10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH UUH'SPAPER FOR TUB HOME Founded igjt Published evenings except Sunday by TUG TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO- Telegraph Bulldln*. Federal Sqaare. E. J. STACKPOLE, Prts't and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Business Manager. GUS M. STEINMETZ, Mana t in e Editor. A Member American Bureau of Circu jfllKi!* latlon and Penn -1 H sylvunia Associate •eij&pSllfl Eastern office, HHInIB Story, Brooks & fPiSuURf Flnley, Fifth Ave nue Building, New Brooks & Flnley, ZT People's Gas Build ' lng, Chicago, 111. Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. .. " BETTER NOT House of Representatives—which af fords another reason why that body should be organized by the Repub licans, who believe in protection not only to the dye industry but to every other American enterprise. A Berlin editor says the American people are war-mad. Well, hasn't Ger many done enough to make us mad? They should spell it Koamin'off. What China Can Do (Philadelphia Ledger.) It's a long way from Peking to Ber lin, but the officials of the Wilhelm strasse will doubtless not be blind to the significance of the severance of diplomatic relations announced by the Chinese government. Germany has long cherished designs of con quest in the Far East as in the Near East. Twenty years ago she seized Kiao-chau, using the murder of two German missionaries as a pretext, and thereby acquired one of the best harbors on the coast, which has since been a_ lively center of commercial ac tivity. " Its capture by Japan earlier in the war does not necessarily mean that China will never regain it. In deed, the action China has now taken will g*ve the Allies so many advan tages that her claims will have to be considered when peace is made. It may have been this consideration which mainly dictated the action, for Germany has given no such direct provocation to China by the U-boat warfare as she has given to other neutrals. It would be well worth Ja pan's while to respect the integrity of her great neighbor. She already has a treaty with Russia. If China were admitted to the alliance on 1 terms that preserved her national pride, the three powers would control the destiny of Asia so completely that the policies of the Western nations, including our own of the "open door," would rest entirely upon their consent. Canada's Title to Fame (From the Detroit Journal.) Canada's part in the war is one of the most brilliant chapters in the world's history. In two years and a half a nation of 8,000,000, trained in tlve arts of peace, indifferent to the maneuvering of war, has become a big factor on the battle field and in the financial operations on which military success is based. This peaceful, energetic neighbor of ours decided to raise an army of 50,000 increased it to 4 00,000 and is now aiming at 500,000, with certainty of success. A year before the war Canada's trade balance was $4.10,000,000 on the wrong side; its exports for the present year exceed its Imports by $345,000,- 000. Though not fully developed indus trially, the Dominion has been able to provide fully for its armies, to manu facture munitions for its allies and finance the payments, to raise millions for war relief and to participate in British loans. Starting out with a loan from the mother country, Canada soon found, as the result of interior reforms forced by the war, that she could pay her own way, and this she is doing un grudgingly. Whiskers and Weddings [Omaha Bee.] Approaching the altar of Hymen, a Chicago girl gave her prospective lord and master an ultimatum; he must shave or give up the wedding. So there was no wedding. Several morals might be drawn from this bit of real life. First Is Una fact that each has escaped an unhappy expe rience. A girl who can think of her husband's whiskers on her wedding day Is not sufficiently centered on the ceremony to promise well as a wife. A man who prefers his beard to his bride may not be expected to make many of the sacrifices constantly es sential to pleasing the woman he has taken for better or worse. Eugenists might get some consolation out of the young woman's stand. Insisting that the groom shall come clean in other regards, why not include the modern rite performed so expeditiously by any skilled barber, or possible of achievement by even a tyro equipped with a "safety" razor? In the final analysis, a man's whiskers continue to be his own fault, while a bride is something of personal selection— sometimes. Novelist Will Miss Them Those famous men of action and romance, the Northwest mounted po lice, are gradually passing. So are the predatory redskins and the white horse thieves. How the novelist will miss them!— Cleveland Plain Dealer, HARRISBURG Sj£6&TE^GRAPII fdctic4 ""P IKKQijtcCLKIa, By the Ex-Committeeman j ■ i .. .. i The latest piece of Democratic cam- ! palgn buncombe was whistled to slum- j y ber in the House of Representatives I last night when the members refused ] "I to take seriously Representative Clem i J Chestnut's resolution to command the I Economy and Kftlciency Commission I to tell the House whether the Legls-!? 1 lature really needs all of the people on the payroll. • The resolution was carefully ground P out at the Market Square windmill and ? the Fulton member was given charge 11 of it. He was successful in securing >" a verification of a rollcall last week I'' and the Democratic ringmasters! wanted to encourage him. He pre sented the resolution on schedule time and when it was being read the an- " nouncement of each salary was greeted B by an incredulous whistle. This kept K up after every sum mentioned and when the total of the salaries was !l presented there was a loud whistle ® from every part ot the house, even " Democrats joining in. 0 Representative George W. Williams, v Tioga, then rose and suggested that in order to give the author of the 8 resolution time to prepare some fur- 0 ther information tho measure be laid on the table. The members of the House whistled again and the motion carried. r Another piece of Democratic strategy c was laid over. It was a resolution to a j force the majority to indicate its stand v lon adjournment. It came from Rep resentative L,anlus, York, and called 1 for all bills to be In hand by April 7 11 and for all committees to report by r May 1. The Democratic campaign is not go- t ing well. Disappointed by the Repub lican policy to allow things to go „ slowly in the matter of investigations, j the Democrats tried to make noise by t interviews, which got lost in the snows. : Then they sprung the corrupt prac- c tlces act, but as it appeared in the t hands of a Progressive, too, no one took it as seriously as the ringmasters f committee. There are rumors that it , is the bill drafted with such great care , by Henry G. Wasson, Republican state chairman in troubled times, and re typed. The interest displayed in it by the Progressives rather spoiled the Democratic air of proprietorship. —The name of Paul W. Houck, of Schuylkill county, who has been men tioned as a possible appointee for Sec retary of Internal Affairs, is being talked of again for Superintendent of Public Grounds and Buildings. —lt Is said that ex-Congressman D:.niel F. Lafean, of York, is not to be considered for the secretaryship, but for something else. The appoint ment will not be made for some time. —Ex-Mayor Blankenburg appears to be having some fun with Mayor aware county gets such an officer this year. —A Bethlehem dispatch to the Phil adelphia Inquirer says: "The appoint ment of Allen 11. Bartold as postmas : ter of this borough was a big sur prise because It came unexpected. The appointment marked the culmination i of a long and bitter struggle between t the political forces led by A. Mitchell Palmer, former Congressman from the Twenty-sixth district, and forces led by his Congressman, J. Harry Steele, of Easton. Mr. Barthold was • the original Palmor man in Bethle hem. The appointment is a complete setback for the Steele forces, the Con i gresaman having presented the name i of Warren R. Roberts some time ago . for the postmastership. The position pays nearly $3,000. —Things are not going to suit the North American these days. The erst while organ of Philadelphia Reform movements thus criticises some recent movements: "George D. Porter has been selected by Senator Penrose to corral independent votes for the Pen rose ticket in the county tight against tb Yarn next Xali, That JBprtejc m ay STARVING IN SYRIA By MARY CAROLINE IS it nothing to you, all ye that pass by, that \ve in far off Syria are starving? Are you cold these winter days? You have warm cloth ing, warm houses; heated cars to ride in. Are you hungry? Were you ever hungry because you had only a small piece of black bread once every few days—if some one remembered to give it to you? Have you children? Did you ever watch their little lives go out in unspeakable torture and agony from starvation, cholera and cruelty? "We Syrians know what all these things mean, and we stretch out our hands to you, oh! rich America, beg ging for bread—for at least one warm garment to keep out the bite of win ter from our emaciated bodies. We beseech you to help us put roofs on our broken homes, and tools Into our hands that we may work and care for our families. Give us a chance to live we implore you." This is what those starving thou sands would say to us if they had the opportunity. Their very silence and impotence do soy it and more, for it is extremely difficult to get news from Syria. The censorship of the mails Is rigid, the missionaries and even the consuls cannot say what they might, and communication with the outside world is almost cut off. But from time to time news filters through from Egypt. Russia and the j neighboring island of Arvad, which is now a French possession, that reveal be properly brought into the limelight and bolstered into some semblance of an "independent leader," he will be banqueted "by his friends" at Scot tish Rite Hall on April 12. William Wunder, a Germantown florist, is> chairman of the arrangement commit tee, and Frederick S. Drake, another of the Penrose reform contingent, is one of the boosters, who are exerting themselves to pull off a dinner that will hove some "effect" and get creditable notice in the newspapers." Labor Notes There are 252 army nurses that re ceive a pension from the United States Government. The Santa Fe Railroad Company lost in its tight to have the California "full crew" bill declared unconstitu tional. The average pay of Lies Moines (Iowa) school janitors is S7O a month. The average pay for 350 grade teach ers is s7l a month. In the more advanced grades of the schools in one Western city boys are taught to work in concrete. A bill has been Introduced in the Michigan Senate to prohibit youths under 16 from driving motorcars. San Francisco Housesmitlis and Ar chitectural Iron Workers' Unions have won their fight for an eight-hour day. Justices of the California Supreme Court have decided that a "caddy" is not a servant, but an employo of a club. The Submarine Failure According to Information furnished to the Associated Press, Germany's submarine warfare between Feb. 1 and March 14 destroyed 78 British vessels of a tonnage of 1,600 tons or more. The vessels of this class in the British mercantile marine at the be ginning of the campaign numbered 3,731. The subtraction was 2 per cent, of the whole. This is at the rate of approximately 9 per cent, a year. It would take ten years to wipe out the Brltfsh mercantile fleet. This computation allows nothing for new construcUon, nothing for the fact I that it Is easier to Intercept old, slow going tramps than the faster new ves sels, and nothing for the development of a better defense. Taking these fac tors into consideration, and the recent decreaso In the number of submarine victims. It seems almost possible to say that the much vaunted submarine campaign of Germany is a demon strated failure—that Great Britain will not be blockaded.—The New York - J MARCH 20, 191* the worst possible conditions. It is au thoritatively stated that fr,om 100,000 to 2 50,000 have died l'rom disease, starvation and exile In the province of the Lebanon alone. In Syria proper as many more may be added to the death toll. An eye witness tells of passing through village after village where the only sound he heard was that of his own footfalls, and where the only live things remaining were the sparrows building their nests in the depopulated houses. The coast towns appear to have suffered greatly, Beirut, Trablus, Junieh and othem might be mentioned where the estimate is made that half the population has died. But then the capital, Damascus, which is far inland, has lost 120,000 according to the Mayor, who said also that fifty wagons were insufficient to carry away the dead from the streets. A letter to an American missionary now in this country, written by a man who had a prosperous business when the war broke out and who vat a land owner living in his own new tiled-roof house, told of the starving conditions in his town and begged for money to save his family af six children. "We have only you and God left. We are starving. I implore you to send funds to keep my children alive." The letter was seven months in reaching its des tination. and it is probable that he and his were all dead before the relief i reached him. OUR DAILY LAUGH ————— do you feel cold sitting eu*, here / 8 llV_ with an adir'r- |i. all —l'm used to A GOO \ < ~r23n ANSWER. Why do you MHB want five cents Well, you see, me father dlsln herlted me dls HI morning so I'm ■\ goln* in busl- M| \ ness for mesself. HOW sr.a _ DOES IT. She is always ' finding fault / JIA ant girl and yet -•*? she keeps her. /|T v^lT That'a the \ reason. If she It\ if' praised her to (I f/fj her friends one of them would iff oon get her. (7(7 A TRCTB M lis fir v[ PHILOSOPHER, to bother mneli about the futnre, j No; that ifPHr worries nio until It becomes the lEtentng (Efjal - If uli goes well tho State will' start planting the rows of red oak trees planned for Capitol Park extension hb* fore next fall. When the sale of build lugs for the material they contuin 14 finished by the Board of Publics Grounds and Buildings on March SI there will be approximately twenty four buildings left 111 the stone, includ ing those in litigation. They will i>* taken down as soon as the proceed ings are closed and the Common wealth obtains title. There will be seven or eight buildings remaining which tho State Is occupying, most of them on Fourth street. Tho Idea Is to start the grading as soon as tho build ings to be sold are removed and lo tear up the existing streets. Probatw State, Fourth and Filbert streets will be retained for some time. When the w grading is undertaken it will be along lines which will enable the planting of tho trees. These oaks will be in four lines and they will be started within a short distance of each side of State street. • • • .Tust what the State will do next fall about the buildings it is using no one seems to know. There are half a dozen bureaus in old residences and there is also the laboratory which is in the old' Day school, while the Moor head Knitting Company's building, is used for the document division and tho big Paxton warehouse is employed for military purposes. The Governor's Troop has the old A. M. K. Church and two stables. The chances are that there will have to bo some arrange ment made for housing all of these agencies. The State is obligated to take care of the military and officials are just commencing to realize what the State must do. The Capitol Park extension is now something In which the average legislator, who was In clined to fuss over it last session, takes pride and several men have been telling what a bargain the State got and how unfortunate it is that it did not buy down to the Susquehanna river while it was about it. • * A good story is being told about the Capitol on "Paddy" Gilday. Mr. Gil day is one of the best known labor leaders In the whole soft coal region and had charge of the interests ol' the miners of the big Central Pennsylva nia district. Ho was picked as chief of the bureau of mediation when the Legislature authorized Father Penn to go into the business of keeping busi ness going by settling strikes and has been somewhat noted for his success. In fact, Mr. Gilday is noted as one who can employ a soft answer and over whom no one can pull any wool. The other day he turned up with title to an automobile. It seems that a friend of Mr. Gilday won tho machine in a raflle and ho did not know what to do with it. So he hunted tip Mr. . Gilday and told him his troubles and also sold him the automobile. Mr. Gil day was supposed to have won a bar gain. Up to date he has had to build a place in which to store the car, to pay a man to show him how to run the thing, to buy oil and supplies for the contraption and to go around apologizing to people for what the darned machine hits while he is learn ing how to steer. Harrlsburg has never I)ceu known as a very contentious place, in fact, it has had a good reputation to tho contrary, being more of a spot where people gather to light out their dif ferences. But the records of the Pub lic Service Commission indicate that it has originated more complaints in the last six weeks than any place in the Commonwealth. The dinner of the Legislative Sons of St. Patrick, which is to be held to night with a galaxy of State officials and legislators, past and present and hopeful, in attendance, is the twelfth to be held in Harrisbur??. The idea originated when some members of tho Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, a famous organization dating from revolution ary days, were kept in Harrisburg by press of business on the great day. There have always been St. Patrick's day observances here, but they made it a real one. It has been kept going ever since and they say that Lieuten ant Governor Prank Ft. McClain and George J. Brennan, the scribe, have not missed any of them. Col. Georgfl Nox McCain, who is suggesting the purchase of the Penny packer farm because of Its historic associations of revolutionary days, used to be a newspaperman on duty here. He flourished twenty-five years ago in the days of Col. William Rode armel and was the staff representative of the Philadelphia Press. Governor Hastings made him a colonel on his staff and he was also decorated with the big order of Venezuela by one of Castro's enlightened predecessors. Colonel McCain became even mora noted because of the lectures on for eign travel, several of which he de livered in Harrisburg to the delight of many. Last time he came here he declared he was more satisfied with life than ever in suite, of his many and varied experiences. "I'm a plain farmer now," was his summing up. However, It is to be noted that the colonel heads a delegation to Harris-, burg to ask improvements of roads whenever he gets a chance and that he is strong on marking of PennsyU vaniu's historic places. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE ~| • —J. M. Dreslbach, Mauch Chunk banker, celebrated fifty years as an officer of a bnnk In his home town, j —Charles Q'Neil, the mine workers* official accused of being a coal oper ator, is vice president of No. 2 dis-r trict which embraces Cambria and other counties. He denies that he ig an operator. —Dr. K. H. Harte, prominent Phil adelphia surgeon, is urging people In his home city to organize base hos pitals for the Red Cross. —Congressman John R. K. Scott, of Philadelphia, has been spending some time at the seashore. —William A. Law, Philadelphia banker. Is prominent in the Belgian relief committee. DO YOU KNOW That Harrisburg organized sev eral hospitals here during tlio Civil war? HISTORIC HARRISBURG The first steamboats were used oa the Susquehanna in the twenties SJM ran to near Columbia. Peanuts Replacing Cotton Iist year Comanche county, Texas, which until a lew years ago luid frown hardly any commercial cirip except cotton, made more than 500,- 000 bushels of peanuts. This year there are a dozon counties west and southwest of Fort Worth that will produce from 250,000 to 1,000,000 bushels of peanuts. That section hasn't any special monopoly on the peanut Industry, for they are being grown all over Texas and Oklahoma, but not on quite an extensive scale as In tha locality mentioned. The peanut Is a drouth reslster, and there Is hardly a summer so hot and dry that It will not make a fairly good crop. When the drs% hot days come It will wilt and look as If it was going to shrivel up, but whenever a rain comes It starts to growing and putting on nuts agafri. It may be planted from, April until June, and Is usuaily har-* veeted In October or Noven*ber<-J taron Xun> bA raaMid*. ,