18 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH <1 NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRIXTISO CO. Telegraph Building, Federal Mint E. J. STACK POLE President and Editor-in-Chief T. R. OYSTER. Business Manager QUS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Bxeeetlve Beard 3. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, F, R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMETZ. Members of the Associated Press—Tbs 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. ■ t Member American Associa- Bur'eau of Circu lation and Penn- Associa- Eastern M c e Building! Western office! Story, A i Chic/go, in! IJmr ' Entered at the Post Office In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. B Y carrier, ten cents a GBfflSSaß) week; by mail, 13.00 a year In advance. FRIDAr, APRIL 11, 1919 So much ice miss, If lore is weak; so much we gain, If love is strong; God thinks no pain Too sharp or lasting to ordain To teach us this. —Helen Hunt Jackson. THE SUMMER CAMP THE Y. M. C. A. management should not hesitate in planning j extensively for its summer camp for boys. The opportunity is ripe for excellent service in this re spect. The association camp last year, conducted somewhat in the •way of an experiment under more or less unfavorable circumstances, was a great success and every boy who attended came home the better for the experience. The committee In charge does well to consider the selection of a permanent site, but great care must be exercised In this, for a very great deal depends upon the place in which the camp is located. The enterprise will cost considerable money in any event, but the people of the city will support It liberally if it is shown that the site is suit able and the expenditure Is in the nature of a permanent investment. Every manly boy likes the out doors and the Y. M. C. A. camp, as conducted last year, affords an ideal means of gratifying this longing un der conditions that will send him back home a healthier, happier, bet ter lad. Not only does the associa tion need a camp site, but it ought to have a cabin somewhere in the mountains near Harrisburg, within hiking distance of a car line, where parties of boys could go to spend week-ends during the fall and win ter seasons. It is to be hoped the committee will make this a part of the program. "What is Rotary?" asked a Har risburg man yesterday. We don't know. But we know what a Rotary Club is and we know what a good Kotarian is, and so we are ready to say that whatever Rotary is, was or is likely to become, is good for the community, good for the country and good for the world at large. When ever the people of the world under stand each other as the members of Rotary clubs understand each other, then wo shall have small need for a League of Nations, for the only con tests likely to develop will be little scraps over where the next confer ence shall be held or who shall be the next International president. DOWN WITH DICTATORS! FORMER SENATOR JOSEPH W. BAILEY, while he Insists that he did not read himself out of the Democratic party in his recent speech at Newark, renews his at tacks on the present day leaders of that party in a way that leaves nothing to be desired on the part of Republicans. "For several years," says Mr. Bailey, "our leaders have been pandering to Populists, Social ists and political nondescripts, until they have now adopted almost everything which the old Populist party advocated and many of the things which the Socialist party has advocated." , The result of the election of last November demonstrated the truth of Senator Bailey's statement. Thor oughly disgusted with the trend of Democracy, as taught by the men who assume to speak for it at the present time, self-respecting and conservative Democrats are leaving the Wilson party and giving their allegiance to the party of patriotism that still recognizes the Constitution as an instrument that insures the continuance of our prosperity as a Nation, if its principles are adhered to. The drift of sentiment away trom Wilson, reflected in the last flections, is continuing, stimulated from day to duy as reports from Paris tell of the un-American sur renders ho is making In order to bring success to his League of Na- FRIDAY TVENTNG, HARRISBURG tWftt TELEGRAPH APRIL' 11, 1919. tions. "When November of next year is reached and the people have an other opportunity to express their views on national affairs, there will be such an overwhelming anti-Wil son vote rolled up as will seal, for years to come, the fate of the party that he has brought to ruin. It will make no difference whether Wilson himself is the candidate or whether we have a man of his choosing, the people will recognize the brand and repudiate it with emphasis. "How can any man who believes in the principles of the Democratic party vote for such men?" asks Sen ator Bailey. The answer is that he' cannot. And it follows that such men will vote for the candidate who will do the most to draw the country away from the political heresies that have dominated its policies for the past six years and restore the principles of representative govern ment that have given the United States the commanding position that she now holds among the world powers. That candidate will bo the nominee of the Republicans, who will represent in his own person and in the party whose standard he bears, a record of Achievement, of strict adherence to the mandates of the Constitution and of constant ef fort to upbuild and protect Ameri can industries that will be an irre sistible lodestone to those voters who still maintain a pride of country. Our old friend. Dr. Pazet, former Ambassador from Peru, improves with the years. H.'j address in Harrisburg yesten?y orought wonderral response 'front those who desire nothing more earnestly than that our neighbors to the South of us shall understand that all we desire of them is their sincere friendship. His defense of the Mon roe Doctrine voices the sentiments of thousands upon thousands of Ameri cans, who believe that there should be permitted no Asiatic nor European interference with the smaller nations of South and Central America. The nations of these two great continents should stand together for the peace of the world, even though they have to fight for it, and the closer they stand the less likelihood there will be of the necessity for a fight. „ WHAT THEY LEARNED WHAT the housing committee saw at Yorkship Village, near Camden, Wednesday, cannot be picked up bodily and incorporated in the build ing program to be adopted for Har risburg, but it afforded a fine lesson in careful and systematic planning to meet the needs of the people. Even though it may be admitted that some mistakes have been made, the truth is apparent that the plan ners know what they are talking about, when they say in their pros pectus that while "Yorkship Village is not a model town, it is a group of comfortable well planned homes." The difference between Yorkship Vil lage and the average town is that Yorkship being built during the war by the Government, was built so as to afford comfortable homes in healthful surroundings for the ship workers, who were needed to man the rapidly growing plant of the New York Shipbuilding Corporation, with whom the Government had placed large rush orders for large sized ships. Without any real program, nearly all towns grow little by little and haphazard. One man builds a hotel and another builds nearby a group of stores. Cottages spring up here and there and surround the busi ness center. Business pushes in and surrounds the nearby cottages cut ting off their light and destroying their privacy. Real estate specula tors appear and build the greatest number of houses possible on the smallest piece of ground. Real es tate values jump and thereupon your poorly paid worker either has to take crowded unsanitary quarters or go far from the center where prices remain more reasonable. Such a town has no real plan for develop ment, but like Topsy "It just grows" until suddenly it comes to realize that it is a full grown town and then calls in experts to try and cure the many deformities which have de veloped in its haphazard growth. It is not so with Yorkship Village. There, thanks to the foresight of those interested in its creation, ex perts were called in before the build ings were started and the whole plan of the town, its streets, its homes, its houses, its churches, its clubs, hotels, public buildings and play grounds were all thought out ahead and planned for, so that the many ills that the average town experi ences have been avoided. That is what impressed the hous ing committee most —the need for much thought, and care and discus sion in the formulation of a pro gram for Harrisburg. Nothing but the best will content those who are back of the movement here, and if we can show the world some new things, why all the better. Harris burg has done that before and the the project indicates that while they may take their time to the solu tion of the problem the result will be eminently satisfactory. "The Kaiser is as wise as a serpent and as harmless as a dove," says a western exchange. Our idea is that he is as wise as a dove and as harmless as a serpent. It looks as though France means to place a first mortgage on Germany, which is better than having to take German bonds. "What shall we do with our tanks?" asks a despairing Englishman. Ask any American prohibitionist, friend; just Cfck him. "League has appendix to treaty," says a news dispatch. Ah. ha, now we know what's the matter —appen- dicitis. _____ 1 foUtict Ck By the Kx - Committee man The first real adverse criticism of the legislative recess seems to have come, oddly enough, from a staunch Republican newspaper. The Phila delphia Record and Pittsburgh Post, Democratic standard bearers, have been more or less indignant about the recess being taken, but as the Democratic members were conspicu ous in voting to adjourn and not a one chirped in protest their com ments are more or less discounted. The Inquirer's editorial opinion on the subject has been much dis cussed about the Capitol, especially in view of the fact that the popular impression is that hopes to get the controversy over the Philadelphia charter bills in better shape had some to do with the recess being authorized. It is an open secret that one of the reasons why some of the up-State men voted for the re cess was that they wanted to give a chance for a settlement of the Quak er City row and thus insure some tranquillity for the rest of the sit ting. Others voiced objection to the recess in private and when asked to raise the banner of revolt discovered that they had much to do at home. The Inquirer says: "The Legisla ture of Pennsylvania, we are sorry to say, is a loafer. Always it could do its work, with steady application, in six weeks. Always it fritters away nearly six months of time. It is frittering now. And to aid the frit tering process. It has adjourned for a considerable holiday, just as if three and one-half months had. not been devoted mostly to holidays. Don't the legislators ever get tired of doing nothing?" —The Philadelphia Record says: "Luzerne county will elect four judges within the next two years. The term of Judge John M. Garman expires this year, and his successor must be elected in November. In 1921 the terms of Judges Freas, Strauss and O'Boyle will expire. It is believed that Judge Garman will have at least two opponents in the coming fall campaign, while more than a half a dozen lawyers are doing a little quiet work in the way of preparing for the contests that will be staged in 1921, when three places on the bench are to be filled." —All administration bills will be ready for presentation to the Legis lature when it reassembles. There are only a few and they are mostly relative to the Department of Public Grounds and Buildings, but they will be prepared, according to statements at the Governor's office to-day. It also became known that a number of attaches of various departments, who had been seeking increases of pay, had been informed that the proposed bill to create a State Sal ary Board was designed to fit cases where men were working on salaries established years ago and since re garded as inadequate. This will he the death knell of a number of bills to raise pay. —Men back of the bill to recon stitute the State Board of Agricul ture and give it a share in the man agement of the Department of Agri culture. have been told that the bill will not be passed. Instead, as soon as the Legislature reconvenes, the Jones bill reorganizing the Depart ment of Agriculture will be taken up and passed finally. —The Philadelphia Public Ledger, in an editorial on picking mayors does not want Senator Vare or any other leader to do it. It says: The sooner this community gets rid of the notion that divisions of opinion or party affiliations along the lines of national politics have any possi ble relation to the business problems of a great city, the sooner will it attain that ideal of good municipal government which is the ambition of all good citizens, however they may group themselves on questions of national policy. Congressman J. Hampton Moore had a notable dinner in Phil adelphia the other day when he en tertained the men who had been en gaged with him in newspaper work twenty-five years ago. Some of those in attendance were Colonel George Xox McCain, Peter Bolger, Peter J. Iloban and others who used to grace legislative sessions. —The Pittsburgh Gazette-Times has just handed out this wallop: Secretary Baker's tribute to the newspapers for public service per torruea in publishing the casualty lists in deserved. We say it with modesty. But don't forget that if Mr. Baker had had his way the lists given out by the War Department would have been not worth printing. —Chester has occupied its new city hall. Harrisburg has made a start, thanks to the Governor, and the Smith bill will provide a way. —Renewed efforts are being made at Pittsburgh to show the boroughs the advantage of annexation to the city. LABOR NOTES Women organizers of the State Federation of Labor and the Local Labor Council in Seattle, Wash., have issued an appeal to workingwomen to 3oin the trade union movement. A 10 per cent, increase in wages and a 44-hour week are being asked by garment workers in Chicago. The constitution of the Provincial Federation of Labor in Nova Scotia declares for a 36-hour week for all workers. The Moving Picture Operators' Un ion in Omaha, Neb., has established a six-hour day and raised wages from 50 cents to 70 cents an hour. Six years ago these workers, then un ganized, were being paid from 20 to 25 cents an hour. There is little opposition on the part of employers to the demand of horseshoers in Cincinnati for an eight-hour day. Steam and Marine Fitters' Union in Seattle, Wash., have purchased at a cost of $12,000 a grocery store and will operate it on the co-operative plan. Colored restaurant employes in Fort. Worth, Texas, are being organ ized. Trade unionists in Boise, Idaho, have voted to assess themselves $1 for the purpose of organising the men and women workers in all branches of industry. The Governor General of Algeria is studying the question of extending to the colony the measures adopted in France to increase the allowances of government employes temporarily on account of the high cost of living. Having learned that the Australian government is compensating contrac tors on tlie cancellation of the con struction of wooden ships, the Ship wrights' Union are claiming that they also are entitled to compensation. SOMEBODY IS ALWAYS TAKING THE JOY OUT OF UFE Byßrigg $ / Mew you Boys \ . ■ N / Go M AMD ENJOf f ] TOO CAM T _ YOUR CIGARS /" "N ( TRY OME o? \ MA*C M? N / I VAIHH.6 I HSLP / \ I Tm£.S£ fRAIsjK \ MAD JIM- I \ / I THE FARMERETTES AGAIN In accordance with the program laid out by the Council of National Defense, urging educational institu tions to recruit the "man power" of the Nation for the raising of food stuffs, the Margaret Morrison Divi sion of the Carnegie Institute of Technology, have gone a step far ther and are recruiting the girl pow er for this purpose. The girl "far merettes" recruited are not drawn from the student body, but are com posed of girls employed in nearby offices, stores and factories. In enlisting in the "farmerettes," the girls are given not only an op portunity of "doing their bit" in the production of foodstuffs so sorely needed, but are afforded the chance of a summer vacation that will ben efit them physically and financially as well. Before leaving for the summer camp, the girls have been formed into classes in which they will re ceive instruction in the domestic sciences such as cooking, sewing and millinery and also in dramatics and a thorough course in physical train ing and athletics. A part of the physical training consists of esthetic and folk dancing. These classes will meet three evenings a week at the Margaret Morrison Division between the hours of 7:30 and 9:30. In May and June an advance guard of workers will go to the summer camp to do the planting. On July first, the first vacation par ty of girls will leave for Camp Louise Carnegie, situated at Glen cairn, thirty miles above Pittsburgh on the shores of the beautiful Alle gheny river. In camp the girls will live in the huge old Mansion House. This building has about twenty-five rooms and big porches and is full of the nooks and cranies so dear to the feminine heart. All the rooms are open to the sunshine and the breezes that sweep up the Allegheny. Here the real work of the summer will be taken up and the girls will not only raise crops, but the crops will be the direct means of raising strong healthy girls. Under the lead ership of Miss Grace Brogan, the "farmerettes" will be taught to plant, till the ground and harvest the crops. The physical training the girls will receive in camp will not consist simply of the work they do in the fields, but under the leadership of Miss Helene Burckhalter they will be put through a daily course of athletic training. "Hiking" will be on the program and the girls will be taught to follow in the foot steps of their mothers, who thought noth ing of walking a mile or two, long before the advent of the street car and the automobile. However, it will not he all and no play, for the "farmerettes" will have their regular time for wholesome recreation and may swim, boat, dance, swing in the hammocks ton the spacious porches or play tennis if they so desire. WE STILL ARE CRIPPLES How many of us realize we are cripples? We have the usual quota of legs and arms, fingers and toes, but we're cripples just the same. Samuel Hopkins Adams made tho discovery while studying reconstruc tion of maimed soldiers at Walter Reed General Hospital. Washington. Describing the incident in the May number of the Red Cross Magazine, he writes: " 'I supose you regard yourself as a whole man,' demanded one of the vocational therapy experts. "Looking myself hastily over to make sure that I had not lost any thing In the surgical ward, I replied that I could count the usual number of arms, legs and other appurten ances. " 'All right,' said the expert, 'but you're sort of a cripple at that. You're atrophied." " 'lf I am, I've never discovered it,' T assured him. " 'Of course not. People never do until they're shown. You haven't got anything like the full use of more than four fingers and two thumbs out of a total of ten. The normal man— the man who believes himself nor mal, I mean—never has. Can you light a safety match with one hand ?' "He handed me the box and the match. After the second abortive at tempt the match fell on the floor and the box fell on the match. " 'That's elementary, that stunt,' remarked the instructor. 'Our one arms can do that before they get out of bed. You see, your two smaller fingers are really cripples. Now we teach our fellows to do the/work with those fingers that you have to another hand for. There's the whole physical principle of our training in its simplest form—substitution.' " THE PASSING OF THE RAILROAD SHANTY-MAN [Front the Literary Digest.] MONG the picturesque person f\ alitics, now being swept away by the onward progress of civ lization, is the railroad switch-ten der who sat at the shanty by the right of way and became a sort of unofficial purveyor of more or less authentic information and the hero of many a railroad yarn. As a writer in the Little Rock Arkansas Gazette notes, Government operation of the roads, combined with the ex tension of the interlocking system, has slated the "gossipy tenant" for retirement. In the old days when ixnpoctant news flew through the yards and passed from crew to crew, it was generally "shanty dope," and was traced to "shanty No. 1," "shan ty No. 2," or "shanty No. 3," as the case might be. The writer in The Gazette reminds us that, "The shanties came into being with the first railroad that was built, and were intended to protect the switch-tenders from the rains and other severities of the weather. In cold seasons the tenuer always had a cheerful fire, and, being naturally fond of company, he welcomed tho trainmen who slipped In' to warm themselves. The shanty jobs, through the working of some unwritten law, were invariably given to old or de crepit trainmen. Operatives who lost a leg or an arm or sustained other disabling injuries were given such assignments on their return to service. Many a railroad escaped damage suits by exercising diplo matic skill in the distribution of the shanty jobs. w "Before automatic switches were brought to their state of efficiency, the shanty and the shanty-man were as much a necessity as the yard master or the yarde'erk. In the shanty-man's own estimate he was more essential than the president of the road, and he usually did not hesitate to express this opinion, as he has from time immemorial been a person of privilege. When he hnd important information to send through the yards he never reserved It for any one. He let the first man along know all about it. knowing that there would be no delay in its transmission to the others on tho plant." Every railroad terminal, we are told, hap its stock of anecdotes con cerning tho shanty. A story is told of "how a shanty-man played the role of hero and saved the passen gers In the waiting-rooms at the old Union Station at Twelfth and Poplar Streets, St. Louis, from the fury of a pack of wild beasts." The tale runs thus: "It was back in 1886 or 18S7. that this catastrophe was averted through the forethought and sprint ing qualities of the shanty-man. A circus train was being switched through the yards, and had pro gressed as far as Fourteenth Street, when a derailment overturned a string of cars loaded with caged lions, tigers and other types of the jungle. Several of these cages were wrecked: many of the animals crawled out and started down the tracks in the direction of the sta tion. "The man of the shanty saw the menagerie first, and, having a good start on the thoroughly frightened heasts. proceeded to smash all pre vious records of sprinting achieve ment scored in any railroad yard extant and he succeeded. He reached the waiting rooms far in advance of the onrushing animals, and had enough breath left to shriek an alarm. The people waiting for trains crowded in the rooms and the doors were quickly secured. Some of the animals ran up a stairway in the station building leading to the of fices of the station company and created a panic among the clerks, some of whom jumped from the second-story windows out on Pop lar Street, while others sought safe ty behind desks and chairs and in closets. Some of the animals suc ceeded in reaching the street, where they were shot by the police. The few that managed to get to the of fices were taken alive by attaches of the circus." Many of the old-lime feuds be tween train-crews were traced to the shanties. A story would get a start and brcod trouble. It might have been originated in a spirit of jest, "but the point of humor was not always discovered in time to head off a fist-fight or two." But picturesque and interesting as the shanty-man was, he was a relic of the old, informal, rough-and-ready era in American,railroading and is passing with other "archaic insti tutions." As we read: "The new order of operation calls for well-appointed towers with an abundance of room for all the dis patchers and lever-men, and there is room for a whole crew to 'warm up' at a time. A man in a tower now can control switches a long way ahead on either side of his tower, and he has only to pull a little lever or touch a button to accomplish that result. It isn't nec essary to go out in the weather and throw a heavy device that used to to severely tax the operator. Elec tric current and magnets perform the same service with a minimum of effort. The veterans, who are being relieved of their shanties, are going to crossings that are not pro vided with gates, where they bid fair to spend the balance of their railroad days. As these stations take thorn out of the active yard centers, their capacity to gather and distri bute the 'dope* will be severely im paired, and it is hardy to be ex pected that the trainmen will longer view their disclosures with awe." BOOKS AND MAGAZINES Francis Bowes Sayre, whose book, "Experiments in International Adminis tration," has just been published by the Harpers gives a curious, if comparative ly unimportant, instance of international co-operation. In an agreement signed at Tangier, May 31, 1863, between Mo rocco and the leading European coun tries and the United States, it was to be instituted at Cape Spartel, Morocco. "Under this treaty," says Mr. Sayre, "the lighthouse ar.d land upon which it stands are to remain under the sovereignty of the Sultan, whose flag alone shall be hoisted on the lighthouse tower; but Its 'superior direction and administration' is turned over to the representatives of the contracting Powers, which agree to £liare equally the annual expenses for its maintenance. The lighthouse is to be protected by a Moorish guard, and all the contracting states agree to respect its neutrality. There is thus set up an International establishment, supervised by representatives of all signatory states. These shall make regulations for the di rection and management of the light house which cannot be changed without the consent of all. The interational ar rangement still remains In successful operation." •'Experiments In International Ad ministration" is a complete study of previous attempts at League of Nations in the past, what they have accomplish ed and why they have either succeeded or failed. Prudence Bardish. in her recently published book, "Mother Love In Action," is a firm believer that if mothers would exchange stories with their children and write them down for future reference, they would find themselves in possession of a most en tertaining collection of literature. "One mother I know," she says, "had a charming little Christmas story that her son told her when he was only seven years old. She wrote it down. Now he Is a leading magazine writer and one of his best-known stories is that Christmas story that he told his mother when he was seven years old." In "Mother Love In Action," a Harper book, the author has tried to solve the manifold problems constituting the mother's job and to encourage a deeper Bense of the importance of the task that lies at the door of a mother who has the responsibility of little children on her shoulders. American merchants who are exand ing or Initiating business with French Spanish and Italian speaking countries will find an aid of incalculable value in a slender little book of forty nar row pages which E. P. Dutton and com pany are publishing this week entitled "Exchange Tables for Converting Dol lars into Francs and Francs into Dol lars." As the same currency prevails In Switzerland, In Spain under the name of Peseta and ia Italy under that of Lire, exporters and importers doing business or preparing to do business with any of those countries will find that these conversion tables will not only save much time but will also avoid the possibility of error. The old tables of this sort which were In use before the war are inadequate now as they cover only rates of exchange from 5.15 to 5.25. These new tables cover the conversion of francs into dollarß and of dollars into francs, at rates ranging ail the way from 5.00 to 5.80 and there fore are useful not only now while the rates are abnormally low but will be equally useful during the entire transi tory period and also after rates become normal again. The tables have been compiled by Ernest Levy, of Paris. In the Realm of Nature Timely Articles oil Subjects Pertaining to Natural History Furnished by the Harrisburg Natural History Society. Now that the cold March winds are a thing of the past, the wild flowers arc rapidly increasing in I number. A walk through WildwooJ Par! - , or along the Conodoguiner. creek, or about the mountains a'. Hockvillc, is a rare treat for the lover of wild flowers. In the moun tains the trailing arbutus is now to be found in abundance. Those who know the flower only as it is sold m the markets, tied with wet, dirty string into tight bunches, can have little idea of the joy of finding tiic pink blossoms freshly opened among the dead leaves, or growing in broad patches among the moss and pine needies. In the same locality will be found that first harbinger of spring the hepatica. It has now dis carded its worn-out fdilago in favor of a fiesli set of leaves, some of the flowers- are purple, others white, oc casionally a cluster will be found with a fragrance resembling that of sweet violets. A walk through Wild wood Park will be a revelation to one not familiar with this mo3t beautiful of our parks. In shady lo cations will bo found the beauti ful white flowers of the bloodroot, some are quite large with from seven to ten petals, others smaller with as many as twenty petals. They must be seen in their native haunts however to be appreciated as the petals soon fall off after being plucked. The root is reddish and is filled with a blood-like juice, as is also tlic stem. As the fluid stains whatever it touches—hence .Is va'i o to the Indians as a war paint 01:0 should be careful in plucking the flowers. There also will be found the spring beauties, a delicate flower with leaves resembling blades of grass, the flowers have live petals, are light pink or white, with pink linos, converging near the base. A little: further on, large patches of dog's tooth violets will be found. Of source they are not a violet at ail as they belong to the lily family. Many persons prefer the name of adder's tongue, which is more ap | propriate, the flower bearing some 1 resemblance to a snake's head, while the spotted leaves bring to mind Jts skin. There, too, will be found the goller. corydalis, dainty little yellow sucks resembling the bleeding heart; ! the yellow cinquefoil, looking like gold dollars scattered over the ground; and the toothwort or crin kleruot, which takes its name from its root which is crinkled with tooth like appendages. These are some times eaten and taste much iike wo.er cress. The flowers are pale pink or white in loose clusters. On the hillsides will be found the saxi frage, the rock cress and last but net least, the white hearts some times called Dutchman's breeches. These are usually found in shady lota lions where there is rich leaf m6ld. the flowers are white tipped with yellow and resemble the fa miliar bleeding heart the leaves are finely dissected and lace-like. THE FRONT—AT LAST [By Major William S. Manning.] Now I am free to do, and give, and puy. Not stinting one for other debts I owe. My debts were these; To smile with friendly show. On all about, too close for other play; To say to all the nothings X could say. And miss the silence which my friends would know; To heed the clock that ticked to and fro To ill-done tasks, long-drawn, di luting day. But now I am come to a wide, free, space Of easy breath, where my straight road doth lie; And all my debts are funded in this place To one debt, tho the figures mount the sky. My debts are one, my foe before my face— I shall not mind the paying when I die. Something New in Concrete Certainly people would laugh at the suggestion of a concrete air plane now, just as tlicy would have laughed at the proposition to build a concrete ocean-going vessel fifty years ago.—From the Boston Tran script. Stoning flMjat Something seems to have affected the mulberry trees about Harris burg and in the absence of a better cause, people familiar with these trees say that it is the weather. And the strangest part about it is that trees which survived last winter's severity have been the most affected There are a number of "weeping" mulberry trees,' a fancy , creation, about Ilarrisburg and while k several in private yards have been killed this year the inulberrys in Capitol park have been able to sur vive. The trees have been carefully inspected and no disease or inse" seems to have ruined them, but ar as dead as door nails. On tb> other hand, the State's mulberry tree, right outside of the State Museum, is thriving and has just been pruned and lixed up for summer so that i it can vie with the orange trees out side the windows of Dr. Thomas Lynch Montgomery, the State libra rian. The cause for the deaths of the other trees is being looked up. The magnolia trees about the city, which aro in bloom, are attracting much attention, but there .are a num ber of such trees which show the effects of the cold spell some days ago. The ntild winter has caused the magolias to bloom earlier than usual in many cases and the flowers are not as delicately shaded in many cases as formerly, while the outside leaves aro dark brown. • * • The Senate of Pennsylvania has been officially asked by American soldiers in English camps to inter est itself in the return of soldiers who are married. Several letters have been received by senators and officers asking that some action be taken. The letters are mostly from men who claim that they are mar ried and that their families arc suf fering inconvenience as a result of their retention in the service. One man wrote that his pay is only $52 per month and that his family ex penses run about SSS. Another who addressed "The senators of Penn sylvania" said frankly that "I want to get home just as soon as I can." Another asked that the newspapers of the State be interested. * • * According to reports coming to the State Capitol, anthracite coal pro duction has been speeded up in a number of the hard coal mines in the last week and big shipments will soon be on the way is opinion of men here. The mines in the lower anthracite field will increase their output it is predicted. • • • Pennsylvania fishermen who have been too eager to open the trout season ahead of time have fallen into the hands of State Policemen, game and tish wardens by the dozen the last fortnight. The mild'weather and the fact that many streams stocked with trout in the last few years show numerous fish have been too much for some lovers of fly casting and they have disregarded the fact that the season opens on April 15 and gone after the trout. In addition to arrests for fishing ahead of the time the law allows some men have been arrested for having over 25 fish, the legal limit. • • * Dr. J. T. Uothrock, who is being honored in such an unusual manner by the State's official forestry or ganization which he helped to create, is "the grand old man of forestry in Pennsylvania" as he has been styled by some of the leading con servationists of the country. The doctor is eighty now and has had a notable career. He was born in McVeytown and educated at Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, went to war, became a doctor, turned to botany, served with the Govern ment geological survey, held a chair at State College, gave up a fine prae- I tice at Wilkes-Barre to engage in natural history research, explored Canada and western States, went through unknown Pennsylvania and has preached its beauties and pos sobilities and dangers. He has en joyed life, but says once in a while that he has had some hardships "good to reflect upon." "" • * * The opening of the tadpole season has developed a new industry out on the Hill. There are some young sters in that section who have been visiting Bellevue Park and gathering lin the "tads" and showing them in tin cans. There is a large crop this year and the small reptiles have a great attraction. The traffic is in marbles and tadpoles. A fine large tadpole is sure to command a "glassy", while ordinary run of the pond will bring only a "commie." • • * Up-town kids have the turtle hunting fad. They have been scour ing the runs and the river banks and have numerous small turtles. One pair of boys used a parental garage as an aquarium and the father found two water turtles in the floor of his car when he started out for a ride. Another family discovered a minute water turtle in the gold fish bowl. ] WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —W. U. Barr has been elected head of the Rotary club of Reading. —George W. Sturmer, the veteran Pennsylvania railroad man, was here a few days ago on safety work. —C. Oscar Beasley, here on Phila delphia transit matter, has had more cases of that kind here than any other lawyer. —Dr. W. E. Hughes, prominent Philadelphia physician, has returned from a trip to Cuba. —Joseph P. McCullen, mentioned for judge in Philadelphia, has taken a prominent part in Democratic State politics for years. —Manager A. F. Kaul, of Dan caster. who has served fifty years, is being sent congratulations from Harrisburg friends. —George E. Datesman, director of works in Philadelphia, may bo made the engineer in charge of Fairmount Park. —Judge John M. Patterson, of Philadelphia, originated the idea of the Victory parade for his city and Is serving on a committee to ar range it. | DO YOU KNOW ~~ —That Harrisburg used to be one of the cut nail making cen ters? HISTORIC HARRISBURG —The first industry here after ferrying and trading was wagon and boat repairs. REVISED There was a duffer In our club And he was wondrous wise; He'd slive or hook into a trap Amid the worst of lies. But when he saw what he had done. Without the slightest strain. He merely picked the pellet up And threw it out again v —Gran Hand Rio*, ,