10 iARRISBURG TELEGRAPH L NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 18S1 hibllshed evenings except Sunday by 'HE TELEGRAPH PHIXTTNG CO. I'elesrrnpU lluildlnK, Federal Square E. J. STACICPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief !\ It. OYSTER, Business Manager JUS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. It. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board r. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, P. It. OYSTER. GUS. M. STEINMETZ. Ifembers of the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to tko use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in t.his fiaper and also the local news pub ished herein. 11l rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. A Member American Newspaper Pub # /■W-Si't lisliers' Associa •HßSSsSSEjaSßl tion. the Audit . SEg**""""lS Bureau of Circu lation and l'enn- IWTsylvanla Associa fgj jS 855 [J "-ted Dailies. £S." ffi Sdii ffl Eastern office BHR W aS* lift! Story, Brooks & BBS 9 BS9 Of Finley, Fifth IBlniiMaß Avenue Building, New York 'City; Western office, Qf*®-'" Story. Brooks & fig Finley, People's Gas Building, -1 Chicago, 111. Entered at the Post Office in Harrls burg. Pa., us second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. TUESDAY. APR IT J 1, 19i9 The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and ■breeds reptiles of the mind.—WIL LIAM P.LAKF. THE STANDARD LOAF [F there is any good reason why j the Legislature should not pass the McConnell bill establishing a standard for loaves of bread it has not been heard of. Even the master bakers arc in favor of It. The idea of the bill Is to have loaves baked in various weights, starting at three quarters of a pound and going on up as far as needed in the trade. Any baker or retailer sell ing a loaf off the standard as repre sented would lie liable to a fine of $25 for first offense. The bill would enact into Penn sylvania statutes one of the wisest of the Federal food regulations. It would also mako legal what is now the rule in many places, because, as a result of the war, people have be come accustomed to ask for a pound loaf or some other weight instead of the five cent, six cent or ten cent loaf. Just what it would mean to have the loaves standardized can be grasped by the more statement that if prices vary, people will know how much they are buying, something which they seldom realized before the war regulation became opera tive. TAKE NO CHANCES THE Public Service Commission reports that 10G automobiles were struck on grade crossings the past year. It is safe to say that nt least nine-tenths of these, many of them fatal, could have been avoid ed if reasonable care had been taken. To lio. sure, grade crossings should l)e abolished, but so long as they exist the burden of responsibility for avoiding accidents lies with the drivers of automobiles or other ve hicles using them. The consolation that one may sue tho railroad for damages is poor substitute for 'Broken limbs or crushed bodies. The old sign—"Stop, look, listen" —is still applicable. Take no rhances at a grade crossing. A HOUSING EXPERIMENT WELLINGTON, Kansas, is about to try an experiment in hous ing that, in view of develop ments locally, is not without interest for Harrlsburg and the Chamber of Commerce committee now trying to work out of a solution of this city's difficulties along this line. Business men of the town have formed "The Wellington Home Inundation," something new in the line of home building associations The purpose is "to encourage habits of saving and thrift, to obtain more home owners, to give employment to Wellington workmen, to improve and beautify the physical appear ance of the city and thereby to pro mote the general welfare." So far as known the Wellington plan for a home foundation is not in operation anywhere. It provides for a fund, to consist of direct dona tions of money and loans from these who, actuated by civic pride, are willing to let their money work for a time without interest. Gifts of residence property will be received, should any person prefer to donate in ( that way. For the first year the foundation will be administered by seven directors. The foundation is not a charity fund. In most cases the usual in terest charge will be made when any money is loaned from it, but that is left to the directors, who will use their Judgment. Probably its larg est function will be that of a liberal building and loan association. "While the activities of the founda tion 'may be various, its principal eervice will ran something like this; "When sufficient money has come TUESDAY EVENING, the directors will purchase a resi dence property, preferably a h&use which is run down, ramshackly, in need of paint, and in appearance a dirty spot on the face of the city. Plans will bo made to clean up the property and put in the place of the outcast a neat, modern cottage of four or five rooms. The directors are restricted to the employment of Wellington workmen and the pur chase of materials in Wellington. Presently, in the place of a blemish, it is hoped, will be found a beauty spot. When the new building is ready the directors would give the first chance for ownership to a man with the cash to buy it, if such person ap peared. This would place It in the hands of a home owner, and the original expenditure would return at once to the foundation and be im mediately available to go out and remove another blemish. But if no one was at hand with the cash, any applicants to own the home on pay ments would be considered. The deed to the property would remain with the trustees for the foundation, and the applicant would be considered only as a tenant until his payments had reached an amouij equal to one-third of the value of the property. Then a local build ing and loan association would ac cept him on their plan, the deed would bo made to him and the bal ance of tho value of the property would be paid in to the foundation. From that time on he would deal with the building and loan asso ciation and the amount expended on the property would bo back in the foundation, ready to go out and do its work over again. Thus tho foundation is intended rather as an auxiliary, or a "booster," for regular building and loan asso ciations than such an association it self. It is an experiment which those who have founded it believe will work out well in practice. The plan is being watched with interest by the Federal authorities and by communities such as Harris burg, with similar problems of house shortage and reconstruction. Some such plan would do much to save some of the districts of this city that are showing a distinctly hack ward tendency. HEROIC SYMROLS THE men of the famous combat divisions of the American army, who had the good fortune* to be assigned the task of smashing the German armies in FVance, won reputations for their units which the War Department is wise in perpet uating. General March does well to retain in the new regular army the divisional numerals and appellations of those organizations which won for themselves glorious names in the campaign which crushed the Hun. , Take the 28th—the Iron Division —for example. 'What traditions it has to cherish! What a name for high courage and achievements it has to maintainl It would have been a shame, indeed, if the wonder ful organization that performed the herculean task of stopping the flower of the victorious German army at Chateau Thierry and sent it back reeling and beaten on its long re treat to final disaster should pass out of existence when the means of making it a permanent branch of of United States army were at hand. The very name will have a magic that will recall to the service many a soldier who will have a longing for the old division after he has become "fed up" on civilian life and the old charm of the army begins to re assert itself. Not only from a senti mental but from a very practical standpoint it is highly desirable that these tokens of our military prowess as a Nation be kept alive and con stantly before us. WORK WELL DONE THE change in the public mind regarding the manner in which the draft was administered is perhaps the best tribute to the loyalty of the boards identified with the operation of the selective ser vice law in Pennsylvania, > whose official existence ends to-day. The men who served on the various boards are deserving of all the praise that can be given them. Not only did they stick to business in most trying times and fulfill orders which wore hard to understand, but they cVlneed their patriotism by giving the American Square Deal. When it is considered with what suspicion and apprehension the ad vent of the draft was greeted; how rumors and reports of favoritism filled the air in the first few months of its operation and how aliens and soft heads, to say nothing of the traitorously inclined, tried to ham per its operation, the popular attitude in support of the boards at the close of the war tells its own story. Even in parts of Philadelphia, where dis satisfaction had been most rife dur ing the first half of the draft period, the belief was general at the close of the time of fighting that the draft had been honestly administered by men who realized their responsibili ties to the Nation. In other sec tions of the State where the call to service also fell heavily the boards were publicly commended by leaders of their communities for impartial ity. In this part of Pennsylvania the general feeling swung around to the support of the draft officials as men who were striving to do their best in work not always pleasant. As Major W. G. Murdock, the chief draft officer, says in his fare well letter, the draft was made a success by patriotic effort and hon esty on the part of the men who came in contact with the great army of registrants and often with mem bers of their families. Watch your step. This is April X. i Calm yourself, April, calm yourself. "pottttc* LK By the Ex-Commit tee man . . —I Tt commences to look as though bills to repeal tho nonpartisan elec tive feature of second and third class city laws were commencing the long, long sleep. Tho hearing on tho third class repealer scheduled for to-day was cancelled and the second class city bill went back to committee in the House. Evei since Senator Penrose made his declaration against the proposed changes in the election laws stock of the repealers has been going down and tho hearing scheduled for to day on the third class bill was ab ruptly called off last night by Chair man Stadtlander, who said ho had not been consulted about it. Rep resentative Dawson, sponsor for the seebnd class city bill, sent it back to committee himself. —No date will be fixed for ad journment this week. The talk Is still heard of May 15. This is fa vored by many rural members who are anxious to get home and a movement to fix a date about the middle of this month to shut off in troduction -A* Ifilis is likely to as sume shape this week. —An interesting bill appeared in the House last night from Repre sentative W. W. Jennings, of Brad ford. It looks like a kick from the State Board of Agriculture against the abolition of that body. The Jen nings bill proposes to re-establish the board, which it is intended in the administration agricultural re organized to abolish, and to give It power to run tho Department of Agriculture. The secretary of the board's executive committee is to be Secretary of Agriculture and to be paid $6,000 a year. The Jones bill makes the salary $lO,OOO. The bill has no chance and is cither a pro test or presented as a vehicle for compromise. The fact that it ap peared at all is interesting. —The Brady bills proposing amendments to the primary law and changing the Philadelphia registra tion law were granted an extension of two weeks on motion of their sponsor in the House last night. —Secretary of the Commonwealth Woods informed the House that he had sent to the War Department the legislative resolution asking that soldiers he allowed to keep uni forms and had been informed that Congress had already taken such action. —All liquor legislation pending before the House will come up for consideration at a public hearing before the House law and order committee next Tuesday. The de cision to hold the hearing is the result of an agreement between the "wets" and "drys." Among the bills pending in the House is the Ram sey bill to permit the sale of beer containing not more than two and three-fourth per cent, alcohol and the Fox enforcement bill. Governor Sproul has gone on record as fa voring no action by the State on de fining what constitutes an intoxi cant. Ho took the stand that Con gress would decide that question. "Wet" leaders plan to defy the Gov ernor by trying to put the Ramsey bill through the legislature, argu ing that its passage would force the Governor to veto the measure. He certainly would use an ax. Repre sentative John W. Vickerman, lead er of the "dry" forces in the House, introduced his enforcement bill last night. It is expected to supplement the Fox bill. —Among legislative visitors last evening was United States District Attorney E. Dowry Humes, of Meadvillc, who stopped off to see old friends and was congratulated on looking so fit. He found time to confer with Representative W. G. Sarig and other remnants of the fighting Democrats of former years. —Representative W. Heber Dith rich, of Pittsburgh, called to the chair in the House by Speaker Rob ert S. Spangler, last night, made a fine presiding officer and was con gratulated by friends. —Appointment of a superintend ent of public instruction will de pend upon the passage of the bill for increase of the Balary of the superintendent to 10,000, legislators have been informed. —William H. French, Associated Press correspondent at Pittsburgh, visited the Legislature. He used to cover the legislature of Connecti cut. —The interesting comment ap pearing on this page last week rela tive to Senator Penrose and the non pa! tisan law, from which credit was inadvertently omitted was from the Washington, Pa., Observer. It shows what Western Pennsylvanians are thinking. —A State-wide protest against the Heyburn bill which proposes to place the Administration of the Mothers Assistance Fund in the hands of the courts in twenty-seven counties as yet unorganized is being made by the club women of Pennsyl vania. They are acting in response to a request issued by Mrs. Franklin P. lams, chairman of the Legislative Committee of the State Federation of Pensylvania Women's Clubs. In her circular to the 10,000 women in the organization, Mrs. lams requests the club members to "write at once, strongly opposing this bill to Gover nor Sproul. to the various county representatives." Another Problem to Solve. "Each Nation is entitled to the souvereignty of the air above it." Does this mean that if one of us cooks onions and the aroma blows over into the other fellow's sky, lie can make a fuss about it? —From the Boston Transcript. LABOR NOTES To keep the workingmen in the Allied and neutral Europeun coun tries informed as to the true atti tude of America toward the war, the Socialist Democratic League is to es tablish commissions at Milan, Paris and other cities. The Manitoba (Canada) Minimum Wage Board has set its first wage for working women in the province in the case of laundry workers. The board has figured that $9.48 a week is necessary for a girl to live de cently, and for good measure an ad ditional 2 cents a week is added. Portland (Ore.) Federation of Theatrical Workers has secured a new agreement. The six-day week is granted to musicians, moving picture operators and stage em ployees. These workers and the bill posters have been given substantial wage increases. Three meathods of training work ers for war jobs in England are financed exclusively or in part by the Ministry of Munitions—training in technical schools, training in in structional factories and training in instructional bays of industrial fac tories. The last two methods are used inteaching women mechanical processes. i [ i HARRISBURG TELEGKXPH MOVIE OF TWO MEN ENJOYING A HUGE JOKE .... .... By BRIGGS NO. t TllS No. 2 that H6 KIO.A Th miCTimT NO. 1-a* Foretold in -AND N0. 3 IMFAADIATSW > Has a trick cigar that approaches first picture- presents He 13 Going TO. pass To . NO 3 GE,>IT with CIGAR, PROGRESSES HINCL^ no. a who is seer si APPROACHING "G6NTS NO. A AND Md z Gent J NO. 3 GcntS 2. AND 3 GENT no. S gents 1 AND 2. in now avNait culmination pXiffS away enjoying grand at moment Huoe enjovment op OF .JOKE ON NO, 3 IN INNOCENT CLIMAX oP JOKp' OF EXPLOSION SUCCESS BNJDVmBNT OP JOKE _ " 050 Fliers at the Front [Fhom the Cent Soixante Six (166 th Squadron, Army of Occupation), Trier, Germany.] When Tennyson immortalized Balalclava's "noble Six Hundred" in his "Charge of the Light Brigade" it's a pity he couldn't have fixed the meter for the substitution of "Six Hundred and Fifty" so that the stir ring lines could have done duty in paraphrase a few decades later to commemorate America's aerial con tribution to the great war. For, to the best of our belief the number of our "flght brigades" came to about that total, possibly a little bit more, most likely less. In the first place, it should be ex plained that these figures refer ex clusively to the men who got into action —who saw enough service across the lines to put them in the combatant class. They were'nt de duced, you may be sure, from news paper reports of "official state ments" in regard to air service per sonnel. The latter might be made the theme for a sequel to Baron Munchausen's widely known narra tives, but as data for a serious es timate of air service forces they re quire some editing. , "But," somebody exclaims, "the brunt of the fighting borne by less than seven hundred flyers—surely there's some mistake. Why the press reports put the American air forces in France at something like fifty-eight thousand, of whom near ly seven thousand were officers." Perhaps, but that isn't saying they were all at the front. "No," you may rejoin, "but the same report says that two thousand of them were—2,l6l officers and 22,- 351 men, to quote exactly." Admittedly, it looks as if some body had made a mistake. But be fore throwing out anybody's figures let's examine the data a little fur ther. The same reports quoto the number of squadrons at the front as thirty-nine, twenty of which were pursuit and the rest reconnaissance or bombardment. That might not be so far off, if you count in the eleven squadrons that the French supplied, and the three more for which we must thank our Italian allies. And then, too, there may have been some new American squadrons formed just about the time of the armistice; but suppos ing there were, they never did any work and ought not to be included in an estimate of effectives during the hostilities. Even then, two thousand or more officers would bo a pretty full complement for thirty nine squadrons, wouldn't they? But just suppose, for the sake of the argument, that two thousands flyers did get into the zone of ad vance, is it safe to conclude, from this bare supposition, that anywhere near that number of men ever flit ted through an Archie burst, bomb ed an enemy dump, executed a re connaissance or strafed a trench? Most decidedly not. Knowing what we do about air service squadrons in the line it seems a practical cer tainty that no more than half that total could have seen action over Ilun territory, while, in the opinion of many who are able to speak from the standpoint of participants in air service operations at the front, a bare two-thirds would be nearer the correct proportion. And what of the 650? Well, just to avoid a flamboyant peroration let's stick to the crisp text of the war office report as quoted: The total casualties of the air serv ice in action were 442, including 109 killed, 103 wounded, 200 missing, 27 prisoners of war and 3 interne*!. SLUMBER SONUS [By Lieut.Col. John McCrae] .Sleep, little eyes That brim with childish tears amid thy play, Be comforted! No grief of night can weigh Against the poys that throng thy coming day. Sleep, little heart! There is no place in Slumberland for tears: Life soon enough will bring its chill ing fears And sorrows that will dim the after years. Sleep, little heart! Ah, little eyes, Dead blossoms of a springtime long ago. That life's storm crusht and left to lie below The benediction of thfc fulling snow! Sleep, little heart. That ceased so long ago its frantic beat! The years that come and go with silent feet Have naught to tell save this —that rest is sweet. Dear little heart. 1 To Open The Door For Prosperity [From the Literary Digest] PROSPERITY —perhaps the great est we have ever known "Is knocking at the door," declares an editor in Wisconsin. Another in his office beside the New York Stock Exchange looks up from the ticker to tell a cheer ful "tale of the tape," a story of a four-months' rise in industrial stocks showing "that recovery of normal temperatures, pulses, habits, and worries has been rapid; the worst is over." The man on the street, whom a Boston daily holds to be "a better prophet than the closeted ex pert," sees "the greatest purchasing population of any country in the world on the keen edge for a great many things it has been deprived of for the last two years;" he sees fac tories returning from munitions making "to their former specialties with great arrears of orders, which they must fill." The Postmaster-Gen eral judges from the remarkable inciease in postal revenues during the last four months that the coun try "is on the threshold of a period of pronounced industrial prosperity." But while prosperity is knocking at the door, the door does not open. Buying, we are reminded in a Gov ernment report, is limited, money is timid and remains in banks; some mills and factories are .idle and few are running full; construction of pub lic and private works has not began, and unemployment is spreading. The difficulty seems to be a matter of prices. As several editors explain, buyers are waiting for the expected drop in prices; sellers hesitate to cut prices for fear of losses; mean while the wheels of business can move but slowly. Now "the one large missing clement" in the busi-' THEY MUST BE MEMORIAL [ From the New York Times] Characteristic of every such pro posal as those that are stirring the little pity is a fatal fault that it Is based on the delusion that anything to which the name of war memo rial can be ascribed will be one. Of course this is not carried to its log ical conclusions, even by those who hold It most sincerely. They do not advise the purchase of a new motor fire engine, or the repavement of Main street, or the payment of the mayor's or city clerks' salary, as a war memorial, but to do any of these things would be just as sensible as it would be similarly to designate any of the schemes that are so naively advo cated. None of the schemes Is in trinsically bad, in the sense that its execution would be detrimental to anybody. But the plea that such "memo rials" as these would be "useful" is the perfectly adequate reason for re jecting them all, as the one purposo of a memorial is to be a memorial, and the effort to make it serve two purposes will always be a failure land an absurdity. A private per son, of course, can erect a hospital or a library, or give the land for a public park, and as long as it lasts and bears his name it will be a me morial to his generosity; but just as he could not attain the same end 'through something designed for ids own personal use and benefit, so a city cannot provide for its own mu nicipal needs or necessities and at the same time pay lienor to some thing entirely different. Reminded Him of Home The burglar had entered the house as quietly as possible, but his shoes were not padded and they made some noiso. lie had just reached the door of the bedroom when he heard someone moving in the bed, as if about to get up, and he paused. The sound of a woman's voice lloated to his cars. "If you don't take off your boots when you come into this house," she said, "there's going to be trouble, and a lot of it. Here it's been rain ing for three hours, and you dare to tramp over carpets with your muddy boots on. Go downstairs and take them off this minute." He went downstairs without a word. but. he didn't take off his boots. Instead he went straight out into the night again, and the pa! who was waiting for him saw a tear glisten in his eye. "I Just can't bear to rob that house," he said, "it re minds nie so of home." —From the London Opinion. ness situation, the Boston News Bu reau concludes, "is a meeting of minds, as between buyers and sellers of the great staples, on something like an equilibrium in prices." It is Just such a meeting that is furnished by the "Redfteld plan," which the Sec retary of Commerce and many ap proving editors believe will open the door for the waiting business boom. As The Nation's Business (Washing tion) quotes Secretary Redfleld's de scription of the situation: "Our industries are presented with an unpleasant pill to swallow. Prices must come down. Industry can not make it easier to swallow the pill by licking oft the candy. The sooner the pill is swallowed and cheerfully accepted, the sooner will production spring back to normal. The sense of the whole thing is to bring about a reduction of prices by voluntary agreement. Everybody expects prices to fall sooner or later, and the best thing to do is to bring them down at once." So Mr. R'edfield has arranged to bring Government, capital and labor together in a joint "endeavor to bring about a level of prices at which Government itself will be glad to make its own purchases, prices such that the Government can turn and say to the general public, 'This is a fair basis of prices'." The Secretary calls this a process of "accelerating industrial equilibrium." The official title of the accelerators is the In dustrial Board of the Department of Commerce. The chairman is Mr. George N. Peck, a manufacturer, for merly of the War Industries Board; the other members are Commissioner of Immigration Camtnetti, T. C. Pow ell, of the United States Railroad Administration, and four heads of large business concerns. Arbor Day's New Meaning [Philadelphia Public Ledger] Despite the efforts of the forestry associations and the support of the State and Federal governments. Ar bor Day has been celebrated too often in a perfunctory manner. No one denied the value of tree plant-, ing, or of encuoraging scientific for-| estry, or of conserving the natural resources of the State, but the an nual proclamations of necessity be came somewhat stereotyped and only the enthusiasts whose minds were made up anyhow reacted to the yearly stimulus. This year, how ever, Governor Sproul has been able to strike a new note, and his elo quent appeal that the two Arbor Days of 1919, April 11 and April 25, be given over to tree planting In the interest of the soldier dead should accomplish two praiseworthy purposes. In the first place, the tree-memorial Idea is given official recognition and a very beautiful form of memorial vigorously in dorsed by the Governor himself. Then, secondly, by reason of this memorial idea being associated with the problem of conservation an im petus Is given to the general prob lem of reforestration that should prove of the greatest value to the State. So in a sense Arbor Day is remade for Pennsylvania and re made under inspiring conditions that associates the primal natural resources of the State with the un dying memories of those who from a love rf country made (lie great sacrifice for their fellow citizens anil their own here in this great and patriotic Commonwealth. From this time on Arbor Day in Pennsylvania and 'throughout the Union cannot but have a now and deeper meaning as is forecast in the proclamation of the Governor. Thirty-Sixth Division National Guard j of Texas and Okla- '"■ v. homa. Divisional f \ headquarters ar- / flsA \ rived in France / Wmd \ July 31. 1918. Ac- I V-V I tivities: Blanc \ ™ W J Mont sector, north \ ym J of Somme-Py, Oc- N. Y S tober 6-28 (French Champagne offensive). Prisoners captured: IS officers, 531 enlisted men. Guns captured: 9 pieces of artillery, 294 machine guns. Total advance on front line 21 kilometers. Insignia; Cobalt blue arrowh£k> i with a khaki "T" superimposed upon a khaki disc. The arrow head represents Oklahoma and the "T" Texus. APRIL* 1, 1919. EDITORIAL COMMENT The Bolsheviki have turned a church into a theater. In their set it was probably the only way to till it.—-Columbia State. Leniency in dealing with Germany may indicate a soft heart, but it certainly indicates a soft head.— Washington Herald. The cutting down of Germany's army to 100,000 men leaves mighty little excuse for a League of Nations. —Washington Post. Some one should explain to Europe's diplomats that we were not fighting for the spoils of war, but to spoil war.—Greenville Piedmont. There is a rumor in well-informed circles that Great Britain will be forced to accept a mandate for the governing of Ireland.—Chicago Trib une. Bolsheviki may reason that if they can make all other nations as rotten as Russia, then Russia will be as good as any other nation.— Toledo Blade. "Victory an Inclined Plane" [From the Manchester Guardian.] Marshal Foch spoke very simply, very colloquially, very much a sol dier talking to his friends. He stood chest out, head well back, with one leg well forward, suggestng the elastic, posture of a fence as he moved slightly and regularly at the knee as though about to lunge. His main point was that he had done nothing. "The Boches attack. 1 said I would stop them. When they were stopped I attacked them. Well everyone did what he could, and after some time we were all at tacking along tlie live hundred miles of front—the French, the English, the Americans, the Belgians, and we all went for t) em." At that point the marshal raised both his hands and pushed forward with his hands slightly downward and body in one movement. "Victory," he said, "is an included plan. We pushed them, all of us, and they simply had to retreat and retreat." 1-le continued to make the ! slightly downward movement with I his hands, moving elastically at the I knee in unison. "And after that we simply kept pushing and pushing, and they went back and we were simply on the point of getting he waved his hands. "Then they asked for an armis tice. They accepted all our condi tions," his shoulders, hands and eye brows went up. "Well !" The impression everyone got was of the great shock it had been to the marshal when the enemy sur rendered. Maine to War on Dogfish A bill has been introduced Into the Maine Legislature which has for its purpose war upon the dogfish. If the bill passes, the state will start a drive for assistance from the Fed eral government. The dogfish is very destructive to the fishing industry. Its elimination is important not to Maine people alone, for our Maine fish go far to ward supplying the nation. The Fed eral government has every reason to respond favorably to a call for aid. It Is spending huge sums annually in the propagation of fish ind cer tainly their preservation is as im portant as the propagation. -Bangor Commercial. THE STRETCHER REARER By Private Wm. J. Bun, 304 th Field Signal Battalion Medical Det., after u buttle Somewjiere in France. (Winner of French War Cuss). r see him yet. plodding tin Fland ers i„ud— A field of carnage, a field >f blood; Where the Maxims whine, and the big guns roar, In man's modern improvement on Hell, called War. Not much of a Hero to vark at, I guess Muddy and bloody, and weapon less; But where shots fly thickest, he . doggedly goes, Exposed to the lire of both friends and foes. For he gleans there where the mudr rows lie By DEATH the reaper, pHed high. And plucks from the outstreched hand of DEATH Some stricken Mortal, who still holds bteatli. Sing ye of heroes, whose lutive deeds shine, On many u crimson battle line, But for liini the bearir of the stretcher cot. Who ,is daily a hero and knows it not.] . iEbmng CMprt Major William G. Murdock, the executive officer of the draft iu Pennsylvania, in a letter issued to members of the boards in praise of their efforts to make the selec tive service law a success in Penn sylvania, to-day expresses the hope that "whatever military organiza tions are formed by the soldiers upon their return will welcome you as honorary members." The ma jor's letter regrets that the law does not provide for recognition of tlui services of the members of the drafc. boards and he takes occasion to ex tend to the hundreds of men who administered the draft commenda tion of their services. Major Mur dock was busy to-day receiving re ports from the boards of the State, as to tho manner in which they hail closed up their official existence yes terday and a complete report will be made up for the State. It is probable that some steps will be taken by members of the Legislature to bring about recognition of the services of the men who served a members of draft, appeal, medicaf and legal advisory and instruction boards. A record of the service at these men, many of whom served throughout the whole war is being made up by Major Murdock for the archives of his office. • • Walter McNichols, acting Com missioner of Labor and Industry, has offered the services of the State to enable industries and physicians and surgeons to get together because of numerous requests for information as to oportunities for industrial ser vice in Pennsylvania from physi cians and surgeons leaving the army after service during tho war. Heads of industrial establishments have been informed in a circular that Dr. I' rancis I). Patterson, chief of tho bureau of hygiene, will look after this feature of State work. Dr. "Dan" Poling, who will ad dress the big Christian Endeavor convention in this city to-night, dur ing his student days was reckoned the finest specimen of physical man hood in tlie Pacific coast colleges. Ho held a dozen championships for events requiring extraordinary strength and endurance and is still an ardent devotee of college sports. Early in his life, and he is still a, yottng man, lie was elected to lead the young people's work in the United Evangelical Church in Amer ica and his headquarters would have been Harrlsburg had he ac cepted, but he felt called to the wider field of young people's work in general and has become one of the leading Christian Endeavor and temperance workers in America. Ho was a member of tlie famous Flying Squadron which did such valiant work in the promotion of national prohibition: at the outset of the war he threw up his work and went to France in the "T" service and served clown in the front line trenches until he was gassed and shell-shocked to the extent of being forbidden further work in the war zone and was invalided home. His book, "Huts in Hell." is one of the war classics and anybody who doubts the service the T. M. C. A. rendered the men in France would do well to read It. • • • If matters can be arranged. Major Henry M. Stine, the officer in com mand of the Harrlsburg Reserves, will have the first of a series of talks by returned officers at the court house on Saturday night. Captain John T. Brctz, who helped train the Reserves in their early days, will be the speaker and will tell of the work of the 112 th. • • • Thomas D. Beidloman, who has resumed charge of things about tlie State Capitol Park, has his force on the daylight saving plan. Things start early in the park maintenance department and the park is com mencing to show the results of hl3 painstaking supervision. "I do not know why it is, but we have had more flittings this first of April than I have known for a long time. For a while there was a disposition to get away from the April 1 flittings and to take up May. but this year calculations are off/' said a van man yesterday. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Clarence D. Coughlin, who had charge of the Catlin will at Wilkes- Barre, is a lawyer and was long a political rival of the dead Senator. ■ —James A. Gardner, the New Castle official, hero to-day for the third class city hearing, comes by virtue of action of city council in his community. He is one of the leaders in such legislation. —Judge A. D. McConnell, of Greensburg, has decided not to an nounce decisions on liquor licenses until late in the week and has causeife much speculation. —Dr. W. T. Ellis, the traveler, is now in Turkey watching the devel opment of reforms. —Sinton Miller, elected head of the Jewish Publication Society, is u prominent Philadelphian. DO YOU KNOW —That Harrlsburg used to lie one of the loading sausage mak ing places in tlie State? HISTORIC lIAHRISBURG —This community contributed company of men to Wayne's cxpedv, tion against the Indians in Ohio. THE ANXIOVS DEAD O guns, fall silent till the dead men hear Above I heir heads the legions pressing on: (These fought their light in time of bitter fear. And died not knowing how the day had gone.) O flashing muzzles, "pause, and let them see The coming dawn that streaks th*< sky afar; Then let your mighty chorus wit ness he To them, and Caesar, that we still make war. Tell them, O guns that we have heard their cull, That we have sworn, and will not turn aside, That wo will onward till we win or fall, That \Vo will keep faith for which they died. Bid them be patient, and some day, anon, They shall feel earth enwrapt In silence deep; Sl(all grec, in wonderment, the quiet dawn. Ana in content may turn them to their sleep. -By LIEUT.-COL. JOHN McCRAE.