10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH 4. NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded JBSJ Published evenings except Sunday by THB TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph Bundles, Fed-ral Sgearc E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief T. H- OYSTER, Business Manager OUS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A- R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager BXHIUTS Beard I. P. McCULLOL'GH, BOTD M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMETZ. Members of the Aesoclated Preee—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 dlapatches herein ere also reserved. t Member American Newspaper Pub- Aeeoc^a lation end Penn sylvania Associa Avenue Rullding. 1 Chicago, 111! K Entered at the Poat Office in Harrls burg, Pa., aa second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mall. $3.00 a year In advance. MONDAY. J I'LY 11. 1919 And he shall judge between the na tions, and shall decide concerning many peoples; and they shall beat their strxrrds info plowshares, and fheir speors info pruninghooks; nations shall not lift up strord against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.—lsa. 2 :4. GOOD APPOINTMENTS GOVERNOR sproul. continues to gain in public confidence through the wisdom of his selections of fit public servants. His long business experience has given him ability to choose wisely In the many appointments which he Is re quired to make for the public ser vice. Political critics, of course, will en deavor to persuade their partisan followers that the Governor Is al ways dominated by party consider- j attons In his official nctlons, but the fact that Democratic ns well as He- | publican approval has been given many of his appointments empha-j sites the good sense which he Is dls- ' playing In this matter. Public opinion Is rapidly crystal lizing In favor of such reservations aa to tho League of Nations as will i safeguard American sovereignty j and American interests now and j hereafter. Some such alliance of , the principal nations opposed to i Germany in the recent war as made ! possible the crushing of the Hun ' menace may be necessary for the j preservation of peace, but this alii- j ance need not necessarily involve the surrender of any of the freedom of action which has always character ised the conduct of our Government in the development of a great peo ple. A MODEL SMALL TOWN THE Kansas City Star calls at tention to what a small town can do in the way of helping itself, citing as an example the pro gressive borough of Brimiield, 11!., which, with a population of only 600, has erected for itself a com mnnlty house at a cost of $30,000. According to the Star, until Brim field accomplished this unusual un dertaking its young people were compelled to go to the city of Peoria for amusements and entertainment. The town had an old and out-of date "opera house," which was noth ing more than a town hall under private ownership. Just as In tho average small town. It had no motion picture shows, no theaters, no skating rink, no common meet ing place for the public, no place for dancing, no place for public parties of any kind. Every small town will recognise at once the conditions that existed In Brlmfleld. They are common to small towns In Pennsylvania as well as Illinois. Now, the story of lirlmiicld re lates. there Is a different atmos phere in the town. The young peo ple no longer say: "There is noth ing going on In this old town." There Is something "going on" In Brlmfleld. according to the Star's correspondent. In the way of whole some, standard amusement and en tertainment. The young people know Marguerite Clark and Mary Flekford and Dorothy Dalton and the "Talmadge girls." The kids are all acquainted with Charlie Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks. The boys play basketball according to the 191k rules of the game, and they AH the gymnasium every night for healthful, purposeful egarclse. Whan the women of the town went to glr* a reception- -there Is the re. noption room at the community house. When the churches give a "sapper"—the community house. When the cemetery association meets, when the township board holds a asasion, when the businsea- IBM give a banquet, when the pub. Ha schools hold commencement #- ecu ess, when the garage society it* am.Ml exhibition—the MONDAY EVENING, ' community house answers every purpose. And. best of all, one can Imagine the good fellowship of the com munity being Increased and built up by the frequent community meet ings at the public service house In Rrimtield. It brings tho community together in almost every activity of the social and business life. Brimtield Is brimful of the sest of > life and public spirit is rife. Brim- j field is about five years ahead of the j times. Community houses or , neighborhood clubs—are going to j be as numerous in a short time as "town halls" now are in the villages and boroughs of the country. And not the small towns alone. Cities, too. will have them —Harrlsburg along with the rest. The trend is rapidly in that direction and the Legislature recognised the tendency when it provided recently that third class cities in Pennsylvania might finance and operate indoor recrea tion centers. Every stiff fine imposed upon the noise-makers, including the cut-out offenders, means a more livable city. No mercy should be shown the per sistent violators of the anti-noise or dinance. ONE LAW FOR ALL IT IS gratifying to note that even in Germany former Prince Henry's appeal to the King of England not to bring the ex-Kaiser to trial is received with no applause. Prince Henry should have known that his plea would prove futile. The world wants William to pay for his crimes. No penalty that can be exacted Is severe enough, but inso far as it is possible he must be punished. Prince Henry is a believer in the old tenets of kingship, chief of which is that "the king can do no wrong," but that period is past and the popular belief of to-day is that few kings ever do anything right. The Prince thinks he can prove that the Kaiser, his brother, was not responsible for tho war. May le not, although tho world has good reason to believe tho contrary, but we know that he was responsible for its conduct and that a word I from him would have halted the outrages in Belgium and France, and on the high seas. It is for these crimes that we want Wilhelm to answer, and answer he must. The new doctrine on earth is "Bobby" Burns' dictum that "A man's a man for a' that," and a king who commits crime is no bet ter than the tramp who breaks a law. There is one law for all, and he who breaks it must answer for the of fense. Providing a suitable memorial in honor of the men who rallied to the colors in the great war is a com munity obligation and the Chamber of Commerce deserves public ap preciation of its initiative in the matter. EATING IN THE AIR FHOM press reports we learn i that tho R-34 was "well stocked up with cold ham, . roast beef, steak pie, tea and cof- | fee," and that all the little luxuries I of a well appointed hotel table were in the larder. And yet there were those who • pitied the crew. Offered a similiar | menu and the crowd that would , have volunteered for the ride back would have overflowed a real ocean I liner. The minute it is reported | nbout that "good eating" and air i travel go hand in hand the railroad | diners will be deserted. May be you haven't eaten on a , dining car recently. Perhaps you | haven't noted the change that has j come over the dining car bill of fare i since the Government took over the ' roads. If not take it from one who knows and don't investigate. There 1 WHS a time when a dining car dinner was a meal to be remembered. Now it is a thing one can't forget. If you eat as much as your appetite demands your pocketbook protests; if you eat what you feel you could afford, you starve. One used to send back half of an order uneaten—it was too much; now if you don't eat everything set before you it is too bad; hut mostly you lick the plate and then wonder how the man who has to make a trans-continental trip by train avoids starving to death. It's a great life. Most of tho side show "living skeletons" get thin by eating their meals regularly on diners. The only reasonably priced Items are griddle cakes, lettuce and pie, but these make a strangely unsatis factory meal, tine of these days somebody is going to make a mis take and put something really cheap, plentiful and good on a diner blll-of-fare, but that won't help much for all the regular patrons will die of shock. 80 bring on your "cold ham, lamb, roast beef, steak pie," and the little luxuries aforementioned, ; trot out the old R-3t, we're ready for the trip. P. 5,.--\\'hy not take along a few of (lie gentry who arrange the rail road dining car menus and drop "em oterboard half a mile up? — j it is going to be difficult for the Secretary of War to explain to the people who have been compelled to purchase food stuffs at abnormal prices why the millions ($121,100,. OOOi of dollars worth of meats and canned goods of every description were permitted to remain in ths great military depots for months without any real effort to place thte hoarded food upon the market In some reasonable way. aevsrnor sprout is using a double- Hitted aa to disposing ef a let of bills lsft for him to worry with by ths legislature Hs Is manifestly scruti nising with great ears the accumula tion of measures referred to him by the lawmaking branch. 'PuutrOifttfuua *r am Ex o Newspapers of Pennsylvania, es pecially those In the third class cities, seem to be far more Inter ested in the activities of the politi cians near and real, since the repeal of the nonpartisan election feature of the third class city code,- than In commenting upon the action of the Governor In approving it. It seems to be the general Idea that the non partisan municipal election, like some other governmental panaceas of which much was heard in years gone by on Capitol Hill and in the newspapers, has not been the suc cess claimed for it so vociferously and much of the lamentation over the approval of tho Willson repealer is coming from newspapers whose | owners -or editors are more or less j interested in the political fortunes of a clique or personal factor rather ! than the welfare of a party. From what the newspapers print ! there were many men surprised that j the repealer was signed and some politicians who have been active in nonpartisan schemes \gt\re rather I stunned, although in this city ap- j proval of the repealer has been con- 1 sidered a probability ever since the bill went back to the Governor after being recalled in the same shape as it originally passed. Almost every city has had an outburst of political activity that j indicates a revival of the old time ! party contests and the general run of the voters of the thirty odd third j class cities appears to be glad of the j chance to carry the party banner again and to he showing little re- J gard for the wailing in the market ! places over the passing of a law that brought many unexpected and absurd situations into the politics of Pennsylvania's smaller municipali ties. —The Philadelphia North Ameri can, which is generally credited with having kept the judicial non partisan net on the books this year, criticises the Governor rather sharp ly for approving the repealer, while odell Hauser, writing in the Phila delphia Press, says: "After consid erable delay the Governor approved the bill with his signature. 1 sup pose he did it on the principle that he had dragooned the faithful into voting for so much they didn't want, that he might as well give them something they did want for a des sert. Anyway, he signed it. That will make the coming campaign for Mayor and Councllmen 'a lively pro position in some of our best third class cities this fall." Other Phila- j delphta newspapers seem too much i interested in their own political sit uation to pay much attention to the rest of the State or laws affecting its cities. —Taking newspapers of Altoona. which is well up in the alphabetical list of third-class cities, for example we find the Altoona Mirror weeping over the repealer and blaming the politicians as did the Harrishurg Patriot in one of its characteristic editorials. The Mirror says; "What the party bosses could never get the third class cities to agree to, they succeeded in Influencing the Legisla ture to enact and the Governor to approve. Instead of selecting the best men for office from all the citizens at large, we will now choose them from political parties." The Altoona Tribune makes this con servative comment: "We have never thought much of the nonpartisan method of nomination and election: it has never secured a better class of officials and has tended to de crease the interest of the people in both the primaries and the election. We have likewise objected to that provision of the Clark act which per mits council to elect tho city treas urer. It will be prudent, however, to study the act in all its sections before indulging in unreserved ap proval or condemnation." —The York Gazette and Daily goes almost as far as the Harrishurg organ of the worst Democratic ma chine known in the Keystone in years. This York paper says it is "a lamentable slop backward" and then remarks: "It Is silly and ridic ulous to elect men to direct muni cipal affairs simply because they happen to belong to one political party or another." —The Pottsville newspapers say the approval of the bill caused "con sternation" among the politicians who did not seem to think it was going to become a law. Kaston and Lancaster peoples seem to have re ceived the news with indifference, while in other parts of the State Democratic newspapers of the same stripe as the Harrishurg machine organ are throwing dust on their bends, and at the eyes of the public, by saying the politicians did it. The Heading Herald, which has the ! faculty of getting considerabble I from out of Berks polities has this to say: "It has no material effect 1 on tho Socialists, because in either 1 event that party would vote for can didates of their own for office. But j in both the Democratic and Repub ! Ilea A ranks things are different. ' Each party hnd representation at city hall and between the two there < was a mutual understanding. The ! new law will change all this nnd | put everybody up in the air as to ! results." —The Reading Kagle feels badly about it, saying the Governor's ac tion "surprised and chagrined" many of Reading's city officials and people. It says some candidates, Including 11 Democratic randldnte for mayor, called It "a freeze-out." —l'p in Carbondals and Pittston, where they are very practical In their politics, the n< wspupers re cord great activity among the candi dates for office on getting petitions signed Hnd In perfecting their linea. Hazleton newspapers any the elec. lion this VCH r in that city will be the "llvelteat" In years. —This is the way a Philadelphia Press dispatch from Allentown : views the situation in the Lehigh j metropolis: "There WHS a wave of ] satisfaction throughout Allentown the last two days over the action of Governor Hprnul in signing the non partisan repealer for elections In cities of the third class For sev eral terms under the nonpartisan luw the Allentown City Council con tained Socialist* and near-Roclallsts, whose hsndllng of ths public funds has resulted In extravagant waste of public funds In unsuccessful at tempts to demnnstrat* their theo ries; • multiplication of nfltres for the benefit of Hoctaliets, and an In rrsase in the tax rats without ads quale improvements." —Naw Caatia. Bradford. Eria arid Johnatown nawapapara do not Ilka tka ehanga and ara Incltnad to Mama "tba politician*." SAJUUSBTTRG TTF&KAFT TELEGKXPH WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND BY BRICGS I "^ RR:R . LET YOU | H VJ X?OS £O UWTIL I U JM ~*' / MORNJIN/C ~HE / I YOV'/ V 1 ,IJ^CK OME 7 | V AP COME LASSIE : FER / | FE& .I I>M COME LASSIE W/WK& 'l>( LASSIE-LASSIE /' E LA S SI E ■ L ASSLP SIDELIGHTS ON PERSONALITY AND CAREER OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT FROM HARVARD DAYS How From a Weakling Youth He Developed a Sturdy Constitution—He Cultivated Every Natural Advan tage and Converted Liabilities Into Assets A Potent Moral Influence By CHARLKS G. WASHBURN NC) one who, like myself, met Theodore Roosevelt for the first time in 1878, when he entered college, would have tailed to be sur prised to be told that he had been- a delicate child, subject to severe at tacks of asthma. He is described by a member of his family as having been a rather small patient and suf fering boy, but always the head Of the nursery at 28 Kust Twentieth street. New York, where he was born. He there amused his companions with stories relating to strange and marvelous anlmul adventures, in which the animals were personalities quite as vivid as Kipling gave to the world a generation later in his "Jun gle Hook." His father transformed one of the rooms in the house into an outdoor piazza gymnasium, to which he introduced his son. as I have been told, in the following words: "Theodore, you have the brains, but brains are of compara tively little use without the body; you have got to make your body, and it lies with you to make it. and it's dull, hard work, but you can do it." This was Theodore Roosevelt's flrst flght, the struggle to become physically strong, which he began at the age of nine years. One of his most striking charac teristics, even at this tender age, was his power of concentration. Because of his Inability in his early childhood to engage in rough sports ho spent much of his time in rending and writing; while so occupied he was always able to detach himself from whatever was going on about him. This characteristic, he preserved throughout his life. Because of his frail health he was educated by tu tors until he went to college and wns of necessity more or less of a recluse. When he was nhout fourteen years old his father lived for part of the year, at lenst, at Oyster Bay. As Theodore grew older and strongor ho developed a great fondness for the water. He did not care to sail, there being too little physical exertion in that: he preferred the smallest boat that could live in the bay or sound. He would row himself and made long excursions shooting ducks, his pleasure increasing as rough water and fog made the trip more perilous. He wns also huslly engaged in col lecting nnd studying the hnblts of I birds and animals, of various kinds, which he stuffed nnd skinned him self. His love of naturnl history nnd literature was a pnasion throughout hl life. Paring all this time he rndo ran nnd boxed, nnd at eighteen, when Ihe went to college, had become a strong and normal yonng man, nenr- I sighted to he "are. hut able to he 1 a verv respectable figure as a fencer nnd lightweight boxer Tn speaklne of his early political life Roosevelt said lr a speech h made at the Tfarvnrd T'nlon In 1907, while he was President: "\s soon as T left college T wanted |to take so Interest In political life; T wanted to find out how the work of govcnlng was reallv done Ooite s number o' nice people tr- Vw York along Fifth Avenue solemnlv advised me not to ioln nnv of the regular political ergo nltu Mona, he canre T would And that they were eomnnoed on'v of 'muckers' not of •eentlemen ' The answer waa easv; Then they are the ones that govern if it is the mocker* that govern, I want to aee If I cannot hold mv own with then' 1 will loin with •hem in governing you It von are top week tp govern voiirsdves ' T intend to ha one of the etas* that rov rns rstt one of the class fhst |a governed An T telned the nnlltiea' eiuh In mv district I tolned if lull as ' did the Vgtienal Hoard " Meantime. In 111*, when he wet twenty-tour yeere old. hie drat book^ which he had began to write tn col lege, was published, "The Naval War of 1812." One would expect to find an author so young ar.xl of Roosevelt's tempera ment engrossed in the romantic side of his subject with little attention paid in detail to the technique of naval warfare. On the contrary, the book deals with the inaccuracies of earlier writers, rrruch space is given to the careful sifting of evidence ami it is decidedly controversial in its tone dealing in technicalities to such a degree as to make it perhaps of greater interest to the student than to the general reader. Roosevelt once said of it that it wns as interest ing as a dictionary. This was ar? exaggeration; the book is not lacking in interest and what is of more importance, had a positive influence In stimulating the development of our navy. The session of 1884 ended his ser in the Assembly. He refused a re nomination and two nominations to Congress. His purpose to abandon political life seems clear. Several years ago I happened to be sitting next President Eliot at a public ditvner—Roosevelt was then President. Mr. Eliot said to nie that a certain prominent banker had told him that the banking fraternity would not then do things which it would have done two years before — fine 108110101*5' to the changed feeling In commercial circles; It was a very different feeling in 1907 from that which prevailed In 1897. For this Roosevelt was largely responsible. His great power wns a moral power, and moral questions Intciosted him more than any others. He was at his very heat tn any controversy in which they were ir/volvcd. For ex ample. he did not believe that the question of lowering or raising tho duties as proposed by the two parties in nny way approached in Import ance the trust or labor questions, so culled, in which the rights of dif ferent classes of society were In volved and the question of social justice was at Issue. He believed that those who urged upon him the necessity for taking up the tariff knew that the tariff would be a rod herring ucross the path of moral and industrial reform. ! n 1905, when the first Moroccan Incident occurred and It looked very much like war, he wrote a very strong letter, as Senator I-odge has told me. to the kaiser. In which ho said in substance that the ctvtlized world would regard with horror a war with France and thnt the kaiser would bring upon himself the hos tility of all civilized nations. Tho kaiser replied that there would be no war and that he would do al any time what. Roosevelt advised That danger passed, and Ihe result was tho Algeclras conference, where Henry Whits represented the T'nlted States. It will ho remembered that the conference came to a deadlock and appeared to be about to break up. Henator Bodge has told me that one afternoon when they were riding and discussing the subject Roosevelt said to him: "I have cabled to the kataer reminding him of Ills note end asking him to take steps to se cure the conclusion of the confer ence I do not know whether he will do anythtnk, but have done my part." The result was that the Oer man resistance was withdrawn and a settlement reached Henator t-odge raid that Mr White told him that he did not know that nooaeve't had done anything but that he was struck with th# sudden disappearance of the Oermat* opposition snd the quick settlement which fallowed, all the result at the cable Us tu not tn hit youth a ready speaker. Ha wee halting and toaat- tating in his delivery. In the early days no one would have predicted a great future for him as an "orator." In the later years, while he had none of the arts of the orator, the subject matter of his addresses had been so interesting and his personality so compelling that he was a most im pressive speaker. He has, as every one knows, been a most voluminous writer, and I was surprised when he said to me some years ago, in sub stance: "Do you know I am not a very ready writet ? No one knows how much time I put into my arti cles for the Outlook." He then pulled a typewritten manuscript from his pocket and said: "Here is an article that 1 am going over as I have opportunity, correcting and recasting it," and then added, "but my work is done three months ahead." Here was one great secret of his ability to accomplish much; he was always doing today the work of tomorrow, of next week or of next year. During the winter of 1909 he was at work on the addresses he was to deliver after his African trip and while in Europe the follow ing year. Ho was always impatient with well-meaning but futile people. New York Cats Dempseys [From the New York Sun.] Among the worthiest creatures in the animal kingdom is the cat, and particularly the kind of cat that lives and works in lower Manhat tan. Observers whose way takes them through the streets of the warehouses, wholesale groceries, markets and factories see the cat occasionally by day as it passes from door to stairway or from cellar to street, nimbly avoiding the shifting boxes and bales and the boots of the drivers and passerby. Nimbly and gracefully the cat does it, avoid ing all appearance of haste or fear. Of the latter it probably has none; cats are fatalists, and it was one of the sights of besieged towns in Europe during the war to watch the cat disregard the roar of the shells and the flying stones and earth, while the dog, a sensitive creature with an imagination, sought refuge even as his master man did. In lower Manhattan dogs rarely are seen. They would not like it, for things are busy and noisy and there is nobody to play with. The downtown cat is not for play. Pos sibly, ufter generations of life in the mercantile world, a kitten would not know how to play with a ball of yarn. These cats are serious ani mals, like Cassius, but not quite so lean and hungry. Yet tHjey are not fat. You neVer see a Wlllard among them; they are all Dempseys, seem ingly trained to the hour and with death in either mitt for the corner ed rat. They have an unmistakable business look, a do It now, let effi ciency be our motto, expression. They have breathing spells, these cats. Sometimes at night, after the last truck has gone and the watch man is making his rounds, cats may be seen in the quiet cross streets west of City Hall Park, busking in the light of the electric lumps. Now and then a cut mother will bring her litter to the sidewalk as If to teach them something about the surface life of the city. On Hundavs and holidays the cats, which may be long to Feline Union No. 19, posi tively loaf in front of their shops, sprawled on the walk and confident that nobody will step on them. What do they live on when the stores are closed for three days at a stretch? Ask the ghost of any downtown rodent. He knows! Only Partirips Criminis [From the New York Times] It was not Bethmann who con ceived the idea of the Potsdam con ference' at which it was agreed to start the war, and the legal fiction of his responsibility cannot be stretched to rover a conclusion so absurd. It was not Bethmann who ordered or permitted the atrocities, and there is no law which can make him guilty of It. The indictment lies not against the late emperor, but against William Hohensollern, a man, and the man who headed a conspiracy of which Bethmann may have had no knowledge, and In the carrying out of which Bethmann was no more {than lite pea la William Uoheaaol iefii'a aaai J JULY 14, 1919. When He Can't Get a Drink j E. M. Statler, the hotel man. In the June American Magazine: As a result of prohibition, we seem to have these very definite effects: men go out with their wives and their famalles to the restaurants und theaters, more than they did; they drink soft drinks, and they cat more food, especially sweets; they walk more nnd ride less. "They are also easier to get along with. At least, my manager in De troit says that it is like being 'trans ported to heaven' since the drinking man has boen almost eliminated from the hotel guests. "As the time goes on, more und more men certainly are going to take to soft drinks. In the' new . | Motel Pennsylvania in New York we will have three soda fountains and | I expect they will do a big business. lln Detroit the two most popular | 'tcmpcranco drinks' with men are ! 'grape-Juice highball' which is ! grape juice and seltzer, and the various ice cream sodas. "I have been mnking inquiries, and I find that men have been pat ronizing soda fountains more and more in recent years, even where there was no prohibition. A woman [told me the other day of going into I one of these places in the New York j financial district several times lately. On each occasion she was the only I woman in the place, aside from the I girls behind the counters. And the men in there were not office boys or young clerks, but solid, substan tial business men were taking their ice cream sodas, their phosphates, I and even their 'nut sundaes,' with ! evident enjoyment. If they did this j when bars and saloons were open, i they will surely do It still more when there is no place else to go. "In Detroit another effect of the prohibition conditions is that people are spending more for food when they go to the restaurants. v The j average- check for luncheon and | dinner is twenty per cent higher i than it used to be. Remember! I This increase is in spite of the fact | that all charges for drinks are now ! absolutely gone. That means that j one large item has been subtracted j from the amount spent in the res taurants and yet the sum has in creased. I mean the average sum I per person. Wander Song Mad, restive city, you hold naught for me; Your glamour and your might; your music and your light Mere tinsel prove to nomads of the sea. I'm sick to death of all your sounds and sights: You call to me in vain; I loathe with might and main Your sin, your social laws, your fool delights. There is a wider life that holds me fast: It calls and ever calls; it's full of lures and thralls, And oh! it always draws me back at last. It speaks through halliards drum ming on the mast; Beckons from alien lands and lone Pacific strands, And hails me down the northern storm-wind's blast. Aboard, my men! Aboard! and swing away. . . . I long to leave behind, with all their kith and kind, Vain cities that would bind me to their sway. —Ntya Becke, in the Sydney Bulle tin. Soaked Hcrr Scheid £ 50,000 [Prom the Stars and Stripes.] Herr Josef Scheid, one of the leading citizens of Coblentz, will not be obliged to refer to the vaca tion guide this summer, nor will he be concerned with the high cost of ice, beer or other necessities. The afer-mentioned gentleman has been invited to spend six months in the Third Army Military Prison at Cob lentz, and all that will be required of him will be to sweep the streets daily and keep his bunk in good shape. With tne persuasion of a few M. P.'s he accepted the invita tion. Herr Scheid is one of the wealth iest men in Coblentz, his worldly assets amounting to something over $2,000,000 in real money. Until he took up his residence in the Third Army brig he was a contractor, en gaged in wholesale traffic along the Rhine River. A short time ago, he loaded up one of his boats at Mainz, and headed it for Coblentz. According to the hill of lading, the cargo contained "rock, crushed rock and wine," but before it was even unloaded, the American Intelligence Department discovered 35,000 bottles of cognac, worth about $200,000, camouflaged under the crushed rock. As traffic in cognac is distinctly off limits, Herr Scheid was conse quently out of luck. He was tried, found guilty, fined 200,000 marks and sentenced to six months at hard labor. "China a- Danger to Japan" Marquis Kinunochi Saionji, senior Japanese delegate at the Peace Con ference, made the following remarks with regard to Japan's relations with China, when interviewed by Gregory Mason for the Outlook: "I have a great admiration for many Chinese, unfortunately some of the Chinese statesmen have a way of saying things for effect which they cannot mean. Japan has solemnly promised to give back the leased territory of Kiao-chau and to restore Shantung to China in full sovereignity, except a little land at Tsingtan for establishing a Japan ese settlment, and Japan will keep her word. I do not need to defend that word from any Innuendo. Japun has always kept her international agreements and her honor is above reproach. "It is not necessary for me to take up other ridiculous Chinese pre tentions, such us the pretension that Jupan is aiming to gain military and economic control of China u,id build up a gigantic power with which to try for th> hegemony of the world, try intelligent man can see that China Is much more of a danger to Jupan nnd to the world than Japan is to China. Whatever steps we have taken or may lake In China are aimed merely to protect our Just In terests there and to preserve the peace of the Ear East." End Debt Next [From the New York Times.] The Oerman confiscation seem less confiscatory to their opponents, who have for four years or more endured' rates not very much leas, and not for like reasons. It is one of the injustices and ironies of the victory that the war to end war leaves the world, both victors and vanquished, under a burden of debt larger than the burden of militar ism But the burden of militarism has lasted since tha time of the Cesser*, and, since now there la an and of ths Caesars, there will be sooner er faster aa sad of ths war debt. Bmttng Qlljal|l ■■ ■■ ■■ -'j One could come pretty near get ting into Ithe section dbevoted to names commencing with the letter H in Boyd's 1919 directory of Har risburg and Stcelton the whole of Napey's Harrlsburg Directory and Stranger's Quide for 1842. A copy of this early directory, said to have been the first worth whilo in Har risburg, has been made available for comparison with the 1919 guide to the homes of 100,000 people by D. C. Fadden, 112 Charles street. It is certainly an interesting basis upon which to rebuild the Harrls burg of seventy-seven years *go. The population of the borough, aa it was then, was about 6,200. Har risburg ultliough a settlement since around 1719 ti'd not become a place with many people until 1785, when it was made the seat of the new countv of Dauphin and later in 181- became the Capital of Pennsylvania. In tho fifty-seven years that had passed up to 184 2 't had not pro gressed much nnd Ulpolyto b-apeys directory reveals a town smaller than Middletown, Mechanicsburg or Gettysburg today and actually con taining fewer persons than wore in the Second and Eighth wards of Hurrtsburg at the 1910 census. In deed the wholo population or Dauphin county at that time was not much over 30,000, und less thuri Cumberland or York. • ♦ Mr. Napey's director venture gave way the following year to J. A. Spofford's Harrisburg Directory, tho first of tho Spoffofd publications on Harrlsburg. A copy of this 1843 directory has been loaned by John Gastrock to the Harrisburg Public Library and It, too, affords some in teresting information. Mr. Spof ford was a printer at 4 North Sec ond street, now Market Square. Mr. Napey conducted a grocery, Hour and feed establishment at 63 South Second street, which was at Mul berry street boforo the borough abandoned the Broadway system of continuous numbers and. numbered houses according to blocks. This early business man also kept pills and various medicines on hand and handled "letters cut in zinc" to make barrels, etc. He did not make a success of his directory, but ho woke up the town by showing its varity of opportunities. The names of the residents are contained in ten pages of the sixty-four in tho book, the rest being a very interest ing classified business directory, a Capital Hill list, statistical, data and advertisements with a sketch of Harrisburg. • • • It is of this sketch that much might be said because it has been taken as the foundation of nino tenths of the sketches written of Harrisburg since, cribbed from, stolen bodily, revamped and em bellished by more than one am bitious historian, chronicler or annalist of our fair city, were few of whom credit Napey's enterprise and most of whose plagorisms can be traced by their use of certain facts and arrangement of narratives. This sketch is generally attributed to Gearge Washington Harris, an attorney and grandson of tho sec ond John Harris, the founder of Harrisburg. ilr. Harris had access to family records and being a great admirer of his sturdy patriotic grandsire, was especially well posted in the loro of the locality. Tho sketch is most interesting and two facts are worthy of repetition. One was that letters addressed "John Harris, Harris Ferry, N. America," by London merchants came to his stone masion that still stands on the river front and the other that long before 1785 he predicted that his infant town would be the seat of government of Pennsylvania. Ho I was so positive of this that he left ! a place for Capitol Park in his : town plan, and his faith never 'wavered in the future of Harris burg. With his son-in-law, William Maclay, one of the first two United States Senators from Pennsylvania, he urged it for years and two de cades after he had been laid to rest in Paxton church yard and Maclay was beside him, the State Capital came here, and the prophecy mado in the time of the Revolution was fulfilled. The classified business shows twenty-four attorneys, twenty tailors, twenty-five shoe and boot stores, with one last maker, forty-two grocery, dry goods and flour stores, eleven butchers, twenty-four hotels, fourteen boarding houses, the latter occupied largely by State officials, attaches and Legislators, eighteen carpenters, seven masons, twelve physicians, seven hardware stores, nine cabinet makers, four hat stores, four justices of the peace, five chair makers, one potter, six plasterers, three tobacco stores, nine clergymen, fourteen smiths, four confectioners, four soap nnd candle makers, two dentists, six saddlers, seven drug stores, ten bakers, ten painters, four warehouses, "at the canal," five tinware and stove manu facturers, fifteen milliners and "Mantua makers," two tunners nnd "morocco dressers." five bookbind ers, three liverymen, two brewers, three cloekmukcrs, five lumber mer chants, six brickmakcrs, four book stores, ten "oyster and entlng houses," eight burber shops, three auctioneers, eleven printing houses, three coal and wood yards, two locksmiths and the same number of gunsmiths, and nlno churches, only one of each denomination. In tho business list are names of several men whose families are in the samo lines of dally activity today, notably Gilbert, Gross, Roberts, Ott, Alrlcks, Shearer, Pager, Orth, Magluachlin, Jonas and Hutter. There ure many firms listed whoso names aro familiar to older Harrlsbtirgers such as John Brandt's warehouse and wharf, Peter Hernheiscl, tho build er; Zollinger's hat store, the Felix candy store. Wyoth's book store, Duncan's tobacco store, tho Hae hulcns, Orcenawall's tannery, Clyde A Co., the book binders, and Feun A Wallace, who published Tho Tele graph. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Martin Boland, well known Scranton dentist, will go to India. - General W. K. Price is one of & syndicate to build a big office build ing in Chester. —Congressman J, M. Rose, of Johnstown, will urge a six cent coin. —lra W. Stratton, former mayor of Reading, well known here, may run again. f DO YOU KNOW That Harrlsburg made clgare are ■old In Canada? Historic Harrlsburg ooaohee beg**. aggtUag