8 i l ..u.i- . inn i J ■ SATURDAY EVENING, SXRRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 17, 1917. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH t V /I NEWSPAPER FOR TUB HOitß Founded itjl Published evenings except Sunday by THIS TBLBGRAPH PIIIXTIXO CO, Telegraph Ilulldlns. Federal Square. JO. J. STACKPOLE, Pres't and Bditor*in-Chitf P. R. OYSiTKH, Business Manager, OU3 M. STEINMETZ. Managing Editor. Member American Newspaper Pub __-jranrißT{ llshers' Assocla- BgC%jßL*rta tlon. The Audit x'ljM, Bureau of Clrcu- HgHHSwA lation and Penn jfil M 188 sylvan I a Associat • sm S'.K Eastern office, iitS tfta Story, Brooks & Kid W Fin ley, Fifth Ave- EIS ;r? nue Building, New BWj-JjC York City; West- KSWSr ern office. Story, Brooks & Flnley, . ing, Chicago, 111. Entered at tho Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as teecond class matter. By carriers, ten cents a week; by mail, $5.00 a year in advance. SATURDAY EVENING, FEB. 17 t- = Woe unto him that giveth his neigh tor drink, to thee that oddest thy venom, and male est him drunken also, that thou mayest took on their naked ness.' —HAB. 2:15. I NNOCrLATION FOR TYPHOID THERE can be no question as to effectiveness of innoculation as a means of preventing typhoid. It has been demonstrated beyond all doubt that the body may be rendered Immune by this means, without bad effects upon the patient. Had precau tions of this kind been taken previous to the epidemic of last summer in Harrisburg there would have been no epidemic, since it has been established pretty clearly that carriers of typhoid germs were responsible in very largo measure for the outbreak that re sulted from contamination of milk and Ice cream. It is, therefore, gratifying to note that the manufacturers and dealers, of their own volition, will Insist upon ty phoid innoculation for their employes during the coming hot weather sea eon. In so doing they are not only safeguarding the health and the lives of their patrons, but are making a wise move in their own behalf. Ice cream is growing in popularity, especially as a warm weather dish. Hundreds of thousands of dollars have been and are being Invested in mod ern plants for Its manufacture under sanitary surroundings which would be set at naught If It happened, as It did last summer, that some of the men en gaged In the handling of the product ■were typhoid carriers. Unquestion ably many dealers entirely blameless ■were put to serious loss last year by the ban that was pl'aced on ice cream when typhoid fever was traced to it. It is to the Interest of these to see to It that no dealer shall make himself the cause of a condition that may not only make hundreds of people sick but which would be ruinous to busi ness. Nothing "will do more to restore public confidence in the safety of ice cream from a food standpoint than the earnest efforts of the dealers and manufacturers themselves to insure its purity. They are moving in the right direction. Frlghtfulnesa Is no respecter of "safety lanes." "WANTED, 1,000 DWELLINGS" WANTED, 1,000 Dwellings!" That is the "ad." of the civic t authorities of Reading. Reading needs new houses, needs them badly, and despite tho fact that hundreds have been built the past year the usual spring scarcity is worse j than ever. • This Is a good sign. It proves the steady growth of the city. Harrisburg also needs new houses. Not only are dwellings at a premium here, but we have some hundreds of them that must be torn away shortly, having long since outlived their use fulness as human habitations. Why wouldn't It be a gooij thing for both Reading and Harrisburg if some big corporation were formed to build attractive houses on a large scale in order that they might be rented cheaply? Tho Investment certainly would be safe, at least, and those who engaged In such an enterprise would be doing both cities a good turn. The Weatherman is going to have a 'iard time explaining the way the ■Groundhog hits oft the weather. STEEL MAKING IN HARRISBURG WITH the construction of one of the largest open hearth fur naces in the world at the Cen tral Iron and Steel Company plant, this city, and the blowing In of an ad dltlonal blast furnace at the Steelton mills of the Bethlehem Steel Com pany, Harrlsburg's place in the iron and steel industry assumes bttll greater importance. Both the Central Iron and Steel Com pany and the big Schwab mills are growing rapidly. The new blast fur- nai-e at Steelton is only the first unit of the big $15,000,000 improvement program mapped out for the Bethle-. hem mills, and the Central Iron and Steel Company is now extending Its gas producers and remodeling its idle stacks. Under their present manage ment there is no prophesying how im portant these two plants may become in the steel world, but their future greatness is already more than as- S * sured.. With tho blowing in of one of the idle furnaces at the Central Iron April |j& ]6, as announced In The Telegraph Thursday night, at least more men will find employment. The number of men to be oddod to the Bethlehem Steel payroll when all units of the im provement program Improvement are completed will run Into the hundred 3. In the very heart of the distributing district of the East, this city is bourid to grow Into one of the really big steel producing points of the world. The difference between Cuba and the United States Is that we prefer hot air to hot shot, following a disappointing election. Why Not a Street Car Survey? TTTTHY not a street car survey in * * Harrisburg? The question naturally arises as a result of the excellent results achieved in the police department through the survey made at the sug gestion of the Chamber of Commerce and with the friendly co-opcration of Mayor Meals. Nearly every day brings to the Tele graph offices letters of complaint re lating to delays of street car travel and what the writers are pleased to call "inadequate service." Doubtless some of these are the results of the jitney controversy and the unfortunate labor disturbance of last summer, but not all of them. Where the fault lies the Telegraph does not presume to say. It knows only that a very large num ber of Harrisburg people believe con ditions could be materially improved. The average citizen ha 3 no feeling either for or against the trolley com pany as such. He wants prompt and efficient service for his nickel and be yond that he is not greatly interested. And he is entitled to that. Regular schedules, reasonable frequency of cars passing a given point, comfort able seating arrangements and cour teous treatment at the hands of effi cient, honest and polite employes are the passenger's rights. These are the best advertisements any company can have, but the opposite is also true; delays, Inefficiency, dishonesty, care lessness, over-crowding—all operate against a trolley company in the opin ion of the people it purposes to serve. It is easy to fall Into a rut. It is not easy to get out. There is doubt less room for improvement In the ser vice of the Harrisburg Railways com pany. A friendly, co-operative survey at least would give the people much useful information and would not only encourage improvements but would place the blame for shortcomings, if shortcomings there are. rOTATOES AT S:t.ro A DUBHKL POTATOES reached $3.50 a bushel in Chicago the other day when a new kind of boycott was 'started which brought the price down with a bump to $2.75. The retailers took the situation Into their own hands and simply declined to buy at any such ridiculous price, recommend ing that their patrons use rice and other foodstuffs of the kind as potato substitutes. The result might be well worth consideration in Harrisburg, where prices of potatoes threaten to go beyond all reason. Chicago commission men insisted that the high prices were due to ship ments abroad, and doubtless that and a short crop in this country last year do have an important bearing on the situation, but the fact that prices fell away seventy-five cents a bushel In one day under pressure of the retail ers' boycott would appear to be ground for the suspicion that they had been artificially inflated. Too often people blame the retail dealer for the high prices of provi sions, but in most cases he is simply caught In the same trap that holds the consumer —he must buy at the figures quoted or do without. High prices tend to lower consumption and the small dealer whose profits are not in creased to any extent, and often act ually lowered, by exorbitant charges for the goods he handles, would be as happy as the consumer if the cost of living were reduced to before-the war levels. EARL WHITE'S APPOINTMENT 1 APPOINTMENT of Eari white as clerk to the police department under the revised system order ed by council takes Into the service of the city a young man trained for the work he undertakes by years of police court newspaper reporting. Nobody in or out of the police department knows more about its workings than Mr, White. He has a wldo aquulnt ance in all parts of the city, holds the confidence of the police officials and officers and is of excellent character. Mr, White fits into the place he has been called upon to fill as though he had been carefully groomed for It. His appointment Is another Illustra tion of learning one's job so well as to be suddenly boosted out of It into a better one. PJX PORTS TO WARRING NATIONS OUR total exports for tho calen : dar year 1916 .were valued at $5,481,423,689. Of this amount France, Italy, Russia, the United Kingdom. Canada, Australia and New Zealand, and Japan, took $4,320,000,000. — or 79 per cent, tq THEY CAN'T PUT YOU IN JAIL FOR THAT By BRIGGS I Youn mime ujas \ I ' ('- SO we. ~~ Ijfesgffia J (kr) Q ( s^swus A s 'JT"VO U A " T -*•> "•" cMufe OFF ice TV)i& THIS. ' wf^D 5 i e V OF H CRE^ E 1 CrC C y-r >x Y T u * re venF J CTLY V/AUU6 ikj THE BU-Sime SS / O"' C S) / \ JO-STIFIED lM ) \AJOKLJ>- WE ? L |\ \ \" COMMITTING "I+4l S~ ((no! -? ) ) t t"? v Y OUTM t "Cl„,o g^^ ON the Allied Powers. It is an ill war that blows nobody good, but if the end of the war flnd9 us with the pres ent tariff abomination on the statute books we will catch a blowing quite different ip character. Some people never will learn anv sense; take this latest plunge of the Crown Prince following the perform ance of Verdun, for example. Labor Notes Organized actors, stage employes and musicians have formed an alii- j ance. Vancouver (B. C.) women have pe titioned to be allowed to become mem bers of the Municipal Council. A local branch of the National Union of General Workers, an En glish organization, has been formed at Athlone, Ireland. Belgian refugees have opened a horse slaughter-house at Halifax, Yorkshire, and are teaching British workmen to eat horse meat. For the first time In many years the union house card is to be displayed In restaurants and cafes in Saiv Fran cisco that are employing union cull nary workers. Active work is now being done by the Canadian National Service Board to supplant male labor for female wherever possible in munition plants. Already nearly 1,500 women are en gaged in the manufacture of mu nitions in Ottawa. On October 1,\1914, there were about 2,300,000 women in Germany registered at the different employ ment insurance companies. On August 1, 1916, this number had risen to 4,- 000,000. The increase, though not so great in the metallurglc industries, is nevertheless Important, there being 140,000 women to-day instead of the 60,000 employed before the war. 2ynt Vfirt SJPLoLau shrdl taunn I Another War Change The woman window-dresser, strange as It may seem, Is a war novelty. Now, however, she Is frequently to be found, even In the leading shops where men alone were formerly sup posed to have skill to arrange articles of women's clothing in such a way as to make women want to buy them. In pre-war days, though a certain' amount of the "fancy drapery" win dow-dressing was done by women, more important branches, such as the arrangement of model gowns, were seldom entrusted to them. Window-dressing is regarded in the drapery trade as an art. In houses where there Is a great deal of glass one or two competent window-dress ers may be kept at this work all the time, but usually they will only have a couple of days a week at it, and dur ing the rest,of the time may be em ployed as buyejs or to supervise stock or as salesmen. In the multiple shops, such as tobacconists, there are usu ally men whose business it Is to dress windows at the different branches and do nothing else. There are several reasons given why women have not until now found their way Into the front rank of window-dressers. One Is that 95 per cent, of women shop assistants do not concentrate in their work as a career In the same way as men do; they usually have an eye to marriage as the more attractive pros pect. Another reason given is that the dressing of windows is too heavy work for women and Involves a good deal of climbing about on ladders for which they are not well suited. But tho big drapery firm* have now, as a rule, nothing but praise for the women who aro doing this work. The women are not getting tho same rates as the men whose places they are tak ing—where a man "living in" would be paid £9O to £lOO the women are receiving only £7O to £Bo. —London Times. They Worship Trees I'nder the very shadow of the tele graph pole we find tho tree worship pers of Indta. Many kinds of trees aro worshipped in India for many kinds of reasons. Some are supposed to be the abode of demons who must be propitiated. The sacred Bo tree under which Buddha received enlightenment Is worshipped by pilgrims who come in thousands. In eome small villages where there are more women than men it often happens that there are no men of equal caste to the girl whose time has come to marry. Since the tree repre sents a deity which can assume any rank or caste, the parents of a mar riageable daughter who has become a burden to the family take her to the village tree god and marry her to him. She is bound to the tree and left either to the mercy of the prowling wild beasts or to be rescued by the first male of a lower caste who is In search of a helpmeet.—World Out look. "po£t£cC4 Ml. "^e.KJtoijCtfa.HXa the The Philadelphia Record to-day prints a very interesting story to the effect that the Governor is testing out the Senate in regard to passing the Sproul resolution for an investigation over his rumored veto and also on the Important question of its attitude on his appointments by having some of the members sounded in regard to their feeling on Secretary William H. Ball for superintendent of public grounds and buildings. The fact that Mr. Ball was being seriously con sidered for the place made vacant by the retirement of Samuel B. Rambo during the days of turmoil preceding the election of Richard J. Baldwin as Speaker was mentioned in this col umn early in the week and since that time the friends of the Secretary have been urging his qualifications for the position. He was Chief of City Prop erty in Philadelphia for years. The Governor is more concerned now than he was early in the week over the attitude of the Senate on his appointments as he is commencing to realize that the dismissal of old and tried men during the excitement of the last days of December created considerable feeling throughout the State and is being reflected in the Senate. The Governor and hia friends have also begun to realizo that they; can not count on any Democratic help and that the sole aim of the Demo cratic bosses, legislators, partisans and newspapers is to "get" every Repub lican, the object being to obtain capi tal to help the present Democratic machine get into power. The Democratic game is very ap parent. Day after day, the bosses and their legislative leaders have been in sisting that the investigation must be "fair and impartial." After the speeches the Democrats vote for the very measures'they decry. Now, after their scheme for a commission of "outsiders" to investigate the execu tive branch of the State government, has been twice buried under ava lanches of precedents they propose to bring it up again for purely advertis ing purposes. The Democrats are pulling long faces over what they call the dreadful state of affairs In Penn sylvania, but having trouble about re straining their glee over the Republi can row. —According to. reports in Philadel phia the Penrose plan Is to start, tn vostlgation by standing committees, which have full authority, in the event that the Sproul resolution is vetoed and the veto Is sustained. The first object of attack will, according to the Philadelphia Ledger, be the Public Service Commission and then the bat teries will be turned on the Attorney General. This Is the reason why Com missioner Magee has been dropping hints about plans of the commission to do some Investigating of public util ities in various cities. —Senator McNichol got two fine places In the Philadelphia Tax Revi sion Board. He nosed out the Vares and put in men who will fight V'are men for control/of wards. The Sena tor appears to be as lucky getting places as* subway contracts. —lndiana county is dry because all of the saloons were penalized by Judge Langh.im for violating: the antltreatlng rule. They will open up again on March 12. —Easton Democrats will have a special train to go to tho Inaugura tion. . —The borough of Knoxvllle voted down a $150,000 loan for street Im provements. —The Pittsburgh temperance meet ing seems to have developed an atti tude of antagonism toward the Anti- Saloon League on the part of some of tho most conspicuous advocatoH of lo cal option and prohibition In Western Pennsylvania. Tho refusal of tho league people to agree to tho plan suggested may have a far-reaching effect. .—Henry Q. Wasson's SIO,OOO fee'ln the Harmony escheat seems to have attracted much attention among law yers In Western Pennsylvania. —The Johnsown Leader, which went Into the hands of a receiver latelv, Is to be sold by court ordor, —The Philadelphia transit plans appear to be taking a pretty big place In political affairs. Borne of the big men in Philadelphia deny the state ments of Public Service Commission ers and are inclined to go before the people with their views, It Is un fortunate that the plans should come up at a time when politics 1B so para mount in State affairs. :—Erie county court's have granted some new licenses and there will be something doing In Luzerne cour.ty shortly. Perry's license court la also attracting attention. :—Some attention has been attracted at the Capitol by the news from Co- TIPS ON THE CLOTH top shoes are in for a Spring run, and all cloth shoes with leather tips and strappings will also play an important part in the summer's fashions. Belts and girdles of gold and silver tissue have carried over from winter models, and are now shown on spring dresses. Stout ladies and those who are only a little plump will be given as youth ful lines in suits, coats and dresses as the willowy-formed damsel, and when these clothes are made correctly they will not he lacking in the necessary quality of dignity. Beads of all varieties and all col ors are used with distinctive and real artistic value as trimming combined with hand embroidery. Green in brilliant and refreshing shade is sure to be a popular color in dress fabric as well as accessories. A Paris blouse recently Imported was of white voile, trimmed most charmingly by conventional lines of colored floss, put on by a couching stitch. Three colors were thus effec tively combined. Cotton gloves may now be had In quarter sizes, and this is surely an I lumbus that Governor Cox smashed precedents by appearing before a joint session of the Legislature and asking for a budget appropriation. He asked for $42,660,000, $10,000,000 more than his predecessor. —Pittsburgh newspapers say that the Governor will veto the Senate res olution next week. Taxidermists Are Sculptors [From the Washington Star.] It is very doubtful if many of the 300,000 or more people who visit the animal exhibits of the National Mu seum annually realize the great amount of work put on each animal in the mounting by modern taxi dermists. The larger animals are mounted on so-called "manikins" of re-enforced plaster, and are not, as Is quite generally supposed, ' simply stuffed with excelsior or sawdust. The expert taxidermists employed by the museum are more In the nature of sculptors than anything else. They are said to have been the pioneers in this kind of work, and at this time complete their work by constructing life-sized hollow plaster figures which are not only light and durable, but also far more realistic than those pro duced with sawdust and excelsior. Booze on the Run According to statistics compiled by the Commissioner of Internal Reve nue, there were 1,413 breweries In the United States In 1914. During 1915 this number was reduced by forty-one, and during 1916 It was further re duced by forty, there now being 1,332 breweries In tho country. The statis tics further show that there were 743 distilleries in the United States in 1914. During 1915 there was a de crease of 108 in this number, and dur ing 1916 thirty more went out of busi ness, leaving a total in operation to day of 605. In two years eighty-one breweries and 138 distilleries wore closed. Thus is prohibition gradually making itself felt throughout tho country.—Colorado Springs Gazette. Phones Made Trusts The telephone, not the tariff, has made the trusts. We have had the tariff in this country for a hundred years or more, but the trusts are bare ly more than a quarter of a century old. And if you will look into tho question you will find that the last twenty-five years about marks the de velopment of the long-distance tel ephone. It was that development that made It. possible for a man to sit in his office In New York, or Chicago, or San Francisco, gauge instantly busi ness conditions across the country and give his order on the moment to his I lieutenants. And I firmly believe that if the age of electricity should cease to-morrow —at the crack of a finger, as it were —within twenty-four hours every one of our big trusts would be gin to disintegrate. Big business does not merely thrlvo on communication, It Is vital to its very existence.—Col lier's. Bill That Helps All [From Chrlstlun Science Monitor] It may seem a trifle overdrawn at first blush, but when the matter If looked Into carefully, the air of exag geration vanishes from the statement that every Missouri horse, every Mis souri dog that travels under the wagon every motorist, every farmer's wife and girl, and boy, and man servant and maid servant, every country mer chant, and every consumer of produce will be the gainer by the Hawes Bill The arch-enemy of Missouri rura civilization is mud, and Mr, Hawes a member of the Missouri Legislature is the arch enemy of mud, whlcli means bad roads, advantage for women who have here- I tofore been obliged to wear a lialf | size too large. Blouses of sheer material, such as i georgette crepe, chiffon, organdie and • ! voile, are being shown in a wide range • I of colors, in white and in ilesh tint. Hand embroidery and application of beading make pleasing trimming on materials of sheer quality. Delicate flesh-colored lingerie In i silk is in good demand, and this nat urally brings forth a decided call for corsets in matching color, with tho result that many exquisite models are I to be had. Leather embroidered in gold and , i silver is a fashionable trimming fea ; I ture for millinery. Figures and forms cut out of leath ;■ er and kid are applied to hats with i loose and irregular embroidery stitch- I es done in colorful flosses, j Many French hats are in brilliant I colors this season, such as cherry, ! rose and cardinal. Huge silk tassels trim many separ | ate skirts and one-piece dresses. On | separate blouses and Jackets the tass |el idea is used, but here the quaint [ornaments are smaller. i The American Ambulance * Mentioned In orders; praised for their 1 grit— • Men of the U. S. A.! 1 Those who start battling when others . leave off; 1 Those who fight Death for his preyj " Those who plunge on through shrap nel and gas; Those whom no cannon can rout; Those who dread naught but to fall In their Job Of bringing the wounded out. e e Mentioned in orders—only a line — But, ah, what a tale it tells t Of dauntless devotion to stricken men I Deep in that hell of hells! . Lads who went over from your town e and mine— f Striplings we used to flout— a Flowering to knighthood there In the y work B Of bringing the wounded out. e f Mentioned in orders; men from our y land j Gone there to kill the lie B That we in America do not care , If our brothers bleed and die. } Christ, as you succor the souls of men t In gory field and redoubt, . Have in your keeping the tender and brave, Who are bringing the wounded out! —D. M. Henderson in Collier's Weekly Health Note Little tubs of beer and Little shots of gin Make the mighty waistline And the double chin. —Huntingdon Globe. | OUR DAILY LAUGH 1 THE ONLY COURSE OPEN. Why did you ' V go Into bankrupt cy? I thought you o were making lots •1 ot mone >'- tftk•: couldn't get any ■ more credit. P i rV I. - ■ A.- ij [1 IN SOCIETY, y You seem to JSFgJjifW Tr' ? ay what you like . OJ* j about the Bilt-/ / -! tnore's but thoyC'v. t | certainly do en- II ; tertaln lavishly. r | Yes. They spare ■ s jI no expense to s \ their creditors. tM . ? M JSV K UNUSUAL. s 'J/l JAy 807 >• /iV Yes, he's over! ■ n\ Vjl K 90 and has no particular hobby S-vb to Hh,ch h ® at - Ay M i tributes his long life. it v :- CANDOR, it The Lady; Sup postng, Jane, I Jbmi J* should deduct from your (wages J(u2 A the cost of all th /ft-g. TtJ B8 e dishes you broke? |j 1 N| Ehure, mum, in i . L H ' that case It's me- vB h self'd be like the M , n dishes. Bmting (flJjat Some interesting railroad history is recalled by the fllipg in the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth the other day of the official papers of the merger of half a dozen railroads Into the Western Maryland railroad. The combined companies have a cap ital of $78,000,000, and the Pennsyl vania and Maryland companies of the system are now one as was accom plished recently when the big Pan handle merger was made by the Penn sylvania and the New Yorlc Central consolidated many of its lines in northern and western Pennsylvania. ~ The names of the companies absorbed * by the Western Maryland are indica tive of what was once contemplated, especially the scheme to make Harris burg in reality as it now is in the matter of freight traffic, the northern terminus of the Western Maryland. In the list are the eastern and western extensions of the Baltimore and Har risburg railroads, which were part of an ambitious plant to tap the rich agricultural regions of the loWer Sus quehanna and Cumberland Valley, ' which held charters from both Mary land and Pennsylvania and which formed the backbone of the system in southern counties and the George's Creek and Cumberland, which is the West Virginia end and the Connells vilte sfnd State line. Hundreds of cars from the latter two lines pass through Harrlsburg every day. They come from the Connelisvlllf cut off, which is supposed to shorten the haul from Pittsburgh to tidewater, and are brought into Harrisburg over the Heading lines from Shippensburg where the Western Maryland connects with the Cumberland Valley and Reading, by the huge engines of the railroad. Few meetings of medical men in Harrisburg outside of sessions of the State Medical Society have brought to gether as many doctors and surgeons as the conference held at the Capitol yesterday by the Department of La bor and Industry for discussion of treatment of wounds. It was really a preparedness meeting for the doctors ns the most advanced methods, learned on the battlefields of France, were presented with pictures. The doctors were told from actual experi ence what had to be done to stop the deadliest of all diseases, gangrene, and what was explained yesterday will be applied to industrial accidents. Men who were In attendance said that the lessons were invaluable and that more meetings of the kind should be held so that the medical men who have to deal emergencies could have op portunity to hear what is done in war to the end that they would be ready to tako their part in time of stress. Can a justice of the peace admin ister an oath to a man he meets 011 a highway? That is a question which the State Game authorities are trying to solve and Dr. Joseph Kaibfus, ex pert in matters pertaining to game, says that it is getting beyond him. It appears that the doctor "flagged" some of the affidavits sent to him by claimants for bounties, for scalps of foxes, wildcats and other vermin be- I cause tlicy .vcre all written in one man's handwritiiysi.v-C>ne explanation given by a justice who was interro gated was that he had met the claim ant on a road and "swore him." AM he did not have paper and ink with him he simply agreed to take the trouble off the man's hands and wrole out and signed the whole business. He got the fee, of course, but whether he is guilty of fraud or perjury is the problem. •* • y These are the busy days for the ' photographers, especially those who specialize in outdoor work. The nu# merous conventions and other gather ings being held here have caused the picture men to be right on the job. Every day this week a photographer has had his camera sighted on tho Capitol front steps and there has been one group after another photographed with the great granite building and the Barnard statues taking the place of the woodland scenes of the studio. * • Dr. Joseph D. Findlay, of Altoona, Pennsylvania railroad physician in the city at the foot of the mountains, and one of the premier road enthusiasts in Central Pennsylvania, attended the conference on industrial accidents at the Capitol yesterday. Dr. Findlay is not so busy with his large practice that he cannot devote some time to his pet hobby—better roads, and he is Rlair county's representative on the Board of Governors af the William Penu Highway. * • Secretary of the Commonwealth j Cyrus E. Woods, former minister to Portugal, who is to speak before the Civic Club in its series of winter ad dresses, will give some of his ex periences while at the court of Lis bon. Mr. Woods was minister at a very interesting stage of affairs in the Lusitanian realm and was a figure in the social as well as tho diplomatic life of the world famous city. • • • According to a note sent by a friend Ohio is about to pass a law which will require the reading of tho : Declaration of Independence in all ! schools. Years ago this used to be the custom in this State and in Har risburg and vicinity, in the time of our grandfathers, there were prizes for the boy or girl who could recite it best. In fact, in those days the Declaration ranked next to the Bible in the schools, as attested by old time letters. , === . * 1 WELL KNOVN PEOPLE —E. G. Smith, the Wilkes-Barro editor and publisher, has qualified to become a major in the reserve. —Congressman John M. Rose in a speech at Altoona declared that he was opposed to war until it simply had to come. He is the man who beat Pacific Bailey. •—-Ex-State Treasurer John O. Sheatz is'taking a prominent part in the moves for tho new Delaware river bridge. —Eli M. Rapp, the Berks school superintendent, in a speech in Dela ware county urged county boards of school control. —Ex-Judge W. E. Porter, of Law rence county, is the head of the new Western Pennsylvania organization that will work'for temperance. He Is the man who made Lawrence dry and suffered defeat for it. —Col. T. B. Ellis, commander of the Sixth Infantry, chose the long Southern route for his regiment so that the men could see the country. * DO YOU KNOW 1 —That Harrif-burg makes many tilings that go into Uncle Sam's defense plans 'L. HISTORIC HARRISBURG Harrisburg's first schoolhouse was in Walnut street near whefe the new hotel will be constructed. This Girl Knew "How useless girls are to-day. X don't believe they know what needles are for." "How absurd you are. grandma," protested the girl. "They're to make the graphophone play." r