14 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE U/iME Pounded IS3I Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Square. £. J. STACKPOLE, Prest and Edilor-in-Chitf V. R. OYSTER, Business Manager. GUS M. SHEINMETZ, Managing Editor. * Member American Newspaper Pub- Isylvanla Assoclat- Esstern office. Has- Brooks, Fifth Ave nue Building, New Gts Building, Chf- Entered at the Post Office in Harrls burg, Pa., as second class matter. " By carriers, six cents a week; by mail. $3.00 5 a year in advance. ■ worn dally fvrrngp circulation (or tk* three month* ending April 1, 1018, iar 22,432 it These figure* nre net. All returned unaold an< j damaged coplea deducted. FRIDAY EVEXING, APRIL. 28 Any man may commit a mistake, but none but a fool tcill continue in it.— CICERO. I MEXICO NOT AN ISSVE? IV'E Mexican question will not be i an issue in the capipaign of> 1916—if President Wilson can j prevent it. At a recent dinner in I Washington where the President and other lesser lights of Democracy met to sound a key note for the canvass of the autumn not one word was littered regarding Mexico—and this in j epite of the fact that the dinner was held on the same day that the news canie of Carranza's demand for the withdrawal of our troops and that the country was informed of the attack made upon our soldiers at Parral. There was much oratory about what i the Democrats have done for the! farmer and how they have done up I everyone else with whom they have' come in contact—but of the most pressing question then before the people, about the national honor which Carranza's note had impugned, al'OUt our soldiers slain by border bandits and attacked by Greaser mobs, not one word. This is the typical manner, of the! President in dealing with a trouble-1 some problem. He thinks that by! ignoring it he disposes of it. If he has his way Mexico will not be an issue this year. But Issues are not made by speeches, either in what those speeches contain 1 or by what those speeches omit. Issues grow out of facts. The facts of the Mexican question cannot be :«vaded or avoided. Mr. Wilson and l his party will have to face those facts. Mexico will be a big issue in this gear's campaign, because out of Wil- j -eon's handling of the Mexican ques- j tion arises all the contemptuous treatment which we have received from the powers of Europe. Wilson j may continue to keep silent about! Mexico —but his silence will be a con-1 fession. MAYOR BOOTH BY THIS is a tale of two cities —in , real life—and the hero is Fred- 1 eric E. Boothby, erstwhile of i Portland, Me., and now of Watervllle, ' that State, it is written to show that, •while being Mayor of an American j municipality is usually a thankless; job and often without recompense' save worry and censure, there is at least one man who has been able to make a success of the job not only! In one city, but in two. Boothby was general passenger] ayent for the Maine Central Railroad Company when the citizens of Port land began looking around for a candidate for mayor. There were lots ; of men who wanted the job, but all ol' them were about as well fitted for ! the place as a square peg is to fill a 1 round hole. Somebody suggested Bocthby. He didn't want the office.! Said he was too busy and that he j aian't know anything about politics; anyway, a*id got the reply that it j was because he was busy and because he didn't know a ward politician from a precinct committeeman the people wanted him. They said they I ■were tired, of politicians in the mayor's | office. So Boothby ran and was j elected. Twice after that he was j chosen for the same place, which] shows what a good mayor he must have been. During his terms Portland took on j r.ew life and so graterul were the i people for what he did in turning one of the town's tin can commons into a beautiful public park that they named the new recreation place In his honor —and so it stands to-day. But Boothby came to the place where he felt that he had done his part and was entitled to * rest, so he moved away from Portland and re tired with his wife to a pleasant home in Watervllle, his old home town, and last winter went South on a vacation. Hardly had he landed in Florida until he received a telegram announcing that his fellow citizens of Watervllle had nominated him for Mayor and he 1 must come home and make the run i for the sake of the old town. The 1 , success of this, his fourth campaign, is indicated by a note in the news -1 papers the other day stating that he [had just been inaugurated. This all may sound like a personal "puff"' for Mayor Boothby, but it is more than that. It shows that the| busy businessman often makes the I most successful city official and thatj #r-- ' • •• -. -- . . ~r -• w i* "** " < •"**"* - :■ •<"--•• • - V- - - ~ / FRIDAY EVENING. HARRISBURG $&&&. TELEGRAPH APRIL 28, 1016 the less politics has to do with city office the better. Politicians playing for place and salary may serve very acceptably, but the man for mayor of any wideawake town Is one who has made good In business, who has a high reputation for energy and honesty and a proper pride in his city. Boothby's rather remarkable career simply Illustrates the point, that's all. HARVEY BOOSTS HI'GHKS IN his characteristic and always in teresting way Colonel George Har vey, the original Wilson man, is out in the May Issue of the North Ameri can Review for Justice Charles Evans Hughes as the man of the people for President. He discusses the political situation from Dan to Beersheba and, after pointing out Colonel Roosevelt's alleged shortcomings and the attitude of the influential leaders of the coun try toward Root and others. Colonel Harvey declares that nobody wants 11 1'ghes—"nobody but the people!" He suggests that the Colonel has over played the "frightfulness" policy in dealing with Wilson and has not profited from the knowledge "that it was not the prodigal son who pos sessed the fatted calf." This In allu sion to the proposed getting together of the progressive and stalwart wings of the Republican party. He further declares that while Hughes is opposed by political leaders and others, he is essentially the choice of the people, notwithstanding the effort to create an impression antagonistic to his selection on account of his judicial position. Again referring to Roosevelt, he says: Whoever says Our Colonel is a candidate is a liar. He Is n<> hill climber. He is Mahomet. If the Mountain sees fit to come to him. it may bask in the glories of Heaven; If not. It can go to Hell. Thus Colonel Harvey discusses at length the Roosevelt element of the situation, basing his conclusions upon the rather doubtful attitude of many voters in different parts of the country. Contrary to the view of Joseph H. Choate, he thinks the nomination of Justice Hughes "would be far more , likely to clarify the muddy turmoil of politics than to bespatter the judicial ermine—a consummation devoutly to be wished." Manifestly Colonel Harvey, pursuing the role of prophet as in the period preceding the nomination of President Wilson, proposes to throw about his prophesies as many safeguards as pos sible, so that there may not be another flareback such as followed the election of President Wilson and his repudiation of Colonel Harvey. Throughout the Hughes boom, as staged by the distinguished editor of the North American Review, there is repeatedly thrown upon the screen his epigrammatic and rapid-fire comment regarding the especial availability of the "candidate of the people." There is, in fact, throughout the whole editorial his argument summed up in the sug gestion that Justice Hughes is "hold ing to the old-fashioned idea that the responsibilities of the Presidency are so great that it is not. to be sought and must not lie declined." And there you have Colonel Harvey's latest inspiration and his conviction that "the overpowering issue will be one of men—of ability, of judgment, ol fidelity, but above all of character." He believes that it will be Hughes or Wilson and that, patriotism must dic tate a choice between the two. But notwithstanding Colonel Har vev's analysis of the situation the Re publican sentiment of the country seems more and more to be crystalliz ing around the one proposition that the party will unitedly support the nominee of the Chicago convention whether his name be Hughes. Root, Knox, Brumbaugh or any other of the "favorite sons." DR. DRINKER'S VIEWS EVERY sane parent wants his son to know how to take care of himself when in danger. He does not want him to go about pick ing: fights, but he wants him to be prepared to protect himself in an emergency. That is the view of Dr. Henry S. Drinker, president of Lehigh Univer sity. who addressed the students of the Technical High School Wednesday on "Preparedness." And that, if you please, is all there is to "prepared ness;" to know how to protect oneself in case of war. Otherwise we would go ourselves and send our sons into the trenches to be butchered. Dr. Drinker recommended the sum mer military training camps to the boys /Of the Technical school, and cer tainly it'eannot be gainsaid that these training camps are better places for the average boy than a summer's idle ness spent in town or in the trifling amusements of summer resorts. So the Democrats at Washington, led iby the Tammany delegation, have smashed the Administration's plan for turning over the Philippine' Islands within four years. With an almost solid 1 Republican minority arrayed against | this foolish independence measure its 1 fate is a foregone conclusion. AN ADMIRABLE PLAN IT is a good sign when City Com missioner Gross, as the head of the Department of Parks and Play grounds, invites the former members of the Park Commission to co-operate with him in an advisory capacity. One of the gravest features of the act creating the commission form of gov ernment was the fact that the new law eliminated the volunteer bodies of citizens wh6 had given to Harrisburg and other cities their best thought and ] energy in working out the various municipal problems. Under the cir cumstances, therefore, the invitation of Commissioner Gross to the former members of the Park Commission will be hailed with satisfaction by citizens generally. In the multitude of counselors there Is wisdom and we trust the ex-Park | Commissioners who served their city | so well will respond to the invitation Lto serve as an advisory body. "Pottttca- Ik "^MVKCllttfaKUi, By the El - Com ml ttermi n Judging from the preparations being made by the leaders of the rival fac tions, there will not be any "pussy footing" about either the Republican or Democratic campaigns prior to the primary 011 May 16. The Brumbaugh campaign tour will start to-morrow and the Penrose tour is already on. Governor Brumbaugh returns to the city this afternoon and after disposing of mail and accumulated business the Governor will devote himself to prepa ration of the speeches he will deliver in Blair county to-morrow and at the railroad men's meeting in Pittsburgh Sunday morning. He will be back in Harrisburg Monday and go to the east ern part of the State on Tuesday. Sen ator Penrose will leave Pittsburgh to morrow and spend a couple of days touring the State, making some speeches Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. According to gossip which filtered into the city to-day from the two big cities, the campaign will be vigorous. —The plans of the Brumbaugh forces are to have men of noted ora torical ability flay the Penrose leaders, including the senator, according to these stories, and the Penrose people will retaliate. Intimations of charges of various kinds are already in the wind. The sudden switching of Con gressman John R. K. Scott from the Governor's Blair coupty tour is de clared In Philadelphia to be due to in tention of Penrose orators, in case the Philadelphian takes the stump, to read extracts from newspapers now friendly to him, said extracts having been printed in times when Scott was a target. —The Brumbaugh campaigners plan to make a play to the railroad men by having Senator W. J. Burke, of Pitts burgh, one of the officials of the or ganized brotherhoods, speak beside the Governor. Burke is a good talker and well liked. —The Penrose orators are. to be Senator Charles A. Snyder and Con gressman B. K. Focht, neither of whom is inclined to be "mealy-mouthed" in making speeches. The Senator will also do some talking himself. —The Democratic plans are not to have very extensive meetings, but to have A. Mitchell Palmer visit the vari ous counties to have talks with the leaders, while his rival, Michael Liebel, Jr.. goes about from place to place on the same errand. Palmer and his pals are putting out their slate and it is being facetiously styled "The President's Own," which title Is disputed. Liebel and Palmer will issue statements at short intervals which will supply the interest whenever the Republican campaign dies down. —With Pittsburgh bubbling because of the tights for control of organization in both parties, the activity of tlie Pen rose men in lining up against the Gov ernor and his friends and the Demo crats in a row over their county chair manship, Philadelphia is also doing Its share to make things interesting. The Mayor has been warned that he is endangering the loan bills by his atti tude and demands are being made that he keep the police out of politics. Purging of the registry lists is under way and the McNichol men aver that they are not getting a square deal. The Philadelphia Republican League and the Citizens Republican League, two new organizations, are making daily attacks on the Vares and threaten to carry the war into South Philadel phia. —The Philadelphia Record to-day prints an amusing story about the speeches of Mayor Smith, Congressman Yare and Senator McNichol at the banquet of the business men. The Mayor pleaded for the loan, McNichol made a hurrah speech for Penrose and Congressman Vare boomed the Gov ernor. The diners had a lot of fun. —Pittsburgh papers dwell upon the welcome given to Senator Penrose and to the manner in which he has been promised support. —Judge Eugene C. Ronniwell, who is contending with ex-Judge IS. L. Or vis. of Bellefonte, for the empty honor of the Democratic senatorial nomina tion. was here yesterday on his way to Shippensburg, where he made a speech. —The Philadelphia Ledger to-day says of Philadelphia conditions: "Political developments yesterday in dicated that the two loan bills, one for $67,000,000 for port and transit improvement and the other for $47,- 000,000 for general improvements, were in danger of defeat at the polls on May 16. One of these striking developments was the delivery of an ultimatum to Mayor Smith by City Commissioner Moore to the effect that if police activity in politics did not cease within two days both bills would be voted down by the people." —Senator Penrose, who never has opposed the candidacy or W r illlam S. Vare for Congress, will, in the pri maries of May 16, contest his renomi nation through the candidacy of Homer H. Hacker. This new policy was announced yesterday .by the Philadelphia Republican League, di rected by Councllmen Berger and Trainer, as follows: "The forces sup porting the State leadership of Sena tor Penrose and the candidacy of Senator Snyder for Auditor General, as well as an unlnstructed delegation to the Republican National Conven tion and a full district and Congres sional ticket, are prepared to carry the State and city fight against the Vare Brumbaugh-Smith alliance di rectly into that section of Philadel phia which heretofore the Vares liave claimed as 'exclusively Vare terri tory.' " —Ex-Deputy Attorney General Frederic, W. Fletlz. who has taken charge of the Brumbaugh campaign in • Lackawanna has announced that Registration Commissioner Alex T. Connell will be In charge of the head quarters every day until the primary. Registration Commissioner Connell has been appointed secretary of the campaign committee. Warren T. Acker will be treasurer of the com mittee, and this, with Mr. Fleitz as chairman, will complete the organ ization, "The sentiment in Lacka wanna.county is very favorable," Mr. Fleitz said to the Scranton Republi can, "and as there is no contest here among our friends, we have excellent prospects of getting the party to gether." In a statement, yesterday, Mr. Fleitz was anxious to correct an impression that the Brumbaugh or ganization was an anti-organlzatlon movement. He said thar all those taking part are organization Re publicans, who favor Governor Brum baugh as a .means of securing the nomination at Chicago of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt. Several meet ings In the nature of political rallies wiil be held In Town Hall before the primary on May 16. and Mr. Fleitz Is trying to Induce Colonel Roosevelt to address at least one of these meet ings on behalf of the Brumbaugh candidacy. Dangerous Explosions fFrnm the New Haven Journal-Courier! We should advise Count Von Bern storfT, the German Ambassador in this country, who, on the wnole. has con ducted himself with rare discretion, to abandon Wolf Von Igel. His case is full of dynamite. ' THE CARTOON OF THE DAY --■ t i r I Can He Fiddle It Down jlffe a" jfc - * 'if J s.s*t- L-J & m!WF£ 2P ~ - aszJr JS*?- James G. Delaney, 260 Cumberland St. 1 TELEGRAPH'S PERISCOPE —"Whiskers are coming back," says a newspaper paragraph. Yes, that's what makes the barbershop possible. —Kansas City will present a fly swatter to each of its 13,00 ft school chil dren. Isn't this a subject for pacifist protest? —Congress Is again asked to adopt the metric system for the United/ States, which is like leading a horse to water but being unable to make it drink. —lf the owner of an automobile does not make more mileage than he can afford the neighbors say he hasn't the money to buy gasoline. —The worst thing about this back ward Spring is that roasting ears are going to be two or three weeks late this summer. —One of the perversities of nature is that a man does not get bald on his chin instead of on the top fit his head. "editorial commentFi Chancellor Von Rethmann Hollweg says that there must be a "new" Bel gium at the end of the war. That's the way the Allies feel about Prussia and Germany.—Chicago Herald. Dr. Spahr, leader of the Centerist party in the Reichstag, says that "Americans of German descent have indeed endeavored to create a senti ment for our view, unfortunately with out success." Why not also give due credit to the German submarine com manders?— New York World. Dollars Behind the Flag [From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.] America's largest bank has welded together a new and greater' ship com bination than any In which this country has ever been financially Involved. The Morgan "ocean trust" is only a part of this new consolidation which passes to the Standard Oil-Hockefeller wing of our money powers. The business gen ius of that group of financiers is proverbial. It has in the last couple of years been notably active in estab lishing branch banks in various parts of the world. And right here is where the United States may count upon a restoration of its flag to the high seas, because the routes of ocean shipping depend greatly upon the banking fa cilities which shippers here and abroad may employ. With the greatest of all business concerns behind both these newly created foreign branch banks and also back of this huge merger i f ships, it seems likely that the Stars and Stripes will soon replace the foreign flags under which the steamers now operate. And tills is the real way to revivify American shipping, through private capital and private manage ment. Government ownership would only mean political waste and incompe tence, in addition to being an outrage upon the best traditions of our land. Record to Date [Prom the Roston Globe.] The New Jersey 12-year-old boy fish ing in a stream who says he caught with his hands a brook trout that weitrned two and one-half pounds and measured sixteen and one-half Inches has told the star fish story so far. And Not Easily Stopped [From the New York Sun.] Will William Alden Smith, of Michi gan, sray to Albert H. Cummins, of lowa, •"Well, Senator, the Ford seems to be a self-starter, what?" Tango Preparedness [From the New York Sun.] City men. military experts say, make better soldiers than rustics do because they have more experience in late hours and dancing. Why not make rural free one-stepping obligatory? Not Much Alike [From the New York Sun.] It is to be hoped that General Scott has learned to discriminate between a lemon and an olive branch. PIPE DREAMS By Wing Dinger Gee. I wish I had a million— No. 1 wouldn't give up work, But I'd have some sort of office And # I'd hire a brainy clerk. So that on a day like this one I could phone, say, at nine: "I'll not be around this morning. > Eighteen holflg** lor mine." SOME PROFITABLE HOBBIES Subjects For Science By Frederic J. Haskin NOT long ago, the experimental work conducted by the scientists of the Public Health Service in San Francisco was Interrupted by their inability to secure a further sup ply of white mice and rats for labora tory use. The wife of a suburban physician, bearing of the incident, conceived the idea of raising white mice and rats for the medical pro fession. and incidentally making pin money for herself. She bought a few of the rodents, set up a breeding es tablishment. and during the first year made more than enough money to buy all her clothes. Rats and mice and guinea pigs are in constant demand by universities, hospitals and laboratories for experi mentation. yet comparatively few per sons are engaged in raising these ani mals and the suDply is always run ning short. The white guinea pig, for example, is a necessity to every scien tific laboratory in the work of propa gating and testing anti-toxins. The San Francisco case is only one of many important experiments retarded because the animal needed was not available. When the Public Health Service was carrying 011 its cholera work in New Orleans, the surgeon in charge was compelled to scour the whole country before he could get a sufficient supply of white guinea pigs to continue the experiments. This proved very expensive, as the lowest price paid for any was fifty cents plus the express charges, and for some the price was a dollar apiece. With this large and permanent scientific market for animals, it is cur ious that more people have not fol lowed the example of the San Fran cisco woman and started a sideline of rats and mice or guinea pigs. As a business by itself, it would probablv not prove profitable, but the original vestment is so small and the amount , ! n , p , squired so negligible that as a sideline it could hardly fail to be successful. Guinea pigs, for instance, yield greater returns when raised as an adjunct to a small truck farm, be cause they require a lot of green food, which is supplied by the waste of the farm, but is rather expensive if pur chased itself. The loose leaves of cab bage, the tops of carrots and the in ferior roots not worth bunching are rood on which the guinea waxes fat. One Long Island woman started rais ing guinea pig S for the Rockefeller Institute in order to enhance the in come derived from her small truck farm. The animals proved the better investment, and now she uses the truck farm to enhance the value of the guinea pigs. The guinea pig is usually raised In ™ < i ß i Ca ?. ea sim " ai ' to those used for rabbits. If possible, there should be some arrangement by which the 2?.?™ ! ,e removed and . leaned dail> for it is necessary that the ani mals be kept sanilary and healthy if thej are to be distributed for medical use. A hutch three feet long, two feet deep and eighteen inches high will ac- C »7 m ?», a, ° one ~oar nnd three sows and still provide room for them to move about freely. The guinea pig produces from two to five litters of at least*sTx?'*"' C " Ch "" Pr averaffln S ™ ts an, l "lice are raised In small wire cages, the floors of which Free Speech vs. the Flag [From the New York World.] Professor Beard, of Columbia Uni versity rises with some warmth to de fend persons who revile'the flag. "Sup pose," he says, "some one does say 'To hell with the flag!" what of it? This j country was founded on disrespect and denial of authority, and it's no time to stop free discussion now." No one will quarrel with that state ment. This Is a free country and it is the privilege of any American to abuse It and Its flag as much as he pleases. But there is the material difference that this is decidedly not a right to be exercised on pubUc property and in an auditorium that represents the country of which the flag Is the em blem. There is nothing to prevent dis contented persons from hiring a hall to express their grievances against file government. When, however, they de fame the flag on property belonging to people to whom the flag is sacred, the question is no longer one of free speech but of disloyalty. It is well to get the facts straight, If men want to consign the Stars and Stripes to hell they should not attempt It under the very folds of the banner that protects them In their contemptu ous speech. I | should be scrubbed daily. They need . plenty of fresh water, but food should be distributed in small dishes holding only enough to satisfy their imme ! diate needs. A supply of uncraeked I nuts may be left in the cage, which , prov ides material for them to gnaw upon, thus keeping: their ever-growing teeth worn down and in 'good condi ; tlon. The female rat, which has on the average of thirty offspring a year, , ; should be given a cage to herself when with young, and disturbed as little as , possible. The male is frankly a can . | nibal, eating his family as soon as they are born if allowed to remain in the same cage with them. This ap : petite Is not due to the lack of proper i food, as some have sought to excuse him. but because he prefers his own i species. Experienced breeders never i feed rats meat, which always intensi ties the cannibalistic instinct, but in sects may be consumed in large num bers without any untoward effect. Rodents used for laboratory pur poses should be nearly uniform in weight. Mice, which command higher prices than either rats or guinea pig's, range from half an ounce to an ounce 1 ill right, while rats range from three to four ounces. The mouse, which , 1,38 P'a.ved such a large part In folk lore and the hysteria of ladies, is now L ( daily engaged in the involuntary but > none the less heroic act of dying in i order that a part of the human race | may live. Among other things, his | small body is admirably adapted to - testing the carbolic acid qualities of serums. A certain amount of car ; bolic acid is necessary to the preserva ■ tion of the serum, and by administer ■ ■ lng doses to the mouse it may be de r I !.T,7 lln t d , V ow mm ' h nla V he used without injury lo the human bodv. , Besides the scientific- market, white mice and rats and guinea pigs are in demand as pets. Mice and rats have ' a £ ll !;? d thp PoP'UaWty as play things in this country that thev have abroad, where they are as common an accessory to the home as is the canary but the animal stores always keep "a supply of them. Here the Japanese wallaing mice are usually on exhibit They are animals afflicted with a cur- Jous brain disease which Impels them to run around in circles or to scurry about in an erratic manner which chil dren find highly amusing. Japan was the first to discover this variety but they may easily be bred by the'ama store. m S,OCk Becured at » reHabte as T the K "'r n e vv "' K V B f lentl ncally known animal wlfh'k adored by children and is mud ?n di , n and as a pet. Through the working | out of many complex problems of breeding and heredity in the cavv a dozen distinct varieties have been pro (lured. Some have long silkv hair and with others the hair is so short | AS to display the pinkn'ess of the skin beneath The guinea's colors also are n . lany " exhihUJon in the lh£,ock shows of the country he is black red ■ cream, white, chocolate, blue and tor . olse shell, with any number of com < ; binations or these shades. The blue ! guinea pig is still in the experimental state an.l requires a certain amount r, of imagination to believe him Z | thing but ii faded black but ?he M breeders have hopes of making I h the most striking of cavy's colors yet OUR DAILY LAUGH | call an Interview with a great man TH tim )K1 ' T ' * n *® n " e spring ; I'm quite a be- For people then i ' wl " laalne«» lEtening Qlhatj Harrisburg's magnolia trees are in all of their Springtime glory. There are probably more of the han.lsome lawn trees in this city now than has ever been known and some of them sue superb specimens. They are not confined to any one locality as people have them in yards ali over Harris burg, but Front street appear* to have quite a number. The tree on the George W. Reily property at Front and Reily streets, probably the oldest magnolia in Harrisburg, is in full flow er and resembles a gigantic bouquet. It lias been greatly admired by many people. Probably a dozen other mag nolias are blooming along Front street, and there are some on Allison Mill which are showing beautiful flowers and which bid fair lo add much to at tractiveness of Harrisburg gardens in the next few years. In a short time the tulip trees and the wistaria will be in bloom and the geraniums will soon be displacing the tulips as the bright spots of the gardens. * • « Herman Collins perpetrates the fol lowing in the column dedicated to Glr ard in the Philadelphia Public Ledger: "Whenever Governor Brumbaugh and Cyrus E. Woods, Secretary of the Commonwealth, wish to erase the fog from their brains they go out together and play a game of golf. "A Harrisburg wit who has seen them bent upon such errands was ask ed that ancient question if the Gover nor and Secretary were of the Civil War variety of players—'out in 61 and back in 65.* " 'No,' said the capital humorist; 'they are both of the Spanish War period—out and back again in 9S.' " • ♦ * Taking of polls to get a line on Presidential preferences in this city has been going on the last few days and from all accounts It has led to some rather amusing experiences. The men who handled the work said that they had run across a number of persons who positively refused to ex press any opinion in the matter, which is quite different from what turned up in the campaign of 1912. Yesterday afternoon a man took a canvass or straw vote or whatever you may choose to call it in a business building and found that the Democrats were practically all outspoken and most of them for Wilson, while the Republi cans were inclined to ask what the other fellows had been saying. Con siderable Roosevelt, Brumbaugh and Hughes -sentiment was found. Traveling men who come to this city for the week-end say that they have been struck with the absence of political talk in their swings about the State. One traveling man who covers the whole State got in last evening and remarked that for the approach of the primary period he had been struck by the lack of political arguments in hotels where he had stopped and in the cars. "Generally, you can gel a line on politics by listening to the talk in the smoker," said one man. "Well. I don't think that in a ride from Al toona to Harrisburg I heard more, than two men talking politics. They were all talking shop, general busi ness or war." Father Penn pays his bills even if they are sometimes over forty years old. Yesterday Auditor General Pow ell received from the Harrisburg Trust company, which had received it from the Armstrong Trust company, a State warrant for $38.52 which had been drawn in payment of some damage claims alleged to be due to soldiers in the Civil War. The warrant was dated March 31, 1871. and was in payment of a claim allowed by a. special act of assembly in 1869. It was warrant No. 2.385 and made payable to John Gil pin and W. F. Johnson. Jolin F. Hart ranft signed it as Auditor General. Where it had been no' one knew. When it turned up, the record was in vestigated and it was discovered that the clerk in charge had drawn the same numbered warrant twice, al though each warrant was a different transaction. The error in the number was established and the claim being proved a Stale check for the long due money was ordered drawn. * • » B. B. McGinnis. Plttsburglier. who is prominent in election contests now being heard In the Dauphin county court, has been one of the Democratic war horses in that city for years. He was active in the reorganization move ment. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE I —Mayor W. S. McDowell of Ches jter. has been giving men who were in hard luck carfare to return to their homes. —B. F. Fackenthal, Jr., prominent Bucks countian, has presented the his- I torical society of that county with a number of valuable colonial notes. —-Senator Penrose has been Invited to deliver an address on the general political situation at a Philadelphia dinner next week. —W. Li. Binder, the new president of the State Editorial Association, is i editor of the Pottstown News. I —Congressman J. Hampton Moore is being accused of writing poetry. DO YOU KNOW That Harrisburg's business as A ! publishing center is growing by 1 leaps and bounds? HISTORIC HARRISBURG For over fifty years the post office was in Second street below Market Square. Then it moved to the Square. The Searchlight A ROOF GYMNASIUM A Philadelphia firm has equipped its roof as a model gymnasium in which each of its 400 employes Is required to take at least a half hour of exercise dally. There Is a cinder race track around its edge. Inside are tennis courts and basketball grounds with wire net coverings. If the weather Is . j> bowling alley, rowing machines and other apparatus afford facilities for physical culture under a roof which protects a part of the space. Time schedules are made out by means of Which the use of the gymnasium is distributed throughout the entire day. i The women employes have the same I privileges as the men, but at separate I flours. '' f > Does Newspaper Ad vertising Pay? A large pain manufacturer ask ed this question of retailers throughout the country: NO. 8 SAID: "Does newspaper advertising pay? Yes. We would not do without that kind of advertising at all. We do not do as much of It as we ought to, but that Is another question. "Let us say. for Instances, that the ad we run this or next week dops not bring in a single new customer. It keeps our name be fore the public, and .when they ,!o want anything in the line we carry they think of the people whose names they see In the pa pers. Wo think money spent in newspaper advertising ts well spent." (Continued to-morrow.)