6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A XEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THE TKLV.RAI'H PRISTMO CO. Telegraph Building, Federal Square E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief T. R. OYSTER, Haziness Manager Gt'S M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board 3. P. MeCULLOUGH. *• 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 nchvs published herein. Ail rights of republication of apeclal dispatches herein are also reserved. Member Amtrictn |gj jg |M Eastern office. y Avtnu'e Building Chicago. ®n!' Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents s C-aSSgsH"} week: by mail. $5.00 a year in advance. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1918 \ There are moments in the life both j of men and nations, both of the j world and of the church, tchen razf blessings are gained, vast dangers averted, through our otcn exertions — by the stcord of the conqueror, by the genius of the statesman, by the holi ness of the saint.— ARTHUR PESRHYR STARLET. ~t~- r =====^; BORROWING TO BUY THE Harrisburg Railways Com pany set a very excellent exam ple for other corporations yes terday when it went into bank and borrowed $25,000 with which to in crease its Liberty Loan purchases. j "Borrowing to buy" is a healthy way to obtain Liberty Bonds. The Gov ernment does not desire the pur chases to be made out of current revenues. It has provided a means ( of term payment whereby the sub- j scriber is to pay for his bonds on , the instalment plan. Thus the cor- ; poration or the individual has oppor tunity of buying now and paying ; later —even of borrowing the first j instalment and of paying off the debt out of earnings of the next six months. It is not a matter now of per sonal sacrifice or willingness to in vest. The Liberty Loan must be put over. The honor of the city and i the good faith of the nation are at stake. We must not fail. It behooves every man to search first his own conscience and to hearken to the promptings of that still, small voice, and then to use his Influence with his friends and neighbors to increase their bond purchases. And It is the duty of every representative of a corpora tion with credit in bank to see tj> it that his company puts every dol lar into Liberty Bonds its resources will stand. No settlement with the cutthroats ! of Germany will be satisfactory to the I American people which does not "in- j elude indemnities for the destruction j which has followed in the wake of the ; Hun armies and her submarine devil fish. Butchery of old men and chil dren, the outraging of women and the pillaging and burning of towns, all these, and more, must be compensated for by the outlaw government of Ger many. GOOD WORK THE members of the Emergency ' Aid of Camp Hill deserves the | thanks of the community for! their prompt and efficient service in ! the influenza epidemic. The ladies of the organization have made dozens of pneumonia jackets and have dis tributed them and other medical supplies where they are most need ed. They have cooked gallons upon gallons of nourishing beef broth for i families unable to prepare it for ! themselves and they have taken j turns in nursing the sick, while their 1 husbands have acted as drivers for physicians too fatigued to keep go- | ing without help. This is service I that dollars cannot buy and it re- j fleets a community spirit of which j any town might be justly proud. The doctors ought to be able to buy i more Liberty Bonds. DID YOU DO IT ? WHOEVER started this "clean the-furnace" idea, anyway? Lead the villlan forth and j let him be roast in his own flrepot. j "Clean your furnace —a patriotic ' duty." is the way the sign read, but i the artist made a mistake. "Duty" is too mild a word; sacrifice, it should have been. The way the thing was worded if sounded just like buying Liberty Bonds, or giving to the Red Cross— this "clean the furnace" business— and just as pleasant and easy. And with respect to furnaces in general, this may all be true. But there is one particular furnace in this old burg that has a temper like a man in the first stages of Spanish influenza and a disposition like the Kaiser at an October war .conference. It has a grate that evidently was at one time champion of the gentle art of high and lofty tumbling, a pipe that ma- TUESDAY EVENING, lldously conceals tons of soot to, dump down the collars of unwary pedestrians, doors that are as hard to keep in place as a unit of Infantry on the Hindenburg line and a draft that ought to go up when It insists or* going down, and always down when it should be up. Fooling with that furnace has cost one man in Harrisburg the love of his wife and the respect of his chll drn, made him break his pledge against swearing, caused him to loose a half yard of bark oft one shin, wear his left thumb in a sling and has made him ashamed to face hiß pastor. He took the coal commis sion's advice to clean his furnace and he did it—but he soiled his char acter. As between cleaning the furnace and renouncing all his claims for exemption, he has decided, if the war lasts that long, that next year about the 9th of October, rather than tackle the job again, he'll ask to be inducted, with the understand ing that he be sent to France at once. He has made up his mind that as he has but one life to give for his country he might as well die in a trench as in an ashpit. ON WITH THE WAR PRESIDENT WILSON'S reply to the latest German peace note is everything the allied people could desire. It meets public opinion in every respect and justifies those who saw in the President's first note merely a diplomatic Instrument de- I signed to set the German govern | ment before its own people as well I as before the world as accepting terms, from the imposition of which j it hoped to squirm by the trickery j of diplomatic interchange. • The President's communication 1 shuts the door to peace by negotia-, tion. If the war is not to be car ried to German soil, German com-': manders must quit fighting on what- L ever terms Foch. Pershing and Haig may decide, and there can be no/ ' doubt the guarantees they demand will be ample and sufficient. It is ( no longer possible for Germany to dicker with the Allied governments) by the mere expedient of dethroning, the Kaiser. The President stipulates that he and the whole German! I autocracy must go, but even after that terms of armlst'ce will be die- f tated by the Allied military authori- ; ties. Summed up, the message means I simply this: That the Allies will not deal with the German people—ex cept as a completely conquered na tion —until the military government has been overthrown, and then only after sufficient' guarantees have been given General Foch end his subor dinate commanders to make it cer- j tain tffat Germany will not be able I to resume the war. In other words,: nothing but what amounts to uncon-f ditional surrender will meet the j terms of the President's note. This Is what the world expected. Nothing else would have been ac ceptable. Of course, Germany will refuse to accede. The Kaiser will throw off his sheepskin and appear again as the wolf he Is. The note, I when it reaches the Allied armies,' will give tremendous encouragement to the fighters. They will drive: ahead with renewed vigor. They, are out to conquer Germany. We must match their efforts at home, j On with the war—both in the; 1 trenches and here at home. Down; I with the Kaiser nnd all he repre-; , sents! Everybody is enlisted In the , [great cause. For *he sake of our selves and our children, wc devote! our whole thought and effort te ! translating the President's terms into; actualities. LIBERTY BONDS AS CASH [ A MAN who would refuse to take , a Federal Reserve banknote or ! a National Bank greenback In j payment for a day's labor, a bushel | of potatoes, or any commodity, or any , transaction wherein money figures, j would be counted "oft his trolley," Ito use a slang term. Paper money, j with Uncle Sam's authority on it, ! Is demanded by men instead of metal money and the bank tellerwho would i shove over a bag of coin instead of a packet of notes in cashing a check for $lOO, for Instance, would be apt to Irritate. Warrants of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which has an in come of 135.000.000 a year and does not owe anybody anything, are not only accepted at face value, but very much desired. And rightly so. Paychecks of the Pennsylvania, Reading or any of the railroads around here are taken at face value and cashed by anyone who is asked in the ordinary course of business. And it is good business. And so, why, in the name of com monsense, a Liberty Bond should not be legal tender in fact and cash in business It Is hard to see. The only difference Is that It is a little larger In sfze than a banknote and Just now on stock exhanges Is a cent or ! so down, with chances that as soon I as this war ends it will go kiting to a premium. ■■ I 7>UIUC* IK *Pen-it44jttfaiua> By the Ex-Conunltteeman | , Plans to name one election com missioner to conduct the electiops on November S for each 1.500 sol diers from Pennsylvania in the camps and cantonments of the United States may be changed and one man be named for each 1,000 in the camps .where there are many men from the Ke.vstolie State and ' to detail commissioners for camps # where there are small numbers. This is the day whereon camp commanders were asked to report to the Adju tant General the number of Penn sylvanians in their camps. The re ports are expected to be completed .by the end of the week and the j commissioners will then be named and likely be called to meet here next week for instructions by the ; Secretary of the Commonwealth, the officer in charge. I Holding of the elections is not going to be an easy Job this year las the men are scattered through 'many units in various camps and it ;is estimated that there are well over 160,000 in the big camps of the country and hundreds scattered 'through aviation and other stations where men are being given special ized training, being organized into United States Guards or for special service. Over 10,000 more men will [go out before the end of the month, j Men will be given honorary' com | missions for foreign service in event ithat it is possible they may be al- Ilowed to have supervision of elec tions abroad, but that hope is very 'dim. Scores of men would like the places and it is expected that the selections this year will be different In personnel from those of 1917. ! —Democratic State Executive i Committeemen who will meet in Philadelphia Saturday to fill vacancies and decide upon how far the Dem jocratic state organization shall go 'into the campaign have been sound jing sentiment as to whether the ("State Headquarters should confine ;itself to Congressional elections or the Palmer-McCormick regime go on the stump. Some of the Demo cratic leaders, scenting a demand for reorganization when the returns ) are in, think the statq organization ' should not emphasize the split in ! the party. No candidates are in sight as yet for the vacancy in the ; 15th Congressional district. —State officials are arranging to : ask early argument in the escheat act test in which President Judge George Kunkel, of the Dauphin county court, upheld the constitu- I tionality of the law, and lnferent ially, the act of 1917, supplementing the statute of 1915, which it is ex ipected will'be immediately appeal ad to the Supreme Court. The Kun kel decision was given after the case had been sent back for an opinion on constitutional questions and pre parations have been made by state officials to defend it. Frank M. Eas jirian of this city, is the special coun sel in charge of the proceedings. The Auditor General's office has been getting ready to enforce the law against which Pittsburgh banks and attorneys have been fighting for 'three years. Many thousands of dol lars will be involved it is believed here. —A Harrisburg dispatch to the Philadelphia Inquirer says: "Of more than 32,000 men registered or enrolled as qualified to vote at the' November election In Dauphin county, over 21,000 arc Republicans, according to the official lists. These figures, are taken directly from the personal declarations of the voters themselves and are the most strik ing commentary upon the manner in which the Republican organization in the home county of Democratic National Chairman Vance C Mc- Cormick has ""keen at work. ' It ia the greatest preponderance of Re publicans known In the enrollment in the districts in the county out side of the city and one of the most remarkable ever known in Harris burg since the enactment of the personal registration law for cities." —Registration in Pottsville shows that there are 3.764 Republicans registered and 1,306 Democrats, a ratio of nearly three Republicans to one Democrat. There are but three registered as Washington Party, sev en Prohibitioirists Kid eleven So cialists. The Democratic candidates can take no comfort from those fig ures. It is believed .that the reg istration throughout Schuylkill coun ty will also show big gains by the Republicans. —"Senators Sproul andßeidleman. the Republican candidates for Gov ernor and Lieutenant-Governor, and Representative James F. Woodward, nominee for Secretary of Internal Affairs, will sweep the county with the largest pluralities in the history of the party for state candidates. They will more than repeat the vote cast for Colonel Roosevelt for Presi dent," is a Schuylkill prediction. "For Congress, John Reber, .of Pottsville, the Republican, is gain ing In popularity every day. He is making a campaign without any bombast." i ONLY BY SURRENDER [From the New York Times] ! No armistice can be granted to Germany on the terms she proposes. They would allow her to extricate her armies from positions growing every day more perilous, where ini jmense losses or actual destruction i confronts them. They would permit | her to withdraw in safety her men ,and material of war to .new and much shorter lines of defense, where, •employing every moment of the re jspite in reorganization, her dimlnish 'ed man-power could be much more • effectively employed to resist the 'enemy's advance. Incalculable mili tary advantage would accrue to her ifrom the cessation of arms at this ! time. I Surrender, not an armistice, must !be the condition precedent to any Italk about peace. Let Germany give 'guarantees that by withdrawal from invaded territory she means with drawal from the war, disarmament, demobilisation, that she confesses defeat, has no purpose to resume hostilities. Let her give up Metz and Strassburg to be occupied by allied garrison forces. Metz is in Lorraine, Strassburg in Alsace. There can be no peace, there should be no arm istice, until the two provinces, both ! fortresses, have been restored to France. But It must be an armistice on land and sea. Let Germany give her navy, with all her submarines, into the keeping of the United States and the nations associated with us in the war, to be held in trust subject to the decree of inter national disarmament and to the re quirements of the League of Nations for a naval police force. Bulgaria Got Awake [Kansas City Star.] The Dusseldorfer Nachrlchten de clares that Germany's alliance with Bulgaria "was a mistake.'' That's what Bulgaria discovered. t PS '; ' \ WXHWSBTJRG ''jfljftl TELJEGIC&PH AIN'T IT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEELm ... ... ... By BRIGGS WHEN YOU'VE WRITTEN * To -Aim© One OAY HE C*LifS Ytev - AiMO V oo imagine HE S A AN UNKNOWN Jackie FOR ANO m-JVCOMNSWI AGES Also iYbU HAVEN'T THE slightest. .IDEA OP. MIS LOOKS ~ tv/eRY ™'NG I . * AMD You r SIT ALL AFTERNOON -AND \VH6-lO HS S OH ~ I T A CALLING NfouRSELF * A a,s HANDSOMS AS AN (JR-R-RAND UYTLe FOOL •• * .ARROVN COLLAR AD /. AND ' GLOR-R-a-w JW| THE COM'ING ELECTION [Philadelphia Inquirer] "We are coming close to the November election and we have had comparatively little campaigning so far as the Re publican candidates are conern ed. War conditions are chiefly re sponsible for this state of affairs, i Senator Sproul set the pace when ihe deliberately ceased to work for his election in order to give all of his time and labor to .the promot ing of the Fourth Liberty Loan. It was the proper and the patri otic thing to do, but this does not mean that we are not to pay any attention to the political campaign. On the contrary, the moment the i ! bond campaign is ended it will be necessary *o go into* the state con gest with vigor. Indeed, good citi i zens must make up their minds' I that the issues of the day are of su ' preme importance and that it is es ; sential for the good of the people : that a Republican Governor in the I j person of Mr. Sproul shall be ielected. i "It is estimated that the registra l tlon of voters in Philadelphia this 1 fall will show a decrease of about ; 35,000 as compared with the fig i ures of last year. It is not hard |to understand this falling off, be- I cause there have been, approxi mately, 35.000 drafted men sent from this city into the camps and •over there' in the last twelve months. None of the men abroad will be given the opportunity of voting, and for that reason the duty of those who are still "back home' becomes all the more imperative. "This means hard work for 11 of j the county committees, because it is j essential that the full vote be gotten , out on election day. With the re- j duced registration every voter is go-1 ing to count. There is no doubt about the feeling of the vast major ity of the voters in Pennsylvania but it will not do to let the election |go by default." A MAD WORLD [From Christian Science Monthly] Fear is the most prolific source of evil. Of course if fear were under stood in its full metaphysical signi ficance. it would be understood to be the provoking cause of all evil i of every sort. But even from the ' . ordinary point of view of the world. I fear, when it communicates itself to numbers, is capable of causing i greater disaster than any other phase of the human consciousness. The pagan philosophers realized that there was such a thing as the fear of fear, in other words, as they stated it, the fear of death was worse than death itself. Centuries later Shakespeare appropriated the idea, and put precisely the same sentiment into the mouth of Isa bella, in "Measure For Measure." and indeed, anyone who knows anything at all of history knows disease was i spread upon the wings of fear in the case of that awful visitation of the fourteenth century known as the Black Death, and again when a pes tilence of a similar nature swept London, in the seventeenth century. Some day the world will come to see that what it calls contagion is a mental contagion, and that what it calls infection is the infection of one mind from another. Orthodox medical practice to-day largely rec ognizes this, but it draws back from the logical consequences of its own admission, and endeavors to shelter itself in a halfway-house, which is built partially out of mind and par tially out of matter. FAITHLESS TFrom the Kansas City Times] When the German Chancellor's rejfly shall have been received, con veying In some way or other, as It must, the Information that he represents the German government, the President could find no better words for his answer than are In his speech of September 27. when he said: "We are all agreed that there can be no peace obtained by any kind of bargain or compromise with the governments of the Central Empires, because we have dealt with them already and have seen them deal with other governments that were parties to this struggle, at Brest. Lltovsk and Bucharest. They have convinced us that they are without honor and do not Intend Justice. They observe no covenants, accept no principle but force and their In terest. We cannot "come to terms" with them. They have made It Im possible. The German people, must by this time be fully aware that we cannot accept the word of those who forced this war upon us. We do not think the aame thoughts or I speak the same language of. agree ment." KAISER SPEAKS AGAIN ("Our navy is holding its own against the united enemy naval forces and is unwaveringly support ing the army."—Wllhelm Hohen zollern.) Though here and there by tempest blown, The Allied warships sail the sea; My gallant navy holds its own And that's enough for it and me. We scorn the foreign boasts banal. We hold our own—the Kiel Canal. Britannia the waves may plow And move her ships in manner grand, But let me ask George here and now Whose navy is it rules the land? We fear no foemen's loud effront'ry Unless he sends his ships 'cross country. While Allied warcraft soil their paint Through being out in nasty weather, I keep mine clean and free from taint All in their little ditch together. No blows of wave or foe we feel From River Elbe up to Kiel. We give the army great support. Our Interest in it does not lag. Exultantly in every port Our seamen loudly toast "der Tag." This custom they must soon forego. Our Wine supply is getlng low. The Allies loudly claim they are The lions of the ocean wide; They send their warships near and far,, I keep mine new and safe inside. This name I claim for them and me. We are the Groundhogs of the Sea! —Exchange. FOOD FROM THE EAST (George McPherson Hunter, in New York Times.) Much is being made, and quite naturally, about the military effects on the war by the collapse of the Bulgarian offensive powers, and the submission to the terms of the Allies. Its political effect on and I the Balkan problem is so great and fraught with so many issues, all of them of immediate Importance, that its effect on the food situation, is nearly forgotten. In the Near East, cultivation can be resumed in Palestine. Already iin Mesopotamia, as the result of British occupation, by employing In dian farmers, foodstuffs enough to support the soldiers in the cam paign are being raised. Along the boilers of the Black Sea, especially in the Crimean Pen insula, and from the land around the Sea of Azov, the grain trade is immense. In peace times whole fleets of vessels were engaged in transport ing grain to Northern Europe. It is no exaggeration to coll the Black Sea region, with its outlet through i the Dardanelles, the bread basket of ! Northern Europe. The Black Sea grain carriers took their cargoes to Antwerp, Rotter dam, Hamburg, and other ports in the north. How much these regions have suffered from the closing of that trade, and how deep the dis tress it caused In Bulgaria, Rumania. Turkey, and Russia, we know by the reports of th millions who have died of sheer starvation. Bulgaria's collapse and surrender mean hope for a harvest next sum mer. Turkey out of the war means the lands dominated by her begin ning again to cultivate the soil and feed themselves. To be sure, seed and Implements mav be scarce, and the export trade will not be revived for several years. But the hearten ing thing about it is the relief it promises in the world's food situa tion. It is not only the beginning of the end of the war but of war's ugliest concomitant famine. Expecting to Be Thanked [From the Phlla. Public ledger] A good deal of time Is wasted In sitting around expecting thanks. Those who pay least attention to applause and praise get most of It. What they never sought gravitates toward them. Fortune, tha], fickle Jade, makes eyes at those who never wooed her. The cat, a fascinatingly capricious animal, comes to your chair and purrs because you have not notloed It. An audience has Its own way of rebuking the enter tainer who makes the direct bid for approval. It bestows Its suf frages where It pleasea It likes best what appears artless and un studied. The Ingenuous and the spontaneous carry Hfelr own appeal. The devices that draw laughter must not obtrude. Sophistication must i put on a disguise and pretend a I charming pagan Innocence, General Wood's Birthday [From the Kansas City Star] Fifty-eight and fit to fight! That typifies the spirit of Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, "the prophet of preparedness," who to-day is cele. brating his fifty-eighth birthday. Born October 9. in the little village of Winchester, N. H., the future commandant of Camp Funston early was setzed with a desire to lead a seafaring life and at an early age is said to have made several short voyages along the Atlantic Coast. Now, despite the disappointment of last spring, when he was refused permission to accompany the 89th Division overseas, he is training an other division of the United States Army, the 10th, and his greatest reward would be to see service in France at the head of troops that he has changed from raw material into the finished product in record breaking time. General Wood instilled his fight ing spirit into the men and officers of the 89th, now near the battle line in France, and the men of the 10th, of which he is the acting com mander. have imbibed the same vim and desire for service that charac terized the earllpr unit. General Wood has no Illusions re garding the war and his program for bringing it to a victorious conclu sion, as set forth in one of his speeches, reads something like this: "The war will last until Germany is beaten. "To accomplish this America may have to send five million men to Eu rope. "For nearly four years England and France bore the burden of sav ing the world from German domina tion and now America must become the dominant factor. "This county is now engaged in raising a Liberty Loan. It must 100k forward to raising still more Liberty Loans and to do this every person must save and work to pro vide funds and to release men for war purposes. "Every one at home must serve while the arfny is going abroad to do the fighting." That is General Wood's program, typical of the man and the soldier, on whom Kansas, in recognition of I the abilities of the senior major gen eral of the army. conferred the title of "Citizen Extraordinary" by guber natorial proclamation. The tievelation of the Hun [From the North American Review's War Weekly] The Hun now stands revealed. So likewise stands that assistant Hun whom w-e commonly call Bolshevik. It would be Impossible to exaggerate the significance of the disclosures which our Government is making of the results of Its agents' efficient ac tivities in Russia. It may be that there is little that Is new in them. Practically all the essential facts have been stated, and believed, be fore. But the important thing is that we before saw through a glass, darkly, we now see face to face In the ipslssima verba of German and Russian ofllcial documents. It Is such a of almost every conceivable national and Interna tional vice and crime as horrified humanity has never known before. Ry the side of. its appalling details, Marat and Robespierre seem humane : and Benedict Arnold loyal and hon orable. These are what they show: That as far back as 1887, under Moltke, Caprivl and Waldersee. a war for world-conquest by Germany was planned; so definitely that when In 1914 the war wea actually be gun, it was begun on the identical plans of twenty-seven years befofe. The war of 1914 simply executed the consplraoy Of 1887. That in the early summer of 1914, before the assassinations at Sarajevo, preparations were made for immedi ately begtnning a great European and world-wide war: for which the quickly-following assassinations serv ed as a convenient pretext. This throws a fearful reflection of plausi bility upon the charge, which has been explicitly made by writers of Information and character, that those assassinations were officially arranged for at Vienna and Berlin for the purpose which they served. That early in the war and long before our entry it*to it the German Government directed the "hiring and bribing" of "anarchists and es ! coped criminals" and others, to cause fires, explosions, riots and other like occurrences throughout the United States; at a time when the United Btates was scrupulously neutral and was on friendly terms with Germany. OCTOBER 15, 1918. Fixing a Date in History [New York Times.] ' SenatoijJLodge thinks that to raise the question whether the Germans "warned the passengers of the Lusi tania,' as a publishing house did in an advertising circular, "by indirec tion or by implication a defense of Germany in one of the very most villainous things she has ever done," it may be, but it is a most unsuccess ful defense. If at this late date any body is trying, as Senator Lodge [says, to defend Germany on the [ground that she warned her intend ed victims, it is lost labor. .We all remember that warning; on May 1, 1915, an advertisement J signed "Imperial German Embassy," warned all travelers, without men tioning those going on any one ship, that vessels flying any allied 'flag were liable to destruction, "and that travelers sailing in the war zone on ships of Great Britain or her allies do so at their own risk.' That ad- ! vertisement fixes a date in the minds of human beings the world over. For we can all remember that .at that time we thought of Germany as a civilized country. Despite her atro cities in Belgium, we still supposed that she was, if on a lower plane than other countries, still far re- I moved from barbarism. And no human being who read that adver tisement believed a word of it. Every one knew that England would not commit such a crime, nor France, nor Italy, nor Uussia under the Czar; and, knowing this, no one eapposed for a moment 'rat Ger many would commit It. It was it f-uVict for gc.isip and gen ii mlr:lt on the Lusitania herself: au :unus ing piece of b'ti'f. everybody raid. l\w far v/-> have travned since that time! No matter what loath some crime Germany migh 1 IJOW ad vertlse that she >as going to com mit, every one in the world would believe her completely and instantly. It was on May 1, 1915, that the gen eral receplon of that advertisement proved that the world believed Ger many to be civilized. Six days later the belief was shattered, nev±r moie to enter the mind of man. LABOR NOTES A few ago there were C#,- 000 men working on ships. To-dc.y there are 350,000 working on ships and 360,000 more on accessories, making about 700,000 men at work on ships or on parts of ships. Standard wage scale, representing about $l6 a month increase per-man, is announced by the Federal Ship ping Board for members of the dock and engine departments of Atlantic ships. [OUR DAILY LAUGH I SCELBBTIAL were like stars. His sister said something slm- COON TRACKS. tPo werf u 1 storm dat was las' nits, and d , Ole woman didn't git hom SURPRISED /V Mrs. B. —My ■ husband may not be highly' f £• educated, but j Iffju* he's a good pro- / mj j Lll jJT ' vlder; he brings I home the bacon. /f|jS, • Why, I thought juU i you were both Dw k 1 vegetarians! lumttttg (Etjat It record and tradition are any thing to steer by HArisburg should meet the call made upon Its people by the national government for funds. Readers of this column are familiar with the part that the ham let which grew up about John Har ris' Ferry and developed into the Capitol city of the second state In the Union has played In American history and how its sons not only fought the Indians and the French In western Pennsylvania and left their bones from Quebec to Savan nah In the Revolution, but have given of their lives in every war II and in every country wherein the Stars and Stripes have been lifted In battle. And the men who have stayed at home have pledged their money in equally patriotic fashion. The residents of this district loaned their money to the Congress at a time when such an act was classed as treason by the British govern ment and to be caught meant the noose. In the Civil War they loaned money when Lee's army was almost In sight of the Capitol and confis cation of property would have been the result had the' Southern army crossed the Susquehanna. They have met the call in times more fiery thnn those of to-day and when the demand was almost as great in proportion to wealth here as at present. Just as an illustration of the spirit which animated the Founder of Har rlsburg this well-authenticated story mfiy be told from the memoirs of George Washington Harris, who lived until a comparatively few years ago and whose recollections of his dis tinguished forefather were first hand. "When Independence was first agitated," wrote Mr. Harris, "John Harris thought the Declaration premature, but when Independence was declared he promptly espoused the cause." Just what this meant may be understood when it is stated that Harris was the richest man in this neighborhood. He was the leading man and looked up to by settlers and Indians alike. When he made his decision there were no Tories left in the neighborhood. When the Philadelphia newspapers containing the Declaration of 1776 arrived at the Ferry Mr. Harris writes that John Harris took his mother aside and in the presence of one of his sons read that docu ment to her. His mother was the wife of the man who had estab lished the Ferry and the son was the first white child born on the banks of the Susquehanna. "When he concluded the reading" wrote George Washington Harris upon whom the recital of this family scene (made a great impression, "he ob j served that the 'act was now done' land that the war 'in which we are I about to- engage can not be carried on without money.' Addressing his mother he said 'Now, we have 3,000 (pounds in the house, and if you are agreed, I will take the money to Philadelphia and put it into the pub lic treasury to carry on the war.' " Mr. Harris writes that when the mother agreed Harris took the money to Philadelphia where "he deposited it in the Treasury and took certificates." After the war and when the debts were funded these certificates rose to be worth 25 shill ings the pound. Not only did Harris reap, the bene fit of his patriotism just as we are going to get ours in Liberty Bonds, but he had three sons in the Revol ♦ion, wherein he had the rank of captain and quartermaster himself. David Harris was a colonel and William and John were captains. His son-in-law, William Maclay, later a United States Senator, was a captain. In 1778 when the situ ation in Northumberland county was critical Harris wrote to the Execu tive Council and voluntered his as sistance- in transporting supplies to the afflicted region. When the peo ple from the Wyoming massacre fled down the river Harris cared for many of them here. One of the families whom he then befriended was that of Conner, whose son David Conner, later commodore and the man who took Vera Cruz, was born here. Harris gave freely of his means and loaned more money to the government in these trying times and in 1779 helped to establish an grmy supply depot at the Ferry and advanced money to buy flour, while it is well known that supplies for Sullivan's punitive expedition against the Indians were gathered here and that Founder Harris helped in the work. • • • The presence of Major William B. Gray in town yesterday recalled his speech before the Harrisburg Rotary Club a few weeks ago in which he told the Rotarlans that one of the chief reasons for locating the big ordnance and quartermaster's plants at this place was the well known loyalty of the people of this section. "Those familiar with the unsurpassed railroad facilities of Harrisburg urged that the depots be located here for that reason." said Major Gray. "At the conference which chose the sites for these de velopments were many of the noted engineers and traffic men of the country, including high representa tives of the army. When the ques tion of Harrisburg was under dis cussion one of the most influential and experienced 'of the army offi cers said that Harrisburg should be selected for the reason that there never was any question about the loyalty of the people. This officer told his fellows that a careful study of the history of Central Pennsyl vania showed the citizens to be in tensely patriotic and ready to lay down their lives for their country. Jde said if the depots were located here there never would be any ques tion of defense in case of invasion, that the people would defend them with their life-blopd." • • | State Commissioner ot Fisheries [Nathan Ft. Buller is doing yeoman service at the Pleasant Mount Hatch ery. When the Commissioner went home to spend the weekend he found that Influenza had hit the establishment and yesterday he turned In and spent the day work ing with the young fish and arrang ing the work. The Fisheries De- . partment has been hard hit, Chief Warden Albert being among the men laid up. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —General C. T. Cresswell. com mandant of the Reserve Militia, is assisting in the Influenza cam paign In the eastern part of the state. —E. Lowry Humes, former United States district attorney, Is In Wash ington in connection with the brew ers case. / F DO YOU"KNOW [ —That thousands of the dollars subscribed here for Liberty Bonds come back again In the fonp of wages and materials? HISTORIC KARRISBURG This was one of tho first towns on what Is now the Pennsylvania main line to come forward with cash for building of the line Just as it had been a subscriber for the building of turnpikes.