14 BAP.RISBUXG TELEGRAPH A KEH'SPAPEK FOR THE HO.ME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAI'H PRINTING CO., Telegraph Building, Federal Square. E. J. STACK POLE, Pres't & Editor-in-Chirf V. 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 republl.-atlon of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this rP<"r and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. j Member American (A Newspaper Pub- Ij—jjc llshers' Assocla- Bureau of Clrcu- Sft sylvania Assoc!- M SB ated Dallies. ESflj Eastern °^ ce ; Avenue Funding, Finley, Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carriers, ten cents a *itiPiweek; by mail. $5.00 a year in advance. FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1918 He vrho reforms himself has done more to reform the public than a crowd of noisy, impotent patriots.— LATATEB. WHAT S YOUR IDEA? I THE Syracuse Post-Standard be-' lieves it has found a name for the Kaiser by which he should be known in history. William the Frightful is the Post- Standard's recommendation. William the Frightful is good, but the fault with it is that it is too good for the wretch who cares no more for the lives of his countrymen than 1 he does for those against whom he mukes war. The Telegraph, therefore, would amend tha motion with a suggestion, of its own. Here it is: Butcher Bill! Butcher Bill, who is going to be; gored to death in his own slaughter r pen! If you have your own pet name for Wilhelm send It along, avoiding profanity, if possible. With Secretary Baker in Europe. 1 we are at least relieved of the an- : lioyance of his excuses for the fall down of the Signal Corps and the j army aircraft program. Or would he insist on telling us that everything | is going well? TRAITORS TO THE REAR ALL disloyalty to the government at this time should be sup pressed without regard to any thing save the good of the nation. We have done enough pussy-footin\j t in this matter and the time has come when all patriotic citizens must show, their colors, especially when the ugly head of the pro-German pro-; pagandists shows Itself. We must be careful, however, in our attitude to avoid any appearance of disregard for constituted authority or law. Ample provision is at last, being made for the proper treat ment of disloyal persons and under the new sedition act of Congress l there will be provision for the \ punishment of those who think more i of our enemies than they do of our| soldiers and the welfare of the United States. Ex-President Taft has sounded a proper note in his recent statement that our citizens of German origin are to be divided into two classes. He says, "the Pennsylvania Germans, who came over before the Revolution j and settled in this State still re tain German traditions in their mode; of life, but, driven from home in ai search for religious freedom, they never have had particular affection j for the Fatherland. They are loyal' to the backbone." Mr. Taft points out further that the Germans who came over in 1848,, "led by Carl Schurz and other coura geous liberty-loving leaders of high ideals, came to avoid militarism and despotism. They loved freedom and 1 hated slavery. They enlisted in the Civil War in great numbers and every battlefield was wet with their! blood. There was a considerable 1 German immigration after our Civil j War of those who sought the ma terial advantages this country of fered. but who recognized Schurz as' their leader. Since Germany's ma rial progress began, after the Franco-Prussian War, the immigra tion has been small. Our present; generation of citizens of German ori- 1 gin are generally valuable members of the community and are descend ants in large measure of those who came over between 1848 and 1870." It is a remarkable fact, however, that the sons of these original Gor man settlers are the worst offenders at the present time. Time after time reports reach the public of the cl ■ most inconceivable attitude of many of these persons. They seem to have forgotten all that this country has meant to them and their families and to have absorbed In some fashion an idea that their first duty is to Ger many and not to the United States. It is a favorable sign, however, that since the destruction of the Lusl tanla and the outrages on the battle fields of Europe those who were dis posed to applaud German effort at ■the outbreak of the war have been turning back in patriotic devotion FRIDAY EVENING, Ito the country of their adoption. | Thousands of German boys are in | our army, true and loyal, and we I must be careful In anything ancl everything that we do not to hurt the ! innocent, while we strike hard the | guilty. These patriotic citizens of German ancestry are bearing a | double load, and as Mr. Taft suggests, , "We must be considerate of them and not add to their embarrassment by unjust and hysterical suspicion." Above and beyond all else we must i maintain law and order, and even :n I the punishment of these traitors to | the Stars and Stripes there must be | exercised the greatest care that no innocent person shall be harmed. Foolish people who utter disloyal | sentiments through ignorance or ] bravado must understand that they | are treading on dangerous ground i and when they get Into trouble they ! should realize that they have brought I it largely upon themselves. Every patriotic citizen will do his | utmost to suppress disloyalty. Of ! fenders through Ignorance or care lessness should first be warned, and | persistence in their course ought then subject them to the prompt and proper attention of those in author ! ity. Disloyalty and the dangerous | prbpaganda of pro-Germanism v.'ill j no longer be endured In this coun ; try. A patient people are ready to ! strike the foes in front as well as the foes in the rear, but by lawful means, and only by lawful measures. • Think of giving an American soi- ! dier in France a Creel pamphlet on : the virtues of the administration, in | stead of a slice of bread or a piece 1 j of meat. COAL FOR NEXT WINTER HE Telegraph has received com- I plaints from a number of Har- j risburg people on the ground ! that the retail prices for coal fixed by the local committee are higher j than those of some other cities and ; therefore unfair. The Telegraph has attempted no comparison of figures ! here and elsewhere, but Fuel Com- i missioner Hickok, has the data upon j which the retail prices were fixed j and he and the committee, repre- j senting the Chamber of Commerce, ; the Rotary Club and the Municipal ! League presidents, believe that the ; retail coal dealers are not getting j more than a fair profit. Indeed, the, committee of consumers would have j been willing to allow the dealers ! more than the fuel administrator j proposed. But the coal question goes deeper than price. It is already a question of coal at any price. There is in prospect for next winter a more ser ious shortage than that which caus ed such widespread hardship during January and February of the pres ent year. "The Coal Age," an authority on the national fuel situation, says that: The production of coal so far this year has been more than a million tons less each week than the output estimated as necessary to prevent another fuel famine next winter. It adds what the newspaper dis patches have been carrying the past week or two—the reports of serious labor disturbance and threats of a strike in the anthracite fields of this State. Nor does "The Coal Age," place the blame on the mine work ers, who are said to be discouraged by the fact that Secretary McAdoo has offered certain favored mines all the cars they want if they will sell coal at slightly reduced prices to the government for the railroads. Says the publication quoted: The direct result is dissatis faction and discouragement on the part of the miners at the idle plant and an increased cost of production for the less favored companies. Men can't live even on high wages when they can work but two or three days each week, and the companies cannot mine at low cost under such conditions. Presto, up go coal prices and wages, and the public pays what the railroads save! With no desire to pass snap-judg ment on Mr. McAdoo's methods, it would appear that anything which tends to reduce the general produc tion of coal is poor business. It is too much to hope that coal will either be cheaper or more plentiful next fall. The thing to do now is to forget the price increases and buy as much as the pocketbook will per- ] mit, the dealer will sell or the bins hold. Last winter there were times when many of us would have pur- i chased coal at any price, and could ; not. That condition will be repeated next winter, in aggravated form. Information concerning the progress of the war is all right, but when it comes down to tons of it being shipped in steamer holds that could be used for supplies and food, we are getting too much of a good thing. HATS OFF TO SML'TS OUR hat is off to General Smuts, the veteran Boer warrior, who put the slinking, plotting Aus trian diplomats to rout in three minutes. "Is it true you wish to make a separate peace?" asks Smuts, point blank of the Austrian delegate who wanted to trap England into nego tiations that would cause distrust on the part of her allies. "Yes-or no?" reiterated the Boer general, and when the Austrian be gan to hedge and evade, he added: "Then —good night." That's the kind of diplomacy the world heeds—the "yes or no" kind. There never would have been a war if diplomats had been frank, fail' und truthful. News item—"Paul Jones suspected of disloyalty." After all, Shakespeare knew what he was talking about when he Intimated that there is noth ing in a name. Where is the fellow who was boast ing last week that he had all his gar den made? The Germans learned a fresh les son on tbe American front yesterday. but even at that they are merely in the primary grade of American In struction. The early spring suit crop has been seriously damaged by the storm. It looks as though Emperor Charles admitted the truth before he had re ceived Instructions from the Kaiser as to the kind of lie he was to t-ell. ""Pofctttc* tK I>e.n,KCij£ccuual > e.n,KCij£ccuua By the Ex-Committeeman Time limits for filing nominating petitions for the May primary ex | pired at midnight, about 900 papers ; being entered by candidates on tho I final day, the last filed within ono : minute of twelve o'clock. The Re ; publican and Democratic parties j have contests for nominations i'or | governor and lieutenant governor, j while the Republicans have rivals for honors for secretary of internal affairs and for the four nominations | for Congressmen-at-Large. In many j districts there are battles looming lup for nominations for Congress, i state senator and members of the i House, the prohibition amendment I being an issue. The Prohibition and ! Socialist parties have filed complete tickets for legislative nominations. Philadelphia has many legislative candidates of different parties. While it will take several days to i enter all the petitions on the records 1 to-day is the last day under the law for candidates to withdraw papers. It is believed that there are approxi j mately 2,500 petitions on file for ill I of the nominations. To-day attorneys and candidates j were busy examining petitions filed i by rivals with a view to instituting ; contests to get lines on the names signed for rivals. The petitions will be re-examined and the lists made up next week and certified to county commissioners for printing of the ballots. —Closing of the time for filing, nomination petitions for the -May primary was marked by three moves on the part of state administration forces to nose out opponents from j the advantage of position on the' ballot because of spelling of names These petitions, which were said to have been about the Capitol all day, j were filed within five minutes of midnight and chances are that theyi will be attacked. Petitions werej filed for George P. Aarons, 1909 j North Park avenue, Philadelphia,! and Joseph R. Bateson, 9 Maurice street, Pittsburgh, for the Republican | nomination, of lieutenant governor,! which gives them places above Sen ator Edward E. Beidleman, of this: city, who filed for the same office. | There were reports that a petition j for James Scott, to beat out Johni R. K. Scott was in hand, but Beidle-1 man declared they would not en gage in that kind of game. The third ; petition to be filed was for James j Woodward, "gentleman," Ashland, for secretary of internal affairs,! which gives him the edge on James j F. Woodward. Ashland is in Schuyl- j kill county, the home of Secretary of 1 Internal Affairs Paul W. Houck. j One of the petitions was signed inj the Lost Creek district of Schuyl kill. —Outside of these eleventh hour petitions there were no surpris?s in the late filing, although the Capitol was filled with rumors. State admin istration officials were numerous about the offices until the hour ex pired and among those who remain ed were O'N'eil headquarters men and Select Councilman William E. Finley. of Philadelphia, and W. S. Leib, resident clerk of the House. William P. Gallagher, chief clerk of the Senate, looked after the Repub lican state committee end and War ren YanDdke, secretary of the Dem ocratic state committee, and David L. Lawrence, friend of Joseph F. Guffey, were also on hand until the finish. Attached to the nominating peti tion filed by Dr. Moses Stearn, of Philadelphia, for Congressional nom inations in the Third district, which is in Philadelphia, was a letter from the candidate who suggested to Chief I'lerk Thorn that the paper be dis infected immediately as it had been circulated through a district of that city where smallpox had been pre valent. The doctor said that the pa per represented backing of people who desired to have bathhouses, open summer and winter. Included in the rush of papers entered were many supplemental petitions for candidates, some of whom desired to be on the safe side in events of attacks. At least a dozen men failed to become candidates be cause the papers presented for them on the last day were short of the re quired number of names or did not contain affidavits and the defects could not be remedied in time. —Judge Eugene C. Bonniwell seems to have flashed like a comet across the gaze of the workers at the Democratic state windmill who make no effort to hide their chagrin at the cracking of the slate. According to what was received here last night from Philadelphia the judge means to be a candidate and a row such as occurred after Vance C. McCormick was slated in 1914, seems certain. The machine bosses are now saying that McCormick and Palmer knew what they were doing when they re fused to run. —The platform enunciated at Mc- Keesport by J. Denny O'Neil will be subjected to acid testing in the next few days and the candidate will be asked whether he intends to abide by the decision of the Republican primary. The fact that Mr. O'Neil did not make a specific declaration such as was made by Senator Sproul was much commented upon here to day. —Many people regard it as doubt ful whether Senator Sproul will re ply to the attack made upon him by Governor Brumbaugh last night. The Governor's remarks were ex pected and it it said that the Chester Senator has been advised not to get into a controversy, although there are some who say that if the Gov ernor persists in his attacks there will be counterassaults. —Robert P. Habgood attended the I closing of the petition filing and re marked that in his travels he had found that the people of the state were getting tired of Philadelphia and Allegheny county political domi nation and wanted an up-state can didate. Mr. Habgood professed the greatest confidence and talked har mony. —Joseph N. Mackrell, secretary of the O'Neil committee, says that there are more than 125,000 signers on O'NeU's petitions. The Sproul people claim over 200.000. —The fact that some of the big gest newspapers in the state to-day declined to get heated up over the O'Neil platform, the plans of the Philadelphia reformers against Vare and the filing of nominating petitions and played up the war. Congress and the Liberty Loan was not lost on the politicians to-day. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OH, MAN! ■:■ BYBRIGGS 1 JCHM IV£ TouO I TTHEV POINI'T HON£ Novaj CAL/w \ TOR A mowTH- ABILITY VMHATSOOVFR To PAY FOR ALL DAMAGE YouRSELF AMD DON-T 3he is G0110& to Call / AfJ — eT DoiyE To furniture Forget You're a /UP THIS EUEMio£ To / *sjgch\ IKE Y /HEY CAfO'T USE OUR GENITLEM AM" r VUITP You- J T £ GOOD CHINA EITHER! >OAVS 1 I THeR€"S aioYTHI/OGJ \ / t I / IFC-O-A J/ SMITH- ?TW-> EXPERT AT ' I Y Q U VAJAMT DOME 76 / TNPL MAR"" S '/ . /l„Tsgsa- *,•„ *™ / \ Otfer the in "p£>uva* . • J It is our opinion that the only way Kaiser Bill will ever reach Paris is by riding in on one of those 75-mile shells. Read about this man and then sayi a prayer for Dr. Isler. An Altoona paper tells: "One of the most re-! markable instances of pluck and de termination to triumph over ad- - verse conditions and win an educa-j tion is shown by the case of Thomas j Reilly, of this city. At the age of 50 years he will be graduated this spring from Grove City College, in the western part of the state. "In his youth he was terribly burn- ! ed in the iron works at Holiidays- j burg. Later he taught school in the : country districts, and a few years ago; lost a remunerative position because he was not a college graduate." Cyril Harcourt, who wrote a very clever book and play called "A Pair of Silk Stockings," is the author of "A Pair of Petticoats," now showing in a New York playhouse. Cyril is getting very close to the deadline. Elimination of the German lan guage is having its battles in Penn sylvania. At Reading a split in St. Paul's United Evangelical Church is in prospect as a result of a walkout at a German service following a re cent congregational decision to hold alternate English and German serv ices. The pastor, the Rev. H. H. Kreidler, and most of the membsrs favor the abolition of all services in German while the war lasts, deeming them unpatriotic, but a German speaking minority, chiefly elderly members, has thus far been in con trol. All can speak English. The members who walked out when they found the service was to be In Ger man are trying to force the issue and say they will demand satisfac tory action. THE COMING PROBLEM [Ohio State Journal] The war is going to change the labor problem in a marked degree. Labor is undoubtedly to enjoy a defi nite share of what it produces and It will depend upon that share as to the extent capital will employ Itself. And it is probable that capital will be ruled out entirely and labor will have to take care of itself. This sit uation may seem to encourage a class interest, but it will act the oth er way. There will be no labor class 1 In the future, no class whose Inter ests are in any way in conflict with the general welfare. The fight against capital will have gained much ground, and then it will be discovered whether labor is more necessary to bapltal than capital is to labor. These questions are to be threshed out within a few years aft er the war closes. Already the gov ernment is taking steps in this direc tion—in the government control of j the railroads and in the nation's ' agreement with the federated labor. Anyhow, the old labor situation will disappear and we will have another if not a better one. EASTWARD [Philadelphia Public Ledger] Oh! to be In France Where the flags of freedom dance And the charging lines go forward at the dawn, Where the men of every land, Clean of heart and strong of hand. Stand together 'gainst the devil and his pawn. There the roaring guns Fill the circling of the suns With an awful aching agony of sound; And the bravest and the best. Who have met their last great test, Lie uneasy in the quivering, echoing ground. Back with half their strength, Lone battalions pass at length, And the young, fresh troops go ever rolling by; Passing where the rest have passed But each further than the last, Toward the victory that only blood can buy. Heart and soul would be In that land of agony. For there the fire of sacrifice is bright. There truth stands victorious. There honor shines glorious, Both glowing in the luster of that light; There life Is worth the living, In the fullness of the giving Soul and body to the undying cause of right. Poisoning German Children With Hatred [A remarkable contrast between the sublime and spiritual tones of the letters of the maidens of France to the maidens of America is found in this letter from a German school girl to a friend in Switzerland which was published in The Princeton Alumni Weekly a few weeks ago—] Frankfort-on-Oder, 20, July, 1916 My Dear Louise: The contents of your last letter would have hurt me had I not known that your thoughts of our glorious war resulted from sheer ignorance. It is evident that you, a Swiss gill, with your French sympathies, cannot understand how my heart, the heart of a young German girl, passionately desired this war. Speaking of it some years ago, my father said to us: 'Children, Ger many is getting too small for us: we shall have to go to France again in order to find more room.' Is it our fault if France will not understand that more money and land is neces sary for us? And you reproach us that our soldiers have been very cruel to the Belgian rabble, and you speak also of the destruction of Rheims, and of the burning of villages and towns. Well, that is war. As in every other undertaking, we are past masters of war. You have a great deal to learn before you can come up to our standards, and I assure you that what has been done so far is a mere bagatelle compared with what will follow. Close to Armageddon [Ne wYork Times] The British Premier's speech makes it clear that this battle is as close to Armageddon as it is possible to get; that the two contestants are engaged in a death grapple, and that all that has gone before, in Russia for instance, has been mere prelimi nary play. Equally matched, and with no tricks in reserve, no cards up their sleeves, the battle is simply a brutal test of strength. It calls for every ounce of it. This is so well recognized in England that the Ministry has apparently been blamed for wasting armies in Mesopotamia and Palestine; but the Premier an swers that triumphantly. "In Meso potamia there is only one white divi sion in all, and in Egypt and Pale stine together there are only two white divisions, and the rest are either Indians or mixed with a very small proportion of British troops." With these forces the British have destroyed two Turkish armies and kept the Turks out of the battleline in France. The world will be eager to hear more of Brigadier General Carey, who improvised a force of "engin eers, laborers, signalers, and any body else who could hold a rifle" and held the gap the Germans had open ed on the way to Amiens. But for him and his scratch corps, the Pre mier broadly intimates, the Germans might have got to Paris. We shall know more of Carey before long, and of this astounding fight of his; and it appears certain that it will be years before the world ceases to hear of him. The Booster Spirit If you think you are beaten, you are; If you think you dare not, you don't. If you'd like to win, but you think you can't. It's almost a cinch you won't. If you think you'll lose, you're lost, For out of the world we find Success begins with a fellow's will— It's all In the state of mind. If you think you're outclassed, you are You've got to think high to rise. You've got to be sure of yourself before You can ever win a prize. Life's battles don't always go To the stronger or faster man; But soon or late the man who wins Is the one who thinks he can. —From S. W. McGlll, Nashville. GIVE ~ Give until you feel that you Cannot give another sou! Give until you're broke, and then Make some coin to give again! What is all you give away? There in Flanders yesterday Was a soldier, fine and true. Who gave up his life for you. —Detroit Free Press. As R matter of fact there is but one race worthy of ruling the world and which has already attained the highest degree of civilization. That race is ours: the Prussians are un doubtedly the lords par excellence among the Germans. All other nations and among them, unfortunately, the Swiss, are degenerate and of inferior worth. That is why I have always been so proud of being a true Prussian. Yesterday, again, our pastor ex plained to us convincingly that our first parents, Adam and Kve, were also Prussians. That is quite easy to understand, because the Bible tells us that the German God cre ated all after his own image. If then, all men are descended from Adam and his wife, it follows that only Prussians, or at least Germans, ought to exist in the world, and that all who push on and prosper ought to belong to us. You must admit that that is logic and that is why our motto is, 'God with us, Ger many above everything.' You know now why we wished this war. Is it not shameful that other nations, who have no right to existence on the earth, wish to di minish our heritage! We are the divine fruit, and the others are only weeds. That is why our great Em peror has decided to put an end to all these injustices and to extirpate the weeds. Do you understand now? I remain your school friend, KATIE HAMEL, (Daughter of the State Councilor of Architecture). Mr. Creel [N'ew York Times] Actual or inferential responsibility for the doings and utterances of Mr. George Creel cannot any longer, con sistently with the public welfare and comfort, be borne by the Adminis tration. It is the general impression that when he speaks he speaks for the President, an impression he has not very energetically sought to dis pel. His declaration that he should be proud to his dying day ' that there was no rush of preparation in this country prior to the day the President went before Congress" could not have been made at a more inopportune time, but that is not the worst of it. It is an avowal never to be made by anybody at any time. It has aroused public indigna tion to a degree which is only faint ly reflected by the denunciation • di rected against it in Congress. The usefulness of the Bureau of Public Information has never been satisfactorily demonstrated, but the demonstration that, if the bureau is to be continued, it should have a new head is complete and conclusive. LABOR NOTES Professor Baldwin of the Michigan Agricultural College is of the opinion that women can assist production by relieving men in cities rather than themselves working on farms. Urgent calls have been sent out by the anthracite coal operators for more mine workers in an effort to in crease the present army of 2 53,000 men up to the normal force of 1915, when there were 177,000 mine work ers in the regions. Organized labor in legislative cam paigns of 1918 in several states is urging the extension of the exclusive state fund plan of workmen's com pensation as a result of years of ex perience under various systems of administration. Madagascar fishermen sprinkle a poisonous substance on rivers and lakes which paralyzes the fish and causes their bodies to rise, when ihey are caught by hand and eaten with out harming their captors. With the consent of the union con cerned, a small number of Chinese seamen who were temporarily unable to follow their usual vocation were employed mending roads in Berk shire. England, and were paid the full trade union rates. East St. Louis (III.) organized mer chants have accepted an arbitration suggestion of the Retail Clerks" Union, which has been on strike since last June to enforce a 20 per cent, wage Increase and 9 o'clock closing on Saturday nights. Nine states have adopted consti tutional amendments for the state wide recall and are in the order of adoption as follows: Oregon. Colo rado. Arizona. California, Nevada. Washington, Michigan, Kansas and Louisiana. APRIL 12, 1918 BOOKS AND MAGAZINES Rupert Hughes' newest book, "Long Ever Ago," was published last week by Harper and Brothers. His other books are: "Clipped Wings," "Empty Pockets," "In a Little Town," "The Last Rose of Summer," "The Thirteenth Commandment." "We Can't Have Everything," "What AVill People Say?" In a recent in terview, Mr, Hughes said: "Forty seems to be a good time for a wo man to ask herself if she will under take romance as a livelihood. It. is by no means too late either for a man or a woman. "In writing fiction I always say that a person who can tell a good story well can write one if he will only take the trouble to learn how to spell, punctuate and paragraph and net himself pen-broken." "The Roardman Family," by Mary S. Watts. Many novels are written about people of senilis or talent who rise to fame from poverty and priva tion. In this novel Mrs. Watts be gins at the other end of the scale. Her heroine is a young woman who was brought up in the most rigid traditions of gentility; a woman who might have stayed at home and been taken care of had she so chosen— but who did not so choose. It is with her emancipation that Mrs. Watts is principally concerned; an emancipation that is wrought by her work and art and native common sense. The narrative occupies a period of about fifteen years, begin ning with the first year of the pres ent century. In its central figure it adds another outstanding character to the notable list of creations which its author has already given to liter ature. The MacMiilan Company, publishers, New York, $1.50. [OUR DAILY LAUGH SUMMED UP "Of what does a shad consist?" "A backbone, a wishbone, a funnj bone and then SOIBV 1 GREAT AT THAT. "In case of war I know a lot of electricians who will go to the front." "They would bo good at charging batteries." , PROBABLY NOT. "The circus has cut out thrillers." "Couldn't compete with the movies, I s'pose." , UNDISTURBED POSSESSION. "Every man is entitled to his opin ions." "Quite true; and in many cases they don't appear to be of the slight est use to aaybody but tho owner." lEhettij Glf|al "Beating tl pycar to It" is quite* a habit witlPensylvania railroad* employes heii There are all sorts of ways to v employed at h three and four | deep along !e Iding east of the j Market strei sjway on payday. The paycar ins n a schedule p.nd< is due at Eno|oicertain days, twice each month, fertwho work at night' hurry to this l t>and-catch the pay car before it Ms for Enola. Those who have aioiobiles make good time and arellwys on hand before j the cashier sflvn. Roadmen have | another wayo tet paid ahead of' time. especifV hose on the Mid- I die division. If hey happen to be | in Harrisbifi rid the paycar is ; somewhere bven this city and Al toona, they lean early passenger train to the ir where the paycar is sldetrackei Itey frequently savo a whole day.lTh Enola bunch with their autos,hox>ver, have it all over their who use j trolley cars flTrains. I • * ! Some of t; lol.itieal lights who came here trday with nicely written skeUs of themselves to | hand out tofxwpapers on the oc | casion of their papers found that a comljiton of an unprece ! dented rushif nominating papers I on the last diarn a big battle made I individual ;bitns rather below J par in the n*k>'lue. Some of the j men had gojto considerable trou ble to set li facts about them selves and tj qualifications for of fices and tljmportance of their nominationsjhit they were thank ed for theirlflness and given back their data. Ind none seemed to understand 0 it is bad business to wait until tlast day. One candle for a nomination for the Housjom an up-state coun ty had fllek petition with 250 names and I|\ 250-word statement to give out Th it. When he was told there It a chance that 110 might get heme and nothing else on the wires was quite vexed. "But, mypople want to read about me," 1 he. "So do tlpeople of 500 other candidateft."jjt in an/ unfeeling | newspaperml I "Say, I nil get this in." | "Why did you come down a I week ago ait void the rush?" was asked. "I couldngive my candidacy away." "Well, Dout us," remarked a big lineman I night. "Just to show you I have li on duty for thirty hours and Wiave run up against some of thaery worst tangles I have struck, i one place we had a dozen poles fn and wires in trees and in roads..nd then we have had this snow onp of it." * * Some of Irisburg's "war gard eners" were, the dumps- yester day and tlunqulries they made were rather Rising. One man who had spent sojmoney getting a plot plowed askefliat he should do as he had founie ground all covered with snow. : "Planted f seed?" was asked. "No." I "Well, thqgive thanks and wait a while," withe advice he got. Another cjn who had spaded a plot was alsfistressed because the snow fell dfche nicely arranged garden, all jfdy for seeding. He was told to mature work a while. V • Isaac It. Imvpacker, the histor ian, who is ijsuMhority on the bat tle of OettysrKind on lives of tho Pennsylvani;i(on*ianderß, has writ ten a letter i oft of the Philadel phia newspaj4*swhieh gives an in teresting sidlgt on General Han pock. It aI.H dais with a subject nv ii discuAd by Harrisburgers. He says: "Tl coice of concentrat or at GettyMir; was not Hancock's at all. He \|s ot given the deter mination ofth question, whether to tight or ripe Meade's orders to concentrate T Vettysburg were giv en before hnh*rd from Hancock, and natural lj ancock would not have undertiijbto decide, as he did not. in factjlfertake to decide, a .luestion bel./iwg to the army com mander. TK Sund at Gettysburg did not keel Hicock from rising to the comniartk/Vhe Army of the Po tomac. Hancoß recommendations to Meade to idult after Pickett's repulse was bid on the fact that a nail from ncock's saddle was driven by a tfet into his wound, and at the mrfnt he assumed that the ConfedenS were out of am munition and >re shooting nails." 1 WELL KOWN PEOPLE WEIJ>(OW PEOPLE —J. DennO'Neil, who opened his campaigyesterday, has been living in Mfcport for thirty-three years. —Fire Mllial Chal Port, who has been in orida for his health, will be homi a short time. —Augustuif. Oliver will direct Pittsburgh's d Cross campaign. —Major MH. Davis, Pittsburgh health dire** says that the pneu monia outbik in that city is one of the woriknown. —Uvlngst Seltzer, Schuylkill superintend* has been re-elected for his foui term. DdTOU KNOW —That er cities arc watch ing howßrrisburg la handling Its sclKxproblcm? HISTtIO HARRIsnURG For hal