8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THb telegraph PRINTING CO. Telegraph Building, Fed-ral Square E. J. BTACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief P*. R. OYSTER, fiutiwn Manager ©US. M. ST2SXNMETZ, lfanaping Editor , A. R. MICHENER, Circulation Uanagor i i Executive Beard I 4 P. MoCULLOUGH, ~ ~ BOYD M. OGLESBT, P. R. OYSTER. Gua M. STEINMETZ. ■ Members of the Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub lished herein. Ull rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. I Member American Newspaper Pub- Associa- Bur'eau of Circu lation and Penn sylvania Associa ated Dailies. Eastern of o t Avenue Building, New York City; Western office, Story, Brooks & I Chicago, L lldiusr > Sintered at the Post Office in Harrls burg. Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mail, 93.00 a ■BUST year in advance. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 19t0 When the fight begins scithin him self A man's \corth something.—Bbown o. NEWSPAPER ATTITUDE W. E. PORTER, chief of Pitts burgh's bureau of smoke regulation, in an otherwise excellent address before the Cham ber of Commerce yesterday, left his audience under a misapprehen sion, tho Telegraph believes. He said that in the early days of hig campaign for smoke prevention in Pittsburgh the newspapers of that city declined to give the project their support, for the reason that their advertisers did not wish them to do So. but that now, "because their advertisers want it" they are doing excellent work In the move ment to make Pittsburgh a clean City. Mr. Porter ought to know. If he does not, that the interests of the community and not those of any in dividual are the concern of every ! Influential newspaper. Not a day passes that every newspaper worthy ■ of the name does not tramp on the K toes of some one of its advertisers. It is very much to be suspected that what Mr. Porter mistook for subservience to advertisers was I really a mistaken loyalty of the newspapers to the basic industry of - their community, they fearing that . smoke prevention might also mean i Industrial extinction or unnecessary f hardship. Speaking for itself, and judging Mr. Porter's remarks on the Pitts burgh situation from that stand point, the Telegraph can say that It is constantly endeavoring to pro tect the legitimate Interests of its advertisers, but that primarily Its Influence is everlastingly thrown on the side of the community, and that, if the interests of any of its advertisers are opposed to those of the community at large, the mere fact that a patron may be offended does not alter the newspaper's at titude toward the duty it manifestly owes the public. The Telegraph does not believe that Mr. Porter thinks the newspapers of his home eity are any less devoted to the in terests of their community than the Telegraph is to the best interests of Harrisburg. Incidentally, it may be mentioned, the Telegraph is highly favorable to the abatement of smoke in Harris burg, and it has not consulted any body In reaching a decision to sup port the movement. WE MUST PRODUCE EVERYBODY knows that if the farmers of the country pro duce an abundance of food- Stuffs, the people will be well fed the following year, and it is also appar ent that if every farmer cut down tile labor to four or six hours a day the snpply of wheat and corn and ether lines of provisions would be go reduced the next year that many f M would be on the verge of Starvation. The farmer must work if we are ID eat and the same applies to every Other line of trade. We cannot con ttnue to cut down the number of working hours without cutting down prod Tie 11 on and when production is eat prices go up because the supply •f goods is limited and the country Ends itself without the wherewith either to live comfortably or to go ■forward. Nothing that we eat, EVbtlng that we wear, nothing that Uro mse in any way is produced PjWlthout labor both brain and 7 manual. If labor Is reduced, that Is, If by reason of strikes or six hour days or forty-four-hour weeks, we cut down the amount of goods we tnrt out or the amount of food we produce, we ourselves are the sufferers. The world cannot live in idleness. It has been pretty well proved that by giving one-third of our time to labor, eight hours during six days a week, we are able to keep ourselves and the world at large supplied with SATURDAY EVENING, those things needful for life and the luxuries which all of ns to some extent enjoy. But wljen we go be low that standard we are in danger. And when we produce less than our capacity during an eight-hour day we are not giving a fair return for our wages, and the result in the great world of supply and demand is the same as though we had worked only six or seven hours. Although we may not believe so. the fact nevertheless remains that we ourselves suffer from the effects of our own idleness, if we persist in it. The man who does not work does not eat, unless he does so at the expense of somebody who does work. It Is not so much the things that we do while we are at work that hurt us as the things which we do during our period of leisure. So long as work is healthful, it can be made enjoyable. The man whose mind is on his work is usually a happy man. He is entitled to a living wage and the opportunity of laying some thing aside for a rainy day, but in return therefor he ought to be willing to give a fair day's work for a fair day's pay, and to work at least as many hours a week as will guarantee his fair production of the things which the world must have if it is to continue to live. The trouble with the present period is that all of us seem to be trying to get, and are forgetting the other important essential, to give. It is not only more blessed to give than it is to receive, but we must give in full return for everything we get if the world is to continue to stand. * Production and still more produc tion is the crying need of the hour. No matter how high wages go, if production continues to fall as it has within the past several years, we shall still be on the verge of starvation and our money will still continue to buy ever less and less for the dollars "wo spend. MIS-REPRESENTATION HERBERT HOOVER, speaking before a gathering of profes sional men in New York the other day, said, among other things, it is his observation that socialism is on the wane in Europe; that it has failed wherever it has been tried and that gradually the people of European countries are coming to understand that it cannot be made to work for the benefit of the public. Wherever it has been put to the test production has fallen almost to the vanishing point, with consequent idleness of all classes, great reduc tion of wages and income, with economic ruin and starvation facing millions of people who have placed their future in the hands of advo cates of socialistic forms of gov ernment. Mr. Hoover has been President Wilson's right hand man in many difficult circumstances. At no time has he failed. He has done more to popularize President Wilson in the warswopt areas of Europe than has Mr. Wilson himself. He is a hard-headed man of affairs and his judgment is generally good. It might have been thought that under the conditions Mr. Wilson would have placed much weight on Mr. Hoover's beliefs, but apparently such is not the case. For example. Presi dent Wilson in appointing twenty two men "to represent the public" at the conference to be held in Washington for the consideration of labor and industrial problems, has named Edward Russell,on a number of occasions socialistic candidate for governor of New York, and John Spargo, who has been active as a socialist lecturer, writer and worker for many years. To be sure, Spargo has recently displayed some com mon sense as to the practical work ing out of the doctrines he in his earlier years advocated, but still he and Russell are both out-and-out socialists. They represent a politi cal doctrine that Mr. Hoover says has failed in Europe. It is as fool ish to call them into conference at Washington as it would to have two quack doctors lecture before a con- I ventlon of physicians who are I specialists in their lines. The President has an unfortunate habit of naming little men for big jobs. It would seem that in the choice of twenty-two men "to rep resent the public" at so Important a conference he might have chosen representative citizens rather than radicals whose policies and opinions have failed to work out under the most favorable conditions. POOR POLICY AS ITS only suggestion as to re duction of the high cost of living, the administration ask ed for appropriations exceeding 11,- 500,000 with which to investigate and prosecute. An administration that has done practically nothing with the power and funds already appropriated, wanted to take up a collection from every man, woman and child in the country to help reduce the cost of living. And that in the face of the undoubted fact that the poll | cies of the administration, more than any other one thing, have been the cause of excessively high costs. The "cost-plus" plan of govern ment contracting, the high wages voluntarily offered on every Govern ment Job, the waste of labor and materials on every Government un dertaking, the scrambling of the railroads, the discouragement of productive Industry, the inflation of the currency—all these have tend ed to Increase the cost of living. And then the administration want ed J1,500,000 with which to try to correct some of its mistakes. The Post Office Department is living up to Its reputation In the delivery of war department food orders. All the older that Is being made Is not intended lor apple butter. FOTFLXC* IK *Ptiut44j6?attXa* By tho Bx-Oommltleemad It seems to be pretty generally agreed throughout the State that the results of the Republican pri mary on Tuesday end any chance of there being launched even an annoying fight against the re-elec tion of Senator Boies Penrose next year. If the Philadelphia mayoral ty contest had gone the other way there would have been an immed iate campaign started and much noisy comment. But since the re sults of the strenuous primary in Philadelphia and in Allegheny and in other counties where Penrose adherents are prominent have been announced there has not been very much heard about 1920. The Senator has been following up the campaign developments in Philadelphia fully as closely as he did the progress of the charter leg islation in the Legislature and as soon as the session of Congress ends, will start his campaign in Pennsylvania. The primary next year will be in May when in addi tion to the Senatorial candidates there will be Presidential delegates elected. No one has been heard of as a possible candidate against the Sen ator except GilTord Pinchot and it is believed that the activity of the former forester in calling his pro gressive conference here late in July and in touring the State, speaking to Granges and various agricultural meetings is part of his preliminary campaign. Pinchot is better known in Pennsylvania than he was six years ago. —lt Is very apparent that the Democratic State bosses plan to capture the Keystone delegation to the next national convention by the use of federal patronage, flattery and fuss. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, is more willing than usual to make speeches in Pennsylvania and there has been a systematic effort to boom him. The small Democratic registration this year while it is an evidence of in capable leadership and disgust of rank and file will be, if anything, a help to Palmer. Between the fed eral jobholders, who constitute about all the machine Palmer and ; his pals have left, and the hide bound Democrats who vote under the sign of the Democratic rooster he is assured of enough votes to win quite a few delegates and to put up a fight in districts where Bonniwell Democrats were taking an interest in Republican primar ies and where the chances of en gaging in a fight tempted some men to forego their party allegiance this fall, facts which may rise to plague them in the spring of next year. —Governor William C. Sproul will make speeches in two States this fall under the auspices of the Republican National Committee and also take part in various po litical meetings in Pennsylvania, according to what has been learn ed at the Capitol. Some time ago an inquiry was made at the Capitol as to whether the Pennsylvania Governor, who made a considerable impression Mpon the men at the conference of the Governors In Salt Lake City, would consent to make some speeches for the Na tional committee. It was suggested that he speak in New Jersey and Massachusetts because of the im portance of the gubernatorial bat tles in .those Commonwealths. The Governor will likely devote the last two weeks of October to these tours. —Although there have been ru mors and reports going around, it looks very much as though the re organization of a couple of depart ments of the State government and the organization of some bureaus about which much was heard this summer and which was deferred until "after the primary" would be postponed until "after the elec tion." The Governor has not shown much inclination to make changes or to upset things. —Dauphin county has two new residents, Dr. Thomas E. Finegan, State Superintendent of Public In struction, and Dr. George H. Ash ley, State Geologist, both of whom have made Harrisburg their home and who are credited on official records as of Harrisburg, Dauphin county. v —One of the interesting things in connection with the primary as brought here by men connected with the State government is the failure of the Prohibition party to make county or municipal nomina tions. This seems to have been general, even in counties where in years gone by the Prohibitionists were a factor in local contests and occasionally In county and legis lative battles. —The outcome of the primary in Chester city and Delaware county has enhanced the prestige of Gov ernor Sproul considerably. People up the State were watching what would happen In Delaware county very closely In view of the break between the Governor and the Mc- Clue people during the Legislature and the militant way in which the Governor backed the new Republi can League won much commenda tion. The editorials in the Ches ter Times, the Governor's own newspaper, were widely read throughout the State and the vig orous manner in which the Gover nor calls for a reckoning with money in politics will form a theme for much discussion in the long winter evenings in more than one election district. -—The Philadelphia newspapers are very frank in declaring belief that the nomination for mayor of Congressman J. Hampton Moore, now conceded means better things. The Puhllc Ledger says that it means "the opening of a new era." While the Press calls on the peo ple to support Moore because he stands for much. The Evening Bulletin speaks in the samo vein. —The Philadelphia Inquirer is out with a demand that election frauds be uncovered and the crooks be jatled. There are similar utter anees In other Philadelphia news papers and it looks as though a concerted efTort to get rid of some of the stains would be made this year. —The Philadelphia Press is go ing after the voters who fail to vote. It attacks them with a sharp stick and asks why if they go to the trouble to register they do not vote and why a man who does not vote when a whole city is stirred up takes It on himself to growl. The Press says: "Men who can vote and won't vote should at least for feit their suffrage rights. The vot er's privilege should become void by nonuse. Such citizens are slackers. They are unfaithful and disloyal and should be punished for their failure to meet a plain civic -kllntlnn HTRMSBTTRO TEUEXJK3LPH THAT GUILTIEST FEELING By BRIGGS /// // WHERO Ypu TIRAVJG.L THROUSH // // MW\) /TOWUN lISJ A GTREET CAR ONJ // // ' MR&/ _/ YOUR WAY TO THE C.C. AWD / MYDRBSGBD (NJ YOUR "K>JTCK\S" _1 1 ' Y WHILE OTHBR MERO ARS 1 - L^AIR^ NOFUVAAL IN APPEARANCE AMD \ U " R VFIL \T - ON THBIR WAY TO WORK. m m — IVNL 11 FLWE FEET-S RATHER _ J No Wonder Germany Quit By MAJOR FRANK C. MAHIN Of the Army Recruiting Station "Night after night during the early | part of August my patrols came in I and reported a hidden Boche I machine gun which was raising the j devil with them. We finally got the blamed little gun exactly located and found we could not reach it with the stokes mortars, and it was so hidden behind hills and woods that the .37 millimeter guns could not reach it. So the only thing we could do was to get the artillery on the job and I requested that they destroy the machine gun. In a couple of hours a young captain of the 155 millimeter howitzers (6- inch) came up to my headquarters and wanted to see the effect of the fire of his battery. I had a telephone strung up into a big tree and the captain and I then went up. He called his battery and remarked: 'D —Y speaking. Play ball! Bat ter up,' said cryptic remarks mean ing that Captain Donnelly was speaking; that he was in position watching and to commence firing. A couple of minutes passed and a shell went screeching overhead, I landing with a cloud of black smoke and a huge pillar of mud about 100 meters beyond the machine gun emplacement. The captain spoke into his phone 'over, one hundred, line.' I remarked 'gottcha, Steve! A hit one hundred meters too far, but directly beyond with no correc tion needed to either side.' 'Right you are!' my friend answered. Whoosh! went another shell towards the machine gun emplacement and this time it hit about a hundred meters in front. This time the cor rection was 'short, one hundred, line.' Again we waited for the old familiar whoosh, and soon it came. When the third shell hit there was an entirely different mess of debris thrown up; it was a mess of flying white fragments, evidently concrete. In my ear came a cool voice, 'A hit! Fire for effect!' And then the captain laid down his phone and grinned at me. Another short pause and that part of the landscape of northern France contained in a radius of about twenty-five yards I from the machine gun emplacement began to rapidly disappear. Be lieve me! things were happening. At the end of ten minutes no hu man being would ever have believed that there had been a machine gun emplacement in that churned up, shell shocked piece of ground. When the firing had ceased I was satis factorily convinced that my patrols would have no further trouble from that particular locality. But the trouble was that evidently our Teu tonic friends did not appreciate the little fireworks display the captain and I had viewed from the upper story of a big pine tree, for about an hour later they proceeded to drop about two hundred of their own six inch shells into one of my com- j bat groups. Naturally at the con- j elusion of their party there was a decided need of repairs to trenches in that combat group. I hastened down there to see if there was any thing left of the seventeen men oc cupying the group and found six teen of them safe and sound dis cussing their narrow escapes be fore reaching the shelter of the deep dugout A number of rifles and one automatic had completely disap peared, as well as one man. He had been out in front of the group as an observation and listening post and where his sand bag reveted hole had been, there was now simply a huge shell crater. Right next to that hole and actually Joining it was another shell hole. Three or four of us were looking around for some sign of the missing man and climbed into the adjoining shell hole. We stood there talking about him when suddenly there was a movement under our feet as though a big mole were burrowing around. We all stepped back with amaze ment and out of a cascade of dirt there arose the missing seventeenth man. He was a pretty pasty green, eyes as big as saucers and still pret ty nearly scared to death, but not e'-en scratched. It seems a shell had burst, making the shell hole In which wc found him and Immedi ately. afterward one had burst be hind him, literally blowing him over Into the first hole and then suc cessive explosions had proceeded to completely bury him alive. When he heard us talking English it sud denly occurred to him that possibly he wasn't dead yet. so he stood up to see. and found himself not only alive but still whole." A Long, Long Time (From Kansas City Star). ! Uncle Johnny Shell of Kentucky is 131 years old. He can remember when Bryan wasn't running for President. Growth of Oar Cities Estimates taken on the eve of the official ten-year census and based upon reliable reports show a start ling growth in the population of American cities. In 1910, the census showed only four cities in the United j States with one-half milion or more ( inhabitants. To-day, If the federal census last year verifies estimates, there are thirteen. The New York Herald has pub lished the following table, showing the estimated growth of the twenty larger American cities in the last nine years: Rank. City 1910 1919 I—New York. .4,766,883 6,244,616 2 —Chicago 2,185,282 3,059,396 3 —Philadelphia 1,5 4 9,00 8 1,936,260 4—Cleveland .. 560,663 936,300 s—Detroi 465,766 910,616 6—Boston 670,585 830,625 7—St. Louis ... 687,029 824,435 B—Baltimore8 —Baltimore .. 558,485 726,030 9—Pittsburgh.. 533,905 667,381 10—Los Angeles.. 319,198 574,656 11—San Francisco 416,912 555,882 12—Buffalo 423,715 616,832 13—Milwaukee .. 373,857 504,707 14—Cincinnati .. 363,691 472,668 15— N. Orleans. . 339,075 440,797 16 —Washington .. 331,069 430,390 17—Minneapolis.. 301,408 421,971 18—Newark. N.J. 347,469 416,963 19 —Seattle 237,194 395,323 20—Rochester .. 218,149 349,038 A great part of the growth of New York City is explained by the great increase in the number of resi dents of foreign birth or of foreign parentage. New York's population is classified by the Herald as fol lows: 1910 1919 Population 4,766,883 6,244,616 White 4,669,162- 6,116,602 Negro 91,709 120,138 Other races .... 6,012 7,876 ; White, native parents 921,318 1,206,926 White, foreign parents 1,820,144 2,384,384 White, foreign born 1,927,703 2,625,292 Males 2,382,482 3,121,051 Females 2,384,401 3,123,565 Males, voting age 1,433,749 1,878,211 Illiterates, over 10 254,208 333,013 Number of school age, 6-20 1,334,357 1,748.008 Number in school 828,720 1,079,445 The Hour of Fate [Victor Murdock in Association Men] What is the' hour of fate in a young man's life? I should say 7 p. m. That hour Is the springboard from which most men leap to success or fall off to failure. I am also convinced that 7 p. m. is the fork in the roads, one of which leads to character and the other to the lack of it. There are twenty-three other hours in a day, but there is no hour so potent as this 7 p. m. Why? This is the answer: a man's waking hours are divided be • tween industry and leisure. To a j majority of mankind, 7 in the e"en j ing marks the end of work and the • beginning of leisure. It is the hour j when a man makes a choice of the j kind of leisure he is to have. If he | turns to the leisure that means im provement to his mind, his body and his soul, he wins; if he turns to the pleasure feeding frivolities, he loses. ! It is a cold blooded proposition, but lit is true. Genius is 99 per cent, hard work and the best of leisure is a shift from one kind of work to another kind of work. Ninety-nine out of every hundred men who win in this world use the time, when they are not at work, in activities which look like work to the loafer. | , F s As to Article X [David Jayne Hill In the North American Review] "We may rightly refuse to deal with any nation that violates Inter national law until it has made reparation and acknowledges Its authority. We should, undoubtedly, bring all our available forces to bear against any nation that criminally breaks its legal engagements; and we may ptoperly lend such aid as we are at the time reasonably able to lend a nation that is the victim of criminal aggression; but to be come the guarantor of possessions the acquisition of which was iniquit ous, or of the consummation of future transactions of which we may not even be aware, is not only wholly outside our national obliga tions, but violative of the only prin ciples upon which international peace and harmony can ever be per manently organized. Unless our ideals are respected, our force and our resources might prove more helpful to the true interests of man kind if left entirely under our own control, with no prospect of future stultification through exposure to the charge of being faithless to ob ligations which we ought never to have assumed. Irish Balk on Prince [From the New York World.] When Hia Royal Highness the Prince of Wolea vlalta New York he will be the guest of the city only in a manner of speaking, unless many of the aldermen change their minds, which' does not seem probable. There is a firm determination among these aldermen that no city money shall be appropriated for the recep tion of the royal visitor. Something resembling an alder manic strike threatened the other day because Mayor Hylan in hia let ter explaining the need of funds for entertaining General Pershing spoke of other distinguished visitors >vho are to come here shortly, including the prince. Several aldermen of Irish extraction debated long in the corridors of city hall before they would attend the special meeting at which $lO,OOO was appropriated for the Pershing celebration. In the meeting itself an alder man interjected a remark about the Prince of Waies and another across the room answered: "That won't get my vote." A little later Alder man Falconer, Republican, asked President Moran if any part of the $lO,OOO was to be spent on the re ception of the prince. Mr. Moran replied somewhat emphatically in the negative. Later Mr. Moran Issued a state ment explaining that the appropria tion was made to enable the citi zens to express their appreciation of the work done by American sol diers and added: "The entertainment of foreign guests on visits of a friendly nature during peace should bo defrayed by private subscription and not from the pockets of the taxpayers." Less Efficiency [From the St. Paul Pioneer-Press] Some Boston authority, eminent no doubt, but lost to memory at the moment, issued a statement which, dealing with labor production, took the ground that efficiency, after all, was the only accurate measure and wages were negligible. If wages, for example, increased 30 per cent, and efficiency increased 60 per cent., the situation was vastly im proved. This is axiomatic, of course. Then the authority went on to as sert, rather than to prove, that labor efficiency had enormously in creased since the beginning of the war and there was nothing but op timism to be spread out for our de lectation. Unfortunately the facts are not all in corroboration of the efficiency assertion. In the steel industry, commonly said to be the barometer of all Industry, the reverse has been asserted. Reports by the several steel concerns, show that since tho beginning of the war Bteel wages have advanced an average of 170 per cent, and at the sams time ef ficiency has decreased an average of 20 per cent. If this Is true, the labor cost of the average ton of steel produced has increased ap proximately 225 per cent. The books of the steel corpora tion show that in 1902 it paid an av erage wage of $717 per man, or $14.70 per ton of steel produced; while in f9lB this average wage had increased to $1,685 and to $32.68 per ton of steel. The figures indi cate a distinct lessening of labor efficiency at a time when Increased production is acknowledged to be the world's greatest necessity. Ifs a Long Road (Forbes Magazine.) American business men should take note of the fact that the Brit ish House of Commons has adopted an amendment to its profiteering bill empowering the Board of Trade to fix wholesale and retail prices. When Britain, a "nation of shop keepers," to quote Napoleon's his toric phrase, adopts such drastic regulatatory legislation, what may we expect, what may we not ex pect, here, now that the public have started in earnest to wage war against the business community be cause of the rapacity ruthlessly practiced during and even more es pecially since the war? The. ac claim with which the announcement that the Government would sell to consumers surplus war supplies was received, coupled with the extraor dinary stampede by the public to purchase the goods, reveals how keenly the people feel about this whole question of living costs and profiteering. The truth is that the temper of the public is ugly, very ugly. The reforms demanded may lead to something more than cor rective measures; vengeance may be demanded. The sins of the profi teers are likely to be visited upon not only the guilty profiteer, but upon business men who have con ducted their operations with hon esty and self-restraint. SEPTEMBER 20, V9T9. Dr. Finegan's Going a Loss [Schenectady Union-Star.] It la not probable that the gen erality of citizens of New York state realize that the vast public service that Dr. Thomas E. Flnegan has rendered public education and the magnitude of the loss in his de parture. He left this week the of fice of deputy commissioner of ed ucation at Albany to become head of the school system of Pennsyl vania. The Keystone state pays a com pliment to the Empire state In selecting Dr. Flnegan to reorganize the school system in the land of William Penn. For twenty-seven years Mr. Flne gan—he wasn't Doctor Finegan al ways—was connected with the of fice of public education at Albany. Without detailed information, it is Impossible to assess here the exact value of the work of this one man. A natural teacher, Mr. Finegan led in changing and advancing me.thods of public education. A master of detail, he has been charged with infinite toil in adapting new ideas to the practical, every-day needs of I the schools. An inveterate, In satiable worker, he has been bus led day and night, and the results are seen In a system of public schools, probably the best In the Union. The highly complex job that has been his lot you may understand when you step from one of those Immense public schools In the me tropolis, a city In itself, where hun dreds of children from the homes of those born under other flags are made into good Americans—step from one of those schools to a little district schoolhouse back on the hills, where In one room four or five generations of native-born Americans have been trained. Dis similar as they are, both these schools do their parts In the day's work largely because Dr. Finegan co-ordinated them. The schools of the Empire state doubtless are a long way from what they ought to be; but they are vast ly nearer their ideal than they were when the blacksmith's boy up in Montgomery county got the idea that he'd like to be a school teacher and help along education. He goes now to one of the high est salaried educational positions In the country, and now New York must look out or Pennsylvania will run away with the scholastic , honors. Autumn Do you remember, sweetheart, how along this woodland path. We walked last June, when every thing was green? The flowers bloomed aronnd us, and our hearts with beauty thrilled, For a glorious summer bounty filled the scene. But here to-day we wander midst a very different world— We cannot recognize our path at all; The changing leaves, the stalks, the pods, the fruit, the berries red— Our very souls with rapture view the fall. And where was all this glory when we walked the path last spring? Deep hidden in the green and in the flower. And so in lives about us, people whom we daily meet— Their souls arise to greatness for the hour. —Emily Granger in Portland Ore gonian. Loss to Profession [From the Kansas City Star] The Washington * correspondent occupies a position of very great responsibility. It is his business to interpret to his readers the develop ments in national and international affairs. He must be a man of abil ity and integrity sufficient to estab lish himself in the confidence of the biggest men in the Nation so they will talk freely to him, knowing their confidence will not be abused. And he must have such a grasp of affairs that he can point out the significance of matters that might appear trivial to the casual observer. A man of this type was Ben F. Allen, correspondent for the Cleve land Plain Dealer, who was killed in an automobile accident while accompanying the presidential party In Oregon recently. He had been long in Washington, had. a wide acquaintance among public men, and had made a strong impression through his intelligence, his high ideals and his integrity. The people of Ohio whom he served and the newspaper profession suffer a severe loss in his death. ttlttg f Plana for the In Har risburg of the new post of C**> American Legion and which It is ex pected will make It one of the largest and most influential In Cen tral Pennsylvania, call to mind the fact that Pennsylvania's capital was among the earliest to organize a post of the Grand Army of the lie public. A few weeks after the firl post was formed in the middle west a preliminary meeting was held iu Harrisburg. This was in the fall <— 1866 and the next April the post wx formally organized, received iw charter and was named. The fact that it was among the early onc>< of the hundreds which were forms*:. In that period Is shown by Its low number of 58. At first It had C--y of the largest memberships in the central section and was in fact r. large that a year or so later tho so-called uptown post, No. 116, w*- established. Post 520 was formed by the colored men later on. Pcv 58 and Post 116 have had the barm meeting places for many years, in fact College Block has been s> Identified with 58 that it was called G. A. R. Block for a time. • • Girard in the Philadelphia Press has this interesting pragraph about a man well known here: "Lancaster has just made a lieavy draft on Harrisburg's brain reserves by taking Professor Omwake, who becomes dean of Franklin and Mar shall College. Liko the McCrackens, whose family furnished four college presidents, the Omwakes are teach ers. Doctor Leslie Omwake is presi dent of Ursinus. In the presence of the latter, the late Dr. N. C. Schaeffer related to me the story of what he said was the best after dinner speech he had ever heard. The Omwakes were being feasted in testimony of their success, where upon the brilliant sons being asked to talk, spoke particularly and elo quently about their mother and what they owed to her. Then Father Omwake was called, and this was his speech: "I married those boys' mother." • • * Squirrels in Capitol Park are get ting a change of diet through the kindness of Frank M. Eastman, the lawyer. Mr. Eastman is a great walker and on some of his rambles in the woods about Harrisburg has noticed many acorns on the ground. He brought some of them to the park and the squirrels had an after noon party. Since then he has made further donations and the denizens of the park are developing a taste for another item of their natural food. • * * int ® ns t brimary there has been little of the fool betting re ported, at least on the local tickets. There were some bets on the Phila delphia contest and several pretty . s ' zed aums changed hands in the business section. Only one freak bet on the city trcasurership was reported and that makes a man buy a friend two ten cent cigars every morning for two weeks. • • * Governor William C. Sproul has received a letter from ColSnel j£fn Price Jackson, who has been in the Army almost from the outbreak of war. telling of his departure for Armen a with the Ilarbord Mission. Colonel Jackson was in charge of labor and distribution .of labor in France a.nd also got into other coun tries. He will probably not return to Pennsylvania for months to come. Judging from the inquiries being made a number of Harrisburg men who were in the Army and have been away from home lately are coming , back for the official welcome. If the number of men heard from and the , number of men In tho city who will 1 be entitled to participate in the wel , come turnout, there will be one of • ; he I ? ost interesting parades ever . seen here and every branch of the , service will be representd. s• > - 1 ?® decision of the State Council S hL^? D /L° yn ., Arci i num to hold the biennial meeting: of the Pennsylvania r Grand Council in this city hereafter 1 S i4. a iit to Harrisburg: hos "PJ J a accommodations. It Is 5 the first fraternal organization of lm , portance to determine upon the city , as a permanent meeting place, a logical choice in view of the railroad 5 facilities and provisions of good t hotel accommodations. There will . probably be more organizations to s do the same. It is also notable that i the meeting at which this action was 1 L ak ?P ™ as the firat be held here p by the State Council. Youngsters of Harrisburg do not seem to be able to wait for the open ing of the school libraries which the Harrlsburg Public Library plans to place in 21 school houses next month and they are trooping to the Library to take out books and to look up facts about various things. Some of the boys and girls appear to be greatly interested in the na ture study, judging from their in quiries and from indications the city will be able to furnish plenty of aviators before many years go by. About every fifth boy wants a book on airplanes with some Interested in submarines. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —John Wanamaker is a member of the Philadelphia committee to meet Cardinal Mercier and escort him to the Quaker City. —Dr. C. J. Marshall, former State veterinarian, will devote himself hereafter to work at the University of Pennsylvania, which he has taken up again this week. . —The Rev. Dr. Hugh T. Kerr, honored by election to a national church organization, is a Pittsburgh er. —C. L. Huston, the Coatesvtlle manufacturer, is chairman of the commission of the Presbyterian Church on Evangelism. —Charles M. Schwab speaking at the Blair County Pair, recognized many of his boyhood friends. —Judge John M. Patterson, of Philadelphia, has gone to the sea shore for a rest. f DO YOU KNOW —That Harrlsburg had many men In the overseas battleship fleet? HISTORIC HARRISBURG —At this time in 1862 Harrisburg was filled with men summoned here for emergency military service. The Planet Carnegie (From the Westminster-Gazette) Mr. Carnegie shared an almost unique honor with the Empress Eugenie in having a planet named after him during his lifetime. Two of the remarkable family of minor planets situated between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars were named Carnegie and Eunie.