10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NBWSPAPBR I'OR THE HOME Pounded if]t (Published evenlßgs except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO„ Ttlccnph B.illdliiK, Federal Square. 'E.J. STACKPOLE,Pw'( 6 1 Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Business Manager, GUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. Member of the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all 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 I dispatches herein are also reserved. I A Member American 1 Newspaper Pub ' Ushers' Assocla tion, the Audit Bureau of Circu latlon and Penn jHgHg M sylvan la Assocl- Eastern office, Egv " - 53! Story, Brooks & Sat M £533 HJ Finley, Fifth M Avenue Building, MratCTnriwF Western office! t ! ory - Brooks & Gas ' Building! Chicago, 111. Entered at the l'ost Office in Harris burg, Pa., as s *cond class matter. . By carriers, ten cents a '°yyi> veek; by mail, J5.00 a year in advance. THURSDAY EVENING, AEG. 23 But if any of you lack wisdom, let ?iim ask of God, who giveh to all liberally and vpbraideth not; and it shall be given him. —JAMES 1:5. Ol'R OFFICIAL GUESTS WHEN officials of other cities of the third class come to Har risburg for the League conven tion next week let's all endeavor to put our best foot foremost. Every de partment should make it a point to 1 have all appertaining to the parti cular department in first-class shape. Our parks should be trim and neat, especially the walks and drives. The paved highways ought to justify our reputation as a clean and wholesome city. Everything under municipal control should Invite special com mendation and it remains for the authorities to maintain and increase the good opinion of all visitors, especially those who will come with seeing eyes. We must hand it to Mayor Smith, of Philadelphia. He seems to have tamed the foolish Republican factions in that city so that they now enter his presence as fierce foes only to emerge a few minutes later arm-in arm whistling "We are a band of brothers." j HIGH SCHOOL SITES PUBLIC confidence in the motives and purposes of the members of the present board of school di- ; rectors has been shaken by an ap parent disregard of the sentiment of 1 the people. This was manifest in the ( upsetting of the building program, and the school district will not re- ' cover from the mistakes of last win- j ter for years to come. But there ought to be a limit to the blundering or worse that is re sponsible for the present attitude of the people towards those respon sible for present conditions. Ever since a new high school building was proposed the question of site has been uppermost In the thought of those who are interested in the har monious development of Harrisburg, Of course, there will always be wide differences of opinion as to the loca tion of public buildings, but where a civic center is being created through co-operation of the State and the city there should be no dif ficulty in reaching a proper conclu sion as to the most available site for the new school building. It is un derstood, however, that a committee of the school board having proposed two locations—one on North street, fronting the Capitol Park zone, and the other at Front and Boas streets —the site on Front street may be chosen, ignoring the more central lo cation. No particular reason has been ad vanced for the selection of the site on the river front, and as official action will not be taken until Sep tember we believe the board should give full consideration to all the rea sons which would seem to determine the choice of a location facing the Capitol Park. Already the Tech nical high school occupies a com manding position on Walnut street facing the park, and it would be an admirable arrangement to choose as a site for Lhe new educational in stitution the plot on the opposite side of the beautiful stretch of park now in the progress of creation. Several imposing semi-public buildings already* occupy a frontage on the inevitable civic center which is bound to result from the extension of the State grounds. But all this aside, it would appear that accessi bility to the new school building Is even more important. With street car lines passing over a monumental \laduct at State street to the Allison Hill district of the city, and with other street railway lines making the proposed location on North street convenient to all parts of Harrisburg, to iNlace the building on Front street •would result in very general com plaint on account of Inconvenience. W® cannot believe that the school directors would deliberately interfere with a great civic plan such as Is em braced within the extension of the Capitol Park area, and there is still ample time to give full consideration to all phases of the question. At least, the final decision should be postponed until full investigation shall have been made of the compre henatve scheme of treatment noj? b*. THURSDAY EVENING, lng worked out by distinguished landscape architects and planners, with a view to conserving the best Interests of the State and the city. Every argument In favor of the two sites under discussion should be presented and then a conclusion ought to be reached that will be sat isfactory to all the people. Let us make no more mistakes In the work ing out of our educational problems here. Could any stories of the doings of our soldiers In France be more graphic than those of Walter Shaffer, of Dau phin; Franklin Etter, of Harrisburg, and the other boys who are doing their bit on the other side of the At lantic. The Telegraph is greatly pleased to print these letters to the home folks, because they are so full of human interest and lack the stilted style of the professional war cor respondent. YOUR DUTY. MR. CITIZEN FOR sixteen > ears Harrisburg has been going ahead in a way to command the admiration of all the municipalities of Pennsylvania. We must not move backward. We are sending our men to the battle line for the liberties of the world and those of us who remain at home should not in the slighest degree lose our Interest or our zeal in the mak ing of a city fit for the people of this day and those to follow us. There are some weaknesses In our present municipal organization which must be overcome. To an extent that is sometimes discouraging the men of vision in this community are los ing interest In the administration of local affairs. Discouragement has followed the ascendency of Uttlb men here and there to places of power, and unless there shall be a quick right about face we are certain to ' see the progress of Harrisburg take the backward track. It Is sometimes the unpleasant func tion of a newspaper devoted to the public welfare to point out defects of administration in those charged with public duties, but it is much more pleasant to applaud good and consistent public service rather than criticise shortcomings. This news paper has striven in every way pos sible to aid the local administration through commendation of good work, but we fear the time is not far away when there must be a dif ferent course towards those who ap pear wholly indifferent to responsible duties and public opinion. We are about to choose a new group of public officials, a consider able number of names of well-known citizens having been submitted for the consideration of voters. These are the stockholders of the munici pality who must determine those best ; qualified to serve as directors of the municipal corporation. Mere good will and good fellowship and all that sort of thing should not count In making the choice. Fitness for the 1 public service, devotion to the inter ests of the people of Harrisburg in all walks of life and a desire to con tinue in every possible way the city's development ought to be the prime requisites of every man chosen to public place. But this will not hap pen unless and until the voters them selves become aroused to the Im portance of their own duty in the premises. They liave no right to per mit an election to go by default In any particular and then rise in pro test when it Is too late. Now is the time to investigate the qualifications of every candidate In the field. It Is up to you, Mr. Tax Payer, to go over the list and discover for yourself and through proper Inquiry of your neighbor how this or that in dividual is qualified for disinterested public service. Riverside must inevitably become part of Harrisburg, and In view of the past experience in annexation mat ters the sooner the nuptials take place the better. What may seem a big bill for existing utilities In the suburban district now, will look reasonable in the light of greater expenditures for other things in the event of further postponement. The time for taking Riverside Into the Harrisburg family Is to-day. Meanwhile, the particular kind of garbage disposal system can wait a proper decision. It Is not clear that we want the present antique plant of the private contractor, or even an In cinerating plant. There njay be other and more modern ways of disposing of the waste of the city which will be In the nature of conservation and economy at one and the same time. Those pretty "Motor Messengers" of Harrisburg, who are among our most willing workers, should organ ize a flying squadron for the collection of magazines In the homes of the city for shipment to the army camps. It may not be amiss to suggest that should you have more of one kind of vegetable than you need, your neigh bor might be willing to exchange for your excess supply hli surplus of an flUwr TtctUU* trwllr nutrlttoju. "Politic* Ck By the Ex-Committeeman Thousands upon thousands of nominating petitions for county and municipal nominations were filed In Pennsylvania's sixty-seven counties yesterday, which was the last day upon which such papers could be put 1 upon record for the primary elec tion on September 19. In some coun ties the filing of petitions was greater than ever known under the present law and is taken to mean that there will be many lively contests this year with a view to getting things lined up for the great tights of 1918. To-day men active in politics were looking over lists in an effort to find out Just who had filed papers and what the effect would be and it will require a couple of days for the lines will be definitely drawn. In some counties Republicans and Democrats are split and the "wet" and "dry" issue, which was so prominent In the filing of the judicial nominating peti tions, looms up in many places. The time for withdrawing petitions will close r.ext week and it is the hope of Republicans In many coun ties that there will be steps taken to harmonize local differences on the Philadelphia plan of getting to gether. -—The Philadelphia Inquirer sums up the situation in Philadelphia to day by saying that the candidates are pledged to party loyalty and the Democratic Philadelphia Record ad mits the success of the efforts of Mayor Thomas B. Smith by saying that "the slate of the bosses goes to the voters" and confesses that "the hoped for opposition" did not appear until very late. The independents and the Washington party put up tickets and the Democrats also filed enough to insure a healthy fight in their own party. The Philadelphia North American is not paying as much attention to local politics as usual. —The Inquirer says in its review of the Philadelphia situation, which Is of importance to the whole state: "The record of the filing of nomina tion papers for candidates to be vot- I ed for at the primaries on Septem ber 19, yesterday being the last day upon which such papers could be received, insures the keeping of the agreement for harmony among the local Republican leaders. There will be no serious contest for any of the city offices and the councilmanic sit uation is such that few if any of the candidates whose papers were filed through the Republican city com mittee, will be at any time in danger of defeat. All talk of possible fu sion has been disposed of since it be came known that every candidate for a city nomination supported by the Republican leaders Is pledged to de cline any nomination other than that from the Republican party. This condition gives assurance to the Vare forces that neither District Attorney Rotan nor James B. Sheehan, the Penrose-McNichol choice for regis ter of wills, will do otherwise than "stand or fall" with the Republican colors, and at the same time the Penrose-McNichol cohorts realize that Receiver of Taxes W. Freeland Kendrick and Frederick J. Shoyer, a Vare favorite, who will be the nom inee for city treasurer, will decline to allow their names on any other ticket than that of the Republican party." —Mayor Smith has asked that the critics of his transit plan hold off a little until some explanations caa be made. —The burgess of South Bethlehem, whose joy will be gone soon, has stirred up a lot of trouble by veto ing an ordinance providing for car nivals. It was backed by many peo ple who resent his action. —Captain W. W. Vanßaman, who is In the Eighth Regiment, has de cided he will not run for district at torney in York county. —The Philadelphia Press says of the Pittsburgh political situation in an editorial: "The liveliest place on the political map of Pennsylvania this year is Pittsburgh, where a mayor is to be elected. Singularly enough the choice will be made on a nonpartisan ticket, but a factional controversy will furnish all the ex citement anybody will need. The factions have been less successful in fixing up their troubles there than In Philadelphia. The result, however, which will be largely determined at the primaries next month, will have its effect on Western Pennsylvania politics, and is expected to be some thing of a pointer for next year's gu bernatorial contest." •—Among the interesting facts in connection with filing of papers is that D. Clarence Gibboney, the old crusader, is a candidate for district attorney on the Republican ticket in Philadelphia because his friends put in papers for him. Gibboney has led some hot lights in the past. The Philadelphia Democrats will run Richard T. McSorley, who withdrew as a candidate for Judge a short time ago and the Washington party men will run Samuel J. Houston. The Record calls the Washington party "a Vare annex." —Delaware county has eleven can didates for sheriff and Montgomery several for each office. —lt is said that In Schuylkill, Lu zerne and Lackawanna counties the crop of candidates breaks records. —ln a decision handed down at Wilkes-Barre yesterday Judge Wood ward, of Luzerne county, declares constitutional an act of the Legis lature passed during the recent ses sion which increased the terms of township commissioners of the first class from two to four years. The act was attacked by James Camp bell, of Hanover township, who sought a mandamus to force the county commissioners to accept his nomination papers as a candidate af ter he had been refused on the grounds that no vacancies existed by virtue of the act extending the terms of the incumbents. Judgt. Woodward clares in his opinion that the act abolished the office of township com missioners elected for two terms, and established four-year commissioners. Teach Them English It Is enough to enlist the Interest of the public In the movement to put It on the common-sense basis that as English is the language of the country all who come hero to make their homes should be compelled to learn it. The foreign-language press, if it held to be necessary to help ing the foreign-born to become ad- Justed to the country, should be held strictly to that object, and what could be more in line with it than requiring such newspapers to aid In teaching them the language of the land? Those that would not do this, that would not consent to carry English translations of some of their articles, should be suppressed as being concerned more for the In terests of a foreign language. America must tighten up every where In guarding Itself against in roads being made In It by foreign in terests. Those who will not enter whole-heartedly into the study of the language of the country should be sent back to where they speak the language they do approve.—Pltts -1 bfirsb Post* ' v ' V HAJRRISBURG TELEGRAPH SOMEBODY IS ALWAYS TAKING THE JOY OVT OF • By Brlggs *l| I j WELL. JACK - ' VE L _ /EST L L " ' —/ FOR. PLS/VSURE / YOU'UE - (Vk.,- ~ ,e / \6UR., HORKJ BOM""" FOU ' / GOT-. ."To BE PtTCHED KNJOUJ Yoc/'v/e AI WAYS TAK'I'SIG] ITO "B" FL*T, AWO To CARRY V-, VVT*V DOT I VoU MUST/ HAVE A f /am' ELECTR.C.AfO H. ThE ObV°OT \ Bell OKI YOUR " / / AMD A PLUMBER ow \° p L if e > XL. E EDITORIAL COMMENT The thing thut most conscientious objectors object to is being shot.— Mason Telegraph. Germany is entirely willing to make another peace if somebody will kindly furnish the scrap of paper.— Boston Transcript. "Kaiser Scoffs at Fart United States Will Play in the World War." —Headline. Perhaps he reads The Congressional Record. —Chicago Tri bune. A Canadian statesman calls for a "thorough ventilation" of conditions in the Dominion. Perhaps it will be done by the draft. —Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph. By virtue of being chairman of .the Red Cross General Committee, Wil liam H. Taft is made a Major Gen oral. Oyster Bay papers, please copy. —New York World. Though they hate us more, the Germans really respect us more, now that we are belligerent, than when we were neutrals too proud to tight. —San Francisco Chronicle. The American pacifists are the only persons in the history of the world who prefer to have a war fought on their own territory in stead of on the other fellow's. —Bos- ton Transcript. Activity Ahead The weekly review of Chicago trade published by R. G. Dun & Co. says: "While there are cross currents and factors which increase the feel ing of caution in some business chan nels, the development mainly are fa vorable, and it becomes more clearly evident that production,in the lead ing industries upon a greater scale than heretofore is imperative. "Despite the uncertainty existing, the outlook favors a prolonged per iod of unprecedented activity. The need of greater capacity in this dis trict urgently appeals to investment, and with the necessary financing manufacturing outputs would sub stantially expand. Decline in unfilled iron and steel orders does not direct ly affect operations in this district; In fact, all available plants are ex erted to the limit and the forward bookings assure day and night acti vity running well Into next year. Glory I knew that hamlet well: a single Bordered with cottages, where faces Wives at their household tasks, and mild old men Dreaming their younger yesterdays again In silent sunshine —smiled at every one; Where, with the setting of the gentle sun, The husbands from the fields came singing home. And when their cnildren all day long would roam Till evening, when the whispering poplar boughs Echoed the music of young lovers' vows. A hundred years it had been so— and so 1 knew that hamlet one brief month ago. Then I came back; a single house stood there; The rest were smoke upon the Au gust air And ruins in the obliterated road. A gray-garbed sentry through the ashes strode; An old man's body, white hair splashed with red, Vay in the gutter; toward a black ened shed. Flushed face aglow and savage lip a-curl, A death-grimed soldier dragged a lit tle girl; A strangled baby lay beside the stream; Far in the dusk I heard a woman scream, And from the inn-porch, dark with blood and wine, Roared forth the chorus of the Wacht Am Rhein. —Reginald Wright Kauffman, of the Vigilantes. On His Mettle Many a young man Is claiming ex. eimptlon from military duty now who will regret that action for the whole remainder of his natural life. This is the finest opportunity he will likely ever have to prove his mettle. Those who show the right spirit will not only have the respect of their fellows as long as they live, but will always enjoy that which Is vastly better their own respect.—Punx putawney-fipirlt ATROCITIES IN THE GERMAN RETREAT j WATCHERS from the French lines before St. Quentin have seen the great cathedral of that hapless tcjwn put to the torch and reduced to ruins. The Germans are getting ready to retreat once more, to abandon the town and its vicinage. The houses pt the peace ful inhabitants are blown up or fired. The smoke of blazing villages rises from the surrounding plain. But it was with chief satisfaction that the Boches set fire to the cathedral. They know that no work of architecture in Germany could compare with it, and that in destroying it they were in flicting upon France an irreparable injury, even though it had no mili tary excuse. What they apparently did not appreciate was that the whole world shares the injury with France and will Join in her resent ment. The devastation now being perpe trated at St. Quentin is in accord ance with the fixed military policy of Germany. It is done merely with malignant purpose and without hope of military advantage. In March, 1917, the military correspon dent of the Berlin Lokal Anzeiger de scribed with gusto the process: "In the course of these last months great stretches of French territory have been turned by us into a dead country. It varies in width from ten to twelve or fifteen kilometers (six and a quarter to seven and a half or eight miles), and extends along the whole of our new position, pre senting a terrible barrier of desola tion to an enemy hardy enough to advance against our new lines. No village or farm was left standing on this glacis, no road was left passable, no railroad track or embankment was left in being. Where once were woods there are gaunt rows of stumps; the wells have been blown W. J. Bryan, American [New York Herald.] "Before our nation enters a war it is perfectly proper to discuss the wisdom of gcing to war, but the dis cussion is closed when Congress acts. After that no one should be per mitted to cloak attacks upon this government or aid the enemy under the claim that he Is exercising free dom of speech. "No sympathy, therefore, will be wasted upon those who have been arrested for unpatriotic utterances. They abuse tree speech, and this ap plies to attacks upon the Allies as as to attacks upon the United States. Wo can no more allow our allies to be crushed than we can afford to be crushed ourselves. The defeat of our allies would throw the whole burden of the.war upon us. We must stand together and fight It through. There are only two sides to a war. Every American must be on the side of the United States." Since we entered the war no words have better expressed the first duty of an American citizen than these, which are quoted from an article in the Commoner written by William J. Brvan. Creditable to his political vision, his common sense and his patriotism, tliey may furnish light t£ some doubting souls bewildered by mocking voices and traitorous sug gestions of sedition. Pennsylvania We love thee, Pennsylvania, thy rocks and hills and dells, The smiling, verdant valleys, where sweet contentment dwells. We breathe the air of freedom, and pray God it may last. And nothing mar the greatness, or the glory of thy past. We love thee. Pennsylvania, we gladly sing thy praise, We pledge to thee devotion, through all the coming days. Thy fame we proudly cherish, thy honor we'll uphold. We'll play our part with courage, as our fathers did of old. Chortis Dear Pennsylvania, grand old Key stone State, Steadfast and loyal to all that's truly great; When duty calls thee, thou hast led the way. We love thee and we'd die for thee, Dear old Penn-syl-va-nl-a. [Words and music by Frank Hall, Harrlsbunft. Deoartment of . - • • k . up, wires, cables and pipe lines de stroyed. In front of our new posi tion runs, like a gigantic ribbon, an empire of death." And the Berlin Tageblatt gloats over this destruction of the dwellings and property of helpless peasants in this burst of fine writing: "And the desert, a pitiful desert leagues wide, bare of trees and un dergrowth and houses! They sawed and hacked; trees fell and bushes sank; It was days and days beforo they had cleared the ground. la this war zone there was to be 110 shelter, no cover. The enemy's mouth must stay dry, his eyes turn In vain to the wells—they are buried lp rub ble. No four walls for him to set tle down into; all leveled and burnt out, the villages turned into dumpa of rubbish, churches and church tow ers laid out in ruins athwart the roads." All this was done in the territory which the French armies had to cross before reaching their present posi tion before St. Quentin. It checked them not a bit. Across the desert waste they built highways and re built roads. The wells were poison ed. The armies laid water pipes for their supply. Every farmhouse and peasant's cot was reduced to dust. They carried their own shelter. The "terrible barrier of death" was to them no barrier, only a reason why they must push forward with renew ed strength and determination to hew down the vandals guilty of the barbarous destruction. Now In front of St. Quentin they see the Boches engaged in the same work prepara tory to their next flight. How in the face of this continued practice of frightfulness in retreat can the world receive respectfully the dictum that "The honor of the armies of both sides is safe"? —New York Sun. If (With apologies to Rudyard Kipling.) If you car. hoid your tongue when German backers Are loosing theirs and damning Uncle Sam; If you can keep from cussing out the slackers And flaying smug hypocrisy and 6ham; If you can wait and not be tired by waiting, While reptile papers keep us on the rack; If you can stand the paclflstlc prat ing. And never have a yearning to strike back. i If you can see your country's cities plastered Wlthsychophantic warnings against war; If you can watch a yellow livered dastard Refusing to confront things as they are; If you can see a swarm of crawling lizards. Squirming through the marriage license door— Men with atom souls and smaller gizzards. Disgracing those whose honored names they bore. If you can hear an orator denouncing The liberty for/which our nation bled; If you can let him go without a trouncing Or punching In the bally traitor's head; If you can smile when lying propa ganda Seduces men who ought to know the truth; If you can tolerate their rotten slander And bear it with an idle fist, for sooth— If you can sneer at men who wear the khaki. Or jeer at those who wear the . navy blue; If you can whisper like a skulking lackey. About the men who have the nerve to do; If vanqulshment of brutal foes appalls you, If you can't prove your right to be a man, You may bo everything mother calls you, But, believe me, you are not American. —Edwin Carty Ranck, la the Brook- I Jtyn. JEftgl* ATTGUST 23, rg!7 Where Does U. S. Get Off? There's a question that is pressing And it surety keeps one guessing, I'll state it as it now appears to me England, Russia, Italy, France Each and all have had their chance To slay the Prussian Beast and make men free. The submarine still takes its toll And, might the Huns not reach their goal Where men and women, starving, die like flies? Their millions strong along the West Might crush the French and all the rest Then, there is where the big for U. S. lies. Have you ever thought about It Or, if so, do you still doubt it And treat it with an ordinary BCOIT? Now list—lf Huns can pull their trick And both the French and English lick Pray, tell me, where does XJ. S. A get off? Brother, what you and I 'most need Is to drop pleasure, ease and greed And get down to brass tacks and win this war; While the safety of the nation May be arms, bombs, aviation, You and I must be loyal to the core. R. I. DEIHL, Paxtang, Pa. | OUR DAILY LAUGH YOU CAN'T FOOL 'EM. "Do you allow your husband to go to the beach by himself?" "Certainly not! I wouldn't trust him behind a screen door." THAT WILL HELP. *1 love the heroes, all of them. Each day for them I pray, Altho they're many miles from hep I do my "bit" that way." THE SITUATION. "How are yon making of wttll jrour chicken firming?" "I find it bard aoratchlnc." QUALIFIED. She (romantically)— The man I /carry must be willing to go through fire for me. He —Then I'm your man. The boss ha* flrod me tor telephonist you M Ebnttnn Cttljai A friend commenting upon the nr. tide in this column the other even ing on the recognition given to Wil liam Maclay, one of the two .first United States senators from Penn sylvania and one of the men who made Harrisburg, says that Mr. Ma clay never agreed with his father in-law, John Harris, about the Sus quehanna river front. Mr. Harris was an Intensely practical man and looked for the river front to become a commercial highway, as it was for many years after his death when "arks" and "flats" brought down coal, grain, hides and other things from up the Susquehanna and the Juniata. Mr. Harris held to the be lief that the stream in spite of its shallowness would be an artery of bo tho a , that , the r ' ver front would The tmvn <° r , ront of a busy ,own irnfio fi busy, all right, but tho in tho v W m ,hr °'"< h °n the railroads valley of Paxton creek. Mr that riv°V h0 otller hand - "aid that conio th nt wolll d eventually be- P°ace of ?r. Pr ? , ] lenado and Pleasure bard h!,,i ,' r burK - He waa J ust as counts but v, aS Harrls - from all ac as shown . W . as a better Pinner, Canftol wii i ho location of the the fact tl!nt°*. designated it and tlonaf LVifni a 'most got tho na- SuqmLhAn w on tho banks of the among tho o. , T -\ cro are Dorics told hunf nf w,,? r , f:lln,Ues of Harris and down V am Macla >' walking up after hTa 3® , rlver generally urlnh ,i lns meal - almost In nHwi jlone - one of the most dig height and°bi r ? feet three inchea of what ? in Proportion, some *.? '° handsome clothes opinionated to a. dccrpp k.,* ' rinhi" Ch be,l ®i er "'at some day Hart risburg would be the queen city 0 f the Susquehanna and that his favor nf would be the strolling place °L th °^ Sands who would like him enjoy the splendors of tho sunsets • • • observation by State agricul tural experts on the opportunities for raising more foodstuffs in this part of the state by changing the rotation S ra '"„ "OPS calls to mind that y '2 a^ out ns rigorously ad hered to about hero as in any part of the country. The initials mean corn, oats, wheat, and while there are some who add "G R", or Brass and rye, to their list, the bulk of the farmers raise the three staples, occa sionally turning some sections of fields into potatoes. Dauphin county farmers have been successful with noth wheat and corn, far moro with the corn than some of their more northern neighbors, but they have never raised very much rye. Al lalfa has been very successfully raised in several townships and Is coming into general favor. The rec ommendations of the State experts will not strike the Elauphin farmers. The drills of the Harrlsburg Re serves are attended by quite a few businessmen for the exercise as well as for the military training that is given by the energetic captains and their young lieutenants on the island twice a week. It happens that there is one man who Is keenly interested and a good soldier, too. But he has a hankering for knowledge of just what he does. He knows the man ual of arms and to complete all data J 1 ® t??® 8 a Pedometer with him on the drill nights and when Major Por ter puts the men through battalion drill several times around the big Held he has quite a score to show. Announcement that the national Red Cross, the Y. M. C. A. and the American Library Association were planning co-operation to raise $1,000,000 for libraries In each of the thirty-two army cantonments has brought many assurances of support already. In this city a number of people have telephoned to know what will be Harrisburg's share and giv ing notice that they meant to give their dollar. The idea of a dollar for books for soldiers bids fair to be very popular. • • • Samuel T. Bodlne, president of the U. G. I. and head of one of tho Philadelphia district appeal boards made an interesting observation yes terday at tho meeting in the Senate chamber. He said that his Company has sent word to every plant asking how the draft would hit them and was informed that seventy-two men could not bo spared. He then asked what would be done if each of the seventy-two fell dead. Out of the whole list it looks like one exemp tion will be asked. • • • Did you ever see a mountain start to move at you? That is the way people who saw the giant blast fired at Steelton say the great hillside of stone looked. The blast was remark able in that it did not make much noise. There was a roar and then the hill seemed to be moving; then the rattle of stones, the crash of larger ones settling and a cloud of dust. Thene have been some great blasts fired hereabouts, but nothing like that at. Highspire quarries yes terday. • Among the Pennsylvania officers who have gone up the ladder Is Edgar T. Collins, brother of Deputy Attorney General Emerson Collins. He is now a lieutenant colonel and chief of the division which will be formed of Michigan and Wisconsin troops at Waco, Texas. He graduated from West Point In 1897 and was in command at Plattsburg, where his brother just visited him. ♦ • A. Mitchell Palmer sat in the front row of the Senate chamber yesterday during tho district board meetings and seemed to enjoy the place. When someone suggested that he might take a notion to try for one of ths>se front seats he observed that he had trouble enough. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE" —Auditor General Snyder plans to visit the ambulance troops at Allen town this month. One of the units Is named for him. —C. E. Carothers,.chairman of the milk commission, is a. practical farmer and has raised his own cattle in Western Pennsylvania, so that ho knows the game. —Sheriff G. W. Richards, of Alle gheny, has been arresting draft dodg ers himself. Ho is a former legis lator and well known here. —William J. Berkey, prominent In Johnstown nfYalrs, has been appointed treasurer of one of the big secret orders. —W. T. Tllden. Jr., son of the late Philadelphia manufacturer, has been winning fame as a golfer in national events. DO YOU KNOW [ That ITarris burg's WUdwood Park treatment has been copied In several eastern cities? HISTORIC HARRISBTTRO The first movement for a home for the Governors was started by Harrlsburg people during the Civil Wax and the State then, fpt j| ■