8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1631 SS=^==^=^==== Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Uulldlngr, Federal Square. S3. J. STACKPOLE, Pres't and Editor-in-Chief S\ R. OYSTER, Business Manager. OUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. t Member American llEhera' Assocla- Bureau of Circu lation and Penn sylvania Assoclat- Eaetern office, nue Building;, New em office, Story, Entered at the Post Office In Harrls burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carriers, six cents a 4nGSJyi3st£> week; by mall, $3.00 a year In advance. _ SATURDAY EVENING, OC7TOBEK 7 Silence is Golden. To speak wisely may not always be easy, but not to speak ill requires only silence. MR. ROOT'S SPEECH MR. ROOT'S New York speech should be placed In the hands of every American voter. It Is not only an effective campaign docu ment, It Is a classic. In it Mr. Root, with logic beyond challenge, by vivid illustration and lucid language, an alysed the Wilson administration. He showed the estimate In which, as a result of the Wilson foreign policy, the United States has come to be held by foreign powers and the danger which I that estimate involves. "We are told that Mr. Wilson has kept the country out of war," he said at one point. "So has every President for seventy years, except Lincoln and McKinley. Never since Columbus sighted San Salvador has there been a time when it was so easy for Amer ica to keep out of war by doing noth ing as it has been during the great conflict now raging in the old world. All the great powers of the world, ex cept ourselves, have had their hands full with existing enemies. They have been straining every resource to the utmost to avoid being conquered by the enemies in arms against them. Our danger is not now, while the great war is raging, but later, when peace has been mado and the great armies are free and rulers and governments look about for ways to repair their losses, and the great spaces and ill defended wealth of the new world loqjxi large on the horizon of their desires." Without bitterness, but with telling force, Mr. Root traced the course of the Wilson administration. He de clared that the great safeguard of a nation -was its reputation for character and manliness and courage, and that with such reputation gone It was al most certain to be so imposed upon by foreign aggressors as to make war unescapable. During the visit of Charles M. Schwab and hia party, the other day, it so happened that four trips were maau through the Market street subway. The great steel magnate thought he was going through a tunnel, and was greatly relieved when assurances were given that plans are now unfler way for the reconstruction of this subway to thw building line on both sides of Market street. City Engineer Cowden has been co-operating with the City Planning Commission and the Pennsylvania Rail road officials In this much-needed im provement. FOR PROSPERITY'S SAKE THREB-FOURTHS of our sales are duo to conditions created by the war. Republicans and all others who are familiar with the currents of trade are not deceived by the Democratic pretensions of sub stantial prosperity which rests solely upon abnormal conditions abroad. With the close of the war these tem porary conditions will give place to a situation which is now giving the greatest concern to those who look ahead and who are endeavoring to provide for the slump that is bound to follow unless a protective tariff along Republicans lines Is placed up on the statute books as a barrier to the cheap products of Europe. It has been shown over and over again during the last six months that American people have lost heavily through the removal of the protective tariff. A continuance of the present erratic administration at Washington would bring about results that are too serious to treat with anything save the most grave c^islderation. George W. Wagenseller, the Mlddle burg editor, who knows the news paper game as few other men from an Intimate personal experience, has added the Juniata Star, at Mlffllntown, to his newspaper properties. MV. Wagenseller will have the good wishes of the entlro fraternity in Pennsylvania in his en larging newspaper activities. PREPAREDNESS REGARDLESS of war >and his military connection, Shackleton, the noted English explorer, will return to the antarctic. There is a lesson in this. We are apt to think England, France and Russia straining in a death struggle for victory—eating, drinking and sleeping war, with neither time nor energy for anything but the great conflict. In reality this is far from fact. The Allies—the English in particular—are busy in a dozen ways preparing to take advantage, to the full, of the in evitable period of peace. This is one of the signs of the times for us. If SATURDAY EVENING, • * HARRISBURG &6S& TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 7, 1916. we do not raise a tariff wall about us as England proposes to erect around the British empire we are doomed to the most disastrous period of industrial life in the history of the country. JUST ONE SHARE WONDER how many of the peo ple of Harrlsburg fall to realize that the million-dollar hotel Is I to be the culmination of the efforts of years and the filling of a demand as wide as the country! This city has suffered more than many' of our peo ple know from Inadequate hotel fa cilities and while the fame of Harrls burg has spread in every direction by reason of its unrivaled location, its splendid parks and playgrounds, its wonderful rivar basin and its many unsurpassed advantages, the absence of the hotel that is so greatly needed has diminished the enthusiasm which was aroused by all the other good things. Now we are to have the hotel just as soon as the plans can be adopted and the builder obtained. But those who are laboring so earnestly to bring about this great Improvement are striving in every way to make a record of building a hotel without one cent of debt in the way of bonds or other ob ligations. While many have sub scribers of one or more shares, so that those at the head of the movement are anxious to secure hundreds of sub scribers of one or more shares so that the undertaking may have the acter of a community proposition. Surely, few citizens of Harrlsburg will find it a hardship to subscribe to one share of stock to the value of fifty dollars, payable in installments over a period of fifteen months, be ginning January 1, 1917. So inter ested are the Chamber of Commerce people in this matter that they have set apart next Friday for a whirlwind campaign, In which hundreds of pub lic-spirited men will engage to wp.lt upon all our people who are interested In the hotel with a view to obtaining the final subscriptions. It ought not to be necessary for these msn to give of their time and effort in a matter of this sort, but they have cheerfully agreed to do so In order that the hotel directors may feel free to complete all their plans without delay. A POETIC NEIGHBOR WE are apt to think of Pennsyl vania as industrial rather than literary, as practical rather than poetical, but there resides down Columbia way a quiet, modest man who has done for his State in the world of letters what the Schwabs and the Carnegles and the Hersheys have In a business and manufacturing way. He is Lloyd' Mifflin. Last week he passed his seventieth milestone and byway of celebration Is about to Issue a new volume of verse. • To learn how beautifully he writes and how one need but read the following sonnet from his new book, then close one's eyes find think of yesterday: * Faint music drifts among the Au tumn boughs— Some one is coming far across the leas Where haze makes dreamland of tho fields, and bees Murmur the livelong day. The wading cows Move lazily along, or stop to browse; The orchard, from Its golden fruited trees. Spreads nickering shadows where the nocks, at ease. Rest In the shade and Indolently drowse. And now mid bronzing leaves, the silent Jay Finds his lost bugle and salute* the air From tawney valleys rich with tented corn; Slowly the splendor comes, as far away, With grape-leaves wreathed in his sun-burned hair, October, loitering, winds a phantom horn. After a week of standing shoulder to shoulder and marching together up and down .the streets of the city, the pro gressive citizens of the Chamber of Commerce have a new and broader vision of the future Harrlsburg. All who are still outside the organization and who are able to Join In this work should do so without further urging. It Is your city and your Chamber of Com merce and Just as you give for the up building of the community all will be happier and more prosperous and mors contented. VACANT LOT GAKDEXS ONE of the progressive real estate men of Harrlsburg lias sug gested that the vacant lots of tho city might be turned over to the children next summer for the cultiva tion of flowers. This suggestion will probably be of Interest to th Civic Club, which haa already conducted for several years the agricultural activities on tho vacant lots about the city. Ford's new war cry Is "get the men out of the shops In eight hours;" that ought not to be difficult. The trouble seems to be to get some of them In for eight hours. "Diamond sharks swindle shoe dealer; loses price of ring."—Newspaper head line. OH, well, let them sell another pair of shoes and make up the loss. Attention, small boys!— October 14 has been set apart by the mauufactui ers as "Candy Day." Perhaps there was more cupidity than sympathy In the support given the New York street car strikers by the shoe makers' union. Well, anyway, there are no typhola fever germs in pumpkin pie or scrap ple. Philadelphia laundrymen will raise the price f#r collars; getting their pa trons by the throat, so to speak. The Days of R . . By BRIGGS j r W " I Ml ■II IN ■II I T>oOt£c* u By the Ex-Ooramlttrfrman ■Democratic machine circles were Riven ajiother Jolt last evening when Judge John M. Garman. of Luzerne county, former Democratic State chair man and one of the big: Bryan men of the State when some of those now making a noise as Democrats were silent, came out against the re-election of President Wilson. Such a decla ration from such & man would be enough to make Democrats pause and think, but as It came right after the thufnps handed to National Commit teeman Palmer and State Chairman Guffey in Schuylkill county and the snubs they got in Wilkes-Barre, It in dicates that something is wrong with the reorganised, rejuvenated Demo cracy of Pennsylvania. And right on top of It all comes the report that the Democratic national committee is go ing to call on the Democratic post masters and Federal officeholders for cash contributions with the State or ganization also seeking campaign money. The fact that the Democrats of the State are divided as much as evy is becoming more apparent every day In spite of emanations from the Market Square windmill and In about one year there will be another demand for a re organization for the purpose of throw ing the present bosses into the garbage can. Judge Garman's remarks were made during a visit to Philadelphia and stunned some of the Democratic lead ers. "I am opposed to President Wil son." said he, "because his policies are against the spirit of true Democracy, He has violated practically every tra dition and acted in direct hostility to the national platforms of the Demo cratic party since 1860. He has given us a wobbling, unstable and extrava gant administration." Judge Garman also condemned the Wilson administration's course in con nection with Mexican and European affairs and characterized his action on the elght-hpur issue as "undemocratic, In fact, autocratic." Arrangements for the reception of Presidential Candidate Charles Evans Hughes at Philadelphia on Monday call for a big demonstration of Penn sylvania Republicans. Governor Hughes, who Is due to reach Philadelphia at 8 o'clock Mon day evening, will be accompanied by Mrs. Hughes. A committee of the Philadelphia Union League, including John Grlbbel. Charlemagne Tower, ex- Govcrnor Edwin S. Stuart. Alba B. Johnson and James B. Bonner, will no to Trenton to accompany tho Hughes party to Philadelphia. All of the members of the Philadelphia con gressional delegation have been invited to Join the subcommittee on this trip. At. 7 o'clock Monday evening members of the Union League, it Is announced, will assemble at the teague and pro ceed to Broad Street Station with the reception committee tb meet the candi date and escort him to the Opera House. Tho reception committee In cludes Senators Penrose and Oliver, ex-Secretary Knox, Mayor Smith, of ficers of the Hughes Alliance in the State of Pennsylvania, including Pow ell Evans, chairman: William Draper l.owis, Bayard Henry, vice-chairmen; George D. Porter, secretary, and E. B. Km£li, treasurer, and the members of the national compalgn committee of tho Union League. —Senator Charles A. Snyder, candi date for Auditor General, is speaking to-day with Congressman B. K. Focht at the annual soldiers' reunion at McClure, Snyder county. The senator, who is a descendant of the famous Governor for whom the county is named, was given a notable greeting. —Pittsburgh reports are that there is a brisk registration in that city. Philadelphia reports a lively round-up. —Men connected with Scranton's centennial took advantage of the pa rades yesterday to boost the regist ration and a big enrollment Is expected to-day. —The Central Democratlo Club counted noses last night to see how many members and prominent Demo cral4 are going to Shadow Lawn next Saturday. The number was not an nounced. The special train will start from here and there will be plenty of seats. —Prothonotary H. F. Walton was re-elected prothonotary of the courts in Philadelphia yesterday. He is a former Speaker of the House. —Re-election of Senator E. E. Beldleman Is expected to be by one of the most substantial majorities polite in years in Dauphin county. The sen ator in his visits throughout the county meets people everywhere who are for him regardless of party affiliations. . Postmaster W. A. McAdoo. of Kit tanning, was nmong visitors here yes terday. He was at the windmill to see what was doing. Senator Penrose returned yesterday from New York, where he conferred with George W. Perkins and other men Influential around the national Repub lican headquarters. The senior Sen ator would make no comment on the political situation beyond saying that there was "no doubt over the result of the presidential election." Although the election will be held In one month there is still one vacancy unfilled In the Democratic list of can didates for presidential elector. This vacancy is In tho space allotted to the twelfth congressional district, compos ed of Schuylkill county. The other four electoral tickets are complete. Tho vacancies in Democratic lists will be taken up at a meeting of the Demo cratic State executive committee at Philadelphia next Saturday. Dr. Eliot and Mr. Wilson No one has a higher regard for the clarity of Mr. Eliot's mind, for the su periority of his intelligence, and for the genuineness of his courageous patriotism than the editors of the Outlook; but, even taking at Its face value his presentation of the debit and credit account of President Wilson, we cannot follow In his conclusions. No number of specific and detached economic laws can make up for the fundamental corruption of an adminis trative system by the relntroduction of the spoils system "under some In visible compulsion or supposed neces sity," nor can the passage of the Fed eral Reserve law and the rural credits act cover up the fact that the Wilson Administration In Washington has been one of the most expensive and extravagant In the history of tho coun try. We are of those Americans to whom Mr. Eliot refers who wish "that the President would publicly abandon the neutral state of mind which he recommended to the American people at the outset of the war." But we cannot agree with Mr. Eliot that this is an error "resulting from too great reticence and caution." It is an er ror which President Wilson repeated deliberately in his address before the League to Enforce Peace, when he said of the European war: "With Its causes and its object we aro not concerned. The obscure foun tains from which its stupendous flood has burst forth we are not Interested to search for or explore." This Is not an error of reticence and wiutlon. It Is the error of a man who flbes not see straight or think straight, and we cannot support such a man. ; No matter how good his specific and detached act# may be, no matter how fine his aspirations or how upright his personal character, the adminis trative leader of a great nation like 1 the American Republic must be a man who sees clearly and thinks consis tently. If Mr. Wilson had mado as 1 many mistakes, had changed his mind as often, and had been as "untrue to his ' own convictions" in the administration of Harvard University as he has in the administration of tho United | States Government, we respectfully 1 ask Mr. Eliot If he would advocate Mr. Wilson's retention as president of Harvard.—The Outlook. Going Some ' The Belgian Relief Fund received sls from three little boys in Pennsyl vania who saved this amount by doing ; without luncheon desserts. —News Item. I Three little boys, without dessert, [ Sat side by side, my! how It hurt To forswear cookies, pies and cakes | And luxury of stomach aches! i Said one: "I guess It's going some To give up sweets for Belgium." I "You bet It Is," said number two, , "It's harder than I thought to do." . "I never guessed," said number threo, i "That Ice cream meant so much to me." • Three little boys, my how It hurt, ■ Sat side by side without dessert. I Three little boys In distant land, ) Sat cold and hungry, hand In hand, ' And wondered how a hearfy meal, ' A home, and clothes, and warmth would ' feel. [ The pallid snow lay on the ground, I Tho blight of war stretcheri all around. Three pairs of brimming, hopeless eyes Were raised in prayer to leaden skies. , Like answer straight. In heaven's name, L Food, warmth and clothing swiftly came. Dessertless lunches, going some, ■ Had! saved three lives In Belgium. ~ H. STANLEY HASKINS. [ DON'T KICK YOUR LIKE THE ARKA i WHY kick your job around as though it were the Arkansas hound-dog famed In song? There are men whose pet affectation it is to denounce and disparage the task that procures their daily bread and perhaps spreads It with butter. They like to pretend that their ex ceeding virtue languishes unrecogniz ed. They are worth ever so much more than they are paid, but no body sees it that way. When they read of fifty-thousand-dollar men or hundred-thousand-dollar men their imaginations are quick to establish an identity. They cannot see why X and Y should be paid so much, when they, the real revolving wheels, the true, dependable underpinning of the whole establishment, are getting so little. Any time you like you can hear from the man who is feeling that he deserves a better position and is denied his right to it. In the cor respondents' columns of the fascin ating country newspaper, faithful mirror of the lives of little towns, you will find that many a rising young man has "accepted" a position in a store or a bank or a freight depot or a factory. It sounds so kind and con descending to say that we "accept" a position. It never would do to ad mit that we sweated blood to get it and now are having the time of our lives to hold it down. It is a poor workman who insists that the place he now holds is but a stepping-stone to a more responsible and a more lucrative post. The suc cessful men are they who utterly bury themselves In the working life they are leading, with no thought of a better-pjiid hereafter. They are not counting the days to a promotion They "put in their best licks" at the The Victim Don't cry, little baby, that milk strikes are on, That men who are struggling in greed, Hear not your faint wail as the hun ger pangs press, Who are deaf to the plaint of your need. Cease struggling with strength that le puny and weak With the force of a giant-like might; A song bird that flutters in clutch of a hawk Can make, oh, much more of a fight. So slight is your need In the pressure that's on For chance to pllo up golden store, 'Tls trampled with scarcely a knowl edge 'tis there, As the eager crowds rush on for more. ♦ It lies like a field flower, crushed by the storm That no one gives even a look; Shall baby hands hold back the iron machine Which armies' attacks would not brook ? Don't cry, little baby, but weakly sub mit, This world is but trouble and strife, With the strong to tho front and the weak to the wall, 'Tis better your pitiful life Should flicker and fade in the merci less maw Of the Moloch of business-like gain; For then you aro safe from a bitterer fate, And shorter your portion of pain. —Josh W ink . ' n Baltimore American. Social Blunder No. 8973 [From the Boston Transcript.] Hostess (to departing guest) Musv you go so early, Mr. Blank? very sorry that I must leave, Mrs. Park; the fact is, not ex pectin- to Have such a pleasant time this evening, 1 made another engage ment. BTUMPING ~FtJT HUGHES Mrs. Nelson O'Shaughnessy, author of "A Diplomat's Wife in Mexico," has Joined the Women Hughes Cam paigners and left New York this week on the special train for its extended tour. Since the publication of her book Mrs. O'Shaughnessy has tasted for the first time the Interest of the public speaking and will now make speeches! In behalf of the Republican candi date. task in hand, in the spirit of him who said, "This one thing I do." For it is a day of specialists and of concentration. The lackadaisical and the half-hearted stand no chance by the side of those who are driven as by a consuming fire and will not be denied. It is not always a case of love at first sight between a man and his work. But a calling may be an ac quired taste and still become a ruling passion. It is an excellent sight, that of a man at work with an evident relish for what he is doing, a just prldo in the traditions of his craft, a firm de termination that every finished pro duct reaving his haj|<i shall be as good as he can make in business the value of a trade name often lies with generations of men who wrought not in the spirit of a hire ling but In obedience to an urgent voice within which never let them rest upon a botched and boggled oper- You cannot do your best work till it 1'? shlnln £ morning face" to It. All that Is wrong in you and thl *Z° U be wron * ln and with the thing you produce, whether it be a book or a letter, a shoe or a coat, nr W °? d ®? bo* or a gold ring, a bridge or an interstellar airship. The mood oualftv hls J vork affects its quality for better or for worse. Your own welfare is the welfare of all you m?' .factories are run by sunlight in the disposition as well as at the win °wl; ' ,y . a spiritual combustion as well i f! Under the boilers, by an enthusiastic human mechanism as I WhLt a h flywhoel and turbines. What better place is there for a man woH< nf h? , blo P a P h >' than in the hands, and whnt more sat the ?n y mem ° rial ca " be leave when 5L Koes dow n at last upon his life . —Philadelphia Public Ledger. Dentists to Advertise cinH h rt e „ J^ d f. rn EU,lcal Dental Asso ciation, at its recent meeting in In dianapolis, planned to start an edu cational campaign in paid newspaper to bring to the public tWcaL health i tlu> lm P°rtance to good teeth it , better attention to the , Proposed to confine the advertising to educational lines. The ' 0n K° f tho organization pro vides for a board of censorship whose purpose is to exert its influence upon wJtftta fha °h, t0 ? eep , the advertising of the society 0 "" ° f Ule pui 'P° Bes ,S P lannp <l to co-operate with the national vigilance committee of th Ch *""" r Unions and Contracts [Omaha Bee.] ..MeV'l Ss? Y°„'r k "'f, evidence of tho fwt that ik~_ % K aiid e tWr r.'l'aH " lkln themselves [° r the collective bargain, which is the chief aim of trades unlon actlv A f h ® members have imbibed' knowledge of the fact that they have too Um Thev°hf hlnß ° f rea P° na lblllty, too. They have come to know that the public has a share in the bargain they have struck with thoir employers and, more than this, they reallre that they should be bound by an ® ree °R? nly nd fre cly entered into SR°" ltt0 of these considerations— the contract to be binding on ■ Cm i oyers mt,st also be binding the worker s will do more than any other means to bring them tn that state of stability and account ability wherein the function or their organizations will reach its fullest possibility for service, because it will have the respect and confidence of those with whom they must deal. The action of tho N.ew York union men In declining to break their contracts is a proof of advance. WHAT THE ROTARY CLUB LEARNED OF THE CITY [Questions submitted to 'members of the Harrisburg Rotary Club and their answers aa presented at the organisa tion's annual "Municipal Quia."! Does etty regulate oerhead signs? If not, should It be done? , City does not regulate overhead signs. I fEbntfttg (ttljat With awarding of a contract for con struction of a system of storm sewers along a,nd across the old Pennsylvania, canal In Steelton a few days ago vtttO sounded the death knell for another section of that once famous waterway. The history of the old Pennsylva nia canal. should It ever be written, would be filled with many a romance end would be quite apolitical chronlcl> Prom time to time since abandon*, ment of the stream as a waterway for boats there has been many a merry controversy and years of agitatloa in Steelton to obtain the filling of stream form only one of the number. When the borough of Steelton was * thing yet unborn the old Pennsylvania canal sluggishly ll<wed through the peaceful tarni land#that now are oc cupied with smoking mills and tyw? business places. At the lower enM . llarrisburg there was the lock for raising and lowering boats and at what is now Trewick street, Steelton, was a coal yard operated by Couffer & Sultzaberger. These were about the onlv places below the city for several miles. In late years when the borougn grew up closely along the banks of the abandoned stream a strong demand for filling ot the waterway was made. Unanswered, this resulted in periodical outbursts In council and In politics for vrnrs until the question was recently definitely settled. The canal will be filled from Locust street and the Penn sylvania Railroad will construct a new freight spur Into the borough and erect a new freight station at Front and Locust streets, Steelton. The sew age now drained Into the canal will be cared for by a system of sewers to be built at the Joint expense of the borough, the steel company and the railroad. • • • Governors of States who are natives of Pennsylvania will be guests of hon or at the first annual dinner of the Pennsylvania State society to be held in Philadelphia on November 23. The committee in charge of the dinner Is now arranging the invitations and has discovered that four of the executives of States were born within Pennsyl vania. The society was formed last winter and is composed of heads of departments and divisions and mem bers of important commissions. Monthly luncheons are held. It is expected that the dinner in Philadelphia this Fall, which will bo the first of the kind ever given in the State, will bring together many of the prominent men of the Keystone Com monwealth. Governor Brumbaugh is the honorary president and Secretary of the Commonwealth Cyrus E. Woods the president. Members of the Leg islature are eligible to bo members. "The general use of automobiles nowadays," said one with an imagin ative mind the other day, "forecasts the period when a man's trade or pro fession mav be identified by the car that he drives. The indicator will bo on the radiator cap, where already many machines belonging to physic ians' bear the rod cross. A lawyer would fly a crossed pen and seal, the merchant a symbol significant of the kind of merchandise he sells, the in surance man an insurance policy, and the railroad man a miniature engine. I saw a camel a day or so ago, mount ed on the hood of a small roadster. Must have been placed there as sig nifying that the special merits of that particular car obviated the necessity of refilling the tank with water every day or so, and implying that the cap could go us long without water as tha camel." • • • Although eighty-four years old, 8. B. Elliott, of Iteynoldsville, comes Harrisburg a couple of times a montli on business of the State's Forestry Commission. Mr. Elliott, probably next to Dr. J. T. Rothrock, has been identified with forest conservation more than anyone else connected with the State government. He has been a member of the commission for al most thirteen years and he knows every acre of the reserves and of a lot of land which he would like to see brought under the State's control. Mr. Elliott has had much to do with the auxiliary reserve system to whoso importance people are Just waking up. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE [ —Judge T. D. Finletter, of the Philadelphia courts, caused some sur prise in a trial of a pickpocket the other day by saying he knew how it felt because he was once robbed of S4OO that way. • [ The Rev. F. R. Wagner, new head of the Allegheny synod of the Lutheran Church, is a clergyman at Iluntln^'lon. —Judne E. C. Bonniwell, of Phila delphia. re-elected head of the State Firemen's .iS'--ociatlon, has been con nected with tire companies since ho was seventeen. —Congressman W. H. Coleman, who is having a iUrenuous campaign for re-eleetto- is also Republican chair man ef .Allegheny. —The Rev. Edward Riggs, prom inent Ph'lrde'phtan, is spending the year in nee and will not visit Philadelphia. [ DO~~YQU KNOW That Hnrrisbnrg plates are used for boilers for locomotives in New England? HISTORIC HARRISBURG The stockade about John Harris' house was first called a fort by provincial authorities in Philadelphia, In Time of Tribulation And the Lord said unto the chlU dren of Israel, Go and cry with the gods which ye have chosen; let them deliver you in the time of your tribu lation. —Judges x, 11 and 14. [_ Our Daily Laugh Jealous women But she always \ M III JMIkSi And "be marr'eil \ R "ne rich • uri rns she of * w I dunno. A RARE AC COMPLISH- MENT. I Father: Has *"**w this fiance of yours any ability Jk ALW. In any direction 7r whatsoever? l\ Daughter: Oh father, he pro poses most beau- ' •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers