8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded tSjl Published evenings except Sunday by , THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Square. ID. J. STACKPOLE, Pres't ana Editor-in-Chief -*'• K. OYSTER, Business Manager. GUS M, STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. I Member American Newspaper Pub lishers' Associa tion. The Audit Bureau of Circu lation "\nd Penn sylvania Associate Eastern office, Story. Brooks & Finley, Fifth Ave nue Building, New Gas Entered at the Post Office In Harrls burg, Pa., as second class matter. _>cgßy carriers, six cents a week; by mall, $3.00 a year in advance. THURSDAY EVENING, JAN, 4 Without the love of books the richest man is poor; but endowed with this treasure of treasures, the poorest man is rich.—J. A. Lang ford. WATER CONSERVATION PUTTING before the Legislature the water conservation program as outlined by Governor Brum baugh in his message read before the lawmakers on Tuesday, the Slate flood control committee, headed by Dr. Dixon, has taken a momentous step In the history of the State. As is usual, private capital saw the profits to be gained from use of water supply and water power long before the pub lic became at all interested In the sub ject. Indeed, there is no very great public demand for water conservation at this time, although the subject is receiving the growing attention of all' thoughtful people. The Governor, j Dr. Samuel G. Dixon and others of 'the flood control committee are uj little ahead of popular demand, as j wise and far-seeing public servants; should be. Their recommendations should re ceive all the more earnest considera tion of the Legislature because they do not propose to rush haphazard into any pet scheme of legislation which might or might not prove best. They very properly ask for a comprehen sive survey of the whole situation. They propose to view the subject from every possible angle and with all] available information at hand before! they venture upon recommendations: that will, if enacted, affect the lives and prosperity of Pennsylvania people for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years to come. The water works of the ancients were most carefully constructed. They j were one great public asset in the I early days of civilization. Many of; those of the East and Far East were ■ so well built that if not in actual ! operation to-day they are still ob- j servable as well preserved relics and; as illustrations of those "elder days, of art" when "builders wrought with j greatest care" and when vast public j moneys were expended in providing for water supply and irrigation pur-1 poses. During the Middle Ages no; artificial provision was made in Europe for water supply and the people of J those countries paid extravagant prices ! in health and taxes for their neglect. | That period in European history may j be compared with the much briefer! interval in America when the use of l streams as sources of waterpower was' permitted to fall very largely into decay, when large coal-driven mills took the place of those which the early settlers by force of necessity ran J by the dammed-up water of the streams that passed their doors. But the "inexhaustible" mines of! coal already are nearing the end of j their supply and the hope of the peo- I pie for cheap water power in the| future lies in the long neglected; streams. Big corporations have seen j this and vast sums already have been ! expended in dams and plants and fair! profits are being realized from the In- i vestments. It would be unwise, as the Governor points out, to permit all of the vast water resources of the Com monwealth to fall Into the hands of private capital. Every householder in j the State is paying the penalty fori the exploitation of public coal lands at the hands of greedy interests and ! it would be criminally negligent, with yds example so disagreeably demon-1 strated, to permit the same thing to happen with our water supplies and sources of water power. Properly conserved, the streams of the State may be made not only the servants of the peopl.e, but a source of great ' revenue for public purposes that now must come from the individual or from corporations in the form of direct taxation. The proposed survey is rich in possibilities. The subject is one of the most interesting that has been presented to the Legislature in years. There ought to be no quibbling over thn granting of appropriations suffi cient t# carry the proposed work along. MORK PUBLICITY FOR \YM. PFW ONE hears a great deal more about William Penn lately than for years; and one reason why this is so is because of the efforts of the William Penn Highway Association. There is now being mailed by thou sands the first issue of the Bulletin of the William Highway, a twenty four-page monthly issued In the in terest of the Penn Way and of good roads generally. Typographically per- THURSDAY EVENING, MOVIE OF A MAN WITH THE ITCHY FLANNELS : : . . . By BRIGGS tCPT slt>e AnP NJPPER UPPER SHOULDER I==AR jRIGHT QBFT , | "Ga" i Rear £ CVAJ O* THU ''' ©N The I R(6hT iHPRt: * ,6HT THE small oH B*BY shooter BLADE cf ThS • ' " ' BACK j MO\KMSMT) feet, this bulletin has a list of con- I trlbutors who command attention. |_ Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh | leads the publication with a glowing [tribute to the Penn road and its "many matchless miles of scenic splen dor." Highway Commissioner Frank B. Black tells of the aims of the State Highway Department. Then there are j signed articles by Colonel Henry W. j Shoemaker, of the Altoona Times; H. ! G. Andrews, Strickland Gillilan, Judd j Mortimer Lewis, Edgar A. Guest, j Charles Henry Davis, president of the ! National Highways Association; E. J. j Stackpole and others. I There are special articles dealing j with the recent William Penn road opening at Easton; with Charles M. Schwab's handsome summer home along the William Penn Highway at Loretto; with what the members of the Senate and House think of the good roads proposition, and in this i article many legislators permit them selves to be quoted. The Bulletin of the William Penn Highway seeks to get away from the ; bromtdisli passageway traveled by I road boomers. It will present road ' facts in a new light and an interesting ; manner. It is not a money-making I proposition—being issued solely to ! publicize better roads. As such it is alone in a wide Held. That it will be appreciated by advertisers is evi denced in the first issue. The Tele graph congratulates the association on having issued a very clever and very pretty first number. If the President must have Carranza sign something he might send him an endorsed note for >5,000,000. STATE DAIRY INSPECTION THE State Grange very properly is moving slowly in the matter of proposed dairy inspection. It is very geneially reported that some of the leaders of the Grange would' like to come out openly against such in spection, but that they realize such a course would put them in a very un favorable light before the public. The farmer cannot afford to oppose State dairy inspection. On the other hand, he ought to welcome it. The stigma of typhoid fever has attached itself to many a dairy farm. Careful farmers with modern methods at their command know this and take precau tions against the contamination of their dairy products. Imppre milk can be produced more cheaply than clean milk and under present condi tions the two are brought into unfair competition. The farmer whose dairy is above reproach has nothing to fear, and he ought to welcome the State inspector. His -neighbor whose products are not above suspicion ought to be forced to do what his conscien tious competitor does of his own voli tion. The attitude of the public in general toward dairy inspection" may be judged from the fact that the Ameri can Federation of Labor at its recent meeting in Baltimore, where 2,000,000 ; labor men and their families were representaed, adopted by an over whelming vote, a resolution fav oring the adoption by Congress of the Linthicum bill for a Federal in vestigation of the manner in which, milk Is produced and distributed. More children, not to mention the adults, die from bovine tuberculosis every year than from the infantile paralysis outbreak, which caused such a panic last summer. Municipal dairy inspection has proved ineffective. Either State or Federal inspection, if npt both, is g. certainty of the future. The farmer will do well to accept the Inevitable gracefully. The most discouraging thing about Rumania is that it doesn't know when It's licked. PENNSYLVANIA CITIES GOVERNOR BRUMBAUGH HAS indicated quite clearly in his message to the Legislature that there is need for a larger measure of home rule for the municipalities of the Commonwealth. In this view he has expressed the opinion of many who have studied conditions in the Pennsylvania cities. Williamsport is even now in the throes of a municipal revolution and students of municipal government are in practical agreement upon the propo sition that the present commission form is more or less of a failure. Discussing the problems which con front many of the American cities, tho Kansas City Star says: What the city manager plan pro poses is the election of a small board which shall hire the best man obtainable to run the city. There is a chance to get high class men on the board. Hut even if professional politicians should get control of it, as they would at times, the system would be so much simpler and more direct than the present one, and the responsibility so centered, that the administration would certainly be far more efficient than it is when politicians control the present ma chinery. I'nder the existing system the city has little chance to improve conditions, because there is con stant change in the administrative officers—the mayor and his depart ment heads. The system condemns the city to government by ama teurs. The city manager plan at least makes it possible, as public sentiment becomes more ;Jert, to keep trained men in charge of city affairs. Those who are concerned with tlie efficient management of our Pennsyl vania municipalities should see to it j that the Clark act, under which all the ! third-class cities are operating, Is so I amended as to make it optional with I these cities whether the commission i shall be a paid body or one serving j without pay and employing a manager | or heads of departments. Manifestly there are weaknesses which must be remedied, and the pres ent Legislature should not adjourn without giving some relief. President Wilson "had a hundred thousand men; he marched them into Mexico and he marched them out again." A SIGNIFICANT RECORD LOOKING back over the campaign, it may be of value to note that none of the members of the Cabinet who took the stump for Wil son—and they were almost unanimous in doing so—was able to do for his chief what their ex-colleague, Mr. Bryan, did. The States where Daniels, Baker, Redfield, et al, spoke went Re publican, while the States where Bryan put in his work went Demo ; cratic. It is no wonder that the Bryan men look upon the rebirth of I their idol as the outstanding feature of the politics of the day. | We bet you could have heard a blue bird sing in Wildwood Park this morn ing. Need More Movie Censors "Seventy-five .per cent, suggestive melodrama, and no good. "Twenty per cent, obscene or slap stick comedy, ana no good. "Five per cent, travel and educa tional, and all right." That is the manner in which Dr. Ellis S. Oberholtzer, one of the Penn sylvania board of censors, summed up tho average output of the moving pic tures that are submitted to the censors for their inspection in an address be fore the Federal Catholic Societies. "You have no idea." he added, "of the number of films that need censor ship. We have to cull from nearly every scenario submitted to us some obscene situations and we need a bet ter grade of censorship to keep our ; moving pictures clean and well worth while. Only four other States com pel the submission of films to censor ship, while the law should be such-in every State."—From the Philadelphia i Public Ledger. TO STOP DRINKING, STAY IN BKD Booth Tarkington, one of America's greatest writers, has written an ar ticle for the January American Maga zine on ttu- liquor habit in which one of his characters says: "'I didn't plan to do it. I didn't even attempt to do it. I just did it or something did it for me. I woke up one morning, after an unusually tierce night, and when I crawled out of my bedroom for some brandy I found I couldn't lift a glass to my That didn't alarm me, I'd been thai shaky before, but I decided to go back to bed and sleep until my nerves were some what quieted. I did go back to bed. and I decided to stay there until I got "up normal" without alcohol. 1 stayed there all that day and the next—when I began to care a little about real food —and the next, and the next. I stayed there ten days, andwhen I got up I was feeble enough In body, but I'd given my mind or soul, or "something, enough rest for It to get a quiet and true vision of what had been happening to me, of what I'd slid into, so to speak. And I was through. I had decided. I knew X couldn't "drink moderately,'"" HAKRISBURG TELEGRf Xt Ut .By the Ex-Committeeman All is quiet on Capitol Hill to-day. Aside from the water supply and power and the game conferences there has been little stirring since the Legislature adjourned. There was no talk of dismissals this morning and not even a new rumor as to any ap pointments for the places made vacant by the Governor's requests for re movals. The Vure leaders generally reiterated yesterday their statements that the Penrose-McNichol power in the Legislature is not sufficient to hold up confirmation of appointments by the Governor nor to pass any meas ure over his veto. The political out look forecasts peace in Philadelphia until the election next summer of city committeemen, but factional warfare in this city until the Legislature ad journs. It was said the Vares are not prepared in the light of recent events to push John It. K. Scott's claims for the governorship nomination in 1918. —Accentuating their victory in the election of the presiding oltlcers ot both the Senate and the House, the Penrose leaders yesterday let it be known that they will add to their prestige in the domination of legisla tion at Harrisburg by the appointment of Clarence J. Huckman, of Bucks county, and James F. Woodward, of Allegheny county, to be chairmen of the Committee of the Senate and House, respectively, on Appropriations. This will mean that the sixty millions of dollars or more which is to be ap propriated for the administration of the State government and for educa tional and other purposes, including the large sums to be spent for good roads, will be allotted not by the men who have been backing the Brum baugh political leadership,' but by the supporters of Senator Penrose. —Penrose men say it is logical to assume that with Buckman and Woodward named for the chairman ships of these committees the presi dent pro tern, of the Senate and the Speaker of the House will see to it that a working majority of each com mittee will be in sympathy with the policies which the chairmen will ad vocate. —There was a report yesterday that S. J. Gans, of Philadelphia, who was chairman of the Law and Order Com mittee four years ago, will be renamed for that position. It. is authoritatively stated that there has been no agree ment upon any candidate for chair man of the Committee on Law and Order of the House by the Penrose leaders. It is to this committee that nil legislation affecting the sale of in toxicating lirpiors, including the Local Option bills will be referred. Shuffle-Shoon and Amber-Locks | Shuffle-Shoon and Amber-Locks Sit together, building blocks; Shuffle-Shoon is old and Kray, Amber-Locks a little child; But together at their play | Age and youth are reconciled, | And with sympathetic glee Build their castles fair to see. "When X grow to be a man," So the wee one's prattle ran, "I shall build a castle so— With a gateway broad and grand; Here a pretty vine shall grow, • There a soldier guard shall stand, And.the tower shall be so liiKh, Folks will wonder, by and by! Shuffle-Shoon quoth: "Yes, I know; Thus I builded long ago! Hero a gate, and there a wall; Here a window, -there a door; Here a steeple wondrous tall Rlseth ever more and more! But the years have leveled low What I builded long ago!" So they gossip at their play, Heedless of the fleeting day. One speaks of the Long Ago Where his dead hopes buried lie; One with chubby cheeks aglow Prattleth of the By-and-by iSide by side they build their blocks— Shuffle-Shoon and Amber-Locks. —Eugene Fields. "Copy Germans to Beat Them" Max Eastman, author and editor, called the Lloyd-Georgo regime in England an effort to imitate Germany to defeat Germany in a lecture on Socialism in Philadelphia recently. In answer to a question on the effect of the Lloyd-George coup, Eaatman said: "England is showing what the people of this country will not rec ognize: that war and military success are incompatible with freedom end democratic government. When war comes you must look for one-man power. "England to-day Is imitating Ger many to defeat Oermany. England will never go back to Its old regime It will organize until it has state capi talism, government ownership and op eration of all industries in the interest of capital."—From the Philadelphia North American THE GOSPEL OF PREPAREDNESS MAKK TAPLEY, in the romance of Dickens, you remember, was Cheerful. No matter what con ditions or troubles he encountered, Mark always saw a cheerful side to the prospect. And when he couldnt bo as cheer ful as usual he bravely insisted on being as cheerful as possible. Amer icans need to emulate the example of Tnpley. TVith the world mostly at war. the United States is us yet only dabbling Parties Don't Have Ideas President Wilson, In one of his speeches during the recent campaign, uttered this sentence: "The Republi can party h%s not had a new idea In thirty years." This utterance natu rally invited nrgument, and there Was a good deal of hooting at it. Examination of the subsequent de bate leaves two conclusions. First, the statement, sweeping though It appears, is quite true. Second, that it is just as true of the Democratic party, of Which President Wilson said nothing, as it Is of the Republican party. The difference of opinion hangs about the word which Mr. Wilson used—"had." Political parties don't "have" Ideas. They reflect them and adopt them. This thought was expanded by one of our readers, C. J. Buell of St. Paul, Minn. "The truth Is (he said) that great new ideas never originate in organised parties, but always outside of them among a few advanced thinkers. These ideas grow and spread and gain popu larity until tlnally they are embodied in legislation, sometimes by one party, sometimes by another." Mr. Ruell cited a large number of examples, such as railroad regulation and conservation of natural resources. —Prom Collier's Weekly. Every Man Own Cleaner A Fostoria, Ohio, youngster nailed his trousers to the floor in the kitchen of his home and put the electrfc vacuum cleaner on 'em. The cleaner did the work.—From the Toledo Blade. The Booze Motto The enormous consumption of liquor in Kansas disturbs Senator Reed. He attributes it to prohibition. To to sure. That is why the liquor forces always welcome proposals to make States dry and have as their motto, "Prohibition and Prosperity for Booze!" Kansas City Star. Backsliders Return, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings. Behold, we come unto thee; for thou art the Lord our God. —Jeremiah iii, 22. AND THE CAT CAME BACK Zim in Cartoons Magazine Did you ever try to lose a cat? I mean a cat that- your wife didn't want hanging round the house and had or dered you to carry off eight or ten miles and drop into the lap of nature. Maybe you think cats have no idea of the points of the compass. Well, you're wrong, for they have the human race cheated in their powers of orientation. Last niglit.l placed an unwelcome feline in a bag, bade it God-speed, and sent a boy on a bicycle with full instruc tions and a bill of lading as to his des tination and thanked goodness that not one corpuscle of its blood had been shed in the commission of the act. This morning Grimalkin sat in his accustom ied corner on the porch, ready for j So, it was not Grimalkin's ghost. It I was Grimalkin in the flesh. I "Re-n't you superstitious about cats, mister? I be!" said the boy. "I let it out of the bag head first but I think I ought to've took It out tail first, so I'm going to try it again to-night and tnke I it out 'tuther end to, and ridg me bicycle home hind end foremost, so't to make the cat b'lieve he's running back track and discumfuddle him so s he won't know where he's at!" PHONOGRAPH JiEKDI.E RRI SII Do you really clean your phonograph records when you rub them with a cloth? Doesn't the rubbing* compress some of the dust into the grooves? I Arthur Herrman, of New York city, j thinks so, says the Popular Science Monthly for January. He has taken an ordinary brush and lias attached it to the sound box in such a way as to dis lodge all dust from the groove just be fore the needle reaches that particular portion of the groove. His sweeper Is composed of stiff bristles. It may be swung to an in active position out of engagement with the record by turning it on its swivel connection. It is adapted for the play ing of records having hlll-and-dale or laterally cut grooves. THE I.ATRST IN BABY CARRIAGES The up-to-the-minute baby carriage has its electric gong and batteries, op erated by a conveniently located pushbutton, preferably on the handle, to clear the pathway of the carriage.— "Popular Science Monthly for January. JANUARY 4. 1917. in the pool of blood. Let's be thank ful that, bad as our circumstances and our standing are in this respect, they are no worse. True, we are yet in no condition to defend ourselves if assailed by some rapacious power. Rut we are coming to recognize this fact, and perhaps we'll be able to take the proper prep aratory steps by and by—indeed, some steps are now being taken. Let's be hopeful—and vigilant in this regard. —Detroit Free Press. OUR DAILY LAUGH MENTAL LIIJERTY. Do you enjoy WT novel reading, Mi as Fullman? piuch. One can | JjMUb r associate with \T people in fiction W\\Jjj w.Rjh that one 't Ff/ R:;l wouldn't dare to /iti| •Peak to in real j\V /i ■ t JpC A HIS LITERA /j| TURE. /(TN'l * Not literary, ixk w • . The only book he cares for li fa the volume ot J* business. IN THE COURT Q r-\ r> ROOM. T ]—/ T Judge How I long have you \ owned a car? Motorist (charged with .\ 1 speeding) —One week, your hon- 11 or judg 0 —um maa —then you can ifji" fr-| Itlll afford to I [ j V\ I fay a fine. • I ' —I ! 'maKßsm ! wmtmw in ™ fP' aMM TOUCH. j If / JwWMjnj Your so# i t~ ✓ £ plays very well ! I — he has such a sensitive touch, llas he? \ not when ha \ touches me! AT SEA. V First Passen ' gcr—Sir, I fancy rf your mother ■n over there ha/j a £ OJSL touch of sea m'" sickness; per haps you'd bet ter l°ok after Second Pas scnger The W s / i§|f lady Is my 'ia mother-in-law. /jffiiil / First Passen-. • ger—a thousand pardons. GAME AND | jjf llj M ifl|| GAMES. I I Jill IV mlljl Were you ever [! ill! l|| I jli on a big game j Yes, and sad ID •—) to say I found **- It—l spent xwo BSnrafifc days at Monte Winks—What did Jones die of? Blinks —Overwork^-earning money enough to pay for the operation that saved his life.—Judge. Tommy (during heavy bombard ment, to his musical pal)— Chuck It, Nobby! I can't get to sleep while you're making that awful noise! London Opinion. limuttg (Htjal Announcement by the Harrlsburi Railways Company that it is planning service improvement and changes in an effort to maintain schedules during rush hours, brought forth a number of tralfic tie-up stories and the sympa thies of at least one autoist who has occasion to use the downtown streets frequently during the day. "Ser vice improvement!" the autoist said in a "peeved" sort of a way as he told his trouble to a friend. "I'd lika to know how they can do it. Why sometimes it takes me from fifteen to twenty minutes in my automobile to get from Market Square to the Phila delphia and Reading station. Most of that time I spent creeping through the Market street subway behind a coal wagon. Four cars, three automo biles and another wagon were trail ing us. It's going to be some job to better traffic conditions, there ought to be a help in keeping schedules." Talking about better service brought a story from an olficial of the railways company, too. He was discussing the plan started some years ago to run ex tra cars out State street, and the re sults of the trial. in that sec tion of the city asked for better ser vice, then with extra cars running to Twentieth street, they preferred tak ing a crowded Progress or L.lngles town car instead. I rode out on sev eral occasions and found that often * the extra car would have only a few passengers, while the Progress car fol lowing it had more than 80, many of m them getting off at points passed by the other car." "If you must have an accident, don't have it in a tollbridge, especially if there is an unreasonable Amazon at the one end that takes the toll," is the advice of a local man who relates the following experience: "Crossing a tollbridge in a nearby county an auto collided with his two horse spring wagon from the rear. The wngon was so badly damaged that he could not continue his trip with out repairs. He did not care to leave the horses stand while he went in search of the village'smithy,' so he unhitched them and lead them across the bridge^ "At the tollgate he paid 10c for each horse and 3c for himself. He later re turned with a blacksmith and paid 6c to enter the gate. When the wagon waa repaired, he again paid 6c to leave the bridge. Securing the horses he was forced to pay another 23c to pass tho gate. He had paid 58c and still wasn't across the bridge. How ever his troubles were not. over. When lie finally passed the tollgate he was charged 30c,the regular rate for a two horse team. Altogether his toll had cost him 88c. "The matter was taken up with the bridge authorities and the 58c re funded, but then maybe the experience was worth that sum. • Retail milk dealers in the city kept the telephones busy tho other day when they learned that the dairymen were talking of another increase in the wholesale price. Members and efilciuls of the city dealers' association decided after short phono conferences that no meeting will be held for sev eral days until the action of the farm ers is known. It was intimated that a fight will be started at once If the dairymen attempt to Jump the prlc again. A 2c increase per gal lon became effective November 1 1916. • • • -• Only a few of the third-class cities in the State pay 9c a quart for milk, according to a recent census of Pennsylvania. In one or two places the price is 10c per quart, but the big demand with a small supply is largely responsible. In some of the sections there are few farms and much of tho milk that is sold is brought from other points. * * * The value of the phonograph in the school and the appreciation of the var iety of music made possible by this machine are causing youngsters in a number of schools to make plans to buy talking machines. In one school in a borough nearby the teacher and boys and girls are working together. Each day pennies and nickels are sav ed, which otherwise would have been spent for candy or other transient joys. The youngsters are working hard and expect to get their machine soon. * * * George H. Wirt, chief forest, fire warden of the State Department of Forestry, is tho author of an illus trated article in the recent issue of tho Journal of the Engineers Society of Pennsylvania in which ho teUs what the State is doing and says that if the waste spaces of Pennsylvania could be reforested and protected from lires there would be no question about water supply. Forest fires, he says, are inexcusable in Pennsylvania and SIOO,OOO invested in means to check tires can save millions of dol lars. • • Now that the Christmas rush is over it is probable that something will bo done pretty soon about a new high school for the West Shore. The school directors of that section have been studying the problem from vari ous angles and from all accounts are about ready to make known some line of policy which will bring tile realiza tion of hopes and furnish the educa tional facilities which must coine with the increase of population. a * It is an interesting thing to note that the Stutc appropriation for the common schools, which Dr. Schaeffer would have Increased to $18,000,000, hsvs jumped by ten-year intervals, ex cept in the last instance. In 1915 the total was made $16,000,000, although the extra million added for the first time since 1908 can scarcely be con sidered as an increase because it was specifically appropriated to certain objects. The increase in 1908 was the result of agitation begun back in 189S and brought about in 1908, when it was made eleven millions. f~~WELL KNOWN PEOPLE Judge falling, re-elected in Novem ber, took the onth as Justice of the Supreme Court yesterday. The Rev. Dr. Daniel E. Weigle, well known in Hnrrlsburg. made an address In /vllentown yesterday urging wider publicity for churcheS. Ambassador Fletcher, of Chambers burg, brother of ex-Sheriff J. ltowe Fletcher, of this city, is finally to bo sent to his post in Mexico City. DO YOU KNOW * That large quantities of tho timbers from the old, •tumble-down houses in the Eighth Ward were found to be so heavy and so well preserved that they have been used in some of the lino homes of Harrisburg and vicinity erected in the past three years? The Season and the Thing To everything there is a season,' and a time to every purpose under the heaven; a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; a time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; a. time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.—lScclesl astes, 111, 1 to 8.