8 IURRISBIIRG TELEGRAPH A VBWBPAPBR FOR THE HOME Founded 18S1 Published evenings except Bunday by THE TBLIUIUPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph Building, Federal Square E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief V. R. OYSTER, Business Manager QUS M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHENER. Circulation Manager Executive Board J. P. McCULLOUOH, BOYD M. OGELSBY, F. R OYSTER. GUR M. STEINMETZ. Member of the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited t.o it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. P A Member American Newspaper Pub 'iEl 12 j| ® a . B l er n if Sulfas if Building. Entered at tho Post Office In Harrls burg. Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a OMMfI week; by mail. S3OO '*4aSsisafl& > ' g year In advance. Nothing is denied to well-directed labor; nothing is ever to be attained without it.—Sir Joshua Reynolds. Our best is bad, nor bears Thy test at ill, it should be our very best. —Browntng. SATURDAY EVENING, DEC. 14 i GERMANY'S FUTURE WHETHER or not the people of Germany are repentant of their past transgressions Is a doubtful question that only the future will answer, but this much seems certain —that they will come out of the prhsent chaofllc state of affairs with a more or less conser vative republican form of govern ment hs the choice of a vast ma jority of the people. We are hearing very much A l,B t now of Bolshevik ism in Germany, but the recent elec tions in several states show the old established Socialist party to be even more overwhelmingly in favor there than the Republican party is in Pennsylvania. The Spartacus group —which corresponds to the Bolshe viki of Russia —is making a lot of racket, but the Socialists are getting the votes. The Liebknechts, who seek for their own hands the pow ers so recently wrested from the Kaiser, are steadily declining in favor. If Germany puts down 'JJolshevlkl idea and adopts a stable form of republican government, it will be greatly to her own advan tage and to that of the world at large. Meanwhile, Germany must be made to feel the sting of the lash she used so long over the bared and bleeding shoulders of helpless na tions. She must pay for their blood in the toil of her hands and the sweat of her brow. She may work out her own internal troubles satis factorily—and it is to be hoped will do so and very soon—but the world is not Interested beyond that. Ger many in sackcloth and ashes, acknowledging her sins and sin cerely sorry is a picture none of the correspondents has as yet sent us, but that is a state of mind Germany must reach before becoming a can didate for membership in the con gress of nations. We are Joyouely turning to the arts of peace, but not so fast that we can't Watch the kind of peace that is being turned out at Versailles. American foldlera fought for something, and it muen't be muased up by theorists here or abroad. THE MOON BILL THE country will watch with much Interest the course of the Moon bill to make the tele phone and telegraph lines of the company public property. It is an administration measure fathered by Burleson, wrecker-ln-chlef of the postal system, and has the backing of President Wilson, who proposes to take from their owners the prop erties they have developed at their own risk, investing millions in what some of the government experts were pleased to term in the caso of the telephone, "an interesting toy-of doubtful value." The trend of telephone rates has been constantly downward Under private ownership. Will Mr. Burle son assure us that rates would be still'further reduced with the gov ernment In control? Can he guar antee the excellent service We are how getting? Or would ho do as lie has done with the postal depart ment —cut down the number of em ployes, keep wages so low that good men leave for more luaretlve private employment, raise the tariffs and wreck the syste.Tt? These are the reeulta of hid efforts in the Poet Office Department. Have we any Veason to expect anything better of a telegraph and telephone system operated in accordance with the re markable notions of this genius for mismanagement? Unless we greatly misjudge, the SATURDAY EVENING, public-at-large has no stomach tor the experiment. The people are familiar with the dismal failure of Burleson as mall director and even those who sincerely favor govern ment ownership realize the folly of constituting him the head of two great lines of business concerning which he knows nothing. There is no demand for public ownership outside a very limited, but noisy circle. But there is a very distinct feeling against it. Its advo cates are few and lukewarm; Its opponents are legion and very posi tive In their views. Congress, we imagine, will go slow with the Moon bill. The people of Dauphin county and its chief city—the county seat—will not be satisfied with any scheme of re pair and enlargement of the present antiquated and inadequate court house. There must be no more penny wlse-and-pound-foolish experiments. We have outgrown the provincialism of the past. Let's have a real eity and county building. MUST BE PROTECTED LAW-ABIDING liquor dealers of Harrlsburg who have been supporting Mayor Keister in his effort to break up "bootlegging" in Harrlsburg are meeting with the same kind of opposition that has brought tho business in general to its present state of ill-repute. If saloonkeepers—not all, but a great majority.—had not tied up their trade with the disreputable elements of the community; If they had not violated every decency and half the laws in their chaße for the dollar, it Is very doubt ful If prohibition sentiment would be so overwhelmingly strong it now is. The saloonmen have sown the whirlwind and their harvest time is fast approaching. If "bootlegging" is not stopped here, the government promises dras tic steps. All the hotelmen would suffer in that event for the crimes of the lawbreakers. So long as the liquor business is legalized—wrong though it be —so long it should re ceive the protection of the law,* but in the present instance the inno cent may have to suffer with the guilty,. which seems scarcely fair. At all costs, soldiers in Harrisburg must be protected from the tempta tion of drink, even though it be necessary to close every liquor selling place in the city. Under the cut of a big cannon the Postal Company prints this: "Loaded —The lines of the Postal Telegraph Company in August, 1918, earned for Postmaster-General Burleson $320,000. He pays us $140,000. He keeps SIBO,- 000, for which he did absolutely noth ing! This in America!" Lucky he turned over $140,000. A PATRIOTIC SERVICE THE P. O. 8. of A. has set a very excellent example for the other patriotic societies of the country I in deciding to undertake a campaign of education against BolshevlWgm in the United States. The P. O. S. of A. is made up of every-day Americans from every walk of life—embracing in its mem bership working men, business m.en, professional men and men in public life; mechanics, teachers, merchants, physicians, Governors, United States Senators; and it is pledged to up hold tho constitution of the United States. A Bolshevik would stand about as well in a P. O. S. of A. lodge room as the ex-Kaiser would at a French peace celebration. The or ganization has undertaken to make the Bolshevik as unpopular in Amer ica as Wilhelm is in France, and has wisely decided to accomplish its pur pose by education —wlilch is a far better word these days than propa ganda. The honest man wko knows what Bolshevlklsm really means abhors tho doctrine, which is .worse than czardom or kaiserisjn. Education is all that is necessary. Once the peo ple know the Bolsheviki for what they really are the word will die a natural death in the United States, it will be so little used. JOBS WAIT THE MEN WITH each succeeding day there Is additional evidence that there Is no need to have concern over the problem of find ing Jobs for the soldiers when they return from France. The Jobs are waiting—anxiously waiting. Ac cording to the Topeka Capital, the Kansas State Board of Agriculture Intends to adopt a resolution urging that the Army be demobilized as rapidly as possible In order that Kansas farmers may be assured of all the help they will need next sea son. The farmers of Kansas, says the Capital, have sown 10,000,000 acres to fall grain—a record acreage— and there will be more seeding In the spring if help is available. Kan sas authorities want the boys sent back to their local boards to be mus tered out, thus landing them in the same communities from which they were drawn, and preventing conges tion in some parts of the country and scarcity of help In others. The suggestion is a good one. The men and the Jobs will get together if given a chance. The Federal em ployment service at Washington has been working itself into a frenzy of late over the greatness of its task of finding Jobs for the men and finding men for the Jobs. There is no need to worry. The cotiUc* u '^LKKQyIvaHUI By the Ex-Oommltteeman j A strongly centralized Department of Agriculture without any commis sion, but with the duties of each bureau clearly defined and every body under one secretary of agri culture Is believed to represent Gov ernorelect William C. SprouPs Idea of the way the Pennsylvania De partment of Agriculture should be worked out. It is not believed that It will be long in coming after the Legislature gets started. Members of the State Commission of Agricul ture, who held their final meeting of the year here a few days ago, are believed to have seen the hand writing on the way and that is prob ably why they made no recommen dations, but merely worked out a plan for a budget covering the de partment as at present constituted. —The name of Lieutenant-Gover nor Frank B. McClaln has been §galn heard as a possible secretary of agriculture because the lieuten ant-governor gave special attention of the Council of National Defense to the agricultural end of the work and is said to have seen the places where the field services of the state and national governments failed to meet up. —There is much activity in the department's bureau how, but the opinion is that the resignation of everyone will be asked early and those to be retained will be notified of reappointment. Secretary of Agriculture Charles E. Patton plans to retire to his farm in Chester county after his term ends. The state board of agriculture will meet In January, but some people here think it will be abolished after that. —All but four of the counties of Pennsylvania voted in favor of the $50,000,000 road bond issue at the November election, a striking con trast to the election of 1915, when till but twelve voted against it. The majority in favor of the amendment this year was over a quarter of a million votes or six times the ad verse majority when it was submit ted five years ago. The four coun ties opposing the amendment in 1913 were Cumberland, Perry, Ju niata and Union, when they polled a combined adverse majority of 1,- 081. Five years ago these same ment by'over 6,600. With only the counties were against the amend- Philadelphta and Allegheny votes the amendment would have won and without the majorities from the two big counties it would also have won by over 125,000. Lackawanna, Lan caster and Lycoming, which were for the amendment in 1913 gave larger majorities this year. Gover nor-elect William CI Sproul will de cide upon what form the legislation to carry the into effect will take and because of this spon sering of the resolutions for the amendment he will have a great deal to do with the matter. —William A. Magee, public ser vice commissioner, and ex-mayor of Pittsburgh, writing in the North American about a new constitution, say's: "In order to obtain home rule, recognition must be given in the constitution to the face that there are almost as many classes of cities as there are cities, by reason of the diversity of circurAfctances and con ditions. Heal municipal home rule does not contemplate independence of the Legislature or of the central administrative departments at the Capitol. Ultimate supervision by the central power of the state is not de nied in municipal home rule char ters. What the people want Js full local coqlrol of all such matters as specifically pertain to the locality, instead of being yoked up with oth er cities in other parts of the state, which have entirely different prob lems. As to general and ultimate matters let the Legislature rule. As to local and particular matters let the people of each city rule. This is an impossibility under the local and special legislation clause." •—Duncan Sinclair, of Fayette, is a candidate for chairman of the House appropriations committee. —The program of the legislation of the State Grange will be exten sive. At the Tyrone conference resolutions were adopted favoring ratification of the national prohibi tion amendment; appropriation of more money for public schools, limiting teaching in elementary schools to English language; ex tension of vocational training in township high schools; revision of the tax laws; use of army trucks in rural parcel post service and call ing convention of diversified inter ests of state at Harrisburg prior to February 1 to map out construc ' The Wilkes-Barre Record in tlve program of road building, discussing the Luzerne congressional district contest says: "A contest will likely follow, and possibly an appeal to the Supreme Court, but the burden of the contest will fall on Mr. Carpenter. The action of the court comes with startling sud denness and was taken, it is under stood, without notice to the ptrties in Interest. It will be interesting to see who. reasons are given for the selection of the six returns for certification, while the others are discarded, as substantial ly the same objections were offer ed to the returns from the six camps as were pressed against the others. The Altoona Tribune serves this notice in an editorial headed Pri maries and Ostracism." It says It is intimated that every man who chances to belong to the minority element of a political party at a primary ought to be ostracized by the victors, no matter how enhusl astically he supported the entire ticket at the general election. This Is a very foolish and - mischievous idea and "its practice has caused con siderable harm in the past. A pri mary election is a partisan expedient for deciding the claims of rival can didates for the Various nominations to be made. Where there are sev eral aspirants for the same otfice it is not treason for member® of the party to differ in their choice of can didates." Consolidation of Tarentum and Brackenrldge is being planned byhe councils of the two boroughs. Last night Tarentum council named a committee to prepare a consollda .tlon agreement. Brackenrldge coun cil recently appointed a similar com mittee As soon as the agreement Is approved, consolidation ordinances will be passed authorizing an elec tion in each borough. In the 1910 census Tarentum had a population of 7,414 and Brackrfhrldge had 3,134. It Is estimated that the present com bined population is about 15,000. There is a movement to call the new horouzh Allegheny, faARBISBtTRq TET EGRATO THE DAYS OF REAL SPORT /SP/7 — —7£ DI SCUS SfON McAdoo's Change of Base (From Philadelphia Inquirer> Director McAdoo has taken the Nation off its feat by his proposal to keep the railways under national management for five years. Coming so soon after the President's an nouncement that he had no "con fident judgment of his own," it is dis concerting to read that he wholly approves the McAdoo plan. Mr. McAdoo lays down three pos sible plans of conduct which are not quite the three which the Presi dent mentioned. Each supposed that he had closed the entire subject with respect to alternatives, and both were wrong. It is not at all necessary to follow any of the three or six plans, because others are available. It Is entirely possiblo for the rail ways to be turned back to the own ers within the statutory period with proper compensation and rehabilita tion and with legislation which will permit the completion of plans long, desired by the managers, but ever opposed by the Interstate Commerce Commission. The government easily can provide for the national incor poration of all railways, for their assimilation into groups and for fi nancing them by public funds on a basis that will be Just to all. It can also provide a regulating body of experts with worldly wisdom. All this might easily take up the statutory time as at present allow ed, or it might take less. In any event, we ought to settle the matter in honesty and fairness. It is with great regret that we are obliged to say with all his success as Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. McAdoo has failed as Railway Director. When he says that his plan will eliminate the subject' from politics he is mis taken. He is simply making the greatest poljlcal issue of modern times. It is apparent that he wants to postpone the subject until after the election in 1920. It is to be hoped that he has no personal interest in making such a suggestion. At the earliest possible moment that constructive legislation can be secured the railways should be re turned. WHO ARE THEY ? BY EDITH M. THOMAS "I still have some frieiula in Amer ica."—The Kaiser The Kaiser has friends In America?; Pray, Where do they live, and who are they? Speak—for he needs them all, to day! Friends In America? Are they these — The kin of the lads who have fought overseas, Now flinging our flag to the German breeze? The Kaiser has friends in America? Who? They who remember —and woep anew, The deed that was done by his pirate crew? ' • Friends? Are they those the Father land lost In the year '4B, who counted no cost, But Freedom they chose —and the ocean they crossed? Friends of America? Well, if so, Silence is golden—they've come to Here is no place for Liberty's foe. know; Friends in America? Still, I say, Where do they live, and who are they ? Cite them—extradite them —the only way! —New York Herald. McAdoo's Railway Medicine [From the New York Sun] Director General McAdoo makes a lame argument for extending—right now —the government's operation of the railroads to cover five years from next January. It is true enough, as ho says, that the government has not had a chance yet to show whether it can make a reasonable success out of Its experiment, which thus far has been an undoubted failure. It may be that even in the next two years there would not be time to prove the merits of government operation one way or the other. It is beyond ques tion that the present statues govern ing the Director General's powers are faulty. And it is as clear as sun shine that the government has so tangled up the whole railroad situa tion, has so completely transformed the normal business of the carriers and has so utterly demoralized the individual units that to turn the roads back abruptly to their owners would cause nothing less than a na tional disaster. But, while all those truths stand out big and startling before the eyes of everybody, it does not follow that a single conclusion of the Director General is either logical or lucid. The Return of the Soldier [From the New York Tribune] , AS our soldiers return, boat by boat, wounded or well, maim ed or whole, we are all of us stirred deeply by our sense of obli gation, our desire to do something, anything, everything, for these fight ing men of our own flesh and blood. Both this emotion and a most ad mirable plan for putting it into ef fect are expressed with rare elo quence and conviction in Secretary Lane's annual report. Anything but a statistical digest is this unusual document. It is for every American to real and enjoy. Here, for in stance, is Mr. Lane's picture of the soldier's point of view: "And in their look will be a query, one though over in the trench at night and on the long, slow 'slog, slog, slog' of the day's march: 'What is my life to be when I get home? Am I to go hustling for a job or. will the old place be mine? But .if a girl has that place and wishes to be her own mistress in the future —what then? School? Oh, I can't go back to school. When I left I was only twenty-one, but now I'm thirty-one. And I have lived with men, fought with them, been sometimes bested by them, learned to know them in all their many littlenesses and their great goodnesses. 1 am back now, back for a man's life. This America that called me out has called me back, and it will have something for me to do. N Now, what is to be my chance?' " Young and old, the returned sol Have Ceased to Function [From the Wilkes-Barre Record] Any fair-minded person will make allowance for the fact that in pre paring for and conducting a war of the proportions that we have experi enced, mistakes are inevitable. For the most part' President Wilson re tained at the head of departments men who had been chosen for peace ful duties, unacquainted with many of the tremendous new problems that canie to the fore. Under the best of conditions mis takes would have been unavoidable, but there have been some mistakes for which it is impossible to rake up an intelligent excuse. They do not pertain so much to the conduct of the war as to the accommodations that mean so much to those who are tn the war and to the anxious peo ple they left behind. There seems to be no rational , ex cuse whatever for the delay In send ing out pay checks to tens of thou sands of dependents of soldiers and sailors for whom the government promised that provision would be made. Some of the newspapers print heatrcnding stories of suffering where wives, children and aged par ents have looked day after day in vain for the remittances that neves come. It is a*, hard thing for these people, who never have been sub jects of charity, to be compelled to appeal to charity for the aid that is their due from the government. An appropriation was made to supple ment the amounts to be deducted from the pay of the men, but it is held up somewhere, and the only explanation given is that the work is so far behind that it cannot be reach ed. Yet we read of thousands of clerks in the department officers do ing less than half the work they would be compelled to do in private employment. . There has been a la mentable lack <*f efficient manage ment somewhere. Took Them at Their Word Here Is a good story, from the lips of a former navy man, who was serving under Admiral Beatty— then captain—at the time the inci dent occurred. Beatty had under his command two very "hard cases" of men who were always being brought before him on one charge or another. One day he asked them what punish ment they considered they deserved. "Shot at sunset, sir," replied one man cheekily and the other con curred. "Right," said Beatty. "March them away." At sunset the prisoners were marched on deck and halted right in line with the turret guns. They were then blindfolded, and Beatty order ed one of the gun crew to load and Ore. It is impossible to train any of a boat's guns on its own deck, but the men forgot this in the excitement of the moment. The shock cured them, and they never troubled Beattv again.—Answers, London. dier faces exactly this problem. He has given up the boy's normal prog ress or, if he is older, he has broken his lifework in a fashion most difficult to restore. This he has done for the country of us all. How can we help these men to come into their own again? The plan which Mr. Lane proposes is to offer every soldier a chance to gain a 'farm of his own for the working of it. The national land, which was used to reward the vet -1 erans of the Civil War, is practical i ly exhausted. But other free land • can be obtained in abundance—by i irrigation, by drainage, by develop ing cut-over lands, by arrangement , with the states for the cultivation . of abandoned farm land. There is , no question of the land, there is no question of the urgent need of i stimulating farm life. As Mr. Lane L says, "the passion for the city is ' upon us." For our own economic I salvation we must encourage the i new farm idea, of a farm village as a center, offering the best of schools, i churches and amusements. Qpr farm plan, for our soldiers i must be most liberal. Canada is of , feeing each man a farm of 160 , acres and $2,500 with which to lm • prove ia. The United States will not . do less. The total appropriation of : $500,000,000 suggested by Mr. Lane t seems small indeed in proportion , to the vast service rendered by these > men. The details remain to be ' worked out. The essential plan will receive the instant approval of every ■ loyal American. LABOR NOTES President Morgentlialer of the Pa cific District Council of Electrical Workers appeared before the State Railroad Commission to urge thnt the light and power companies of Southern California be compelled to comply with the state law relative to safeguarding the lives of electrical workers. Seattle (Wash.) Photo-Engravers' union has entered into a new agree ment with their employers which sets ti new standard for that section in the industry. It is a flat scale and runs for two years and calls for $34.50 for the first year and $36 for the second, with a 4 4-hour week. A conference of delegates repre senting 2,500,000 British trade union ists adopted a resolution providing for the establishment of an interna tional trades union bureau to secure closer relationship between British, American, Colonial, Allied and neu tral workers, with a view to formu lating a trades union policy during and after the war. The annual convention of the Trades and Labor Congresq of Can ada will be held In Quebec beginn ing September 16. The majority of railroad workers in Japan are women who are doing everything except running and firing the engines. The annual convention of the In diana State Federation of Labor will be held in Fort Wayne beginning Wednesday, September 25. La Crosse (Wis.) Coopers' Union has established the Mlnneapolls-St. Paul wage rate of 60 cents an hour. Former rates were 41% cents. Secretary of Labor Wilson has an nounced the establishment of a wo men's division In the Department of Labor as a recognition of the great importance of the work of women In Industry and the necessity for a na tional policy in determining the con ditions of their employment. President Wilson has signed a bl'.l which empowers the Department of Justice to equip the Atlanta Federal Prison that prisoners may be em ployed in the manufacture of tents, canvas mail bags and other material for the government. The attorney general may set wages to be paid the convicts. Metal workera at Winnipeg, Can., are earning $37 to S4O a week. In two years increases have boen from 38 to 60 per cent. In Francq all the food is being raised by women workers. They work 12 hours a day, with a two hour recess at noon. Mourners in Darlington; Eng.. re cently hgd to dig the graves of their dead relatives, as the grave-diggers had gone on a strike DECEMBER 14, 1918. BOOKS AND MAGAZINES"] John T. Faris, author of "The Romance of Old Philadelphia," (Lippincott), a study of the ro mance of Colonial settlement, has woven Into one fascinating narra tive many life stories gathered from old manuscripts, rare books, and genealogical records. The center of life in America in early days, Phil adelphia's story has never been told so humanly and humorously be fore. .1 "Passed as Censored"—"The oth er evening a message was tlashed to us to put out all lights and out they went . . but nothing happened. But before nightfall of the second dark night, we began to hear rumors of captured Zeppelins,and next morn ing the papers were full of four cap tured (possibly (lye), only one of them undestroyed by its occupants, all of whom were either killed or captured. And the intact one was so near here that we motored down to see it. I have never seen such a monster in my life —it is inconceiv able even though the sutanlc crea tion is familiar from various pic tures. Its stern lay on top a big hill while 1 its huge black, glistening body overstretched a valley, its front end lying across a small stream, and its nose almost poked into the road on the other side of the valley. It was bigger than any ocean liner I had ever seen, and' is believed to be the first and only Zeppelin captured practically in tact.'' Dan Beard, whose "American Boys'. Book of Signs, Signals and Symbols," has Just been published by the Lippincotts, was the founder of the Boy Scouts movement. lie is National Scout Commissioner, Boy Scouts of America, and the most popular writer on all subjects connected with the scout life. "Four Years in the White North" By Donald' B- MaeMillan. Har per & Brothers, publishers, Price, $4.00. . The thrills, privations, hardships and wonderrul discoveries of the Crocker Land Expedition during four years of exploration in North Greenland are here told. Long journeys across frozen sounds and wind-swept plateaus are described —the intense anxiety felt by the little bund of men over the non-ar rls'al the relief ship—the hunting of walrus, caribou and bear. A full account of the scientific work. "Doctor Danny." By Rut£ Saw yer.- Harper & Brothers, publish ers, $1.35. From'the beginning when Padriac pipes past the Lazy Bush on to the end where Doctor Danny fulfills his love promise, we have Doctor Danny's own story, glimpses of which we saw in "Her self, Himself, Myself." i Pennsylvania's Great Revenue (Prom the Philadelphia Iriquirer) During the fiscal year just ended j Pennsylvania had an income of $44,- 000,000, ap Increase of about ten per cent, over the previous year. There are living men who can remember when the total income of the United States government was not so large at this sum. No details are offered of the total expenditures, but it is known that there is a comfortable surplus in the treasury The com monwealth expended much less than anticipated for war work. Every item In license taxes shows an increase with the exception of that for sale of liquors, which shows a slight decrease.- ( The state received a little more than a million and a half from this sourco, which next year may be nil. The tax on Inheri tances shows a large gain, amount- I ing to nearly six millions, of which I more than one-half was from col- I lateral bequests. As the Federal j Government proposes a great in | crease in all kinds of inheritance ' taxes it can be seen that this will be a heavy burden on some persons. . While the tax is popular it has the ' disadvantage of being a tux on 'capital and not on income, and to j that extent reduces tuxlng power. | For purposes of comparison it I may bo stated that the' revenue of | the slate in 1910 was less than $29,- 000,000. The coming Legislature will not only have large revenues to dispose of, hut is now authorised to float $50,000,000 for good roads. This will relieve the annual budget for good roads to some extent and ! promises rapid construction. • Sl On the whole the financial posi tion of Pennsylvania is bolter than that of any other state In the Union. It has no debf'hnrt'obundaht reve nues for nil needed purposes. Gov,- ernor Sproul will take charge under unusually happy auspieu. I Eumttg