8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 published evenings except Sunday by 4®E TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. i>lrsrik Baildlng, Federal Square E. J. STACK POLES President and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Business Manager OUS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A- R MICHENER, Circulation Manager ■ Executive Board P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMETZ. Members 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 fiaper and also the local news pub ished herein. Ul rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. J Member American Fl Pub- SfflSw Eastern ffU e,^ " i Chicago, Elntered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. gggjK By carrier, ten cents a week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. f> that I could a sin once eee! We paint the devil foul yet he Bath some good In him, all agree. Bin in flat opposite to W Almighty, seeing ft wants the good of virtue and of being. —George Herbert, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1919 SEND IN YOUR PROTESTS DAYLIGHT saving appeals to mil lions of people who are not being heard in -the unfair at tempt at Washington to repeal the daylight saving law without hearing and through the means of a rider attached to an appropriation bill by a committee which does not have Jurisdiction regarding such matters as daylight saving. This rider has been hung on to j the agricultural appropriation bill j by a committee without notice and with no sense of fair treatment for the millions of industrial workers who want a continuance of the day light saving plan which was inaug urated last year with widespread favor. The hill, which was approved by the President on March 19, 1918, in augurated daylight saving in the United States during seven months of each year, beginning with the last Sunday of March and ending with the last Sunday of October. Nobody ever dreamed that an underhand at tempt would be made to repeal the law which proved so popular during the first year of its trial and it is now up to the people to make their protest heard at "Washington before it is too late. It appears that farmers in some sections or the country arc opposed to the law, but as the farmer regu lates his activities by the sun and not by the clock he is less to be con sidered in this respect than the in dustrial workers who regulate their activities entirely by the clock. These are In favor of the daylight saving plan. The first weather report from the seashore resorts is that It was very warm last night at Asbury Parle.. GREAT WORK AHEAD COMMISSIONER OF HIGHWAYS SADLER is giving full expres sion to the Sproul theory of im proved roads in Pennsylvania. We are proud that our neighboring county of Cumberland has furnished at this important period of road de velopment one so admirably equipped in business experience and acumen for the important work which has been entrusted to him by the Gov ernor. His conferences with county delegations and his straightforward talks without camouflage or any thought of evasion have impressed all who have heard them with his sincerity and the practical character of his policies and purposes. Commissioner Sadler has made it clear that the milliqns of dollars set aside by the Commonwealth for gen eral highways will not build scores and hundreds of connecting roads which ought to be maintained for the traffic that is increasing by leaps' and bounds in every community. He knows, as docs every intelligent man who has given the subject thought, that the only way in which . this great State can possibly secure the road system that is necessary to its development Is through the co operation of the counties with the State. Out of the general revenue and through loans It is proper to appropriate funds for the construc tion of main or trunk highways, but the counties themselves must pro vide the means for connecting roads. Dauphin county must not fall back in the slightest degree In its ■bare in the great highway cam paign. This county has been elow in the past and now it must keep step with the Commonwealth unless the county which has the honor of being the seat of the State government ■hall be forced to bear the odium of (allure to mftidtaln lis place In the WEDNESDAY EVENING, new road-making era that la now upon us. Nor must we forget that the build ing of roads means employment for thousands of men, and the duty of the State and all the subordinate municipalities is to provide employ ment for returning soldiers and all who are made idle through the cessation of war activities. Now is the time not only to build roads but to do all manner of public work that has been postponed or sus pended during the war. The com munities which adopt this policy will be the prosperous and contented sections of the State, and Harrisburg and the county of Dauphin, which have not fallen short in any phase of the war, will certainly uphold the traditions of the past in going for ward with the projects which are now under discussion and which generally have the approval of the people. Among commercial and industrial leaders there is increasing confidence in the future prosperity and expan sion of business in this country. When the disturbing elements which are alien to everything that is important in the development of the United States are suppressed and business and general employment are per mitted to resume the normal condi tions, there should be a general re sumption of activities along every line. But the elements which are antagonistic to general prosperity must be sent to the rear. BLACK HEROES SINCE the return to this country of the famous New York regi ment of colored troops the peo ple have learned something of the splendid character of the sendee of of the black Americans In the world war. Their heroism, devo tion to the ideals of the Republic and their cheerfulness under great hardships have embellished a new page in the history of those who have come up out of great tribula tion to have the privilege of fight ing for the liberty which was vouchsafed to them through the sacrifices of an earlier generation. Harrisburg has had a distinguished place in the history of the negro soldier abroad and it is highly ap propriate that every distinction should be given these returning sol diers that the people of all races may understand the gallantry and bravery of the men who fought with Colonel Hayward and other officers of distinction during the supreme conflict in Europe. DEAD ISSUES THE power of the old "liquor ring" in Pennsylvania business and politics is smashed for all time. The House of Representatives broke its back when it passed the prohibition amendment some weeks ago and the Senate ended its misery yesterday by concurring in the ac tion of the lower branch. The liquor interests have been an evil influence in Pennsylvania as they have beep in every other State. For years their agents have been active in elections and during ses sions of the Legislature. Party poli tics has meant nothing to them. They have infested both the Repub lican and Democratic parties and they have never fathered a piece of constructive or beneficial leglsla* tlon. We are well rid of them. A snake does not die until the sun goes down, it is said, and we may look for a few more kicks from the liquor serpent's tail about the time enabling legislation comes up for a vote. There will be, no doubt, an effort to override the will of the people by pushing through the Leg islature a bill that would rob the prohibition measure of its teeth. But it will fail. Governor Sproul has pledged his word to the adoption of such laws as will make the new amendment effective, and his word is as good as his bond. Besides, the Legislature that voted booze out will not be aosily induced to get it back again camouflaged as a "soft drink." No; liquor and liquor influences, are dead issues in Pennsylvania. It remains only to bury them. The Senate Is to be congratulated upon its decisive vote. SENATOR SMITH THE Telegraph extends its con gratulations to Dauphin coun ty's newest representative in the State government—Senator Frank A Smith. The office is one of dig nity and importance, and those who know Senator Smith best predict that he will fill It as It should be filled. He has had wide experience in politics and in business and for 'years has made a careful study of State legislative procedure. He goes to the Senate well equipped for the place he is to occupy and with the overwhelming sentiment of the voters of the county behind him. He succeeds such men as Senator John E. Fox, Judge S. J. M. Mc- Carrell and Lieutenant-Governor E. E. Beldleman. He may well feel elated. "KATY, BAR THE DOOR!" PRESIDENT WILSON declared for "open covenants of peace openly arrived at" long before the armistice was signed. Just be fore he left for Europe he told Con gress that its members would know all th'tt he knew concerning pro ceed ngs over in Europe. But the New York World. Demo cratic and Wllsonlan, says that at one ot the sessions of the peace con ference President Wilson took ex ception to the publication of certain accounts of the proceedings "on the ground that the publication implied a breach of confidence on the part of some delegate." If the President can find out which delegate gave out the facts, perhaps he will move to have him barred from the eonference. fclZUct U\ flKKtlfttfCLHla, By the Kx-Committeeman j If the plans of some of the legis lators for holding morning meetings of committees work out, the House °f Representatives is likely to meet oftener at 10:30 and 11 than 10. The to o clock session has never been popular on Tuesdays and the sessions on that morning have seldom started on time, not at least since 1913. Speaker Spongier has been talk ing over matters with chairmen of committees and some of them have ottered to have meetings in the morn ings which would certainly expediate business and leave the afternoons rree to dispose of bills on the cal endars it is probable that the 10:30 and 11 o'clock sharp will be given a tryout next week. .?^ e i vspa ' )ers generally give the SiKi' the Passage of the pro niDition amendment ratification to Governor Sproul. The Philadelphia uecord, a Democratic organ, says tnat it was the governor who put it through and this view is also held Pittsburgh Gazette-Times at the other end of the State. Although Senator William E. Crow, the state chairman, voted against the resolu tion. he is blamed by some of the wets for lining up men for it and git en a share of credit by unbiased observers. „ The next thing in order will be r 1 ® regulatory legislature which may be expected to appear promptly. , . • b , e rnore or 'es based on what is done by Congress and other A howl is expected from liquor W J °„ haVe Paid ,he f>'H li . quor licenses if the .£? b i" to Provide for monthly instalment licenses are passed and hili W ?n "if 4 b ® Bur P rlß,n to see a •>•11 to make a refund appear. James A. Gardner, the veteran city solicitor from New Castle, ap peared before the House committee in charge of the third class city bill yesterday and explained its provi sions. No attempt to strike out the the nonpartisan feature was made. —Highway Commissioner Lewis S. badler is the most astonishing pro position about the Capitol and some of the legislators say frankly that they do not understand him. He talks so directly and positively that they can not get used to him. " "This man Sadler" said a man from one or the smaller counties who had called at the Highway Department showed us just what he intends to do and gave me a memorandum In writing about it. I understand that it goes. • The commissioner has managed to get more promises in the millions than any man ever connected with the state government and his pledgok of support for lateral road construction are far and away above anything ever known. Judging from what the people who call upon him say. he does it by stating the plans and letting it be known, as he did last evening, that when once a thing is put down and agreed upon it goes Just like a contract for construction. The legislative I.eague is com mencing to take a big interest in legislation and it will be worth watching to see how the so-called rural legislators lined up when the Philadelphia charter legislation comes along. It is safe to say that the third class city bill sponsored bv Representative Wallace is going to be treated with much respect and the New Castle legislator is pretty canny in getting it out of commit tee and started on its way through the Legislature so early in the ses sion. * —Members of the League of Bor oughs got some rare entertainment yesterday afternoon when Represen tative "Jerry" Simpson made his speech on the Shunk bill to authorize the Public Service Commission to suspend increased rates. Simpson's speech was acclaimed as the best ef fort of the session, but his motion to postpone after a plea for passage caught some of the spectators* breath. Means whereby the State chiefs of standards, who ilxes the stand ard weights and measures will have authority to enforce adherence to the standards established by him and displayed in fhe Capitol will be provided in a bill being drawn pp. James Sweeney is chief of standards, but the limitations of the law do not allow the State to take steps against any city or county whose standards are nqt just what the State has set up. Local authori ties have considerable lattitude now and it is held that it does not make for State-wide uniformity. FOCH'S CIGAR (From Life.) Marshal Foch was puffing a large cigar as he arrived, suggestive of General Grant. —Associated Press Dispatch from Paris. And if the contemporary historian will but do his duty, and the Peace Conference runs on long enough, we may pick up our paper one morn ing to learn that : "When Premier Lloyd George reached the council chamber he was persnirlng freely, suggestive of the Village Blacksmith." Or "President Polncare tripped as ho reached the top landings of the for eign office steps to-day. and in fall ing was painfully bruised, quaintly recalling the fall of Jack, the com panion of Jill, in Mother Goose." Or: "Premier Orlando, who is recover ing from an attack of Influenza, was observed to sneeze upon checking his coat In the lobby, reminding many of Lewis Carrol's Immortal lines: 'Speak roughly to your little boy, And spank him when he sneezes; He only does It to snnov, Because he knows It teases ' " Or President Wilson, it has becoms known, has three tlmea declined the honorary presidency of the French Society for the Establishment of Permanent Pence. This Is sugges tive of Julius Caesar." The lives of great men cannot too often remind us of something^ Trouble in Germany The real trouble in Germany will siart when they begin to distribute the postoffioes among the adherents of the party In power.—Des Moines Register. The Proper Way This talk of Trotzky for Czar of Russia is an outrage'to Lenine. Why not compromise by dividing Russia between them?—Springtield Rooub- hahrisburg telegkxph AUTTIT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEELUP7 ... By BRIGGS after You- we been - and By anotmcfi officer AnP BY Still ano BAVULGD BY An OFFICER FOR SALUTING WITH A POft HAVIW6 THE QUER FOR HAYING YOUR HANDS CCfiARCTT* IN YOUR MCUTH COAT yMJiUT rWEt> in Your pockctS % -TF Finally one Pay -And The next pay You -and You Can Do This- You Receive Your Don Civilhan clothes OH-H -ii - BOY !•! DISCHARGE and You se& AN opficcr AIN'T it A QR-T^T^AHD approaching A m D GLOR-R-Roo3 Daylight Law Attacked (From the Philadelphia Inquirer.) A rider has been attached to the Agricultural Appropriation bill, un der consideration by the Senate, whereby the Daylight Saving Law is repealed. It is understood that the farmers have complained of the in convenience to which that law sub jects them and that their protests have induced the action which has been taken. The farmers form a very import- , ant part of the community and their political power is so great that Con gressmen are always anxious to pro pitiate them and to do anything! in reason, or even out of reason, ! to secure their support, but after all the rural votqr is not the .only person in'this or in any other con nection who deserves to be consid ered, and the proposition to repeal the law in question should be dis cussed and determined on its merits. Has the gain of an additional hour of daylight during the summer months been of sufficient benefit to the people in general to Justify Its retention, or has the innovation failed to realize the expectations with which it had been awaited or to vindicate the arguments of Its advocates? That is the real issue and there is not much doubt what the decision would be were the matter submit ted to a popular referendum. It would almost unquestionably be in favor of letting the law stand. Surprisingly little trouble was ex perienced when it became effective. On the day set people adjusted their clocks and watches to the new dis pensation and presently went about their daily business without any disturbing consciousness of the change which had been made. They found to their satisfaction that the I afternoon had been agreeably pro longed at the cost of no appreciable sacrifice and at the end of the pe riod over which the artificial time keeping extended, the return to nor. mal conditions was accomplished without the least consequent em barrassment. It is true that daylight saving was adopted as a war measure, with the professed purpose of restricting the consumption of coal and the use of the electric current, and it may be Tirged that with the removal of the war pressure It is no longer necessary, but that consideration is immaterial. It may not be neces sary, but it is still desirable, and the rider to the Agricultural Appropria. tion bill will be eliminated if Con-1 gress cares to respect the public preference. PEACE "There is no peace, no peace," the big guns shout To drown the little voice that ev'ry hour. Persistent as the Muezzin from his tower, Proclaims that all is well. Yet who shall doubt The deep sea thunder in dim moon lit caves. The green hills singing to the morning sun. The wild flowers flaunting till the ; day is done. Or plaintive sea gull cries o'er twilit waves? — "No peace," they growl! The little voice pleads on: A lark high singing o'er the bar rage blast, A moonbeam on the lake's dark bosom cast, "Lo! beauty, beauty may not, can not cqase, And beauty's thrice-starred crown is peace, is peace." Pvt. J. Peterson. Seaforth High landers, in "More Songs by the 1 lighting Men." LABOR NOTES 3 During the last year British trade union membership has Increased over 200.000. Among the first men to be releas- \ ed from the army camps in the; United States are the coal miners, j Veterun soldiers reluming to Ppnn-j sylvania will flrul over 50,000. jobs: ready Tor them. .. ... j The number of female trude un-; ionlsls in Hungary Is nearly* five: tintes as large is in pre-war times, j Me.ni hers of the Machinists' Upion i in Canada are demanding that they be paid in cash instead of by cheek. . Trolley workers In nine cities hri've reoHved increased pay under u re cent ruling by the War Labor Board. Prison wardens tn England are asking that they be paid the samel rate of pay as is now given to tho I oolice id that' country. ' ' Chaotic Mexico BY NORMAN BRIDGE (From au address lie fore tlie Council on Foreign Relations.) O*UR CHIEF words tonight: I ought to be constructive. We should try to help Mexico to the things she needs and deserves. But first we must know the facts if we can. It does not profiet us to fool ourselves as to conditions, or for Mexicans to deceive themselves. And three are conflicting voices in the air as to conditions in Mexico. We know from a masterful state ment of Secretary Lansing, ad dressed to 'Mexico some two years ago, thafa long catalog of out rages had been endured by our citi zens, including many murders. The list of such killings has now reached five hundred or more. Months ago a great cry of starva tion and nakedness came up from Mexico. Our Red Cross went down there -with food and clothes, found the desolation, and began to relieve it. But Carranza soon told the Red Cross workers they were not needed, and they came home. But the deso lation was there and has contin ued. Now tye have numerous reports frohi our own investigators of wide spread starvation even in Mexico City,, of prevalent disorders, robber ies, outrages upon people, blackmail and graft by Mexican officials, and of six or seven small armies of counter-revolutionaries in different parts of the country, and in open hostility to the Carranza govern ment. Mr. Creel's Rosy Views Mrr Creel has for months been publishing in Mexico City a weekly branch of his daily bulletin of pub lic war information under an act of our own congress. It has been filled with little besides a roseate story of the great progress of the Mexican government toward normal conditions. Yet Are know that in the very last month on five different railroads there were in eleven days some thirteen instances of bandit outrages of more or less destruc tion. We have the Indubitable proof that during the last year in a small area of the eastern littoral there oc curred this list of outrages: Eighty robberies (many of them highway robberies') and of large sums of noney; twenty-flve men killed, mostly unarmed Americans: twenty men and women brutally maltreated (some of them in ways unprintable* and several men captured and held for ransom. There can be no question that the present Mexican government has planned and is trying to effectuate a wholesale confiscation of the prop erty of foreigners, property acquired under law by purchase and lease, and that the United States, Holland and Great- Britain have solemnly protested against this violation of international faith and usage. We know that thousands of the best and most brainy Mexicans are ex patriated and fear death if they re turn home. There is no doubt Carranza is try ing to bring about order, and with poor success. Ills people are tired and long for peace and security. Many of them see no outlook for these blessings at a permanency save by American intervention—a feeling they often voice in private to Ameri can friends—of course, never pub licly. To the dominating five per cent, of Mexicans this idea Is abhor rent, and they mostly hate Amer icans. There ought to be a better way to help than by intervention. What is that way? What are the things necessary for the Mexican govern ment to do. and how can we help it to a laudable and possible suc cess? Tlie First Steps Of course, the early steps are to establish order, put down opposing factions and protect life and prop erty. stop the grafting of subor dinates and conduct the government on business lines. Next, rehabili tate the railroads, now wrecked or on tlie verge of wreckage, and re establish travel and business. Make it safe for men to plant and them selves reap and have their harvest, and not have it stolen by factional armies and bandits, or the govern ment soldiers. But the government must be refin anced before these tilings can be done—lf they are to bo done in a reasonable tlmo or in an effective manner. The bondholders and other credit ors ought to be willing to accept refunding at a lower interest, if se curity can bo had. Claimants for dayiegee ought to. be willing, to cut down their claims if' there''can be public order and opportunity to work. The government owes in interest alone *110,000,000 (United States money) and will need for a starter (United States money,) to rehabili tate the railroads and industries and to provide for pressing obligations. The United States and Great Britain! can alone help if they will—no other! people can, unless possibly Japan.' The United States is the only one i likely to help, and help would not 1 come from the American Treasury, 1 but only from American capitalists, | by and with the approval of our gov- j ernment in urrangement with that of Mexico. Can the conditions of such finan cing be met One first condition would have to be the abandonment of all laws and decrees of confisca tion of the property of foreigners acquired under law. Then the cap italists of America would, I believe, be ready to help refinance if they could see any adequate security for money advanced and if they could be shown a substantial certainty that the money would be wisely j spent for vital needs. Some suchj conditions would be absolutely indis- 5 pensable to a helpful credit in l money. What material security can Mexico! give? None such is in sight. The 1 customs dues have already been' largely mortaged to the French to I secure private loans. There is no property Mexico could sell or hy pothecate, unless it be a part of her: territory, and she is debarred from! doing this by two constitutions —orl one constitution that is alleged to be j an amendment to another. There is no other promising wayi except by some mutuality in the co-| lossal job of financing and rehabilita tion. I mean a mutuality betweenj the borrower and the lenders: some ' Joint functions in spending the: money and collecting the income fori payment—approved actively by the Mexican and the American govern ments. One Way Out If Mexico should invito us to join with her in forming an international commission of our citizens and her own, to be empowered to supervise the expenditures of the money ad vanced and control the collection of money for the payment of the loans i and interest, then the whole problem Mould be solved, and both peoples [would be blessed if not happy. Nor is such a scheme impossible. It would depend upon whether the two peoples have the more good sense more adaptility to new and difficult [ problem, or the more pride of au thority and the heroics of dignity. Commercially we build houses, rail roads, and public works on the basis indicated, and feel no disparagement of dignity, and many limes nations have given to such commissions tasks of perplexing sorts. Why not so re finance a nation demoralized by years of internecine frightfulness, with millions of its helpless people pray ing for relief? Burleson's Telephone Failure (From the New York World.) Substantial popular support will be given to tire appeal of the Na-~ lional Association of Hallway and Public Utilities Commissioners that the telegraphs and telephones bo restored to their owners. Tlie question is not whether there was any justification for govern mental seizure of these lines or whether there lias been favoritism, as is charged in llie financial ur langements which the Post Office Department has made with then). What chiefly concerns (he people at this time is the matter of service. That it is poor and growing poorer and that there is no prospect of Improvement wilt lie very generally admitted. It lias been charged that tho de partment took over these lines with a definite purpose to establish na tional ownership, a plan which Post masters General of both parties have advocated for several years. If that was tho aim experience lias not demonstrated the wisdom of the enterprise. Under privute management the telephone in New York was efficient and trustworthy. In the hands of the Po3i Office Department it has become in many cases an exasper ating nuisance. Judging public op eration bar its own performances for six months past, it is a failure, and furtlieemoro It furnishes the worst possible recommendation for Post master Genera) Burleson's grand scheme of public ownership. _ FEBRUARY 26, 1919. JBerger Gets the Full Penalty (From the Philadelphia Inquirer) Twenty years In a federal prison ; faces Victor Berger, instead of that j seat in the House of Representatives which he intended to occupy. Ber j ger and his fellow agitators have j l>een given the full penalty, and ! Judge Landis, who imposed the sen -1 tences, can have the satisfaction of [ knowing that he has performed his | duty and that his drastic handling jof the defendants will have the t hearty approval of the vast majority ,of the American people. There Will j be no usual appeals, of course, be j cause those who pretend to despise the law, are nearly always the first I to seek clemency and relief from it. i The conviction and sentence of Berger and his associates is not only "a victory for law and order and for red-blooded patriotism, but it is also a triumph for democracy. We have had other cases of sedition, of dis loyalty, and of conspiracy to obstruct the draft, and in each there has been prompt punishment. To have made an exception in the case of the Mil waukee Congressman-elect would have been the violation of the very principles for which he himself pro fesses to preach and hold. We have no doubt that the defendants are really very much surprised andshock ! Ed at the severity of the sentence. ! They huve been using the court room I as a forum for the dissemination of | their peculiar views, and they proba j bly hoped for a light punishment that ; would enable them to pose as martyrs | with the minimum amount of person al discomfort and inconvenience. But | they have received precisely what : they deserve and they may be thank ful -that they are not living in some ;of the countries where the death penalty would have been the in |evitablo result of their seditious ! course. ! It is folly to attempt to reason j with a man like Berger. who con | tends that the war was "imperialls |tic and commercial," that "American" j sim is now synonymous with capital | ism" and that "the so-called League of Nations is simply a thin screen 'behind which the capitalistic classes! !of the winning side are dividing | the spoils." The chief and most | unforgivable offense of this misrep resentation who was elected to the American congress from a Milwaukee district, was In trying to obstruct the draft. Suppose the Bergers had been successful in this effort, what would have hjeen the result? The United States would have been dis graced in the eyes of the world. It would have proclaimed its inability to enforce its laws. That would have the effect upon this Country as a Nation. But it would have meant I oven more than that. It would | have ensured the triumph of Prus sianism, and sounded the deathknell of decency, of honor and of civiliza tion. The attempt failed, and for the con spirators to escape the penalty of their crime would have been a dis grace and a miscarriage of justice. Law reigns, (lie government at Wash ington still exists, and those who would destroy the temple of true | liberty are meeting with a Just fate. Burdening a Bog With Money (From the New York World.) The mother of a six-year-old New York boy to whom a $:i,000,000 trust | fund was left by his father plans 4to let the fund accumulate until he becomes twenty-one. As estimated, I the fund, with interest compounded : annually, will then exceed $8,000,000. It is to be hoped that this estimate takes account of income and other tuxes. But assuming the realization of the project and granting that the boy comes of ago with his inheri tance multiplied, will he be any better off with a fortune of $8,000,- 000 than with u fortune of $3,000,- 000? Is there" anything a normal youth on reaching manhood has less use for than money as mere money? The ambition which seeks to pro vide the largest possible < ndowment for a son is, of course, creditable to muternul affection. But it is doing no favor to a boy to heap up un earned millions for his benefit. Mak ing a multimillionaire of him at the start must necessarily dull incen tive and stunt the development of natural talent. Nor is public opin ion as tolerant as it once was of fortunes made through the mere breeding of money. | An Improvement The camels are coming. Hooray! uooray! An arid condition's arriving to stay. Allegorical ly speaking, the camel wl'l make A much ulcer pal than tlio bibulous snake ' —Tennyson J Baft, in the Kansas City Star. lEbroittg (Eljat is=ai=r=—n , - ■ ,- .J "The Harrisburg Telegraph hai hit upon a vital need In Its sugr-es t'on that a beltline be run around the city to open up the great stretch of land lying east of th State hospital and arsenal propertlei for industrial and housing develop ments," said J. A. Kirkbaum, ©( Pittsburgh, a warehouseman who was in Harrisburg yesterday. The Idea is not original with the Tele graph, it was explained to him, and he continued: "No matter where the thought originated, it is a good one. 1 have looked about this city a bit and 1 am convinced that you must find more and cheaper railroad frontage sites for industries and housing if you want to attract man ufacturers or trans-shippers to this city. When you build a factory on expensive ground you are handi capped at the start, and add an overhead that you must carry throughout the years. When the Pennsylvania railroad went into the warehouse business in connection with its freight stations, as it has done with the new Keystone in the lower end of the city, it recognized in Harrisburg a very important trans-shipping point. I am told that its experts collected data for months in order that the company might provide a proper amount of room for storage. But I am of the be lief that generous though that ar rangement is, the time will come shortly when Harrisburg can be made an even more important ware house point, especially in connection with the Pennsylvania railroad, now that tlie southern connection byway of the Cumberland Valley is pro vided through the absorption of that property by the Pennsylvania. The only way you can get cheap sites is to create them and the belt line ap pears to answer the question that arises in the minds of strangers who come here to look the situation over." • m • The average Harrisburg small boy is not going to get over the war for a long time. The youngsters are drilling and the proudest ones are those who have caps or parts of uniforms. "Ono result of the war is going to be that there will be more cadet corps than you have any idea of," said a teacher yesterday. "There will be half a dozen this time next year, and the men who were in service will have all the fun they want with the boys." • * * "I thought there was a law that placards should not be within a cer tain number of feet of a polling place," said a man yesterday. "From what I have seen the people read inches instead of feet. There were cards put where they hit you and the election boards did not seem to care. ' There is no use having elec tion regulations unless they are com piled with." • • • If activity in hot beds and cold frames is anything to go by the gardeners about Harrisburg, com mercial, amateur, expert and time passing, intend to add materiaily to the food Supply of the State capital this year. It ;s estimated that the production ot vegetables and the like in the Harrisburg dis trict last year went ahead of any thing ever known and that the im petus given will be reflected for years to come. There will be a de crease in "war gardens," of course, but many people have learned the joy of eating a radish or gathering beans from_ their own plants and that a back yard tomato has a flavor not equaled by any other variety is a self evident truth. Winter has not passed, but there are more little stakes being set out in future gar dens and seed catalogues examined just at present than the average man thinks of. And from indica tions Allison Hill is going to chase the First and Tenth wards. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Governor Sproul is almost the only Swarthmore graduate In the State government. ♦ —Secretary of the Common wealth Woods is an alumnus and doctor from Lafayette. —Col. Edward Martin, Commis sioner of Health, upholds University of Pennsylvania traditions at the Capitol. —Banking Commissioner John S. Fisher comes from Indiana State Normal School, of which he is now a trustee. -—Dr. Nathan C. Schaefter, State Superintendent of Public Instruc tion, has degrees from Franklin and Marshall and several other col leges. —Adjutant General Beary went to a military school at Newark. —James N. Moore, director of the Legislative Reference Bureau, hails from Grove City College. | ' DO YOU KNOW —That Harrisburg people are being complimented for their improvement of lire apparatus? HISTORIC HARRISBURG —The old Harris mansion used to be a girls' college years ago. Disposal of Books a Problem Now that the American armies are being demobilized, the Ameri can Librarians' Association is con sidering what shall be done with the 3V4 million books in the sol diers and sailors' libraries here and overseas. Various proposals have been under consideration, but the one which is getting the most sup port, it is said is to give the books to towns of the southern states which have no libraries. The ad vocates of this proposal point out that the Northern cities and most of the Western cities are already well equipped with libraries, while this is not true of many towns of the south. When the armistice was signed in November the American Library Association had a total of 2407 libraries and branches in op eration in the United States and in France. Of-tliese, forty-three were full sized libraries in building* of their own in the cantonments and large military reservations in thjs Ilnited States, with about thirty-five thousand books tn each.—From the New York Times. .1 Nomination Our nomination for eral of the lenguc is Colonel House, viz: * Wholly unquotable, Always ungoatable, Secretly notable, Silence's spouse— Darkly inscrutable, Quito irrefutable, Nolily immutable, Edward M. House! —Philadelphia Evening Publlt ' 1 - Ledger. J