6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH i / NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded JBSI Published evenings except Sunday by THE TBLHaiMPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph llulldlng. Federal Square E. J. STACKI'OLE President and Editor-in-Chief V. R. OYSTER, Business Manager QUE M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHENER. Circulation ifanaper Executive Board 3. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGEDSBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUa M. STFINMETZ. 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 published herein >ll rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Member American i Newspaper I'ub —/Virraga llshers' Associa tion. the Audit Bureau of Clrcu- KlE.PT3tf!Clation and Penn- IHMgHSJxi sylvania Associ [Hl B pgjt jjfl ated Dailies. 556 ff? 45 HjM g s4c r jj k^' C & 1 KhßSi* Wm Avdhuo Building Western . Chicago, Entered at the Post Office In Harrlo burg. Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mall, 13.00 a year in advance. What a man docs for others not tchat they do for him, gives him im mortality—W'cbster. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1918 . yr-; ■ ' ' COMMUNITY SINGING OF all the community activities during the war period nothing lias been so productive of good will and neigliborlincss as the com munity "sings." These singing car nivals bring together the people in such a way as to enrich the friendly intercourse of the people and those who have given of their time and effort in this direction must realize how greatly what they have done has been appreciated throughout the city. Now that active hostilities have ceased, may we not hope that the community singing will be contin ued in some systematic way? There are many fine singers in Harrisburg and --these should take the lend so that there may be no difficulty in perfecting such an organization as will give force and effect to the movement. These things do not happen, as many people suppose. There are always in the background agencies at work which lead to the results which are so generally approved by the people. It ought to bo a comparatively easy matter to arrange a series of singing events, and we Know of no better use of the school buildings than their utilization dur ing the evenings and when the schools are not in session in this way. A community which expresses its aspirations in sung is likely to bo a contented and happy community and much of the finer sentiment j which has been developing during j the war will remain with us so long j as the things that encourage good j will are promoted through a spirit j o< co-operation among all classes j of our citizenry It has been suggested that the Kaiser te ser t to Molukai, the leper settlement, hut who has anything against the lepers? GET l'P FRONT THE tremendous approval of the $50,000,000 loan for good roads in Pennsylvania is an emphatic endorsement of the whole highway j movement. Due.r,g the active prose cution of the war the great im portance of substantial highways I was constantly brought' to the at tention of those who had anything 1 to do with the transportation prob- 1 lem. Had it not been for the better i roads constructed during recent [ years the United States never could j have accomplished what was achieved in the sending of an army fully equipped and maintaining that army overseas. Now that peace is dawning and we are looking toward the develop- j ment of our commercial and *indus- I trial life it Is quite as Important to ; give full effect to the highway j movement. Motor trucks, automo-[ • biles of every kind and the general ! use of vehicles In markotlng the products of the farms have demon- ; etrated the wisdom of the good j roads agitation. There are still those who Imagine I that too much money Is being ex- j peuded In road building, but these E never stop to ccns'der the millions which are saved to the consumer and producer through substantial highways. Pennsylvania, above all other states, must open up In every direc tion the roads that have been so long neglected. This city is par ticularly Interested In the William Penn Highway which had tts Incep tion at a great meeting here two years ago. It ought to bo completed within the next year or two and then will follow the Susquehanna j trail, north and south, and tho lm-1 provement of the Lincoln Highway I WH'k >ea ts a* )ili„ r—-id | s '■ SATURDAY EVENING, HAJmiSBURQ 1&9BS& TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 30, 1?1S. . during the war. But we must not be satisfied with the efforts of the , State only; Dauphin county must do ' its share and all the other counties in this purt of Pennsylvania. Un • less they co-operate with the State ■ the great road-building movement • will not reach the proportions which 1 the new day demands. ■ G. A. Kissel, president of the motor cgr company bearing his name, recently declared; Ono of the great lessons at home which the great war will teach is that of good roads. Ask any of the soldiers from "over there' when they return how they found the roads and highways of Eu rope, and ask especially the engi neers and members of the motor corps what, in their estimation, was one of the greatest advan tages the Allies had in the' trans portation of food and suplies, and they will state that, outside of a 1 never-ceasing flow of motor trucks and equipment, the excel lent highways and roads permit ted the uninterrupted use of this equipment. I believe it Is up to us to take this lesson to heart and apply it while we have time. , What Mr. Kissel has said Is simply j ' an expression of the opinion of all j i Intelligent persons who have made j any study of the highway problem. . "Cross-country operation of mail j motor trucks," according to the ( Commercial Vehicle, "is proving [ vey successful, as shown by James ; I. Blakeslee, Fourth Assistant Post master-General. One truck route between Washington and Philadel phia, without direct rail connections 1 and costing $BOO monthly for opera | tion, has in eight months paid a: monthly revenue of $16,000. An other route into Washington, where j twenty-eight parcels dally were. moved in the first month, now shows a ton of traffic each way In every twenty-four hours. Seventy lines now operate over the country, all but one cast of the Mississippi River. Plans are being made for a com plete system that brings up visions of $360,000,006 yearly revenue, this amount' being estimated provided the entire country is once properly established with a network of roads und' truck routes. Mr. Blakeslee plans to rebuild the thousands of army trucks now in France after i the war, and to utilize these also for this work." Tho Dauphin County Commis sioners will be In line with all progressive officials when they get up front In the good rpads parade. And think of George Washington being compelled to carry a Henry White to an American peace confer ence. A PRO-GERMAN IN PARIS PRESIDENT WILSON has done an outrageous thing in the ap pointment of Heniy White, a pro- Germany if there is ono in America, to represent this country in Paris at the peace conference. The President was forced by public cpinion to ap point a Republican as a member of the delegation, and he has insulted the party by naming a man whom tho whole Republican electorate of the country repudiated long since. White, it is true, was an ambassador to Berlin in President McKinley's time, but his daughter married an officer who was a member of the Kaiser's Prussian bodyguard and at once lost favor with those who, hnd honored him. He is no more a rep resentative of the Republican par'y than the President hiiyself is. But if the President has insulted the Republicans of the country, what | has he done to the country as a ! whole, and to our allies? What will ! the world think of a President of the j United States who will deliberately j choose from the abnndnnce of splen did material at his hand a man to represent this great ration at the peace conference who i a personal frter.d of the ex-Kaiser and who said upon leaving Germany at the out break of the war: "I will never for get the impression which I received of the moral grandeur of the German nation Every American who knows Germany will be a fi 'end of Ger many. I cannot believe Germany can be defeated." i And this Is the "American" the | President is sending to "represent" i vig at Paris. Will he go as a special : envov of the United States or as a • special pleader for Germany? And : how much weight will such an Indi vidual have with our allies? And i [how will our allies regard a Wesl ! dent who displays such a lack of t common sense? | No wonder McAdoo got out of the } Cabinet. ( The American people at the No ' vember elections showed themselves j to be out of patience with Mr. Wilson I and his policies. They are being . forced to a place where their lack of patience will be replaced by Indigna tion and disgust. It is admitted that Harrisburg does not pay its policemen enough, but then, on the other hand, some of the policemen are not giving evidence of earning vc-rv much. Those who let vice flourish under their very noses, for example. Good pay and good .ser vice should go hand in hand. Harrisburg manufacturers and busi ness people are more than pleased ; with the outlook and we may expect I the city and all of Central Pennsylva- I nla to move forward toward Its ulti mate development as the very heart i~ m Industrial and manufacturing State. Those who have held up enter prises for the period of the war are now getting busy, and the architects tell us that scores of projects wh|ch were suspended are going forward with a rush. Is President "Wilson playing for the German voteT If so, he is welcome to it. The weather in Peru appears to be Chile. foUtlcsU ""ptn.itcviuG.ii.4a. By the Ex-Committer man Terms of twenty-five of the mem bers of the State Senate and of the whole of the membership of 207 members of the House of Represen tatives of Pennsylvania will begin to niorrow. Under the constitution the terms of the legislators begin on "the first day of December next after their election." although the ' General Assembly in which they I were chosen to sit will not begin un j til the first Tuesday of January. I The members of the State Senate j chosen to fill vacancies were selected at special elections according to law. j They will serve out the terms of the men who died or resigned. The time for filing expense ac counts for the recent election will expire Thursday, December 5, under ' the act of 1906. A. number of the I state candidates and the state com j mittees have to file their statements. —Owing to the delay of counties I in filing their official returns of the i election of November 5 at the State | Department the computation of the official vote of Pennsylvania will be thrown into December. George D. Thorn, Acting Deputy Secretary I of the Commonwealth, has sent word to the officials of some of the smaller counties asking them to expedite their returns as the official soldier vote was available last Friday. The big counties, including Philadelphia and Allegheny, have filed their re turns. In addition'to the vote for Senate officials the vote on two con stitutional amendment propositions must be computed. —Men active in • political affairs I and who keep rods and reels on' hand for a summer's fishing are of [ the opinion that Nathan R. Buller, the State Commissioner of Fisheries, I is pretty certain to be appointed for j a full term as Commissioner by Gov- ' ernor-elect William C. Sproul when i he takes office. Mr. Buller, who was one of the eight state ofiicials who failed of confirmation in the last Senate because of antagonisms, has attended strictly to business since his appointment last July and from all accounts there has been recog nition of his ability in influential quarters. —fudging from tho manner in which applications for rooms are! coming to Harrisburg there is going! to be a record-breaking crowd at I the inauguration of William C. dproul as governor on January 21 and the new Penn-Harris hotel, which is to be opened in time for ihe assembling of the Degislature will do much toward relieving the | shortage of hotel accommodations in Harrisburg. The reservations i are being made from every section of the state and many prominent men are coming for the ceremonies. —State S major William E. Crow, the chairman of the legislative com mittee in charge which will be named, will soon meet the new gov ernor to talk about the details of the day's program. There will bo i Dig parade and many features. The parade will probably break the record for size. Returning troops and Reserve Militia nmy participate as well as clubs and other organi zations. —Capitol Hill is unusually filled with rumors of changes and 3hifts in the State government these days, but little real information lias come here. The belief is generally that there will be a general reorganization of departments on Capitol Hill to bring them down to date. Interest Is high in the reports about the Labor and industry and Agriculture departments. —One story heard liero is that Thomas J. Dynch, secretary of the State Water Supply Commission, will be one of the deputy attorney generals. Mr. Lynch was executive! clerk under two governors and is a. member of the Dauphin bar. —The Capitol people are awaiting | a visit from the new governor which | it is believed he will pay before the session opens. —The Pittsburgh Post indulges in this editorial on the War Service Hoard: "Governor Brumbaugh may iliink he Is going to enjoy a $19,000 pension after his term of office, but tho sentiment arising indicates that the people have other notions about it." Mr. Wilson's Denunciation Woodrow Wilson, when president of Princeton University, wrote a book entitled "Cnnstttutional Government of the United States." It was first published in 1908, and reprinted in 1911 and 1918. The following quota tion is taken from page 71 of that book:. There are illegitimate means by which the President may influence the action of Congress. He may bar gain with members, not only with re gard to appointments, but also with regards to legislative meusures, Ho i may use his local "patronage to assist members to get or retain their seats; hemay Interpose his powerful influ ence in one covert way or another in contests for places in the Senate. He may also overbear Congress by arbi trary acts which Ignore the laws or virtually override them. He may even substitue his own orders for acts of Congress which he wants but cannnot get. "Such things are not only deeply Immoral; they are destructive of the fudamental understanding of consti tutional government and therefore of free public opinion, to bring thoir own punshment, to destroy both the fame and the power of the man who dares to pracitce them. Inspiration Night and Day A North Carolina newspaper says "all poets who love to drink in sun shine ought to spend the fall in the mountains." These mountains are also wonderful .in the f%U for such poets as love to drink in moon shine. —Houston Post. Where For, Berger? Since Victor Berger, Socialist con gressman-elect from Milwaukee, is reported under indictment on charges Involving violation of the espionage law, it appears Just a lit tle uncertain whether he will go to Congress or to tail,—New Orleans Tunes-Picayune THAT GUILTIEST FEELING By BRIGGS VJHCM Yoo ARC OUT ou Tue IAPFV II- 1 Got-F COUR&6 _ (CADpYLGSS) I lU"* 1 - \ | rORO / Ybu REALH6 You HAUE Btreu t " " "—' *"* l v.r J &oS"PeoDeD uot* NOM- payment ' I | THINK HE"'3 \ ) OP Vtou.R House ACCOOMT AMD I PoSTSTD Too i \ f) AM . AWFUL assessment. YOO V fa Feeu A 5 TMOU6H Yoo uiefte id hdt.yd eot?RYSoDY'S AfJD THEY Y (Pb\ K fffi/WJ _ ALL URSE You- , 1 | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | SHOULD AMERICA SEND FOOD TO GERMANY Just now a most difficult issue is thrust upon the American people for solution. For the first time in our national life we have fought in a foi eign war. We entered the unpara .eiled conflict just in time to turn the defeat of our Allies to a glorious vic- Yoi four years we produced and .allied to the four corners of the earth foods and medicines to save mil- i lions of people from starvation. j For four years we have met tnc nost cruel and gigantic forces of evil .hat sought to defeat our charitable work and further made war on us. After a preparation for fort> years, Germany suddenly launched themost cruel, heartless war on innocent na Rons' that the world ever witnessed. She began at once to Kill, pillage, 'rope, murder, rob. burn po.son and destroy life, property. the ' helpless, aged and young alike, bhe violated all laws of "('ods' as Si rrr "ji Sim *he S c Y"i "'Kanim-ad/' shei asks of her , [his °s C u r r? an j y uSlice is our duty. What; the one great defini- 1 tlon. -'JusUcc is the granting to each, P T.°sUceVan aUHbute of God. In repentencc; then „ hou ia repent. Is right that Germany h< hr_ r rg _ her victims from whom has^ot^repented. is°n 0 a y'et l( ih pj r st' n ?et "me^iKk to be fed l.y u "' ne'ed to be fed does Germany • e *\- KO s ),e reaped now?. Three m own soil, harvests °f France and Kus "la d f Sh? eries for broad right after her harvest time. , nj? w hy does If Germany 'sK'am^ng ;rlcans she. not a PP l ° , _ j an q and ask are lining within her Know them to plead her case. Belgians, Armenians an!i French? „„-/wer be led in pref ere^ce 11 to h" innocent victim he has bl There* brought is not for ur/l'r'crfmeT alone, but tlr axrif" ■-, iuirai pVt" •!>' ir " m the righteous first j the guUty. He sa . thP Kingdom.' Then\o'?he' wicked he said. "Depart from nae." Belgium, France. Sntil K they change in mind, heart and soul ' <5 B. BIDIiOCK. , Pastor M. E. Church. Marysville. Ps- AN APPEAL F ( °hh|STMAS GIFTS „ KoHS andl former rtud;nts ar l lifers in Rosenwald school. ? jiiLtriluited among the colored his disti South roanv Christ- Ohlld ?membrances of one kind and TTiaj v,or which have been sent to us for* that purpose by generous friends of rmHf -Mnred 'people of the rural dls .rlTro of the SouUb I *'•* to say. £ ,i Hv*n freely of their meager re -J. as well as of their time, to .ources, as weii wa| . reUef move . help In the • f t hem. this has ment .' Jf,eh sacrifice and privation ""fi 1 ". 1 many such homes and others, and In many ,jttle to remind the iilff™ 2r .K I.PP% Chrlotmft, .... cee Institute 10 cu. o(ir m in.nrmed ary thrown. U) .irri child ran and to take .pains to see that thev reach those who are worthy. !n tVihitilne them over as wtfie a sec d'stributtng ut)l ag possible, tion of the ' h-tnoever, no matter Anything whatsoever. a home which otherwise might he neg cMed at the Christmas season, lected at i trll lv yours. R R. MOTON. Principal. Tuskegce Institute. Alabama. Only One Flag There is room in tills country for only ono flag, and that is the flag of the republic of the United States. When four million soldiers from over here and over there return to civil Mlfe raising any banner antagonis tic to tho flag these men have fought for is not going to be the favorite outdoor sport of the people who be lieve in safety first.—National Re , publican. Liquid Fire and the Huns A FORMER Harrisburg Tele-| graph reporter, now of the I American gas and flamo regi ment, writes of his experiences in i France up to Oct. 25, as follows; "Wo have been In the line again i since I last wrote you,but have come back and are now some distance back of the lines. Rumor has it thai wo are shortly to go into winter quarters, and if we do, 1 thihk that we will have seen the fighting front for the last time. The Germans are fighting desperately, it is true, but they haven't enongh men to relieve those in tho line often enough, so that they can't hold a position very long, no matter how impregnable. 1 ant sure we are now on the last lap and hope it will be a short one. The men of our company arc being called for leaves of seven days, given at various places such as Paris, Nice, and Aix Les Baines. I haven't de cided where I want to go, but think it WUI be Paris. I shall likely about the middle of November. Only a certain percentage are called to go at a time. "I feel sure the worst of the fight lpg is over for us. Out of the 250 men who marched out of camp on Christmas day In our company, there are only 70 odd left, The rest are all replacements. If I could tell you of the attacks wc have been tn, and all the fionts we HUve been on, you would Indeed be suprisod. "Our work in the last few attacks' STRAY STUFF Wealth is no disgrace. Notwithstanding the soap box ora tors Who seldom come nearer to soap than the box. We are not going to esteem such things as great riches And so-called "society" and such Material und foolish gew-gaws as these As we did before war's leaven Lightened life's loaf, But neither, let us trust. Are we to become bolslicvlki. The ono who prates loudly of "The brotherhood ofman," And thinks it mean the destruc tion Of property, invariably will be found To bo one who hates wealth Because he has been too lazy too enibecilic. To acquire any of it. A gift of a hundred-dollar bill Usually would convert one of this kind To the side of capitalism over night. Common sense and the saving grace of humor Usually come to the rescue Of the* American people in every crisis And will not fail us now. That we must reconstruct our na tional life Along new lines. Is undoubted And, we fancy that in the new time that's coming Wc may laugh equally at tlio strut ting importance Of the nian of millions who ac quired them by accident And the unwashed orator who re gards labor As his greatest enemy and his mis sion To save mankind that docs not wisli to be saved, By spouting like a spern whale. THE UNWRITTEN LAW [N. A. Review's War Weekly] That tho President may not leave the country during his term of pffice has ever been accepted as an unwrit ten law almost as binding as though it were specifically incorporated in the Constitution itself. So firmly Is this opinion rooted that there was severe criticism of President Roose velt when he went to the Canal Zone, notwithstanding ihe fact that ho was continuously under the American flag during his entire absence. There was even adverse comment when President Taft crossed the Rio Grande to meet Mexican represen tatives on the very border itself. Had either of those Presidents pro posed to absolutely expatriate him self and sojourn in a foreign coun try 3,000 miles away for a period of several weeks, or perhaps months, it is not difficult to imagine the storm of protests that would have been stirred up. And, to our think ing, the protests would have been wholly Justifiable, Just as they would be Justifiable were Mr. Wilson to absent himself from the country. /I Sufficient Reason One good reason for barring the red flag from street parades is that It gives the police too much to do to protect it.—Buffalo Enquirer, i lias been all flame and smoke screen I work. We advance and burn out ; machine gun nests with liquid lire i and throw out a smoke screen for ! the Infantry to advance. Believe me, j there is no glory and glamour to our , lighting. It is facing the cold stcoi and seeing tho sights and sutferings tho hardships that eventually break men's spirits. This is the greatest game that human beings ever engag t ed in. A football game used to give me a feeling of thrill and exhilara tion, erpecially when our team swamped another team. But war is a different game. To stand out there on a front lino* and see tho • liquid fianio trickling down through i the trees upon the men in the ma -1 "hine gun nests and even seeing the Boche tumbling from the limbs as a dead bird from a nest, and then i seeing them running out of their ! positions, and again hear the big whoop of the infantry as it rushes out to occupy the position, gives one all sorts of thrills and emotions. At times there is a grand and glorious I feeling about it, but when you look ' around and see the toll of the game and realize the price that is being paid, that feeling of exhilaration oozes out. One fellow who came to us recently was killed tho first day up the line. Was he fortunate? "Things look fine just' now. Every one is in good spirits and with seven I days of absolute independence, we i are all feeling like tho cock of the t walk." _. DEMOCRATIZING BELGIUM [From tho New York World] Tn tho address of King Albert of ' the Belgians in his ancienf capital j this sentence evoked a storm of ap ! plause from all the members of Parliament: "The Government purposes to the Chambers to lower, by pa triotic agreement, the ancient barriers and to ifluke the con sultation of the nation a reality on the basis of equal suffrage for all men of tho mature age required for the exercise of civil rights." The words "equal suffrage" are the core of the statement. The Bel ! gian franchiseas it existed in 1914 I was complicated. The male citizen i had a vote at twenty-five years; at | thirty-five, if married or a widower ! with children, he had a second vote; ; certain educational or property I qualifications commanded a maxi- I mum of three votes. But there were ' further conditions. Electors of Sen ators had to be thirty years old, und there wero elaborate provisions : for proportional representation. ! Compared with the Prussian three-class vote, the Belgian system ! was liberality itself, since almost | half the voters had at least the second ballot, but franchiso reform i was' tho chief subject of political discussion when the war smashed everything. It is resumed at the first passible moment and in the right way, with an authoritative i promise to the world cs well as | Delirium of equal suffrage The Soldier King whose first ' speech in Parliament afti r four • years of exile is a counsel and pledge 'of democratization sets a good ex ample to neighbors who aim at re establishing the old autocracy of birth and wealth or at establishing a now autocracy of anarchy and pillage. TWO KINGS [From the Boston Globe] The wheel of time has made a giddy revolution. Into the capital city of Belgium rides Belgium's King, acclaimed by a liberated I people. Over the border, in Hol land, a crownless refugee, dwells Wtlhelm Hohenzollern. That com plete reverse of fortune which we behold in Shakespearean tragedy in the course of four acts has been enacted before our eyes in historical fact In four years. King Albert himself might well have doubted most of the time dur i ing the past four years that he | would ever tiead the soil of his ; capita' city again as monarch of Belgium. A nation more utterly un der the heel of the conqueror modern history has rarely exhibited. Her King 'was an exile, reigning over the remnant of his army in a bleak summer hotel on the sands of the Channel coast. His return to Ms palace in Brus sels is the triumph of a different sort of kingship than that typified by his exiled neighbor. King Al bert "played the ganve" He was the friend, the servant, the cham pion, tho comrade of his homeless people. He shared the fatigues and privations of those floodecL lands where tho Belgians stood fft buy on a pathetic wisp of their own soil through four desperate years. The reversed position of the two kings, after tho shouting and the tumult die, is a hint that jußtice may not after ail be so blind. THE TRIP TO EUROPE [From the New York Globe] The President, announcing a de cision generally expected since he asked the public to give him counsel which has not been regarded, is to sail for Elurope. The reason he assigns is the difficulty of discussing by cable "the greater outlines of the final treaty about which he must necessarily be consulted." Yet tho unprecedented absence from the place of duty assigned him is not to be protracted. The plan is to take part in the preliminary dis cussions and then to allow the rep resentatives of the United States, when the real decisions are likely to be made, to carry on tho work under cabie instruction. The judgment has been general and freely expressed against the President's attendance. He will be tho only official head of a nation present, and will outrank the other conferrees. This will not be agree able to other peoples although, of course, politeness will forbid open protest. The real Influence of this country is thus likely to be dimin ished by putting minor matters to tho front. The President's personal partici pation will probably strengthen the suspicion that a disposition exists on this side to "liog" the peace set tlement, a suspicion unfortunately developed by persistence in separate negotiations with Germany. The President in his pre-election state ment put in the record his convic tion that failure to elect a demo cratic congress would be a repudia tion of his leadership. This was not true, but it opens the door to possible inquiries as to whether or not the President in conferences authentically expresses the views of America. The German problem and the peace problem are much nearer to Europe than to us, and our asso ciates did the greater part of the work, and it will do this country no lasting good to appear in the role of trying to dictate. When tho President shall return, leaving behind the formal peace delegation, the American represen tatives • will bo much dwarfed. What the President has said, witli varying Interpretations, may be quoted to them. Jn tho confusion their weight may be less. In all the affairs of life a delegate may often achieve more for his principal than can the principal himself by direct participation. It is of doubt ful wisdom to make it too openly appear that our negotiators are to lack power The treaty necessarily must be one of which the details are greatly important, and a full statured, aggrandized, and inde pendent delegation is desirable when details are under discussion. As tho President's journey is not likely to have a good effect abroad, it is certain to have a bad effect at home. The Power of Right [By Theodore Marburg, ono of the organizers of the League to Enforce Pe:ne and among the best known of American publicists.—The Edi tors.] Long before the United States en tered the war some of us ventured to express the fact that, while wrong often triumphs locally, wrong uni versally recognized as such co Id not triumph; that to doubt it was to deny that reason ordered tho unj ver o, Was there ever a more strik ing Instance of this truth than in the persons of two men—the ex- Bmperor of Germany and King Albert? Emperor William scorned the Belgian King as wholly incapable of opposing successfully the will of the mighty German Empire. Ho bade Albert stand aside or he would force hts way through his little Kingdom. This threat he carried out to the ac companiment of blood and lust and cruel oppression. But back of the Kingdom of Belgium was the king dom of God; and what is the posi tion of the wo men to-day? Al bert re-enters his beautiful capital, while Belgium is crowned with un dying fame as having dont a "bi/fjer thing than Thermopylae." The ex- Empcror is a fugitivo on the face of the earth. Is there in the whole of history a more convincing ex ample of the power of right? HER ENDORSEMENT "I want to get this cheek cashed," said a young wife to a clerk at the bank, according to the San Fran ciso "Argonaut"—though it is hard Lo believe this heroine was an up-to-date California woman. "Yes, madam," was the clerk's reply; "please indorse it." "Why, my hus band sent it to me; ho is Just away on businesa" "Yes, madam; but Just indorse it. Sign it on the back, please, and your husband will know that we paid it to you." The young woman went to the dcßk and in a moments came back with tne check indorsed, "Your loving wife, Sophia," j Stinting (Eljat [ Tho State Game Commission will not pay $1 per bead for rabbits for propagation in any district in Penn sylvania. It will pay thirty cents which is considered liberal and some men who sought to do a lit tle business with Dr. Joseph Kalb fus, secretary of the commission, found that he was as familiar with ways of catching rabbits as he was in tho days when he hunted in tho Fa* West, for some time there huvo been efforts under way to in duce the state authorities to dis tribute "cottontnlls" In some sec tions where the rabbits have been growing scarcer, but where tiny are still known, offers to catch rab bilt for tliu pin pose were tentative ly made and when the state off'aers euid they would buy they were stun ned by tho demand for a dollar a tall. There has been rabbit hunting In some sections, hit in opinion of Game Cominlssln* offi cers rabbit cutchlng wotii...0 general printing has been decreased, but at the Capitol it is regarded as likely that more cuts will be made. Hardly a day goes by now with out some men within the draft age write to Major W. G. Murdoch wanting to know if he can not get into the service. Instead of men wanting to got out, as was the case with numerous instances the last year, there are many who, having been examined and classified, desire the credit of having been in service at least for a week or so. Un fortunately there are no inductions open now. • • • Professor A. E. McKlnley, of the University of Pennsylvania, who is In charge of the collection of data relative to the war for tho War History Commission, has sent letters to some of his friends in this vicin ity, calling attention to the import ance of soldiers' letters as showing their side and also giving the clue to important events. There are many which have come to Harrls burg which would be Invaluable if they could be put into the hands of the commission which has head quarters at tlie building of the His torical Society of Pennsylvania In Philadelphia. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Ex-Auditor General A. E. Sis .jon, of Erie, has been abided to the State War History Commission. —General C. B. Daughert.y, of Wllkes-Barre, is compiling some memories of his service in the Na tional Guard and the Spanish War. —Senator \V. C. Hackett, of Eas ton, is an authority on the history of his county. lie comes of a fam ily long identified with it. —Superior Court Judge Prank M. Trexler has a fondness for tho his torical data of the Lehigh Valley. —Bishop P. M. Khlnelander wants the Episcopal cathedral to bo built on the Philadelphia parkway 4 to bo a denominational memorial for tbat community. ' ■ —Emerson Collins, deputy at torney general, is an authority on the history of the we3t branch country. —Colonel C. A. Rook, of 'tltc Gov ernor's stall and editor of tho Pitts burgh Dispatch, is in Prance. DO YOU KNOW —That llarrisburg made 6tecl which was used for tho army in Siberia? HISTORIC HAHRISBURG —The so-called yellow fever epi demic in Harrisburg In the nineties had ono of the highest mortalities of any outbreak. Mr. Wilson at Paris [New York Times] The resolve of the President to attend the Peace Conference at Paris is not shaken by the expres sion of a very general if not sub stantially unanimous public disap proval. Deeply as they regret Mr. Wilson's decision, many Americans will admit the force of Mr. Stetson's observation "that the President is in a much better position than any body else to determine whother he ought to go abroad or not." It will be tho prayer of the American peo ple that, in the decisions taken, con cerning the end of the war, Mr. Wil son may have an Influence as bene ficent and successful as that which he exercised while it was la pre press, \