6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR TIIE HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THIS TBLKGItAPII PRINTING CO., ' elesraph llullriliiK. Kt-dernl Square. - I E. J. STACK POLK, Pres't and Editor-in-Chief J'\ R. OYSTER, Business Manager. GIJS M. STEIJCMETZ, Managing Editor. i Member American Nee Pub ing, Chicago, 111. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carriers, ten cents a week; by mail, $5.00 a year in advance. ] SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1017. —_________' My lord Cardinal, there is one fact 1 which you seem entirely to have for- 1 gotten; God is a sure paymaster; He 1 may not pay at the end of every week, ' or month or year; but 1 charye you, remember that lie pays in the end. ' Anne of Austria. ' i LOOK AFTER YOUR HOY HAVE you a boy? Then read this i from the address of a welfare worker delivered at a gather ing of parents to celebrate the dedica- < tion of a school building in New York: Be sure to see that your boy at tends school, but do not neglect 1 that other essential to a useful life —early training in< industry and the value of the dollar earned by t honest toll. Let your boy work, so long as it does not interfere 1 with his schooling, but do not let him take any "job" that offerß itself, merely for the money. See 1 to it that his surroundings are Kood and be chary of letting him 1 work for anybody who would per mit him to do a "shady" thing. , Much better no work, valuable in forming character though work Is, than work under a man who is ' guilty of some of the shhrp prac tices I have noted in this city. 1 This is good advice. Let your boy work. Work of the kind outlined is productive of nothing but good. Only a few years back there were social workers who believed that no child ' should be permitted to work for gain. t This was beyond dofobt the reflex of the child labor evils which modern 1 laws have stopped to a very large de- , gree. The* pendulum since then has had time to swing back a trifle and ' good judgment has come forward to urge that the boy or girl be permit ted to earn money outside of school i so long as the employment is not so heavy as to undermine health, so lengthy as to rob the child entirely 1 of playtime and is honest. Let your boy "get a job"—but in- ' quire carefully into how he is expected to earn his money. Many men are not above those "sharp practices" against 1 which the welfare worker quoted herewith warned New York parents; They operate right here in Harris- ] burg. Don't let your boy do anything for money that smacks of the "shady trick" by means of which unscrupu- L lous businessmen take advantage of their patrons or of other business men. The offense may not be great. Indeed, most likely, it will be made to appear trilling or even "smart." But I rest assured that the honor of the lit- j tie lad you love to call "son" is at j stake and honor stained in early youth is apt to carry the mark for life. When your boy comes home with a "new job" inquire carefully into how he is expected to earn the money— especially if he has been offered more than boys are ordinarily able to earn. Congress has taken the doesn't out of the old charge that "prohibition doesn't prohibit." POTATOES AND just think of It! Less than two years ago we used to go home {n the evening and ex claim disgustedly: "What! Fried potatoes again?" Just like that, we'd say it, and she who presides over the destinies of our household would actually* apologize. Yes, indeed, apologize. She'd say: "Well, you see, I had to be out this afternoon and fried potatoes are easy to prepare, and I thought you wouldn't fnlnd just this time." And now what? Why, we go home and looking gloomily across the spotless linen, observing the vacant spot wherein the polato dish was erstwhile wont to repose in solitary grandeur, we growl: ' "What? No potatoes this evening? How do you expect a hungry man to get along without potatoes?" And she who presides, etc., responds with tears in her voice: "Oh, my, I thought you used to say you didn't care for potatoes." 'Twas'ever thus. EDISON'S EX AMPLE EVERY time you say to yourself; "I'm too tired now, I'll do that to-morrow," think of Thomas A. Edison. On his seventieth birthday this week he worked twenty hours at a stretch. He didn't have to do it. He might have been golfing or yacht ing or automobiling. He might have been doing any one of the thousand things that a man may do for pleas ure. He had money enough. But he did none of them. He labored away steadily on an Invention he hopes to make of use m protecting the United States if we get into the war. Edison flnds pleasure In work as well as play. That's why he has suc ceeded. He lias learned the secret of the delight of congenial occupation at SATURDAY EVENING, constructive tasks. Ho knows also lliat the man who does not work "overtime" seldom amounts to any thing. Turn out to-night and make the boys feci you're glad to see 'em home again. HOME RULE HARRISBURGERS who heard Jesse M. Swltzer, of Dayton, at Chestnut street hall last evening tell the story of city managership at Dayton came away convinced of the importance of home rule for the cities of Pennsylvania. "The greatest good that can come from a city charter framed and adopted by the people It is designed to serve as an instrument of government is the spirit of community co-operation It engenders," asserted Mr. Switzer. Lack of community co-operation is at this moment the besetting sin ojl Harrisburg as a city. Waning interest of the individual in the affairs of the municipality has been one of the alarm ing signs of recent months. Unques tionably, this is the result of the hap hazard, nondescript character of the legislation under which we as a city op erate. The Clark act may fit some of the third-class cities of Pennsylvania, but its pattern never was suited to the needs of this city. If homemade gov ernment arouses the people to intelli gent interest in public affairs, the re verse is also true. Harrisburg people can no more be expected to be satis fled with a charter or constitution framed by the State Legislature than the people of Pennsylvania, as a whole, would, or could, rest content to live under a constitution framed by the federal Congress and forced on them, willy nill>;, after the manner that mu nicipal legislation and regulation are J forced upon the cities of the Common wealth by the State government. Neither commission form of govern ment nor city managership will bo successful in Harrisburg until the peo ple themselves have the right of home rule. The voters of the city must decide what they need and desire. Politics has no place in municipal i government, but politics does have a ! very conspicuous part and will con- i tinue to have it so long as the city laws are framed by politicians largely for their own benefit. There is no great er travesty of law than the nonpar- j tisan feature of the Clark act. Dayton, | Mr. Switzer says, is operated on a strict ly business basis, after the manner of ian industrial corporation. It wouldn't be except for the home rule feature which has enabled it to eliminate poll | tics and the constant catering for I favor that is a consequence of the na- I tural effort of salaried councilmen to be re-elected. We may shout the virtues of city managership from the housetops and I sing its advantages unceasinglv, but it I X would hot be an unqualified success in Harrisburg until put into operation I through the medium of a homemade, home-adopted city charter. Doubtless city managership would be made to work ®any reforms and the experiment even under present laws would be a step in the right direction, but even the most efficient system would fail of full fruition unless it had back of it the "community co-operation home rule en genders." And to think we used to call 'em spuds. n HEADIIXG FOR A FALL AWAY buck in 16G0 Abraham Cowley, whoso father, by the way, was a grocer, wrote: "As riches increase," says Solo mon. "so do the mouths that devour them." The master mouth lias no more than before. The owner, me thinks, is like Ocnus in the fable who is perpetually winding a rope of hay, and an ass at the end per petually eating It. Out of these in conveniences arises naturally one more, which Is, that no greatness tan be satisfied or content with itself; still, if it could mount up a little higher, it would be happy; if it could gain but that point, it ' would obtain all its desiies; but yet at last, when it Is got up to the very top of the Peak of Tenerlffe, it is in very great danger of break ing its neck downward, but In 110 possibility of ascending upward in - to the seat of tranquility above the I moon. Doubtless provision prices were farthest from the poet's thoughts when he thus dipped his pen Into phil osophic prose, but his conclusions ap ply very aptly to tlie food barons of to-day, having gone along pushing prices higher and ever higher, a lit tle at. a time, a few pennies here and a few pennies there, they at last seem to have reached the place where they [rhe Days of Real Sport .... s y b^ggs ® MovW SYLVESTER IP /%/ /// /// Take THIS- MY LA N D HOW /; ■/// v/a. " You Children) TAKE OM ?! i /f/., /// This is The Third dav^— In \ i.l.r r ' an>t> you won't HAve. rag Hh — I ~H4— '' '~P~ 1 To take ANY ;p i -'M* ~if appear to be in "very great danger 1 of breaking their necks downward, but in no possibility" of going much higher. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR I Housing Below Par To the Editor of the Telegraph: I liavc been a subscriber to the Tele- ! graph for many years and I am prompt- j J to make a reply to such prominent j news on page one of last night's Issue, , as there is such a great chasm or con- | trast between the two photographs, i. e. j page six. Yes, I certainly am sure, and j know from personal experience, that , 1 the housing conditions are below par in this, the capital city of Pennsylva- I nia. I am a laboring man, and yet I am forced from circumstances to min ister to those that want lovely homes of beauty, comfort, Joy and pleasure, and it is sure a joy in this old life of mine if I can see but a few little kids enjoying perfect health, perfect love and a sanitary home. But for me and many like me, we are on the alter of ! sacrifice, and must, in patience await God's own time, when all men shall truly be on one common level —and in one word it is Ijove. 1 Labor is the foundation of all wealth, yet it has to dwell in hovels. | LABORER. ; Taming Rubber Ten years ago the world depended f*>r crude rubber upon the great for ests of the Amazon valley, the valley of the Congo and other places in the tropics where trees yielding rubber were found growing uncared for, as nature planted them. In 1907 Brazil ! furnished 36,000 tons of rubber and (29,500 tons came from other coun 'tries, chiefly in equatorial Africa, where rubber was gathered by natives who searched the jiuigles for rubber producing trees. Only about 500 tons were obtained from plantations on the Malay peninsula and the islands of the East Indes. Last year Brazil supplied 35,000 tons of crude rubber, a slight falling off from the mark set ten years ago, and the other regions in which rubber is gathered as a natural growth of the forests sent 13,000 tons to the markets of the world. But the losses in "wild" rubber were far more than j offset by the. great increase in the yield of rubber plantations, chiefly on the Malay Peninsula and nearby islands. The "tame" rubber amounted j to about 130,000 tons, a gain of nearly 145,000 tons over the preceding year, litself a record breaker, and more than ten times the quantity produced as re |cent.ly as 1911. j So a great natural staple has 1 been tamed in ten years, and that triumph of constructive enterprise has | made possible the enormous growth and wonderful success of the automo bile industry of the United States and the world. It is an achievement which conveys a striking Intimation | of the possibilities which still exist of creating new industries of im mense value, by wiser use of the re sources of the soil —the earth which man has lived on and used for thou sands of years without ever under standing fully what he could do with it and what it is ready to do for him. —From the Cleveland Leader. For Government Trust 1 Louisville Courier Journal.] Anions: the bills with which states men n.t Washington are bombarding the press is one that provides that | "except as may be authorize*! by the j Postmaster General no part of any (edition of any second-class periodical i shall be transported over lines of railway or other transportation lines ; upon which mail service is maintained j by the Post office Department, except lin the mails of the United States, and if such transportation, outside the mails, shall be permitted or au thorized by the publisher, the entry of such periodical as second-class matter shall be canceled." In short, this remarkable bill would make it illegal for publishers to ship their periodicals except by mail over any line which carries mails. That would be establishing a mail trust with a vengeance by a govern ment which has directed much of its energies in recent years toward breaking up and preventing trusts. Caring For Own Interests Two dulists were preparing to fight In a farmer's field. The farmer ap peared, and, as he hurried toward them with wild gestures, the duelists, though not afraid of each other at ail, felt touched and pleased to think that the farmer took an interest in their } welfare. "Hold on!" the farmer cried. "Is s this a duel?" ' "Yes," said a second, "Are they going to use pistols or swords?" asked the farmer. ' "Swords," said the second, • "Oh. all right then," said the farm . er, with a smile of relief, "If they 1 were going to use pistols I just wanted you to hold on till I got my livestock 1 out of the field."-—'Philadelphia Bul r letln. HXfmiSBURG TELEGRXPH ov By the Ex- Committeeman ■■ ■ ■ fl Presence of Governor Brumbaugh and Senator Penrose in Philadelphia to-day has caused the center of in terest in political affairs to shift to that city. Both the Governor and the Senator will meet their friends to-day and plans for the future of the Legis ture will be discussed with a serious ness that lias been lacking lately. The Governor is expected to act on the investigation resolution on Mon day. Friends here say he will veto it because to do otherwise would cause a disturbance in the State government al routine that would take months to iron out, while others are urging him to sign it because it will be a defiance of enemies and a challenge to bring 0.1 anything. /In the event that the Governor vetoes the resolution and is sustained there will be some investi gations made by stunding committees created by concurrent resolutions and various departments, including that of the Auditor General, w.ill be gone into. As the legislators will take a recess next Wednesday until March 12. It is not expected that there will be a large attendance in either branch next week and but little business will be done. The plans for the future of the investi gation proposition will be worked out during the recess. Both branches are scheduled to meet Monday night and the resolution for adjournment will be put in promptly. The Senate may adjourn on Tuesday but the House will stick at work imtil Wednesday noon. The general lack of legislative interest is manifest at the Capitol, everyone being now waiting until the "probe" proposition is settled. —lt's funny how legislation runs in J cycles. Bills turn up year after year and when a new member gets an old idea dressed up he has a grand time over it. Now we have the bills to prohibit the use of cigar-cutters and to abolish running-boards on street cars, which are biennial blooms. This year they happen to be in the hands j of men of more or less experience in the Legislature and not much Is heard about them. But along comes a new member with a bill to prohibit mak ing and sale of cigarets and the pub licity that he grabs must be very gratifying. The bill to require electric headlights on locomotives is about due and it will get the usual notice. But the funniest of all is the attention given to that ancient problem—taxa tion of domestic animals. In 1907 some one presented a bill to license horses and it was followed by new bills to license dogs and then some one cap ped the climax in 1909 with a bill to license cats. In 1913 .two bills to li cense "Toms and Marias" were pre sented. ■—Auditor General A. W. Powell last evening denied with emphasis the re port that there had been friction be tween himself • and Deputy Auditor General C. 13. Willock, whose resig nation was accepted yesterday, but Capitol corridors are full of reports of incidents indicating the contrary, j The Auditor General yesterday threat ened all sorts of dreadful things to newspapermen If they discusspd stor ies which have been afloat. It is un derstood that' Mr. WHlook resigned two days ago. Powell has been in the limelight many times since he took his office and his term will be up in May. One of the interesting facts in connection with yesterday's explosion is that newspapers which have been | extolling Powell's business methods to-day roast him. —Chester W. Cummings, named as referee in compensation to succeed the late F. K. Saylor, is a former Mayor of Lancaster, a noted golfer and prominent Republican. He lias many friends in this city. The ref erees receive salaries of $2,500 and Mr. Ciimmings will have the same district as Mr. Saylor. His headquar ters will be in Lancaster, but he will hold hearings where needed. Includ ing a number in this city because of its central location. —Christopher Kopp, appointed a deputy factory inspector to-day, is a protege of William A. Magee, accord ing to Capitol gossip. He lives on the North Side of Pittsburgh, old Alle gheny, and was named to succeed James Ilazelett, a brother-in-law of David, Johns, who was named to a place in the State Fire Marshal's office. —Senator W. D. Craig, of Beaver, has started an Inquiry Into the why and the wherefore of the Item In the appropriation bill for the expenses and fees tn the Harmony escheat In which the State seems to have paid over 60 per cent, of value to Bet some prop erty, Lawyers appear to have done well, Henry G. Wasson, late Republi can State chairman, getting a ) 10,000 fee. -—Philadelphia authorities have started a new suit for fees against t *d ee bani ulqx'j I "LEARN TO SAVE' , OF ALL GREAT FOlfflmßSl rlt naqO .gnlob ———————— qqflrt Jl p.urlT By S. W. STRAUS President American Society For Thri&oo^V'^no ' in 7.k(irtfs A BELIEVER in thrift who was a benefactor to his descendants as far as money is concerned', .it least, was Commodore Vanderbilt. When he was 10 years old he was tail ing passengers from Staten Island 10 New Y'ork byway of the ferry boat. The fare was not large, but he saved enough in two years to buy two boats of his own. In the meantime his wife had gone into the hotel business and in the next few years tliey accumu lated SIB,OOO between them, with which Commodore Vanderbilt bought the controlling interest in a steamboat, lie taught his son to bo just as thrifty. Though he himself was enormously wealthy, he insisted that his son woilc, and work he did, oh a farm. Thus 'vas founded one of the great American fortunes. "No boy ever became great as a man," said John Wanamaker, "who did not in his youth learn to save money. Nine-tenths of getting ahead Register James B. Sheehan. They calim SOO,OOO. —The remarks of Democratic Na tional Committeeman A. Mitch ell Palmer seem to have made consid erable impression on people on Capitol Hill and they are commencing to re alize just what is the Democratic at titude in regard to State affairs. Pal mer has several times declared that he had enough matterial to create rev olutions in Pennsylvania politics, but the people have seldom believed him. especially when he "besieged" Penrose in 1914. Palmer and his pals like some newspapers printed in this State have to be "out" to make themselves heard. Their stock in trade would be gone if they once got "in." Pennsylvania suffragists announce that they are particularly elated by tho granting of suffrage in Ohio be cause in the past it has been the rule that black States, that is States not having granted any suffrage to wo men, follow rapidly the example of adjoining States. Miss Clark, whose secretarial office is in Harrisburg, said: "The granting of presidential suffrage In Ohio and Indiana means that it is Inevitable that the present Legislature will pass our bill, and that eventually the women of Pennsylvania will be en franchised. This seems certain to us because at least now that this ques tion is brought to the doors of the homes* of our legislators they cannot justly and fairly rule that the women of Pennsylvania are not as much en titled to and as worthy of suffrage as the women of Ohio, Indiana and Illi | nois." Labor Notes Muskogee, Okla., has appointed a union man city auditor at J2.000 a year. There are a number of women mi ners employed in Bohemia, Austria. In Germany there are at present 300,000 women doing war work at home. The secretary of tho Governor of Ohio is a member of the Typograph ical Union. Electrical workers at Salt Lake City have secured increased pay and an eight-hour day. Union printers at Youngstciwn, Ohio, have secured an Increase of 50 cents a day. A new local of* carpenters at Tren ton, Canada, has a membership of 200 already. Quakers Talk Against War [From the Philadelphia Ledger.] The duty of Friends In the present crisis was emphasized at the quarterly meeting In the Arch street meeting house. Lydla Morris, who discussed this subject, earnestly urged that a few plain facts be uttered at every oppor tunity, showing how at variance Is war with Christian teachings. This, sho declared, was no time for fitful, half hearted work, but for all thr* energy and passion that can be Instilled. The Toboggan Route Switzerland has an advantage over some other neutral powers, in that when she gets tired of her German ambassador all she has to do Is to put hint on a sled and give hlin one shove. —The Indianapolis News. FEBRUARY consists of laying someth iuti, James J. J1 ill conveyed when lie saiil, "If you wi-ether you are going test is .easy. Are ..m^.save money? If not, drop n 9jat. surely lose. You may you will lose as sur&.a* These men knew what,iiHUt,;euftitiin was earning a niera t jw^n^. ! ;yriier did not make the iifcfaiii|<• Icnst And almost toyj U, ;JWl l W^eijo . / I crawl up to lo oqori And am quiet,^ For then I knofciirtilßD)"dni;fl Here comes ,finc{„ji#d And suddeftW- tW stf^ 0 . 0 ,,? 0 ixxig noqu juq 3d lliw A host of M r*wsy "is Just ftt!tloiilom And from 1 * fall, o 9)B 9i>rli .jail-nlinb And then. I emtiO' v-wrtfw I '.*! irq'ff)b(>yvt) j i v/ 3^bo J 1 'fl firii tfie^Lt"; 4 j The Kaiser's jed all alonftlfS'(lB(''*mh-l-^i3 l ji T mied I States uporv IRh nsrt'i'iions jtake up this sniiifctv/'ATlth tttU;otfw{lcr |JS?r Lrnoffl S',! jby the OerrtiaHr' l ''"m' i,< jbis I speech to the Kftiot juiii>nuiv | has never relinquished in factTts sub marine warfare, the UrvittMl-WtHtee hns but one duty and that is to piohilizk l up to the hilt'."*— -VYom'tliti HhWrttoH' l American. oilt Jluil-aitu ■{lit ~<7. if —'" ' ' 'i"" 'iii"""-'* silt nl | OUR DAILY WKUmI •-.liiJiqaort iijjiHuuJl | fj ol mil biou'j/. 1/ONOAN'DXAR- >iJ; *ils 1 R°vv. iP'rtr:' Our friend with ( . an eye to the. afSsJar main chance liaß VVmt ' I a long head. *ti\ 'iff'" l | Yes, but isn't \ having too long a / 1/\ft\ ~>• head likely to l\V mbM.-iJ.-. I make a man nar- fixwSmi.ii 1 ■ I row-mlndcd. HiKti.v/ .nwol)! 1 j rtohi PRACTrCAI> iR 11 %%\\ /SS queen of my I "Um, W here f? /S|| i are the crown - Bl | Jewels." tor the services of militiamen who* iiih'u mipn in BgiTipe. 'mse upriirv Ins include aKffSiK' big iii- various kim 3 il cities an 4 i i ap*jiW„"oS;;, muuii. miuiim. muiuiy mmi lurwunT. but there iUVe JChW x lA4ll>scveral spe cifier, ireqnwl* Oatf*vi(lftA'*ttf;wWOiffcpe >odt| pilcHnjirr( fittrtiorfT In Wtf^lW !^#tfr£r S'Brt¥ WW VtiU' Mi f#W -^CoWiiWfe'^sblHi iAhf H well trained to act as tJiflljottf'iJr'lßeitfflWßal ■ffk Jieed fcMtiliWl M 1 k*rer ,fwhKrt;• <#k w *> guard ifsmntt ti )V> . om4t)H Vi|t;bn<>Wi •tflftl KtW#iwW jrfi4l)ersmfao .AwWflAu# inMStc.BflHtdlteMWS^MHttM** 1 >nS imtoirw; imi nwwhtwt [int>iftni)iiA9ly ,inolry ,Moi>neunbo *s®iisb> Utwjrnrtl'irmliJ'. *;iodljjaii'llticiw would l)o HttloD/HMlaaiWjuo/lWntßsiiw; iW"ui ofijttac, tituit!i(lair[thotliir* iilor ;ababuirneCt .&ni*M iftlui tSfe >inr win> >wtol tM|;xm11 Iyosllr<1yosl lr< nltirliintl todhito;' dot i*i)Uii*®Wt> tol*o luhi 'srl9\ hubikvwi oinTm*M .hirtiMuoiht iota 9Uk>t.\l naltyrvstf* flifw nor TeneVi'ilWßeatt4 wa*ifcl tiftcgw-on tion was bumped by sonio M(IW tip I *!!*!.!ca#ufin in the qusirtRi*tbiX> 4WfIb O WHWiAMJdt Mtt .fWHittiW fOfinri'tfee&uar 'o#llOMllsOtM.#bt WiMltcMitfßftttf) QitlvU'o 1 rt HMwiiebMwnt I6w'n#p"ft rWtttt 1 a TW sXtt¥vW "lift&llcflMOfc |n IIIIIIRM IIIIW MI'flJl'IK'MIl inwi-t-tho . j number of foreigners who turn u] ail rs I firearms or weapons. The chance iai e ■ Ibat 1 hr.i-o will !.. ■. nrottv llvplvtm-l- tation oil both sides of the question tliis session. It's get ideas wliflo tiiey arc'iSjEKNfifcved. They will dp- is the mat)i t" and hawWH^SSw ef l with and shown, and t done to paeify them. 'JWt mhSsRMy a barber w.aa a man in our town announced that, the razor 3fWT *p good. The barber stoppeiJ*ißd cafefelUy stropped the back /of £V) _ jtmjfcrKen t. he started akhli\n thfjCroir cx- h r mg faijIJIL rhtFurS'people owe ja gratitude to jVmowC. DeiAiideil, jjrutlv(\eit ri< lo thVj[iWernor,! of the lCT|itiiYifc oil i[j>dSTlaY ris a bent to be bliJl^*yi^ , which la in the limpfSL Musetum. * rriiM painttng, whig* Iff KenerallN bellevedyto be close to li ofrfylars ola dA>lcts*the most striWnn licidenti in tlie liye of the "frSnSJol WilliElri Peaa.*'' "who plru'i'd bt |\ stone, {.n. Harrin bVr Jus t It seems f.hut \fflon WilliMMC Krone was governor that Mr. attention was h,i Iracted toAhe fouflition of the painthsg which ban bcfen "restored" and "ne touched" py picture butchers at v(ifi ous timewtunjll it \*as almost a sn-ne from a ttvY s nkltifiju' for arm. bright Uiq matter lo nh®*)tteilionyJdltylme <1 iv e:nor and lip °fl[!iun. lo bring it baVr" llr. Black took l!ba rosin and other ftult off and the rfsuut deiightr-d the Governor and everyone I else. It was almost as good as ivheii Tt vv.is eN'cc'tit d cH biraqa n^mo'Ai ■ ||o qpSHMII '•* WELfc KNOWN PEOPLE 10 I .wiimniii m fit h*v'li|jim | J'lif ' '■uiox ai- Uiiuutumlumia-uf-imniHip -titCß. —.iiiHgp ji. ,i. uei k. ui 1 j uuei: t< tuth.or of jL number of books on nclrth gniaeftW history. Atkinson, noted Arm editor, That I nl pretzels to < jcrj iiistokhv iil||!nnnr: A grandson ofTVllllHiil "Penn ,i hd Harrisburg his home for several jars |after the town was laid out. f