12 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded ISSI Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph Building, Federal Square E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Business Manager GUS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHEN'ER, Circulation Manager Executive Hoard J. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, F, R. OYSTER, fIUS. 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 paper and also the local news pub lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. A Member American Fj Newspaper Pub- I Associa- Bur'eau of Circu lation and Penn yl\Ninla^Associa- Eastern office Story. Brool. r & Avenue Building. Western oUice, Gas' I Chicago, 111. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Fa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. TCCESDAY, APRIL 8. 1919 Occupation is the scythe of time.— Napoleon 1. SIGNS OF THE TIMES THERE are increasing signs of the approach of a presidential election year. The other day a party of business men in Philadel phia hailed William Howard Taft as the "next occupant of the White House" and yesterday the New Y'ork Sun printed a letter from Ducktown, Tenn., telling of the organization of a General Leonard Wood Republican club in that town, "for the purpose of electing Major General Wood president of the United States." To be sure, Ducktown is not a metropo lis and what Ducktown thinks on the subject may be at wide variance with what the nation-at-large thinks, but this "voice crying in the wilder ness" has a tone that gives one pause for thought. Newspaper cartoonists like to make fun of the daily gatherings in the village grocery, where the future of nations is settled every evening be fore the shutters go up at 9 o'clock, but the man in search of public sentiment gathers his evidence in just such places. In grocery stores, cigar stores, barber shops—where ever men gather and voice their ideas on matters pertaining to gov ernmental afTairs, there is a people's forum, and it is from just such hum ble discussions that sentiment is de veloped and public opinion formu lated. Ducktown is one of thousands of villages where men's minds are turning now toward the presidential contest, and we opine that if Duck town can muster 350 members for a Gentral Wood Republican club there is considerable feeling for that distinguished soldier throughout the country. Make no mistake about it, if you want to sound out public sentiment go into the places of common resort where the ordinary run of American citizens discuss the issues and thresh out their differences. There is more truth than humor in the old joke about settling the fate of the country around the cannon stove of the cross roads store. COURT-MARTIAL REVISION SECRETARY OF WAR BAKER has at last reached the conclu sion that there really might have been some injustice done in the sentencing of soldiers convicted of minor offenses by court martial. This admission is widely at variance with the secretary's broad denial at the outset that such conditions existed. Indeed, Mr. Baker insisted that there was no truth whatsoever in the charges and knew of no ex cuse for criticism, he added. This is a weakness the secretary has ex hibited on more than one occasion. All's well with his department until it is proved otherwise, appears to be the motto on which he acts and he thereby opens himself and the administration to public hostility that might be avoided if he frankly admitted faults and promised their correction. Americans have no pa tience with the public official who poses as being infallible. HURLEY ADOPTS PLAN CHAIRMAN HURLEY, of the Shipping Board, speaking be fore the National Marine Lea gue in New York, has outlined the plan that he will sup port for the future operation of our war fleet of merchant ships. While Mr. Hurley's experience in the ship ping world is limited to the two years he has been connected with the Federal Board, he has long been a practical business man and has the good sense to take the advice of experts who have devoted their lives to the operation of ships. A comparison of the plan now pvit for ward by Chairman Hurley shows a strong resemblance to the policy for the future of our merchant marine ■worked out some weeks ago by Mr. Kosseter, Director of Operations of TUESDAY EVENING, the Emergency Fleet Corporation, and formerly manager of the Paci lle Mail. Mr. Hurley announces that he is flatly opposed to Government own ership and operation. He is also against Government ownership and private operation, and looks with disfavor upon ownership by a single private corporation with the Gov ernment guaranteeing a certain re turn on the stock. Mr. Hurley's scheme contemplates the sale of Government ships to private parties who wish to operate in the foreign trade, on the basis of twenty-five per cent, cash, the balance payable in annual installments over a period of about ten years, interest thereon to be charged by the Government at 5 per cent. One-fifth of this interest he would have set aside by the Government to constitute a "merchant marine development fund." Each purchaser should be obliged to take out a Federal charter, which should limit the amount of stock to he issued, prevent its sale to an alien and provide that one member of the board of directors shall be named by the Government. It is recognized that a number of routes that probably would be established under the new system, while nec essary lo the future development of American commerce, would not at first yield operating profits. Where [the Government sold a ship for op eration on such a route it would be necessary for the Government to support the new line until its trade increased sufficiently to pay its own way. Such assistance would be ex tended from the merchant marine development fund, under the super vision of the Government directors, who would meet periodically in Washington for the purpose. It would be in no sense a payment from the Treasury, but an advance from the guarantee fund furnished by the steamship companies them selves. When such ships become established on their new routes and earn a profit, the financial assistance they have received from the Gov ernment will be repaid from a por tion of those profits. To one who has been in touch with our merchant marine situation, it is evident that the plan repre sents the consensus of the best thought and experience of the ship ping experts connected with the Federal Board. The fact that Mr. Hurley's name is attached to the scheme does not mean that he origi nated it.' although the fact that he is supporting such a broad and com prehensive policy entitles him to great credit. Of course, the success of the whole matter depends upon the passage of necessary legislation by Congress. Although the recently adjourned Democratic Congress fail ed utterly to frame legislation for the future administration of our huge merchant marine fleet, the Re publicans have announced their in tention of dealing with that prob lem at the earliest possible moment after they have organized the new Congress and taken control of the legislation of the country for the next two years. The plan given publicity by Mr. Hurley may well be taken as the basis for future dis cussion, and, with improvements that the debate may bring out, be adopted as our future maritime policy. LET THE COURTS DECIDE THE Countjy Commissioners, hav ing employed an expert to re assess the coal lands in Dauphin county and that expert having placed the assessments at a figure which the coal companies say is too high, it remains apparently to thresh the matter out to a proper conclusion in the courts. The case is one for expert testi mony. Neither the County Commis sioners nor any assessor is possessed of technical knowledge sufficient to pass judgment intelligently upon the claims of the coal company en gineers of their own knowledge. Experts must be called also in de fense of the contentions of the en gineer who placed the assessments. The mere word of the coal com panies that the assessment is too high cannot be taken, any more than can the unsupported word of any other taxpayer as to how much his own particular property should be taxed. There is a strong belief in the public mind that the coal proper ties are under-assessed >and no mat ter what they have to say about it, an assessed valuation should be de cided Upon, which the commissioners regard as fair, and if the companies then object the place for relief is the courts. A WIDER FIELD COLONEL HENRY WATTER SON no doubt will regret his retirement as editor emeritus of the Louisville Courier-Journal. One cannot sever a connection of more than a half century and not feci a pang of sorrow in the part ing. Colonel Watterson does not be lieve in President Wilson's League of Peace plans; the new owners of the Courier-Journal do; so there was nothing for the old warrior to do but advance his colors, which he has done, for by cutting loose from the Courier-Journal, which owes aH its prominence among the newspa pers of the Nation to Watterson's trenchant pen, the Colonel has widened his field of operations and the Nation as a whole will receive the benefit of his writings. How ever one may differ with Colonel Watterson politically, one must rec ognize his patriotism, admire his courage and admit the sanity of his judgment. What the Courier-Jour nal loses the country-at-large gains. Colonel Watterson is not the sort of editor who permits his opinions to be regulated by the vote of a board of directors. "7 > tK)toijCtraKta By the Ex-Committeeman The legislature of Pennsylvania last right voted without discussion to take a recess next week. The resolution adopted called for ad journment of the Senate to-day and the. House to-morrow until Easter Monday, April 21. Senator William E. Crow pre sented the resolution in the Senate after consultation with colleagues and it was udopted without discus sion. This was about 9:30 and at that time resentment against the pie 11 was smouldering. At 11:20 the lesolution was laid before the llouso and action was rapid. Speaker Spangler put the motion; Representative J. E: Phillips de manded to be heard, the speaker • lid not hear him; the House voted, w'.ili some few "noes"; some one yelled for "division"; the speaker declared the motion carried and it wo.• all over. Much grumbling was heard, but the opponents of the plan were c-i jght napping and the lawmakers -vill take a vacation. Meanwhile the daily expense of the Legislature will go on and there is considerable criticism heard. The Governor's of fice last night declared the Governs was nut taking any hand in the mat ter either one way or tne other. —Governor William C. Sproul's idea of simplifying the quarantine inspection at Philadedlphia by a sin gle inspection which it is desired to facilitate the passenger lines which it is expected will be established out of Philadelphia will take form in the next week. Certain propositions are understood to have been sub mitted to the Attorney General whereby the State Department of Health will look after these matters and act in co-operation with the United States government. One plan is for State and Federal inspectors to board incoming vessels at the same time and thus do away w T ith the delays due to two inspections, each at a separate place. Confer ences on the subject will be held during the week. —There have been recesses in years gone by in the Legislature, but they were never very popular except among the city members. Ol'ten they have been objects of con siderable attack because of the ex pense involved in keeping the men paid by the day on the job. The belief is that this session could have been closed up May 15 with out difficulty and without a recess. —ln times past recesses were oft en taken in February when some of the leaders desired to go South, to Florida, or Georgia, or some more congenial clime and took advan tage of the visits in the sunny states to make up a legislative program. The visiting to the South became popular after Senator Quay estab. lislied his Florida home and some Senators seldom lost an excuse to go away in winter. The Democrats at first used to make capital out of the pilgrimages and tell about the poor rural members who had to stay in snow-covered Pennsylvania, but when a couple of wealthy Dem ocrats were turned up at southern resorts during the recess, they had so criticised, things took on a dif ferent color and there was not so much said. —The greatest objection that is made to the recess now is because it will make the session longer than the middle of May. Governor Sproul has arranged to take care of only very urgent mat ters that may arise during his stay at Hot Springs. Otherwise he is to be left alone to recover. —George B. Wolf was elected county chairman and treasurer and Frank Gilmore, secretary at the an nual meeting of the Democratic standing committee of Lycoming county, at WilMamsport on Satur day. Resolutions endorsing Presi dent Wilson were adopted. C. Ed mund Gilmore, the retiring county chairman, announced his candidacy for the office of district attorney. —President Judge Jeremiah N. Keller, of Mifflintown, who presides over the Forty-first Judicial district, including Perry and Juniata coun ties, will be a candidate to succeed himself. He was appointed to the bench in 1917, on the death of Pres ident Judge William N. Seibert.. J. M. Barnett, the New Bloomficld lawyer, who was a candidate against Judge Seibert, is also an aspirant. —The Scranton Republican says: "Governor Sproul's message on the anthracite situation indicates that the trend of coal .prices will be up ward for the next few months, and he advises that 'every one who can do so should lay in coal now." In one way or another, the Governor says, the anthracite industry fur nishes employment and sustenance to almost one-fourth of 'our indus trial population in Pennsylvania,' while the State consumes only one eighth of the product, the bulk of it going to other parts of the coun try." The Wild Yeasts of the Air [Front the Philadelphia Inquirer.] Deciding that a beverage contain ing as much as 1.4 per cent alco hol is to be regarded as intoxicating, the Judge Advocate General of the army apparently deals a blow at the sale even of many so-called "soft drinks" in the forbidden areas about military posts. Few of these are wholly free from alcohol, and in many cases the alcoholic content may develop after manufacture. Thus nature hereself is in the con spiracy against a bone-dry State. Ilow serious that menace is may be gathered from the Judge Advo cate General's explanation of the fashion of her working. Speaking of the "near beers" he says 'that unless great pains be taken, not only to sterilize the product, but to keep it sterile, "alcohol will be formed by the fermentation set up by the wild yeasts which are found every where in the air." The wild yeasts! What new and unexpected perils science is contin ually discovering! Perhaps the verse about the child who feared the flow ers because they were wild may yet have a very real application. If there are wild yeasts in the air, ter rible ravaging creatures lying in wait for the souls of men and leading them, without their will or their knowledge, to the evils of strong drink, where shall safety he found? Would anybody recognize a wild yeast if he saw it? Can the Judge Advocate General himself lRy his hand upon his heart and declare that he has even seen one? It becomes plainer and plainer every day that before the Uplift has accomplished its perfeet work these revelations of the total depravity of inanimate objects will have become fairly appalling. The Word "Magnet" The word "magnet" is derived from the name' of the city of Mog ncsia, in Asia Minor, where the properties of loadstone are said to I have been discovered Chicago I Tribune. BJLRJUSBURG TELEGKAJPH AIN'T IT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEEUfPT ..... ... ... .... By BRIGGS NAJH6-N4 VOU LIV/ 6. IM A. 'AMD Wi A FAM.LY YOJ^^Y^ ."fLftT* where The nexT To Yo ° WHt} Drying rou CRAzy Partitions are all A Daughter That plays . Too Th.N FIM66R {.xeroses on thc //C Sio"S B GR-R-rano wd YOU'LL a,™* /J//, GLOR-R-RIOUSFeeUN) ? HAVE TO NOUE ''/// FRANCE— PIANO TO AMD TWO YEARS OF WAR I [From the New York Times.] Two years ago to-day (April 6),at| 3.12 in the morning, the House of | Representatives, following the Sen ate's lead, resolved in favor of war | with Germany, and a formal declar ation was issued in the afternoon. It was the first time in all its history, if we except the little Barbary war of more than a hundred years ago, in which the United States ever vot ed to send armed forces into the old world to redress a grievance or avenge an insult. Germany scoffed loudly. She was sure that we could j never get our men across in any , number to affect the result of the war. In fact, the common German idea was that we intended to make war on Japan and were merely mak ing a pretense of mobilization until we could carry out our rjal and hidden purpose. For months after ward whenever our soldiers landed, the Germans were told that only a few medical officers and hospital units had got across or ever could. The doom of Germany was written i large, but the Germans could not believe it and did not see it. Now, two years from that mo- I mentous day when the haughty Ira- j perial mind was beset with the no tion that the United States would i not fight, that we could send no sub stantial reinforcements to the armies of the Allies, the great, ahd it may i be the decisive, part of America, in j the overthrow of Germany, in bring- | ing the war to an end, has been j written by the pen of history. The ! nations that were arrayed against | Germany are fashioning at Paris j the bonds which will keep Germany at peace with the world. They have i taken away her navy, they have j decreed her disarmament, they have restored Alsace and Lorraine to and in mercy that precedes repent ance they are supplying to her peo- | pie food long withheld by the block ade. Her Kaiser is a fugitive, her military party and her general staff are scattered, her old arrogant spirit is broken, she has been brought to terms, and to the autocracy she so long endured there has succeeded a nondescript Government of Social ists that is unable to maintain even domestic tranquility. These two years have been crowded with events unsurpassed in weight and moment by any recorded in the chronicles of any similar period in the world's history. The Quick and the Dead [By Laurence Housman.] Evening rose from a bed of rain, And out of the West day dawned again; With outstretched finge.s of falling light She touched the tree-tops and made them bright; And under the leaves, a-spark with, dew, The cry of the blackbird sparkled too; And every hillock, and glade, and tree Was filled with the makings of melody, As the dying light streamed miles along Through murmur of water, and leaf, and song. Then out of the East, in a paling mist. The dead-faced moon came up to be kissed; Slow and solemn we watched her rise, A face of wonder with cavernous eyes, There life is changeless and time without worth, There nbthing dies or Is brought to birth: Her day is done, she is filled with dearth. Old she looks to the young green earth, Old as the foam of a frozen shore. Old —for nothing can age her more! O young green earth, go down into night. Rejoice in thy youth till its days are o'er! Time speeds, life spends: therein is delight, Till youth and the years can age no more. Bill Hohenzollern The versatility of William Hohen zollern when ho was German Emp orer often amazed and amused the world. But apparently it was never fully appreciated, or perhaps was never fully disclosed, until he went Into exile. His latest elaborate out put from Amerongen certain'v re veals htm as many, more different kinds of liar and poltroon than the world ever knew that any one man could be. —Harvey's Weekly. State Press on Kunkel Opinion Schaffer's Victory For Slate [Philadelphia Bulletin] The decision by which Judge Kun kel has continued the preliminary in junction in favor of the t'ommon wealth against the Bell Telephone Company, or rather, in effect and substance, against the Postmaster- General of the United States us ad ministrator of the company's serv ice, is one of the most important judicial opinions that has been de livered for many years on the rela tions of Pennsylvania as a State to the National Government. The suit has yet to be decided on final hearing, but the principles which Judge Kunkel' has affirmed seem virtually to reach already the essential questions which are in volved in this unusually significant case. The full text of the opinion shows thai it is based on broader ground than appeared to be given in tie first report of it, and that the rights of this State, as challenged by the authorities at Washington, are al together likely to be vindicated fully in the further proceedings before the court. J.idge Kunkel holds that Congress could not confer powers upon the President which arc not related to the actual conduct and prosecution of the war, and that therefore the acts of the Postmaster-General in raising rates were illegal, not being connected with a war purpose or with military necessities of the Na tion. A proper disposition has also been made of the specious, and rather mischievous, contention that the court's injunction against the ad vance in the telephone rates could not be made effective because it was argued, the President of the United States cannot be enjoined. Judge Kunkel insists that even if the President, because of his office, may not be subject to injunction, there is no reason why those who assist him in questionable or illegal acts should not be prevented from doing so if they are amenable to the piocesses of the court. When they changed the tolls of the Belli Tele phone Company in Pennsylvania in entire indifference to the authority of our Public Service Commission in ' such matters, they were violating the rights of this State. Judge Kun kel clearly calls a halt on what we may call a gross usurpation of the authority of Pennsylvania when he says that "The conclusion follows that neither the President nor the Postmaster-General was acting officially in changing the rates and tolls, but they acted beyond the scope of their powers. In such case they are open to in terference and prevention so far as lies in the power of the State courts, especially in the present case where their act amounts to a disregard of the Commonwealth's laws and is an attempt to do that which the defendant company itself could not do." It is due to William L. Schaffer, the new Attorney-General of Penn sylvania. that the issue in question was promptly raised as soon as he recognized the irregularity and the wrong. His cogent, as well as lucid, reasoning has resulted in a signal victory for' the Commonwealth. Not only are the public relieved of the unexpected and unnecessary charges which Burleson attempted to' enforce in the telephone service, but an undue assertion of Federal power over this State has been checked and repulsed. If the prin ciples which Judge Kunkel has af firmed shall enter into his final judgment on the facts of the case, as it would seem almost certain that EDITORIAL COMMENT "No beer, no work," will' probably subside into near-beer and near work. — Boston Herald. Another result of international anuty will be the final recognition of the consumer as a person having equal rights with others. —Chicago Daily News. Among the chief troubles of a proud father in some of those South Sea Islands these days is trying to figure out whether the new heir ought to be christened Woodrow or George.—Manila Bulletin. By changing the abbreviation of California to Calif, to avoid chances for mistake, a suggestion may be accepted to change Miss to Mrs. so that Mississippi may be wholly dif ferentiated from Missouri.—Lowell Courier-Citizen. Commissioner Roper calls on all honest citizens to lasso all tax-dodg ers. Then we'll all be ropers.— Lowell Curier-Citizen, they will, a long and salutary step will have been taken in defending legitimate State rights us against an arbitrary and pernicious national ism in a time of peace. The Line on War Power [From The Pittsburgh Dispatch.] The text of Judge Kunkcl's de cision in the case of the Common wealth versus the telephone com pany to restrain the application of Postmaster General Burleson's rates without the approval of the State Pubiic Service Commission shows it to be of much deeper significance than the brief telegraphic sum maries indicate. It raises sharply the extent and limitations of the President's war powers and denies his authority to fix rates for private telephone users as having no rela tion whatever to the war use of the wire systems. The question, the Dauphin county jurist says, is whether the President and the Postmaster General are em powered to use and opeiate the sys tem for any other purpose than war purposes. He holds it is self-evi dent the system may be used for war purposes without changing the rates to the public approved by the. Pub lic Serr'oe Commission since the Government might use it under nec essity to the exclusion of the public altogether. In short, that the Gov ernment's war use of the wires was in no wise dependent upon the rates paid by private users and that the Burleson rate increase was without legal authority. Point is given to this construction by the language of the act of Con gress, which explicity provided "nothing in this act shall lie con strued to amend, repeal, impair or affect existing laws or powers of the States in relation to taxation or the lawful police regulations of the States except wherein such laws, powers or regulations may affect the transmission of Government com munication or the issue of slock or bonds by such system." This reser vation of power to the State Public Service Commission over rates is the basis for the suit. The war powers of the President, the court holds, do not mean that after he has taken property he is the sole judge of the purposes for which he may use it. Whether that use is for war or other purposes, is a judicial question. The Congress ional resolution shows that, in the, opinion of Congress, there existed no military necessity for changing the rates. The example is cited that if the President had taken posses sion, under his war powers, of a citizen's residence and used it by renting it to another for purpose of revenue it could not be held to be a war purpose. And if he thus ex ceeded his constitutional powers, "and he may not, because of his office, be subjected to injunction or the process of the courts for so do ing, there is no reason why those who assist him and are within the jurisdiction of the courts should not !be prevented so far as they are [ amenable to judicial process." This opinion, it will be seen, goes I to the root of much of the Govern mental intervention in business un- I der the guise of war necessity. It raises, for the first time, the direct issue of distinguishing between pure ly war purposes and others having no direct relation to the prosecution of the war. If it is sustained it will revolutionize the whole war time policy of the administration and establish a definite l'mltation on the I use of official power. BOOKS AND MAGAZINES A dozen naval yarns published by the Scrlbners under the title "Anchors Awefgli," have been pronounced by no less an authority than Secretary Daniels, to be classic interpretations of navy life—and they are by a wo man, at that! Harriet Welles" life as the wife of a Rear-Admiral in our fleet" to all corners of the globe, navy, following "the fleet" to all corners of the globe, has brought the human side of our great fleet very close to her, and these stories of executive officer, ship chaplain, able seaman, and last, but not least, the brave wives whose lives are a never-ending series of all-too-brief honeymoons, have, according to Sec retary Daniels, "a glow and tender pathos which have permitted other than navy eyes to look upon the lights and shadows of a service which has of late come into new apprecia tion by the American people.". APRIL 8, 1919 THE BATTLE OE JUTLAND Compared with the force com- | mantled by. Admiral Jellicoe in the i North Sea, the forces commanded | by Alexander, or Caesar, or Napol- j eon, or Nelson were puny, and even | those of TOKO and Rojesvensky were j unimportant. Compared with this force the agKregate land forces of | both the Allies and the Teutons were ' inconsiderable. The total offensive power of one salvo from one of Jellicoe's battle- j ships was greater than that of a ; half million muskets. The aggregate artillery power of j the twenty-four modern battleships 1 that Admiral Jellicoe had in his | main column at the battle of Jutland, was greater than that of 10,000,000 1 infantry soldiers'—and he moved these battleships at a speed of nearly I twenty miles an hour. No other person ever commanded a force comparable in power with the force commanded by Admiral Jellicoe. The force under Admiral Jellicoe in the North Sea was the concentra- i tion of at least 90 per cent, of the naval defensive power of the Brit ish Empire. It was opposed to the German High Sea Eleet, possessing an offensive power which while in ferior, was not greatly so. It was not so much inferior as to render impossible the defeat of the British fleet, by reason of superior strategy or tactics on the German side, or of accident, or of all combined, es pecially since the defensive armor of the Germans was the better. If the battle of Jutland had been a decisive victory for either side the victory in the war would have gone to the side that was the victor in the battle. OUR SOLDIER DEAD [By Annette Kohn.] "In Flanders ticlds, where poppies blow," In France where beauteous roses grow. There let them rest—forever sleep, While .we eternal vigil keep With our heart's love—with our soul's pray'r, For all our Fallen "Over There." The earth is sacred where they fell— Forever on it lies the spell Of hero deeds in Freedom's cause, .And men unborn shall come and pause I To say a prayer, or bow the head. So leave these graves to hold their dead. Let not our sighing nor our tears Fall on them through the coming years. Who on the land, on sea, in air, With dauntless courage everywhere. Their homes and country glorilled— Stood to their arms, and smiling died. Great France will leave no need nor room That we place flowers on their tomb And proudly o'er their resting-place, Will float forever in its grace, i O'er cross and star, and symbol tag, | Their own beloved country's Flag. j The morning sun will gild with light, [The stars keep holy watch at night, | The winter spread soft pall of snow, The summer flowers about them grow. The sweet birds sing their spring time call. | God's love and mercy guard them aH. ! Charges Loss to Ludendorff Loss of the war was charged by a former Krupp expert to two grave mistakes by Ludendorff, described as the "brains of the German Army," in his failure, first, to estimate the , wonderful possibilities of the Ameri can troop transport, and second, his I false assumption tha£ Marshal Foch's reserve army had ceased to I exist in June, 1918. Ludendorff, he said, gambled with I the existence of Germany. He was I like a jockey in a long race who I forced his horse far ahead of the | rest of the field and who, toward the end, when the others began to gain I with their carefully reserved ! strength, used "whip and spurs in ' a desperate effort to win, virtually ! killed his mount, and yet lost after j all." Nehemiah's Trip to Wall Then went I up in the night by the brook, and viewed the wall, and turned back, and entered by the gate of the valley, and so returned. And the rulers knew not whither I went, or what 1 did. Then said I unto them, ye see the distress that we are in, how Jerusalem lieth wugtc.— N'ehemiah 11, 15 and 16. Stoning (Eljat Few more interesting "close-up" talks on the experiences of men from Harrisburg in the great wai have been given than by Captain John T. Bretz, who commanded Company D, when it left Harrisburg f for Camp Hancock, at the gathering of members of the Harrisburg Re serves, Militiamen and Veterans ol Foreign Wars at the courthouse Sat |urday night. The captain left out a lot he might have told in which h figured, but modestly mentioned him self only twice, once when he admit ted that he had insisted on rations for his men and the other time when he remarked that he had been giver chaige of "a hard boiled" railroad unit at Bordeaux and found that ha had to inoculate discipline. The cap tain's recital was simple and direct and was heard with closest attention by the men fortunate enough to at tend the meeting. He told just how men from York, Chambersburg, Car lisle and Harrisburg endured theii first shelling and among those whc heard him tell that story was Cap tain Henry M. Stine, who recruited the Chambersburg company, but had to s-elinquish command becausn army surgeons turned him down. It was a dramatic moment, when hf told how the company commanded by the Harrisburg man, lost men bj shell fire and how they had to strug gle through gas filled trenches. Cap tain Bretz's talk was the first he had given and he possesses a style ot simple, direct narrative that goes right home. The plan for a big welcome to the returning soldiers has met with the greatest support from officers and men who have returned from over seas. letters from officers on the other side also commend the plan. "We can't' have it as big as that Fourth of July celebration, but we are going to make it the same kind of a real affair," said William Jen nings. Congressman J. Hampton Moore, the greatest authority on inland waterways in the United States, is sincerely and enthusiastically of the belief that money can be procured from Congress for the deepening of the Susquehanna River if the peo ple of the Susquehanna Valley are energetic and persistent enough. He is likewise of the opinion that the project can be developed more cheaply and will be successful from a business standpoint. He believes the amount saved in coal freight rates in one year would almost pay for the whole improvement and he proves easily that the Susque hanna, a navigable stream, would carry much more freight than the Ohio River. The West and the South, he says, have gotten almost all the river improvement money because they went after it. He thinks the time very favorable now for the launching of the enterprise for the reason that the War Depart ment engineers in charge of the sur vey have recently returned from France where a part of their work was the survey of French water v courses and are much interested in doing the same for this country that • has been done for Europe. "Your boys are giving the best years of their lives and many of them poured out their lives for the up-building of the Maine, the Seine, the Rhine —none of them to com pare with your own beautiful river either in size or beauty. Are you going to let feeble efforts or lack of interest on your part hold back the development of this really great stream, when your lads are doing so much for the development of i deeper waterways in Europe? I | think not." • • I Speaking of Columbia —that is the birthplace of Frank B. Musser, pres ident of the Harrisburg Railways Company, and John S. Musser, pres ident of the Dauphin Electrical Sup plies Company. Being enthusiastic Rotarians they went down to attend the deeper Susquehanna conference held in their old home town a few days ago. The Harrisburg party, twenty-eight in number, was met by a band and members of the Mer chants' and Manufacturers' Associa tion. The Columbia people, being very hospitable and desirous of hon oring a son of the old town who had gone away and made good, chose John Musser to be chief mar shall of the parade and put him out in front of the band. "That's always the way," grum bled his brother Frank from a hum ble place in the rear ranks. "John always gets the honors and 1 get. all the knocks. Now I used to play cornet in this very band and they might have made me chief marshal, me being a former member of the band." "May be," observed Preston Crow ell, who was standing near, "may he. Frank, that's the reason they didn't ask you." • • If you want to get a rise out of Frank Cousylman, manager for Doutrich & Company, just ask him how you get to Columbia byway of the Spooktown road. Frank was horn in Marietta and modestly ad mitted to friends with whom he was motoring to Columbia the other eve ning that he could find his way to that town with his eyes tied shut. "Well" asked "Jim" McCullough, who was driving, "that being the case, may be you'll give us some light on how to get to Columbia quickly and comfortably?" Frank said he'd be glad to do it and advised that they "go byway of the Spooktown road." They followed his directions and got lost. Finally in Columbia they explain ed their lateness at a meeting by telling their hosts that they "got lost on the Spooktown road." And ever since all the folks who have cars in Columbia have been out hunting a highway known .as the Spooktown road. A reward has been offered the finder. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Dr. Leo S. Rowe. Assistant Sec retary of the Treasury, who is speak ing cn the League of Nations," used to be a professor in the University of Pennsylvania. —Mayor H. L. Trout ts head of Lancaster's committee in charge of the welcome home for soldiers. —C. F. S. Willow, York city en gineer, says that people in his city have turned to building garages rather than houses. | DO YOU KNOW —That Harrisburg stool was used for material to manufac ture army trucks? HISTORIC HARRISBURG French traders one time tried to buy the historic ford here from In dians, but they refused to sell.