6 HARRISBUKG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 ■ _______________________. Published evenings except Sunday by THE TBUDGRAPH riuvriNG CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Square. E.J. STACK POLE, Pres't Sr Editor-in-Chief P. It. OYSTER, Business Manager. GUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor. Member of the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en title'' 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 la t ioiwuul Penn jg. rr, ;a5 Eastern office. Story. Brooks & 35? £ 8?8 fS Finley, Fifth It? w: Avenue Funding, ~ Chicago. 111. Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. B >" carriers, ten cents a CtfiElKtfaSlsisO week; by mall, $5.00 a. year in advance. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1918 / am among yon as He that serv cth. —jKSt'S. MORE WORK; LESS WASTE ONE day we are told to save every penny possible—in order to buy Liberty Bonds and thus' help win the war. The next day we are informed that! the only way to win the war is to keep business going full tilt—and to do this we must spend in an open-hand ed and carefree manner, like the once famous "Coal Oil Johnny" or the proverbial "drunken sailor. - ' i There are arguments on both sides, j but neither embraces all the troth. Between the two lies the wise course. It is true we must save to buy bonds. But if we save to a point' where we do not purchase what we' need, the merchant and the manu facturer, the factory worker and the clerk, have that much less money and they, therefore, have no cash for bonds. Therefore, it becomes evi dent that, if business is not to be stagnated we must not become a na tion of mere money-grubbing misers. We in America have tremendous resources. The surface of our riches has been scarcely scratched. Here tofore we have lived extravagantly and spent wastefully. What we need now ii to Buy freely what we really need, but to waste nothing. Waste has been our besetting sin. Waste must be prevented. We must labor more in order that we may save more and spend more. More work and less waste, that is the answer. As between the new hotel and the Post Office and which of them will be completed first, our bets are all on the hotel. STOP SPOILING THE PARK THE practice of dumping snow , indiscriminately In the River 1' ront Park should be stopped. To be sure, the snow problem is puzzling those whose duty it is to keep the streets clear and there is no reason why the snow should not be shoveled over the concrete steps, where it would melt and run into the river, the residue of mud and street fifth being left to bo carried off by the first spring freshet. There are approaches to the river at Verbeke, Bcas and Market streets, where Wagons can get down to the river. Commissioner Gross should see to it that this is done. To permit the dumping of dirty snow anywhere in the park is to encourage the dump ing of garbage and ashes there also. This has happened in previous years and there is no reason to believe that the present will be an exception. Ashes are needed on the river bank above Maciay street, but there is no place for them below that point, where the parking above the steps has been completed and planted. This park has cost the people of Harrisburg a lot of money and they do not propose to have it ruined by careless or wreckless persons to whom parks mean little or nothing. It may be necessary one of these days to make an example of those who flagrantly violate the best in terests of the city. THE CANDY INDUSTRY SOMEBODY has asked why, with sugar scarce and high in price, the government doesn't close the candy factories of the country, in stead of merely curtailing their out put. The question is easily answered. I rom recently compiled accurate statistics it is shown the candy in dustry of the United States has ex panded with great rapidity. Sixty-five years ago less than 400 establish ments were needed to supply the American demand for factory-made sweets. Their aggregate capital was a little more than J 1,000,000, the \alue of the products not much over $3,000,000. On the basis of a popu lation of 23,000,000 this meant an annual per capita expenditure of only thirteen cents, there being practically no foreign trade in con fectionery then. To-day, assuming that the industry has maintained during the last two years the same rate of growth as in the five-year period, 1909-1914. the Industry 'em braces over 2,500 establishments, rep resents the investment of J110.000,- SOO capital and turns out confections SATURDAY EVENING, HAKR3BBXJRG QflalSg TELEGRAPH FEBRUARTV, T9T%. of various sorts having a- total value of $185,000,000. On the basis of a population of 102,000,000 this means a net expenditure of SI.BO for every man, woman and child In conti nental United States. To meet the American consumption of sweet meats last year required between $175,000,000 and $200,000,000 worth of factory-made confectionery—and this In addition to the vast amount of cocoa and chocolate other than confectionery that were consumed and to the home production of taffy, fudge and other bon-bons. Here is a vast and important in dustry, employing thousands of peo ple and paying heavy tatfes. It would not be just to wipe it out to tide us over a temporary shortage. It has been curtailed forcibly in its opera tions in order to conserve the domes tic supply, but it would not do to cut it off entirely simply that each of us consumers might have a spoon ful or two more sugar each day. WHAT THE PEOPLE WANT The fierce fires of jpatriotism have fused the country into a solid mass as to the end to be achieved, but they have not burned out self-seeking ambition or desire for personal aggrandizement. Nothing which has as yet come into the world has done that and . probably nothing ever will. There has, however, so far been a wholesome and welcome absence of party spirit and partisan ma neuver. It has been absent, though only in abeyance. It should remain absent and In abey ance. It can be kept so. but only by the self-abnegation of the President and by his breadth of vision and of action. The power comes from the people. The use to be made of the power is in his (winds. The people furnish it, he directs it. Through his direction will suc cess or failure come. Awe-inspir _ ing is his responsibility. TheTeo ple will follow him in compact and unbroken mass so long as they believe lie is thinking and acting solely for them and regard less of party or of self; that neither haughtiness of spirit, nor pride of opinion, nor personal ad vantage, nor party advantage is adulterating the purity of his pur pose or interfering with the suc cessful prosecution of the war. So vital is this that the Presi dent should leave nothing undone to deserve and preserve this con fidence. He must leave no plaus ible ground for inciting suspicion in the minds of the people that such is not the ease. ..uspicion that such is not the ease will im pair his power and conviction that such is not the case will de stroy it. His mind must be open to counsel. Hd must "\/elcoino well-intentioned criticism. He must draw to his side the ablest aids the country affords. His Ms ion must be unobstructed by per sonal or partisan considerations, and bis heart and spirit must hold but one impulse—the victory of America. No, dear reader, this is not the plea of a Republican Senator for u coalition war cabinet. Nor Is It the argument of a Republican newspa per for the creation of a war coun cil. It is from a speech recently made by former Secretary of War Garri son, an ardent Democrat, but a man too big to permit party politics to adulterate his patriotism or to in terfere -with his ideas as to the proper prosecution of the war. Mr. Garrison knows that this war Is not a one-man or a one-party job. How long will it take for some others to learn what the people know and what they want? AN INDEPENDENT PRESS COMMERCE AND FINANCE, one of the best-known and most reliable business publica tions o£ the United States, has this to say concerning conditions that have forced even the powerful New York newspapers to advance their price to two cents: What should have been clone a year ago all tHo one-cent daily newspapers of New York did last week—wont to two cents. If they hadn't done FO some of them would have been forced to the wall. The cost of white paper and delivery to newsdealers was noarlv twice as much as the pub lishers got for the one-cent paper from the dealer, which was sixty I cents per 10) copies. Necessarily, | the newspaper was dependent up on the advertiser for life. That the advertiser has dictated to the newspapers in some instances is acknowledged. How could you ex pect it to be otherwise when the newspapers were drawing three quarters of their support from ad vertising? , This not only was an unhealthy but an ominous situation. The newspaper was not free. The ad vertisers could destroy any pub lication that offended them. Of all the great newspapers in New York only two have ben making am - profit. One came near hreakinc even. The others had constantly increasing deficits. The two-cent rate will give a profit. from circulation and will lessen th:- thralls in which the publishers have been hound to the advertiser. It will curtail the cir culation of some sheets, particu larly those of many thousands of circulation, most of whose read ers are persons wuo have to count their coins carefully and to whom two cents for a paper may seem a good eal of money, but it will make for better news papers. This-sums up pretty well, from an unprejudiced and unbiased author ity, the reasons why newspapers that are honest with their readers and themselves have been compelled to increase prices to two cents the copy or ten cents the -week. The newspaper is a business en terprise just as much as is the gro cery store. Nobody has a right to ask that the newspaper be published at a loss. No newspaper publisher, unless he be immensely rich and prompted by some selfish or politi cal motive, can now afford to sell a paper for a penny. The purveyor of the penny paper cannot collect legitimately enough from the advertiser to pay his ex penses, and his circulation gets more and more costly the more papers he sells. Every increase in circulation makes his losses heavier. The more papers he puts out the worse his situation. The Hian who buys a penny paper is accepting a gift from its pub lisher. Now it so happens that it is neither in accord with business prin ciples nor human nature to give something away day after day un less the giver has some object in view. In the case of the penny pa per It may be that it is controlled by some big business, desirous of a voice, or some politician so anxious for office he is willing to spend thou sands of dollars keeping himself be fore the people, or its publisher may have some sort of propaganda to spread, usually political. In any event, the man who buys the penny paper must be content with an in ferior product and to have his news censored for him and his editorial comment adulterated to meet the biased views its self-centered pub lisher desires, for one reason or an- I other, to foist on the reading public. I Under these conditions it is not to be wondered that two-cent news papers are surpassing the penny sheets in circulation. There is nothing mysterious about it. The people want all the news there is to print, well edited and presented, and they wont an editorial column that knows no control save what those responsible for it honestly be lieve to be solely for the best inter ests of the public. fotitCct Ck By the Ex-Commlttceniau Twety-five thousand nominating ! petition blanks are now being print ed at the state printers for the spring primary and it is expected that twithin a fortnight the Secretary of the Commonwealth can begin distribution of the papers to the prospective candidates for state congressional and legislative nomin ations for circulation under the pri mary acts. Thero are six forms this year because of the statewide, superior court, congressional, state senatorial and legislative nomina tions. Under the law none of these papers can be circulated or signed before March 2 and they must lie filed for members of state commit tees. State wide nominating petitions require 100 signers in each of five counties; papers for congressmen or senators 200 signers in the district and for members of the lower branch of the legislature 100 residents of tho district. The state committee papers require 100 signers of the dis trict and each senatorial district is entitled to two members. In years gone by there has been a rush to file nominating petitions on the closing day, but the secre tary has called attention to tho ad visability of filing early so that de fects can be cured and petitions not be invalidated by matters discover ed too late to correct. expect (he ab-1 sence of Governor Brumbaugh fromj the Cnpitol to be marked by some strenuous doings. The Governor left the city last evening and it is re-1 ported that ho is going to Florida or! some other southern state. No one at his office will say where he has gone or when he will return. When the Governor goes away changes are made at the Capitol and places tilled. As the administration leaders In various counties have been making up lists of the men they want flred and hired, some action may be ex pected. —Senator Sproul's announcement has again been deferred, but the Senator is busy getting around among people and accepting invita tions. It is said that he will have headquarters in I'ittsburgh as well as Philadelphia. —Highway Commissioner O'Neil said this morning that his headquar ters would be opened next week and in full blast. This evening, he said, he would speak in Rod Lion. He was in Carlisle yesterday and says he met many people who were in terested in his candidacy. —ln its account of the meeting of the Philadelphia Republican city committee, the Philadelphia Record shows the way the Democrats hope by calling much attention to the ar rangement made by Senator Vare for discussing the attitude of his or ganization on the liquor question. "In the near future we will have a gubernatorial campaign to deal with," said Senator Vare, to the committee, "and the situation ought to be gone over by you men with the members of your ward committees, so that you can learn their senti ments on the different candidates. All the candidates proposed for the Republican nomination for Govern or are friendly to this committee, and the way ought to be canvassed before this committee endorses can didates for the Governorship or any other state office." Observing that this state of affairs was "a healthy condition," Senator Vare took up the question of whether a candidate should be accepted or rejected be cause of his views on the liquor question. "This committee is not built on a liquor platform," he con tinued, "and we will not hesitate to support a man for state office or in local districts because he is known to be opposed to the liquor. If a can didate has the proper qualiflcations for the office which he seeks and the people of the district want him, so long as it is for the best interests of the party we will support him." —As a matter of fact the Demo cratic state organization is about as badly off in spite of the enormous number of federal officeholders as it has been in years, and this ac counts for the attention being given to Republican affairs by the Record. The row brewing between the Humes and Guffey forces in Western Penn s\lvania and the insistence with whrch some anthracite region men are demanding General C. R. Dough erty, of Wilkes-liarre, for Governor are tabooed subjects with Demo cratic newspapers, although the Pittsburgh Post is rather fe&rful that if the two western factions get into a fuss that the state bosses may force the Democrats to nominate an eastern man. What is making the Democratic machine clank, however, is the liquor issue on which the bosses themselves are divided. —The Republican city committee of Philadelphia yesterday referred the charges against Magistrate "Bill~- Camplell to a committee Instead of firing him. The plan Is to make C'amptell the goat for the Town Meeting movement, but as long as there is a chance for him to return and be good he will not be rattaned. It will be noted that Senator Vare is becoming very much of a pacifi cator. —Stories of a row between Mayor Smith and Director Wilson were re ceived with much salt here to-day. —The }'rrk County Republican Club, of York, has gone on record favoring '-lie candidacy of only those aspirants for Republican nomina tions for the State Senate and House of Representatives who favor the pr.rsase of a local option law and the rdoptirn by the State Legislature of the t-rohibition amendment to the constitution of the United States. —Signs of more trouble loom at Pittsburgh where Council seems dis A GREAT DEAL CAN BE DONE WITH THE IMAGINATION BY BRICGS posed to usurp power. A $6,000 city job, presumably for Franklin P. Booth, former director of the sup plies department, was voted for yes terday by the councilmanic finance committee and inserted into the 19It' budget. Tho new job is to be in a now division of investigation, to be in sole control of Council, taking the place of the Bureau of Efficiency Standards and eliminating the place of chief of efficiency standards, now held by Peter P. Shevlin. • —John M. Carr, a Hazleton law yer, lias caused it to be heralded abroad that he is a candidate for Republican nomination for Con gress at large. So is Isador Sobel, former postmaster of Erie. —B. F. Ruth, the Heading coun cilman who has been kicking tip all kinds of fusses, is former Bull Moose leader of Berks and wants to be mayor of Reading. TWO-CEXT NEWSPAPERS "New York publishers held to the penny price through a period of great stress, in tthich costs of every kind were steadily mounting. They rejected the overtures of Philadelphia publishers, who urged them, months ago, to abandon the penny price. They continued to play with that sort of fire which leaves the most cruel burns—economic Are. Day by day they continued to sell their man ufactured product at a price which did not meet the cost of the raw materials." But says the Kditor Ilnd Publisher, they have accepted the inevitable and all have gone to two cents. It was understood that last year the Federal Trade Commission sent representatives to New York in an effort to induce the publishers to go to two cents as a means of conserv ing news print, and after Philadel phia papers raised they sent delega tions on several occasions to try to bring about the increase, but to no avail, although all the papers did raise prices outside New York. Advertisers, local and national, have favored the higher price for newspapers, and notably the Asso ciation of National Advertisers has gone on record as advocating it. tak ing the ground that any loss accru ing to circulation as the result of in creasing prices is to be considered really beneficial rather than detri mental to their interests. The advertising director of a great New York Department Store says: "At two cents I firmly believe that much duplicate circulation would be eliminated, and the results remain from every point of view unchanged, "Then circulation will mean some thing. The paper at two cents will be more highly prized, more thor oughly perused, and if it has an in fluence and a following, more effect ive in its education of that following. "And, above all, in these days of strenuous endeavor to reduce waste duplicate circulation Is uneconomic. Paper is high, forests are becoming depleted, distribution costs are rising and the endeavor to sell two papers where one would suffice Is not a practice to be Encouraged. "In many lines an increase of turnover or of production results In a reduction of overhead. Not so with the newspapers, every copy of which means loss. "The cure for this evil, I believe, lies in the raising of the price of the newspapers to the reader, so that cost shall be covered. "The consumer pays the advertis ing bill, whether he realizes it or not but we in this country have in the past preferred indirect taxation to direct: like"the ostrich, if we could not see, we feared not. LABOR NOTES San Francisco Labor Council is as sisting the newly-formed Film Ex change Employes' Union to secure recognition from the film exchange managers. The new organization in cludes inspectors, shippers, poster handlers and bookers. In Great Britain the labor party, a trades union congress and the great co-operative societies, repre senting together not much less than half the population of the United Kingdom, are working In close al liance. v The Kansas State Laundry Board has abolished the provision which allowed an employer to extend the work day to ten hours whenever he saw fit to declare an emergency. The Board orders that the straight nine hour day be put Into effect." In Germany the first step to In duce the government to fix minimum wagta was taken in January, 1911, by the conference of German home workers, which in a resolution re quested the government to fix by legislation minimum wages for home workers, so that in order to earn a living they would no longer be forced to work excessive overtime. THE PEOPLE'S mmmammmmmmamm| HBBaaaHHß|||B|HHa||aHH|M^ AS TO BANKRUPTCIES 7 o the I'.citot of the Tclegroph: e have failed to see any article in your valued paper of the bank ruptcy of the Charles E. Bard Player Piano Co. some three or four weeks ago at Elizabethvllle, Pa., where he finally located. The company was organized in this city and was lo cated here for some time. Previous o this Charles E. Bard was superin tendent of the C. M. Sigler Player Action Co. Y\ e have also failed to see any article concerning the bankruptcy of the M. Sigler Player Action Co.. January 30, 1918. Both of the above firms are now bankrupt and the bus iness public is certainly entitled to some information concerning them. The heads of these action com panies certainly were not backward about taking up your valuably space when the companies were organized. It would make very interesting read ing to all those people who were promised a gilt-edged Investment, if they would come across. The writer does not consider a lawyers' notice of bankruptcy, in very fine type, an item of news to the business public. A CITIZEN'. COMMUNITY SINGING To the V.iiitor cf the Telegraph: For several months past many ar ticles have appeared in your paper as to the needs, uplift, virture and gen eral results of community singing. The writer has read the numerous articles with pleasure, and is person- I ally much gratified that so much in terest, has been demonstrated along that line In this city. When coming to this city about a year ago, it was a great personal sur prise to learn, that a city which has shown such decided progress in civic improvement should be so far in the background in social center and community work. Having come to this city from Wisconsin, a state foremost in social work, it was rath er a disappointment not to find the school houses open as social centers, and at least one thriving community chorus. In a city of this size we should have at least four or five large com munity choruses. • In the city of ITarrisburg, where there are so many fine musicians, excellent choir directors, and accom panists, it would-seem that enough enthusiastic, unselfish musicians, willing to Rive their time and train ing for betterment and public good, might get together and co-operate THE DIFFERENCE Since a great many parallels are being drawn just now between the position of President Wilson and his Cabinet and the position of Presi dent Lincoln and his Cabinet, it is just as well that there should be no mistake about the facts. President Lincoln, who entered office with the Idea that war might bo averted, made up his Cabinet of three former Whigs and four former Democrats. He himself had been a Whig. Extreme Republicans re garded the Cabinet with distrust. The Secretary of the Navy, Gideon Welles, was still a Democrat on everything but the slavery question. The Secretary of the Interior Ca leb B. Smith, was an amiable gentle man and a personal acquaintance of the President's, who had served in Congress with him. But he proved to have no great executive capacity, and his tenure of the office was soon terminated for that reason. The Sec retary of War, Simon Cameron, was a man of great political influence and bad considerable abilities, but they did not lie in the direction of administration. He was patriotic enough, but his vision was narrow, and under him the War Department was not well administered. In less than a year after his ap pointment, Cameron was obliged to leave the Cabinet. In appointing his successor the President did not ap point a former Whig or a former Democrat. He appointed a man who was still a Democrat and a violent opponent and virulent personal critic nf himself. This man, Edwin M. Stanton, had cut the President to the heart with his bitter abuse; he had described him as "the original gorilla," and on one occasion he had insulted the future President open ly, refusing to be associated with him in a lawcase. He had given his reasons for this refusal in the most cutting, blistering terms. As a Dem ocrat he had been associated with the Buchanan wing of the party, the one which Ljncoln held in detesta tion. He was appointed solely because the President believed him to be possessed of great executive capa city, and in spite ot fhe fact that hi* personality was disagreeable and offensive. Later on the President with each other and formulate plans to do something worth while along this line. We may think much, write much und talk much, but the writer thinks it is time to do much. To do this work there must neces sarily be some expense, even though the musicians in charge donate their services. There must be the pur chase of community song pamplets, which may be secured at small cost, and a small amount to cover neces sary printing. So far as the writer can think, this is about all of the expense attendant to starting this big movement for g-ood in this city. Of course these choruses might meet in the open air, in the summer, but with the present zero weather, one must realize that either the use of churches or school auditoriums must be donated for this purpose. Such an enterprize must have a backing, as such work is usually started by a university or some or ganization. Having had experience aiong this line of work, and know ing just what it means to the pub lic and community at large, it is without hesitation that the writer asks that either the Chamber of Commerce, the Civic Club or some public-spirited person or persons, send a check to the Harrisburg Tele graph to start and maintain this very important branch of civic and social work In this city. So much has been wrtten on the wonderful influence of community singing that it is rather unnecessary to say more. However, there is one thing we should keep well in mind, namely, that if the government of the United States thinks such work so important to those in the service of our country, as to appoint chorus di rectors for the camps, then it is just as important to teach people to sing in the masses, in their homes and in their own city. In' this day and age every thriv- I ing city has its small choruses and its big, 'get-together community chorus. It is a matter of much in terest to know the splendid work of Dean Nevin, of Kansas Universtty, who has made a state sing; Prof. Peter W. Dykema, of the University of Wisconsin has made the entire state of Wisconsin sing; Harry Barn hart has made New York City sing, : and our nation's capital Is doing ! wonderftil work in community sing- I ing. People of Harrlsburg, let Harris burg sing. SALOME W. SANDERS. 232 Maclay St. February 8, 1918. had occasion to appoint a comnjan der of the Army of the Potomac. He not only went out of the ranks of his friends and supporters, but he appointed a general who was openly critical of him and who was sup posed to have considered the idea of making himself a dictator and rele gating the President to obscurity. This general was Joseph Hooker. The President did not appoint Hook er because he relished the language and attitude of that general, but be cause he thought Hooker would do more toward winning the war than other officers who were more friend ly politically and personally to him self. There can be no actual parallel between conditions in 1861 and con ditions to-day, for the reason that in 1861 Cabinet changes removed the occasion for the particular kind of criticism that is heard to-dav. There was criticism of the Cabinet, but it was plainly seen to be un just, and it was, therefore, ineffect ive. There can be no actual parallel, for the further reason that in 1861 the President did not confine the conduct of the war to those person ally or politically In agreement with hTm, and this made Impossible much of the criticism which we hear to day.—Prom the New York Times. Might Be Wrong Again All we hope now is that the fel low who predicted an open winter won't spoil matters by prophesying an early spring.—From the Detroit Free Press. Calls With the Dawn I hear your call and gladly hasten on, I feel you near, the groping In the gloom; Your faint, first summons hailed me with the dawn As it stole upward from your lower room. I scent your fragrance as of some wild rose, I hurry though my spirit throbs and quakes, I'll greet you when I get Into my clothes, You war-free, Helnz-proof tacl; of buckwheat cakes. v .. .—William Grant Over tta *7o[a *~pt>v>uu j Pennsylvania golfers, with the first break of fine weather, cast a hungry eye on the beloved links. Even distant Fulton county is seized with the golfer's fever, says a country correspondent from that region. "Josh Orner, our local humoristi" he reports, "says that one o' these tine days lie's goin' to th* city an' wear a fountain pen and play that cornfield pool at one o' them country clubs." Wc always fancied Bellefonte as an aristocratic, ancient town famed for its wealth, social caliber and gov ernors. Now it appears you have to look sharp up there to escape the bears. Jack Bickens nearby Belle fonte the other morning was awak ened by a crash of his kitchen win dow. A large black bear had walk ed in and was leisurely masticating the day's rations of mush and milk. Things certainly happen out In Greensburg. The janitor of the public school building was sweeping out the primary room the other evening when he spied a bit of news paper which informed him that he was heir to half of $600,000 fortune from an ancient uncle whom he had not heard from in 40 years. Thus we learn not to spurn the job of janitor. OUR DAILY LAUGH PERHAPS THEY At,l., HAVE 'EM "Why did you camouflage youl dog?" "So I can get by the janitor. The} don't allow dogs in our apartment.' ALL PREPARED. I">e Aapp—Xice dog! Have you tausrht htm any new tricks since ) was here last. Peggy—Oh, yes, if you just whislV ■n MISUNDERSTOOD. "I hear that Burrorws ha* come In tor some money." "Then he'll have to go out without It as far I am concerned." A KICK. Mr. Squirrel—Here, you get awaj from here. It makes my wife nerv ous to see you hanging wound! Etaptttag (Efjat With the coming of spring, thou sands of persons In Pennsylvania will turn their attention to the ma ple sugar Industry. Old residents are firmly of the opinion that the extreme severity of the present win ter presages an early spring. All agreo that, the harder the winter, the stronger the flow of sap when the spring thaws Anally set in, and the more hardy of the early plants push their way through the scat tered patches of snow and ice tn the woodlands. The flow of maptta sap will not wait for the real spring, of course. Very shortly there will be more warm days, and the sap will begin to mount upward in the trees. This year, sugar men are convinced that the season will open early; more than that, it promises to bo one of the best In recent years. The sugar crop promises to be an excep tional one. • • Practically every county In tho state produces a sharo of tho tasty maple product. It will perhaps sur prise many to learn that this state is famed for the quantity and qual ity of maple syrup produced. Tho banner counties, strange as it may appear, lie in widely separated sec tions of the Keystone state. It is the trip of a lifetime to take a Jaunt through Somerset county dur ing the early spring, just about the time nature is beginning to shako oft the lethargy of a winter's nap. Weeks before the ground is in con dition for plowing, country people everywhere are busy on the "sugar" season. During tho weeks imme diately preceding the early thaws, there is much work to bo done. All equipment must be overhauled and put in ilrst-class order; for when tho season linally opens, it comes with a rush. Not infrequently every available person on the premises works from daybreak until well in to tho night. On an exceptionally line day following a severe freeze, in a country where sugar trees aro numbered not by tens and hundreds but by thousands and tens of thou sands, it is almost a physical im possibilty to collect the saccharine liquid as rapidly as it flows, with steady, rhythmical drip, into tho containers. In the sugar belt, camps are established at convenient points and regular routes aro fol lowed in making collections. Tho process of transforming inaplo sap into syrup and sugar has been greatly simplified since the adoption of evaporators, which make possi ble, rapid "boiling down." • • * Conditions in Somerset county aro duplicated in certain north tier counties. Just as it has been pos sible in the past to secure flaky, fragrant sugar and delicious "candy" at unheard of prices in Somerset and Berlin, prices in Towanda, Sayre and Kast Sinithfleld have been equally alluring. While sugar niak { lng is commercially important' in Somerset and Bradford counties, scores of Harrisburgers who spent their early days in Elk, Blair, West moreland or Clarion counties will recall with a thrill of pleasure their experiences of other years, when sugar-making time represented three weeks of back-breaking toll, but every day was a day of unalloyed pleasure. In those days the "spiles" were fashioned from hardy elder bushes, and the sap was boiled in on iron kettle over a hickory-wood fire. The task of collecting the sap fell to tho able-bodied boys of the home. Not infrequently tho great kettle with Its yawning mouth was placed near the house, in order •that the women folks might super vise the boiling process without too much inconvenience to themselves as they went about their other du ties, but often the house was re moved a considerable distance from the source of supply. In the early days, maple syrup was extensively used as "sweeten ing" for sassafras tea. Sometimes, when the flow of sap was unusually strong, every kettle and pan about the place would be pressed into service, while In the woods crocks, buckets, boilers and even washtubs garnered the sparkling water. Some times the kitchen range would bo covered with a miscellaneous assort ment of vessels while the sap was being transformed into syrup. In one Armstrong county home it -was the custom to leave a larpe pan of well-boiled sap on the kitchen stove each night during the sugar season. One night, the boys of the home, upon their return from town, each took a hearty pull at tho big pan before retiring. Knowing well the location of every object in the broad, old-fashioned room, they did not trouble themselves to light a lamp. The "syrup" on this par ticular occasion seemed to have lost its flavor. One after -another tho young men disgustedly sampled tho liquid and went to bed. Next morn ing they were horrified to learn that their sister had "switched" pans. Instead of thin syrup, each had taken a good swig of dirty flish water. , , , Pennsylvania will not only have a 'record-breaking maple sugar crop, but one which will be very valuable in the present shortage of sugar ac cording to men at the Capitol who have been hearins from various counties whore the tapping of trees will soon begin. The state forestry authorities are being asked by many people for information as to the way to get the sugar. Last year the production of the state according to the Department of Agriculture was 1,000,000 pounds of sugar worth from fifteen to eighteen cents a pound and 400,000 gallons of syrup worth from $1 to $1.15 per gallon. From all accounts reaching the Capitol there will be much activity in the woods this year and in spite of the cold and snows men have been out looking over trees. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE " —Judge M. B. Stephens, of the Cambria county courts, says some of the foreigners ought to turn at tention to getting English names. —Rear Admiral Francis T. Bowles says that much of tho criticism about Hog Island is far fetched. —J. B. Hutchison, who goes from the Tyrone to tho Conemaugli di vision, comes of a family long iden tified with the Pennsylvania rail road. —J. Aldus Herr, the Lancaster farming expert, says that farmers will be fine buyers of war bonds when prices of feed and things on the farm get adjusted. —Dr. J. P. Kerr, Pittsburgh coun cilman, has returned from a visit to Camp Hancock. DO YOU KNOW —That ITarrlsburg makes tons of sausage every week? HISTORIC IIARRISBtmO The young men of the town used to have rifle ranges back of the old state arsenal which was la CttpU i tol park.