6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A KEWSPAJ'ER FOR TBB HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph BalMlag, Federal Snare E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Buriscjj Manager GL'S. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHEN'ER, Circulation Manager Executive Beard J. P. MeCULLOCGH, 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. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. American {£{£s££ EM Eastern of f Ut. M Avenue Building; Gas Building - Chicago, 111. Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mail. 13.00 a " hlia r year in advance. SATURDAY, APRIL 5. 1919 Doctrine is nothing but the skin of truth set up and stuffed. —HENBY WABD BEZCHEB. THE HOSTESS HOUSE ONE of the best pieces of war work conducted in Harrisburg was the hostess house activi ties of the Civic Club which came to an end a week ago with the clos ing of the house after six months of most excellent service. It was operated along the lines of the Red Cross and cared for thousands of uniformed men, from the visiting French Blue Devils to the private soldiers of the local camps. Much of the work was under the direction of Mrs. Edward F. Dunlap. chairman of the Hostess House com mittee, and Mrs. William Hender son, president of the club, assisted by scores of volunteers who gave liberally of their time and money. Everything was free, entertainment being provided by the talented peo ple of the city and every Saturday evening a dance was held, carefully chaperoned, at which the young wo. men of Harrisburg were asked to meet the men in uniform. The Sun day evening meetings, with supper served by the canteen committee under the chairmanship of Mrs. J. Meily Jones, were another pleasant feature much enjoyed by the sol diers. The hostess house had a far reaching influence for good. Men away from home were brought into wholesome surroundings and made to understand that the people of the city had an interest in them. Friend ships that will last through the years were made there and a spirit of service developed in those who worked to make it a success that will not die with the passing of the hostess house. Who started this fool talk about a Jap invasion of the Philippines?. The Japs are a canny lot, and if they con templated a war it would not be at a time when the United States has a couple million soldiers handy. BOLSHEVIKISM THE average American citizen cannot know too much of the development of the movement against law and order under the name of Bolshevism. It would be quite as much of a menace under any other name and it is for the people of the United States to take a firm grip on themselves In order to prevent being swept off their feet by the impossible doctrines of these prophets of unrest and dis order. It is because of the great interest in the world conditions that the address of D. O. Armstrong, at the luncheon meeting of the Cham ber of Commerce Friday, was of spe cial interest to a large represen tation of the membership of the central business body. Dr. Arm strong is a Canadian traveler and explorer of international fame and has made a study of the Bolsheviki movement. It is too often the case that groups of otherwise intelligent people in this country are led far afield through what they are pleased to regard as their sympathy for the "under dog." Recently at Boston some women of high social connec tion condemned the deportation of alien anarchists and evoked cheers for the I. W. W. and the Bolshevists. This, in spite of the fact that anar chists in Russia, according to testi mony before a committee of United States Senate, have taken over the government in cities and towns of that, unhappy country and among other decrees have placed women on a par with beasts. While these edicts may not be observed in all their details, they serve to demonstrate the degeneracy of the men who are responsible for the present Intolera ble conditions in a large part of Eu rope. Nationalizing of women and breaking down all the barriers of civilization In the name of liberty, confiscating property and utterly de- SATURDAY EVENING, stroying the things which most men and women hold dear, the Bolshevik element threatens to overspread the world unless the inherent decency of all nations is mobilized behind law and order wherever there is a threat of this after-war plague. Bolshevism, with which some of the alleged intellectuals of this coun try are said to be flirting, is char acterized by a forceful writer as organized hatred, plunder, savagery and lust. Plain speaking is going to be necessary to overcome this menace to the world and the intelli gence of the American people may be trusted to safeguard the insti tutions which we of the United States have cherished and to which the oppressed peoples of other lauds have looked with hope through a long period of years. On his way back to Holland from Russia, Dr. Oudendijk, the Dutch minister in Petrograd, was inter viewed by the London Times and made this impassioned plea for civilization: I wish to give a solemn warn ing to the working classes of all nations. Bolshevism, I say with out exaggeration, is the end of civilization. I have known Rus sia intimately for twenty years and never have the working classes of Russia suffered as they are at the present moment. I have never seen or dreamed of the possibility of such corruption, tyranny, and the absence of all semblance of freedom as there arc in Russia at the present mo ment. Translated into practice, the five points of Bolshevism really come to this: (1) high wages; til don't work; tJI take other people's property; (41 no punishment: (3) no taxation; and 1 suppose there will always be a certain number of people who will adopt a program which in practice amounts to this. That is why. having soon the disastrous effects of this policy on all classes of society. I take the first op portunity on my arrival in Eng land to warn the public. The bulk of the workmen in Russia are to-day far and away worse off than they ever have been, and the state of unemployment is simply terrible. When I left Pet rograd the situation was one of utle'r starvation and most people hardly knew how they would ex ist through the following day. The future to me seems hopeless. One thing is certain, that, left as she now is. Russia will be in a state of utter and complete ruin. Whenever Bolshevism rules, the ration has been beaten to a pulp, and is utterly helpless. This appeal from one who has just come out of Russia would seem to indicate that instead of bene fiting those for whom they pretend to speak the Bolshevik leaders are leading the masses astray and bring ing upon them the* most colossal calamity of the ages. Working men of the United States are not likely to follow such leadership or to be influenced by the false theories of ignorant and brutal men. Lenine. having ordered out the Russian N'avy against the Allies, we arise to offer the services of the Har risburg sand fleet to meet the emer gency. with full confidence that It will fill the bill. PULLING TOGETHER IN. dealing with after-war prob lems, the hfisineStr "interests of the United States are manifest ing a sanity which is encouraging and reassuring as to the future. It must be realized by even the most casual student of the signs of the times that the business man has been subjected to tremendous pres sure during the last few years, es pecially since our entrance into the war. That he has kept his head and has managed to maintain a rea sonable amount of American opti mism illustrates the character of the men who are back of the industry and commerce of the Nation. They have had enough to upset ordinary confidence, but with persistent faith in the country and its future the business interests have continued to meet the'problems which have been arising at every turn with a courage and intelligence worthy the Nation which determined the world strug gle. In all communities there are ques tions popping up at every turn which are likely to disturb local conditions, but with sanity of attitude and a constant disposition to overthrow the spirit of unrest and disorder which comes from the other side of the ocean there is reason to believe that the readjustment of the after-war conditions will proceed toward the normal without serious disruption of our ordinary activities. It is the duty of every man—employer and employe—to co-operate in solving the big problems which are inevit able as the aftermath of war. All alike are interested in bringing about normal conditions as quickly as possible and with the establish ing of peace at Paris there must be also the maintenance of content ment in the United States. Every effort is now being made to provide for any unemployment that may follow the demobilizing of the armed forces of the country and the plunging into idleness of those who had been regularly employed during the war. This is an import ant phase of the restoration of peace conditions and it is creditable to the employers of the country that for the most part they are doing their utmost to act with the same spirit of patriotism which actuated them in the midst of the war. But there must be a constant pull ing together of all classes of our population if we are to have the sort of peace that will assure tran quility and prosperity to all the people. In deciding what the Hun shall pay for the war the peace commissioners ought to consider what the Hun in tended to collect if he won. "War risk bureau has caught up with its business," says a news dis patch. But have the soldiers caught up with some of their allowances? "Another revolution in Mexico." Another, or Just a continuation? It will now be up to the retail coal man to show that he, too, has Just 'cause for increasing prices. ! >T fMtic, U By the Kz - Committeeman I ■ i -i 1 —Exclusive of any action by the Governor on bills which may be an nounced to-day, Governor William C. Sproul has approved forty bills and vetoed eleven. This is an un usual small number for the com mencement of the fourth month of a legislative session. During the ab sence of the Governor not many bills wilj be passed finally in either branch of the Legislature, but they will be held until his return, meas ures being advanced to third reading. About two dozen of the bills signed are general acts, the remainder be ing appropriation measures, practic ally all of them being to de | iiciencies caused by extraordinary | price conditions in the various State i institutions, the care of the insane | and to meet expenses of the State j Government. ! Two of the bills vetoed related to divorce laws. In view of the movement to place a limit upon introduction of bills in the House it is expected that many will be presented on Monday and Tuesday. Employment of aliens in any pub lic building in Pennsylvania, will be forbidden, if the Legislature enacts a bill drafted by the legislative com mittee of the Patriotic Order of Sons of America of which Gabriel H. Moyer is chairman. This bill has been drafted to require that only citizens of the State shall be em ployes of the Commonwealth or nny of its governmental divisions. The bill forbids employment of ahens either in connection with "the main tenance and operation of such build ing." It provides as a penalty that any authorities employing aliens "shall be surcharged tli3 nmount of money so expended, to be collected as provided by law for the collection of surcharges in such cases." —An alien bill already in. is that of Representative W. K. West, of Danville, which is in the hands of the House Judiciary General Com mittee and places a tax of $5 on every alien. —Two bills aimed at German in the educational institutions of the State are on the Senate calendar. One is the Davis bill forbidding Ger man, and the other the Mallery bill requiring all teaching in schools to be in English. —Of all the hearings scheduled bill to establish the Department of Conservation is attracting the most attention and more men active in politics are taking an interest in the measure than imagined. As a matter of fact sportsmen are not united on the bill and the hearing may develop into an interchange of opinions that will rival the discus sion of the bill in 1915. From what has been heard here, there is a de sire to know more about how the policies of the game. Fisheries, For estry and Water Supply bureaus are to be determined than anything else. The question of use of specified re venues has been settled and there is no objection to one head and co-ordi nation of activities, but some men have been sending letters here which indicate that they want to know how the policies of the bureaus will bo outlined. Friends of the fishermen's license bill say that they look for the bill to pass Monday night in the House. The importance of obtain ing revenue for the department, just as the hunters' license provides for the game activities, is being much emphasized in the informal sugges tions. —Capitol Hill is discussing the fact that when the Sproul administration came in. there were numerous inti mations that much was going to be doing in the way of changes among the people who had been conspicu ous Brumbaugh men. Now the pol icy is to keep business moving and to have it handled a little better. After the session when plans can be carried out with the least interrup tion of work, the reorganizations will begin in various departments. This is even better than many people hoped and they have started efforts to make their places permanent. —Clifford B. Connelly, the inan to be acting commissioner of Labor and industry, has been looking over the tield and will work out plans. The same will be done by Thomas B. Donaldson, the new. insurance com missioner. The Banking and Adjut ant General's offices will be reor ganized after pending bills go through. Internal Affairs will be materially changed as the result of new legislation after secretary-elect James F. Woodward goes in. —The Philadelphia Press says editorially: "Speaker Spangler, of the House at Harri.sburg, has found it necessary to read a lecture to mem bers who are not present at sessions to attend to business. It is not any thing new. and if the bill to boost the pay of members to twenty-five hundred dollars goes through they will get more for staying away than they now do. The rules of the House might be made to amend the difficulty, but so many perfectly useless members are elected to the Legislature that they may not be far wrong in supposing that they might Just as well absent them selves as not." Ads Get Working Capital "Advertising is as difficult to de fine as love." Carlisle X. Greig. noted expert, told the Retail Merchants' Association in Atlanta. "Advertising is a sort of super salesman." said Mr. Grelg. "a mega phone voice which appeals to a great number of people at the same time. Advertising is any kind of salesman you want him to be. Advertising will bring 'em In, money in hand, to take away the merchandise you wish to turn into cash—to-day for this reason, to-morrow for that. If is much more than a salesman—it is the special partner that provides working capital, that finds the funds to pay the bills before they come due. "When advertising fails, it is be cause it is underworked or over worked." A Wisconsin Revision She admits having stolen caps and aprons, but denies the theft of china ware and money. This correction is mad for the sake of accuracy and fair play.—Milwaukee Journal. Them Were the Dags! How the peace loving Russian [must sigh when he thinks of the old 1 Nihilist days.—lndianapolis Star. -* VR- —-- fiAKRISBURG TELEGRSPH! ABOUT THIS TIME OF THE YEAR By BRIGGS MOMDAV-*a FR.ewo SROACHCsI-TueSOAYwot>s MO*t <*| WtDtfeSDAY - PMites eu THC SU&JCCT —r~ TVIE RW TOIJMI *JG, NTTEO A NEUJ A CAME NJE*T THe IDEA ov/sft.i- OUTFIT FOR^THC SATURDAY- MIKJt> SeASOKi. TMORSBAY- STT4 to,l>o FR.DAY ;SATORDAY,T-- 50 HE'LL Be PRffE "moRRO^ 6 R> "" lV,e •* ?/ "', ow "T\ v *£//'//?/, RAIIO - SMOWJ-1 (%&) rcZt-r NA, e ,T ,/VZ; SLCET. TRADE BRIEFS An American company about to open up an industry in Honduras proposes to reconstruct the present wharf of re-enforced concrete to reconstruct and maintain the road bed of a railway, to build a new rail way line, to erect one steel bridge and to open up new lands. Shipments of wood pulp from Sweden to Germany, which were stopped by the British blockade in the Baltic, have been resumed. Consul-General Alexander W. Weddell of Athens has transmitted the name of a new business recently organized at Kalamata, Greece, for the exportation of figs and currants, especially those produced in that section. The name of the firm may be obtained from the Bureau of For eign and Domestic Commerce or its district and co-operative offices by reference to File No. 111333. The Landmandsbank. Holstebro, which since January 1, 1917, has worked with a capital stock of $67,- 000, is now doubling this capital. This bank was started in 1887 with a capital stock of $9,000. The normal consumption of gaso lene within the Union of South Afri ca is said to be 50,000 cans monthly. The consumption of coal in Brit ish India by railways, steamers and Indian industries and exports to for eign countries accounted for 15,248,- 000 tons of the 15,213,000 tons pro duced in India in 1917. The Kunze-Knorr brake for freight trains, which has undergone the most severe tests successfully, is not only going to be introduced on all German railroads, but also on those of Austria-llungary. Aktieselskabet Maraker Bruk in Norway are building a lumber raft to be towed across the North Sea. The raft is being built in Kommel vik, Norway, and is considerably larger than the Refanut, the 2,100 standard timber raft which was towed from Finland to Copenhagen. Mica of excellent quality is stated to have been located close to the Rhodesia-Portuguese Africa border. High cost of tins has been ham pering the new industry of con densed milk manufacture in the Cape and Natal, according to the British and South African "Export Gazette." The milk is said to be richer in butter fat than the im ported brands. A. E. Forenade Kopman, a Stock holm corporation doing a general merchandise and agency business, is increasing its capital stock from $804,000 to $1,200,000. The com pany was started in 1916 with a capital of $174,200. The factory at the Rand for the treatment of crude phosphates from Saldanha Bay is to be located next to the Ferreira mine, says the Brit ish and South African "Export Ga zette," and when it starts opera tions something like 2.000 tons of fertiliser monthly will be produced, with about 13 per cent, of soluble phosphates. The Governor of British East Afri ca is appointing an officer to or ganize the statistics of the protec torate's agricultural, dairying, in dustrial and pastoral productions. Considerable interest is being taken in the vegetable oil industry in the Straits Settlements, particularly co eoanut, rubber seed and castor oils. What Overwhelmed the Hun Not the actual strength of the American Army ,in France, says a writer in Power-Plant Engineering (Chicago, March 1), though that could perhaps have forced surren der of large numbers of German troops, but the preparation under way which insured overwhelming defeat of Germany in 1919 was the cause of the sudden ending of the war. He goes on: "If the Germans had not known of the great stream of shells, gas, tanks, and other munitions that was ready to flow forward they might have fought on through 1919, and the battles would have cost the lives, of 200,000 American soldiers. But we were making more mustard gas than Great Britain, France, and Germany combined. Our tank pro gram called for one tank for every seventy-five foot of front; artillery and shells were under way .that would have blown the German army off the face of the earth. And they knew it. So that, although we are paying for a great mass of material that never reached the front, it is really a payment for the saving of 200,000 lives of our boys, and wounds i that can not even be estimated." HOLIDAYS TO RELIEVE "IN TELLECTUAL INDIGESTION" [From the Literary Digest] THAT the holiday has its place in medicine is editorally asserted by The Journal of the American Medical Association (Chicago, March 1). The "concentration of effort and the speeding up of schedules" due to the war, with the assertion of some efficiency experts that such concen tration should become, standard in the future, lead the editor to protest against what he terms "the new mil itarized procedures." More than one of those, he says, who have observed the actual working-out of these plans in practice have seriously asked themselves whether in the long run such war-time measures can secure peace-time benefactions. The fact that every hour of the day is utilized does not guarantee that it is most advantageously employed. "There is such a thing as intellectual indigestion resulting from inordinate concentration." He goes on: "The efficiency of a mechanical or automatic performance can doubtless be increased in large meas ure by persistently continued prac tise: on the other hand, there are more distinctly intellectual process es which become impaired unless a reasonable period for reflection and mental recuperation is allowed. "Let us hesitate, therefore, lest we adopt a machinelike scheme too Psychology of the Flu [A Physician Writes to the Conti nental Edition of the London Times] The great ones of the medical profession have been discussing in fluenza and have disagreed, as usual, regarding treatment and prevention. Not unnaturally the public is feel ing bewildered. It is almost inclined to wonder whether the medical pro fession knows anything at all about influenza. Perhaps the great ones of the medical profession don't. But the general practitioner does. He— if he is any use —realizes that, though he can not treat the disease, .he can treat the patient. How does he do it? His methods are quite simple. He bucks the pa tient up. Either he makes the pa tient laugh or he makes him very cross. It doesn't matter which. The result is the same. In either case the patient is pro vided with something fresh to think about. Either he talks about the doctor's affability or he growls about the (fetor's brutality, and threatens to "report him." Then he goes to sleep and wakes refreshed. Influenza is really a most Innocu ous affair. The percentage of per sons affected who develop serious Symptoms is ridiculously small; and the percentage would be smaller still if there were more general san ity knocking around. Here is a truly scientific exposition of what happens. There are certain germs waiting about with their tails up. seeking victims. No. 1 germ pro vides the headache and the pains all over. No. 2 germ hands out the pneumonia which kills. Neither germ has much chance with the person who Is not prepared to welcome him. If you are fit, the germ—he has a nice long name— will drop his tail and let you pass by unscathed; but If you are not fit— and particularly if you let the germ know you are afraid of him—he will go for you. GENERAL WOOD'S MEDAL [From the New York Sun] News comes from Washington that the War Department announces its award to Major General Leonard Wood of the Distinguished Service Medal. If it is permitted to put an inscription on thiß medal, we sug gest at least the. outlines of some brief explanatory matter, as follows: "Presented to Major General Leonard Wood as a token of the Administration's burning desire to indicate to the people of the United States that it really and truly loves Wood and that it kept him from go ing to France becaues of its solici tude for his health and not because it feared that General Wood, if sent to the battlefield, might enhance his professional reputation and the af fection In which so many Americans hold him." This, as we said, is only a sugges tion. That the head of the War De partment, Mr. Baker, who has a lit erary touch second to only one in all the Administration, could do bet ter with the inscription we are sure. rashly as the basis for the further development of American higher education. The physician has a special concern in the threatened abolition of the institution of holi days. To him who watches the | mode of life of his fellow citizens the beneficence of an occasional holi day has not escaped notice. It need not be debated whether there has been inordinate waste of time in the past: whether the life of many of our citizens, young and old, has not been extravagant in authorized idle ness. The institution of suitable holiday periods is for the most part more than likely to make for good. 'The right use of -a holiday is one of the sovereign secrets in the prac tice of the noble art of keeping alive.' Let us bear this in mind in the discussion of the projects of re construction, frankly admitting that leisure is valuable in the long run only if it improves the quality of work. A change of work may be come a holiday in essence. The best holiday is not one spent in languid idleness, but one that contains the largest amount of new experience. The physician needs such holidays and in selecting their routine he will do well to observe such holiday ex- I perts as the naturalist, the traveler, | and the historian, rather than the 1 golfer." THE AMERICAN [After seeing a "Doug" Fairbanks film] The last kiss faded out; the bright ness thinned. Hands clattered in a tempest of applause; (A thousand white leaves pattering in the wind) Glory turned garish in the fol lowing pause. The audience shrank with it, looked and grinned Sheepishly at itself, then turned to see What the next number on the bill might be A fat man sang "I hear you calling me." But something still persisted, some thing crude; Childishly boisterous, palpably ab surd. And yet it spelled America in rude Large letters; told without a word The essence of our boyhood, the young spirit Surer of naught than what we may inherit; Intrepid faith that does not stop to pray And strength that springs from a child's love of play; Reckless, spontaneous, prodigal, im ' mense, Taking no thought of cost or con sequence. Again life flickered from the shining reels — A lady vampire posed with a pet snake. Six odd sized clowns, late of the burlesque "wheels,"' Dressed as policemen, fell into a lake. A lisping tenor, painted to the eyes, Came out and squeaked "We're going to smash the Hun" * And still the spoil remained. Out of the lies And cheap hypocrisies it rose and spun Its kindred strands of fantasty and fun, Of gaiety unconquerable and wise, Of the brash boy in us that never dies. But keeps us better than a text or truth. Bound to the bright democracy of youth.—Louis Untermeyer in Contemporary Verse. God's Covenant to Solomon And God said unto Solomon, Be cause this was in thine heart, and thou hast not asked riches, wealth or honor, nor the life of thine enemies, neither yet hast asked long life; but hast asked wisdom and knowledge for thyself, that thou mayest judge my people, over whom I have made thee king; wisdom and knowledge is granted unto thee; and I will give thee riches, and wealth, and honor, such as none of the kings have had that have been before thee, neither shall there any after thee have the like. —II Chron cles 1, 11 and 12. ~ APRIL' 5,1919. 1 EDITORIAL COMMENT ~ The Hun always maintained thai envy of Germany brought on the war. If he was right, here is one cause of war forever removed.— Oreenvtllo tS. C.) Piedmont. The future peace of the world do peiiQ.s largely on the policy of the Von nllles conference. Is it "interna tionalize" cr "international lies?"— Manila Bulletin. The magnitude of the problem of of "getting Mexico on her feet" is tost appreciated by those who are familiar with the spectacle of the Mexican recumbent in the sun. You can got him on his feet, but you can't keen him there. We should say iht.t the only way to "get Mex ico on her tcet" would be to tilt the axis of the earth.—Chicago Tribune. CANDY IN THE ARMY Uncle Sam likes his boys to have plenty of candy, and hands it to them by the car-load. The author of a special article prepared for The American Journal of Clinical Medi cine (New York, March ), from ma terial furnished by the Quarter master-General's office, tells us that since the Government has been hand ling the purchase of sugar, through the Food Administration (September 1, 1917), approximately 200,000,000 pounds has been used by the Army, exclusive of the depots and camps on our west coast, where they have been using raw sugar from Manila, having it refined locally. A con servative statement of the total amound of sugar consumed by the Army is 225,000,000 pounds. It is found that about 237 pounds of sugar is eaten by 1,000 men at their meals in one day. We read further: "Lemon-drops (the candy) are sp popular in the Army that consider able difficulty has been experienced by the Subsistence Division of the Quartermaster Corps in obtaining the quantity and quality desired. About 200,000 pounds of lemon-drops is used each month at the present time constituting about fifteen per cent, of the amount of candy furnished to the Army. Samples were secured from practically all the candy-mak ers in the United States and the lemon-drop that was 'thought best for the men was adopted as the standard. The formula was then secured and distributed among a I number of candy manufacturers, with the result that at present the j Army is being very well supplied I with the confection. The lemon i drops now being supplied to the ; Army are made of pure granulated I sugar and 'are flavored with an I emulsion made from the rind of the lemon. It is found that an extra sour lemon-drop is the favorite with the soldiers. The product made from the formula used has the thirst quenching quality of lemonade. "Care is being taken to see to it that manufacturers do not use un developed cacao-beans in the manu facture of chocolate and candy for the Army. It is found that, among the beans used in making these products, there are many undevel oped beans. This is caused by the dense shade of the cacao-tree. The taste of chocolate made from the un developed bean bears the same re lation to that from the developed bean as does the crab-apple to the winesap apple. Candy, when made from the poorer product while pure, ! is very different in taste, being some ; what bitter and unsatisfactory. Steps are being taker to see to it I that this substitution is not made In I Army products." THEN AND NOW Beneath her window in the fragrant night I half forget how truant years have flown Since I looked up to see her cham ber-light, Or, catch, perchance, her slender shadow thrown Upon the casement; but the nodding leaves Sweep lnzily across the unlit pane, And to and fro beneath the shadowy eaves, Like restless birds, the breath of coming rain Creeps, lilac-laden, up the village street When all is still, as If the very trees .. Were listening for the coming of her feet That come no more; yet, lest I weep, the breeze Sings some forgotten song of those old years Until my heart grows far too glad for tears. —By Lieut.-Col. John McCrae. Ebettmg difat Friends of the lat* Chauncey PJ Rogers, Jr., for years connected with' the Auditor General's Department! and well known to many Harrisbur|f people because of his conspicuous service in the llscal departments and! through relationships with families' here, will be interested to learn oC\ an unusual tribute paid to his mem ory in his home county of Erie re jcently. Mr. Rogers died from in juries received in an automobilai accident in Cumberland county lasQi fall. Ho had been a practicing at torney in Corry and Erie for yearst before coming to Harrlsburg as Dep uty Auditor General under A. E* Slsson and his death was the occa sion of many regrets by lawyers and! prominent citizens. A short timo ago on Mr. Roger's birthday the courts of Erie county convened lit special session and addresses eulo gistic of Mr. Rogers were delivered by the judges. General Sisson and others active in the afTairs of tho county by the lake. Nothing liko it had occured in the courts of northwestern Pennsylvania in years and newspapers of that section com ment upon it as well deserved. Mr. Rogors was a nephew of tho Messrs. John N. Speel and A. R. Spcel, of this city, and a descendant of one offl the early Harrisburg families. • • • A good story is going the rounds* of Capitol Hill about a policeman, a legislator and four prominent State officials. These four picn were going to lunch and as they passed the Penn-Harris corner a lawmaker asked a policeman if he knew who they were. "Three Capitol millionaires,'' promptly replied the guardian. And now the question is who wcro they? • • • Robert C. Miller, the new superin tendent of the State Department of Public Printing and Binding, who assumed office this week with a characteristic avoidance of any fuss and feathers, says he is the busiest man on the Hill. He is studying the laws relative to his department, reading contracts and finding out just whnt ails the department. "I have been a printer most of my life, but I'm becoming one of our lead ing students." said the Adams county leader, the day after he took office. "I guess I have been around print ing offices since I have been sixteen and have published a newspaper and conducted a commercial printing establishment for years, but we all have to learn. Now I'm sitting up studying this proposition and until I get it mastered and can think out some things we are going to do the best possible." Mr. Miller is a big man, physically, and scents to be exceedingly energetic in getting after the manifold details of his department. Many men have come to Capitol Hill to take charge of departments without announced pro grams, but Mr. Miller is one of tho first to say that he will have no pro gram until he "learns the game" and he is starting right at the bottom. * • A North Second street d§g. whose habitat is above "Woodbine, has developed one of the oddest of an tipathies. This dog is out on the street a great deal and has much to do with policing that part of the Tenth Ward against visits by spar rows and other birds and in regu lating automobile and trolley traffic. The other afternoon he extended his beat to the skies. One of the Middletown aviators was soaring around, doing stunts, when he was spied by the dog, which promptly challenged his right to that section. The aviator turned and headed for 1 down town and the dog with eyes j fixed on the speck in the sky paced i him for blocks, barking warnings to him never to return. When the State Highway Depart ment completes the work of putting Main street. Camp Hill, into lirst class condition, the road from Har risburg to Pittsburgh will be pretty nearly as smooth as a hardwood floor. Wonders have been accom plished the past two years in the shaping up of this important piece of highway, one of the main links between the east and the west, and hundreds of thousands of dollars have been expended upon it. Hut the effort has been well worth while, and now the job is nearly complete and the next link In the chain be tween Pittsburgh and Philadelphia is that from Harrisburg east and this is being rapidly rebuilt. One of the happiest men in Cumberland county over the activities of Com missioner Sadler is H. C. Zacharias. Chief Burgess of Camp HIM, who no longer fears for his life at the hands of irate automobilists desiring to collect the price of springs smashed on Camp Hill's main street. Which is reminiscent of a remark made by John fk Musser, a neighbor of Zach arias, while driving his car over what was at the time an extremely rough bit of the Emmittsburg road below Gettysburg. "This is the highway over which Lee's army retreated," observed Musser between jolts. "How do you make that out?" asked a doubting passenger. "By these ruts his heavy artillery wore in the road," replied Musser, never batting an eye. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE " —L. H. Kinnard, vice-president and general manager of the Bell Telephone, was a Harrisburg visitor yesterday. —Harry F. Bovard, prominent in Westmoreland county mining af fairs was among Harrisburg visitors. He is interested In good roads. —Senator Penrose will be given a dinner in Philadelphia by friends the middle of the month. It will be quite an elaborate affair. •—Ex-Judge, J. Sharp Wilson, of Beaver county, was among men who visited the State Capitol. He is in terested In roads and legislation —George P. Donehoo, secretary of the State Historical Commission, is a minister and authority on Indian history of the upper counties. DO YOU KNOW —That Harrisburg Is selling knit goods to the army and navy? HISTORIC HARRISBURG —A century ago there were five breweries and three distilleries in Harrisburg. Seaweed Substitute For Oats Experiments with alimentary sea weed as a substitute for oats in feeding horses seem to prove con clusively the worth of the seaweed. The tests were conducted In France under the supervision of governmnt veterinarians, and horses fed with the seaweed fattened more rapidly than those having regular rations of oats. The seaweed, it iB said, grows in abundance on the Brittany coast. I —lndianapolis News.