10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Pounded iS]i Published evenings except Sunday by TUB TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO, Telegraph Building Federal Square. KJ, STACKPOLE, iVfi'l ana Editor-in-Chief 11.I 1 . R. OYSTER, Business Manager, GUS M. STEINMETZ. Mana s ,n t Editor. c Member American Newspaper Pub jfWr'J-E! lishers' Associa tlon. The Audit Bureau of Clrcu- BnjjSBESqA lation and Penn ■ sylvanla Associat es! S3 SSS gfl Eastern office, m nrmm iW* Story. Brooks & IMB KB! M Flnley, Fifth Ave- ,lU ° ew People's Gas Build- ing. Chicago, 111. Ehtered nt the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carriers, ten cents a week: by mail. J3.00 a year in advance. MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 12 It is a small thing to a wan tchether or not his neighbor be merciful to him; it is life or death to him tchether or not he be merciful to his neighbor. -GEORGE MACDO.NAI.D. WRONG, MR. ZIMMERMAN! I * I MR. ZIMMERMAN is wrong in, his assertion that Germany | "has said the final word to the | l.'nited States," and that "The decis-j ion now rests with President Wilson." j Mr. Zimmerman will realize that the i last word rests with the Kaiser, so! far as precipitating war between the two countries is concerned. One of these days an armed American mcr , chant ship is going to pop a three inch shell through the thin steel hull of a German submarine, and then it will be up to the Kaiser. Germany will have to take the initiative, be- 1 cause we will not. It will not be nec- j essary for us to do so. We shall go on and on. sinking every; submarine that sticks up its threaten- I ing periscope within reach of an | American gunner and if Germany doesn't like that it will be very dis tinctly for her to say what she means to do about it. KANSAS CTTY AND US SAYS the Kansas City Times, ! advising its readers to vote for the new charter for that c^y: Kansas City is doing something j for you every day In the year. Can't you give ten minutes to-day to something for Kansas City? To be sure, this was a special plea for a special day, but the sentiment applies quite as much to Harrisburg every day of the year as it does to Kansas City on one particular day.' There is not twentv-four hours in the twelve months when the city of Har- : risburg is not doing something for each one of us. Do we ever pauscftn our personal activities to do a small service for the city? Do we? When we think about the city at all it is nearly always either in a purely impersonal manner or in a fault-finding way. Nevertheless, the city of Harrisburg renders to its peo ple the cheapest service they receix-e. It is said of American cities that they arc extravagant and wasteful, but even so there is nothing cheaper In' American life than the things that city taxes buy. Pause a moment and consider. Where does the average Harrisburg man get so much for the [ money he pays as from the municipal government in filtered water, paved streets, street lights, parks and play grounds, sidewalks, health regulations and in a hundred other ways, for the taxes levied? Very plainly, nowhere. But if the city is not giving yon all you think you ought to have, if you believe it to be wasteful of its reve-. nues and generally inefficient, have' you ever done anything to remedy the conditions of which you complain?' Unless you are an exceptional citizen you have not. Don't you think it is about time you did something for! Harrisburg? Like Kansas City for its citizens, Harrisburg is doing some thing for you every day of the year, j Wha are YOU doing for Harrisburg? l SASSAFRAS SEASON O sassafras, 0 sassafras. sft. Thou art the goods for me, \nd in the spring 1 love to sinß O sassafras of thee! So writes a timid Harrisburg versi fier who sends his poetic efforts to the Telegraph for print, but who be lieves in "art for art's sake" so ar dently that he yearns not to see his own name published so long as space is given to his literary effort. When spring gets into the blood it is apt to break out in several ways; one is poetry and another is after the fashion that our mothers used to try to pre vent when they fed us up about this season on sulphur and molasses and rinsed our "innards" with steaming cupfuls of that very sassafras of which our lyric correspondent so feelingly 0 sings. We confess we never before taw a poem dedicated to sassafras, but we know of no reason why there should not be one among the English clas sics. Sassafras is a poetic drink. It is a delight at one and the same time to the eye, nose and palate. Pink, aromatic and delicious, it has more claims to distinction than many an other beverage that has found favor with convivial spirits of literary lean ings. "Look not upon the wine when it is red," is a warning familiar to all, but one may look upon the sasaafras when it ia pink as much as three MONDAY EVENING. times a day and again before retiring without any other effect than the feel ing that thereby he has reduced the necessity of the usual two bottles of spring tonic to one. It is at once a mealtime drink and a springtime med icine. I It Is a popularly accepted ; that "an apple a day keeps the doctor away," and It Is a huppy solution of [ the rapidly diminishing apple supply that sassafras, that implacable foe of the spring fever germ, comes looming cheerily across tho landscape just in 'time to engage the rapidly gathering • hosts of baccilli in deadly combat. | But nobody gets the fullest pleas i ure out of sassafras by simply buying ' one of the little bundles that lie neatly jtied with a cotton string on the mar i ketstalls these days and taking it for : medicinal reasons alone. Sassafras to Ibe perfectly enjoyed must, like all other things worth having, be worked ' for. The way to do it is to shoulder i a pick, pickaxe or grubbinghoe and go ! out In the woods where the bright I green bark of tho sassafras betrays I the full flood of spring-sweet sap {within, dig out a few big roots, waslf 'off the mud in a nearby stream, shave ] off the soft, yielding bark and bear j the treasure home. We judge our i poet friend must know his sassafras in that Intimate fashion, so lovingly does he sing of it. THE FALL OF BAGDAD THE fiyi of Bagdad, after a cam paign as brilliant and as pic turesque as any In the history of the British army, Is more than a mere military achievement. It is the I beginning of the end of Txirkish over ' rule In the East and the collapse of | the Germanic dream of a Berlin to i Bagdad railway, with all that would j have meant for the ambitions of the Hohenxollerns, Few cities in the world have such a hold upon the popular Imagination as Bagdad, scene of the exploits of so many of the immortal characters of the "Arabian Nights Entertainments" dear to the heart of every boy who has read these remarkable tales and! of fond memory for those of maturcr | years who, In carefree days, have been. transported on their magic carpet! from the prosaic life of the present j back to those times when Sinbad the : Sailor recounted his remarkable ad-> ventures, to the amazement of his stay- ; at-home fellows on the banks of the; Tigris. Here It was that Haroun el 1 Kaschld played the beggar to learn the J truth about himself and his subjects; from the people themselves, and it! was from his throne in the city which he did so much to build that he sent out his armies to conquer the country' for hundreds of miles about. Its streets I have echoed to the clanking tread of I the warriors of Alexander, at its gates ! the Mongols knocked with mailed lists that would not be denied and through j j its narrow and tortuous highways the Tartan hordes swept on to ravage and to victory. For centuries—ever since the days of Nebuchadnezzar and probably before the walls of Babylon were raised, if historical discoveries and references r.re to be believed —Bagdad has been j at intervals a center of oriental learn- ' ing and trade. To its markets the riches of all the East were brought for j exchange and from its halls of learn- ' ing the scholars of ancient times hand ed down their secrets and their lore. As the hub of trade it became also the center of royal plottings and ! covetlngs and for centuries, until the supremacy of the Turk in IC3S, it was the very heart of the maelstrom of carnage and looting that deluged ail that part of the East in blood. The i entry of the English yesterday was unlike anything Bagdad has known in its long history of military occupa- 1 I Hons. For the first time the rights of the inhabitants were respected, sack- i ing and massacre were unthought of and the populace could place itself 1 under the protection of the conqueror with no misgivings as to the safety cither of people or property. I The effect of the city's fall will be two-fold —first to hearten the English people at a time when a triumph for their arms will do much to inspire afresh their will to sacrifice, and sec ond, the rehabilitation of the prestige ef the fame of Great Britain through- I out the entire East. GOOD WORK SINCE the elevation of Chief Wetzel and the reorganization of the department the city po lice force has been doing effective work. The raids of Saturday illustrate the point. Breaking up "dope" dens easily might be dodged by a lax police ; department, and few people would be jthe wiser. Neglect of that kind would ' not be likely to attract public atten tion. This fact, however, has not de terred Chief Wetzel and his detec tives from going after the offenders. I Everybody concerned in the raids is Jto be commended for the thorough ; ness with which they were conducted. "SOMEBODY LIED!" TWENTY-FIVE Princeton seniors make the shameful confession that they have never kissed a girl. Mr. Sullivan, the Telegraph's es teemed and talented cartoonist, has missed a bet. He ought to have used this bit of news to illustrate a picture of his new comic series—"Somebody Lied." MOVIE OF A HANDY MAN AROUND THE HOUSE By BRIGGS /THCRSM r HF ) f~.~~ — f ri * NoT >J. _ fT~NEW6a\n /] I "DOOR BU-/J NO % WO- ] ) 0 P~—.. /a£% "VL KNEW •'■JM What a Child's Cry Did | A rich man in Boston, passing a J shabby house in a lowly quarter of, the town, heard a child moaning. He j went in. The child had the toothache, j The poor family could not afford to j take the child to a dentist and so it' suffered and cried. In that way James Forsyth, the kind j hearted rich man, discovered that' there was no provision for free dent- j istry for poor children. He set aside j % million dollars to found a dental I infirmary for children, but died before ' it was begun. His brothers, John and Thomas, added million dollars to this and thus established a founda tion fund of 2 million dollars for an infirmary. Before it was finished John died and Thomas Forsyth added 2 mil lion dollars more, making a total en dowment of 4 million dollars for the Forsyth Dental Infirmary. The leading men of Boston gathered 1 at a great banquet recently to honor Thomas Forsyth and to give him a loving cup. The Governor of the State, the Mayor of Boston, thg presi dent of Harvard and others made speeches, to which Mr. Forsyth replied that the future of the country depends upon its children; they cannot give the best service when they grow up, unless they have good health: and they cannot have good health without good teeth. This is true. More and more the public is learning the value of mouth hygiene. Free dental infirmaries, free dental clinics and mouth inspections [in the schools are growing in favor, i But the first free dental infirmary j in the world was founded by the For ' syths in Boston and it was all the re ! suit of the agonized cry of a little I child touching the heart of a good Sa maritan.—Kansas City Star. The Food Problem I-isten to the words of a man who for forty-three years has been han dling food for countless people. I pre sent you the opinion of George H. Mc- Kay, superintendent of the Reading Terminal Market: i "Just as sure as the sun shines the next great trouble in this country will be on account of the scarcity of food, whether the war continues or stops." What is the matter with our coun try? Mr. McKay knows very wjm. I Our farmers do not increase their I crops as fast as our population grows to eat the crops. j What answer does he give? We need to educate more farmers and . fewer loafers. Of the twenty eastern, middle and 1 southern States. Pennsylvania stands first with its agricultural output, but Pennsylvania yields less than tlO for every tillable acre in the State. Put as much science on the farms as iyou put in a hat factory and then what? What I heard the president of Stetson's say about their product—no i advance in price in a decade. Whence cornea such science? From the schools and colleges which know how to teach it.—Glrard, in the Phila delphia Public Ledger. Ready to Mobilize Bakeries That the War Department has been for some months conducting a survey of bakeries near and in the great wheat producing states, with a view to j mobilizing their resources for war use, was revealed at a meeting of the ex ecutive council of the National Asso ciation of Master Bakers. A number ■ of bakeries have been already approv ed for war service, it waS said.—Chica go Tribune. Magpies in Picardy i The magpies in Picardy Are more than I can tell. [They flicker down the dusty roads And cast a magic spell On the men who march through Pi cardy, Through Picardy to hell. A magpie in Picardy Told me secret things— Of the music in white feathers, And the sunlight that sings | And dances in deep shadows— He told me with his wings. I He - told me that in Picardy, An age ago or more, s While all his fathers still were eggs. These dusty highways bore Brown, singing soldiers marching out Through Picardy to war. He said that still through chaos Works on the ancient plan, And two things have altered not Since first the world began— The beauty of the wild green earth And the bavery of man. —"Tipcuca." in the Westminster Ga lette. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH By the Ex-Committee man Prospects are that the session of the j Legislature, and consequently the pol- j itics of the State, will not be harrow- i ed up this week by any new moves in regard to investigations or by any! further outbreaks on Philadelphia city bills. It is intimated pretty broadly j that the Republican organization in Philadelphia feels strong enough to j defeat the proposed reform bills and that it will do so after giving a hear ing on the measures. It is not likely that anything will i be done regarding a date for adjourn- I ment this week. The revenue commis sion has to act before much can be done on essential bills. The situation in regard to investi- i gations is summed up this way by the: Philadelphia Inquirer to-day: 'The' matter of the proposed probing of the Brumbaugh administration will prob ably not be taken up by the Senate 1 this week. The Governor's veto of the j Sproul resolution calling for an in vestigation into alleged violations of the law when it reached the Senate i was received and action thereon post- ' poned for the present. In view of the fact that Senator Penrose, who has been most insistent in urging that a probe be made, has not had an oppor tunity to confer with his leading sup porters in the Legislature, no plan of action has been finally agreed upon. While the senior United States Senator is still demanding that the proposi tion for a probe be pressed, he has not submitted to his associates any 1 program of action. It is understood j that he expects to hold a conference I with a number of his friends in the j Quaker City at the end of this week upon the subject." —The Pittsburgh Gazette-Times I says that a bill to make school boards 1 elective in Philadelphia and Pitts burgh, as they are in the rest of the | state, is to be presented. ' —The Philadelphia Ledger does not like Senator Vare's statement that he will oppose the proposed Philadelphia reform bills. The Ledger says that it ' doubts whether the people of the city : "will accept" the Vare dictum. ! —Westmoreland county "drvs" -ire putting up a big fight to cancel some of the licenses in that county and the usual battle in court is ahead. The ! Lycoming and Center county courts have clipped the number of licenses. ! —The City of Chester is considering ; annexing Marcus Hook and Eddystone ! boroughs which would make it a rail ' nlcipality close to the Erie and Wil ' kes-Barre class. —George T. Oliver will preside at i the annual banquet of the Press Club in Pittsburgh this month and several congressmen are expected to be amor.g I the speakers. j —Lancaster Democrats are lookir.g for a large time next month when ; Vice-President Marshall will be the j chief speaker on Thomas Jefferson. 1 —The Philadelphia North American ! says that Senator Lynch, of Lacka ; wanna, is "defending as best he can" I his bill to abclish the nonpartisan I feature of second-class city elections. -—The name of Ex-Congressman D. I F. Lafean, of York, is once more being | heard for public service commissioner. I —After waiting for eight weeks i United States District Attorney E. ' Lowry Humes, chief Democratic ring master and possible candidate fcr lieutenant governor or somthing else, has fulfilled expectations and drawn n i new corrupt practices act. It is in | town and ready for legislators to gaze j upon. It has more teeth than a fox I trap and is said to be so drawn that |.not even a Democratic candidate for mayor can enjoy working under It. Mr. Humes' bill is claimed to meet condi tions in Pennsylvania as seen by inen who do not have control. It will be much discussed. —The Philadelphia Record assails the plans for the convention hall in Philadelphia as too small by half. —Senator C. W. Beales, of Adams, will tike his seat as Senator to-night. His term as Congressman ended last Monday. —The condition of Senator Ma"feee was said to be serious to-day. He has been suffering from pneumonia. —Lorßne borough has voted $20,000 for new schools. —Elkins Park, Ogontz and adjoin ing places want to merge into one post office. —The Philadelphia Press says that a good plan would be to increase the DENMARK MAY FIGHT GERMANS DENMARK is not likely to get drawn into the European war unless her closest neighbors, Norway and Sweden, are drawn into the whirlpool," remarked H. Jantzen, of Copenhagen to the Washington Post. "But if the progress of the great tragedy should eventually engulf us. then Denmark's fortunes will in evitably be cast with the Entente Allies. Denmark has not forgotten nor forgiven the war of 1864. as a result of which Schleswig-Holstein was hand ed over to Prussia. In the earlier war of Schleswig-Holstein. the Germans aided the Schleswi g-Holsteiners against the Danes, and eventually Prussia became the possessor of the country. "Schleswig-Holstein is a country with, an area of about 7.200 square miles and has a population of more Governor's salary and to wipe out the discretionary expenditure fund. —Senator Vare is quoted in Phila delphia as saying that there is noth ing of importance before the Legis lature "outside of local option and one or two other subjects that cannot be passed.'' The local optionists expect to make their fight here next week, but will not get as much attention from the south end of the building as before. —Pennsylvania postmasters are still listening carefully for news of reap pointments now that Acting State Chairman GufTey has said that there will be no changes unless "serious ob jection" is made. The latter term has an ominous ring and being used by a Democratic politician is capable of various meanings. Many are witching to see the outcome of the row over trie Reading post office. —The Philadelphia Inquirer of yes terday contained an interesting arti cle from Media regarding the Sproul boom, which it says the Delaware men are determined to launch. —Men prominent in politics for the last ten years are expected to come here next week to attend the biennial dinner of the Legislative Sons of St. Patrick. There have been so many demands for tickets that the commit tee has fixed March IC as the limit for acceptances. The dinner will be ; held the night of March 20. I —Mayor Harvey, of Hazleton, will l not be acandidate for renomination i but the rest of the Hazleton officials I will. —Mayor Smith, of Philadelphia, is opposed to the wiping out of ward lines in councilmanic legislation. A Pacifist I am a pacifist with all the accent on the fist: I want to grab the tail of some dern thing and give a twist to it that will make that there thing flop right up into the air And come to earth all spraddled out, and go away from there! The way a dog gos down the street with a can on its tail; II want to make some nation tear its whiskers out an' wail. And get down onto both its knees and promise to be good. And stay in its own yard and mind its business, like it should. I have always been a pacifist, not quite the Bryan kind, ' I've always kept the Bible's good commandments in my mind, I've always turned the other cheek, the way I have been told — I From front o back the Bible's right, and like refined gold— But after a guy has come down upon that other cheek, I Believe me, that is where I rise and bust him on the beak! And use his ears for hand holds whilst I shake about Until his teeth are shaken loose and both his eyes pop out. And now. that Uncle Sam has turned his other cheek and got Not only what he thought he would, a swift Jaw breaking swat. But a kick 'neath the coattails that has lifted him a bit, I've got a brick in either flst, and I am feeling fit! I may be old. I may be fat, but I know this, by cripes! I am standin' in the shadow of the good old Stars and Stripes! And there are others with me and before the game la played We will pat some foolish nation in its fat face,- with a spade. —Judd Mortimer Lewis In the Houston Post. _ MARCH 12, 1917. than 1,300,000. It is from Holstein that the cattle or that name come. "Denmark even if it could, would not reclaim both Schleswig and Holstein but it would like to regain Schleswig, or the northern part of the country. Schleswig is largely Danish in popula tion and temperament, while Holstein is German in its sympathies. The Danish people naturally have been bit ter against Germany and nothing prob ably will ever placate them. "With a population of close to 3,- 000,000 Denmark has a standing army of 80,000 soldiers and the total strength of the army has been mobil ized ever since the beginning of the war. We have not lost nearly so much shipping in the North Sea as has either Norway or Sweden, but Den mark is inalienably tied up with her neighboring nations." Labor Notes Bakers' and Confectionery Workers' International Union is growing. The membership is now 22.252, an in crease of 346 in 30 days. Sick and death benetlts were paid out amount ing to $4,443. The Argentine Government is dis tributing seed grain to farmers in cer tain districts, payment therefor be ing secured by charge against live stock and agricultural implements of those receiving the seed. Frisco Building Trades Council has endorsed a proposed amendment to the mothers' pension law which will permit a widow with minor children to own her own home and still re ceive a pension from the State. Ninety tlioysand lives will be saved yearly and a money loss of a billion and a half dollars prevented if plans now completed for accidental preven tion by representatives of medical colleges, industrial plants and the Pennsylvania Bureau of and Industry prove successful. Texast unionists expect action on the eight-hour law, minimum wage and workmen's compensation, in ad dition to many other labor meas ures. OUR DAILY LAUGH DISPATCHING BUSINESS. Counsel eYour honor, you neglected to aak the prisoner if she had any thing to say as to why sentence should not be pronounced? asmuch as the prisoner is a woman we will omit that for mality in order to dispose of the case In some reasonable time. THE CRI TERION. jjj j Edith says •he'll never , marry a man / py > i unless he Is a | thoroughly cul- ]/ A, tured gentle man. \ H I know, but I yi ;; j suspect that '1 V " she'd consider a far bank ac- '' jj | count as the Ifl best evidence of i j culture and breeding. OF COURSE! Do you think war will ever be A / J abolished? \ /[ H * Think! I J I I *\ know. Why, sir, J \ \ • we are going to 1 | K abolish war if It LI / |\ I takes every last | k man on the face HL J I M of the earth. lEbenittg (Efjal According to the report of the State Water Supply Commission on floods and their effoct upon industry, busi ness and daily life in Pennsylvania, the flood control works in Wildwood Park are the only system of the kind in the whole State. This statement, which Hounds rather remarkable tn view of the wide discussion of tho subject of flood control in various parts of tho State and the urging of the Stato Commission that munici palities and communities take up the matter, is contained in a voluminous * report on liood dangers discovered * by the engineers of the commission in making the water inventory. Tho statement is made that, "Too much stress cannot be laid upon the neces sity of planning and building flood control works in anticipation of the recurrence of great floods rather than deferring such action until conimuni ties have suffered irreparable losses and are financially unable to con struct remedial works. Flood con trol works were built above Harria burg in 1908 on Paxton creek at a cost of $115,000 to prevent inundation of the city from that source, which is the only system of its kind in the State.' • • * This statement is quite, a compli ment to Harrisburg and is an object esson to the rest of the State because !f there ever was any city which suf fered periodical floods from a stream it was Harrisburg and the erratic waterway starting out in Lower Pax ton township. A good many people recall how the city used to wake up after every hard rain to find tho creek cavorting over on Cameron street and the inhabitants of Sibic town taking to the hills. Harrisburg lost a good many dollars before it awoke to the fact that the flood wa ters could be controlled and when it was done It was all so simple that we all wondered why it had not been done before. The Hood control and the Paxton creek interceptor were several times pronounced failures and wastes of money but just after the flood control was finished there was a tremendous thunderstorm with il rainfall that ordinarily meant a tor rent pouring through Cameron street. Hut nothing happened down town, although Wildwood park resembled a lake. It was not for a week that the lake was down to the normal condi tion. After that there was not much said about the flood control and Pax ton creek is now a rather respectable waterway and it is only when the Susquehanna gets out of its banks and the water backs up that the Paxton creek gets troublesome. Gut just Im agine what things would have been like if the city fathers and the pub lic spirited men who took up the call for public improvements had not con structed that flood control. The pre dictions that tho creek valley would be an important manufacturing part of the city have been abundantly borne out and the plants of the Har risburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Com pany and others testify to the value of the flood control. * • * Another interesting thing about the report is that it gives some figures on floods in the State which show that i our forefathers were just as badly i damaged by them as we have been but that the wonder is that we did not do something to prevent them long ago. The Susquehanna has been one of the worst offenders and there are records of rampages on which it got to tho great destruction ol - nrop erty as early as 1784 with others in , 1807, 1810, 1850, 1805, 1889, 1902 and 11904, that of 1889 being the worst. The famous "pumpkin flood" of 17Sii, I which occurred the year after Harris- ' i burg was laid out and got its namo because it was in the fall when tho pumpkins were ripe and thousands of them were carried down stream, seems to have been all along the Sus quehanna, as the Wilkes-Barre rec ords show great damage at that time and so do those at Sunbury. Singu larly enough Pittsburgh had a flood given the same name and for the same reason. It occurred in 1810 -fend flooded an area as great as that of the flood of 1907. Pittsburgh records have been kept for 159 years anil show no less than 185 floods with eighteen feet of water or more. There have been 160 bad floods in that city in sixty years. So there are some places worse off than Harrisburg. . • * * A warm Saturday afternoon can bring out the jitneys at a rate that nothing else unless it be a circus tan do. There were jitneys by the dozens running ail over the city on Saturday afternoon and they would be one after another on Market street hour after hour. Probably more appeared than at any time since the holiday shopping and it was notable that some of them had signs that you could see a block away. The jitney appears to hibernate in Harrisburg. At holiday time there are plenty of such cars, if the weather is good, but their appearance the rest of the win ter seems to be more or less regulated by the weather. There are some cars which have been running regularly all winter and seemingly on established routes, bfit the number which come i out when the going is good seems to be greater. • * • A couple of farmers who attended the Yerbeke street market on Satur day declared that they were not go ing to bring as much produce to mar ket as they have been doing because they have to cart It home again. One man complained that he had been bringing butter for j ears but that people would not pay the prices asked all over the market and were turning to oleo more and more. Another said that he had taken home four dozen eggs because of the objections of housewives to prices. William V. Van Inglien, the Phila delphia artist who Is being consid ered for decoration of the Capitol corridor, was here a few days ago. He painted the lunettes in the south wing. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Dr. Sheldon W. Funk, the State lecturer who says that boys should have shorter hours on the farm, owns some of the finest orchards In the State. —Ellis S. Lewis, chosen to succeed the ':ite Tohn W. Bteacy as president lof the York Trust Company, Is well kliown here. —Mrs. Abigail Geisinger, who has made so many benefactions to Dan ville. is ninety years of age. - —William H. Miller, prominent ' Media banker, declined to serve as a member of the Delaware County prison board any longer. —Eugene V. Debs has been deliv ering a series of lectures In the east ern part of the State. —C. H. State chemist for years, takes a whack at the Jones cold storage bill as one which should not be enacted for the benefit of the people. I DO YOU KNOW ! 1 Tliat llarrlstHirg steel Is cmplo.ml in new buildings in Philadelphia? HISTORIC HARRISBURG In the old days when there was a flood in the Susquehanna the small streams which Intersected the city used to flood the streets generally.