10 fIARRISBDRG TELEGRAPH A VBWSPAPBR FOR THB HOiiß Foundtd jtjl Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELBXSRAPI! PRINTING CO, Tchcrifh Building, Federal Square. ®. J. STACK POLE, Prts't & Bditor-tn-Chirf F. R. OYSTER, Biuintss Manater. OUS M. STEINMETZ. Managing Editor. Member of the Associated Press—The Associated Press Is exclusively en titled 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 t llshers' Assocla latton and Penn- Eastern office. Avenue F.ulldlng, Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carriers, ten cents a -, y *• week; by mall. $5.00 a year in ad vane*. THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1918 Selfishness is that detestable vice ■which no one will forgive in others and no one is icithovt in himself. — H. W. Beecher. THE BEIDLEMAN VOTE THE nomination of Senator E. E. Beidleman, for Lieutenant Governor of the State in the Re publican primaries, on the same ticket with Senator Sproul for Gov ernor, is significant of the desire of Republicans in Philadelphia and the State at large to rid the party of the factional quarreling that has dis turbed it for the past few years. The big vote piled up for the Dau phin county Senator, even in Con gressman Scott's own city, is an evi dence of this. Senator Beidleman represented the State as a whole. Scott was the candidate of a fac tion. The same conditions prevailed ■with relation to the head of the ticket and the success of Sproul and Beidleman is such an assurance of Republican success in November that the people will now be permitted to lay aeide thoughts of politics and turn their attention fully and whole heartedly to the winning of the war. undistracted by purely local affairs. The nominations made on Tuesday are equivalent to an election, as Senator Sproul in his statement fol lowing the primaries clearly inti mates he believes. Senator Beidleman made a run most gratifying to his friends, his showing in Philadelphia and throughout the coal regions indi cating his popularity in a personal •way and his strength in Industrial centers to which his friendliness to labor legislation justly entitles him. His almost unanimous vote at home, he having carried all the districts of the city and county, is a great com pliment, especially in view of the pe culiar corfditions surrounding the contest, in which he was opposed not only by a strong candidate but by forces determined to unhorse him as a political leader. Commissioner Gross is wisely com ing to the conclusion that the pres ent system of policing "the parks must be abandoned. Most people ap preciate official kindness and consid eration for old men. but the destruc tive gangs are becoming a serious nuisance and cannot be handled by the old park guards. These hoodlums destroy trees and shrubbery without fear of arrest or punishment. Young officers on motorcycles would cost the city no more than the present in adequate force and the results would be satisfactory. A VOTE OF CONFIDENCE SENATQR SPROUL'S statement to the Republican voters of Pennsylvania In appreciation of his nomination as the candidate of his party for Governor has still fur ther demonstrated his fitness for the high office to which he aspires. It is the utterance of a public man of large experience who understands men and who is without rancor or vanity or any of the small weak nesses which too often rise to the surface in the moment of victory. He regards his tremendous plu- rallty in the primary vote as an If expression of the confidence of the people and a definite response to j his pledge of service for the Com monwealth. The statement Is gen erous to his opponents and avoids even a suggestion of resentment toward or criticism of those who In dulged In attacks upon him during the preliminary campaign. What will gratify his friends throughout Pennsylvania as much as anything else that he says In this| expression of appreciation is ills fur ther intimation that his administra tion will seek to crush out the fac tional controversies which have dis turbed the Republican party for sev. eral years by a broad and fair attl tude toward all party Interests. Senator Sproul feels a sense of deep responsibility and declares that he will give himself over to the W working out of the comprehensive and constructive policies which were enunciated In the formal announce ment of his candidacy some weeks ago. He declares, with a firmness that will commend him still further to the favor of the people, that, he THURSDAY EVENIN "has no grudges to pay, no enemies to punish, no debts to discharge— only a desire to lead a united party to victory In November" that de voted serlvce may be rendered to the nation and to the people of Pennsylvania. Those Republicans who supported Mr. O'Neil, Mr. Habgood and other candidates will unanimously rally to the colors of the chosen standard bearer and it is a safe prophecy that the election of Senator Sproul will be overwhelming and without fac tional disturbance of any sort. Fac tional activities were emphatically rebuked In the balloting of Tuesday. As was expected, his big vote in this part of Pennsylvania serves to •show the personal popularity of the Republican candidate in this city, and his connection with many im portant enterprises In this section have made him more than a mere official visitor. He will be gladly welcomed to Harrisburg as an old friend when he comes to take up the duties of a great office. That was quite a fine compliment which was paid the Harrisburg park system by a moving picture star this week. Sometimes we are almost forced to conclude that the occasion al visitor has a better appreciation ! of the picturesque beauty of the city and Its environment than many of our own people. These accept as a matter of course the beautiful Sus quehanna River basin, the park strips along the noble stream and the large j park areas 'which constitute so fine an asset of the city's residential quarters. "NOT TO BE HURRIED" f yOU cannot hurry the Presi- Y dent into issuing that procla matlon," declared Congress man Chandler in Congress the other day, when an amendement to the food appropriation bill requiring the President to forbid the use of food stuffs for the manufacture of in toxicants was before the House. And why not? Is Congress, which placed this power of declaring the country "dry" In the hands of the i President, powerless to provide for the enforcement of the law In view of the fact that the executive has failed to do what the lawmaking body obviously intended him to do In the event of a food shortage? The Idea is absurd. There is a rapidly increasing ele ment in the country impatient with the administration's policy of per mitting the breweries to use up im mense quantities of coal and food stuffs. while the home consumption of sugar and grain is restricted and coal Is at a premium. Wheatless days and beer nights do not form a very popular combination. It is not unlikely, also, that the President's failure to enforce pro hibition had Its effect on the Demo cratic vote in this State on Tuesday and was a potent factor in leading many wavering Democrats to vote for Bonniwell, the "wet" candidate. Kerensky is said to be on his way to this country, and the Czar is going to Switzerland and only the Bolshe vik! remain to welcome the Germans to Petrograd. Wilhelm will have no body to do him homage but the rag tag and the bob-tail. OUR FOREIGN-BORN THE Americanization plans of the Chamber of Commerce of the ( United States aire taking defi nite form in many cities and there is a work to do—an important work along similar lines—in our own community. Foreign-born residents who want to become real Americana have a right to their chances. The Telegraph finds, in a little investiga tion. that hundreds of those who first saw the light in other lands want to live among us as fellow citi zens. They should be encouraged in every proper way—through the public schools, in our civic organi zations and churches and by indi vidual effort. Show these aliens sympathy and a disposition to help them. We can do much to make the world safe for democracy by starting right here in America. Let us give these seekers after liberty a welcoming hand when they come to us in the right spirit. In Cincinnati recently the Chamber of Commerce of that city, in 'co operation with other societies, held a Patriot's Day celebration at which the Governor and other speakers ad dressed the foreign-bom. More than five thousand were present and the police turned hundreds away. News papers entered into the campaign to make the meeting a success, and cards were printed in the press everywhere like the following: You will be serving your coun- try if you will go to the foreign born resident of your neighbor hood or who is employed in your home or your business and say: •'I want you as mv guest at Fri day night's meeting; my per sonal guest. It is for you and for me." That is Just what the foreign-born man and woman have been waiting for, or better, hoping for, saVs the American ization Committee. There has not been enough of the sympa thetic attitude and good will ex tended to these folks, who. per force. can not but feel that they are without the pale of Amer icanism when they are regarded, as too often they are. with little interest by those they had hoped to know some day as fellow- Americans. the Committee adds. The Harrlsburg Chamber of Com merce can do much In promoting an Americanization movement here and the field Is waiting. Factlonism in the Republican party was bound to run Its course and like a boil it had to come to a head. Perhaps the body of the O. O. P. will be all the better for the lancing of the primary. It Is going to be a difficult thing for the bttsses of the Democratic party to explain to our friends, the enemy, how they failed to control a primary electton with all the power of a national administration at their beck and calL fo title* LK *Ptn,KOi{Crtuua By the Ex-Committeeman | ' " The plight of the men at the head. of the Democratic state machine, | who were given everything that Pres ident Wilson could hand them and who were on the right side of a STeat issue and yet were routed in a straight stand up fight by an oppo nent whom they declined to take se riously is attracting considerably more attention In Pennsylvania just now than the mounting majority of Senator William C. Sproul in the Republican party for Governor. There are many who believe that the protest of the great majority of the Republican voters of Pennsylvania against factionalism, the course of the state administration in backing J. Denny O'Neil for Governor ard threats to run independently, will reach the amazing figure of a quar ter million. The Republican contests are now a matter of figures with the honors with Sproul, Penrose and other men who were made targets by Mr. O'Neil and his backers. Commissioner O'Neil, who intends to spend the remainder of the week at his home in Allegheny county and on some road tours, will prob ably make some statement to-day. It is believed that he will accept the decision of the voters as final and give his attention to the election of "dry" legislators. Friends of O'Neil were to-day declaring that he was too good a sport to buck the verdict of the Republicans and that they would be greatly disappointed if he went into any combination with Democrats or others to defeat Sproul. These men said that Sproul stands squarely by the "dry" amendment and woman suffrage, while Judge Bonniwell is as firmly s. WK// v JI What are you li driving at 7 UH;',. \ \k Ever ywher# else you seo jfl nothing hut por -41 traits of girl*. MORE POWEp TO 'EM. For husbandry the Thrift I """I Stamp can't The cause is big, It will buy and pants rj J L ♦ For the boys J j who go to / I France, And enough of 'em will p make the Huns re- |fll phi treat Dobbe Is a j~ puzzle to me. 1 - j guess he's a puzzle to others, < too. I overheard M n - Dobbs the other day or [ _ derlng him to : ' explain himself. 3-bentttg (Hljat In event that Senator William C. Sproul becomes tho next governor of Pennsylvania, and It seems very pos sible that he will, the distinguished Delaware countian will be the first governor in a third of a century or more to go in the gubernatorial chair with legislative experience. It is a.i very interesting fact that the meai chosen to the executive office lately have been without the first intimate' knowledge of legislation only to be I obtained by service in one of the two' branches of the general assembly. To be sure there have been gover nors, like Edwin S. Stuart, for in stance, who used to get after th legislators in a quiet way and get what he wanted, and others who lik- -k, ed to talk back to them like John K. Tener and still others, like the late Samuel W. Pennypacker who delight ed to sit in review of tftie acts of the commonwealth's lawmakers and veto a goodly part of the product in his own peculiar way. Except for the the congressional service of William A. Stone and the big man from Charleroi and the activities of Stuart in Philadelphia: city councils none of the governors from the early seven ties has served in either branch of the Legislature. Pattisou came to the Capitol from a Philadelphia city of fice, Beaver from his law office uC did Hastings. Stone was promoted from Washington and Pennypacker from the bench, while Edwin S. Stuart was persuaded to give up his beloved business. Tener came from Congress and Dr. Brumbaugh left his congenial post of head of the Phila delphia schools to endure the strenu ous life of a Pennsylvania Governor. Senator Sproul has served continu ously in the State Senate since 1896, when he was elected in defiance of Quay, and he is now the "Father of the Senate." His experience as a leg islator has been In the forefront of pretty nearly everything and there are precious few things about leg islative processes, ways and means that he is not familiar with. "It is my Tionest belief that many persons voted tor Paul Houck yes terday under the impression they were voting for the late 'Uncle Hen ry' Houck, the ciindidate's distin guished father," said an election of ficer of a Cumberland county board to-day. "I base my conclusions on the fact that while we were registering the votes Tuesday and during the time they were being counted no less than four persons remarked to me or other members of the board that they were surprised to see Mr. Houck's name on the ticket, as they thought he had died." No man in political life was so well known or so well beloved as Henry Houck, and while Paul Houok is also well known it is not unlikely that the simiiiarty of names may have added to the strength of the son at the polls Tuesday. No matter how close a contest at an election may be there are always people who aro willing to throw a vote away on some freak candidate or some one who has. not a ghost of a show and whose name just cumbers up the ballot. This was rather strikingly illustrated by the fact that "Butch" McDevitt, a Luzerne count ian who has grown in the public eye through printing ink, actually drew forty-five votes in Harrishurg as a candidate for a gubernatorial nomination. 4nd the fact that so many Democrats threw votes away on him when there was a fight on in their party is also a curious fact. • • • Another matter connected with tho primary which can not escape notice from any one who studies returns is that so many votes are cast for men whose candidates have been k known all along as of the "hot house" variety. For instance, there was a man named Aarons put on the ballot for lieutenant governor and another named Bateson, neither of whom stood any chance whatever of being nominated and they received almost 300 votes between them and that in the face of a fight. The size of the votes may be explained away by ig norance or haste or excitement be cause some people get all fussed up when they go to vote and are apt to make unpleasant discoveries when they come out of the polling place and think over what they did. A good story is to be told of a life long Democrat who always stir red up when he went to exercise his prerogative as an American freeman. There was a big presidential election on in the eighties and this citizen had an argument with a friend on tho pavement in front of the polling place. And he got so worked up that he went right In and voted for Blaine. And he did not know it until later in the day when he was going over a simple ballot and found what he had put into the box. • • • "Port holes for guns to shoot the kaiser!" That's tho answer Harry Gilbert gives to curious people who want to know why there are so many small holes in the brickwork of the new Penn-Harrte hotel. Gilbert is in charge of the brickwork construction of the hotel. He is intensely patrio tic and says he is preparing for the worst. "To be serious a moment," he toid a Telegraph reporter, "the reason those small holes are seen is because we had to have some sup port for the scaffolding, and we used small spots in the district. Of course the holes will be filled in sometime in the near future." In the mean time, the exterior brickwork on the huge million-dollar structure is al most finished. Another Interesting fact In con nection with the election; is that both Senators Sproul and Beidlemaa have two years coming to them at their terms. When they resign a* legislators special elections will hav to 1m? held an ere to b9 held In thrM districts this year. [ WELL KNOWN PEOPLE j —Judge John D. Evans, mention*)* for supreme court, is one of the leaA. ing Red Cross speakers in Pittsburgh, —Richard S. Quigley, captain of the Lock Haven organization of the Reserve Militia, is a legislative can didate. —W. F. Rorke, Philadelphia legis lative candidate is an assistant city solicitor. —R. W. Hafbison, prominent Plttsburgher, Is home from a tour of the battlefront. —Luther Keller, prominent Scran ton man, has been chosen an officer of the Baptist Publication BoarC —W. I. Schaffer, mentioned as possible attorney general, used to a reporter. DO YOU KNOW —That Hnrrisbnrg Is Rolling large quantities of stockings for sol