHAU/S DEATH THE death of the Rev. Dr. William H. Marshall removed from Harrisburg one of Its best known and most useful citizens. Dr. Marshall's activities covered a wide jeld. He was well known as an edu cator, prominent as a minister, power ful as a writer and beloved as a man. Very few men have contributed more lo the cause of good citizenship in (his city than Dr. Marshall. His in llucnce was always for the best. He left his impress upon the rising gen eration of his race and his recognized Place in society will be a constant en couragement to those who remain to tarry on his work. He had his strug gles and his discouragements, but he kept them to himself. His face was always toward the bright vision of a hopeful future. He was a believer in his race and in their opportunities in America, and he illustrated in his own career the point be always tried to make—that there is room at the top for all who use their talents for good find strive courageously and persis tently, and that the world bows to virile leadership in any man, no mat ter who or what he be. OCR FUTURE CITIZENS BABY WEEK has passed! Xot so i Its memory, nor its benefits, for j it has left a mark that will not bo effaced. The stamp of enlighten- j ment and better care which it has placed upon the minds of a host of mothers in this city and environs will produce its effect in years to come on i the physical welfare of those tots for ! whom all the preparations incident to | the welfare exhibit were made. It has been said that "a babe in a • house is a well-spring of pleasure." If the ratio of pleasure to numbers in creases directly and if Tupper's sage j observance is correct, which we doubt i not, then indeed must the many j babies whose presence at the exhibit i caused muph bustling about and much I frankly expressed admiration have j accomplished a deep drainage of the well-spring of this city's pleasure. For the babies came, were seen, and conquered in such a way as to leave no doubt in the minds of any that Harrisburg's babies are supreme. It was a splendid exhibit and most capably managed. With but little previous experience to guide them, the executive committee and those who so kindly and unselfishly co operated worked steadily and ardu ously and accomplished results con siderably beyond their somewhat too modest expectations. Getting off to a bad start by reason of the Inclement weather, the attendance increased day by day until the quadrupled force of examining physicians and nurses was not sufficient to adequately handle the many babies who were brought In to Bowman's store for In spection. and the floor space was taxed to its utmost capacity to handle the crowds. Never was such an cn-j thuslastlc tribute paid to King Baby. .May his Royal Highness return to us next year In even better condition and 'in still greater numbers that we may bow the head in humble submission . to his greater glory. The executive committee expresses itself as extremely grateful to the Visiting Xurses' Association, the City Health Department, the Associated Aid Societies. the State Health Department, the Pure Milk Society, and all the merchants and organiza tions whose splendid support and co operation made possible the best baby - MONDAY EVENING, RAMUSBURG tdSßftl TELEGRAPH MARCH 20, 1916. week that has been seen In this sec tion of the country. The future civic wealth of this community is based on the present care and thought that in too great degree cannot be lavished upon our future citizens, the babies. PENNSYLVANIA GERMAN'S THE TELEGRAPH takes this means of thanking Collier's Weekly for the«wide publicity given in its current issue to a recent address of Dr. Henry H. Apple, presi dent of Franklin and Marshall Col lege, at Lancaster, on the attitude of Pennsylvania Germans toward the present European struggle, in which he said: But under all these conflicting emotions they have the firm convic tion that the best future of the world is somehow bound up with the aims and purposes of the allies. In so far as this country needs their service to promulgate the ideals which we have exalted and the pur poses which we believe are needed to make a better world, they stand ready to answer a summons to ser vice and to sacrifice property or life on the altar of the American Repub lic. Collier's commends this example to the "fifty editors and publishers of German newspapers In the United States" who met in Chicago on the same day behind closed doors to dis cuss the coming presidential campaign, but It is doubtful If those pig-headed representatives of imperialism will be affected thereby. They are not of the same stamp as our own Pennsylvania Germans, who have inherited all the love of liberty and devotion to country that took their ancestors to the front when Washington raised the standard of freedom and again when Lincoln called for troops in '6l. These truck lers to an Imperial master —the "hyphens" of to-day—are not to be mentioned with that fine, upstanding type of manhood we have come to know as the Pennsylvania German. The Telegraph is happy to have the Pennsylvania German set right in localities where he may not be under stood, but it regrets that it should be necessary to explain that there is no hyphen where he is concerned. A NEW COMPLICATION ONE of the most surprising de velopments of the past week — and one fraught with all manner of possibilities for the United States — was the seizure by Brazil of all the German and Austrian shipping in terned in the ports of that country since the beginning of the European war. There are in Brazil 330,000 Ger : mans, who exert such a powerful in ! fluence in the affairs of government there that they will not permit Por -1 tuguese. the recognized language, to be taught in the districts they have colo nized. It has been an open secret that Germany sent these people to South America with the hope some day, when a favorable opportunity pre sented itself, of coming over with a fleet and proclaiming Brazil a German crown colony, in open defiance of the j Monroe Doctrine. 1 On the surface it appears as though | Brazil has taken the bull by the horns . and intends tb use the present situation of Germany as a means of forever 1 freeing herself from the threat of Ger ; man domination. Brazil and Portugal 1 have strong racial sympathies, and I Brazil, in seizing the German vessels, is following closely on the heels of Portugal, which finds itself at war with Germany as a result of having "requisitioned" all German shipping on which it could lay its hands. There would appear to be some close relation between these two so similar acts. The situation is apt to complicate our own war problems should Ger many take the same view with Brazil l as with Portugal. No more momen tous event has transpired, so far as the | United States is concerned, since the j sinking of the Lusitania. Thirty-three miles & day across ths Mexican desert. Who said American soldiers are not made of the same stuff as their forefathers? GIGANTIC ENTERPRISE WE in Harrisburg scarcely realize the immensity of the Schwab interests with which Steelton recently has become so closely re lated. For Instance, through its acquisition of Pennsylvania Steel, Bethlehem Steel is now the largest and most Important shipbuilding com pany in the United States. There are being built in American yards 230 steel merchant vessels, aggregating 901,371 tons. Of that amount 341,- 039 tons, or approximately 38 per cent., are under construction in four of Bethlehem's shipbuilding plants. In addition, the Fore River Ship building Company, a Bethlehem con cern, is constructing for the govern ment vessels with tonnage of 31,892. That was a ringing note Governor Brumbaugh sounded for local option in Pittsburgh yesterday. Now, if ever, is the time for friends of local option to get busy. PERSHING AND FUNSTON AT least in one respect the troops that are hurrying into Mexico after Francisco Villa are "pre pared." They are led by men who know thoroughly the "job" to which they have been set. Brigadier Gen eral Pershing, in actual command of the expedition, has an excellent reputation as a rough country cam paigner. As a fighting commander he won the praise of the Government and the wholesome respect of the wild Moro tribes of the Philippine archipelago. Pershing is a past mas ter of the art of warfare in such con ditions as he is now facing. And to back him up he has Funston. the man who captured Aguinaldo. and thereby put the finishing touches to the campaign that crushed the Filipino rebellion. He knows as much about fighting savages as does Persh ing, If not more, and he may be relied upon to lend sympathetic ear to any requests that the commander of the expedition may make. It will be through no fault of these two brave and trained soldiers If Villa Is not caught. They are the two greatest assets of the United States in Mexico. TELEGRAPH'S PERISCOPE ] —We pause to announce that Spring is due to-day—otherwise you might not have suspected it. —Bryan is the man who put "pared" into Democratic prepared ness. —lt looks as though the Germans after all will hava to spell it Ver done. —How glad the students must be that they didn't start out to call him the "Princeton Tiger." Our most popular Indoor sport in Harrisburg at present is having the j measles. 1 EDITORIAL COMMENT 1 SERVICE RENDERED BV JOHN I>. [Boston Advertiser.] As no man can afford to buy gaso line and pay alimony at the same time, it looks as if the divorce evil would soon disappear from high society. SOMEONE MISQUOTED ? [Pittsburgh Dispatch.] German submarines are credited with sowing the mines which sank the ships off Dover, which raises the ques tion, what has become of the clean-up of the submarines announced some time ago? | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR] NOT HARVEY O. DODGE To the Editor of the Telegraph: Due to my former connection with ' the Harrisburg Telegraph, an er- j roneous impression prevails In this! city, particularly among certain in-1 terests, to the effect that the Mr. Dodge connected with the Anti-Liquor I License Crusade and mentioned in 1 newspapet articles during the cam- j paign, referred to me. It is well- j known that I have not been connected j with any newspaper or interested In such work since my connection with 1 the Telegraph and have had no in-! .«rest whatever in any Anti-Liquor campaign. I will thank you to correct 1 this impression through your columns I and greatly oblige. Very truly yours, HARVEY O. DODGE. I AN APPRECIATION Orlando. Florida. March 16, 1916. To the Editor of the Telegraph: T have been wanting for some time! to express to you personally my high appreciation of the standards at which you have been aiming and attaining |in the Telegraph. You may not fully rcal'ze it, but the daily text or uplift ing verse at the head of the editorial ' column has more Influence and far-1 reaching result for good than many : i sermons to tlie limited few. The absence of liquor advertising and the I clean tone of the paper is an in ' spiraiion. W. THE DAY OF REST ! [From the Phila. Public Ledger] *] The industrial board of the State Department of Labor and Industry has I • ruled that women in hotel employ ment must be given a rest day of ! twenty-four hours during the week, j though in the case of short-lime sum ■ mer hotels this period is divisible into two breathing spaces of twelve hours | each. The rule* that definite sched -1 ules must be made out and posted will I assist in the enforcement of this wise regulation. A reputable and well-con ' ducted hotel finds it a business ad vantage as well as a humane proee -1 dure to insist on rest for its employes ,as stringently as on work. The hotels that have dealt fairly by the helpers on the payroll will not complain of the ruling. They have found by ex | perience that they get better service | from employes who are contented. A ■ business enterprise cannot be mod i ern and fail to make the same dis- I covery. The stores and factories are aware that it pays to make the em ployes comfortable and to treat them with consideration. Ordinarily it is not work that dehumanizes the work er. but the conditions under which the 1 labor is performed. TWO SINNERS By Ella Wheeler Wilcox Copyright, 1916, Star Company There was a man, it was said one time. Who went astray in his youthful prime. I Can the brain keep cool and the heart keep quiet When the blood is a river that's run ning riot'.' ' And boys will bo boys, the old folks says, , And the man is the better who's had his day. The sinner reformed; and the preacher told Of the prodigal son who came back to the fold. And the Christian people threw open the door. With a warmer welcome than ever be fore; Wealth and honor were at his com mand. j And a spotless woman gave him her hand. The world strewed the ■ pathway with blossoms abloom, Crying "God bless ladye, and God bless groom." There was a maiden who went astray In the golden dawn of her life's voting day. She had more passion and heart than head. And she followed blindly where fond Love led; And Love, unchecked, is a dangerous guide To wander at will by a fair girl's side. The woman repented and turned from sin, I But no door opened to let her In. ! The preacher prayed that she might be forgiven, j But told her to look for mercy—ln Heaven. ! For this is the law of the earth, we know. That the woman is stoned, while the man may go. i A brave man wedded her, after all. But the world said, frowning, "We shall not call." OUR DAILY LAUGH YES—YES. tjkSnZQ They say Op portunity knocks C Yes it's th* I ofa only knocker , "• that stops there! HARD LUCK. jf* That chap 8 I pitched winning Jj[_ • ball at Yale. What's he do , | President of a bank. His arm went back on j fcUtlc*. By the Ex-Commltt«emaa Headquarters of the campaign for the election of national delegates pledged to Governor Brumbaugh for President will be opened to-morrow morning in the Franklin building, in this city. They will be in charge of men said to be from Philadelphia and a vigorous campaign will be waged in every district, according to what is stated here. Publicity will also be used, including a special press service which Is being organized. The head quarters will also be used for confer ences, it is stated. Thousands of copies of Governor Brumbaugh's letter will be issued from the headquarters. These copies are now being printed. The Governor's campaign here will be conducted under the auspices of a citizen's committee, the size of which has not yet been determined. A head quarters will be opened in Pittsburgh after the State headquarters in Har risburg gets under way this week. An other headquarters will be opened in Philadelphia and the fight there will probably be carried on by a citizens' committee. The petition will be made up at once and sent out from the headquarters. The blanks are now at the Capitol. The Governor and Senator Penrose met in Pittsburgh Saturday at the lay ing of the cornerstone of the new city county building and shook hands, were, photographed together, laughed and chatted. The Senator started back to Washington yesterday afternoon and the Governor remained until to-day because of numerous speaking engage ments. He is expected here late to night and to-morrow will be here to receive a number of men from various parts of the State who are coming to tender him support. State officials here to-day denied that any printing in behalf of the Governor's campaign was being done at public expense or that orders had been issued to any attaches of the State departments to "line up." It was declared that whatever aid was being given was entirely voluntary. Many rumors have been in circulation. While the friends of the Governor, marshaled by the Attorney General, have been getting their headquarters prepared and campaign outlined, the senior Senator has not been idle. He and his friends are working for the election of an uninstructed delegation from the Stale, flatly against what the Governor and his friends desire, and unless there is an agreement the con test will be under way very soon. The Pittsburgh Gazette-Times to-day says that the Senator went hack to Wash ington after letting it be known that lie favors an uninstructed delegation and the nominations of Charles A. Snyder for Auditor General and H. M. Kep hart for State Treasurer. The Pitts burgh Dispatch says the Senator ex pressed satisfaction with what he had found in the western part of the Slate. Tlie Dispatch also says: "After Sen ator Penrose left yesterday it was learned that it is proposed, when the State-wide fight is properly opened up, the Governor and his administration are to be attacked. The Governor's promise of an administration free from politics, made during his campaign, will be challenged throughout the Slate. It will be alleged that his pledge to insist upon efficiency has been for gotten. Various departments of the State government will be assailed — and so will individuals in them. The local Penrose leaders will start in im mediately upon the formulation of their slate of national delegates. They expect to have it completed by next Saturday. A tentative agreement had been made on a full slate, which was submitted to the Senator while he was here. It is understood to have con tained the name of Public Service Commissioner W. A. Magee for dele gate from the Thirty-first Congres sional district. Penrose is said to have suggested that Mr. Magee should be a delegate. But if the former Mayor elects to run as a delegate in the in terest of Governor Brumbaugh for the presidency, ,he will likely be op posed by the Penrose-City adminis tration forces. That Mr. Magee will be a candidate is generally accepted as certain, though he has never indicated his disposition in the matter. A. P. Moore and Max G. Leslie are under stood to have been the tentative 'or ganization' selections in the event that. Mr. Magee should elect to announce as a Brumbaugh candidate. If Magee goes into the fight and is opposed by the city administration, one of the most interesting contests in the entire Stale will follow." The Philadelphia Ledger to-day says: "The Citizens' Republican League, of which John C. Winston and George D. Porter are officials, yester day attacked the city's $86„800,000 loan bill on the ground that it con tained items inserted for the purpose of increasing the value of private land holdings in South Philadelphia. The league issued a statement in which it was charged that the Vares were re sponsible for many of the 'snakes' in the bill." —The Philadelphia Inquirer to-day hands out this jab at Mayor Smith, indicating that things are not lovely in Philadelphia: "Oh, come along home. Mr. Mayor. Golf will keep until an other day. <~'ome home and tell your Director of Rapid Transit to quit his fooling and accept the Taylor -plans precisely as the people of Philadel phia have already accepted them at the polls. Let's get to work." —Republican county chairmen of Wayne, Susquehanna and Huntingdon counties have pledged their support to Governor Brumbaugh in his cam paign for a united party in Pennsyl vania. Stimultaneous with these in dorsements, General Charles M. Clement, of Sunbury, head of the Pennsylvania National Guard, came out for Governor Brumbaugh and pre dicted his success at the May pri maries. The general has been attend ing conferences here lately. —ln Pittsburgh last night Governor Brumbaugh declined to discuss the Stale situation. He said he did not s<;e there was anything for him to say at this time. The Brumbaugh forces are waiting for a declaration from Mr. Penrose before they make their next move. Last night Senator William J. Burke of Pittsburgh declared for the presidential candidacy of Gover nor Brumbaugh. Mr. Burke said this indorsement did not mean that he would support Speaker Charles A. Ambler, of Montgomery county for auditor general, even though the Governor decided to back him. As a representative of the organized train men the Senator is opposed to Mr. Ambler because of his vote on the "full crew" bill. —The Democratic leaders of the Butler-Westmoreland congressional district are trying to prevent a race for national delegates. John Wilson of Butler and Major James M. Laird of Greensburg are in the field. Effort is being made to lift them out of the running and substitute Judges Lucien W. Doty of Westmoreland and Aaron E. Reiber of Butler. Judge Reiber has given notice that he will not make a fight for the place. —ln a dispatch from Pittsburgh the Philadelphia Inquirer says: "There is n<> doubt, too, that the Penrose forces Will opjioso to a finish the candidacy of Speaker Charles A. Ambler, of Montgomery county, for Auditor Gen eral. It would appear that State Senator Charles A. Snyder, of Schuyl- THE CARTOON OF THE DAY IF WE HAD SENT BRYAN INSTEAD OF FUNSTON. UAM ttotMfß re*MCi&co tfACi'l I 111 AMD / J «\MKv«AVOJ -—From the Columbus Dispatch. I AMERICANS IN THE TRENCHES By Frederic J. Haskin FEW people realize how many na- - tive and naturalized American citizens are fighting in the Euro pean armies. Reliable estimates place their number at about 10,000. These 10,000 men are giving rise to all sorts of legal and diplomatic complications. The question of their status in the United States, if they get through the war alive and return home, is bother ing a good many of them. The State Department is getting a stream of in quiries, wanting to know If an Ameri can who enlists In a foreign army loses his citizenship, or if such an enlistment is a breach of his duty as a citizen. To which the department replies that it all depends. One law sets forth that any Ameri can 1 citizen who takes an oath of allegi ance to a foreign state has expatriated himself. Some of the European armies require an oath of allegiance from the recruit, while others do not. Any Ameri can who has taken such an oath is 110 longer an American citizen. Tiie ques tion of his restoration to citizenship should he desire it, will probably have to be settled in American courts. As to the duties of American citizen ship. the State Department says in its dignified way that It does not under take to prescribe the duty of an indi vidual with regard to his citizenship, but it is nevertheless of the opinion that American neutrality requires American citizens to keep out of the actual fighting. That is just the way a number of the fighting Americans in Europe feel about it. They belong to the class of natural ized citizens who were traveling in their native countries when the war broke out. The home Government promptly snapped them up, presented them with nice new uniforms, rifles and trenching tools, and shipped them off to the front. Most of the com plaints along this line are coming from Italy. Italian law holds that naturaliza tion of an Italian subject in a foreign country without consent of the Italian I Government does not make him less liable to military service. The I'nited States has no treaty witli Italy defining i the status of former Italian subjects who have become' American citizens. Thus a former Italian subject who visits Italy is liable to arrest and enforced military service if he is between 18 and 32 years old. A good many of the Americans on the Austro-Italian front belong to this class. The French Government Is not very willing to give up its claim on men of military age. To get a release from I liability to serve, a special permit has i to be secured from the Minister of Jus tive by the ex-Frenchman who has na turalized himself in another land. Be ! sides the trouble involved, such a per mit costs about $125. Very few Frenchmen who became Americans took the trouble to arrange the formalities involved in removing their names from the list of men avail able for active service. Hence a good many of them are now up to their knees | in mud, shooting at Germans along tlie j line that runs from Switzerland to the I sea. ! Where such service on their part is ; unwillingly rendered, the State Depart ment is doing its best to get them out, s but each individual case means an im i mense amount of correspondence and j labor. There is no means by which I Washington can compel the release of kill county; will receive the support of the Fenros'e lieutenants for this honor. The Penrose leaders insist that the booming of Brumbaugh for the Presi dency is a part of a scheme of the William Flinn-Roosevelt men to strengthen themselves through the aid of the patronage of the State admin istration." —An interesting announcement just made is that T. Larry Eyre, former superintendent of public grounds and buildings, will run for Senator in Chester county. He will be lined up with the Governor on everything. —Senator James P. McNichol will be a candidate for re-election in Philadelphia. It would seem that he is not going out of politics after all. —Richard R. Quay will be a candi date for Republican delegate from his borne district on a Roosevelt plat form. —A Washington dispatch to the Philadelphia Record says: "Most im portant of recent political develop ments is an innovation of Democratic making. It will be appreciated by spectators at National Conventions who have become accustomed to look ing down upon row after row of heavy-jeweled, slech and prospective Federal officeholders. There will be none in the Democratic convention which, barring accident, will renomi nate Woodrow Wilson at St. Louis for the Presidency. This departure from the established practice of a President seeking a renomination Is in accordance with the wishes of Mr. Wilson himself." HUGHES SHOULD SPEAK [From the New Republic] The country has a right to demand that the views of the candidates on all great questions bo made perfectly clear. 1 cannot wuit till after the nomination to find out what the nom inee thinks about the issues of the day. For in this election Americans dare not choose in the dark. Justice Hughes should declare him self in the next few weeks. He should either stop the agitation for him. or announce his candidacy and resign from the bench. He owes that to the nation. It is a demand that comes not alone from his political enemies trying to "smoke him out," hut from his admirers and friends who feel that the embiguity of his position to-day is Injuring the presidency, the court und Mr. Hughes himself. "Tonimy," said Mrs. Smith to a small boy who had come to her home on an errand, "won't you have a piece of my anjcol cake?" "No, thank you," he replied, "I'm not ! ready to be an augel yet." a naturalized citizen from his home land when there is no naturalization treaty between the two nations. The British army lias been getting Its share of Americans, chielly in the Cana dian contingent. Numerous youths from the border States have enlisted, many of them under the age of legal majority. The American Government has succeeded in arranging for condi tions of release for such recruits. Al though they enlisted voluntarily, some of them found that war is a bigger con tract than they had bargained for, and the parents of others came forward with various and vehement objections. The British Government has agreed that when convincing' proof is brought forward to show that an American citi zen was a minor at the time of his en listment in the British army, he will be discharged without pay wherever he may happen to be when his discharge goes into effect. In consequence, he may find himself stranded without money to live on or to pay his passage home. Persons dis charged from the British service are not allowed to wear the British uniform thereafter, so the erstwhile soldier may not even have a coat to his back. The State Department has no funds appro priated for the care of eases such as these, and therefore the department • requires that a deposit big enough to take care of the discharged recruit and pay his passage home shall be made ; by whoever is interested in getting him out of the service, before the ease is brought to the attention of the British I Government Numerous naturalized Americans are fighting in the German armies. A num ber of German businesses in this coun try are being managed by the women of the family, while the husband and father chases Russians or argues with the Knglish on the western front. In Cincinnati, for instance, there is a Ger man bakery being run by the lady of the house. Iler husband and her three sons are fighting for the red, white and black. Incidentally it may be noted that she is making a success of the baking business. There is a treaty between Germany and the United States providing that German subjects who have become citizens of this country shall be recog nized as such in Germany if they have lived in the United States for five years. But if such a citizen emigrated after he was enrolled as a recruit In the standing army, or while be was on leaV" of absence during the regular service period which ever German must render, or If he was in the reserve, and left after his "line" was warned or called on, he is liable to trial and pun ishment tin his return, even if he has his American naturalization papers. Many Germans who returned to the fatherland to light have done so on account of strong pressure exercised by the relatives left behind them. One naturalized German of Pennsylvania who had married an American girl, was induced by letters from his mother in Germany to cross the Atlantic and enier the army. After three months service he was badly wounded, and his former employer brought him back to Pennsylvania. His right arm had to be amputated, and he is now employed as a watchman in the plant where he was formerly a skilled laborer. The ques tion of his citizenship is still being de bated. THE STATF, FROM W TO IW The fact that it pays to advertise is being appreciated more and more in every line of endeavor, none more so than from a community standpoint. City planning is becoming one of the biggest assets of a metropolis or a hamlet and Philadelphia, the once sleepy village, is now become awake under the strenuous administration of Mayoi Smith and is humping herself for all she is worth. A city publicity board has been advocated to aid boosting of the city, and the need of advertising, education, and censorship is being given careful and thoughtful consideration. It was with some surprise that wo beheld a headline in Harrisburg's morning paper, "Brumbaugh Again For Local Option." Why "again?" The statement appeared in a Phila delphia paper yesterday morning that the Susquehanna is frozen nine inches thick for a hundred miles from Mc- Fall's Ferry to Clark's Ferry, but un less our eyes deceive us the Susque hanna is flowing along at the same old rate of speed right in front of Har risburg's steps. A tramp known as "Rocky" was shot yesterday morning while ascend ing a stairway in the home of Walter Hauler, of Bedford. He has visited that section for over fifteen years and presumably received his name from the nature of the path which he traveled. Pittsburgh celebrated the centennial of its incorporation as a city on Saturday last with a big parade in which the Governor, the two Sena tors, the Mayor and other city olfi cials participated. The Huntingdon Valley Hunt of a few days ago unearthed a mysterious animal that defied all pursuit and caused much excitement on the part of the. hounds. "What is it?" "Name it and you can have it," and other equnily futile suggestions resulted in nothing, and the poor dejected hounds for the first time had to acknowledge themselves outwitted. THE DIFFERENCE (From the New York World] It la 110 reflection upon Air. Tuft, Mr. Hoot and the other ex-Presidents of the American Hal- Association to say that they are conservatives. It is no reflection upon Mr. Bnmdeis to say that he is a radical. The opposi tion to Mr. Brandels is summed up and accounted for by these two facts. | Stoning The unusually cold weather which lias been inflicting this neighborhood lately ran only be exceeded for thtjr time of the third month by the cola •spell of sixteen years ago. There have been cold waves in 1904, 1907, 1909 and 1912, the latter the coldest ever known, but they have not been hi March. In 1913, there was a cold wave in May, but It only got down around freezing and nipped plants and chased home straw hats. The business-like cold wave which we are undergoing, therefore, has to go back to the third week of March, 1900, for any com parison. in that year, following a comparatively mild February and not unpleasant first week in March the mercury went down about the twen tieth and gave the State" the worst chill it had experienced in .a long time. In some sections zero weather was ob served and the official figures noted at the government building were not far from I hat point. The countryside ami the towns were not prepared for it and the cold caused much suffering, the violent change resulting in consid erable sickness. In many respects it was not unlike what has been noticed this year. * * * One thing this winter that is to bo noted is the abundance of coal. None of the Harrlsburg coal dealers, in spite of the very heavy demands, has re ported any shortage of coal or any in ability to get it for customers. In fact, most of the coal yards have been well stored with coal and to spare. A coal ! dealer explained this circumstance a ! few days ago when he said that he had : ordered more than usuul, fearing a i .shortage because of labor troubles and ! that he was not. only stocked up, but that his fellow dealers had also taken | Ihe same precautions. Consequently, the city is well supplied with coal and the fall in temperature has not caused trouble for those who needed coal. » 4 e Some idea of the serverity of the March cold snap can be obtained from the fact that big crows of the size one ordinarily does not see in the vicinity of buildings have been noticed hang ing about the outskirts of the city and visiting Reservoir Park. These big fellows, which are common enough in the depth of the country, are show ing signs of hunger as the protracted winter lias deprived them of even the short rations on which t hey have been [subsisting for a long time. Quite a flock was observed yesterday about the almshouse farm and more have ! been seen in Wildwood park and I and along the river front. » * » It seems rather hard to realize that it will only be a little more than three i weeks until the trout season opens, jand casting for the gamy fish will be in order. The true trout fisherman visits the streams or else gets confi dential reports on conditions, but this year many will have to act on hasty I information owing to the fact that rigorous weather has prevented much observation of the brooks. Quite a few yearling trout were put out last year in Cumberland and Perry coun ; ties and there should be some fine fishing according to State officials who keep tabs on such things. While Captain Kdward IT. Sehell. a member of the city bureau of health and sanitation, was chatting the other clay with a friend,a citizen (of the type that feels it his duty to frequently criticise most anything and anybody connected with the city government) took the health official to serious task because of the measles outbreak. "Now I thought that you as a mem ber of the board of health should lie spoken to about this," finished the good citizen. "I think you should do something about it!" And he hur ried away. "Oh," observed Captain Sehell a trifle wearily to his companion, "that's nothing-. Folks have queer ideas about the duties and powers of the bureau of health. The other day, for instance, a man stopped me on the street and asked me if it were true that I'm a member of the board of health. I admitted it. " 'Well.' said he, 'I think you should know of this: I've tried for four hours on several occasion* to Ret a long dis tance telephone connection to Phila delphia. Four hours, mind that! Now then I ask you. as a member of the public board of heulth, shouldn't something be done about that? I certainly think so. Don't you?" " Tes,' 1 said as feelingly as I could, 'I certainly do!' " ■* » • Just as an instance of how rapidly buildings are outgrown it. may be stated that the courthouse In Pitts burgh which is being replaced by the joint city-county building, was dedi cated by Rutherford B. Hayes in 1888. The cornerstone of the new building was laid Saturday with the Governor and United States Senators in attend ance. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE"" —Col. George A. Dodd, who is lead ing one of the columns in Mexico, is [a native of Lycoming county. 1 —S. Davis Page, who is figuring in the Pennsylvania Historical society ! controversy, is head of the Society of ! Colonial governors. —-Howard Eaton, who is one of tha national authorities on big game, is a Philadelphian. He had charge of liberation of elk in this State. The Rev. R. S. Johnson, promi nent Method'st temperance worker, looks for a l< cal option law next ses sion. —Frederick Palmer, war corre spondent, says that the Mexican situ ation should be handled vigorously now or it will bob up again to make trouble. —Judge H. C. Quigley, of Center county, has been elected president of the county supervisors. | DO YOU KNOW That Jlarrisbiirs-ninde tin plate is used ill many States? HISTORIC HAKRISBURG Harrisburg's first water works, Its filter plant, was a model for ot.her places in the State. A Quotation For Manufacturers Here is a quotation from a re cent issue of Newspapordom that is well worth the study of every manufacturer: "Take two cities of about the same size and class of people. In one city advertise your product in the newspaper; in the other, do nothing. "Your sales book will tell the story. "Or figure out your sales In a city where you rlo not adver tise and watch your sales Jump* quickly mill surely—a little flsf uring will tell just what thn newspapers have done for you. Newspapers afford the very best test as to the efficiency of your advertising."