12 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded JBSI Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph Building, Federal Square E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief V. R. OYSTER, Business Manager OUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board J. P. McCTJLLOUGH. BOYD M. OGELSBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMETZ. 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. Ji Member American r ! Newspaper Pub lishers' Asaocla- Bureau of Circu- EIERPIa lation and Penn syl Assocl |pj| jpj Eastern £258 Finlay. ™"if th P55, Eff Avenue Building, BBSS# Western office. 3K2*Sb Story, Brooks & Fihley, People's Chicago, *lll. nK ' Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a > week; by mail. J5.00 a year in advance. FRIDAY, .VCGT7S7T 23. 1918 Pray in faith; and faith is not on ly a trust in God's goodness or pou>- er, but the definite assurance thai ice heve received the very thing tee ask. — Andrew MragAY. , I THE TIGER AND THE FOX THERE are many reasons why; General Foch should be made generalissimo of the allied forces. In the first place, France is the battle ground and the French, nation has most at stake in the war.. Again, Foch knew better than any-; one else the character of the terri-1 tory over which the battles must bo| fought, the obstacles to be met, the| opportunities for advantage and the characteristics of his antagonists. His military training and skill were at least equal to those of any other general in the allied forces. Re sults have fully Justified the selec tion based upon the considerations mentioned, and Premier Clemenceau has the satisfaction of seeing his choice vindicated. The credit ac corded to Foch must be also ex tended to Clemenceau who, it is un derstood. insist :d upon the general being placed in supreme command. Here's a paragraph from the letter of a soldier of Pennsylvania now in France to his mother: We move—really this time— early in the morning. It is Just after supper on a very changeable day. Most of the regiment is now up in the front line and we now take our place with them. At least, that is what everyone thinks is the end in view. And all rather hope so, in order to get the anxiety over with. If we do get there, will do ray best for your dear sake and for that of all the dear people at home. Could anything be finer than the patriotic sentiment of the last sen tence —"If we do get there, will do my best for your dear sake and for that of all the dear people at home." And that is the spirit of the American fighting boy. RECREATION NECESSARY THERE comes this protest from a reader of the Telegraph who believes that "recreation should be suspended for the period of the How caji our people go to the theaters, to outings and to pic nics while our boys are dying in France? There are many who take this mistaken view of the situation which the country now faces. It is a conclusion reached without proper consideration of all the elements in volved. Who would be the better if we all put crepe on our hats and went about smileless with our best funeral expression always to the fore? Pack up your troubles In your old kit bag. And smile, smile, smile. While you've a lucifer to light < your fag. Smile, boy. that's style. What's the use of worrying? It never was worth while. So, pack up your troubles in your old kit bag And smile, smile, smile. That's advice straight from the front line trenches. It is the favor ite song of the soldiers in tight quarters. It is the kind of thing the soldier does and it is what he wants us back home to do. Nothing would worry the soldier in France more than to think that we in this country were unduly worried or were growing mournful and morose. No. our writer friend views the thing from a wrong angle. The sol dier must have his recreation. As soon as they are back from the trenches or the battleiine—no mat ter how many of their comrades may have fallen there —the lads in uni form demand recreation and relaxa tion. They laugh, and joke and play, with death all around them, and thus they gather new courage and new strength for future trials. And the men who are holding the trenches in pnlll and factory, in of fice and mine back home are no dif ferent from the man in uniform. They are one and all working under unusual ndltlons, subject to un usual strain; they become tired and Aervoua and they require their play FRIDAY EVENING. time as does the soldier, if they are not to become stale and inefficient. A "day oft" now and then is essen tial to the well being, physical, men tal and moral, of everybody. "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy" is a truism that applies even more strongly to war times than to the easier days of peace. Bernard!, the German strategist, who wrote several books before the war as to the military aims of Ger- many, and who manifested only con tempt for the British Army, has rea son to believe that the Tommies are not such poor fighters as he pre tended to think. They have been driving his particular army over a large section of France for several days, and seem disinclined to stop the exercise. TOO LATE TO HESITATE PERHAPS the most serious crit icism of the Washington Ad ministration is Its frequent hesitation In matters of the gravest concern affecting the war. First, in preparation for the struggle which was Impending, then the delays in Important decisions affecting equip ment, next the failure to act prompt ly in the new draft measure which the military authorities were ur gently recommending, and then the "watchful waiting" as to Russia Even Ex-President Taft, who has been most patriotic in support of the Administration, suggests this hesi tant weakness in a statement regard ing the situation in Russia. He says: We, who are raising an Army of millions of men. need not hesi tate to send a force of two or three hundred thousand men to form a nucleus of a new Russian Army to break Germany on that side. We shall thus reduce her western strength far more than w'e shall our own. It is vastly easier to redeem our pledge to save Russia from Germany by kicking her out of Russia now, before a treaty of peace, than it is to put her out by enforcement of treaty provisions afterward. We may regret that we are "shuffling in" to a policy of fate ful import. We may ask why we do not send an American general of sufficient rank and experience to command our forces and head the expedition instead of a Japan ese general. We may query whether our policy does not lack candor of declaration and fore sight in execution. Nevertheless, as now initiated, it must develop into a great successful campaign, saving Russia and crushing Ger many. By circumstances and pub lic opinion, we are again pushed into a course first objected to and then adopted. We may have lost months of precious time, and the present inadequacy of force em ployed may cost us months more. Still let us rejoice that the Irre vocable step has been taken, and be confident that our Government, as it comes to realize the exigen cies. wUI meet them ultimately with a* Army and a Navy suffici ent for the task. Notwithstanding the procrastina tion that has been so oftsn a sub ject of criticism, the people of the United States are determined to see' this thing through regardless of mis takes of the past or the future. They strongly approve the proposed army of four or of men and are back of the Administration to the limit in the prompt organiza tion of this great force to the end that the Hun menace may be crushed for all times. Amerlcune will always insist upon the right of free speech and the inalienable prerogative of constructive criticism of their officials. While reserving unto themselves these privileges of a free government, however, they will not hold back one atom of their sup port of the constituted authority in prosecuting a vigorous and winning war. They're having meatless days in Vienna; also breadless and vegetable less days. And after a while they are going to have kingless days. German women are operating ma chine guns on the battlefront, news dispatches say, and yet there are some American women who think they are overworked when they are asked to give the Red Cross a few hours each week. RESULT INEVITABLE BUSINESS men in Philadelphia are making loud protests against the slow mail service there since the mail tubes have been discontinued. That was to be ex pected. The mail tubes were a great invention for the saving of time, and the discontinuance of that service is bound to cause delay. For the information of persons not fa miliar with tube transportation of the mails in large cities, it may be explained that the tubes serve ex actly the same purpose and operate in the same way as the cash-carriers in stores. In former times, it was the practice to have cash boys run ning through the aisles of stores getting money changed. That caused confusion and delay, especially when stores were crowded. Now the clerk takes your money, puts it in a little container, dyops it in the carrier and it whizzes along to the cashier who makes the change and shoots it back. In former years, and at present, all mails were carried over the streets j in wagons or automobiles. Owing j to congestion of city traffic, this caused delay, and tubes were con structed under ground from one part of the city to another. Letter mail was put into cartridges, these containers slipped into the tubes, and they went whizzing along on their journey, regardless of crowds, block ades, snow drifts or what not on the streets above. It was a little more expensive service, but it was quicker. It was an improvement over old methods of handling mall, just as the subway street railway systems are an improvement over surface cars. The tube mail carriers were established by Republicans, who'are always constructive in their manage ment of either public or private af fairs. The present administration discontinued the tube service and went back to surface transporta tion, hence the protest in Philadel phia, where it is declared that even the "special delivery" service is a joke. Undoubtedly, the mail tubes In aome form or other will eventual ly be restored, but not until the postmaster general has given the public more poor service than it will stand for. The Bolshevik! having declared war on America may be embarrassed to find an army with which to fight. If the German fleet comes out, the Allies will do to it what they are doing to the German armies. 'p tKK4uica.Kia. By the Kx-Committeeman While certain of the Democratic leaders of the state are hoping against hope that there will be some sort of an agreement reached between Judge Eugene C. Bonnlwell, the Democratic nominee for Governor, and the bosses of the federal Job holders' union as to the manner in which the party in Pennsylvania should be run after the coming elec tion, there is a general belief that the Judge and his friends will go be fore the Democrats of the state with a demand for reorganization. This was the method pursued by the Pal mer-McCormick clique in 1911, fol lowing the developments of'the cam paign of 1910, and if the vote for Bonnlwell does not show up well in districts dominated by Palmer and his pals the chances are that Demo cratic history will repeat itself. The attitude of the Judge has been a disappointment to the machine leaders who find it hard to realize that the candidate does not rate them as high as they consider they stand in the Democratic party. It is said that the Judge has sent word a couple of times that he considers all incidents connected with the state committee and the platform as closed. This is the reason why the state committee is not to be called to meet next week as required by the resolution passed here last June. The indications are that it may be well on in September before any session is held and then a platform which will not disturb the judge or any one else will be adopted. —William C. Sproul, the Republic an candidate for Governor, and his colleagues, will open the campaign in Lehigh county to-morrow and there will be a notable gathering of leaders from eastern counties. The Senator received 1 great welcome yesterday in Erie. —Although Senator Sproul was in Erie Judge Bonniwell was so busy with the aftermath of his visit to York, where he seems to have upset the whole applecart of the reorgan ization faction, that he telegraphed regrets at his inability to travel to the city by the lake. In other words he was so occupied with York and other eastern affairs that he passed up the chance to make a speech at Erie. —Tork is not the only place where the judge seems to have been getting busy with the reorganizers' men be cause there are reports coming that In Allegheny and western counties a formidable organization is being built up behind the judge and he will go to Pittsburgh next week to add some additional strength. It is said that Bonniwell has the Democrats of the hard coal region in a state of mind that can only mean turning on tne federal jobholders wnen the time comes to contest for control of the machine. —Senator Penrose and Senator Sproul will be the big speakers at Lebanon next Wednesday. —Senator 'Edwin H. Vare yesterday gave assurances to the real estate men of Philadelphia that as far as he could exert his influence there would be no increase in the tax rate in Philadelphia and that he would work to get it Cut. There was some thing unusual in the call of the real estate men upon Senator Vare, they are said by the Public Ledger to have "ignored" the mayor and Chairman Gaffney, of councils' finance committee. —The Pittsburgh Post's announce ment that John F. Short, the Clear field editor, is to be named to the im portant federal post of marshal for western Pennsylvania is generally ac cepted as being what is planned. The Post is speaking by the book on Dem ocratic matters in western Pennsyl vania. Short's appointment is a shrewd move because it may serve to strengthen the reorganlzers among the men of the central group counties who have been ignored time and again in the distribution of pa tronage. —Hazleton and other coal region towns are having trouble to keep police forces together. The men are resigning to work in the mines as they can make more tnoney. —ln Westmoreland county steps have been taken to have the liquor dealers aid in the coal production movement. It will be a test which will be interesting. —The Luzerne County Grand Jury yesterday ignored charges of conspir acy brought by Mayor Kosek against Allen Olds Meyers and Steven Dona hue, Burns detectives, who made the investigation that resulted in graft charges against the Wilkes-Barre police force. Mayor Kosek charged the detectives with an attempted frameup, by which the Mayor's char acter and integrity were to be as sailed along with the bringing of sensational charges against Chief of Police Zoeller, Police.Clerk Nolan and Captain Hergert, of the city detec tives. Only Mayor Kosek and the court stenographer were called to testify. —Notice of the abolition of his posi tion as assistant engineer in the Bu reau of Highways was received yes terday by Walter D. Gernet, of Phila delphia. Director Datesman in a brief note explained that the place would be vacated on account of the small amount of work to be done on the Northeast Boulevard. Gernet was assigned as resident engineer on the boulevard work and his friends say that his work on the various contracts has been of a high character. —Concerning the Short appointment the North American says: "Until a short time ago Short was an -old guard" Democrat, aand vigorously opposed the Palmer-McCormick or ganization. He had turned Clearfield county over to the "old guard" candi dates, and was one or the leaders who carried his county four years ago for Michael J. Ryan for the Democratic nomination for governor over Vance C. McCormick. Recently Short was induced to "get in out' of the rain." Treat 'Em Rough Sign in a Tonopah restaurant: "Use only one lump of sugar in your coffee. Stir like heii, for we don't mind the noise."—St. Louis Globe- Democratj Girls, It's a Serious Matter The scarcity of men at summer re sorts used to be a joke. It has passed i that stage now.—From the Bir mingham Aae-HeraTd. HAHRISBTTRG TELEGRAPH AIN'T IT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEELING By BRIGGS Af Tgro h w/MTe D AND - AMD Yoo SLAVE FOR A CuATPn vH ALuaT ,S SHORT OF HELP AMD COO ?LE OF WEEKS MORE VVAtTED for Your, annual yoo-11. haue ■•**> *ua.-t f-dr T\AJO WEEK'S VACATION) mo O p- OPPORTOME'TIME WITHOUT AMY- GrOCOOfiAfieMEIOT _ ' / /'MI NJEAALY 1 / jjeM) y / \ I Boss / fJOTHIUG ) AWP Finally OKIE day - amD he Tells "rbo To Take -OH-H-h- BOV.'-t-J tt>U ARE A THREE weeKS RBST OW /WTIT A GRTVR-RAND The BOSS' OFFICE Ft/LL pay- AMD "TVieRB'LL BE AMD (jrLOR-YuS k FBELIM* f! 7 • A SALARY IWCREASe LUMEnI ( &L f f j TYA" | l(%^y Sure Bait For Husbands It is well that the war satirist who has set England and America by the ears remains anonymous, else the militant feminists might forget their promise to lie down with the lamb "for the duration." In his "second Book" (Doran), Artemas dispatches a few sharply pointed arrows in the direction of designing maidens. Here is a bit of his advice on getting a husband. "Bring up thy mother in the way she should go and restrain her con tinually. Else shall she hold thee up before the young man's eyes with out ceasing, wherefore thou shalt surely lose him. "Consider the worm. It sitteth on its hook in a duiet place, nor follow eth after the fish. Nay, rather doth it entice him because it sitteth aloof, Do thou, therefore, in like manner. "When a young man speaketh unto thee concerning a miracle that hath saved him his life, then open thine eyes into his, and call him wonder ful. "For in this manner shalt thou re move the credit of it from the mir acle and he will believe thy words. And he will perceive in thee a multi tude of charms that erstwhile had been hid." "Which Eye, Sir?" [Pittsburgh Post] There Is a story from the west ern front of an officer Instructing an American artilleryman to hit the enemy in the eye at a long range point. The gunner appeared hurt, i and on being asked to explain, de manded. "Which eye, sir?" While no names were given in the above story, and it may have been heard in many forms before, the good aim of the American gunners is proverbial and has won special praise ffom the time our boys ap peared in France. The latest re port of this nature deals with one of our corporals who has been as signed to duty as a sharpshooter. He ! has picked oft six Germans in the j past three days, and three of them at a distance of 600 yards. ! German and English Fleets Captain Persius, the distinguished German authority, is reported as saying that the British fleet has done nothing during the four years of war. Perhaps not, in comparison with the vast activities of the Ger man high seas fleet and the world wide German commercial marine. —X. A. Review's War Weekly. Coming, Uncle Sam General Crowder keeps calling them and they keep right on answer ing. The Kaiser will begin to think there's no end of Yankees the way they're pouring into France.—Pitts burgh Dispatch. A Good Guess If the statues of the Hohenzollerns are not melted down now they cer tainly will be .later. —Pittsburgh Dis patch. Poor Health Resorts Russian cities aren't proving such exceptionally fine health resorts for German officials. Seems to be too hot. • It's the Humidity It didn't take a mind reader to tell what most people were thinking about during the past three days.— From the Toledo Blade. LABOR NOTES Twenty firms in Winnipeg, Canada, have conceded the Job printers an in crease in wages of $5 a' week. Every industry except Tarming in Eureka and Humboldt county, Cal., is on an 8-hour basis. On August 6 at Chicago. 111., the International Glove Workers' Union of America will convene. Sheridan, Wyo., has passed an or dinance Closing all places of busi ness on Sundays and legal holidays. Pennsylvania already is in the fore front of the States in plans for mak ing maimed soldiers self-supporting. British farm laborers are to have a half-holiday, this making their or dinary working week one of five and one-half days. During the last six years organized street car men In Chicago have re ceived more than I'tO.OOO in benefits. Russia Betrayed, Harden Declares (By Maximilian Harden) THE world will not forget that it was Nicholas who procured for the idea of disarmament a re sounding annunciation and that the opening of the Hague conference was for him as the dawn of a new life. History may discern in his character many signs of flickering weakness, but no ignoble trait of will * * * If the second Nicholas ever had a program it was to bo mindful of the injunction of his namesake before him—to do on the throne all that lay in his power in order to win from the masses that looked up to him forgiveness for the monstrous prerogatives of the crown. * * • He summoned the nations to disarm and banned alcohol from Russia. That he willed these three things, history will some day write down to his credit in her book. His conquerors who gave themselves out to be the savior of mankind, the uni versal Messiah, have worked in eight months more horror and woe than he wrought in eight years • • • All their attempts to translate the great French revolution into Russian have merely landed them so deep in blood that they imagine they can earn Germany's commendation by reporting that so far 130 persons have been shot on suspicion of com plicity in the murder of the German envoy at Moscow. "But Russia is not dead yet. Never War Finance and the Public [Col. Harvey's War Weekly] Nothing could be more gratifying than the cheerfulness with which the American people are meeting the demands of war taxation. Whatever the Government needs it can get, either by taxes or by laws; and whatever proportion Congress and the President decide shall be fur nished by taxes, that proportion will not only be furnished, but furnished with scarcely a trace of protest. Palpable inequities of detail will be objected to, perhaps made much of; but there is surely no harm in that Of the magnitude of the burden, as such—and it is of course beyond all precedent, and steadily going high er—there is substantially no com plaint whatever, and will be none. In this, as in the deeper sacrifices of the battlefield, America has stood the test without a quiver. Her heart is in the right place. * • * The time will come when the economic wel fare of the country, very possibly its rescue from financial dangers no leoo grave than those with which it had to grapple for years after the close of the Civil War, will depend, as it did then, upon the existence of a body of sound public sentiment on the basic questions of national finance. Here's a Fountain of Help If you are down with the blues, read the Twenty-third Psalm. If there is a chilly sensation about your heart, read Revelations 3. If you don't know where to look for a month's rent, read the Twen ty-seventh Psalm. I.f you are lonesome and unpro tected, read the Ninety-first Psalm. If the stovepipe has fallen down and the cook gone oft in a pet, put up the pipe, wash your hands and read the first chapter of James. If you feel yourself losing confi dence in men, the thirteenth verse of First Corinthians. If people pelt you with hard words, read the fifteenth verse of St. John and the Fifty-first Psalm. If out of sorts, read Hebrews 12. More Power to Them! General March most commendably says that the object of the allied army on the Aisne-Marne front is to annihilate its foes. We ourselves ven tured to suggest some time ago that the chief duty of America through its army and navy was to "Kill Huns!" And the boys Over There seem to be doing It. More power to them!— North American Review's War Weekly. Something an Indian Can Do Of course we don't countenance barbarous warfare or anything like that, but if one of General Persh ing's Indians should return with the Crown Prince's scalp, we don't be lieve he would be court-martialed.— Portland Press. The Master of Destiny Circumstances,! I make circum stances. —Napoleon Bonaparte. forget that The might of Russia, stMl ungainly and like a child, can not be broken from without. Nor. as our generals testify, has it been broken even in this war by any su perior strength of Germany. Only from within has this power been paralyzed for a season by an incom prehensible miracle, or, if you will, by the poison of Lenine world com munism. The Brest treaties, Herr Harden declares, are a crime, the unredeem able sin of Austro-German diplomacy as represented by Czernin and Kuhlemann. "No lapse of years can redeem the son of Count Czernin and of Herr von Kuhlemann, in that they allow ed this harvest of mercy, paid for In blood, to be swept away at the very door of the barn, and in that by their lust for the plaudits of a day they dissipated the profits of this grand prize. • • The fruit of their world jugglery, the outcome of their despicable little game, now with a promise of free democracy and now with a threat of brute force, is that without the slightest need, almost everywhere from Kola to the lower Danube enemies are arrayed against us, and that at every Social ist meeting in western lands warn ings are loud against a people whose inmost aspiration has been laid bare hy the treaties of Brest and Burk harest. Must Keep Our Heads [N. A. Review's War Weekly] In Great Britain the other day the| celebration of the fourth anniver sary of that country's entry into the war was marked by two dominant features. One was rejoicing over the victories which were daily being reported from Champagne. The oth er was a wise admonition against over-exultation and over-confidence, and a reminder that the war was in all probability still far from its end. In France and Italy the same pru dent spirit seems to prevail. We shall do well to make it prevail here. Our perfectly natural and commend able thanksgivings and rejoicings over the achievements of our troops must not for a moment be permit ted to carry us in even an infini' tesimal degree to slacken our efforts to put forth "force, force to the ut most, force without stint or limit." Above all, let nobody venture to cite this second miracle of the Marne as rendering unnecessary the extension of the conscription age. In fact, it is a powerful argument for making such extension at the earliest possible moment. Women as Whitewings TFrom the Pittsburgh Dispatch.] New York, which has Just follow ed the example of more progressive Cities like Pittsburgh in the appoint ment of women police is going to ad vance a step farther by employing women as street cleaners. The first batch will be put to work in the out lying districts until the public has a chance to become accustomed to the sight, but later the idea is to be extended. Recognition that street sweeping is a necessary public service and that there should be no distinction in service to the community between the housewife who sweeps the side walk and the woman in the city em ploy who sweeps the streets may come In time. One thing may be reasonably expected—that the wo men whitewings will make a good Job of it. The long experience of the sex with the broom must give them an advantage over their male com petitors. What man can ever hope to wield a broom to the satisfaction of a woman's eye? Pictures on Transports The T. M. C. A. established a mo tion picture circuit for the trans ports. Each transport Is provided with 40,000 to 60,000 feet of film. The crew and the soldiers enjoy the pictures going over, as do the wound ed coming back. There are over 3,- 500,000 feet of film shown on the boats of the high seas every night under the auspices of the Y, M. C. A. The Fighting Name, Yanks General March, chief of staff, has appealed for the elimination of the name "Sammee" as applied to Ameri can troops. He says that if there's one thing American soldiers don't like it Is to be called Sammee, and that the allied soldiers can't under stand why such vigorous fighters should be glw _ a silly name.— Washington dispatch. T 2rri, rrio, Must Get Into Training [From the Pittsburgh Post] No matter which class of the new draft Is called Into service first. It Is common sense that, If we are to win the war next year, the sooner the available men are put Into training the better. Every day of training lost counts against the early ending of the struggle. Whatever Congress does In extending the age limits it should do It promptly and without Imposing restrictions that would hamper the War Department in training the men. Americans are determined' to win and nothing will enthuse them as the policy of a "quick finish." While Congress it not expected to pass the momentous mea&ure without dlß cussion, it can put It through In a bualness-llke way that will thrill the country. It has Indicated that It will extend the draft limits and It should make the most of it in giving impetus to "On to Berlin!" Hays and McCormick Colonel Harvey has put the matter beforei the chairmen of the two na tional committees. His reply from Mr. Hays was clean-cut and un-> equivocal In its adhesion. Mr. Mc- Cormick was willing to consider It. —Louisville Herald. Willing but not able, apparently. —Col. Harvey's War Weekly, All Guilty I. W. W. All Guilty.—Headline. Which Includes also the one hun dred who were convicted in Chicago last Saturday.—Kansas City Star. 1 OUR DAILY LAUGH BPS LOOKED LIKE IT. Bugs: Run for your life, hen comes one of those armored tanks. ENVY. Gas Lamp—Some people are bom lucky. That fellow has a swell Job in front of a big hotel! ALLIED PROFESSION. "Did you ever aee men shear sheep?" "No, but I've watched my father clipping coupons, which I Imagine is something similar." TOO PERSONAL. "My personal property was great- taxed this year, was yours?" the doctor told me I had a CW Of oyer taxed a arras." lEumng Qlljai Comment has been made froip time to time about the manner in which the automobile has revolution ized farmers' means of getting about to go to church, stores, markets and similar places to say nothing of the ease with which a whole family can be picked up and transported to a fair or a picnic or harvest home, but the average person has not noted how the old stage lines have been driven from the roads by the motor vehicle. One has only to attend one of the numerous farmers' gatherings which are held throughout this part of Pennsylvania in August to note how general is the use of the auto mobile. In fact, the man who drives horses or owns a double team of mules is looked upon much as tho man who was the proud owner of a car six or eight years ago. There are some towns in Dauphin, Cum berland and Perry counties which have for more than a century bad. what was called a stage to keep them in communication with the outside world and their people, mails and express packages and even milk cans and other things were handled by stage which took them to the nearest railroad point. Some of theso stages have been real old stages, too but most of them ordinary wagons! For months the owners of theee lines have been turning to gasoline for their motive power and have heen doing quite well. The bulk of them have also been canny enough to se cure certificates from the Public bervlce Commission which gives them exclusive routes. There are probably hundreds of rural routes served by automobiles now where for years teams and stages were the means of transportation, while there tu>, C , OU n try Jltneys whlch connect £Y systems and have timo trains, too*'' 11 the railroaa • • • P ', an ® voly ed by Mechanlcs- Durg peoplo to overcome thefts of so£fnt? r ors . anizin R an autoVnoblle as alonß the lines of the old horse thief protective concern, which was a terror to evildoers in years here T'l, I>idS falr to be '°"owed , e o re - Thare are some Harrisbnrg f who have been suffering from loss of. cars who are considering the tie n s°thT t A U n l Plan „ ln othor coun! ninn i. ? and Eaet Pennsboro Plan is also being studied. • • • People at the Capitol are now calling the genial chief clerk of the Adjutant General's Department, Dr. B. W. Demmlng. The reason Is that he accompanied a party of doc tors to the base hospital at Camp Meade on an Inspection tour and when they went Into the operating room he went along, just like any of the rest of us would do. A nurse handed him the gown and other things doctors wear .upon sucli mournful occasions and as he wears large spectacles and looks impres sive at all times, the operating sur geon continually called his atten tion to the fine points of the opera tion, addressing him as "Doctor." Whether the doctor was "on" or not, no one seems to know yet, but Mr! Demmlng did not do any talking! He looked wise and got away with It But he has a new title. ~ • • • J. Hillary Keenan, chief clerk t. ?.. tate Headquarters, la nothing if not patient. He has to listen to all kinds of tales of woe from people who want out of the draft and some who want ln. Tho ones who want ln, strange to say are the most persistent because thev usually wish to get ln a special call or an officers' training camp or soma other place where the getting is not good. But the other day Mr. Keenan had a sequence of visitors quite out of the ordinary. He was visited in quick succession by a doctor, a priest and an undertaker. • • • James F. Lentz, recorder of Dau phln county and general manager of affairs in the upper end of the county, is sleeping with one ear open these days. Mr. Lentz Is an early riser, but not early enough for some of the young men In the upper end district who turn to him as guide, counselor and friend in draft matters. They call him on the telephone during the day, at sup per time nnd when he has gone to bed, while some of the farmer boys call up on the telephone about the time that the roosters are starting to herald the coming day. • • • Dr. Frank C. Hammond, of Phila delphia, who was here yesterday at tending the meeting of medical men to discuss the, supply of physicians, is the medical aid to the Governor ln draft matters. He has been prom inent In draft matters and is presi dent of the Philadelphia county medical society. Information comes to the State Draft Headquarters in devious ways. It comes by mail, telegram, tele phone, freight, express and word of mouth, but the oddest one of all ar rived a day or so ago when a letter came giving information about a slacker. It was signed by an ear nest young man from western Penn sylvania who signed his name with this Utle: "Learning to b© detec tive." His chief complaint was that a man discovered that "radish " meant "register." • • • Col. W. W. Fetzer, the Milton man. who was killed in action, had a re markable experience in the National Guard and army. He started as an infantryman in the 12th Regiment and then went into cavalry. When he got to France he was in engi nef,r?' machine gun, trench, mortar, artillery and finally back to infan try again. He was a brave and painstaking officer of high value. Captain Paul Houck, son of the Secretary of Internal Affairs, was here a day or so ago on leave, Ha i4gimenTs, ttl ° Be th * neW 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE f —General Douglas Mao Arthur who will have a regiment largely made up of Pennsylvanians at Camp, Meade, is a son of the famous gen eral, —James A. Gardner city solicitor' iof New Castle, president of the Lawrence county veterans has is sued a call for a reunion, He is well known to many Harrisburgera. —Lester Larimer, Ebensburg banker, has four sons in the army and four not yet of draft age. He has a basketball team in his ily, which he captains. 1 DO YOU KNOV ] i —That HarrfetburgV* experience with street paving caused many changes in plans for improvements in other cities? HISTORIC HARRISBCRG General Zachary Taylor was among th men who addressed the- Legislature m the eld Capitol.