10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded iSji Published evenings except Sunday by THH TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Ilullrifnc. Federal Square, E J"JSTACKPOLE, Pres't and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Business Manager. GUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. Meri^ ' iifg, "Chicago, m. ild Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. carriers, ton cents a week: by mail, $5.00 a year in advance. TUESDAY EVENING, MARCH 27 Despise not tho chastening of the 'Lord; neither bo iceary of his cor rection; for villain, the Lord loveth he ■correcteth; even,as a father the son in whom he delighieth. —Puov. 3:11, 12. BOYS! "DO YOUR Bin" BOYS! Do you want to "do your bit" for your country this com ing spring and summer? Of course you do. And you can, too, although you are not old enough to shoulder a musket and march away to war. Here's the answer: Make a vege table garden; no matter how small your lot, make a garden. And if you have no available land, go on a scout ing trip about the neighborhood and locate a vacant lot. Tell the owner you want to turn it into a garden to help supply Harrisburg with food in time of war, and if he is a true blue, patriotic citizen he will be glad to let you have the use of it. Thousands, perhaps a million, men | will be taken from the factory, the office and the farm in a few weeks. These men will become consumers in- | stead of producers. They must eat and so must all of us who remain at home. It may be necessary, most likely will be, to send foodstuffs across the sea, to France and England and to Belgium. Prices are high now and the supply is low. By increasing the crops of vegetables by home gardening i the coming summer we will strike a j hard blow at the high cost of living j and at the same time perform a patri- j otic service to the country. Take Germany or England, for in- j star.ee. Both have men and guns! aplenty, but both are feeling the stress of hunger. More garden truck is the answer. To be a true patriot you need \ not don a uniform and go into the i trenches. "They also serve who only stand and wait," but they serve more ' who make two potatoes or two heads j of cabbage grow where none grew j before. You can have a lot of fun, lads, help feed the city and earn a pretty penny for you own pocket at one and the same time if you will go into the home-garden business. Get busy and "do your bit." Cheer up. the worst is yet to come. iHousecleaning time is almost here. CAMP HI LI.—TAKE NOTICE CAMP HILL should sit up and take notice of what some of its people are doing. There was formed last night the Locust Street Com munity Club of that town for the pur i pose of beautifying the thoroughfare named, the introduction of uniform grass plots and planting, the keeping down of weeds on vacant lots and the general betterment of conditions. This is a wholesome sign in any , neighborhood. Good citizenship is contagious. I# the Locust Street Com munity Club lives up to its tenets its influence will 'spread to all parts of the borough. Camp Hill is an at tractive suburb and its people are thoughtful of the appearance of their town, but, like all other places, it is capable of much Improvement. Other localities should take a lesson from the Locust street organization. t Mann's latest sentiment seems to in (dicate that he is well named. SELECTING AX ARCHITECT WITHOUT further discussion of the special qualifications of this . or that architect and with a view only to meeting public expecta tion with regard to the important school building program authorized by I the people last November the dispute , over the selection of a designer for j the buildings should come to an end. It is too bad that the controversy has po lone prevented final action on the j building proposition. The people of ; Harrisburg never contemplated that such an issue would be injected into an undertaking which involves so much of the present welfare and the future of the youth of Harrisburg. It ought to be possible for the nine men comprising the School Board to adjust their differences of view and i ' mute harmoniously upon the .choice of TUESDAY EVENING, the joint committee appointed from the members of the School Board and the Chamber of Commerce to select an architect. No criticism has been heard of the man unanimously recommended by the gentlemen of the committee nor should there be any serious criticism, of the other architects who were un der consideration before a final choice was made. It is not a matter of abuse of individuals, but only a question of maintaining a proper position before the community; let us have an end of the whole matter. Now is time for ! broad and intelligent consideration of all the matters involved, to the end 'that the buildings so seriously needed may be started and the school children of Harrisburg given the opportunities for education which they deserve. So far as this newspaper is con cerned, it has no criticism to offer of any of the architects who have com peted for this commission, but it be lieves the committee which has made recommendations after full inquiry and investficMon has performed an im portant picnic duty which entities its findings to the support of the school directors The Czar is said to be happy shovel ing snow. Doubtless he's happy be cause he is still in a clime whore snow lies long enough to be shoveled. PATRIOTISM YESTERDAY a woman well up ,in years called at the Harrisburg offices of the Red Cross and asked to be given materials that she might knit socks for American, sol diers. She could not see well enough to do the -finer grades of sewing, she said, but her lingers were trained to knitting, as nimble as ever, and she simply "had to do something for her country." She was of German birth. Yesterday a well-known Harrisburg baker offered for the use of the gov ernment one of his large, modern bakeries. "1 take pleasure in doing this and take pride in performing this small service for my country," he said. He, too, is of German birth. This is patriotism. How many of lis have done as much ? MANX AND'CLARK TAMES R. MANN did the obviously patriotic thing yesterday when he announced his willingness to retire from the speakership contest in favor of a bipartisan or nonpartisan organ ization of the House. He decried the introduction of partisan politics at this critical stage of national affairs and urged the re-election of Champ Clark and the elimination of party in the consideration of affairs in which the whole country is vitally interested. How trifling the verbosity of Champ : Clark in reply! "I reject the plan; ij will be re-elected in an hour," said the j Speaker, and he voiced the sentiments I of the Democratic party at Washing ton. Even in the midst of war's alarms | party preference is the keynote of j Democratic doctrine. "Stand by our grand old Demo- ] cratic machine" is a poor cry to send j broadcast over the land to a patriotic people intent only upon the honor and I safety of the nation. HAVE MERCY, MUX! WITH all due respect to those advertisers who help fill our pay envelope Saturdays, we unhesitatingly brand as scoundrels of deepest dye certain of them who have been offering through the col umns of the HARRISBURG TELE GRAPH brooms, mops, soap, carpet beaters and the like' at bargain prices. We know to what nefarious scheme | these wretches are up and at the ! risk of our job we're going to expose 'em to the much abused married men of this community. They're conspir ing against our peace of mind and our household happiness, that's what they're doing. They know well enough that the housecleaning bug is buzzing in every Harrisburg woman's bonnet. Of course, we are aware there's no stopping the ravages of that insect short of tearing up all the carpets in the house, taking down all the bec& removing all the window curtains, sleeping for a couple of nights on the floor and eating for days from the window sills. It's a regular yearly catastrophe that nothing can prevent, but what we object to is hurrying matters, in bringing down on our poor, helpless heads disaster before it is due. For goodness sake, you store keepers, stop. If you're content to let things take their ordinary course may be before the housecleaning season just naturally rolls around of Jts own accord most of us men will be safe and comfortable in some advanced first line French front trench. 'TWIXT DEVIL AXT> DEEP SEA PARTISANSHIP has led the Demo cratic party so far astray from impartiality that one of its mouth pieces to-day headlines the story of General Leonard Wood's transfer this way, VGeneral Wood chose new post himself," and then goes on to say that the heretofore commander of the Eastern Department was given the choice between Manila or Hawaii and the southern post, which he accepted. Misrepresentation breeds contempt, and it isn't only the staunch Roose velt supporters who see with alarm the Introduction of politics Into na tional affairs at the most crltcial junc ture of the United States' history. Wood was given the choice between absolute obscurity and what amounted to a somewhat lpsser demotion. Kind of Washington, wasn't it, that he was not packed off as military aid to the minister of Peru* Ohy Man! By BRIGGS fr+~T~ec^zT~^- — \ / BRlJG"evi 1 I W,LL o c I Nioie w 5.V* \ / ,T \ I HFor / HELP V 2 FO- FtPTee-vJ- RI<SHT YOUR \ f I 1 \ vajith my J —. \ VARCiOTi To "Do I - I ("7" \ "looTums You Tecu Your I7TTt She Smd To \ titxfeeNi MS ii I Teacher, G£T Yoor ) - - r-> T>o*J-r ,t t££sn't P/SPA TO \ \£o help YOU TO \OP A SYSTe.v,J "PUPIL f\ fW DO Vouß J > I AMY \ ZAmpleS J | ' Labor Notes The military preparedness bill passed at Albany, N. Y„ is designed to bring 250,000 working boys of the ages of 16 to 18 under the compulsory military training act. There has been an increase of 12 per cent, for Canadian press telegraphers and about 7 per cent, for commercial telegraphers employed by the Canadian Pacific Railroad. According to a survey made by the Municipal Court, a family of modern size cannot live in Philadelphia above the starvation line at less than $832. Pittsburgh Electrotypers' Union se cured a three-year contract. Wages are increased $1 a week immediately and a total of $2 a week during the life of the agreement. Requiescat in Pace [Emporia Gazette.] It was fitting that Colonel Bill Sapp of Galena should pass from this planet j after the prohibition sentiment of the : Slate and the nation had legally, at; least, made it impossible to use liquor j in prohibition territory. Colonel Sapp was the last of the old Democracy, which made it a business to capitalize with the issue of personal liberty the votes of the Germans who liked their beer. He drank no very great amount of liquor. But he believed in liquor as a political asset. And he got ratheT a long distance from the natural base of his abilities and of his creed. He was an honest, conscientious man in his private relations. He was | lovable and courteous personally. But \ as a political influence he was all bad; I a net proposition with no discounts. ! As a friend, a business partner, as a | companion on a journey, and as a hail j fellow well met. Bill Sapp was alto-1 gether a joy. But as a politician his; death brings a negligible loss to his j State, his party and his country. The Striped Kimono The seafaring young man had writ ten his mother an unusually affection ate letter. He was coming home, he said, and was bringing her a striped Japanese kimono. The mother got the sense of most of the letter unaided, but, finding herself unable to grapple with all her son's big words, she handed it to the district visitor for a second per usal. "A striped Japanese kimano!" the visitor exclaimed, when she came to that part of the letter. "How nite!" "Nice!" exclaimed the perplexed old lady. "You may think so, but would voii kindly tell me what I am to do with such a thing? 1 suppose 1 can keep it tied up in the back yard; but what on earth am I to feed it on good ness only knows." Topeka State Journal. ' The Pilgrim Seed Out of a land of comfort and of ease. Holding for conscience's sake the world well lost. Our dauntless fathers dared the winter seas, The savage arrow, and the hungry frost. Knowing the danger, counting well the cost. The legend of their courage we recall— We thrill with pride to know that in our veins The glow of that heroic blood remains. We thrill —and that is all. We pile our heroes' cairns, each year a stone; It is our joy the starry flag to wave . For those who died for freedom of our own And those who died for freedom of the slave. Laying our laurel on each patriot's grave, Proudly we tell of liberty's great price And echo with a glibness undismayed Words bled from the deep hearts of those who paid. Shall not their blood suffice? We who have grown so perfect in the word. Where is the holy lightning of the deed? We of the facile heart so quickly stirred And soothed with dreams ere it has time to bleed. Vainly we call ourselves tho Pilgrim seed— Where Is the Pilgrim soul that braved the sea For a pure conscience? God awake the men Of poweir to make America again A country of the free! ( Let there be a seal upon our speech. Forbear a while our mighty dead to name. Clasp we instead the hands their spirits reach To draw us through the saving fires of shame. Until our noblest heritage we claim— Our oliildren's right to say, when we have died, "How just they were! how generous! how brave!" The cross of Christ shall scarce avail to save A heart uncrucified. —Amelia Josephine Burr in the Out i look. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH By the Ex-Committeeman The McNichol faction in the Legis lature, with assistance of Democrats, last evening took the honors away from the Vare faction in the contest over the lieffernan 'Mil to prevent Philadelphia city police and firemen from participation in politics. They got the bill, reconsidered after its de feat of Tuesday, placed on the post poned calendar and then sent back to committee. Democrats and independ ents who had gone along with the Vare men last week swung over to the other side. The contest was attended by some interesting debating. Messrs. McNichol I and Beyer twitted each other and Mr. I McNichol charged that there was an i attempt to drag factional politics \ through the House again and asserted ! that up-state men were not interested jin the squabble in Philadelphia, to which Mr. Beyer rejoined that the i measure was a needed reform, spon sored by the Committee of Seventy. | McNichol said he did not know if j the mayor of Philadelphia was op posed to the bill. | The vote to reconsider was 9" to RB. , —The Senate did not seem to know! exactly what to do about the Powell | report last night and there came near ! being an outcropping of some factional j feeling. Senators McNichol and Vare j differed and Senator Eyre seemed to | think that things should be studied, j Finally it was decided to have the re i port made available to take up at any i time. I —The resolution to make the Lieu- I tenant-Governor take the place of the ' Governor when the executive is nway ten days or so will have to be passed | by this Legislature and the next before it could go to the people. It would be effective only if passed by a popu lar majority. —Schuylkill county Democrats ap pear to be run better than the Demo crats in the House. They held a meet ing at Pottsville yesterday and, agree ing to forget differences, will form an organization to get busy for election of county officers. —The House last night got back some of its old-time appearance as the members of families of members were given the privileges of the floor. There were many visitors, but they had to stay in the portion about the Speaker's rostrum. The "sidelines" were closed. —Several lobbyists were decidedly 1 , indignant last night when barred off the floor. They had an idea that favorites were being played and pro ceeded to memorialize members. The Genius Myth [Thomas Sergeant Perry.] Indeed the whole conception of gen ius as something that lifted its pos sessor far above the common herd by an inexplicable quality—an idea which ■ was carefully nurtured by writers who had the ear of the public—was one that had wide ramifications; and demigods acquired full rights of citi zenship in modern society. Genius became as ready and satisfactory an • explanation of every form' of con spicuous merit as instinct of the actions of animals; and in the lordly company of those who possessed it the , ordinary qualities of human nature appeared unworthy of contemplaion. The great man theory ruled trium ! phant in literature as in society, and snobbishness was one of the forms in ! which its recognition found expres , sion. A Mystery [From the Washington Star.] ' "Your immense fortune astonishes me!" ! "Don't see why it should," rejoined Mr. Dustln Stax. ' "I can't understand how an indivi dual could accumulate so much money 1 without having one of these enormous moving picture salaries." In Healing the Sick And immediately when Jesus per i ceived in his spirit that they so rea soned within themselves, he said. Why reason ye these things in your hearts? Whether it is easier to say the sick of the palsy, Thy sins be forgiven three; or to say. Arise, and take up thy bed and walk?— Mark ii, 8 and 9. Consolation For the Czar [From the Baltimore Sun.] • For the first time In his life tho Czar is probably able to go around without a bomb detector in the lead. EDITORIAL PAGE A Pleasant Course Somebody says that the course in ! automobiling which a Western college , has inaugurated should be a pleasant course in fair weather. Yes, if it's co- 1 educational.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. HO WSUBMA RINES A RE DETECTED A submarine always reveals her presence to the seeing eye. If near the surface, her periscope leaves the betraying wake, and, even when she is a hundred feet or more under water, she always disturbs the surface in a way that, to the experienced observer, makes her presence known. The watcher in an airplane quickly sees such disturbances, even if the sub mersible is too far under the sea to be seen Itself. But tlie important fact is that the submarine spends most of her time on , the surface. The U-53's ability to sail ! seventy miles under water without ris- I ing is regarded as a great achieve- | Malice in Kulturland [New York Evening Post.] Horace Wyatt's "Malice in Kultur- j land" (Dutton; 75 cents, net), a par- i ody on Lewis Carroll's classic, which j transports the observant Alice to Ger- I many, is full of good-natured humor J shot here and there with real wit. The best of the pure parody is in the poems. It is the Austrians, and not the oysters, who are taken for a walk by the Kaiser and the Chancellor, af ter "the wise Italian winked his eye" and declined to follow, nnd it Is the | Austrians who protest shortly after j against the feast that is made of j them: "The time has come," the Kaiser j said, "To talk of blood and wars; Of me, and Germany, and God; And culture and the cause; And why the sea is much too hot, I And whether bears have claws." "Please, sir," the simple Austrian! cried, Turning a little blue, "We did not know that was the sort J Of thing you meant to do?" The Kaiser is thus addressed by the ! Crown Prince: "You are old, Father William," the young man said, "And the end of your life is in sight; Yet you're frequently patting your God on the head— Do you think, at your age, It is right?" I "In my youth," said his sire, "I estab -1 lish my case ;As a being apart and divine; And I think if I try to keep God in his place, He ought to support me and mine." Democracy Is on Trial [Burris A. Jenkins in the National De fense Digest.] Orations on brotherhoods, poems on fraternity, even millions for relief and benevolence, do not seem to bring on the brotherhood of man to an alarm ing extent. A strong schoolmaster, even though he be a Hoosier one, is in demand. Besides, if the worst came to the worst and we should have to fight, our sons would prefer to die fdr their country from bullets and not from embalmed beef. Were it not bet ter, then, to learn something about supplying armies? The fact Is that democracy is on trial for its life these days. If the crowd-psychology is to count at all in time to come, if it is not to surrender its voice to absolution, it will need to demonstrate its power to influence and to be heard. President Eliot has well declared that if democracy is to en dure It must show that it Is as effi cient in military matters as is mon archy. We Have Been Friends We have been friends together In sunshine and in shade; Since first beneath the chestnut trees In infancy we played. But coldness dwells within thy heart, A cloud Is on thy brow; We have been friends together— Shall a light word part us now? We have been gay together; We have laugh'd at little jests; For the fount of hope was gushing Warm and joyous in our breasts. But laughter now hath fled thy lip, And sullen glooms thy brow; We have been gay together— Shall a light word part us now? We have been sad together,— We have wept with bitter tears O'er the grass-grown graves where slumber'd The hopes of early years. The voices which were silent there Would bid thee clear thy brow; We have been sad together,— O, what shall part us now? —Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton. Lax Traffic Laws [Neapolis Cor. Liberty Press.] Seems like some people are very careless; last Friday night Ark Jewell rar. against George Naoker, knocking him down and hurting both legs. MARCH 27, 1917. ment. Most submarines, that is, can not keep submerged nearly so long. The reason is that it has to come to the surface to recharge its electric bat teries. Til is recharging is done by the oil engines, which can work only on the surface, because of the exhaust. In addition to its other disadvantages, this recharging process makes a noise that can be heard five miles away. Whil6 undergoing this ordeal, the sub marine is in a helpless condition, and a well-aimed shot, even from a small gun, such as a motor boat can carry, can pierce its thin steel plates and send it to the bottom.—The World's Work for March. Most Powerful Foe (From the Fourth Estate) I am more powerful than the com bined armies of the world. I have destroyed more men than all the wars of the world. I am more deadly than bullets and I have wrecked more homes than the mightiest of siege guns. I steal, in the United States alone, over 300 million dollars each year. I spare no one and I find my vic tims among rich and poor alike; the young and old: the strong and weak; widows and orphans know me. I loom up to such proportions that. I cast my shadow over every field of labor from the turning of the grind stone to the moving of every railroad train. 1 massacre thousands upon thou sands of wage earners in a year. I lurk in unseen places and do most of my work silently. You are warned against me, but you heed not. •1 am relentless, I am everywhere; in the home, on the street, in the fac tory, at railroad crossings and on the sea. 1 bring sickness, degradation and death and yet few seek to avoid me. I destroy, crush or maim; 1 give nothing but take all. I am your worst enemy. I um Carelessness. OUR DAILY LAUGH THK ONLY rrifc-u* j POSSIBLE *35 ! TSST I reason. T/N^TTrTTr Mr. Prim: I /\ A)\l A was to a swell C \ \£- society affair the \ [VTK \ other night \ jfj)j where we ate \ l/'IJ for three hours. Ml - /(,''// Tough Guy: J ,/ Huh, the meat Ufl jj I must have been fffjjflw k-/ //L, tough. Sis. In*, you know. " are' related { ©rcntttg Qltjat "There's a whole lot being prilited and more being said about aliens just now than has probably ever been heard in this country, but I wonder if the average person who talks about unnaturalized persons being a menace considers that the Teutons who are not citizens are In a minority among the aliens?" remarked a man who has studied (he races and 'he nations that have sent people here to work aiul who have been observing how they be have themselves. "As a matter of ■*< iact," he continued," there are many aliens here and in Stcelton, but there are a good many of them whose la therlands are at war with Germany and her allies and some of them cor a from countries which have suiter-a beneath the iron rule of the Geru<...< militarists. To consider them as dan gerous aliens at this juncture is carrv ing it a little far and it would be well for the people who are getting heated up about aliens to have a quiet talk with some Federal authorities. Per haps, they will learn a few things about keeping their mouths shut. The idea of considering the men who work in this county and who live in our city and who have never foresworn their allegiance to the British government or the Russian government as folks who must be watched is far fetched. Why, they are probably watching the Teutonic unnaturalized about as close ly as anyone. And then, think of the Italians who form such a growing sec tion of this community and of the sacrifices their home folks are making to wage war against Germany. Per haps, some of the Serbs whose homes have been wiped out and relatives killed or scattered are dangerous aliens.' My idea is that the Federal authorities have had plenty of time to get lines on the aliens who are liable to make disturbances and that the rest of us should wait until we are called upon as witnesses of some dan gerous conduct or until we hear some thing authentic. It is desirable that we get the aliens to become citizens, but some of these aliens have more against Germany than we have." A good many interesting stories are told about Simon Cameron Long, the eminent railroad man who died sud denly on Sunday night and whoso death is a great loss not only to the Pennsylvania railroad, but to the transportation systems of the country as well. Mr. Long spent his boyhood in this county and when barely out ot school entered the railroad service. They used to say that he knew every one on the railroad and in the Pitts burgh district he was a factor in many things. With Superintendent W. B. McCaleb he handled the tremehdous emergency traffic arising out of the mobilization of the National Guard at Mt. (iretna last summer. He lived in his car at that point and kept in con stant touch with the whole svsteni at the same time. Secretary of the Commonwealth Woods has been called upon to restore order in Tennessee. The Secretary of the Commonwealth, whose office re ceives many letters and on almost ev ery conceivable subject, has been formally asked to settle a dispute of international proportions in the hills of Tennessee. Having been United States minister to Portugal the diplo matic abilities of Mr. Woods are well called upon. In tills particular case a lady desires to be officially informed if the Germans, especially the Hessians, ever really did anything great for this country. She remarks, parenthetically, that her neighbors are inclined to be a bit insistent upon the excellent work for the nation dope by the Germans and she wants to be in a position refute their assertions. ♦ * * Major R. C. Williams, the liew in spector-instructor of the National Guard, who reported here last even ing, is a cavalry officer of the United States army. He will attend inspec tions and in case of war will act as a mustering and inspection officer. * * * Captain Walter Krueger, cf til* United States army, who has been in spector-instructor of the National Guard in the Second brigade or Pitts burgh district, has written an interest, ing article in the Infantry Journal, published by one of the important military asosciations, on "Prepared ness." He discusses a plan for reserves and some of his ideas are well suited to an industrial State like Pennsylva nia. Captain Krueger was lieutenant colonel of the Tenth Pennsylvania in fantry in its border service. • • • Harrisburg supports a good many more missionaries than the average person knows. There are missionaries in a dozen lands who are maintained by Harrisburg money and the contri butions from this city for home mis sionary work in the West and the South amount to considerable money in the courso of a year. The other day a Harrisburg woman was asked if she could not increase the check she gave annually for support of a certain missionary. It was represented to her that various conditions made it desirable. "Well, she asked resignedly, "have missionaries gone up, too?" • • • There was more good roads talk about the State Capitol yesterday than has been heard for a long time, and - meetings on in the interest of good roads at both ends of the big building. The result of the meeting was that the legislators were consid erably impressed by the sentiment in behalf of generous appropriations for better highways. * * • WELL KNOWN PEOPLE E. M. duPont, head of the Johns town railways, is planning for somo big extensions of his line. —J. R. Flannery, prominent Pitts burgh business man, is hurrying along the plans for Red Cross work in his city. —John R. Morrow, Pittsburgh banker, is the head of a new consoli dation of banking concerns in that city. —Col. James E. Barnett, colonel of the Tenth infantry for years, is active in the movement for organization of a machine gun company in Washing ton county. —William J. Browning, who may be clerk of the next Congress, lives in Camden and is well known to many Pennsylvanians. DO YOU KNOW | That Harrisburg lias for years w been a center of a thriving iirc scrving industry? HISTORIC HARRISBURG During the war of 1812 severaj reg lments were mobilized here. Day of the Lord at Hand Hold thy peace at the presence of! the Lord God: for the day of the Lord is at hand: for the Lord hath pre pared a sacrifice, he hath bid his guests.—Zephaniah I, 7. Democracy's Chariot Hail to the water wagon, chariot cf Democracy! What Russia drunk nnn fuddled failed to accomplish in cen turies of effort. Russia sober and clear minded has done in three days.- Kansas City Times,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers