14 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH .1 KEIfSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded IS3I Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO.. Telegraph llulldlnK, Federal Sqaare. E. J. ST * CKPOL.E. Prest Sr Editor-in-Chief l'\ R. OYSTER, H'.tsiv.css Manager. GUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. Member of the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en titlert to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. - Member American Newspaper Pub- B,', ii _ Chicago. 111. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Pn.. as- second class matter. -jjgsgv By carriers, ten cents a _> week; by mail, 15.00 a year in advance. IK I DAY. JANUARY I. lftlS Too lute i re learn n mail must hold his friend Unjudged, accepted, trusted to the end. — JOHN BOYI.K O'REILLT. \ 1.l (ii r.HUtVS MR. CUTLER BURWELL S. CUTLER, the new chief of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, sounds | funereal note in his annual report! when he says, speaking of the for-; ign trade we have won during the] Mar. "Important as it is that we; 1 old our advantage in these and > ether markets, we must not lose: right of the fact that all such ad vantages are likely to disappear if; we do not come out of the war vie-J toriously." The losing of trade advantages) would be but one of a chain of evils \ hlcli would, not "unlikely," but' i ositively. encompass us if we did rot tome out of this war victorious- 1 ly. For instance, Germany would squeesc us with an indemnity which would reimburse her for the entire j cost of her war. She would also ex if employment. Surely, it ought not to be necessary to more than state ; the fact in patriotic Harrisburg. COOl) NEWS. INDEED HOWARD COFFIN'S confident J assertion that the American air 1 campaign will be launched on time with 100 per cent, of the J mated machines and aviators in the field is the best news that the Amer ican people has had in many a day. President Wilson, in this Instance, selected the biggest men in their line in the country for the task as- \ signed—by far the most difficult of j the entire military preparedness j program—and they went at it as j business men. Politics had no part ! in their activities. Their one thought j was the accomplishment of the work ; before them. Now. six months ahead I of schedule, they are able to say that they are traveling on time and that there is every prospect of put ting ten thousand American aviators in the field the coming summer. Would that there were more air i boards and more Howard Coffins in the national service! Just how difficult the task as signed was may be realized fully only by a careful perusal of Mr. • "offin's own article on the subject. The air board started out without even an engine and faced with the I necessity of designing a motor that j could be turned out in a score of I factories and the parts assembled anywhere, or changed from one ma- j chine to another in an hour's time, i Simplicity of pattern, speed, econ- ' omy of fuel and ability to stand up i under the grueling wear and tear of j war were essential. Two years and 1 more the allies had been laboring i and had not an entirely satisfactory j engine. Yet the American air board, ! locked in its rooms at a Washington hotel, and summoning all holders of patents and all automobile en gineers of note in the country, put down on paper the plans for the Great Liberty motor that in twenty eight days thereafter was spinning 1 ehind an aeroplane and pronounced ny European aircraft experts to be the superior of anything in service against Germany and better than any German 'plane. After such an accomplishment and the gigantic task of manufacturing this machine and aeroplanes for its Installation, came the training of a ast army of workmen and ten thod sand artisans for this special line of ■work, in addition to the making in large quantities of all the delicate instruments with which military machines are equipped. And here is where the great automobile industry of the United States was brought Into the gam# and proved the sav ing factor of the situation. But even (,lie"n the difficulties were not solved, m FRIDAY EVENING, for there remained to be cut and wrought whole foreßts of spruce and practically the entire linen Industry of Ireland had to be requisitioned. All this is being dime, Mr. Coffin says, the planes are being made, the engines are being turned out in a steady stream and by the middle of the summer an American air force of 100,000, including 10,000 trained fliers, will give the allies a tre mendous advantage all along the French front'. I Here is an accomplishment of | which all America may be proud. ' Xobody is asking the politics of Mr. [ Coffin and his associates. Xobody cares. The President Is praised for having picked men who have gotten the work assigned them well under way. How much more to the admin istration's credit it would have been had it acted as wisely in all of its selections —the Shipping Board for example. But this is not merely a wartime triumph. After the conflict the American aeroplane industry will be on a firm footing, the sphere of the aeroplane as an adjunct to pleasure and business will be greatly enlarged and we shall be able to take the place of leadership in the industry which we never should have lost. All railroads have a "Black Dia mond" flyer, now that everj- coal train is given preference in the move ment of traffic. 56,000.000 OF FOODSTUFFS DAUPHIN county has been mak ing iron, . mining coal and j manufacturing so many things | that we seldom think of it as | one of the notable counties of i Pennsylvania, even as we often fail to realize that the Keystone State is one of the Commonwealths which raises a large part of the food it consumes. It was not until the State Depart ment of Agriculture began to system atically arrange the data about the crops of the State that the import- j ance of Pennsylvania appeared in the ' big scheme of food raising and con-"? servation. And the same work has j brought Dauphin county to the at tention of the students because of its' place in agriculture. To bring it home, we may say that' the corn and wheat crops of Dauphin j county aggregated in value a quarter \ of a million dollars more than the 1 receipts of the State of Pennsylvania | from automobile licenses during j 1917, the banner year for motor ve hicle registration in this State, which ; produced three and a quarter million | dollars for road maintenance. Ourj corn was worth $2,581,794.60 and; our wheat $1,165,148 this year alone. I The value of the hay crop of Dau- j phin county for 1917 was $1,054,- 597.80. in itself an aggregate con- : siderably greater than Harrisburg's • budget for 1918, quite the largest ever framed. While the value of seven staple crops alone, not includ ing fruit or any vegetables except po tatoes, was $6,072,834.56, or about one-ninth the assessed valuation of the city of Harrisburg. Not counting in what was raised in the war gardens, which can hard ly be estimated, the farmers of this iron and steel, coal and quarrying, manufacturing and railroading coun ty. dug potatoes worth $612,198 and our oats crop, of which the average man knows mighty little, aggregated the handsome value *>f $">45,458.32. Our rye was worth over $75,000 and the buckwheat, which few know we raise in Dauphin county, was valued at $7,673.60. Dauphin county is not only send ing forth the tlower of its youth and making its industries do their utmost to help win the war, mobiliz ing its money to buy Liberty Bonds and to support the agencies for the welfare of soldiers and sailors and maintaining its railroad forces, but it is doing a very substantial part to ward helping produce food along with the other sixty-seven counties of Pennsylvania. We have to travel some to catch up with the great agricultural coun ties of Lancaster, York and Berks, but we feel, after scanning the 'fig ures of our crops for 1917, that we are on our way. Mayor Keister is right in Ills dec laration that Harrisburg will keep step with the State in everything that has to do with the permanent im provement of the Capitol Park area. A REEL EXAMPLE JVPANESE silk reelers have com bined to hold up the price of raw silk to $6 48 per bale, or $175 higher than the average price for the past 15 years. The outcome of this action will not be lost upon the Southern cot ton growers, who asked charity from the Nation when cotton prices were low, but who show no disposition to treat fairly with the world in its travail today. Private business must be second to the public business in municipal ad ministration. and this fact should be kept in mind in the reorganization of the City Council. THE CUE THAT MIS-CUED RIFLE manufacturers have told the Senate investigating com mittee that they went to the War Department last, winter sug gesting that war was bound to come and that they should speed up prep arations to provide the necessary equipment. They were told that there would be no trouble and that the War Department was not Inter ested. As a result, we are lacking about 40,000 machine guns which could have been delivered by this time if the foresighted and forehanded man ufacturers had been listened to. And yet the War Department was clear ly following the lead of the White House. From the opening of the war in Europe, in August. 1914, down to the days Just prior to the dis missal of von Bernstorff in February, 1917, there was never an intimation from President Wilson that we would not continue to be kept out of war. There never was a syllable from him ,to indicate that the advocates of pre paredness had ceased to be "nervous and hysterical." There never was the faintest gesture to show that he did not continue to "turn away from the subject" of the national defense, as he did In December. 191-1. The War Department had receiv ed but one cue; and that was fol lowed. ! City Council must provide for a real collection of ashes, or be pre pared for the increasing protests of an outraged public. 7>oiiUc*u ! i __ By the Kx-Committcciuaii ( r - -1 I While state administration leaders ! will not figure to any extent in the ! dinner to be tendered to Mayor | Joseph O. Armstrong . next Thurs -1 day at Pittsburgh, it is not iniprob j able that some of them will be in | touch with the Penrose chieftains ■ who will accompany the Senator to j that city for his Western Pennsyl , vania war council next week. For i weeks the Penrose people have been | gathering the sentiment of the state lin regard to the Governbrship and j their activity has stirred tip admin istration men until by the middle of 1 next week both sides ought to be pretty nearly ready to outline what they will do. Many of the men active in both factions are urging an agreement 1 upon a harmony candidate for Gov ' ernor. but It is said that the an tipathy of Governor Brumbaugh and , some of his close personal friends to Senator Sproul will cause the ad ministration .to make a contest at i the primary in the event that the : Penrose people determine upon the 1 Delaware county Senator. The gen- I era I belief is that Attorney General ; Brown will be the standard bearer | for the administration. 1 Efforts are now being bent to se ; cure an agreement whereby no raat i ter who is nominated at the primary ! the loser will support the winner , and thus block the Democratic scheme to elect Vance C. McCormick J or some other Democrat hand ' picked on the banks of the Potomac j to be a candidate 011 behalf of the I Democrats of Pennsylvania. It is ; generally believed that if Mr. Brown ' becomes a candidate that Highway Commissioner O'Xeil. Chairman i Ainey and other receptive candidates ! would fold their tents and line up ] behind him. —The Philadelphia Inquirer to- j day says: "Senator William C. Sproul. of Delaware countv, who is ! expected to shortly formally an nounce his candidacy for the Kepub- ' lican nomination for Governor, has j accepted an invitation to attend a ' dinner to be given in honor of j retiring Mayor Armstrong, in i Pittsburgh, on January 10. The i presence of Senator Sproul at tiiis j function will l regarded by many as inaugurating his canvass for the I Republican nominittion for Gov- I ernor in_ the western section of the j state. Xone of his friends in the I east has for some time had any doubt about his being a real candi- j date for succession to Governor 1 Brumbaugh." —Just what would become of the candidacies of Gilford Pinchot and other men who have been moving about putting up lightning roads In the event of a straight out battle be tween Sproul and Brown is com mencing to b<* talked of. It is gen erally believed that Pinchot, who was here yesterday, lias added to the ex-Bull Moose and labor elements which put him into the field the labor leaders who were boosting Ma jor John Price Jackson until he went to war. —Pinchot has been getting about th? state lining up labor leaders and grangers and has been here an average of once a week. What makes his visit so interesting is that vester day he had a conversation with At torney General Brown. It is doubt ful whether Pinchot got out of the lace as a result of that interchange of views. —The Somerset Standard has come out with a picture and a dis cussion of Auditor General Charles A. Snyder as good timber for govcr ncr. "Pennsylvania," says this in teresting newspaper, "needs a man of learning, not alone iu business and professional training:, but one who is wise to the schemes of poli ticians who have ever in mind self interest. Such a man is the Hon. Charles A. Snyder, of Schuylkill, any of his acquaintances know and many of his political opponents will ad mit." —Mr. Snyder has never Riven any intimation of such ambitions,, but hi.i life history would indicate 'hat his entrance would make the con test strenuous and that if he was governor he would be very positive in his handling of affairs. —Charles A. Caldwell, Sunbury manufacturer, has been appointed mercantile appraiser of Northumber land. —After a stormy conference with the county commissioners at West Chester, Robert G. Kay, county con troller, whose term eStpires next Monday, fixed the surcharge against them at $6,541. It is said that harsh words were used at the conference and the officials gave notice that they would appeal to the courts. The con troller notified the commissioners, I>. M. Golden. John E. Baldwin and Trank J. Elston, some weeks ago that he intended to surcharge them the amount of all bills for bridge work done during 1917 on contracts for more than $250 for which bids were not advertised, as provided by law. —George E. Lyman, connected with the United States Treasury De partment, with headquarters in Philadelphia, has been appointed chief income tax collector for Schuylkill county and the following deputy collectors were appointed to help: C. J. Stack, Shenandoah; Ray mono Beckett, Girardville; Harold Kingsbury. Pottsville, and Thomus Dixon, Lost Creek. —Harry L. Sullivan, for nineteen years assistant postmaster at Xor rlstown, has tendered his resigna tion to Postmaster Kneule, giving as hts reason "extra #ind exacting du ties, demanding considerable more time and arduous labor." —There will be no interference with tlfe business of the State Insurance Fund as a consequence of the con troversy over Auditor General Charles A. Snyder's desire to make an audit with a view to ascertaining whether It can be self-sustaining. Arrange- have been made whereby the clerks employed for the last year and the extra clerks whose appointment started the Auditor General on his inquiry as to what appropriations would reach will be provided for in order to handle the mail connected with the issuance of some 18,000 policies. Mr. Snyder said this morn ing that he had no desire to em barrass the fund or to retard the business in any way, but that ho did think that the money in sight to run It would not reach. Just what will be done about the pay of extrp. clerks who may be named in the futuro Is ah interesting problem at the Cap!-, RAARISBURG TELEGRAPH SOMEBODY IS ALWAYS TAKING THE JOY OUT OF UFE BY BRINGS [FA-H- CHCER UP | R T*JHY THERE'S [ R P s °| 6 _ _ ,T I I AMORASE- IT E C C"L Y F-- UT P'.U I W,AR T _LAST •SJESN-T PAY TO IS SMILC , A T'M MR IHER6 J; FOREX/ER- (HIMK I ~ TO.K -60 ?I OMV- . R R F- ER6 , U TETJ 7O^V\RT E M Y IT- ITS -V 7 GOVEF?NMEMTWILC CORVJTROLJV \ /\ W V J A SMILE- ITS I 1/ THE , V^ FC * .~ Y ) 7 V __Y AH • \ R"~ 50 TO HEART OLO B6V R E I LAU6M "T I I, . " Z " 1 THI.S UOAR IS 601M6 TO IHE VSARVXE- HA HA I I ,£ AW ~ R KEEP ' T / PROUE TO BE A GREAT H* HA, HAHAHAHAF ' AMY L6W6ER 1 A LOT OF II A LJA N AI -IFLHFT J Y °° J6V ,LL,N V V V£A Go'. tol. Mr. Snyder says he will refuse to pay any more until satisfied that they are needed. For some time there have been rumors that a change might he made in the oftice of the fund. One report was that Albert L. Allen, assistant manager, who has been at 'Washing ton cn national compensation mat ters, intended to resign this winter and go to the national capital. —Appointment of Harry E. Klugh, of this city, as chief clerk of the State Department of Agriculture, seems to have caused some heart burnings as several men in western counties got the idea that because the late Dr. M. D. Lichliter, for years chief clerk, came from Alle gheny county, that the successor would be named from that section. Secretary Putton says that the ap pointment was made on the ground of efficiency and in recognition of KUigh's service in the department for a dozen years. —People at the State Capitol are indulging in considerable amusement o\er the ardent manner in which Scranton leaders are working for the appointment of a registration com missioner to succeed Mayor-elect A. T. Connell. Notwithstanding the fact that a commissioner will have noth ing to do for many months there has been such activity as has not been known for a long time. Mr. Connell, Senator Lynch and ex-Senator Mc- Nichols have been here day after day, l'airly camping on the Governor's trail while Sheriff Schlager and Commis sioner Von Bergen have been keep ing the wires hot. So much feeling has been aroused over the appoint ment that the Governor is going to take his own good time. —The Governor has also been tak ing his time in the matter of the Public Service Commissionerships una one of his friends remarked to day that "the state has been saving money by the Governor not filling the places. The present commis sioners are all working hard and keeping right up with the mass of business so that the state is .lot losing so much by the Governor's careful consideration of the men suggested for the places." —Governor Brumbaugh is mo mentarily expected to name a judge for Washington county. He has been in consultation with many men about the place. —Congressman B. K. Foeht, of Lewisburg, is getting his fences ready for renomination. The Union coun tian says that he will be willing to enter the lists with all comers. As he has won the flglit in the face of Democratic opposition of the staunchest kind and against covert enemies he ought to make it very interesting. —James J. Gerry, deputy pro thonotary of York county, and Coun ty Treasurer A. F. Fix are preparing to sail as rivals to Congressman A. R. Prodbeck. of Hanover, for the Demo cratic nomination for Congress in the Yolk-Adams district. Brodbeck does not like the idea of opposition and some of the Democratic state ma chine leaders may look into ork conditions. Banking Commissioner D. F. Lafean. S. Iy McCall and John C. Schmidt, of York, are being sug gested as Republican candidates. GOV'T CRITICISMS [Washington Post] Criticisms of the government, based upon facts, put forward in good faith and for the purpose of correcting existing evils, are not only proper, hut helpful. Criticisms of the carping variety, intended to discredit public officials or to influence political issues, and especially criticisms placing the blame for sins of omission in the ! past upon some individual, are not proper or helpful, but are harmfuf : and in some instances disloyal. The distinction should be drawn i very rigidly. This is no time for | making wild charges against high officials, it is futile, and only aids ( those small bands of traitors who ; persistently are trying to fan the : fires of sedition in the land. Congressional investigations which ■ expose the incapacity or incompe tency of high government officials, intrusted with important duties, are ,i quite helpful. They give the public > definite Information which it has a right to know, and out of the ex- I posures come reforms which are ' greatly in the public interest. The mistakes are rectified or their repe- I titlon made impossible. When the ! government Intrusts un official with a duty it expects htm to attend to it, and if he fails the facts should be niade known to the people. Expo sures of that sort and the criticism which follows justifiable. WAY OF INVESTIGATION Very few investigations hold up in a way that makes them as inter esting at the finish as they were at the start.—Washington Star. "Passive Loyalty." Rudolph Heinrichs in the Atlantic Monthly • From a (ieimfnr l.rtter) YOU and I, Felix, are both of the same German blood. There is not a drop of any other blood in us. so far as I know. You feel the tug of'this blood drawing your sym pathies toward Germany. Perhaps 1 am hard hearted. 1 often wonder whether that is it. I think, however, that I feel as deep affection for father and the others in Germany as you do. And yet there does not st em to me to be the smallest corner of me that is not for America, first and last, and against Germany. 1 do not hate Germany, but I want to see her defeated, and I deeply hope that America will have a part in defeat ing her and that 1 may have a small part in helping to defeat her. • • * You say that you are loyal if you are merely passive, and some fool in Washington, some official or other, said the other day that the Go\em inent demanded no more than pas sive loyalty from its citizens of Ger man birth or origin. I tell you, that passive loyalty today is disloyalty. You are needed, and 1 am needed, *nd every American of German blood, who considers himself an American and nothing else is needed, to symbolize to the rest of Americans NEWSPAPERS QUITTING The Fourth Estate, a leading mag azine of the newspaper industry, says that at least 1,200 publications in the United States and Canada quit publishing during the year 191". These approximate 925 suspensions and 250 consolidations, each of which, of course, eliminated at least one publication. The principal de crease was furnished by the weekly, daily and semiweekly papers. The falling oft' has been general through out the country. The forthcoming 1918 American Newspaper Annual and Directory will show that at the close of the year there are 24.252 publications of all kinds in the United States and Canada, of which the United States has 22,842. Of the total number, the weekly papers showed the greatest falling oft" during 1917. The daily papers ranked second. The net loss of the dailies was 62. Discussing the serious conditions which now confront the newspapers, a trade publication Paper, says: "The failure of 1,200 newspapers in the United States in the compara tively short period of ten months is an alarming announcement without any explanation of the reasons why it is so. "An editorial from the Saturday Evening Post, which is quoted by the Wisconsin State Journal, suggests the real answer, it is that the tendency of tlie times Is consolidation and that many paper*, are being eliminated in those lo<-alltles where tliey have been too numerous to thrive. From this article w6 quote as follows: "'A contemporary reports that, though the population of the four teen largest cities in Michigan has doubled in the last ten years, the number of daily papers has fallen from forty-two to twenty-one. "\\'o donbt like causes have pro- Muced a like effect elsewhere. Quite recently consolidations of dailies in first class cities have attracted at tention. The number of consider able cities with no morning paper and of still bigger places with only one morning paper appears to in crease.' "If the Saturday Evening Post is correct in its analysis, an attempt has been made by some publishers at least to overcome this difficulty by the consolidation of journals, and the elimination of those that are useless. Instead of Ita being an evi den<*e of demoralization In the puh lisliiug world that certain |tapcrs go out of existence, it may indeed often be an evidence of a more intelligent understanding of the situation and the installation of a policy based on a l>etter judgment." BOND OF PERFECTNESS And above all these things put on charity, which is the bond of per fectness. —Colossians, 111, 14. SAFETY FIRST A kaiser sings a happy song, Although, In quest of pelf. He gets his people In alt wrong. He always saves himself. Washington Star, * /. of alien origin, the working of the American crucible. We have boasted in the past that the American people was not merely a hodge-podge of lifty or a hundred races, but a new race, looking not to the past but to the future. Here is your chance to prove it, to prove that no temptation, however great, no lure, however insistent, can turn us who have received the benefits of American citizenship, who have lived and grown and prospered and been happy under American institutions, back to the land that our fathers left, bapk to the kings they re nounced. We dare not Vie passive. • • Instead of being passive, instead of sitting in armchairs at hontc, grumblingly nursing our resentment as you would have us to do, you and I should be out on the housetops, declaring to the German-Americans our faith in the American democ racy and the American people. See ing how much we are willing to sac rifice for the privilege of claiming full American citizenship, other Ger man-Americans. who have less to sacrifice, may value American citi zenship higher than they do now.— THIN SKIN. THICK SKULL DefAulers of the administration, most of them politically sympathetic, are given to much shouting of trea son! and traitor! when it is intimat ed by Americans interested in the outcome of the war that more could have been and can be done by the United States Government toward licking Germany. Pitiless publicity evidently does not make as good a watchword as it made a catch phrase. Friends of tlie present ad ministration, Who elected it upon a campaign of criticism, have since become peculiarly thin-skinned, in inverse ratio to the thick skulls of some of those whom they undertake to defend. They resent anybody's interference with what the Govern ment is doing, and have set up a postulate that the king is doing the best he can and therefore can do no wrong. That sort of thing worked for a while in England—and worked harm. It never did work in France, which has borne the heaviest bur den of the war. Changes in the con duct of the war made by both coun tries undoubtedly have resulted In improvement. Ijloyd George saw a light when his ship was heading for the rocks, fie threw out the Jonahs and steered clear. Persuaded by I capable critics that certain gentle- I men were unfitted for their jobs, he ' replaced them. He did not stub- I bornly hold to a course clearly prov en to be in error. If his pride of judgment was hurt, he made the I best of it, realizing that the war was ' not a war of party, by a party and for a party. He realized something j that is seen but dimly over here as yet; that a nation which is spending its blood has a rightful interest in the process of that expenditure, to the end that as little of it as pos sible be spent—and not wasted. Historians have often disagreed on the lessons of history, but most of them have agreed on one proposi tion: that when a people, even easy going, loyal people, become con vinced that their leaders are not leading, they act suddenly and un mistakably, and they get what they go after, sticking through thick and thin to get it. —The Daily Iron Trade. War Time Wit in London Three years and four months of war have speeded up agood many things in England. As to whether jokes have been accelerated along with other things the reader may fcrm his own judgment after running through these examples from an is sue of the Bystander, London. The German people are going to vary their diet by eating earth. This is good news, for, as everyone knows, you cannot have the earth and eat it. A contemporary wit points out that there- is a German prisoner of war in this country who has not yet escaped. We are informed that the poor fel low suffers from gout. Among: his colleagues. In tho-new- French government, M. Clemenceau hao included M. Nail. If the latter helps the ministry to hold on to office longer than its recent predecessors, he will be well worth his "screw." JANUARY 4, 1918. LABOR NOTES Kederated shopmen employed on the Western Maryland Railway have received wage increases the last few months that total 10 cents an hour. The rate is now 50 cents for boHer makers, machinists anil blacksmiths. These workers are 100 per cent, or ganized. At the last convention of the Metal Polishers. Buffer*, Brass and Silver Workers' Union of North America, it was voted to relinquish jurisdiction of the silver workers. Beginning with the first of the year this interna tional organization will be known as the Metal Polishers' International Union. The members of Stockton (Cal.) Typographical Union have secured the acceptance of a new scale which adds 50 cents per day to their wages. Beginning January 1, 1918, the news paper printers work seven hours and forty-flve minutes. April 1, 191S, ftf teen minutes more will be taken off. According' to data found in a re cent issue of the Gewerkschaft, the official organ of the Austrian Trade Union Commission, on January 1, 191", the members numbered 1 G0,907, of whom 25.907 were women, as ttgainst 372,216 men and 42.979 wom en members on January 1, 1914. Because of the fairness of Justice Higgins, president of the Common wealth Arbitration Court, and the an tagonism of the New South Wales (Australia) government to organized labor, sortie workers urge that the state industrial laws be ignored Snd that unions register under the Com monwealth act. OUR DAILY LAUGH LONG COURSE iH Experience is 'yp ITT the best teacher. 'fr sjp / Yes. But she X// consumes a ter rifle amount of lift / time warning |V / you what not to mW / do instead of 8. showing you Ik 1 . how to go II /|t\\ ahead. IB / I pg nfe AMONG TIDt TV BOTS " Yev\ Toy Soldier: toh w What is your favori,e exprcs \Y ral Trumpet: Well I'll be I blowed! c\ HABILY AN- I STWERED. / Wlfey The / doctor says I / should go South f for my health. j Th o question V, now is where to to another doc- A STREAK OF YELLOW. I ' Rolling Pin— t i W& Aw go on! You eggH are cOW -1 ] V "7$ ards - You all \ffln J\\ have a streak ot yellow in you. Hhmtng (Eljal If there Is one thing which seems to I'avo come with the finusually frigid weather which has afflicted the State's capital It is the care manifested for horses. When the cold wave came in during the middle of December there were to bo seen the usual number of horses which wi re not rough-shod and which were slipping and sliding all over the street. Now every horse seems to be not only rough shod, but well rough shod. It Is what the late Ex- Mayor Maurice C. Eby tried to bring about for a long time. He argued that it was not only humane, but good business. Now there are few horses which are not ready for all kinds of weather. Then, too, horses are blanketed now with the greatest, of care. There arc horses which have blankets about them all tlio time they are out in the weather, while others have their harness over blankets. The horse may bo giving way to the automobile, but there are a good many people who are taking mighty good care of him. Down around the courthouse there are signs of the cold weather eVen when the steam does not give out and court has to be adjourned owing to low temperature in the court rooms. The courtroom rotunda is a pleasant place for some people to linger until one of the tipstaves comes around and the amount of time some people will spend in the court room listening to the discus sion of questionnaires is rather signi ficant. Outside of the courthouse, in the recess formed by the alley be tween the building and the Common wealth Trust Company there is a mobilization of street sweepers equipment that makes one shiver. It recalls days when the "white wing" gets out with the sun to clean the streets before tho mercury rises. A'OW the dirt cans with their upright brooms stand around like captured artillery, hemmed in by mounds of snow and ice on which by the very irony of things the dirt and refuse of the neighborhood seem to have blown. Those who intend to travel not withstanding: the war will have to take Ichancas on train accommoda tions. Since the United States Gov ernment assumed control of the rail roads the traveling public has been having some difficult in knowing what train to board even in well reculated Harrisburg stations. Along with their many troubles, ushers and ticket examiners are having no little amusement at the expense of travelers. Yesterday a locai travel ing man rushe.d through the Penn sylvania railroad station to an open gate. "Where are you going?" asked the man at the gate. "To Lancaster," was the reply. "Not on that train," said the ticket puncher. "The train you want was annulled one week ago." Until the new schedule on the Pennsylvania Railroad is issued travelers will have to take chances and, above all be patient. The other day a traveler asked an usher how late tho 12.40 train for Pittsburgh would be. "You will have to wait, four hours for that train. The 8 o'clock trhin Just came in. You can go on that." It was then 12.20 p. m. Several passengers who had sleep ing car reservations on a western train heard the usher call: "Train for Altoona, Pittsburgh and the West, gate No. 4." Those who held Pull man tickets started to go through the gate but were stopped. The gate man said: "Your train has not left. New York. You will not need any sleeping cars when it gets here. If you do not care to wait, the train down there has several coaches but no sleeping cars." The answer that came back was: "Sherman was right." A wild cat that must have been the wildest of the wild in its day landed in the offices of the State Game Commission yesterday morn ing in the form of a pelt. It was sixty-three inches from tip to tip and in life must have weighed forty pounds. The pelt was perfect, in fact, it was one of the finest ever seen here. The cat was killed on what is known as Cove Mountain, Franklin county, a point consider ably further south than cats are usually known to come. The skin attracted much attention and there were a number of men who were glad that the cat came in the form of a pelt. • • • From all accounts there will be some brisk competition for honors in corn at the mid-winter agricultural show here late this month between boys' and girls' corn clubs. The re quests for information which have been reaching the State Department of Agriculture indicate that there will be some struggles worth watch ing between clubs and that the very finest of the corn will be shown here. Already numerous local exhibitions have been held which have settled rivalries in townships and counties and the winners will come here with their golden products. • • • The meetings of the allied agricul tural organizations to be held here this month are of far greater im portance than any similar meetings held in years and it is interesting to note that the number of associations meeting here in the third week, "Agricultural Week," as it is known. Is double what it was four or five years ago. Hundreds of representa tive farmers and specialists In fruit, cattle, poultry, cheese and other lines, will be in Harrisburg for the greater part of the week. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —The Rev. John T. Reeve, who takes charge of the First Presby terian Church, I-iancaster, was given n farewell reception by his church in Philadelphia. —Joseph Pennell, the Philadelphia artist, says when people think about It the Quaker City's Mummers ought to suspend for the war at least. —E. B. Dorsett, chief of the Bureau of Markets, has been Invited to York county farmers on marketing work. —Howard A. Butcher, prominent Ardmore resident and well known to many, will go abroad for Y. M. C. A. work among soldiers —S. B. TrafTord, the warden of Lebanon prison, who has Just been reappointed, is the oldest warden In # the state. He is seventy-eight. -■— Adjutant General Beary was In Washington on draft matters yester day. DO YOU KNOW —That Harrisburg steel Is being used for making locomotives? HISTORIC HARRISBURG Admiral Farragut was a visitor to Harrisburg Just after the Civil War and was given a great reception by the veterans and citizen*