12 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Pounded IS3I Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building;, Federal Square. E. J. STACK POLE, Pres't and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Business Manager. GUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. A Member Americpn Newspaper Pub- Bureau of Circu latlon and Penn- u Bylvania Assoclat fifi Kfi fljSB M Eastern office, kit. mm ana ml Story, Brooks & SSaaflES HV Finley, Fifth Ave- CEj. Vjlg nue Building. New ± 'l* People's Gas Build _____ 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. THURSDAY EVENING. MARCH 20 No man is born into the world whose work is not born with him; there is ahvays icork, and tools to work withal, lor those who wiII. —LOWELL. PATRIOTISM And there was tumult in the air. The fife's shrill note, the drum's loud beat. And through the wide land every where The answering tread of hurried feet; While the first oath of Freedom's gun Came on the blast from Lexing ton; And Concord roused, no longer tame. Forgot her old baptismal name, Made bare her patriot arm of power. And swelled the discord of the hour. So sang Buchanan Reed in his poem, "The Wagoner of the Alleghenies," in spired by the rising of '76. It is a Etirring bit of verse. In imagination one sees the "embattled farmers" of Kcw England, the backwoodsmen from beyond the Allegheny _ mountains in Pennsylvania, and the plantation own ers of the South gathering to the long, gruelling contest for the freedom of America. Poorly equipped, without uniforms, with no transportation sys tems, lacking funds and supported only by their own unconquerable courage, they rushed to meet a foe ten times as powerful by comparison as is Germany of to-day. Their example must be before us in these days when the honor of the nation they founded is assailed. We enjoy the blessings of liberty and all the good things that make America the Mecca for oppressed and down trodden of all the world because these Revolutionary heroes willed to sac rifice that the miracle of a republican form of government might be wrought on these shores. Are we going to hesi tate when the future of our own chil dren and grandchildren for innumer able generations may be at stake? It is for each one of us to decide, and Americans never have hung back when the call for patriotic service has been sounded. Always there has been "tho answering call of hurried feet." AN IMPRESSIVE GATHERING IF anybody had any doubt of the inherent patriotism of tho citizenry of Pennsylvania, that doubt has been dissolved by the splendid response of a large number of prominent citi zens to the call of Governor Brum baugh to serve as a Committee of Public Safety. Throughout the conference at the Executive Department yesterday there was displayed the highest type of patriotic devotion to the interests of the State and the nation. It would be difficult to conceive of anything more impressive than this gathering of in fluential and busy men from every cor ner of the Commonwealth to consider the mobilization of the resources of the State for the proper support of the government in this great national crisis. Governor Brumbaugh himself made a most impressive address setting forth his view of the situation and empha sizing the importance of co-ordinating all the departments of the State's in dustrial and individual activities for and in the interest of the national defense. It was a thoughtful and patriotic and impressive statement of the con ditions which demand the most intelli gent consideration of the people of the State. That the Governor realizes the Importance of the service which these Influential citizens have been sum moned to perform has been best demonstrated in the high character of those men who have been invited to undertake the work which was out lined to the conference held here yesterday. The Governor also has been widely commended for the choice of the chairman of this committee. George Wharton Pepper demonstrated in his remarks of yesterday and in the man ner in which he assumed the dis charge of the grave responsibilities ■which will rest upon him in directing the affairs of the committee that he is alive to the importance of what must toe done to mobilize the resources of the State for the proper support of the national government. It was a com mon remark that the committee repre eented the best type of the citizenship of a great Commonwealth and the dis cussions all indicated the serious ap preciation of everyone present of the work which must be done. This general committee will give force and Inspiration to local com mittees everywhere throughout Penn sylvania and It Is the hope of the Governor and those who are uphold ing his hands in this crisis that there ill be no waste effort, no lost motion, THURSDAY EVENING, but on the contrary co-operation of tho most effective and efficient char acter. Pennsylvania always has main tained her position as a great patriotic Commonwealth and there Is every promise now that It will" be found ready to meet every call upon Its people or Its wonderful resources. HELP THE BOYS! WHO will help the boys of Har risburg "do their bit?" A few days ago the TELEGRAPH suggested that the greatest patriotic service the boys of the city could per form would be to go extensively into the work of backyard and vacant lot gardening. Yesterday there appeared on the editorial page of this news paper a letter of endorsement from a correspondent, who expresses the be lief that much good could be accom plished if the boys are properly or ganized and their work super vised by a trained gardener. He ex presses the hope that some wealthy resident of Harrlsburg will make the necessary contribution of about S6O a month during the gardening season for this purpose. This is a good idea. There should be in Harrisburg some man rich enough and generous enough and patriotic enough to perform this ser vice to the community, for there can be no doubt that it would be a ser vice of most substantial kind. Gardening, to be successful, must be done properly from the very be ginning. This is no time for experi ment. The yield from the vacant ground of the city can be wonderfully increased by proper attention and di rection. City boys know little about gardening, but they can easily learn; No great skill is required. All that is needed is intelligent instruction. And the crops the boys would raise would do much to keep down living costs in the city and add to the local food supply. Who will come forward with suffi cient money to make gardeners of hundreds of Harrisburg boys who are ready to volunteer? Why will help them "do their bit" for their coun try? THE RUSH TO ENLIST THE recent rush to enlist in both thje army and tho navy illus trates a curious effect that war or the threat of war has always had on American youth. So long as the country is peaceful and the military and naval branches are performing merely routine duties, it is next to impossible to get men to keep their numbers up even to the full peace quota. But the moment the eagle screams and war clouds begin to gather, the recruiting offices are over crowded. The men who go into the navy to day do so with their eyes open. They fully understand that theirs will be a perilous service. Hunting the subma rine is exciting, but it is also danger ous. Yet that is the work to which a large majority of the recruits desire to be assigned. Whatever the cause, the fact refutes the oft-repeated libel that American men are soft and that they lack the courage and the desire for adventure that made the heroes of *76 and '6l. CAI'ITOTi PARK EXTENSION GOVERNOR BRUMBAUGH and members of the Board of Pub lic Grounds and Buildings ex pect to formulate promptly the legis lation necessary for the treatment of the Capitol Park Zone ' during the next two years. This legislation will include an act authorizing the city of Harrisburg to co-operate with the State in working out the several problems, provide for the transfer of such land as may be necessary and obtain an appropria tion for the immediate grading of the park area, the planning of grass plots and the planting of trees. Governor Brumbaugh and who have been Interested with him in the project hope in this way that the people will be able to appreciate at once something of the meaning of the proposed park and thus lead the way for subseequent assemblies to erect buildings to care for the State's busi ness as the needs arise. It may be said to the credit.of the Governor and those associated with him on the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings that they have gone about the solution of the problems in volved in the planning of the Capitol Park extension in a broad and com prehensive way and those who follow will be able to complete the scheme of Improvement in such a manner as to conform with the dignity and Im portance of the Commonwealth. It is the hope of all concerned that full provision will be made at the pres ent session of the Legislature not only for the planting that ought to be done as soon as possible, but also for the widening of the streets abutting on the park. The landscape designers who are working out the plans seo no reason why the width of these streets should not be Increased without fur ther delay, Inasmuch as this feature of the Improvement will not interfere In any respect with the general develop ' ; \ The Days of Real Sport .... By BRIGGS I , - A ment of the scheme outlined in the reports of the landscape architects time ago. Labor Notes Sirs. C. H. Moen, of Grand Forks, N." D.. is considered one of the most successful female farmers in the United States. There were 269,000 tons of coal mined in 1916 for each life lost, the greatest tonnage per fatality in the history of the United States. Rome (N*. Y.) Plumbers and Sheet Metal Workers' Unions have secured agreements with wage increases of 50 cents a day In each case. Nashville (Tenn.) Stereotypers and Electrotypers' Union has established a minimum wage scale of $25 a week for foremen and secured a one-year contract. The Arkansas Senate has passed the bill to establish a printing and bind ing plant to be operated by the State Department of Education. Still a Winning Fight (Public Ledger, Philadelphia. ) It canot be said that the defeat of the local option bill in the House was unexpected. Every one knows what in fluences have been brought to bear upon the legislators at Harrisburg. The fight for this measure has been the one bright spot in Governor Brum baugh's administration, but the party bosses have proved too strong for him. Doubtless conscientious convic tion was represented in some of the af firmative votes. There are persons who, though they may believe in the proper regulation of the liquor traffic, do not see that the most Just and the most effective way to keep it within bounds is to confer upon the voters the right to sanction or to restrain it. There are differences of opinion as to the unit of option, whether it be the country or the town, or even the city ward; but these are questions of minor importance in comparision with the main question. A famiyar objection to prohibition is that it may be im posed upon communities without their consent, as when the centers of pop ulation in a State vote against it, and it is carried by the country districts. In such cases the enforcement of the law becomes a difficult matter and conditions become more deplorable than ever, since the moral effect of a law that is not enforced is always bad. That objection docs not attach to local option, which gives every community exactly what the majority of the voters want. Defeated though it be for the mo ifient, this reform is one which is bound to come in Pennsylvania. The people will not forever permit the saloon evil to exist against their will. It is not necessary, to take, extreme views, to argue that the use of liquor is always and everywhere a crime, in order to concede the right of Cie State to restrict it in the interest of the pub lie welfare, or even to eliminate it if that is the only way to check its bad effects. Nothing is more certain than that the second alternative will finally be adopted if the first is refused. In deed, one reason, perhaps the chief reason for the growth of prohibition sentiment has been the stupid obstin acy of the liquor dealers in opposing salutary reforms in the conduct of their business. Thus many who have no scruples against the moderate use of alcohol, who would willingly license responsible hotels and restaurants, have. come to see that the saloon as such, carried on too often by men with no sense of obligation to their' fellows, is a menace which demands vigorous action. They are not fanatics, they have no wish to interfere unduly with the habits of others; but they will not much longer permit a gr?at Com monwealth to remain helpless in the grasp of an element that chooses to ally itself with the forces of social and political corruption. No temporary defeat will turn them from this de termination. Decidedly Cool (From the Tuttle, N. D., Star.) At the burning of a barn in Steele recently our superintendent displayed some nerve and pluck. Miss Sherman did not wait for the men to get there, but hastened to the barn without stopping to dress, and in bare feet un tied the horses before they had be come unmanageable, thus saving them with little trouble. There is not a man, we venture to say, in all Steele but would have stopped to put on his pants before venturing out into the crisp air, but she did not, her whole thought being of the dumb, animals imperiled, and it was. Indeed, a nervy and cool-headed performance. Probably (From the Providence Journal) If the Maine Legislature passes the bill to prevent the sale of cigarettes, will the new act be enforced along the lines of . the Pine Tree antl-llquor laws? HARBISBUHO TELEGRAPH ir ""PtKKOntauua By the Ex-Committecman The proposed legislative check upon governors and mayors who seek to dis miss officials for political reasons, a measure born of the abrupt changes made in the State government Just prior to the speakership contest last winter, was affirmatively recommended by the committee of the House in charge last night and will reach the lower branch next week. The proposi tion is in the form of an emendment to the constitution and Is another piece of political dynamite. Its con sideration will probably lead to a fresh outburst of factional political speeches and the perennial Philadelphia row will be dragged out again on Capitol Hill. The resolution would have to pass the present Legislature and* the next before going to the people. The Gov ernor, the man most concerned, has nothing to do with it. It provides, in brief, that there shall be no dismissals except in the manner that the Legis lature prescribes. This is aimed to stop such dismissals as those of Su perintendent of the Capitol Rambo and Commissioner of Banking Smith without charges being filed and hear ings given. The committee in charge also re ported out the bills provfding that Philadelphia city employes shall neither be assessed nor contribute for political purposes and that they shall not take part in politics. The bills are designed to go with the Heffernan bill which has been the cause of two air ings of the Philadelphia scrap and which will probably furnish another opportunity. —Men who observe politics are won dering what woulti be the effect if the Philadelphia reform bills now being urged by the dominant faction in the Legislature, but not in the State or city administrations, should become laws and there would be another of those changes of control which Phila delphia works out every now and then. For years the Shern law has been invoked to stop political activity. The newest set of bills, which are backed by the committee of seventy, are designed to put teeth in the Shern law. —lncidentally, it might be added that Daniel J. Shern, the former floor leader In the House and for whom the law mentioned was named, may be a candidate for Senator to suc ceed Samuel W. Salus. It has been Shern's desire for years to get into the Senate^ —Considerable criticism of the legislators for letting the resolution to support the President become a football of factional politics has been heard about the city. It is not im possible that the conference commit tee which will bo put in charge of the measure next week will take its time about reporting a compromise. —This session is about as prolific as any known in recent years in the way of liquor legislation. It varies from the restrictive to the wide open. The chances are that there will be precious little done about new liquor bills. —The Lynch bill repealing the non partisan law insofar as it relates to the nomination and election of second class city officers has been reported from the Senate Elections Committee Of which Senator P. McNlchol Is chairman. Ex-Mayor John Von Bergen of Scranton and other promi nent citizens of that city are asking for the repeal. The bill will be on first reading Monday and can be consider ed finally In the Senate next week. If there Is any desire to hurry action on it. If the repeal goes through, the mayor and five councllmen to be chosen this fall in Pittsburgh and Scranton would be nominated and elected on partisan tickets. Senator W. P. Graff has presented a bill to re peal the portions of the law relating to the judiciary. It is understood that It will be brought out of committee so that both measures can go before the Senators at the same time. An Inconceivable Humiliation (From the Providence Journal) This is a world struggle, and If the United States is to win back any measure of the confidence and ad miration we have lost in the eyes of the world by our failure to maintain our national rights since the sinking of the Lusltanla we must perforce en ter this struggle with every atom of energy we possess. To enter into tho war, to declare to the world that we are in arms against Germany and then sit back and make faces would be a humiliation that it Is incon ceivable to contemplate. ■ J . THE PEOPLE'S FORUM Abolishing Death Penalty To the Editor of the Telegraph: As on Saturday you published an anonymous but lengthy article advo cating the death penalty, may I ask that in fairness which 1 think you al ways try to maintain, that you will publish another, but much shorter. Last Tuesday the House of Represen tatives had more speakers than could be heard in three hours' time to speak in favor of the abolition of capital punishment, and no one could be found to say a word in opopsition to them. Only one speaker advocated giving the jury the right to decide for capital punishment or for imprison ment for life, stating that juries would almost invariably give the verdict. "Life Imprisonment" as they had done even with the law as it now is, in a hundred cases or more which he had conducted as District Attorney in Lu zerne county. The Biblical argument made out by your anonymous corre spondent would have been gladly heard then, but no judge, clergymen, prison-warden or college-professor could be found who would stand up last Tuesday and say anything in favor of the death penalty. Your correspon dent tries to make out an argument from the Old Testament, just as the defenders of slavery tried to do so sixty years ago. It is wrong to say that we take our love from the harsh er history of the Old Testament. Both Bishop Darlington and Rabbi Kraus koff answered this by saying that "love was the great teaching of the Old Testament even as it is of the New Testament." The Rqbbi went further and explained why many offenses were punished with death while the He brews were nomads, journeying from place to place in tents and having no prisons in which to incarcerate crim inals. The stoning of St. Stephen was done by a rabble, just as it might have been done in one of the lynchings down South to-day. When Jehovah in the Ten Commandments said, "Thou shalt not kill" He made no exceptions for one man (or twelve men and a thirteenth man as their spokesman), to kill anyone. The State of Missouri abolished the death penalty last week. Fifteen or sixteen other States have done so, and others are'considering It in the Legislatures this year. Let Pennsylvania take the lead in this re form which was commended the other day in the hearing by prison wardens from New York and this Common wealth, by judges, university profes sors,'district attorneys, bishops, cler gymen and rabbis, and after a year or two we will find, as in Switzerland and other countries where capital punish ment, has been abolished, that murder will be greatly lessened. It is the sure ness of the punishment, not its se verity, which deters from crime. Now nine out of ten men escape, as juries, fearing to hang an innocent man on circumstantial evidence or forced con fessions, will not convict and sentence to death, as such mistakes can never be corrected. Under the new law every To the First Gun Speak, silent, patient gun! And let thy mighty voice Proclaim the deed is done— ' Made is the nobler choice; To every waiting people run And bid tho world rejoice. Tell them our heaving heart Has found its smiting hand. That craves to be a part Of the divine command. Speak, prove us more than ease or mart, And vindicate the land. Thine shall the glory be To mark the sacred hour That testifies the free Will neither cringe nor .cower. God give thy voice divinity, That Right be armed with Power. Thou art not lifeless steel With but a number given. But messenger of weal Hot with the wrath of Heaven, Go earn the right to Honor's seal— To have for Honor striven. Lead us in holy ire The path our fathers trod; Tho music of thy fire Shall thrill them through the sod. The smoke of all thy righteous choir Is incense unto God. And when long Peace is found And thou hast earned thy rest. And in thy cave of sound The sparrow builds her nest. By Liberty shalt thou be crowned Of ail thy comrades best —Robert Underwood Johnson, In the New York Times., , MARCH 29, 1917. guilty man will be punished and sen tenced to lifelong imprisonment, if he deserves it. Authorities were quoted without contradiction the other day stating that more than one-tenth of those hung are innocent of the crime. Yours very truly, TWENTIETH CENTURY. MUST BE AMERICANS To the Editor of the Telegraph: I was somewhat interested and not a little amused in reading recently an article in the TELEGRAPH by Mr. Albright. It is not often that one has the privilege of reading the opinions of one who has devoted his life to a pursuit about as far away from the subject with which he is dealing as the earth is from the moon. We do not wish to assert that the brain of a pianist is necessarily incapable of political logic. We do not know of any pianists whose opinions in this field are quotable, and without intending any disrespect we think the article in question bears but our contention. Perhaps it might be enlightening to show that peace can be maintained oftentimes only by war, paradoxical hs this may seem. We think history will prove this. If a man has you by the throat you cannot shake him off by the offer of a bunch of lilies. The lion and the lamb story is very pretty, but it doesn't work out in the wilds of Africa. Force can only be overcome by superior force. An enemy will be more apt to respect you If he knows you are fully capable of meeting him on his own ground and with similar weapons. There are very few men or nations bent on having a fight and seeking a cause for it, who will respect the cry of the frightened weakling begging for mercy. No man ever yet escaped a sound thrashing at the hands of a blood-thirsty ruffian by merely appealing to his tender mercy, or by some such phrase as "O, don't hurt me, I am such a peaceable fellow, and sister is so far away." Such an at titude as this would soon put the en tire world at the mercy of mere brute force, indeed the most elementary principles of Justice would be regard ed as of no more worth than "a mere scrap of paper." Might has never yet conquered right. Did Caesar suc ceed? Did Napoleon? Did Charles tho First? Had it not been for Wellington and Bluecher, Germany would have been Napoleon's footstool, and Eng land merely a summer resort for the conqueror's favorites. Peace is un questionably a great desideratum and devoutly to be wished, and w r e think Mr. Wilson has made every possible effort to maintain it, notwithstanding the opposition of the pacifists who in this disguise are nothing less than traitors, who deserve what John Brown did not. Certain it is that our government will make every effort to protect American life and honor. This is not a time for us to be Germans or Frenchmen or Englishmen or Rus sians. It is however, high time to be nothing less than Americans. Harrisburg, Pa. Yours trulv, "PATRIOT." 1 OUR DAILY LAUGH TWIN EXCUSES. "Not eating meat?" "I haven't eaten any meat foi three months." "Dieting or boycotting?" LEARNED BETTER. "Did your husband write yoi poetry before you were married?" 'TJo; but he used to write me who we both thought wu poetry." lEbmtttg (Eljal I Persons who have been studying the I proposed plan for Improvement of the Capitol Park Extension district have been astonished at the amount ot traffic that passes over the State street bridge. Removal of the houses in the Eighth Ward facilitates observation ot the conditions attending the traffic and an automobile a minute is nothing un common at certain hours of the day. One would think that with the Mul berry street bridge and the Market street subway quite a considerable part of the traffic going to the Hill section would be taken care of but the growth north of Market street is well demon- by the number of vehicles go ing over the bridge spanning the Penn sylvania tracks at State street. By and by, when the Hill builds up still more north of Forster street, there will be a large amount of traffic carried through the Herr street subway and the State street traffic will Increase as well. Under the plan proposed for the improvement of the park district North and Walnut streets will cou vergo at the entrance to the now bridge which Is to start somewhere near the present but be of such an ornamental type and of such a gradual ascent that it will lit Into the genera) plan for beautlflcation. The bridge will be a largo affair, capable of taking care of traffic from the central part of the Hill, the far-out section and even that portion north of Forster street. It would be the part of wisdom, say the observers, to begin the con struction of the bridge at an early day. There were probably more promi nent men in Harrisburg yesterday than for a very long time. The meeting of the Governor's State-wide Committee on Public Safety and the hearings on the "mine cave' and other bills brought to this c'ty captains of business and men prominent in the official and civii: life of practically every city in the State. Indeed, there never has been in the new Capitol, not even on the day of its dedication or on any of the historic occasions since, such a gath ering of men eminent in the affair* of Pennsylvania. Men whose names are household words and who have been making the marvelous history of the business, the life and affairs of the Keystone State were gathered in one room at the Capitol yesterday In such number that Chairman PeoDer was led to make a striking remark. Discussing the need for finances to organize tho State he said that if he could get one tenth of the wealth represented at that meeting he could carry on al most any pro.iect. Some one who heard I him said that he could conduct a war even under the terrific expensive con ditions of modern days for a while. James Scarlet, the Danville lawyer, told un amusing and yet tragic story yesterday in appearing before the com mittee hearing the "mine cave"' bill. He said that people in some districts of the hard coal fields never knew when their houses would sink into the ground. He read a letter from ono company to a man in which he was requested to make some arrangements in case of damage. The man who got the letter had a sense of humor even in disaster. He replied that his house had sunk into a hole caused by a cave in of a mine several hours before he had received the letter which re quested his acceptance of a proposition in ten days. "Naturally" said Mr. Scarlet, "he was unable to take ad vantage of the proposition by mail." A good many interesting stories aro being told about the old Common wealth hotel which is to go out of business as a hotel on Saturday and some of the traveling men who have been "making" Harrisburg for a long time are sorry that it will pass from the active list. There are some com mercial men who have been coming to Harrisburg for twenty-five or thirty years and some of their names have been regularly written on the registers. Several of them gathered last night in the hotel lobby and told stories of "Jim" Russ and of the times they had to get beds in days of political con tests. Some of the traveling men have gotten so accustomed to stopping at. the hotel that they say they will feel homeless when they come to Harris burg. Tlie spring time is a great time for people to go to night tires. An alarm of fire any hour before midnight will bring out folks who would not think of turning out if the weather was wintry. Last night's alarm came in lime to catch the crowds from the "movies" and folks walked for Mocks to go to see the excitement and to fol low the machines. And as for auto mobiles they turned out by scores. A fire in tine weather after a long winter is one of the greatest occasions to stir up excitement and it's a fine excuse to turn out in the evening. Harry S. McDevitt, the solicitor of the State Economy and Efficiency Commission who drew up the report which is being so much discussed, used to be a Philadelphia newspaper man, having been a member of the staff of The Press for years. It was while he was in newspaper work that he became interested in research work, which be has turned to good advant age of the State. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE "1 —Senator W. E. Crow, of Fayette, has a fad for Holstein cattle and owns a fine stock farm. —George Wharton Pepper, chair man of the Safety Committee, ia a Pittsburgh graduate. —Judge Gunnison, of Erie, who was here yesterday, was much interested In Harrisburg's treatment of its river front. Col. C. C. Allen, who commands the First Infantry, just mobilized, is a regular army officer. Mayor McDowell, of Chester, has proclaimed a "flag day" for next Mon day in his city. DO YOU KNOW That Harrlsburg does a tre mendous business lit the printing or labels for food products? IIISTORHC HARKISBUrtG State-wide gatherings of mtn inter ested In politics were held here as early as 1818. If We Are inEarnest (From the Boston Adviser)' * Ever since the C.utflight Amble and Lusitania were sunk the Entente have been fighting our battles. If. as seems certain, we Are to be at war with Ger many, will it be as a mere sham or In earnest? If the former, surely we should "go It alone"—a mere pretense at keeping the President's word, and with that pretense forfeiting the world's respect and consideration. If in earnest, there can be but one way, for present effective results, and for a part in fixing the peace terms later; and that must be to aid the Entente in whatever way their council of war finds necessary. Belated Energy (From the Rocky Mountain News) "Daniels Orders Submarine Chasers Built for Delivery In Sixty Days." Why didn't he order them sixty days JlxoT
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