12 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A. NEW BPA.PER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 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. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board 1. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMETZ. Members of the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this fiaper and also the local news pub- Ished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. A Member American tV* hers 'h Assoc ' i ! l " toMSgm Associa jjjSS SS BB3| Ma Eastern office. Building, -l Chicago, 111. K ' Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., aa second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a I week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. ' THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1019 , ———— | I've alius noffced grate success 1 Is mixed with troubles, more or less, I An it's the man who does the best 1 That gits more kicks than all the rest, —James Whitcomb Filey. . . PROSPERITY AHEAD |•* yRWSPAPER publishers of jXI Pennsylvania, meeting in Har risburg yesterday, expressed i themselves as believing that a per iiod of substantial prosperity lies (ahead for the newspaper business. fThis will be good news for the gen leral public as well as for those in terested in the publishing business, | for the reason that newspapers pros ) per only to the degree that the cotin 'try as a whole prospers. When trade begins to decline, the newspaper feels the condition in a decreasing volume of advertising; when men lose their jobs or their earnings are , I , If . , THEY TAKE IT FROM US-- I / 1 .\ — LITTLE CHAT WITH I [ ,r> STARVE TO DEATH- <£ DOMT DRINK BUT VERY LITTLE /.A || \ R. Y I , / I I? DO IT MYSELF-- £F GERMAN LANGUAGE VETO] [From the Philadelphia Press.] ' Governor Sproul showed his good 1 sense and courage in vetoing thei foolish bill prohibiting the teaching I of the German language in the pub-1 lie schools. That language is notl taught in our schools for the benefit of the Germans, but for the benefit' of Americans. To know that lan guage is a help to them in business, in study, in research, in travel and in many ways. None need pursue that study unless they desire it and if they desire it, they should not be denied the opportunity to learn it. No doubt, the German language, as well as the German people and all things German, are in disfavor Just now. We may never recover our former good opinion of the Ger man people, but we shall have to do business with them and some Amer icans at least should know their language. AVe may long continue disposed to boycott the German peo ple so far as possible, but there can be no permanent boycott of Ger man trade, of German music, liter ature, philosophy nnd science. To deny ourselves access to those ad vantages, would be a senseless and childish sacrifice of our own inter est, pleasure and profit. The veto showed courage because the passage of the hill by the al most unanimous vote of both houses seems to indicate a strong public opinion in favor or the legislation. Undoubtedly, there is a very preva lent feeling entertained very strong ly by many people that it is a patri otic duty for us to hate and avoid) everything German henceforth and| forever more. Without fresh and repeated provocation and Irritation this would be Impossible even if it were desirable. But hatred of Ger mans does not demand hat'-ed cf an inanimate object such as the Ger man language. It will continue to be one of the great modern lan guages that Americans should learn when they can for their own benefit and advantage and not at all for the benefit of hated Germans. THE CALL OF SPRING Oh, little flowers, hurry, hurry, / Else you'll be in such a flurry. Spring is calling—she is near! Listen! and her voice you'll hear. Get up quickly, shake your tresses. Put on all your pretty dresses. As I spoke, the Aconite Popped up nimbly into sight, Donned her gown of yellowy sheen. With its fluffy frill of green. Then the Crocus turns in bed (Must have heard the words I said) And, from underneath the clothes Pokes up his wee spear-like nose. Then he calls his sisters —cousins, Such a number! dozens, dozens! In a flash they come to light, Dressed in purple, yellow, white. The lovely Snowdrop now awakes, And a careful toilet makes. Her soft-white frock, a perfect dream — Has just a soupeon of pale green. Now Daffodils come bounding out, Such noise they make, is quite a rout l.aughing, dancing, as they sing, "We are Trumpeters of Spring." Awakens, too. the Primrose fair, As she breathes, a fragrance rare Seems gently wafted on the air, Dike gratitude for answered prayer. A moment ere Spring glides away. She stoops, her sweet face to lay Upon the earth, beneath the trees That whisper softly to the breeze. And nil along her path, peep up The Daisy nnd the Bdttercup, And laughing Celandines arrayed Tn shimmering gowns, gold brocade, And merry Cowslips, full of fun, That o'er the meadows lightly run And Bluebells, in a gray-blue mist. P.ise from the ground that Spring has kissed, kissed. Oh. little flowers, you never preach, Yet silently you ever teach Most precious lessons without speech —Annie Harrison. THE GIFT OF GLADNESS The gift is thine the weary world to make More cheerful for thy sake. Lighting the sullen face of discon tent. With smiles for blessing sent. Enough of selfish wailing has been had. Thank God! for notes more glad. —Whlttter. Yea—lf Any Blessed is the man, if any, who can get as much satisfaction out of a $1.50 spading fork and a 79-cent hoe as he could out of a *4,500 tour ing car.—From the Ohio State Journal. i A Camper's Rhapsody THERE is no other word in the vocabulary of our language so suggestive of rare and pleasant conditions of living as camping. It is more than a mere word —it is a symbol as well. Not only is it a word for the eye, but it is equally a word for the ear. For in it are the sighing of zephyrs, the soft intoning of slow-moving night winds, the roaring of strong gales, the moaning of tempests and the sobbings of storms amid the wet trees. The loon's call, the splash of leaping fish, the panther's cry, the pitiful summons of the lost hound, the slashing of deer wading among the lily pads, and the gentle drip ping of odorous gums falling softly ONE COMES NOT Now comes the Great Returning! i Swift gray ships Bring great hearts home to hearts that waited long. One comes not— One who always, always dreamed Of following far-flung paths across the world. "Through all the lands some day I mean to go. And see the strange fantastic ways they have— Odd peoples in the corners of the earth." How much, how much he saw! How much Of tumult and of strangeness ere he fell! Always he followed boyhood's ven turing dreams. Old legends of the world he sought, old-talcs Of nobleness, the groping, seeking dreams Of half-emembered, half-forgotten worlds. What matchless stories is he read ing now. This boy who lies beneath the stars in France, Who, wondering, saw the mighty tale unfold, And, dying, helped the world her dream unroll. Always we listened, smiling, to his plans To seek the distant magic of the world, And them come home to write great wondrous tales. Wherein would surge the magic of the seas. Always his voice on each word lin gered just a heart's beat. Strange, how strange, it must have sounded there, The soft, half-drawing of his Southern tongue In that wild storm! Great eager eyes seemed always questing on Beyond the hills that bound him in, grave eyes Which half-awakened, quickening boyhood brings. What soft sweet eyes he lifted to the flag, That day its peril came! What boyish hands closed all his books! What boyish soul looked up And softly barred the door on all its dreams, And shut out all the magic world of Youth, And grave-eyed saw the storm, But smiling rose, And, smiling, chose to go. Now comes the Great Returning! One comes not; But all the world's heart reads the wondrous tale— The story that he wrote out with his blood, The story that he lived out with his death, The Great Book that he wrote—not coming home. —Eleanor Cochran Reed In the New York Times. Something in a Name "Gee, whiz! Isn't that Smithson who just went by in his automobile? AVhen I knew him a few years ago he had a junk shop." "He still has. Only he moved it to a fashionable street and labeled the same stock 'Antiques.' "—Bos ton Transcript. SPRING POSIES Tis certain something has been lost From spring time's blossoming glee, When onions are as high in cost As orchids used to oe. Washington ftar. on the pine stems, listening to which in silence and sweet concern we, who were lying under the fragrant trees, like happy and weary chil dren, have fallen gently asleep—all these sounds live in this magic word. And in it, too, are human voices, songs, laughter, and all the noises of merriment and frolic. No other pho nograph is like it. . . . The songs around the campfire under the stars in the hush of evening, the strang er's hail, the guide's call to break fast. . . . the flute's soft note heard over the water on a still night, the cheer at reaching camp and the murmured farewells at leaving verily, it is a vocal word, all the sounds that come from it are melo dy.—W. H. H. Murray. LABOR NOTES Wool spinners, cloth folders and ' carpet spinners in Lawrence, Mass., I are 100 per cent organized. Members of the Typographical; Union in Cleveland, Ohio, have re- J ceived an increase in wages of from i $27 to S3O a week. A Sheffield (Eng.) firm has con verted .its war aeroplane factory into a plant for the manufacture of small-scale model locomotives and steam engines, which were former ly imported into Great Britain from Germany. Brooklyn (N. Y.) returned sol diers who are roofers find it difficult to pay the union initiation fee of $75, and are allowed to pay in in stallments. A South African tanning concern has largely increased its output of "upper" leather by the introduction of a special dressing machine. At a recent meeting held in Pitts burgh and attended by representa tives of nearly 100 trade unions it was decided to give every possible assistance in the campaign to or ganize employes in the stel and iron industry and to demand the right of free speech and free assemblage. A conference of the employes in the Metropolitan Poor Law Institu tions in England have formulated the following program: Forty-eight hour working week with one clear day's rest in seven, 50 per cent, in crease on pre-war rates of wages, plus existing war bonus. The union coal miners of Arkan sas won a 15-year fight against the operators when the Arkansas Legis lature, which closed recently, passed | in original form and without the slightest change a bill providing for wash houses at all coal mines in the State employing ten or more men. During the last year increases ranging from 50 to 70 per cent, were granted to workers in the silk rib bon industry in Switzerland. Over 75 per cent, of the employes in the watch factories were also given the same amount of increase. The over 12,000 employes of a large Toledo (Ohio) automobile fac tory are asking their wages be in creased 15 per cent, a week of five working days, eight hours a day for five days and four hours on Saturday. To grant the increase would mean an additional expense to the company of $4,000,000. Recent legislation enacted by the Brazilian Congress nnd officially pro mulgated by the Vice-president of Brazil provides for the payment of compensation to workingmen killed or injured In the performance of labor. An investigation made by the De partment of Agriculture and Con gress shows that since the outbreak of the war about 14,000 new factor ies have been established in Japan and workers employed number over 270,000. In addition, about 5,000 factories were enlarged during the war and the number of additional employes is about 160,000. According to a repqrt about to be Issued by the Department of Com merce, the electric light and power stations in the United States during the year of 1917 generated more than 25,000,000,000 kilowatt hours of electricity, producing an income of more than half a billion dollars, and gave employment to more than 10,000 persons, wjiose salaries and Legislature and State Police [From the Philadelphia Inquirer.] By a complete reversal of its pre vious action, the House of liepre sentatives has passed finally the bill authorizing an increase in the num bers and the efficiency of the Stale Police Force. It was the right thing to do and the members deserve commendation for having the cour age to admit their mistake. The establishment of what is known as the State Constabulary only came after long and earnest debate. It represented the settled conviction of the best citizens of the Commonwealth. There was opposi tion, of course, but it was based up on a false conception of the purpose of the force. The real idea was to give the people of the rural districts the same protection to life and prop erty which is now afforded to those living in the cities and in crowded sections. The history of the organ ization has more than justified its creation, and it would have been a great -pity if unfounded prejudice had permitted the crippling of what is now conceded to be an essential part of the police power of the Com monwealth. Some of the opposition to the present bill came because of the desire of the Governor to com bine the duties of the fire, fish and game wardens in the hands of the State Police, but that evidently is a move in the direction of better ad ministration and efficiency, and is probably warranted by the condi tions. In the debate in the House prior to the final vote, many interesting points were brought to the attention of the members. Several legislatois proved that serious crime had been prevented through the vigilance and activity of the force, and cited in stances where murderers and otlieis had been brought to justice through its cleverness and courage. Inci dentally it developed that the old mistaken notion that the State Po lice was aimed at lahor organiza tions still prevailed in some quar ters. One member said that labor ing men resented being classed with the Bolshevists. Of course they do, and no sane or fair-minded man would dream of making such an absurd charge. The great error is to assume that, all are not equally concerned in the preservation of law and order. We do no believe that those who have opposed the en largement and perfection of the State Police represent the candid opinion of the great body of the working men in Pennsylvania. The men who work for a living consti tute the bone and sinew, the back bone of the citizenship of the State, and the hill in question is for their benefit as it is for all law-abiding persons. W ELCOME HOME AGAIN Welcome the douhboys home again, Welcome the doughboys home! Make it an old-time jamboree. Fireworks blazln' from sea to sea! Hearts aflame with consumin' love Praising the Bord in heaven above Spreadin' the least of unbounded joys, Strain to your breast our fightin' boys; Set 'em above the.rejoicin' throng Shoutin' the old "My Country" song— Welcome the doughboys home again, Welcome the doughboys home! Welcome the heroes back again— Welcome the heroes back! God! How we prayed when they sailed away—• Somehow —afeared they would hafto stay! Fellers that never had prayed be fore Prayed their blamedest an' prayed some more! Dreadin' the grave in the poppy field, Thinkin' of wounds that can't be healed; But they're comin' back—in the glory-glow— Praise God from whom all bless in's flow! Welcome the heroes back again— Welcome the heroes back! —Uncle John In the Excelsior Springs Standard THE SUMMONS Sanctify ye a fast, call a solemn assembly, gather the elders and all the inhabitants of the land into the house of the Bord, your Bod, and cry unto the Bord.—Joel i, 14. Some Blue Mountain Door Bet us go in once more By some blue mountain door, And hold communion with the for est leaves. —Bliss Carman. Abetting (Eljai Homecoming of the Harrisburg soldiers last evening adds anothei chapter to a scries of events of that kind that have place here since 1782. The otoriet of the homecoming of the mr * of Harris Ferry, Paxton and other settlements about here who fought with the American army from Quebec to Cowpens and who joined up with Washington's fovcfti on the way to Torktown, have beer handed down and from all accounts people for many miles around crowded to John Harris ferry to greet the men who returned in wagons. The story of the return of General John Forstcr's brigade from York and Baltimore in 1815 is preserved in the newspapers, al though for a bang-up local story, it gets little notice alongside of the happenings in Madrid and Paris and the Pennsylvania Legislature. Har risburg welcomed home the men from the Mexican war with a parade and a public dinner in Capitol Park. The newspapers are filled with ac counts of the return of Harrisburg commands in the Civil war, espec ially the remnants of the One Hun clred and Twenty-Seventh and anee dotes are still being told of the joyous way the city acclaimed them. Many people recall as though yes terday how the Governor's Troop and Company I came back from Porto Rico in the autumn of 1898 and the lively welcome Company 1> received when it ended ils tour of duty in Southern camps. There were not many ceremonies about them, but the people turned out in force and occasionally broke up the lines to greet the home comers. When soldiers come home from war, such things as police lines, even officers and committeemen, arc swept aside and no one cares. • • * Few people know that Judge Charles R. Witmer, who is presiding in Federal Court this week, is an intimate friend of ox-Prcsident Wil liam H. Taft. Tho day of Colonel Roosevelt's death, Mr. Taft was on his way to Sunbury whero ho was 10 be entertained at the Judge's home, when the sad news reached him. Reaching Sunbury he man nged to elude newspapermen until he arrived at the Ncff House. Hero lie dictated a long article for tho newspapers before he could go out for dinner. Judge and Mrs. Witmer had prepared a lavish banquet for the ex-President, but alas! ho was dieting. "It was the oddest thine I've ever seen." the Judge's son, John A. Witmer, says. "Taft rat down and ate nothing except two enor mous dishes of celery while the rest of us feasted. He was cutting weight." Tho Judge is an ardent sportsman, and in company with United States Senator Boies Penrose and State Senator William C. McConnell main tains a hunting and fishing preserve in Cherry Run, Union county. An invitation to a. weekend with the campers at tho Judge's bungalow is much sought by their friends. • Senator Boios Penrose's big red automobile is having quite a time convincing some Harrisburgers that 11 is not a new fire department, ma chine. It lias tho distinction of be ing probably tho longest and largest car ever turned out by a well-known concern and can make miles fly by, but it has inherited tho rod of tlio Senator's former car and that red is a strictly fire department color. The car attracts much admiration because of its construction and its lines, hut it must he admitted that a good many persons who see it near the Ponn-Harris take it for part of the fire fighting service, • • The Vare Hiking Club, which is composed of the South Philadelphia Senator on mornings when he wants to walk; John R. lv. Scott, when he feels the need of exorcise; Repre sentatives "Jim" Dunn, L. C. Glass and others, has sent a challenge to Governor William C. Sproul for a hike up the river. The Varo club hikes up as far as Division street in the early morning and goes hack to the Capitol ready for that fight that never occurs. It is quite an institu tion, but the membership has not. increased materially. Senator ".Tim" Boyd, of Norristown: Thomas F. Hcaley, of the . Philadelphia Public Ledger, and a number of others, have a walking club that goes as far as the Conodoguinct on Ihe West Shore and threatens every day or so to walk clear to Knola. • • Notwithstanding the fact that word went out at ihe slart of this legislative session that it was to he short and businesslike and that there should bo fewer laws than usual put on the hooks, there are signs that the session is goins to be prolonged until well into June and as for hills, the House received close to 1,650. This is several hun dred short of the number in tho last throe sessions and less than in Ihe memorab'c session of 1913, but the range of subjects has heen in teresting. varied and surprising, lo use mild terms. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE; j —Genernl C. M. Clement,o3f* Sun bury, former commander of tho' Pennsylvania soldiers, was in Hax risburg to appear on behalf ofwfci. bill in ihe Legislature. —Joseph Onffney, nead finance committee of tl 1 " Philadel phia conneif, has hern here for *a couple days conferring with State officials. —Roger J Dever. Wilkes-Barro lawyer bore this week on compensa tion legislation, says he is kept busy discussing proposed enactments. —Judge J. Whitakor Thompson, of Philadelphia, was here in con nection with the movement, for the Pennvpaeker statue. —Senator William K. Crow am. Governor Snroul rejoice in the ittßS* year of birth. • DO YOU KNOW V —That Harrisburg Is sclUagi more products these days than before the war began nnd that too in spite of tho industrial let down? HISTORIC HARRISBURG —When legislators first met in Harrisburg they stayed In session whole weeks at a time. Refinement of Cruelty Just to make the punishment a little worse, the Allies are going to make tl>e Germans translate the 70,000-word peace treaty Into their own language.—Dea Moinoe Register,