10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THB TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Square. E. J. STACKPOLE, Pres't and Editor-in-Chief IP . R. OYSTER, Business Manager, OUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. I Member American sylvanla Associat nue Building, New cago, l\h' 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. THURSDAY KVENTNG, OCTOBER 5 However vexed you may be over night, things will often look very 1 different in the morning. If you have written a clever and conclusive, hut scathing letter, keep it hack till the next day, and it will very often never go at all. —Lord Avehury. M'KEESPORT HIGn SCHOOL r IMITATIONS have been received In Harrisburg to attend to-mor row tho dedication of McKees port's new High School, a handsome building of which any city might well be proud. Next year we hope to invite 11c- Keesport people to attend a similar dedication in Harrisburg. Harrisburg never stands back when her neighbors are making needed Improvements. Our school system must be on a par or a little ahead of the others. We don't like to boast, but Mc- Keesport has got to "go some" if it wants to keep ahead of Harrisburg in the way of High Schools. John D„ Jr., has an income of a mil lion dollars a week. My, what a flock of new hotels he could build for Har risburg and never miss a meal. French soldiers are reported to bo organizing football teams. Now Heaven help the Germans! Those English tanks must be almost as dreadful as some of our own Ameri can tanks. IDS OWN COUNSEL PRESIDENT WILSON as an ex cuse for not making speeches at towns whero he did not want to epeak, yesterday said: "1 am before the Jury and can't say anything." True, he is before the jury, and it appears that the defendant is making a pretty good blurt at being his own counsel. Shooting ring-tall pheasants from cover la far different from potting Zeps on a dark night, but there is no closed season for the Keps. Democratic Chairman Guffey called on the National Chairman in New York yesterday. We bet he met the treas urer, too. WE NEED THE TREES AS a result of the tree census just completed by City Forester Gipplo there is now opportunity for intelligent tree planting through out Harrisburg. Not a day should bo lost in preparing for the placing of hundreds of shade trees of the right variety. Some years ago the question of the creation of a Shade Tree Commission was considered, but owing to opposi tion tho matter was dropped and in stead tho office of city forester was created. This young man has proba bly accomplished all that is to be expected with the insignificant appro priation set apart for his bureau, but his work has established a basis for future tree planting activities. While there Is opposition to a sepa rate shade treo commission there would appear lo be no objection to a further subdivision of the responsi bilities of the City Council. Three of the existing commissioners could easily be constituted by ordlnanco a Shade Tree Commission and thus avoid any friction In tho caro of trees within tho ctty limits. At least, this method might bo tried as a further experi ment in the absence of a separate shade tree commission as provided for in the act of May 31. 1907. It ought now to be apparent to those who opposed such a commission whon the proposition was first broached in Council that something must be done to save tho trees we already have and provide others we so seriously need. As ono lover of trees has properly said, other cities and towns and com munities are getting along peacefully and comfortably in their shade tree activities while we are scrapping about nonessential details. Forester Gipple's report upon the existing trees shows that they are al most universally In bad condition; that they are diseased, planted indis criminately and without regard to va riety or size, and that there Is great necessity for trimming and placing in proper condition those that have with stood the operations of the tree butch ers and other despollers who have done their utmost to destroy the tree life of the city. Of course, arbitrary and unreason able and tactless shade tree commis sioners have been responsible for some of the antagonism to creating such a body, but these few casea ought not THURSDAY EVENING, HARRT&BURG TELEGRAPH! OCTOBER 5, 19T& to operate against reasonable and nec essary action In Harrisburg. A prop er commission never does drastic things; it uses tact and Judgment and knowledge of trees and tree planting In getting the best results. In the New Jersey communities where there has been groat success In planting and caro of trees, the dom inating tree on an existing street is the standard for that street. These trees are carefully trimmed and the street Is thus given a delightful appearance of uniformity throughout. Pennsylvania has been slow in taking up the care of trees, especially in its cities, just as it has been slow in Its highway im provement. We believe that the present City Council will see the importance of doing something without delay to pro vide for the protection and care of the shado trees we have and increase the number wherever possible. "Last night's Chamber of Commerce dinner was, I believe, in the nature of a memorable mtlestone of what the city of Harrisburg has before It. If we do not meet theso big men of Bethlehem in the spirit In which they meet us, we and not they will bo the losers." This Is the sort of comment which has come to the Telegraph from many sources since the fine demonstration of com munity spirit at the annual dinner of the Chamber of Commerce. THIS MEANS HARRISBURG WILHELM BERNHARD, of Chi cago, writing for the current Issue of Tho Rotarian Maga zine, introduces an interesting article on industrial communities with a para graph that amply set 3 forth the needs of Harrisburg at the present moment and explains almost In a single sen tence why men of far sight and vision have seized upon this time to Inaugu rate another forward movement for tho city. Mr. Bernliard says: There is no question but that a handsome, well-ordered city Is tho best possible business asset for the people living in it. Get rid of the dirty, ugly and inconvenient city! Many things indicate that the next few yearn will witness in the United States a progressive short age of labor, repeated demands for increased wages, a more or less concreted movement for an eight hour day, coupled with great re duction of immigration, a diminu tion in the supply of untrained workmen and almost a famine of skilled laborers. A change of administration at Washington Is as certain as anything still not formally decided can be. That will spell Increased activities along all industrial lines. Mr. Schwab is to 3pend $20,000,000 at Steelton, to use his own words, "as fast as it can be spent." This means at least 30 per cent, of that sum. more likely 40, will be spent in wages aside from the regular payroll, which will grow com mensurately with the enlargement of the Steelton plant. There will bo an influx of workmen, skilled and un skilled, such as we have never known and for which we are not prepared. Are we going to keep as much as possible of this money and these work men in Harrisburg and vicinity? Are we going to make our city so attrac tive that the best worklngmen will want to settle here? Naturally, we want both. But we are going to have them only to such degree as we deserve them. This is why men who have faith in Harris burg are putting up their money for the erection of a great new hotel. This is why they are working for the passage of the new high school loan. It explains their effort to give tho city a largo and powerful Chamber of Commerce. It is back of the desire for a new building code, the efforts being made to give the people proper bathing and boating facilities and re creation opportunities of all kinds. All these things are necessary to the future proper development of the city. The laborer now goes where working and living conditions are best. He choses his Job and he does not re main long in the community which does not measure up to modern ac cepted standards of health, esthetic and industrial specifications. So Har risburg must go forward or backward, and the watchword Is forward. Now and then the remark is heard in the various civic movements of the city that this or that person has no in terest in the campaign because it hap pens that his business is transacted with the world outside. No Interest In tho city! How about the comfort and welfare of his family? Are these not Interests sufficiently large to Justify participation in every movement for the betterment of conditions here? A POLITICAL SIDELIGHT VANCE M'CORMICK met Murphy, leader of Tammany Hall, and after the long session ended tho Democratic National Chairman, said: "We had a delightful conference." Let's see! What were those nasty things Mr. McCormick's newspaper organ used to say about Tammany Hall and Murphy? Shades of political reform shut your eyes, hold your ears and hang your head In shame! TIARIUSnURO NOT JEALOUS HARRISBURG is keen to be includ ed In every enlargement proposed by the Bethlehem Steel com pany, but we arc not jealous of the distinction just conferred by Messrs. Schwab and Grace upon Little Egg Harbor, where the largest ordnance practice ground in the oountry is to be located. Guns that shoot fourteen miles are not the kind of "industrial" companions for which we hanker. SCATTERING BREAD ONE of the most interesting fea tures of the Chamber of Com merce membership campaign now in full swing and one of its most Important phases ls the per sonal service being rendered by tho 100 men of the city who are doing the soliciting. It Is an encouraging sign in any town when men leave their own business for practically four successive days to work together for what they believe to be the benefit of the city as a whole. All of them are busy men. Their desks are crowded with work.. They have a task for every hour. Many of them are working nights to keep abreast. But they Rre, nevertheless, going about the membership canvass with all the energy and enthusiasm that have made them successful In their several lines of Individual endeavor. These men of the membership com mittee are making personal sacri fice. Little worth while ever has been accomplished without that element. Where it is manifest in the form of social service to the greatest degree, there community progress is most rapid. Those who give thus of their time and brains and energy have their reward, however. Every worthy gift or sacrifice has. They are as those who "scatter their bread upon the waters." Wonder if those pessimists who never see any good in Harrisburg and who declared that the million-dollar hotel was a myth still feel that way about it? It's.amazing how many peo ple continue day after day to tramp on their own feet. A letter has reached its destination after fifty-seven years in the mails. You've got to hand this Democratic crowd credit for putting one over occa sionally. Yesterday was an unusual day in the news—nobody sighted the Bremen. folitic* U By the Ex-Corumlttecman ■■ I The first outbreak of the feeling ex isting throughout the State against the bosses of the Democratic state ma chine came yesterday in Schuylkill county and is generally believed here to bo the forerunner of revolts against the inside ring of the party organ ization, which will be followed by a demand for a new "reorganization" as sure as President Wilson loses. Kor months there has been smolder ing discontent against the manage ment of the party organization in the State by National Committeeman Pal mer and his pals and the vote cast for Congressman Michael Liebel against Palmer showed that it had possibili ties. To overcome the feeling Palmer went to Philadelphia and took Charles P. Donnelly, whom he had almost thrown out of the party, to his bosom and practically put him in charge of the Philadelphia end of things—when the patronage had. all been given out. In Pittsburgh similar tactics were em ployed to get "Billy" Brennen back into the fold. In Scranton, Erie and other places the pacifying policy was followed, the absence of National Chairman Rlc'Cormick and Assistant Postmaster General Blakslee facili tating Palmer's work. But it seems that Palmer overlooked Schuylkill county and the trouble broke out in a new place. Right after Palmer and State Chairman Guffey had finished telling a crowd of Potts ville Democrats how well organized was the Democracy of Pennsylvania and the excellent chances of carrying it for Wilson, etc., Joseph Daley, of Coaldale, a former candidate for sen ator, got up and bluntly said that be cause of the failure of the bosses to form an efficient organization the Democratic party in this section had been allowed to perish. "Look at the activity of postmasters in this meeting and then remember how President Roosevelt threw "Bill" Lelb, the Republican boss of this county, out of Federal office for the same activity!" shouted Daley. As nearly all the Democratic post masters In the county were present to greet Palmer, Daley's remarks caused a sensation. John F. Whalen, who was presiding, interrupted Daley and recognized At torney Joseph Bell, of Shenandoah, to quiet things, but he also declared the party in that section of the State had been allowed to go to pieces. "It is dead," he said, adding that, although the election is only a few weeks off, a county chairman has not yet been elected in Schuylkill. Bell suggested John F. Whalen, chairman of the meeting, as the proper leader to re organize the county Democrats, and although this statement was applaud ed, Whalen declared this was no time for such discussion. A meeting of Democratic leaders was hastily called at which steps were taken to endeayor to put some llfo in the campaign. —Pennsylvania Republicans are reading with the greatest interest the reports of the big meeting in New York at which the two former Presi dents united for Hughes. It is de clared that, in spite of efforts of the Democratic press, the meeting was successful beyond the hopes of the men in charge. Ono account says: "It brought together William H. Taft and Theodore Roosevelt in a reconciliation scene which fulfilled the long cherished desires of friends who thought that the feud between the only two living ex-Presidents of the United States had lasted long enough. Colonel Roosevelt grasped the hand of his old foeman. Boles Penroso, of Pennsylvania, and said: "I am glad to see you here." The Colonel was greeted hy Governor Whitman and gave no evidence of re membering that the Governor was also on his blacklist not so long ago. In fact, everybody hailed everybody else as a brother, ancient fusses were for gotten, and the' talk was all of Hughes pnd how real Americanism was at last to come into Its own on March 4 next. —Mayor Smith, of Philadelphia, is coming in for some rapping just now because of the manner In which his bonding company is getting the surety business on Philadelphia city con tracts. The mayor docs not seem to mind. —The booming of Major-General C. M. Clement for Public Service Com missioner is pretty persistent and it is intimated that a decision will soon be reached by the Governor. —The fight between Congressman W. H. Coleman and ex-Congressman M. Clyde Kelly, of Broddock, is be coming bitter. Kelly is going up and down the district making charac teristic speeches, but it Is noted that Democrats are becoming restless be cause he does not declare for Wilson. —Senator Franklin Martin, of the West Shore district, was here yester day and said that his campaign was looking well. His Democratic oppo nent is inclined to be very noisy. —Members of the West End March ing Club have been requested by Mar shal B. J. H. Douglass to appear at the clubhouse to-night or Sunday to be measured for uniforms. Mr. Doug lass expects a big marching club. —Deputy Attorney General llargest took the papers yesterday in the quo warranto proceedings against mem bers of the Tarr.aqua borough council accused of dabbling in borough con tracts. —Philadelphia Republicans will for mally open the campaign with a ban ner raising to-night at the city head quarters. Prominent Republicans will speak. —Robert C. Bright, late candidate for Congress at large on the Demo cratic ticket, haa been drafted to ar range for Democratic speakers for Philadelphia. He had to go to New York to get them, as the voters do not seem to want the home grown variety. —Shamokin has started a movement to obtain a third class city charter. —While tarrying In Reading, where When a Feller N By BRIGGS A // mM BY ji MM y- (\ / /// '/// v/// 8E A Goo ° I \ / v/ /y/////j / v yWm leacher pj \ / ///. / Wwm f~Goot> ""by"! " \ there is always good cheer for Demo crats, National Committeeman Palmer said that the Democrats expected twelve congressmen from Pennsylva nia. —Mayor Smith says he thinks it is all i-i K ht for officeholders to make political contributions, but not police men and firemen. --Democratic postmasters through out the state are said to be responding liberally to the hints given to them in this city to subscribe to the Wilson funds. They Laugh and Grow Fat In the East, the West, the North and the South, the people are happy and contented. Chairman Vance McCormick. With Mr. McCormick's naive elec tion predictions to amuse them they laugh and grow fat too.—N. Y. Sun. With the Saloon Banished [Kansas City Times.] The liquor interests, fighting to de feat prohibition in different Western States, are issuing misstatements about what prohibition has done in States where it has been tried. They say it has increased drunkenness and crime in Arizona. Here are some facts, quoted by the Arizona Republican, about Arizona, which banished its sa loons January 1, 1915, nearly two years ago: In 1914, with open saloons, there were 4,750 arrests in Phoenix. In 1915, with saloons gone, there were 1780. In 1914 there were 2,674 arrests for drunkenness; in 1915 there were 224. In the two years since prohibition the number of inmates of the State penitentiary has decreased 50 per cent. There were thirty murders in the State in the last six months of sa loons. In the nearly two years under prohibition the State has had only six murders. In the last six months of saloons there were seventeen murders in Pinal county. In the first six months with out saloons Pinal county had not even one murder. On the first Saturday night after the saloons closed In Phoenix all tho bak eries ran out of bread and cake, and the meat markets ran out of meat. Drunkards' children were getting' more bread and cake and meat. A mother of six children in Blsbee, in paying for SSO worth of groceries and dry goods, said: "This is the first time "since we were married that the children have had the clothes they needed and our bills were all paid." Well fed, well clothed, happy mothers and children are unanswer able arguments against the saloon. IIOTEIJS WIM, ADVERTISE IN EASTERN PAPERS Leading hotels of the Northwest are planning an advertising campaign to bring a share of the tourist travel to that region, according to T. D. Hock well, of Seattle, secretary of the Washington State Hotel Association. The plan, as outlined by Mr. Rock well, is to advertise in the metropoli tan papers of the East and South, be ginning about March 1 and continu ing until the middle of tho vacation season. The advertisements will sot forth the hunting and fishing possi bilities of the Northwest, and describe the scenic beauties as well as give in formation as to routes of travel, acces sibility of places of Interest, nnd condi tion of the roads. The leading hotels of the Northwest, which foster tho plan, will publish rales and character of service. Why Militia Are Kept on Duty [Kansas City Star.] The militia regiments which are staying on the border are accepting their duty cheerfully and In fine spirit. The folks "back Home" are proud of them for their patriotic attitude. Yet obviously that is not the duty for which the militia were intended. They have to be impressed into that service because the administration failed to provide a regular army of sufficient size to patrol the border. With a regular force at all adequate to the country's needs the militia would not be required for nrolonged , police duty far from homo. IF YOU WOULD GE WRITE A REALLY POPULAR SONG IN the American Magazine, an article about tho fortunes made by song writers, says: "When tho new style of popular song had wormed Its way into the public's heart, the Bowery took Harry von Tilzer in hand and tutored him with the intention of having him amuse and entertain the public with his melodies. " 'ln those days it was easier for me to write a dozen songs than make connections for a square meal,' Harry smiles, whenever he falls into a remi niscent mood. 'And I was ready to sell a song for from 50 cents up. 1 never did get started until Sterling and I wrote the ballad. "My Old New Hampshire Home." After making the rounds with it we took it to a new publisher on Twenty-eighth street. He listened to it and then puckered up his lips. Finally he agreed to take it home and have his little daughter play it, saying that if she should like it he would give us sls for it. For the first time in many moons Sterling and I said a prayer, and the next day we got a check for $ 15.' Our Daily Laugh | her ast JF COOK. Mistress: M y SMti-fffl I 4 ® 1 cook shed /"/ \ \Y/il 8 on "it I 11 j ®j'Khtest provoca- W3) Maid: Did she SPOt U Mum? HEROIC HUS- j How is it that fou are the only ] iif cSLp man at the ladies* \l LA 1 f / J]Bo ■jrldcre party? \\mL/ My wife got/, if® ilck at the last |\ N WV WIM minute and th# IU KM hosteßS couldn't \\if§l\ M 9nd a substitute, imlß f t \ ~TI t Just had to :ome. A TP.IED IT ONCB I'v been try- J&P! S jf ~L to convinca s ff 0f Dobbs that ad vertlsing pays, Aft but ho won't blame him, poor fellow. That's J the way he got NO CHANCE. F% J""" n ' v "^|| No, not with I the dresses tha B Al plrls are wearing "owadays. T ~ In the Social Whirl The two-two" Is the name of the newest dance In the hupper suckles. According to all accounts, it is just too utterly too too.—Macon Telegraph. " 'Would you sell any of your songs now for $15?" the writer queried in a joking manner. "Harry grinned, and shook his head. 'Can you picture me selling a song like "Last Night Was the End of the World" l'or sls? It sold more than a million and a half copies, and my roy alty alone would be almost SIO,OOO, to say nothing as to my shares from the publishing end. To-day 1 would not take $15,000 for my latest song, "I Sent My Wife to the Thousand Isles," which A 1 Jolson introduced at the Winter Garden.' " 'What Is the best way for a new writer to get a start?' Harry was asked. " 'The Lord only knows,' he smiled. 'Every fellow seems to get going in a different way—some by accident, some by design, and some by patience and plodding. I know several that owe their start to Sophie Tucker, one of the greatest popular song exploiters In vaudeville. In fact, she Is looked upon and billed in all the big time vaudeville houses as the Mary Garden of popular songs.' " Rust-Resistant Apples The department of experimental pomology at the Pennsylvania State College names the following varieties of apples as resistant to cedar rust, a disecase which has proved somewhat troublesome in the past: Stayman, Oldenburg, Mcintosh, Red Astrachan, Fameuse, Winesap, Paragon or Black Twig, Yellow Newtown and Grimes. Susceptible varieties include York Im perial, Jonathan, Yellow Bellflower, Minkler and Ben Davis. Northern Spy is fairly susceptible and Baldwin fairly resistant. Awful Thought The price of bread is 'rising, rising every day. Soon the bars will sell the pretzel and give the beer away.— Louisville Courier-Journal. Has Another Think I think most Progressives feel as John M. Parker does.—Vance. As a thinker Mr. McCormlck is a good Democratic chairman. New York Sun. And They Did [Atlanta Constitution.] "Roosevelt's Progressive Chatter" is a headline in The Philadelphia Re cord. By and by they'll make the Colonel mad enough to say some thing. Speaker Clark's View "We got whipped, and I guess that is all I will say about the Maine elec tion. We got beaten good and plenty." —Speaker Champ Clark. Harrisburg. Pa., October 5, 1916. Statement of the ownership, manage ment, circulation, etc., of tne Harrm- I'urß: 'Olrcrroph. required by act of Con gress. August 24, 1912. Editor, E. J. Stackpole. Harrisburg. Pa.; managing editor. Gus M. Stetnmetz, Harrisburg. Pa.; business manager, Frank R. Oyster, Harrisburg, Pa.; pun lisher, The Telegraph Printing Com pany, Harrisburg, Pa., E. J. Stackpole, president. Stockholders: E. J. Stackpole, K. H. Stackpole, F. R. Oyster, Harrisburg, Pa. No oonds or mortgages. Average number of copies of each Issue sold or distributed through tne malls or otherwise to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date of this statement, 32,2n0. (Signed) The Telegraph Printing Co., F. R. Oyster, Business Mgr. Sworn to and subscribed before me this sth day of October. 1918. (Signed) H. 8.-MUMMA. Notary Public. (My commission expires March 9. ,1919) Itammg (£t\at| A good bit has been said and much has been written, including some fur longs in tills column, about the diver sity of the products of Dauphin coun ty s manufacturing establishments, but the average Harrisburg resident prob ably does not know that Dauphin f,°unty is blessed with an agricultural list that is almost as impressive as the roll of products of the mills and fac tories. Tho anthracite mines and the quarries should not be forgotten and neither should the fact be lost sight of %- in these days of booms in iron and steel that there are ore mines in Dau phin county and that even (races of oil nave been found, while the mountains have furnished an immense amount of lumber. This county is likewise a good territory for dairying, as is evi denced by the success attending tho farms about Hershey, Boyd and other places, and the chicken farms have JV- i, nlon °y> which many have not. Within sight of the Stato Capitol dome there are some of the best wheat rais ing farms In the State and in township corn which comes close to a record has been raised. In the upper end wheat, rye and buckwheat have been good crops and if attention was only given to potatoes the way it. has been done in York county this district wouip be known for the excellence of the "sweets and whites." It is not. generally known that the lower end was for a long time noted for tobacco and it was raised on the Cameron farms in the lower end of the city and the upper end of Steelton. Cu cumbers have been raised with good results, as was shown when one of the big preserving companies leased farms near Middletown, and the Dauphin county pumpkin has a well deserved clientele in the days when Jack Frost paints the woodlands. Ijima beans, peai,, turnips, carrots, rutabagas and other vegetables have thrived on Dau phin farms, and as for the "greens," there are hundreds of dollars made oft those crops every year. This county is rapidly getting to the market garden plan and there are some model places, like the Walton acres near Hummeis town, for instance. Although it is pretty far north, there have been some successful campaigns conducted with watermelons, and even cantaloupes, which are supposed to require a special soil, have proved to be a paving crop where tried in this county. The apple and peach orchards of the county have a well-deserved reputation and the small fruits furnish good incomes to farmers. In fact, when one sits down and goes over the list of what, is raised in the way of foodstuffs in Pennsylva nia it will he found that Dauphin county has almost everything except peanuts. • ♦ * Tn the last few days more men have appeared as messengers and errand runners than have been known for a long time, due to the fact that school has been resumed and that the boys who were acting as messengers were called back to their books. The tele graph companies have been the great est sufferers, as their forces have been cut in half, and they have had to en gage men. • ♦ Yesterday's sudden heating up of the atmosphere due to a departing kick from summer caused some people to wish they had not brought overcoats along with them. In the business and shopping districts people from the suburbs arrived with overcoats and heavy clothing. By noon they were wishing that they had thin suits of clothes. Many of the shoppers said that they felt the day as much as in summer. • • It is interesting to recall the fact that the making of coal briquettes, * which has been undertaken here with river coal as a basis, has been a sub ject of discussion around here for the last forty years. Back in 1875 or 1876 Dr. John R. Hayes, who lived at the United States Hotel, evolved a plan for mixing the waste at mines, culm and similar stuff with a sort of pitch and making them into lumps something like a goose egg. The project was given up, but ten years later a small plant for the same work was under taken. At Steelton the manufacture of briquettes from ore and fuel has been carried on for years as purt of the general scheme of economy. * * * Arthur H. Bailey, the former county treasurer and one much mentioned for sheriff next time, spent about an hour trying to locate his automobile the other evening and found it just where he left it. It seems that Pax tang's leading citizen is on one of the committees charged with increasing the membership of the Chamber of Commerce. He came to the city and started hustling for members. He had to visit many offices and he got far ther away from where he left the car. When ho was ready for home he had gone some distance and he had to re trace steps and remember every place he had been. • * • The recruiting tent in the State Capitol Park is a great attraction for veterans of the Civil War who have been gathering about It every day to talk over the "real times" with the men on duty. The Capitol Park seems to be the logical place for the recruit ing ground, as It is State property, centrally located and within the shadow of the Mexican War monu ment. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE ] —Professor Felix K. Schelling. well known here as a University of Penn sylvania lecturer, is ill and has been compelled to relinquish work for a time. —Fx-Attorney General Bell was con gratulated yesterday upon his birth, day. —W. Barclay Parsons, the New York engineer who mav direct Phila delphia transit, construction, built rail roads in China and wrote a book about It. —Joseph B. Grundy entertained the officers and directors of the Pennsyl vania Manufacturers Association at his farm near Bristol. —Dr. J. N. Jacobs, former controller of Montgomery county, who ran an unsuccessful bout with the State on I.ansdale improvements, says he is through with public life. | DO YOU KNOW J That Hnrrislnirg railroad bridges have attracted state-wide atten tion for the methods or construe- < tion? HISTORIC HARRISBURG A bridge spanned Paxton creek at Market street before Harrisburg was laid out. It was used for the turnpike to Reading, now Derry street. WHAT THE ROTARY CLUB LEARNED OF THE CITY [Questions submitted to membars of the Harrisburg Rotary Club and their answera as presented at the organisa tion's annual "Municipal Qulz/'l What abatements are allowed for School Taxes? What penalties are charged for school taxes? When is property sold for nonpayment of School No abatement allowed for pay ment of schuor taxes. A penalty of 6 per cent, is added October 1. Property Is sold for nonpayment in . in June following year of levy, ,