10 HARUSBURG TELEGRAPH A VI VWSPAJPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published evening, except Sunday by TVB TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph Building, Federal Sgaare X. J. STACK POLE President and Editor-in-Chief T. R. OYSTER. Butties. Manager OUS. M. STKINMETZ, Managing Editor Jl. R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board X. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER. GUS. M. STEINMETZ. Member* of the Aa.ociated Pres.—The Aasoclated Frees is exclusively en titled-to the use for republication J if all news dispatches credited to t or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. I Member American Newspaper Pub- Associa- Bureau of Circu lation and Penn- Associa- Eastern office Story, Brooks & Building, Western office' Story, Brooks & Flnle'y, ■' Chicago, 111. inß ' Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Pa, as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week: by mail, JJ.OOa year in advance. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17, 1919 True happiness Consists not in the multitude of friends But in the trorth and choice. —BEN JOHNSON. PRIMARY RESULTS THE returns of the primary elections in Harrisburg and Dauphin county yesterday forecast a great Republican victory at the general elections in Novem ber. More than that, they prove most conclusively that the rank and file of the voters in both city and county very distinctly favor the present Republican party manage ment in this district and endorse the organization's choice of men to rep resent the party in public office. Be yond that, even, is the fact that there can be no mudslinging in the coming campaign, and, without ex ception, the Republicans nominated are above reproach and worthy of support. From the very outstart the at tempt to create a factional split in the party was ill-advised and cer tain of defeat. The organization as at present constituted has not in a single instance sponsored a candi date who has not made good in of fice. The weaJtness of the Demo cratic party in thie county is very largely attributed to the fact that the courthouse has been well man aged and that the leaders of the opposition have not been able to find anything to criticise adversely in the conduct of county affairs in recent years. Honesty and efficiency in office are all the average voter wants. That is what party organization is for, and so long as an organization de clines to give its support to any but capable men of good reputation the majority of that party's adherents may be expected to stand by it. This is what happened in the city and county this time. Republicans, greatly in the majority, have ob served that the organization candi dates in past years have handled their offices well and honestly and they have rallied to the support of those men who this time have had organization endorsement, believing, and very properly so, that this con stituted the mark of a good man. So many candidates come forward in the open primaries that a trust worthy political leadership performs a distinct public service when it does what W. Harry Baker, as chairman of the candidates' committee, and lieutenant-Governor E. E. Beidle- Triin did previous to the primaries. In effect they said: "We are among i the leaders of the Republican party tn Harrisburg and Dauphin county. We have been entrusted with the weU&re of the party management here. We are responsible to a very considerable degree for the favor or disfavor with which the Republi cans of city and county hold the party. For the sake of the party and our own leadership, if for no other reason, we must see to it that good men are nominated, if possible. Therefore, we have chosen from the ttaAd those we believe to be best suit ed for the places to which they aspire and we endorse them. They are as follows,'' and then they gave to the public a list of those candi dates who appear as winners in yes terday's primaries It was all in the open. There was no concealment anywhere. Their leadership had been challenged and they came back with a request for indication at the hands of the 'Wtoee. That they were vindicated a Stance at the primary returns will •how. And what an outpouring of Re publicans it was! How discouraging ttte figures must be to the Demo cratic bosses! How pitiful the hand ful of votes their candidates receiv ed as compared with the tremen dous totals which the Republicans rolled up. It is a noticeable fact that the defeated Republicans, al- DMt to a man polled more votes than the victorious Democrats. The art MttUy, satisfactory to WEDNESDAY EVENING. the Republican electorate. The big gest Republican off-year victory in the history of city and county ts assured. LET US HAVE IT PROPOSALS that the President of the United States be made a member of the American Fed eration of Labor and that all strikes now In progress throughout the country be immediately cancelled in order to meet the present "perilous situation" by which the "foundations of our free democratic Government are threatened," are novel, to say the least. Just what advantage the public would gain through member ship in the Federation for President Wilson it is rather difficult to deter mine. The President does and should stand between the employer and the employe, between capltul and labor, as the champion of the public. His judgment should be as free and unbiased as is possible, and ! membership in any union, whether jit be that of employers or employes.! ; would hardly tend in that direction. I I But there can be no contention I | with the proposal to declare an in jdustrial truce for six months. In that time capital would be able to j get its breath and the President j would have demonstrated what it is j possible to do in the way of reduc ing the high cost of living. Both sides would receive advantages through such an arrangement. It must be perfectly clear to every body that so long as wages are in definitely increased so long prices will continue to advance, and strikes, i which reduce production, always have a bad effect on the market by decreasing the supply, increasing the I demand and, therefore, advancing the costs. If business for the next six months were able to adjust itself to the existing conditions without the constant fear of fresh demands or cessation of production and the President is at all successful in his fight to lower living costs, we should face whatever demands develop by that time on a new foundation with much more opportunity for sane judgment than is now possible. By all means, for the sake of both em ployer and employe, let us have this truce. THE HIGH SCHOOL* THE School Board is moving along popular lines when it plans for the erection of the proposed new high school on the Hoffman Woods site. There are two reasons why no time should be lost in this development. In the first place, the old Central High School is no longer fit for the purposes to which it is being put, while the Technical High School building is very badly needed for additional junior high school uses. Once the school pupils of the city are all quartered on the Hoffman Woods site, it will be possible to use the Technical school structure to house all of the seventh, eighth and ninth grade girls and boys of the central part of town in the Technical school, remodeled to meet the needs of those grades, which will give Har risburg three modern junior high school buildings of sufficient capacity to take care of our needs for six or eight years and will combine the high schools in a way that will give the students of those grades what will amount to all the advantages they would receive did they attend any one of a hundred of the minor colleges of the country, and that without cost of tuition or board. To be sure, we must look out for our finances, but at the best several years must elapse before the proposed "ibhanges can be made, so now is the time to plan. We are fast approaching a place in the school history of Harrisburg where we shall be able to compare our educational facilities with the best there is in the country, and while the cost for the moment may seem to be excessive the results will be well worth the expenditure of any sum that may be needed. PUMPKIN PIE THE poet who sang "the melan choly days have come, the sad dest of the year"—meaning thereby, that autumn had arrived in the offing with winter only hull dov.-n on the horizon and coming along at a thirty-knot clip, must have had his mind on an empty coal bin. That, it must be admitted, would be enough to give anybody the blues. But why look on the gloomy side? There are a lot of things about the fall season that might be worse. Consider, for the sake of illustra tion, our old standby of late Sep tember and early October, th-s lucious pumpkin pie. No, no, Mr. Hallroom, we do not refer to that thin, anaemic, discouraged looking monstrosity peddled out over lunch bars at ten cents per cut. Before the war the price was five cents, and dear at that. This variety of the venerable and venerated New England dish ts the blaeksheep of an old and honorable family, dating back, we understand, to Mayflower Days in the vicinity of Plymouth Rock. Unlike some ram- | ilies of long lineage it has not run i to seed, but keeps right on improv- ! ing with each generation. Only the kind that hangs around lunch bars and restaurants has deteriorated. Pumpkin pie cornea each autumn like a long-lost friend of our eany youth. It is at once a reminder cf boyhood days and sunlit summer seasons, and a solace for the hard ships of winter to come. Brown of complexion, sturdy as to sire and alluring as to general aspect, tlio pumpkin pie that mother used to make (does still, for that matter) was a thing of beauty and a Joy forever —for its flavor is a continu ous delight that lingers lovingly about the tongue on the bare thought of its sweet succulence. What days they were when, after a frosty saoralag, we looted the COJO- field -where the pumpkins grew and bore home the golden, crooked necked treasure, saw it mangled and boiled, mixed with milk and eggs and spices, and pushed into a hot oven, to come out shortly as an old-fashioned pumpkin custard. May be it isn't very good verso, but one can appreciate the senti ments of the rural bard who wrote: When the frost is on the pumkin. An' the pumkin's in the pie. An' the pie is in my stummtek. Oh. how happy then am I. Melancholy days, indeed! There "ain't no such thing" for the fellow with a full quarter-size slab of old time custard pie before him. fMtZce In. By the Ex-Committccman | Men who follow politics general ly agree that no primary in recent years when municipal and county tickets were to be nominated was ever marked by so many strenuous contests as that of yesterday and that the aggregate of the votes polled will be tremendous for an "off year." And by the same token the amount of work done in organ izing the various Judicial, county and municipal contents, especially mayoralty battles was unusual. And likewise the work was very expen sive. The closeness of the contests i n Philadelphia and Allegheny coun ties will furnish themes for some interesting speculation in regard to next year, but the manner in which men aligned with the Republican State organization cleaned up In various up State districts shows that things are not going to be so different in other sections. Probably one of the strangest things about the elections held yes terday was the poor showing of the Democrats. In counties where the Democrats had been strong, they did not poll votes anything like what they used to show and in most of the cities their registration was away below former years. But that did not prevent Democrats in many places from having lights of their own that were fully as inter esting as the scrap in Dauphin and the row over the hopeless place of Democratic candidate for mayor of Philadelphia. —Superior Court Judge William H. Keller Is as good as elected for a ten-year term as a result of the primary yesterday. He was the only state-wide candidate and had no opposition. This fact is a great compliment to the former first dep uty Attorney General, who was named last winter and who will begin his term in January. —There was great interest here in the fate of various judges ap pointed by Governor Brumbaugh. James M. Barnett seems to have been the high man rather decisive ly in the Perry-Juniata district, while Judge S. L. Shull has had to fight in Monroe-Pike. Many have been interested in Judge H. G. Wasson, of Allegheny, and Judge George Henderson, of Philadelphia. The latter was one of the men for whom Governor Sproul took up the cudgels insisting that he be nom inated with Judge Joseph P. Mc- Cullen, his own appointee. Judge J. I. Brownson, of Washington, had no opposition. —ln Washington and Lehigh new Judgeships were the objects of tremendous battles and in Somer set the Governor's appointee sat on the bench and watched four men contend for the honors. —Just what would have happened if the nonpartisan law would haie remained In effect in the third class cities is hard to say. In any event the strenuous party contests for honors indicate that partisan spirit has been revived with a bang. —ln about half of the counties of the State judges will have to sit as the returning boards for the count of primary votes in view of \the fact that County Commissioners were candidates for renomination and therefore debarred from sit ting. The count will begin Friday. —George J. Brennan in the course of a review of some of the turmoils in Pennsylvania politics in the Philadelphia Inquirer comments upon "the battle of millionaires" in Allegheny county, the Chester coun ty skirmish, the Luzerne county free-for-all, and then remarks: "Political storm signals are flying in both counties of the Seventh Con gressional district and Representa tive Thomas S. Butler, known in Washington as "the Fighting Quaker of the House" when he makes the rounds next year for renomination will probably find many new faces n the ranks of the entrenched coun ty committeemen. Delaware county is all torn asunder with the row that has broken out as the result of the formation of the new Republican League whicji has in its ranks many who worked with the Anti- Saloon League, and which now looks upon Governor Sproul as its leader." —People here were much inter ested in the announcement of the selection of Prof. Emory R. Johnson to be dean of the Wharton school of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Johnson was formerly a public service commissioner, a member of the Tener board, on which he was the rate expert. He was removed by Dr. Brumbaugh in his reorgan ization effort. Dr. Johnson was the man who worked out the tolls for the Panama canal and was regarded highly all over the country. —The State Game Commission will probably not meet until next week to select a secretary and other officers. —Col. Joseph H. Thompson, of | the 110 th, will be one of the speak ers at Freeport Saturday. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer will also be there. —Congressman E. S. Brooks has a postoffice in sight for Red Lion, but is having trouble to get the right site at the right price. / A Last Word Thing of a day! Fret out thy little hour; Whence thy unceasing plaint, thy bitter cry; And why in tears consume thy spirJ it's power? Immortal is thy soul, thy tears will dry. . Thy heart is racked and wrung by love betrayed. Beneath the strain 'twill break, or cease to feel; Thou prayest God to hasten to thine aid; Immortal is thy soul, thy heart will heal. —Alfred de Muaset, HXimiSBTTRO TELEGKXPH SOMEBODY IS ALWAYS TAKING THE JOY OUT OF LIFE By BRIGGS f iT GoirSk To Se~A Z~T rCT \ f~\OLT~i^esO^~ DAT OFF T(| >SOMS PMRIY - ALU \ ( LISTSISJ \ ( W^AT ABOUT M 6 ff* | YoO Can! 1 Yoo KNOW" BILU / frbo V \ To . EKJTeR Taim Me O'J !| •PrtPftTrJeß. WILL Be. / wA6rJ6RVCL*M ©AHe-. \ ) * x>*y opp- o pp-- DOP.-T Yoo I \SoRG£' - ./- V Tm E ,C HANSBSW.U V 1 A UTTU g BeCRgAT.O? NO'TERVANTS "to DO 7 AA/Y WOPK-IM NEARCY Tiivte- I N6V6R Go I / At-L Ri(3HT-\. t*. \ CRAZY'WiTu THS 8t1.V.5 J Q\j~r • ANY . MORS ' VYITM Yo*J < \ HOfME •> THAT KEEP COMI*JS IN - . t(t<6' w6 O'D WE ( JOW T . JOCH \ Vo*-" NEVER u' N Voo user> lb Take n*e \ ,£ have a .swell, i \ REMIZB WHAT OUR MSAT7 L jtOSRY lAJHefte. - SVT, NOU/"V) T/MS /HOW WOUUDnj T I No Wonder Germany Quit By MAJOR FRANK C. MAH3N Of the Army Recruiting Stution A few days ago I was speaking of the work, new in this late war, ut : battalion intelligence officers, and \ the minute details they insisted j upon getting. The fact that all those j details were incorporated in re- | ports, and that these reports finally went to Allied headquarters, raiocd J a question as to what possible use the head of that great organization could have for details first concern ing a most minor and subordinate part of the Allied Armies. You know the saying, great trees fiom ; little acorns grow;" so it is in thi* j case. Some apparently insignificant incident might presage an event of the greatest import. For instance, when raiding parties went into the | Boche lines for information, nothing j was too insignificant to notice, or | bring back. So. it happened that upon one occasion a man returned with a postcard which he had taken from the pocket of a dead German. The card had a picture of some little vitlage,but no name of a place appeared. It also bore some writ ing from a soldier to his brother. No one would suppose that card was of any use, but the orders were that it should be forwarded with in telligence reports, and in France one obeyed orders. At general head quarters, examination lead to im portant discoveries. The village was identified as one in Belgium; the writer spoke of being in a certain engagement, months past; the Al lies knew which GermaJi divisions were then engaged, and also knew where they were located, with one exception; of that division they had lost all trace, and for weeks had been deeply concerned over its lo cation, since it was known to be an assault division, whose appearance on the front always signified a bat tle. Now, by elimination, its where abouts were known. That division, which had been at Chemin des Dames, was now way north in Bel gium. Because of this fact, special efforts were made to secure infor mation in that section, and due to these efforts, adequate preparations were made which enabled the Allies there to repulse an attack, the suc cess of which would have had grave results to our cause. In another sec tor. an officer saw a flash of light, one afternoon, coming from a hill side. On this hill there were no trees or bushes, and apparently an untouched growth of grass. The light did not look like a reflection from glass or a similar surface, and appeared for but a short interval. It thoroughly aroused the officer's curiosity, and the next day, at about the same time, he had the hillside watched by a number of men, scat tered in our lines. They discovered a dozen or more of these light spots, all appearing and disappearing at about the same time. Further in vestigation showed that the hill was fairly honeycombed. The Boche had tunneled from his side of the hill; had dug a number of machine gun pits, and had them perfectly con cealed. since the only openings In the ground were in the grass, and Just large enough to shoot through. Undiscovered until an attack, those guns could have worked havoc, had our men attempted an advance. The concealment was perfect, but Mr. Boche failed to notice one detail. He had not closed the entrance to the tunnel on his side of the hill, and at a certain time the sunlight filtered through enough to make the light spots appear. An amusing incident is related of an English oversight. The Tommies had prepared a per fect imitation tree stump, hollow, to permit a man to stand in it, and watch the Boche lines. It was to be placed right out in No Man's Land, and was carefully made, to conceal its artificiality. They were so ab sorbed in the thing itself that they wholly overlooked a detail in set ting it up. They placed it where no stump had been. The next day the Boche put up a sign saying: "How natural—an impudent En glish stump." To one such blunder on the part of the Allies, there were ten on the part of the Boche; and that contributed largely to their downfall. It was the work of "Intel ligence" to spot such blunders on the enemies' part, and it .was the old story of "two and two"—although sometimes headquarters could stretch it from four to six. A cob web once saved a king; here a post card perhaps Baved the world. i The Guilty Bard The poet sang of Autumn Joys And brown October ale, Thus violating bone-dry laws, And now that bird's in jail. —Tennyson J. Daft. "Lawlessness Never Won a Strike" —John Mitchell Death of the Leader Under Whom American labor Gained Its Greatest Victories Recalls His Stand Against Radicalism and Violence—Kept His Great Influence to the End. THE careers of labor leaders have, as a usual thing, been short and full of trouble. Many captains have climbed by the pathways of agitation to the sum mits of power, only to find that the pathways on the other side of the mountain lead down to the valleys of oblivion. Fiercer than the light that bears upon a throne is that which spots the man in whose hands labor has placed it cause, de manding action and results. If his counsels be radical, the third party —public opinion—comes in and de nounces him as a revolutionary. If he tries to steer a conservative course, he becomes a target for the abuse of the radicals among his own organization and he soon van ishes in clouds of suspicion. If he stages one big strike and wins, he walks from that time on with a Damocles sword over his head, a center of greater expectations. If he loses, he walks the plank and is either engulfed in the waves of for getfulness or swims ashore and finds a haven in some political port. So, many have come and gone and few have remained to the end. And among the few stands out the figure of John Mitchell, in unique relief, a. true and "guide and philosopher and friend" of labor's cause, a leader who held until his death the other day the confidence of his own and who won, at the same time, the respect and confidence of the men who were opposed to him. A Leader at 32. No greater test was ever put up to a leader than that of the anthra cite coal miners' strike of 1902. A young man, just rounding his thirty second year, Mitchell found him self at the head of an organization o'f 350,000 men, grim and deter mined toilers of the dark and under ground worl.d, with heart burning grievances that they were in no humor to have poulticed with soft speeches and specious promises. It was a storm time of bitter emotions, of violent denunciation and abuse, of passion and prejudice on both sides of the controversy. The at mosphere was surcharged with all the elements of a social cataclysm that threatened to involve the en tire industrial fabric of the nation. Yet, in that time of storm and stress, abating no Jot of the prin ciples for which he was fighting, yielding no point of the fundamen tal rights of the organization he represented, calm and silent amidst the clamors of friends and foes alike, he steered his course with a clear head and a steady hand and emerged from the conflict with a victory which, if it did not involve all the points at issue, established a new epoch in the relations of capi tal and labor—that of conference and arbitration—and won for its cause and its leadership a new and unwonted respect and dignity. It was in that fight that the American people became acquainted with a new type of labor leader. When, un moved by the attacks of his adver saries and the threats of his radical supporters, Mitchell calmly offered to submit the cause of the miners to a commission to be appointed by President Roosevelt and to abide by its decision, he accomplished a master stroke of' policy that was as disconcerting to the representatives of the eight great corporations op posing as it was unexpected by the public. By his action he brought to his side the American spirit of fair play, won the advocacy of the last [ ing friendship of President Roose velt and of other big public men, and did more to advance the cause of labor in the public confidence than all the battles it had ever fought before. Related Political Honor Mitchell came forth from thatj great struggle a national personal- ( ity, and a man in whose pathway all sorts of allurements and temp tations were thrown. The doors of political preferment were opened to him. He was led to the top of the mountain and shown the promised land of political honors —governor- ships, congressional nominations, even a vice presidency were dangled temptingly before him. Big busi ness was willing to enlist his ser vices. But he refused all offers, political and otherwise, and stuck to his post of leadership—though the salary never exceeded 1 8,0 00 a year —until ill health compelled him to resign. For ten years he was at the head of the miners' organiza tion. During that ten years tie in creased its membership from 40,000 members to 350,000; brought about an increase in wages amounting to almost 100 per cent; improved the living conditions of the miners; drove out the company stores; took the children of tender age out of the mines and placed them in schools; and inculcated a policy of keeping contracts inviolable that won for his organization the respect of the operators and the confidence of the public. What was the secret of Mitchell's success as a leader? That he was honest, that he was a man who valued high his own personal in tegrity, that he had faith in him self and in his cause—these things throw some light upon his success. But perhaps the elements that con tributed most to his ability to con trol men and events are to be found largely in the sanity of his vision and the equability of his tempera ment. He was a man who had a broad view of the other man's phil osophy. There was no hatred in his composition. He realized clear ly that the actions of men are de termined largely by their environ ment and the economic conditions under which they have been train ed. Trade Unionism His Gospel. The great object of his diplo macy as a leader was to get other men to understand his point of view—not to disparage the points of view of those who might be op posed to him. He was not a dreamer of Utopias. He had no il lusions or panaceas. One will search his utterances In vain for the agitator's catchwords. He was no builder for future social up heavals. Like Carlyle, he believed that "our grand business undoubt edly is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand." His only gospel was trade union ism—in that he believed with the sincerity of a religionist. It was sufficient to solve all the problems he saw confronting him. Only two economic elements appealed to him, the buyers of labor and the sellers 'of labor, and he sought for a com mon ground upon which they might trade. The demand of the work ingman as formulated by Mitchell, was for "an American standard of living," a wage that would enable him to maintain a comfortable, sanitary home, with books and pic tures, an ample supply of comfort able clothing, a sufficient quantity of good wholesome food and extra money enough to send his children to school and to lay by enough to keep his family in time of illness or at the close of his industrial life. The majority of workingmen would remain wage earners, he figured, and the aim of trade unionism was to obtain for them this "American standard of living." "Capital and labor", Mitchell said once, "will both be sorely tried be fore they work out their proper re lations. I am not a Socialist and do not believe in Socialism. I do not believe it would be best for the State to own and operate its coal mines. I am a strict trade union ist. I believe in progress made slowly—by evolution rather than by revolution. "A Little at a Time." "I believe a better day is in store for the American worklng man, but it has to come through no radical change in the organiza tion of human society. It must come one step at a time and through a slow, upward movement by his own efforts. One thing at a time and not all things at once, is the way a better state will be ushered in. I know there are those who believe in an early realization of a new social state, where all men are to be economically equal. But the principle that governs our organization is that of trade union ism, pure and Blmple—of labor's Joint bargaining with capital for a fair share of that which labor helps to produce. We believe in se curing this by peaceable means— through arbitration if possible— and, if not in this way, then by the only remaining way left to us." John Mitchell held the respect and confidence of the employers of labor as perhaps no other national , leader of labor has ever done. One SEPTEMBER 17, 1919. thing; that contributed largely to this attitude was the insistence that the unions must abide by their contracts. "A little at a time," was his advise, when he was confronted with the criticism that the arbitra tion commission had failed to rec ognize the unions. "Anything gain ed is better than nothing, and the big thing is the main thing—the honor of our organization. That is all a union has to stand on—we must keep to our agreements, if we expect others to keep to theirs." Against lawlessness in any form he was inflexibly opposed. Before the strike commission of 1903 he made his position clear on this point in the following language: An American First, "I want to say, too, as to the matter of lawlessness, that before being president of a union, I am over and above everything else an American. I believe that every miner should first be an American. There is no man connected with the organization who would con demn lawlessness more strongly than I would. If I did not do it because I am opposed to lawless ness, I would do it because it mili tates against the success of a strike and against the advancement of the organization. I do not believe law lessness ever won a strike. I have an abiding faith in the American people. I believe that when they understand a cause to be right they will support it, and without the support of the people no great movement can hope to succeed. This is true of a strike. If the peo ple of the country are not in sym pathy with it, it must fail, and I am sure that the sympathy of the people will never be with those who | violate the law." He believed in the "strike" and the "boycott" as the ultimate weap ons of labor warfare, but viewed them as "wasteful" and only to be employed when all efforts for arbi tration and peaceful agreement had bee n exhausted. He was opposed to the "sympathetic strike." At the special convention held at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., in July, 1902, to consider the calling of a sympa thetic strike in aid of the anthra cite coal miners, he said: "Sympathetic strikes have many adherents and the efficacy of such methods appeals strongly to those who, being directly involved in trouble, do not always recognize the effect of their action upon the public, but the past history of la bor movements teaches lessons that should not be forgotten. So far as my knowledge goes, I do not know of one solitary sympathetic strike of any magnitude that has been successful: on the contrary the most conspicuous among the labor struggles have resulted in ignomin ious defeat not only for the branch of industry involved, but also for the divisions participating through sympathy. Each defeat should teach lessons of Inestimable vatue in framing the lines upon which pres ent and future battles shall be fought and won." Recompense Brief is the time for song, Yet the brown thrush sings, Careless of winters long Or of vanished springs. Grief is the lot of all, Yet the meadows know Only when gray rains fall Will the harvests grow. Swiftly the years are spanned, No dreams abide; But steadfast the great hills stand Till the stars have died. Sing then thy song nor care If the winter near; Know that the rains prepare For the springtime's cheer. Heed not the dying rose By the season's stain; Fair till eternity's close Love shall remain. —Arthur Wallace Peach in the Christian Herald. O'Ryan's Testimony A rather remarkable statement throwing some hitherto obscured light on the lack of efficiency of Secretary Baker's department dur ing the war was made recently be fore the Senate Committee on Mil itary Affairs by Major General John F. O'Ryan, who commanded the 27th Division in France, The 27 th was a National Guard Division and General O'Ryan testi fied that it fought through the war without any' American equipment except coats and some trousers, All the guns, aircraft, shoes, rifles, ma chine guns, and even subsistence supplies, he said, were supplied to the division by the British, The di vision's artlirery support, he added, was supplied by British and Aus tralian units. Exchange. limting OUjat j| Of one thing at least the people of can be reasonably ertain and that Is the prompt com pletion of the memorial which It Is proposed the citizens of Pennsyl vania's capital city will erect to honor their Bona in the war. Tills memorial, designed to lit In with the great plan to make the city the civic center of the Commonwealth and upon which Arnold W. Bruner speaks to-day, will be built entirely by popular subscription and In that respect will be different from the two memorials which now stand here in honor of sons in war. It will be considerably noted by nUie ntiies and by reason of its proposed location, part of a State plan. Harrisburg, it might be Btated, has been chary of erecting memorials and this a reason, say many peo ple, for breaking another record. There is only one memorial erected by this community alone. There is no memorial to John Harris, the settler and the man who did so much to make the Susquehanna safe. There is no memorial to the men of Harris' Ferry, who went to Cambridge, Quebec and Valley Forge. There is no memorial to the eminent men of Harrisburg who took part in early State and National government. There is nothing to commemorate the regiment of Har risburg men in the war of 1812. One of the two memorials stands in Capitol park, a State project, and the other is at Second and' State, a county affair. The Mexican monu ®tate of Pennsylvania $30,000 and took ten years to build. It has been moved once. Originally with an appropriation of i? 2..1 1888 - lt wa not finished until 1868. There was one delay after another. The obelisk, as the State street memorial is often called, was projected by the citizens ?i, the county. It cost something like $13,600 to build and the county commissioners hud to make an up propriation for it. Started in Octo -1867 > it was not linished until 181 6. In fact, it dragged until a committee of citizens took hold of it and overcoming contractors' red tape induced Jehu DcHaven to com plete it, which he did very promptly. This memorial is 110 feet high and ten feet each way at the base. It is not generally known that it is four square With the compass, which ac counts for its peculiar position as relating: to the streets. • • • And while memorials are under consideration the suggestion is made that it would be a very graceful thing to include in the inscription some reference to the service of the women of Harrisburg in the war. There were daughters of Harrisburg who served in the army and navy i egularly enlisted; there were daughters of Harrisburg who did splendid work overseas and there were daughters of Harrisburg whose labors in behalf of various activities in this country, in camps and at home, will never be forgotten. More people have been going up to the paying tellers' windows in Harrisburg banks the last few days with papers that they did not know much about except that they were worth more money than the average man imagines. This week coupons bqcome due on some of the Wat- Bonds and while there were some folks who did not know that they were the same as money there were precious few who did not know that the thing to do was to cut them off the bonds. Some people cashed the coupons and then put the proceeds on deposit, although they could have deposited the coupons without going to all that trouble. But the point is the people cashed coupons who never cashed them In years gone by. • • • There are going to be some peo ple in this community who made "big money" on railroads and in mills last year who may have to explain to Uncle Sam from various things that are heard. Federal agents have been reported at diverse times as looking up automobile lists, telephone lists and other di rectors to get a line on persons. The idea is to see whether some of the ; people filed income tax reports. ; Railroad men last year were pretty careful about their reports, say men who work on the "roads" and that it was the steel men who were care less. The men in the mills say a good bit the same thing about the men on railroads. • • Some of the passenger cars run on railroads entering into Harris burg are a crime. They are old wooden affairs that look as though they have been taken off scrap sid ings, and to folks used to the steel coaches of the Pennsylvania and Reading, it is a trial to ride in them. Cars of almost every southern and western railroad are to be seen not only on local, but on express pas senger service entering Harrisburg. And everyone who gets out of them breathes a sigh of relief and then recalls the good, red-coated steel coaches that we thought were the least that could be given us a few years ago. The 1919 primary election in Harrisburg will be remembered for one thing at least and that is tho number of cards, posters, placards and signs that bloomed on the poles, billboards, fences and dead walls of the city. There has been nothing known like it in recent years and in some election districts boards were tacked full of cards and placed against the sides of brick buildings that did not alTord much chance for the tack pounder. The likenesses of the candidates must have been known to thousands of men, women and children who had never seen thern to know them and whatever appeal they caVried must have been strong if number of cards is anything to go by. > 1 WELL mom PEOPLE | —O. H. Cheer, given a medal for his food administration work, lives in Pittsburgh. —Governor William C. Sproul will preside at the Mercier meeting in Philadelphia on September 26. —President Judge H. M. Ed wards, of Lackawanna county, lias Issued instructions for probing of mine caves in that county, follow ing a fatal accident. Major. Clarence J. Smith, for mer Allentown newspaperman, is home from France where he served for nearly two years. | DO YOU KNOW —That Harrisburg sent many books to the camp ltoraries during the war? HISTORIC HARRISBURG .—Third and Chestnut streets has been a church site for over 125 gear*.