10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 18S1 Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGIIAI'H PRINTING CO. Telegraph Building, Federal Square ■ —* E. J. STACKPOX.E President and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER, Business Manager GUS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board o. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMETZ. Members ot the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches heroin are also reserved. A Member American Ft Newspaper Pub lishers' Associa- Ition, the Audit Bureau of Circu lation and Penn sylvania Associa ated Dailies. Eastern office, Story, Brooks & Finley. Fifth Avenue Building, New York City; Western office. Story, Brooks & Finley, People's Gas Building, Chicago, 111. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. ESK3K. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mail. $3.00 a year In advance. WEDNESDAY. AVGI'ST 13, 1013 All God's pleasures are simple ones; j health, the rapture of a May morning, j sunshine, the stream blue and green, kind words benevolent acts, the plow of good humor. —Robertson. THE CITY IS READY INTRODUCTION Of ordinances! clearing tho way for the de- \ velopmcnt of the Capitol Park urea shows that councilmen and the city arc ready to do their part the moment the State begins to move. The city appreciates what the State j is doing and will co-operate in every way possible. The transfer of. the bridge fund is already assured and there can be no objection to the ordinance placing approval of build ings to be erected near the rlew Memorial Viaduct up to the State Art Commission. It would he shameful to mar the beauty of this structure by permitting the build ing there of tall or ungainly struc tures. The thing can be worked out satisfactorily to all concerned without hardship and the way to in sure justice and gain the end de sired is through the operations of some such ordinance as is pro posed . Perhaps Mr. Wilson will explain whj- he- permits American food to be sold in Europe more cheaply than at heme" EXPERIENCED OFFICIAL THE retirement of Frank B. Wickersham as assistant dis trict attorney will take from the service of the county its most experienced public prosecutor and orte of the best versed attorneys ih criminal law in all Central Penn sylvania. Mr. Wickersham has par ticipated in many of the most im portant suits tried in recent years in Dauphin county and has matched wits with the best attorneys at the bar. He has been very successful and his retirement will leave a va cancy not easy to till. / If we were sitting in the long drawn ''out Ford libel case we would fi el'like finding the defendant guilty and placing the costs on the prosecu tion. thereby getting square with both of them. MR. LYNCH IS RIGHT CITY COUNCILMAN LYXC H wants $lOO,OOO for the exten sion of the city's sewer system, and he ghould have the money. No ■city can grow unless it anticipates ithe needs of builders and develop ers. The eastern section has been increasing rapidly in population and it will go forward even faster If it is given the drainage it needs. Har risburg never has regretted a single penny spent upon public improve ments and it no doubt will stand ready to approve the loan which Mr. Lynch proposes. Texas and Oklahoma have nothing on our own Clinton county, where gas and oil companies are preparing to develop thousands of acres of leases in that territory. WORDS OF WISDOM {{T ET us keep our country gov- I j erned orderly by the ballot, and abide by the will of the majority." says the Governor of New Hampshire in art appeal to the good sense and judgment of his constit uents. "We can by the ballot see that profiteering is stopped. We can by the ballot see that gambling in food is stopped. We can by the ballot safeguard wages where all can live and let live. But if we attack our Government and ruin it we can get nothing save as we may in the mad scramble of the mob." WEDNESDAY EVENING, Inhere is sound logic in those re marks, very opportune in the face of the labor crisis with which the country appears to be confronted. The "will of the majority" has ruled in the United States since the days of our separation from England. Now a Ave per cent, minority Is undertaking to dictate to the other ninety-live per cent, that the prin ciples of tho Constitution shall be I laid aside and some of our most 1 beneficent laws scrapped. Secretary Lansing may have had some opinions regarding the peace negotiations at- Paris, but he seems to have kept them bottled so far as any results are concerned. THE CALL FOR WORKERS THE Manufacturer's Record, a potent force for good dur ing the war. quotes from Second Chronicles this verse: "And in every work that he began * * * he did it with all his heart and prospered," and comments thereon in an editorial under the caption. "The World's Call for Workers." AA'ork alone can solve the problem which the world faces, the editor says, and he .reasons it out after this fashion: For nearly five years the world was busy destroying the accumu lations of centuries, and during that time it had to leave undone the things which ordinarily would have been done. Now I every man on earth must in one ' way or another bear some of the burden of Germany's war upon civilization and hasten to do the | things which need to be done. For five years dwellings were left unbuilt and existing ones un painted and unrepaired; food was consumed and destroyed more rapidly than it was produced as 40,000,000 to 50,000.000 men bat tled for existenee or prepared for the great struggle; railroad build ing ceased, highway construction stopped, streets were unrepaired, hotels were not constructed to meet the world's increasing travel. The result is there is now an enormous vacuum of empty store shelves, of upbuilt dwell ings and hotels and railroads, and of a food supply inadequate to feed up a world of hungry people. There is only one way to over come the situation. Ml the com bined power of ull the govern ments of earth cannot change the inescapable, unalterable facts. But men, individually and collectively, can meet the mighty problems we face by work, hard driving work; by work of brain and brawn and machine power. Production and more production to the limit of man's ability wilt insure world prosperity. Under-production will mean world proverty and suffering. The responsibility of the sol dier on the battlefield to do his utmost was not greater than is the responsibility of every worker now to bring forth the greatest results, whether on the farm, in the mine, in the factory, in the bank, in the pulpit, in the teacher's room, or at the editorial desk. Every ounce of increased out put by work helps to create wealth and will help the world to carry and eventually pay its indebtedness. It will help to feed ' and clothe the world arid will lessen the cry of hunger which has fed the fires of Bolshevism in Europe. The soil, the mine, the factory, the brain, are but plants for the production of things which will add to the world's wealth and help to fill up the world's VJC uums. The work must be done by every man "with all his neart." No other kind of effort is worthy to be called work. The man who plows, the man who preaches, the man v.ho mines the coal or the ore, the man who runs the machine or he who digs the ditch, if he would do his duty to a suffering world, must do it with all his heart, and feel that every pulse-beat which he puts into the work helps to enrich all humanity in its broadest sense. Any man who halts in his work, who dawdles at it and who is in efficient and only partially pro ductive where he should be effi cient and largely productive, is a slacker in the world's great battle against proverty and mis ery. To the chosen people of old, God said; "Thou shalt remem ber that wealth, individual and National, and for the world, can be created only by work. Talk as we may about profiteer ing and the evils of. big business, there remains the fact that the United States is feeding and cloth ing Europe and that we arc sending abroad more than we are keeping at home. But instead of working mdre hours and harder we have cut down the working day and men gen erally are less productive per hour than they used to he. Until we produce more, prices w.ll continue to be high. All the man made laws in the world cannot override the old unalterable law of supply and demand. If we can produce more we shall have more; that applies not only to goods but to earnings. If we cut down pro duction we may boost the wage per hour all we have a mind to, but no matter how much the wage it will not buy as much as the lower wage when men produced more. There is just one answer to tho whole situation and it lies in in creased production. There will be little trouble with either prices or wages if every turns in and produces as much as he is able. Every dollar of wealth in the world was created by men. Everything we wear, eat or use was made, o>' at least made ready for the market, by men. If men do not produce much it is obvious that what they do pro duce will be high in price and there will not be enough to go around, democracy, socialism, bolshevism or any other ism will not alter that condition. If we want better times we must work for them. Some consideration is now being given plans for a new big power dam in the Susquehanna river near Con owingo. All such plans should con template the inevitable improvement of the river for navigation purposes. By the Ex-Committeeman j e —. Soldier candidates are looming up everywhere, but in none more nu | merously than in Lancaster county. I AVilliam C. Kehm, Lancaster's city ; solicitor, former commander of Company B, 10l't-h Machine Gun Battalion, is being mentioned as a i possibility foi* the office of district attorney. He is likely to be slated I for the" office by the Republican party. This announcement created I great surprise. It had been generally I conceded that Sumner V. Hoster . man, now assistant district attorney, and during the war period, in the absence of Lieutenant Colonel Cleon N. Berntheisel, acting district attor . ney would be given the office. The petition of General Edward C. Shan ! non, of Columbia, for a place on the I Republican ticket as a candidate for prothonotary is in circulation. Major I Q. O. Reitzel will be the candidate for register. —A statement was issued yester day by the Republican organiza tion of Pittsburgh, setting forth that their support would be given to the five sitting common pleas court judges, who are seeking re-election in Allegheny county, and Judge H. Walton Mitchell of the orphans' court, who also is seeking a full term. He was appointed recently by Governor William C. Sproul. The common pleas judges are John A. Evans, John C. Haymaker, Henry G. AA'asson, Charles H. Kline and Stephen Stone. The statement in part , follows: | "It has been a fixed policy in Alle- I gheny county to retain on the bench men who have served with fidelity. The Regular Republican Organiza tion is desirous of observing the pro ! visions of the law which now gov ! ems the election of judges and keeping the bench clear of partisan politics, maintaining the high stand ard in which our judiciary has been regarded and in adhering to the well settled rule of keeping on the bench men who have rendered faithful service, has at the outset of this campaign indorsed and will in the coming primary election support the candidacies of Judges Evans, Hay maker, AA'asson, Kline, Stone and Mitchell." —A bombshell was thrown into New Castle politics this week when Councilman James E. Love present ed a resolution calling for a public hearing for Councilman AV. C. Shanafelt, superintendent of public safety and Republican candidate for mayor at the coming primaries. Shanafelt is charged in the resolu tion with official misconduct. Fol lowing the proclamation of the res olution, council voted to call upon the city legal department to de termine whether there is sufficient evidence to justify a public hearing. Councilman Shanefclt himself voted in favor of the move, asserting that he "courted investigation in the matter," and proclaimed his inno cence. Love has been a member of New Castle council but a short time, having the place made vacant by the death of James A. Horton. It was asserted that in looking over the city accounts Councilman Love discovered a discrepancy. Action on the matter followed almost immedi ately. —The reappointment of E. Lowry Humes, of Pittsburgh, to he United States Attorney .for the Western District of Pennsylvania, an office he resigned to serve in the army during the war, was no sur prise. —The Philadelphia Inquirer says that when Representative Ramsey, of Chester county, return ed from Harrisburg for a while he seemed to think favorably of a prop osition from some of his admirers among the "wet" forces that he become a candidate for.Congress in the Delaware-Chester 'district, to succeed Representative Thomas S. Butler, but he has given up that idea and will probably accept the offer of influential leaders who are prepared to back him for the office of register of wills, for which an election will be held next Novem ber. State Senator William E. Crow, ac cording to Western Pennsylvania politicians who have been east dur ing the last few weeks, is more than' a receptive candidate to suc ceed Philander Chase Knox in the United States Senate, the Philadel phia Inquirer says, and continues: "Admirers of Crow say that he has been looking over the field and has received assurances of support which justify him in giving serious consideration to the proposition. He has held the chairmanship of the Republicai State Committee since 1913 and as the leader of the State Senate, he has come in contact with active Republicans in every county ip the State and he lias been in a position to serve many of them in various ways, both at Harrisburg and through the channels of the party organization. "Now that the United States Sen ators are nominated and elected by popular vote friends of the State chairman say he would have an advantage in a canvass through the wide acquaintanceship he has in every district in the Commonwealth. "But many things will happen politically before this issue shall be termined." Friends of the People [Front the New York Times.] When the members of the fallen Hungarian Communist Government scurried toward the comparative safety of foreign parts, none was more speedy in his departure than Tibor Szamuely, who seems to have done most of the rough work for the organization. He reached the border, but before he could cross it he had the bad luck to meet a man whose brother he had execut ed. That was the end of Szamuely; but before he breathed his last the ! Communist had time to fling a phrase to history—"l was only the enemy of the enemies of the pro letariat." This remark deserves to live, for it explaines a good deal of recent history; indeed, about the only other final word that deserves to be set beside it is Nero's "Qualis artifex pereo." Times change and ideals with them; a mere artist is nothing In these days by cemparison with an emeny of the enemies of the proletariat; but the spirit is the-- same. Indeed,, this Szamuely was after Nero's own heart. His corpse was debarred from the cemetery oh the ground that he had killed not ifess than forty men; and when this lasts friend of the people perished 140,000 crowns and much valuable property were found on his person. For a time, being the enemy of the enemies of the proletariat was a gainful occupa tion. Szamuely was npt so fortunate as Bela Kun, Kun. more canny, not only got away with his life, hut he almost got away with 5,000,000 crowns which eventually were dis- HAMUBITORG TELEGR3PH AIN'T IT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEEUtPT t-i By BRIGGS /\FTCR YOU PUT A 'PIECE OF TVIEN VOO PUT YOUR THEN YBU PUT A SAPETY PAPCR I N YOUR MOUTH AND BONNET STRINGS IN YOUR P,RV * ,RA YOUR MOUTH AND MOTHEH TAKES IT AWAY MOOTH ANO MOTHER TAKES MOTHER TAKES IT AWAY AND SAYS NO NO" IT AWAY AND SAYS "MO NO" AKJD • SAYS ***" •THEN YOO TRY TO STUFF , -AND TBO CRY "BECAUSE " AND THCM MOTHER BRWGS THE BLANKET IN YOUR MOUTH Y~J BE"GN TO THINK THERE BABY'S BOTTLE THAI YOU AND MOTHER TAKES IT |S NOTHIN.6 EATABLE IN CAN P ° X IN YOUR MOUTH , A,NLD AWAY AMT> SAYS THE WPRLD SHE DOGSNT SAY NO NO NO " OH-H-H-H- BOY'! AIN T IT WM/FIB AGR R R RAND AND 5 TAJ''"K- -GLOR-R R-R'OUS FEELIN* F X' . T , \(A ;■••; ." """ ✓-••• •/ V *. "T" B. T- M * I covered in the baggage of himself and his party. When the Commun- | ists took charge in Budapest four months ago the Treasury contained | $14,000,000 in gold securities and j $6,000,000 in gold coin. When the ! Communists were driven out there | was no money left. This alone j would explain the eagerness of a I good many of our revolutionists; | expropriating the expropriators may bring no lasting profit to the pro letariat, but quite a great deal to those of its friends who are prudent enough to start bank accounts be yond the frontier. The Railroad Situation [From the Philadelphia Inquirer.] The case against the Government ownership of the railroads has been well summed up in the statement upon the subject which has just been issued by the National Cham ber of Commerce. Some time ago j the National Chamber invited an expression of opinion upon this question from the 1120 trade and commercial bodies, having a mem bership of 670,000 businessmen, which its organization includes, and it appears from a tabulation of the complete returns which have been received that ninety-nine per cent of those who voted opposed the proposition which had been submit ted to their consideration. They did so for the several reasons which all thoughtful and disinterested stu dents of the situation have recog nized as controlling and which in the judgment of the National Cham ber must be regarded as conclusive. In the first place under Govern ment ownership the development of railroad facilities would be depend ent upon Congressional appropria tions which might and in all prob ability would be determined by po litical influences and which would follow after rather than anticipate the country's transportation needs. If the Government were to buy the roads it would have to Issue bonds to the extent of from eighteen to 1 twenty billions of dollars and it | would moreover be obliged to fur- I nish from five hundred million to a billion of new capital each and every I year for extensions and improve ments. Where are those vast sums to come from? Everyone knows what strenuous exertions it was found necessary to put forth in order to secure the suc cess of the Victory Loan, and the majority of those who subscribed to it were animated by a patriotic spirit and did not buy the Govern ment's bonds as an investment. But the bonds whose issue the purchase of the railroads would necessitate would have to be sold on their mer its from a strictly business-like point of view and on terms that would be attractive. It would therefore be necessary to fix their interest rate on a commer cial basis, which would hardly be less than six per cent, that being the rate which the strongest corporations un der the existing conditions and as a consequence of the abnormal de mand for capital which everywhere prevails are finding themselves com pelled to offer. This disposes of the argument that' under Government operation the roads could be so economically financed that a great saving in this direction could and would be effected. The other objections which the National Chamber advances to the Government-ownership proposition are based upon the ground that ow ing to the absence of competition which furnishes the incentive to ef ficiency and progress. Government operation is never as efficient as corporate management; that politi cal considerations would determine I the selection of the directors whom jit is prqposed that the Government shall appoint, and that either rates and fares would be higher or the inevitable deficits would have to be met by drafts upon the public treas ury. Here is a cold-blooded, mattcr-of fuct and strictly practical view of the matter from a purely business | point of view. Thnk it over. Night For Sleeping Only [From the New York Evening Sun.] Might as well have another hour of daylight. There Isn't much to do after dark any more. The Two Sides to It [From the New York Evening Post] There are two sides to every ques tion, the right side and the other man's. How Duds Have Gone Up [From the Boston ranscrlpt.] Headline —"Henry Ford Goes on Witness Stand in $1,000,000 suit." Congress to the Rescue! [From Harvey's Weekly] CONGRESS to the rescue! That is the generous response from the capitol to the S. O. S. sig nal frantically set "forth from the White House. The House of Rep resentatives will patriotically give up its vacation in order to help the President out of the hole in which he has got himself and in which he has succeeded in involving the Nation. His eagerness to have Con gress help him. now that he person ally needs it. presents a suggestive contrast to his unwillingness to have Congress in session when nobody but the country needed it. and raises the question whether the present economic crisis might not have been avoided if only the President had permitted Congress to assemble last spring to attend to public business which he himself had described as urgent. A major measure of respon sibility must unquestionably rest upon him for the present serious state of affairs. Instead of exploit ing his fads and his personal vanity What Has Detained Him? ; [From Philadelphia Ledger] "I have had all along most of the, power I need to tight 'the high cost | of living.' I have had through my department of investigation and statistical analysis very full inform ation about the conditions which I believe in many cases artificially and deliberately raise the cost of living. Yet 1 have done nothing. I would not be doing anything now if the American people were not goaded to desperation and if some of the Labor organizations were not holding the language of Lenine." This is not the address of Presi dent Wilson. But it is a paraphrase of the larger part of it which forces its way in some such words to the surface of most minds as they con the smooth rhetoric, the strong phrasing, the bold utterances which make up that address. It may as well be admitted that there have been few greater masters of terse "Ameri can" than Woodrow Wilson. But the country cannot "fill its belly with the east wind," even if it blows from the White House. What the Nation wants, has want ed and will alone be satisfied with, is action. Woodrow Wilson is good reading, but "reading makes a full man" only above the collarbutton. When the man or the woman whose all-absorbed anxiety to-day is to stretch an inelastic income over the steadily swelling prices of the neces sities of life, reads that the Presi dent has been aware that away back on June Ist the supply of foodstuffs in this country had risen simultane ously with the prices of the same, that he had then and has now in his hand the sharp weapon of the Food Control Act to cut down those prices, that the new legislation he is asking is trivial or only for the future when compared with the legislation he al ready has, this reading is more apt to fill that man or woman with fury than with anything else. They in evitably ask: What has detained him ? Still, after all, the final test of the | President's policy and the final judgement on his future Will be found in the domestic budget. The ! universal housekeeper will have the I first news as to whether he has fail ed again or "made good." He says himself that the evil is curable. He says himself that he has in his hands a large part of the "cure." It now remains to be seen whether, before the month or the year is out, the housekeepers will be searching the markets and the shops, asking: What has detained him? Hard Luck For a Veteran [From the Lawrence Gazette.] Speaking about hard luck, a Law rence boy was drafted, went through the training camp without a scratch. Then he went out to thresh and the big water tank fell on him and smashed him all up. He wouldn't have cared a whoop if It had been a German tank or a dud. but is dead sore at being knocked out by a tame and civilized Kansas water tank. Nary a Law [From the Boston Transcript.] If you must have something with a kick in it there's no law against your getting a mule. in Europe, he should have remained at home attending to the business of a President of the United States. It was perfectly obvious to every in telligent observer six months ago that there were reconstruction prob lems of the greatest importance con fronting this Nation, which de manded immediate attention and which would tax the full powers of both the executive and the legisla tive departments. But ignoring them in his infatuated quest for interna tional notoriety, the President trans planted the chief executive office to the other side of the ocean, and re fused to call the Legislature to gether. It was a repetition of the old story of unpreparedness before the war and of refusal to make preparation until fthe war was actually upon us. Nevertheless, it is, of course, the patriotic duty of Congress, as of all good citizens, to make the best of the President's bad job, even at the expense of pay ing a heavy penalty for his willful neglect. BOOKS AND MAGAZINES" Mexico Under Carrnnzu: By Thomas E. Gibbon, Doubleday, Page & Co., publishers, $1.50. Mr. Gibbon has spent much time in Mexico studying its people and its industries under the govern ments of Diaz, Madero and Car ranza. Being a lawyer accustomed to producing proofs that will stand the test before judge and jury, he has prepared his case against tne Carranza government with the same thoroughness that he would follow if he were presenting it before a Su preme Court. Without the slightest attempt to dramatize the facts, but with a logic that absolutely con vinces, Mr. Gibbon makes clear the situation. One reads with growing anger the arraignment of the ruth less, cruel government below the border. Here is an inkling of the cause of the failure of the Pershing expe dition. Mexico is our next big prob lem—this book will be of real serv ice in solving it. The World's Work Magazine is about to print Admiral Sims' own story, which will be a revelation of Navy secrets. It begins in the Sep tember number. Admiral Sims has risen in the Navy through his indiscretions. Sims sent a letter, critical of the Navy Department, to President | Roosevelt. "Get me all those re ports," was his command when he finished reading it. Sims was called to Washington. Trouble seemed 111 store for him. In the course of his interview a trial target practice was proposed. It was Sims' plan to demonstrate the Navy's inefficiency —it struck the fancy of Roosevelt. FIVe battleships were placed at Sims' disposal. They steamed past a target, and even at a close mngo, not a single hit was registered. Sims' point had been proved. The demonstration, was hushed. This was the first recognition he had re ceived. It was the birth of the new American Navy and it began the work which later marked Sims as the father of target practice, spon sor of the dreadnought and pioneer efficiency man of the United States Navy. When ' war was declared with Germany, Sims was the logical man to command our fighting forces in foreign waters. In April, 1917, he sailed for England. At that time the Allies were helpless—the sub marine was master. Six months later l the situation was reversed. How this task was accomplished is the story Sims will tell. Humbug Argument [From Harvey's Weekly.] Undoubtedly the President had in mind and his prebs will echo the motion that only prompt ratification of his personal peace proposals is needed to clear up the situation, but the humbug of that it too trans parent to make the plea effective. It is not foreign politics but our own domestic business that needs straightening out, and this should be done or at least attempted as quickly as possible without heed to partisanship or any Irrelevant i considerations. 'AUGUST 13, 1919. No Wonder Germany Quit NIIHDEK FORTY-TWO "One night early in June, 1918, we went into the trenches for the first time, relieving some veteran French troops." said Major Frank C. Mahin, of the Army Recruiting Station, 32 5 Market street, Harris burg. "The next morning I started out to make an inspection and see how things were going with the boys to see how many were scared and to hear what had happened to the dif ferent groups as the made the re s lief the night before. We were up in the high Vosges, real honest to good ness mountains, clothed in forests, with footpaths replacing trenches in many places. There were rows of trenches all right but the woods were completely hidden and were always used unless the Boche hap pend to be strafing us. Of course clear down In the front lines, the trees were all shot away and we had to use the trenches for thorough j fares. As I came down the moun tain side through the woods I smell | ed smoke and also corn beef hash, j so 1 realized 1 was approaching a company kitchen. Suddenly my ears were assailed by as fluent and fiery a stream of profanity as it has ever been my good fortune to hear. 'Stand still you little, lop eared, blank'. If you step on my toes again you gray skinned, moth eaten, stringy tailed, son of a blankety, blank, blank, I'll bite your blank ears off. There wasn't never no Missouri mule ever dreamed of hav ing your cussedness, you littleiunder done runt. Blankety, blank, get off my foot.' Valiantly I leaped for ward to rescue one of my men who was undoubtedly about to be mas sacred by the sneaking Hun. I ar rived at the edge of a large fissure in the rocks and looked down, my trusty gun in my hand, ready to do j or die for my beloved country, when j lo! what burst upon my astonished I vision, but a couple of cooks sitting in front of a cavern like kitchen, hands in their pockets, tin hats on the back of their heads, thoroughly ! enjoying the troubles a tall, lanky iTennessean was having loading cans ;of hot corn beef hash' and coffee I onto the backs of fourteen veteran | donkeys. What a disappointment! Here I was all primed to dash into | the midst of a mob of cowardly I Huns, my automatic spitting bullets | and fire right and left till it was i empty, whereupon I would seize j the rifle of a fallen Hun, and using I it as a club, brain Huns right and left until terrified they would fall on their knees and cry 'Kamerad,' whereupon I would magnanimously cease my slaughter and order them | to the rear to rot in a prison cage ] Instead my eyes beheld a very small donkey whose two fore feet 1 were firmly and determinedly plant |ed on the elevens of a big buck sol | dier, said buck soldier, between ■ oaths, being busily engaged in : punching said donkey in the ribs, | fo which treatment said donkey paid I not the slightest attention. Finally ' ha\ ing extracted his pedal cxtremi j ties from under the donkey's hoofs, my long lean friend picked the don | key up under one arm, carried him | over to where his cans were sitting, and violently depositing the donkev | on the ground, caught his two ear's I with one hand and started loading on Marmite cans with the other. I found that each donkey had two | wicker baskets strapped on his back ■ and into each basket was loaded a can of grub. Our official pack mas ter, cargador, or whatever you might call him, of the donkey pack train had had an inspiration. When he got one donkey loaded, he put his ! foot against the donkey's hind qutht j ers and gave a mighty pust, the donkey braced frantically but skidd | ed far enough to be out of the way. j Our friend would then pick up an other donkey under one arm and carry it over, load it and repeat the | performance, until finally the break | fast for two hundred and fifty men started walking down towards the trenches, shepherded by our dough boy. From the kitchen it was over four miles through the trenches and paths to the last of the front line groups, and by the time their break fast got there those men were ready for supper, and anybody except a southern mountaineer would have lost the last vestige of grace and charity he had ever possessed try ing to get those blankety, blank donkeys to go to the place they were supposed to go." iEmtittg (Et?at |! r- The death of Andrew Carnegie re calls that the steel king was once an employe of the Pittsburgh division of the Pennsylvania railroad, and widely known among the older rail road men of Altoona and Pittsburgh. For a time he was in one of the telegraph offices along the line and in that capacity made many friendb among the trainmen and others, who *■ liked him for his cordiality and his willingness always to do a favor or perform a service. About 25 or 30 years ago he went back to the haunts of his youth and met many of those who had been associated with him in the early days. He compiled as carefully as was possible a list of his old friends and acquaintances, procured their addresses and placed all of them, or their widows, on his "pension list" for lives. Every Christmas came a letter to them let ting them know that their old friend had not forgotten them and notifying them that they would re ceive an allotment varying from $4O a month in some cases to $75 in * Others, for the year ensuing. Just how many men and women were benefited bv Mr. Carnegie's gener osity only he will know. Most of t.bem are dead now. but at least one old woman is still receiving her "pen sion" and it has saved her from the embarrassment of want in her old age, or of becoming a charge on others. As it is she spends her sum mers at home and most of her win ters at. the seashore or in the south, and always has a little money in the bank. Mr! Carnegie has been a source of never-ending benefit and pleasure to her! • • Mr. Carnegie had a remarkable memory for faces and names and never missed hunting up the friends of his youth when he was in their vicinity. The responsibility of wealth may have sat heavily on his shoul ders, as in his later years he said, but it never altered his viewpoint on life or gave him false ideas of his own importance. One old conductor, dead these five years, told the following story, which illustrates the point: "I was just getting off the train at Altoona, when I was approached by a little man in a Panama hat who yelled, 'Hello, Jim, got any pie in your grub box to-day;?' "It was Andrew Carnegie and ho was referring to a fine quality of apple pie my wife used to make and which I shared with him as a lad on the division. He sure could remem ber names and faces. Why I had almost forgotten him and here ho was, meeting countless of the prom inent people of the world, re-call : ing me and my wife's pie the mom ent he saw me. I took him home for , supper and wo had a good talk over old days on the railroad. And I'll ! tell you, Andy hadn't lost any of his i old-timo taste for apple pie." , Incidentally it may be mentioned that this man was one of Carnegie's pensioners in lei tor years. ; The Altoona Times has this to say t of Mr. Carnegie's residence in that city: "Hundreds of veteran em ployes, now retired by the Pennsyl- vnnia Railroad company, and who i once worked pn the Pittsburgh di f vision when Andrew Carnegie was superintendent, are mourning the passing of their former leader; s "Scores of these pioneer railrood . ers received a monthly pension through the munificence of the laird ' of Rkiho. He paid this tribute to : those who served the division during I his career as superintendent. This - pension had been paid them regular - ly for many years. "When the great philanthropist , passed through this city and tiding* i of his coming were heralded with j delight, the veterans who knew of y his arrival, hastened to the station r to greet their benefactor. Mr. Car . negle had vivid recollections of his , railroad career, and recalled the ! , men once numbered among his as i sociates and co-workers. "It was not the regular stipend c given them by the famous American j which attracted the veterans to his . train, on such visits. The memories r of days when they worked for him f moved the greying haired pensioners to look into the kindly eyes and 3 grasp the hand of Mr. Carnegie, when theso rare opportunities de veloped. B "The exchange of stories having to do with the railroad of long ago 3 passed all too swiftly for both the 3 veterans and their friend. Carnegie's j visits during the last ten years were limited to the brief periods his train ' lay here to change engines, " "Carnegie was superintendent of ' the Pittsburgh division of the Penn sylvania railroad from 1860 to 1865, s when ho resigned to engage in the s manufacture of axles and other ® railway supplies. At one time ho , entertained a group of twenty veter an railroad employes at his Pitts a burgh home. He Inaugurated the pension system many years ago, 8 drawing the line only where the for -8 mcr employe needed no financial aid. c Tho pension wns continued when J vetorans died, their widows being j benefited. A fund was created by J Carnegie for the purpose and his demise will in no way stop payment y of the usual monthly allotment. 1 "The steel baron, meeting his old '• acquaintances among railroad men, J" always insisted that they call him * 'Andy.' He told veterans the last , " time he conversed with them, 'Roys, ' ■ if you ever hear of any of my men 1 who are in distress or in need, don't 1 fail to let me know about them.' '• "Carnegie resided in this city for 1 two years, making his home with y his mother. While here he develop ■ ed an interest in the city's first 11- '• brary, and helped establish the Me * ehanics' library, originally founded 1 for railroad employes, but since has '• adopted a public policy. y "This marked Carnegie's initial 8 penchant for starting libraries. * Some years later he began his work J of establishing free, institutions 0 throughout the Nation." k * Price Fixing is Blamed t [From Harvey's Weekly.] g It has been said by eminent and s expert business authority that the * high price which the Government has officially fixed upon wheat is responsible for the high price of ~ all other important food articles. If that is so, the solution of the " problem is obvious. We have no de sire to see the Government paying e hundreds of millions of dollars to - farmers to make good the difference n between the guaranteed price and e the price received for their wheat - in an open market; but it seems •" reasonable on economic grounds to 1 do so, If thus the price of meat and e other foods as well as bread could - be reduced. y Certain it Is that the situation i is so serious as to demand the most 0 thoughtful consideration, free from 1 recrimination and from personal or - partisan animus. * The high cost of living must in v some way be compelled to come down. a