10 BARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER POR THE HOME Founded IS3I Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Square. E. J.STACKPOLE.Frw'I and Editorin-Chift F. R. OYSTER, Butinjts Manager. GUB M. STOINMETZ, Managing Editor. « Member American Newspaper Pub lishers' Associa tion, The Audit Bureau of Circu lation and Penn sylvania AssoclfiV Eastern office. Has- Brooks, Fifth Ave nue Building, New York City; West ern office, Has- Brooks. People'# Gts Building, Cli'c Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carriers, six cents a week; by mall, $3.00 a year in advance. Sworn (tally nvcrsKr circulation fair the three month* ending June 30, 1016, it 22,456 These flgurca are net. All returned, unsold and damaged copies deducted. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUI.Y 5 He that is down needs fear no fall. He that is low no pride He that is humble ever shall Have God to be his guide. I am content with what I have Little be it or much And, Lord, contentment still I crave Because Thou savest such. THE RIVEK CARNIVAL NOW that we have passed the glorious Fourth, il is time to give thought to the bif; river carnival of September. Already a general com mittee is at work on the program and the receding river invites the usual aquatic activities. It is proposed to make this year's carnival the greatest ever and to this end all the young people who are ac customed to using the river for boat- j ing are going to be enlisted in the j arrangements. While these prepa- j rations are going forward those who are willing to assist in the carnival should get inio touch with the Depart- ! ment of Fterks, which will probably have much to do with the success of the big event. Already the general committee has considered the tentative plana and something definite will be worked out before this month is over. Harrlsburg Is most attractive at all tlinM and this annual river carnival, ■with the decorated flotilla at night, is bound to bring to the city thousands of people from all parts of the State. But there Is much to be done in the ■way of preparation and all should liave a hand in the work. It has bean demonstrated since the mobilization of the National Guard, in an effort to send the soldiers to the Mexican border, that the railroad com panies were telling the truth when they let it be known some months ago that business conditions were ham-stringing the operation of the various lines. In stead of the necessary equipment it is now shown that there is a serious lack of rolling stock for even handling the troops. What will happen when nor mal business conditions return may be only guessed at. IXIOKIXG AHEAD NOTWITHSTANDING the demoral ized conditions in Europe, sev eral of the belligerent nations are now planning for a resumption of trade activities at the close of the war. Constructive programs have already been outlined at joint conferences of the Allies and these contemplate an Invasion of the South American and other fields much more extensive than ever before in the history of commer cial expansion. Meanwhile, the United States Cham ber of Commerce is doing a fine work in keeping the members of that great organization posted regardingthe trade currents and the commercial de velopmentsthroughout the world. Con gress is almost certain to respond to the demands of the situation and the political stress is likely to have a wholesome influence upon those Demo crats in the Senate and House who have seemed to treat with indifference the business strain and the appeal? of manufacturers all over the United States. Readjustments are bound to follow the close of hostilities, and, while the Mexican difficulty will be annoying;. It j Is not expected to seriously upset the normal business conditions. What is ! concerning most employers Is the level- ; Ing of the wage scale which is certain to follow the breaking down of the j fictitious fabric of prosperity developed during the demand for war supplies. It Is believed, however, that the great good sense of the American people, employer and employe alike, will bring about an adjustment that will be rea sonable and reassuring as to tha per manency of the average wage con ditions in the United States. Governor Brumbaugh has a habit of •urprlslng Capitol Hill with appoint ments that are entirely unexpected. The Impression Is gaining ground that the Governor is doing: a lot of hard think ing on his own account, and that po litical considerations are not entering to any extent to his calculations. THE THTEF THE most despicable human being in a civilized community Is the thief, lower in the estimate of mankind than the stray cur that noses about the garbage and bones. He admits by his skulking crimes that he has not the manhood to earn for hlm »elf an honest livelihood. The loss of the trifles of jewelry and cash he WEDNESDAY EVENING, sneaks while honest men sleep Is the least of the harm his cowardly prac tice does. Mothers and children go trembling to bed after reading of his dastardly doings. When he is caught, as sooner or later he must be, his own flesh and blood share with him the shamo and contempt that follow his un doing. An increase in the police force, with an assurance of permanent positions to fearless and able men and swift Justice untempered by sentiment or mercy in the courts, are needful, but not sufficient to meet the conditions brought about by the wretches who break and enter. Let the Motorcycle Club of Harris burg gro on record as willing to assist the police in locating thieves who use motorcycles, as some of them have done recently. Let every red-blooded citizen worthy of the name procure a good weapon and form vigilance committees in every neighborhood, sleeping in turns on the lower floor where the slightest sound may be heard, and fearing not to drop in his tracks the rascal who dares to violate the security and peace of the home. When popular opinion once opposes a condition the condition must disap pear. Every man's home is his castle; to invade it deserves drastic punish ment. "Do you think the glory of America would be enhanced by a war of con- ! quest with Mexico?" asks President Wilson. Of course not, and who has | even suggested such a war outside the i phrasemaker of the White House? As 1 has been suggested by the Philadel phia North American, the President's facility in declamation is the national misfortune "since it leads him to neg lect preparedness even in the matter of his public utterances, thereby com promising the interests of the United States." A little less hot air and more con structive statesmanship would be a good thing for the United States. ■TEST AS WELL, PERHAPS WHILE some of the friends of Charles E. Patton are dis appointed that he was not made State Highway Commissioner, his retention as Secretary of Agri culture will be welcomed by those who have followed his work in that field. Secretary Pal ton is not only a prac tical road builder, but he is also an agriculturalist of no mean standing and an executive of ability and energy. He has been responsible for increased activities along all lines in the depart ment since he took hold and in addi tion has branched out in new and helpful directions. Whatever tho Highway Department may have lost in him, the Department of Agriculture no doubt has gained. Bass fishermen have had mighty little satisfaction thus far in their favorite sport, but in the long run their present unhappiness will be compensated in larger fish and larger catches. BEGINNING OF THE END WHILE there is a marked ab sence of that cry of the early days of the war, "On to Ber- I lin," the new offensive of the Allies has all the earmarks of the beginning of ; the "great push" toward which the English and the French have been looking longingly ever since the battle of the Marne; only the "great push" appears to have resolved itself into the | "great squeeze," for the Teutonic armies are beset upon all sides. Along the western front the spirit of Kitch : ener "goes marching on." The Eng -1 lish and the French are fighting side | by side in the offensive that Kitchener j and Joffre planned and which "Kitch | ener's armies" have made possible. It was the organizing ability of Kitchener, I if not indeed hi? strategy, that carried I the Allies through the first line of Ger i man defenses and which is back of their continued successes. The end of the war may be far away, I but the beginning thereof is here. As soon as the people of Germany become convinced that their sacrifices have been fruitless, that all their tremen dour and magnificent display of cour age and efficiency has been in vain; as soon as they learn that they have been deceived by those they have trusted and that the dream of world-wide Ger man dominion is forever blasted, that soon the voice of public opinion in Germany will demand an end of the insanity that has possessed all Ger many ever since the idea of "whipping the world" was first conceived by the German war lords. And when the people are sufficiently aroused in that direction, not even German imperialism will be able to hold back long the end of the war. "Kissing can spread infantile paralysis."—Newspaper headline. Thus the hardships of life increase. MORE "WATCHFUL WAITING" PERHAPS, after all, our National Guardsmen are not to be rushed unprepared into a campaign In ! Mexico—thanks to the pacific tone of Carranza's note to the government at I Washington. This time a period of ' watchful waiting" may he welcomed | by the War Department as giving an | opportunity to properly prepare against the "cleaning up" process in Mexico which nearly everybody be lieves to be only a matter of time. Now it remains to be seen what advantage the President will take of the chance offered him. Will our men be equip ped with machine guns and plenty of artillery? Will they be given aero planes and adequate motor transports? Or will they be held at the border as the regulars were for nearly three years—no better prepared, except in becoming used to the vagaries of the climate, than they were when they went down? The States have sent the flower of their young manhood out at the call of the President. They will expect to see him give them tools of their trade. They will insist that the troops be given machine guns, armored cars, aerial scouts in large numbers, artil lery In sufficient quantity and caliber and everything that will at once safe guard them from successful attack and make their task of guard duty and possible Intervention eaiy and as safe The Days of Real Sport .... By BRIGGS JH-umv'chrismos \ SKIN-NAY?/ Aiuf rr Mice , wate« —-r i ,; k, millvuio , IK as possible. That is the simple duty of the administration and one that can not be side-stepped by a renewal of the flow of rhetoric that has been used in the past to gloss over governmental mistakes. College professors are not always good judges of political prospects, but boards of trustees of colleges are gen erally composed of business men who can see the trend of events. A college out in Illinois has offered President Wilson a position after March 4, 1917, TELE6RAPH PERISCOPE 1 —What, we arise to ask, has be come of the croquet champion? —The only trouble is that a safe Fourth is not always sane. —The Germans are beginning to un derstand how the allies felt during the first year or more of the war. —ln a recent speech the President said he is "Just getting ready to fight." Don't worry, Mr. Hughes, the Presi dent seldom does anything that he de clares his Intention to do. —Our only objection to the way the signers of the Declaration of Indepen dence did things is that they didn't take two days to the job. EDITORIAL COMMENT Wilson is highly indignant with for eign interference with our choosing of a President. Now he can appreciate how Huerta felt. Philadelphia North American. A man in Washington is engaged in making a bust of President Wilson; j and Mr. Hughes Is getting together a whole organization with the same ob- \ ject in view.—Washington Herald. Considering their utter dissatisfac tion with Mr. Wilson's selections for the Supreme Court, it's a wonder the Republicans would force him to fill another vacancy.—Nashville Southern Lumberman. The patriotism of the man who goes out to fight for his country is severely tested when the country he is fighting for neglects to protect his family.— New York Sun. Record Exports in May American exports for May reached a total of $472,000,000, according to an announcement by the Bureau of For eign and Domestic Commerce, Depart ment of Commerce. This exceeds all previous monthly records. It is greater by $61,000,000 than the high record for March. It is $300,000,000 more than the monthly May average from 1911 to 1314. The total exports for the year ended with May were $4,136,000,000, an increase of $1,500,- 000,000 over the preceding twelve months, and double the total for the year ended witn May, 1911. The ex ports for May were $80,000,000 more than the total for the fiscal year 1870. The imports for May were also the greatest on record, the total value be ign $229,000,000, an increase of $11,000,000 over April, the previous high mark. This total exceeds the monthly May average from 1911 to 1914 by $82,000,000. For the vear ended with May imports totaled *2,110,000,000, an increase of $436,000,000 over the preceding year and $242,000,000 over the correspond ing period two years ago. The com bined value of imports and exports in the twelve months just ended was $6,246,000,000, a growth of nearlv $2,000,000 ($1,916,000,000) in a single year. Along the Color Line [From the Crisis.] The Rev. Albert Williams, of Omaha, Xeb., the only colored Episcopal priest in the diocese, has been elected secre tary of the diocese. The Detroit Federation of Women's Clubs refused to accept membership in the National Federation because the Detroit Study Club, an organization of thirty-two colored women, is not. al lowed membership by the constitution of the National Federation. The sheriff of Elbert county, Georgia, was shot, and killed by the son of a judge in the superior court because of mistreatment of a negro prisoner. A separate building for colored patrons to cost SIOO,OOO is planned by the Memorial Hospital of Richmond. Virginia. The Governor of New York has an nounced his Intention to form a col ored regiment In the State Guard with white officers. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH LITTLE MILITARY ' TALKS By Capt. Geo. F. Lumb MEXICO THE country is rich beyond the j power of man to describe, In minerals and oil, two vital fac- j tors In modern warfare. Consequently It is a mistake to un- ) derestimate our frenzied neighbor. Astute soldiers of fortune, Japanese ! mining engineers, others graduated in i American universities, speculators and gamblers of high degree are there by thousands. Peons are their pawns; millions their stakes. They have guns purchased In the United States with | the approval of a faltering govern ment. Their men have been at each others' throats for years; they are hard as steel, the flag of truce means nothing, ! the red cross less. On each coast a rugged mountain range; between them the hot plains (Tierra Caliente). These facts have been known to us for years. We are to meet the condi tions with unseasoned men drawn from civil life without sufficient notice to enable them to consult their den tists or balance their books; not ■ enough machine guns to properly I equip a regiment under modern condi ] tions. It is no child's play. We will win 1 whether our generals decide to hold the cities and railroads or to go to the i hills and smoke them out. But before we win we will be hit hard, sometimes below the belt, and there will be another call for volun teers. Why not harden up a bit? It . will do us good whichever way It breaks. Weeds and Their Uses (Ohio State Journal.) Most of our troublesome weeds have come to us from the old countries. I Cine may truthfully go further and say that most of the troublesome weeds ore universal. Before the days of ' steamships and railroads our weeds jwere our own, but the constant in terchange between countries in all I parts of the globe of grains, minerals i and goods of various kinds has spread ;the weeds into alien lands. That the weeds have lived and thriv en is due to the very quality which makes them weeds. Their hardihood and ability to flourish and reproduce under adverse circumstances make them a pest under favorable condi tions. A wild carrot seed shaken from a passing train and falling upon the stone ballast of the railroad track germinates and matures and spreads its seeds far and wide, where a prim-' rose seed would die. If the wild carrot j seed can fulfill its mission in life, which Is to reproduce its kind, in the ] barren, rock-ballasted railroad track. It can easily be seen why it is a pest in the farmer's rich acres. Many of the weeds are useful plants, in spite of their terrific hardihood and fertility. The dandelion, nightshade, jlmson weed and many others are used medicinally. The various clovers,, in cluding even the rank sweet clovers, are valuable not only as forage crops but as soil renovators, for thev draw nitrogen into the ground. Many of the weeds are edible—narrow-leaved dock, chicory, corn salad, dandelions and some of the mustards when used as greens. I,ast, but not least, the es thetic value of weeds should not be overlooked. Every season brings its changes of gay and flaunting weeds which cover rubbish heaps and waste i places with verdure and bloom. Wild I carrots, mustards, sweet clovers, flea banes, daisies, milkweeds, asters and goldenrods furnish a beauty to the landscape which cannot be overlook ed. Newspapers in Danger Indianapolis, Ind., July 3.—At an important conference between the labor committee of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association and the officers of the International Typo graphical Union there was much dis cussion of the present serious con ditions affecting the newspaper Indus try. The publishers also have been discussing the high cost of print paper, and it was stated that unless prices quit soaring soon many papers will either have to increase their advertis ing rates or subscription price, or beth, or go out of business. Gary Warns of Dangers Judge Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the board of the United States Steel Corporation, In an article In the cur rent Issue of System entitled "How Shall We Propare for Peace," says that he does not. think that this Euro pean war will be long protracted. He outlines the present prosperity of this country and sounds a note of warning that this prosperity Is possibly not so great as the volume of business -yould Indicate. — IN MEXICOJOJEARS The Story of a War in Which Every Battle Was a Victory For the Stars and Stripes. By J. HOWARD WERT Author of " 'TWM 50 Tears Ago." published In tW Hirrlsburgr Tele graph, June and July, 1913, In connection with the (Jreat Celebration of the Semicentennial of the Battle of Gettysburg. AND now that ten companies had l actually been selected to form a I Pennsylvania volunteer regiment, proclamations and general orders I blossomed forth again in ponderous! length. Adjutant-General Bowman in! one of these "specially requests no man to assume an office he is not fit for." j Well now! Was not that decidedly refreshing? Since the universe existed ; did any man ever aspire to any office 1 that he did not feel competent to fill? [ Just leave the question or competency j to one's own Inner consciousness and I he would have a job lot of qualified j officeholders in a jiffy. Why, fifteen I years later, I saw paper-made brlga- I dier-general stalking around camps, i gorgeous in tinsel, that scarcely knew) a musket from a broomstick; and col onels who had to hunt up a sergeant! who had been in the regular army to tell them how to make the simplest J regimental movements. And that kind ) of officers, in the opening years of j the Civil War, cost the lives of thou- j sands of brave union soldiers. Even after six months of supposed preparation for just such an event as the present requisition, it took some three weeks to inspect and put into i motion the ten companies now select ed. Yet a Harrisburg paper of this period says: "Too much praise can not be awarded to General Bowman for his promptness. He has been un ceasing in his labors." True, very likely. The fault was not in the offi cial, but in a cumbrous and out-of date system. The general government had fixed Pittsburgh as the point of rendezvous for the First Pennsylvania Volun teers, seven of the ten companies passed through Harrisburg on their Munsey and the Sun Frank Munsey, that prince of jour nalistic experimenters, has purchased the New York Sun and is about to turn ii into a penny newspaper at a time when almost every newspaper publish er in the country is thinking seriously about advancing prices. Munsey is very wealthy, but not all his riches consist of newspaper profits. Indeed Munsey in all likelihood has sunk many more thousands in the "news paper game" than he has ever made out of it. His costly failure in Phila delphia may be cited as an example. Perhaps he can stand the pressure of | a penny paper when other proprietors i are facing the almost certain advance to two cents, toward which a fifty per cent, or more raise in the price of white paper, the basic product of newspaper making, is fast pushing them. Certainly he can hope to make profit from it. and the extreme likeli hood is he will lose heavily. Then too, Munsey faces the prob lem of advertising and circulation. The penny paper must depend upon advertising to make profits, for no daily newspaper worth the name Is now produced at a cost which permits \ it to be sold retail for a cent and come out whole. The Sun never was a pop | ular paper, in the sense that It appeal |cd to the masses. It was always more or less a class publication. It was its ! individuality that won for It the high i place it long has held in the newspa | per world. It kept going and main tained its standard because it gathered its own news, written in Its own way and employed brains to handle its every department. Munsey has announced that he will get his news by the Associated Press, which puts the Sun on a dead level with thousands of other journals throughout the country with respect to its news and he intends to "popu larize" it in ways that one may imag ine from his efforts in that line else where. In the end he may succeed. He has accomplished many marvels of the kind In his time. But the task of "popularizing" the dignified old Sun and making It earn profits on a penny basis with paper prices sky high and still going is a task that will not appeal to many. Mr. Munsey may not knbw it, but the two cent newspaper Is Just around the corner and the publisher who does not get acquainted with that fact soon will get acquainted Instead with the sheriff. The Harrisburg Courier. Reading Prices Raised The Reading (Pa.) News-Times has raised lta subscription price from 6 to 10 cents per week, starting to-day. In creased production cost Is riven as the reason for the step. JULY 5, western way. Despite the disappoint ment of the leading citizens at the summary way in which Harrisburg's twc crack companies had been turned down, the people of the borough gave these companies a royal reception. In 1546 there could be no such thing as a speedy transportation of troops. From Harrisburg some of the com panies used the Cumberland Valley R. R. to Chambersburg, and then othei companies went by canal from Harrisburg as far as that thorough fare of travel extended, and then got o\ er the Alleghenies as best they could. And as the First Regiment contained no Harrisburg unit, it here drops out of our story. Formation of the "Cameron Guards" December 15, 1846, President Polk called on our State for a second regi ment, while, at the same time, Vice- President Dallas telegraphed to Har risburg that this would positively be ; thb last regiment to be accepted from Pennsylvania, for leading citizens felt ; that it would be a disgrace to the capital of the State if it remained en tirely unrepresented in the war. It had also become evident that neither the Dauphin Guards nor Harrisburg R.fies would be accepted. This condi tion arose from various causes un necessary to dig up at this late day, the principal one being the unwilling ness of many of the members to take the oath of enlistment "for the war" Instead of a certain specified time. Then United States Senator Simon Cameron got busy. The same evening that the President's requisition was received in Harrisburg, an enthusias tic meeting was held in the Court [Continued 011 Page 9] 1 OUR DAILY LAUGH y chorus girls pes- What made you think they were, '©'MV wh y they'r« * kicking all th« THE FISHER- i-* ■ 1 C Cautious, at noon, Ui' 5 he lies about LS7 \ His rod and line ldj Boldly, at eve, Astride a tav- |1 J IN He F lies about his fish. tin ® NOT MUCH OF A 4TH By Wins Dinger Went out. to the country Testerday to play In a golf "Flag-Toumay" For a while to play. Handicap of thirty. They did hand to me, And in manner quite bold, I approached the tee. Drove the ball just three feet In the long, long grass. I Smashed at It with mashie Three times, but. alas I played five to get out — Crossed the fairway wide— Landed in the long grass • On the other side. But I kept on going, Holding well my nerve Firm, that from my purpose, Naught should make me swerve. Got to going nicely— Thought a prize I'd take— ' Till I drove from "six" tee And dropped In the lake. Then all hope departed, Confidence did droop, As I saw the ball soar 1 And drop in the soup— Not alone because it Spoiled my chances, bo— But Fd used a sinker— And—oh, well, you know. lEbptttng (Hfjal There's a group of men in Harris burg who for several years past have seen to it that Independence Day has had an impressive welcome to the city. And this welcome is just as spec- . tacular as it is unofficial, yet it has never as yet figured in any of the news stories of events of the day—and likely never will until some city official makes a bid for publicity by forbidding it. Among this group of patriots are employes of the Philadelphia and Heading Railway in the vicinity of the yard entrance at Eleventh and Berry hill streets and a crowd of neighbor hood boys. The principal feature of the fete is the lighting of two "torches," and these torches, by the way, are just a I little out of the ordinary. Sometimes a whole week is required in their mak ing. Two high trees in the field just be low Thirteenth street are selected and huge wads of oil-soaked cotton waste are festooned over the limbs until the trees take the appearance of huga cone-shaped shafts of waste. In anticipation of the opening of the celebration hundreds of people gather about the "commons" and keep things lively with firecrackers, blanks and cap pistols. At midnight engines standing near by cut loose with their whistles and eveiyone who owns any kind of a noise-making device puts it to its proper use. Before the noise dies down someone lights wads of paper and tosses them into the trees. In a few seconds there are two great torches shooting their flames into the air for thirty or forty feet. Wads of burning waste dropping to the ground ignite large spaces of dry grass and in a short time there is a right respect able conflagration. This year some dealer with a large supply of fireworks the sale of which had been forbidden gave his stock away and boys from the neighborhood saw to it that they were properly "set oft." At least 100 fire balloons and scores or cannon crackers were in the supply and a right lively time there was while it lasted. • * • Until the facts in the case are ascer tained, Playground Supervisor J. K. Staples isn't entirely sure that the official regret naturally felt In the cause of a complaint filed by an up town business firm against the extraor dinary athletic activities of some of the youngsters of the Seventh and Kelker street playgrounds may not be sugared a wee bit with a glow of pride. The complaint, in brief, is that four 3-pound iron quoits have been heaved from the playgrounds through the tin roof of the firm's warehouse near by. Therein, playground officialdom ad mits, lies cause for deep regret. The roof, however, is some fifty-five feet from the surface of the playground wherein lies the supervisor's sneaking glow of pride. The complaining firm, by the way, is the New Idea Spreader Company. * * • Now and then the frequent re iterations of testimony brought about more or less unconsciously by mem bers of the bar are pointedly squelched , by the judges on the bench; there are , occasions, too, when the court empha ' sizes this position in quietly humorous fashion. A case in point occurred the other day during a recent equity hear . ing. The question of whether or not a ' witness had made a certain statement was in Issue; President Judge Kunkel ! had his own views about it, while one of counsel for the litigants had his. "The witness made that point clear 1 a couple of times," declared Judge ' Kunkel, "when he repeated his asser ; tions." "Oh, yes," agreed the lawyer, he " made the admission twice, anyway." ' "Yes," said the president judge, "that's a 'couple of times,' isn't it?" Whereupon the argument ended. ' « « » "Did you sit up or get up at mid " night to-hear the city's welcome to the ' new Independence Day?" asked the 2 tired man of his neighbor in the trol ! ley car. "Yes? Well, didn't it. occur to you that the racket was much like 2 London and other English towns must J have grown accustomed to when the Zeppelin raids are made?" "From all I've read and been told J of those raids by some of the folks * who've been In London at the time, " the fire and church bells, the factory ' and locomotive whistles and similar " noise-making agencies in London and ® other English coast towns notify the sleeping inhabitants of the coming of the dreadful 'Zcps' in practically the 1 same way that Harrisburg Informed 5 its own sleeping folks of the coming s of another national^ birthday." 1 With only a half hour schedule in effect on the trolley lines to Hershey on the Fourth, much difficulty was ex . perienced in the evening in handling the big crowds of people who were re turning home. Practically every car had at least lOp and In some cases 125 passengers, while the seating capacity is only 44. Many of the people with children were compelled to wait until late In the evening because of the crowding in getting on the cars, and the rush for seats. One little girl was badly bruised when the mob pushed her from her mother's arms and al most threw her Into the car. Because, of the lack of even standing room some of the passengers were compell ed to stay on the front platform with the motornian, making it difficult to operate the cars with safety. * * * Pockets loaded with cartridges and with 22, 32 and 38-caliber revolvers in trim, Hummelstown and Palmyra fans at the baseball game between those two teams at Hershey yesterday after inoon, furnished the visiting thousands ; with a real Fourth celebration, and a [good Imitation of what a small battle sounds like. Every time one of the I plavers made a hit, scored a run, or made a brilliant fielding play the root ers instead of yelling themselves 1 hoarse, emptied their revolvers in the air. The din was continued during the entire game and after the smoke cleared away hundreds of shells were scattered along the edge of the field. One man who had been enjoying the sport estimated that at least 2,000 blank cartridges were fired during the game. Nifty Work An attorney, angered because of an adverse ruling by the judge, left the courtroom, remarking to another lawy er that "the judge was an ass ana shouldn't be on tne bench." Before the case ended the judge heard of the remark and called the at torney before him. "I hear." he said, "that you called me an ass and said I ought not to be on the bench." "Sure," replied the quick-witted at torney. "Anybody with your profound knowledge of law is an ass to be on the bench. Tou ought to be practicing before tho bar, where your talents could be cashed into big money."— Puck. An Optimist I never listen to calumnies, because, if they are untrue, I run the risk of being deceived; and, if they be true, of hating persons not worth thinking about. —Mont esc,uleu. WHAT THE ROTARY CLUB LEARNED OF THE CITY [Questions submitted to members of the Harrisburg Rotary Club and their answers as presented at the organlza* tlon's annual "Municipal Quiz."] What Is the mileage of the River Front? 4.2 miles. ~-"