6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded IS3I Published evenlags except Sunday by •THE TBLECRAPH PRINTING CO, Telegraph Bulldlu*. Federal Square. ®. J. STACKPOLE.Prrx'i Cr Editor-in Chuf W % R. OYSTER, Business Manager. BUS M. STKIN'METZ, Managing Editor. Member of the Associated Press—The Assoolated Press Is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of *ll news credited to It or not other wise credited in.this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. * Member American Ushers' Assocla latlon and Penn- Eaite rn office. Avenue Bulldlngj Entered at the Post Office In Harrls burg, Pa., as second class matter. .jglffiHSSgfc. By carriers, ten cents a • >reek; by mall. $5.00 a year In advance. WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUG. 22 In what concerns you much, do not think j/ou have companions; know that you are alone in the world. —Thobeau. ARE YOU OX GUARD ? WITH to-day the lists close for all who would submit them selves for the consideration of tha voters In the primary cam paign in the city and the surround ing districts. When the names are made public Ve shall all have an opportunity of going over the roster and making up minds respecting the qualifications of each. Elsewhere on this page to-day a correspondent urges that the per-j sonal habits also of those suggested for the mayoralty be inquired into that there may be no mistake In the final choice of the citizen who shall represent in his person and conduct the people of no mean city. Since the adoption of the commis sion form of government there has been a growing disposition to "let George do it" in the sense of shirk ing all responsibility for municipal administration. As a result of this unfortunate attitude on the part of the people men admirably qualified for the public service, whose names have been canvassed from time to time, have declined to enter the arena because of the widespread in difference to the management of our local affairs. This is regrettable from every standpoint and unless the tax payers get awake we shall drift back to the deplorable condition out of which the community was yanked by the force of an aroused publla sentiment in 1901 and the years im '• mediately following the great public protest against the old order. It Is the duty of every citizen to look about him in this preliminary campaign and to act intelligently for the welfare of the city and the peo ple In all walks of life. GOOD LUCK TO THE CONNER HARRISBURG has more than the patriotic Interest which every resident of the Stato Capital district has in the Increase of the fighting forces of the nation In the launching of the destroyer Conner on the "Clyde of America" yesterday. This Pennsylvanla-bullt unit of the United States Navy Is the first to be called after a native of Harrlsburg In many years, possibly the very first. It was named for Commodore David Conner, whose squadron covered the landing of the American soldiers when Vera Cruz was taken to afford a base for the armies of General Winfleld Scott in the Mexican War. David Conner was born on either Market street or Market Square when the republic was young and was one of the early graduates of the Naval Academy. He served with dis tinction in the War of 1812 and the Mdxlcan War and was even called from a retired life by the nation to fcelp in emergency. Although in following the flag he was not much in the place of his birth, his achievements are part of ! that record of patriotic service in which Harrlsburg can take tjhe great vat pride. A SOLDIER TO SOLDIERS IF the luncheon deception _of the Rotary Club In honor of the young officers of the Reserve Corps was nothing more than a oourteous recognition of the patriotic service of the special guests It was worth while. But It meant much mora In that It furnished an ex-soldier of the regular army an opportunity to give the youthful officers the benefit of his experi ence' in the everyday routine of a soldier. Captain George F. Lumb was the speaker and he discussed with frank- Bess the attitude of the officer to the toldler and that of the private to his superior. It was such an address as Blight be repeated with profit in • every camp of the army. Doubtless Other soldiers of long training and experience In actual service are in structing the men who will com mand our boys in the camp and the Held, but no more practical presen tation of the relation of officer and jnan could have been given than that contained in Captain Lumb'a address. Now that we are going to war it la highly Important that the officers JbaU understand tbat the soldiers WEDNESDAY EVENING, HXRRXSBURG TELEGRAPH A^^JST22^l9l7. whom they will lead are human and possessed of average Intelligence; that they are serving their country quite as patriotically as the officers, and that they will appraise the one In command at his true worth only when he shall have demonstrated his fitness to issue orders by carefully looking after the health, the comfort and the lives of those who serve In the ranks. Self-control, personal courage, con sideration for subordinates, firm ness, promptness In action and humane treatment of those under him, said Captain Lumb, are the characteristics of a good officer and one who will have the support and confidence of the men in the hour of battle. In the further discussion of the attitude of the private toward the officer placed over him it was made clear that temperaments differ and scarcely two soldiers are alike, but the average man soon learns to re spect and render faithful service when he realizes that the officer Is direct, considerate and knows what he is about. In short, there must be a constant study of his men by the officer and of the officer by his men that there may be co-operation and willing obedience under all circum stances. Now that our boys are going toward the front it will be a comfort to those whom they leave behind to realize that the officers who will have authority over them are being trained to do their full duty under all circumstances. THE "SQUARE DEALT BOARDS THE meeting being held at the Capitol tills afternoon for dis cussion of draft and exemption problems by the members of the district appe&l boards and a repre sentative of the Judge advocate gen eral Is tha final step in the organ ization of the draft system in Penn sylvania. These boards are the ones to whom appeals will be taken from action by local boards on applications for exemption. They are made up ot the men who will have to apply the "square deal" to the Individual, to families, to the business of tile State and to the nation Itself. There are no more Important organizations In the whole draft system. The men named are of high type and their task is one which will be great and tax their abilities. They will give freely and cheerfully of their time and experience and knowledge. A nation casting aside a traditional policy of military organization strikes many homes and business establish ments. National defense now rises supreme and these Boards will en deavor to obtain what Columbia asks with the least possible disturbance, compatible with public interest, of home and business ties. WHAT A DOLLAR CAN DO HARRISBURG was yesterday se lected as the place of prepara tory activity of the movement launched by the War Department, the Red Cross, the Y. M. C. A. and the American Library Association to pro vide wholesome reading for the young men who will go into the thirty-two army cantonments this fall. This Is a program which will call for one million dollars from the American people and it Is proposed to raise It by asking contributions of one dollar. More will be accepted, of course, but the Idea as outlined yes terday at the meeting held In our city's library by representatives of the State, libraries In other cities and representatives of organizations which are helping is to get as many people interested as possible. Everyone is concerned in the soldiers and their welfare. /Books are essentials of life in this generation. The War Depart ment recognizes it and has asked the American Library Association, of which our State and city libraries are a part, to take charge. Briefly oulllned, the plan is as many people as will to give a dol lar. The million will establish and maintain libraries at each of the thirty-two cantonments for three years, it is figured out. This means that the people back of this splendid movement will not have to come around again. One dollar will help get a first class library, in charge of trained people, at each cantonment and the best of reading for the young men who are going from our fcomes a t their na tion's call. It is something which should appeal to every one. MEATLESS GERMANY JUST how hard hit and how near to total exhaustion. Germany at the present moment is, the re cently promulgated order for two mreatless weeks each month illus trates. Germans before the war were a nation of heavy eaters. No meal was complete without meat in some form. All manner of sausages were In great demand. American pork by the steamer load arrived dally In regular Instalments at German ports. Previously, the hardships of war diet had not extended to the army. Now comes the command that even soldiers must save wherever pos sible. Two meatless weeks a month for Germany are worth two million more men for the allies along the west ff-ont. The desperate attempt of the Kaiser to break the British blockade and the tremendous efforts of the Crown Prince to reach a decision along the west front can be better understood in the light of this fail ing meat and fat supply. THE JAI'S AND COTTON TWO Japanese spinning com panies, the Amagasakl and the Settsu, have combined into a new company with a capital of $15,- 000,000 in 1,220,000 shares. The new company will operate 547,514 spin dles. It will be one of the largest spinning companies In the world and it Is going to do Its utmost to root American textile competition out of the Orient and follow that up with a drive on our home market. And our present tariff law encourages tliem in their purpose foUtic* U Br the Ex-Committecmen —Prom all accounts appearing In the Philadelphia newspapers Mayor Thomas B. Smith, of that city, ap pears to be "getting away with" his harmony idea among the Republi cans and has not only succeeded in getting agreements on city and county nominations, but Is also tronlng out some of the ward con tests. There are outbreaks here and there but they are not regarded by the newspapers as serious and even the Democratic Philadelphia Record admits that the mayor has suc ceeded In getting the factions to be good, although It charges him with "acting like a real boss." —The belief is that if the mayor gets harmony that will last out of the primary campaign In his city that It will go far toward composing fights in other counties and place the Republicans in good shape for next year's gubernatorial campaign, a condition toward which State Chair man William E. Crow has been laboring for months In the face of many discouragements including some from friends of the Philadel phia mayor. —The Philadelphia North Ameri can is a bit skeptical about the future of the Smith harmony agreement, but the Press says: "Party harmony under the leadership of the Mayor, which already has taken the form of a ticket for the county offices which will be supported by the united Republican Organization, was established by him yesterday in al. most all the wards where factional clashes were Imminent." The Philadelphia Public Ledger says of the day's events: "Mayor Smith announced last night from his Atlantic City residence, following a busy day of conferences in Phila delphia, that the "harmony program was going along most satisfactorily." The Mayor put in much of his time in arranging for a councilmanic ticket, which, when elected, "would support the progressive measures to be placed before Councils by the administration." In short, the Mayor acted like a real "political boss," and had ward leaders who ordinarily report to Senators Mc- Nichol and Vare hurrying In and out of his office. His final piece of poli tical work was to call In Senators Vare and McNichol, and it was an interesting sight to see the harmony Senators walking out of the Mayor's private office together." Senator Bois Penrose returned ti Washington from Philadelphia last night after a perilous experience near Baltimore, when the Senator and two friends were compelled to leap from a blazing automobile. The car Is believed to have taken fire from a lighted cigar, which had been tossed from a passing car and which lodged in the top, wbtch was down. In an Instant the car and ablaze in the rear and directly over the gasoline tank. The Senator and his friends" escaped Injury owing to j prompt action by the chauffeur, Walter DeHaven, of Philadelphia, who brought into play an acetylene extinguisher and put out the blaze. The body of the car was badly scorched and the top entirely de stroyed. This is the second experi ence of this kind Senator Penrose has encountered in the past two years. In 1915, while motoring from Pittsburgh, headfed for Washington, his car caught fire near Greensburg. When the residents of Overbrook, the Thirty-fourth ward and Lower Merlon township, Montgomery county, learned of the order of the Post Office Department, instructing Postmaster J. B. Conner to close the Post Office at that point and to discontinue all sarvlce after August 31, they immediately sent a letter, posthaste, to Washington, terming the order an outrage. —A Stroudsburg dispatch says: "It is generally believed In political circles here that former Judge Wil ton A. Erdman will be appointed Judge of the Monroe-Pike District to succeed the late Judge Charles B. Staples. The appointment Is expected to be made some time this week, as pressing court business requires an early appointment. Judge Erd man at first was not inclined to per mit his name to be used for the vacancy.' For years he has been the recognized Republican leader of Monroe County. He has never en tered Into factional State politics. Sixteen years ago he was appointed by Governor Stone to fill the vacancy -nused by the death of the late Judge Craig. —ln many sections of Pennsyl vania Army men or private citizens conversant with the manual of arms and military regulations have In stituted intensive training for the drafted men who are to report In September at the various moblltza. tion camps. Judge John W. Kep hart of Ebensburg, a member of tho Superior Court of Pennsylvania, has a squad of twenty drafted men from Ebensburg and vicinity which he drills every evening. The Judge received his early training at M'c- Alistervllle Soldiers' Orphan school, as did his brothers Col. Samuel Kephart, of the Coast Artillery, and State Treasurer H. M. Kephart. In Harrlsburg those in qharge of the home defense have offered their assistance to drafted men of Dauphin county who may wish to get preliminary training and drill before reporting at Army canton ments. —There are a couple of Interesting sidelights for the Philadelphia situa tion. Friends of Senator E. W. Pat ton Insist on filing a paper for him for city treasurer and. the Mayor has forced Congressman John R. K. Scott and John F Flaherty to quit fighting. The Press says *they left the Mayor's office "arm in arm." —Thomas Hughes and John Hays, both well known in Scran ton politics have retired from the race for mayor In that city. —The Rev. Lafayette • Maxwell, Wllllamsport preachor, Is a candi date for mayor of the Lumber city. —The crop of candidates for council and other nominations in Pennsylvania third class cities breaks all records. , —Sheriff George DeForest has re signed from the Warren Corfnty ex emption board or thinks he has. The president may not accept it. Mrs. W. L. Hill and Miss Mary E. Fay are candidates tor' school ov FOR V /s X>ET>EWDENJT- A wifp/ • yQW) al lie - rve v — w V V GOT TO HOSTLS Six Rules For Economy In an article In the September Woman's Home Companion, a writer gives Herbert Hoover's six rules tor food economy. They are: "First —To save the wheat. If we eat as usual from our harvest this year we shall have little more than enough for our own supply, but we can divide with our allies if each in dividual makes some sacrifice by eat ing at least one wheatless meal a day. • "Second —We want to save the meat, for our cattle and hogs are de creasing, and we must send meat to our allies. "Third—We wish to save the fats. We wish no butter used in cooking, less served on the table; we want less lard, bacon and other pork products used. "Fourth—Deficiencies in food sup ply can be amply covered by Increas ing the use of fish, potatoes, beans, turnips, cabbages and vegetables generally, corn, buckwheat, rye and rice, which we will have In abund ance this harvest. "Fifth—We want to save trans portation. To meet the war pressure for munitions, men and coal, every one should consume products of lo cal origin so far as possible. "Sixth—We want all to preach the 'gospel of the clean plate;' to see that nothing of value goes into the garbage can. "Aside from eating an increased proportion of these commodities m order to save on the staples, it is ex tremely important that any surplus of these commodities shall be pre served or well stored for winter use." How to Keep Friends An editorial in the September Woman's Home Companion says: "It is almost Impossible to be gen uinely friendly with a person who In sists on being too close to you, on knowing all your thoughts, feelings and affairs, and on claiming your time and attention on the excuse of affection alone. "The bonds of true friendship must be easy and its demands must be for something real and vital. The woman who calls on you perpetually because she has taken a sudden fancy to you is a blind and selfish egotist, in a mild way. Her calls may Interrupt your work and bore you intensely, but if you are a polite and courteous person you bear with her until she directs her attention else where. She will probably tell the new friend that you are 'very unre sponsive.' Some women clutch at ev ery new acquaintance and then com plain that they have so few friends. The reason Is that friendship Is not built on trivialities and whims, but by giving such valuable things as true consideration, real Interest, and manifesting a decent reserve as to the other person's confidences and nonconfidences." Why We Fight There is a good deal being said Just now about the necessity of the entente allies telling what they are fighting for. The "war aims" of the nations battling with autocracy prob ably will be stated In due time and In the formal language of statesman ship. Until that time comes we cap be pretty well content with the statement of democracy's war aims made jjy a French soldier *nd re ported to Premier Lloyd George by General Gouroud. It Is here given In Mr. Lloyd George's own words In his recent speedh in Glasgow. "In France last year I went along the French front, and I met one of the finest generals In the French army. General Gouroud, and he said: 'One of my soldiers a few days ago did one of the most daring things any soldier has ever done. It was reckless, but. he managed to come back alive, and someone said to him, "Why did you do that? You have got four children, and you might have left It to one of the young fellows In the army. What would have happened to your chil dren?" And his answer was, "It was for them I did It.' " Can statesmanship put in better words the objects for which democ racy Is fighting?— Kansas City Star. Grounds For Exemption [From the Kansas City Star.] "On what grounds did you claim exemption?" "I am a conscientious objector. I believe that If they were called for a million men would spring to arms In a single night, and I object to being dragged to arms In the daytime." German Denials The German papers are denying the reports of poisoned courtplaster and bandages circulated by German agency in the United States. Ordin arily, such reports would not require specific denial, but denials of any form of atrocity made In Germany require a great deal of corroborative detail to be Accepted as final by the rest of the world. —Baltimore Amer ican. CITY MARKETS URGED AS A PRIME NECESSITY IMMEDIATE establishment of municipal markets In every city of twenty thousand or more in habitants is urged by Secretary of Agriculture Charles E. Patton as a means of bringing tho growers of farm products in direct contact with the .purchasing and consuming public. In a statement Just Issued Secretary Patton says: "Any town or city of twenty thou sand or more Inhabitants can well af ford and should take Immediate steps for the establishment of municipal or local markets that will bring the farmers of the community In direct touch .with the consumer and thus reduce the cost of handling articles of food. In cities where markets have been an established custom for years their success has been proved beyond all doubt, and with the ad vent of the war garden on small and large scales, some avenue for the overproduction to reach the consum er must be provided. "Municipal authorities should at once consider the establishment of curbstone markets and encourage the farmers to attend this market on a certain day or certain days each week by offering free parking space rental for a period long enough to test t.he worth of the market to the persons who will bring their products for sale. In Home cities market build ings might be available or might be constructed by municipal funds, but by whatever means are at hand these markets should at once find their The Raising of Rye It is possible that the acreage of wheat here in the east might be profitably Increased somewhat, but we believe that greater care in the preparation of the seed bed, careful selection and grading of seed and more intelligent fertilization will pro duce more bushels of Increase than will an extensive Increase In acreage without these better methods. It seems to us that the greatest oppor tunity for Increasing the amount of bread-making grain Is In Increasing the rye crop. Rye Is already much In demand and the price lias been steadily increasing with that of wheat. Rye bread has for years been the chief bread grain of many of the country of Europe, and It is likely that the call for export grain will include a great deal of rye. There are several reasons why rye should appeal to many eastern farm ers rather than wheat. First, it will succeed on soils and In localities where wheat 1b not profitable; sec ond, It may be seeded two or three weeks later and make relatively as good a crop; third, it is too late In a large part of our section to sow wheat after harvesting -"age corn while ryo will frequently succeed well; fourth, rye straw is in good demand In the market and rye will yield more straw to the acre than wheat. These are some of the rea sons why It will pay farmers to ser iqtisly consider sowing rye, rather than to make a general and Indis criminate increase In the acreage of' wheat.—The Pennsylvania Farmer. Union Pacific Pensions There are 365 old employes on the pension rolls of the Union Pacific Railroad Company. They held a meeting recently In Omaha and, aft er Mr. Calvin, president of that rail road system, had spoken, several others who were with the road when It was built from the Missouri river to the Pacific, gave reminiscences of those early days when buffaloes and wild Indians roamed the plains. One of them recalled that It Is fifty years ago this summer that General Dodge staked out the rlfftit of way for the Union Pacific across the Rocky Mountains. Only fifty years ago. Just the length of life of a man of middle nge, the country west of Central Kansas wis mostly desert terrorized by savages, the grazing ground of herds of buffalo. What changes since then; not only In the face of the country, now blos soming in fields of growing grain; but what vast changes in the appli cation of the golden rule and the brotherhood of man. In that day the man who would suggest that a corporation ought to pension the employes who had grown old In its service would have been thought a radical of extreme type. But here is this railroad now with 365 men already on Its pension list. The Union Pacific has done great things in the past half century, but nothing has ben done that brouKht It better returns on the Investment than its pension to old employes — Kansas City Star. 1 way Into every city "in our Comnyn wealth. "In cities where no buildings are available there is nothing better than reverting to the old curbstone mar ket. City officials or Interested citi zens can arrange for shelter sheds which can be removed to a storage place at the close of the market hours, or the farmers can be allowed to park their teams along the curb and sell direct from their wagons. If the farmers can attend such mar ket centers for a period long enough to establish their confidence, without any fees, there Is no question that the consumer will gain fresher and cheaper products. A nominal fpe can be charged for stall or curbstone ren tal after a certain period when the value of the market is established. "Such markets would be an outlet for the overproduction of vegetables grown In the thousands of war gar dens which abound In every •com munity. There Is no reason why these gardeners should not be en couraged to attend such markets and have a method of direct sale for their products. This will encourage the children to greater efforts next year and will show them that care ful practice In agricultural pursuits bring results In money crops. It wtll prove a source In some cases of start ing accounts for many chil dren /and will tend to make them bet ter citizens. The Pennsylvania De partment of Agriculture will gladly outline plans for the establishment of such markets in any municipalities where there is an interest." Germany's Bill A prediction that the businessmen of Germany will force a peace in the near future is made by Clarence W. Barron, publisher of a financial Jour nal In Boston. Mr. Barron declares that he has private information from Germany that businessmen of all classes ore demanding peace, even if the terms must be the same that might be ex pected after German defeat, because defeat, they realize, Is Inevitable and to prolong the war simply means fur ther loss of manpower and a heavier war debt to carry. If peace were to come to-morrow Germany would be staggering under a war debt of many billions of dollars. Germany was great in chemistry, potash dyes, fabricated steel and merchant marine. Now her ships are forefelted, at home they rust in harbors; vast dye and chemistry works have been set up in other countries; the world outside has doubled Its production of steel and Germany Is Industrially Isolated. The big men of Germany see to-day that all Germany has been building for a generation in the trade of the world Is absolutely lost If she fights much longer. There Is no longer hope of a victorious Germany. Amer ica puts financial backbone into the Allies. England's food supply is se cure for another year. The whole world Is building ships. German shipping will be outclassed. Mort gaged by war for more than one third of her value Germany faces financial bankruptcy. Another year of war would make Germany's loss of manpower so great that she would be counted out of the financial and Industrial race of the modern econo mic world. She must give up, and the sooner the better. All of which will be bad news to the pro-German pacifists in Amer ica.—Kansas City Star. How to Store Vegetables In an article on gardening in tho September Woman's Home Compan ion, a writer says: "The ideal storage place for veg etables that grow, under the ground Is an underground room, without heat, that will not freeze, otherwise a cold cellar. The temperature must be between 33 and 38 degrees Fahrenheit; that is, from just above freezing to what is technically known as 'cold;' and it if can be maintained at one point evenly, so much the bet ter. All the root crops except salsify and parsnips, and Irish potatoes, Btored in boxes into which they have been packed In alternate layers with dry earth or sand, in such a cellar, will come out next spring as fresh ah the day they went in. "Salsify and parsnips require freezing to bring them to proper flavor; and so it Is better to leave these two vegetables in the ground, digging direct from the garden as weather permits. If the severity of the winter makes such opportunities too Tare, leave them out until they j have frozen up once, then dig a part I of the crop and store In sand, as directed above. The balance will be all right for early spring use direct rom tho garden." LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Wants Candidates Probed To the Editor of the Telegraph: That portion of your editorial un der date of August 20th concern ing the mayoralty is absolutely true. Our city must not take a step back ward. The mayor of Harrisburg should be a man of energy, executive abil ity, and whoso character is above re proach. He must bo free from alco hol at all times. It would not be amiss for the voters to acquaint themselves with the personal habits of those who are candidates for mayor that they may vote intelligently. Do not take the word of Interested parties. Let your investigation be thorough. Harrisburg must not be "a wide open city." CITIZEN. Harrisburg, Aug. 22. Lan Hay Becomes Playwright lan Hay (Captain Beith) author of "Getting Together," "The First Hun dred Thousand," and the just pub lished "The Oppressed English," is about to make his debut as a play wright. He has Just completed the dramatization of an earlier novel, "Happy-Go-Lucky" which will —be presented in London in September. OUR DAILY LAUGH J ONWARD AND UPWARDS. •'What has become of the man who used to rock the boat?" "He has progressed with the times. He is not satisfied now unless he is mussing up the eaulllbrium of an Aeroplane." MODERATE. "Does your wife belong to all the afternoon clubs?" "Not all of them. She thinks six afternoon clubs per week Is about enough." WE NEVEJR THO'T Or THAT. She—You must have caught your cold at the game last week when It rained. He—Oh, no, X get It In the draft Jmtr It." MISANTHROPIC. "When Brown is happy ho tries t *ing." "Yes. Some of us dota't csre bow miserable we make others, so lens s we're oomfortable. Brnttag (£ljat "I' Harrisburg ever had cause to be thankful for the public Improve ments which have given it fame throughout the land and security and pleasure at home it has been within the last fortnight," remarked a man who pays a right fair amount of taxes yestorday as he stood on the Mulberry street, bridge. "I have the flood control in my mind most of all, but Reservoir Park and the river front, this bridge, the system that takes up the drainage that used to pollute the Susquehanna all along the city, the paved streets and the niter plant are riot to be forgotten. I do not think the average Harris- A burger realizes what the flood control works, planned by Engineer Fuertes. insisted upon by the committee in charge of the public works campaign and carried out by the public-spirited board, means to this city. Reduced to the simplest expression, it means dollars and health. In the last fort night we have had seven storms that brought down tremendous quantities of water. Except for the Market street subway, which was planned before we launched our scheme for comprehensive general improve ments, nothing was seriously affected. When X was a boy, after every thun derstorm such as we have had lately or prolonged rain we used, to go over to State street bridge or Mulberry street bridge, after it was extended to the Hill at the old Mount Pleas ant schoolhouye, or Paxton' street bridge, to see the creek. You have seen the creek back up when there is a flood in the Susquehanna? Well, we used to have that several times a year and I have seen a solid sheet of water fom the Pennsylvania railroad to the base of the hill. The creek valley had a lot of brickyards and other establishments that could stand such treatment and when the coffin factory was built and other indus tries began to locate in the valuable valley of the creek the men who worked in them got tired of being made to lose money. That started the agitation and when X look alons Tenth and Cameron streets and see the garages, factories, warehouses and other plants and see up above State street the big pipe bending and steel plant, the Hickok and other works, I wonder what the misguided citizens who fought the item in the loan for improvement of the creek valley had in their minds. I recall some citizens who lambasted the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH be cause It advocated such a wild thing as making a lako in Wetzel's swamp to catch the water and prevent it from flooding the creek valley and who declared that the Interceptor was a scheme to make money for a contractor, who I believe lost money on It. The plan to concrete the bot tom of the creek was assailed by citizens who had caught bullfrogs in it when young and who insisted that the springs in the bottom would pre vent walling it up. If there is any place next to the river front where the common sense and the esthetic and the pleasure features were com bined It was the making of a flood control lake and a park out of old Wetzel's swamp." ♦ • * Father Penn is now advising his farmer sons and the folks who raise chickens to get rid of t{ie roosters. The rooster has received more or less attention from the farmers' institute lecturers and other men who lecture to the farmers, but the State has officially taken up the Velation of chanticleer to daily life, especially during war time, and the feathered Mormon has been ordered thinned out. In spite of the campaigns waged recently against the useless rooster, the State agricultural experts have lots of them eating their heads off and calculate that as it costs about 20 cents a month to feed a rooster that someone is losing money. Tho calculators have also decided that to keep every rooster between September and New Year's Day will cost approximately a dollar and the advice has been given to eat or ship the roosters, keeping only fine young healthy birds. Another Miggestlon being made by the State's poultry experts is that the hens should be taken better care of in the dog days. Too many poultry houses, it is claimed have all the glass fronts in during tho hot months and that no change is made in summer or winter. • State officials, who have been ap pealed to for some aid to overcome the shortage of teachers in some of the rural districts of the state be cause of teachers leaving such work to go into more profitable occupations in towns, have run against a new state of affairs due to the entrance of teachers into army officers training camps and the draft. Some of the counties have given up eight or ten teachers, quite a few of whom have appjied for admlsston to training camps, while others have been sum moned before draft boards and will go to mobilization camps. State officials are puzzling how to meet the demand for teachers. * * * Troop I of the First Cavalry, which won the coveted honor of being designated as the headquarters troop of the Seventh or Twenty-eighth Di vision, as the Pennsylvania troops will be known, was formerly an in fantry company and is the successor of the company commanded years ago by Major General C. M. Clement, who made the selection. Its place in the First will be taken by the new Danville troop. f WELL KNOWN PEOPLE [ —Elisha Leo, operating vice-presi dent of the Pennsylvania, has been connected with the company from the time he left school. Dr. Harry B. Roshon, Reading's food inspector, has resigned to go into the army medical corps. He has been detailed to Gettysburg. G. .T, F. Falkenstieln, journal clerk of the House and former mayor of McKeesport, was here on his way to the Elks' convention at Sunbury. He is a past state president. —Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo, who is spending the sum mer in the Blue Ridge mounjain dis trict. has been motoring through southern counties. E. J. Ccttell, Philadelphia sta tistician, has been averaging two speeches a day since the war began. R. G. Kay. the new Chester county controller, may not be a can didate for a full term. 1 DO YOU KNOW | t That Harrisburg sell* largo amounts of lumber, although I little of It CTer comes here? HISTORIC HARRISBFRO The first lodge of Masons here was formed Just after the close of the Revolution. Wiser and Sadder Men The businessmen of Germany are powerless to be peacemakers over the heads of the war lords. But the course of events may bring the war lords to a stage where they will listen to the captains of industry*— I Buffalo Courier. . I