10 HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH A NEWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sundaj by THK. TELKOIIAPiI PRINTING CO. Telsimph Building, Fed -ml Square B. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-Oi-Chief R. OYSTER, Business Manager OUS. M. STSUNMETA, Managing Editor A. H. MICHENER, circulation Manager Executive Board J. P. McCULLOUGH, BOYD M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER, Qua M. STEINMETZ. JCdmbers of the Associated Press —The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use tor republication o t all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in t.hln paper and also the local news pub lished herein.. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein aro also reserved. A Member American L tV* herS th Aa, ° cla " lation and Penn |E*l flcSutT sylvanla^Asaoola- KjiJSSfifwS Easte.n ~~~~ -l Chicago, u"ll ldlne Entered at the Post Office in Hnrris burg. Pa., as second class matter. .jgICSSSfc. By carrier, ten cents a .Gwtr week; by mail. |3.00a year In advance. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1919 11"c bear our own burdens more easily when wo help others to bear theirs. — MAßY A. LIVLKMOIIK. KEEP THEM STRAIGHT ATTORNEY GENERAL, SCHAF FER and State Banking Com missioner lusher told represent atives of the Philadelphia Tenants' Protective Association they mean to see to it that Pennsylvania Building and Loan Associations comply strictly with the provisions of the law under which they operate. The manner in which Mr. Fisher has got his Inspections under way indicate that he intends to do just what he says, and he will have firm support in the office of the Attorney Gen eral. The building and loan association was created for the specilic purpose of supplying the man who desires to own his home with the means of purchase. It was not designed to tinance large real estate purchases, however desirable that may be at times even with associations doing business on a legitimate basis. If, ns has been charged, the associa tions of Philadelphia or any other county, favor the large borrower to the exclusion of the man who wants to purchase a home, they are beyond their legal purposes and should be brought to book; particularly in cases where the officers are found to he accepting fees for approving loans and where the funds borrowed are being used for profiteering pur poses. There are difficulties in the way of bringing the offenders to justice, but the very fact that the State au thorities have announced their at tention of going after the law breakers or evaders will have a beneficial effect on the situation. SEE WHO'S HERE WELL, well, folks, just see who's here! No less a per sonage than the old friend who advises us to "do your Christ mas shopping early," This time it is the New York Telegraph that waves the warning sign and bids us get i busy. And the advice is good, at that. Never in the history of the country were the stores so crowded I during September as at present. The I prospects are that as the season ad vances they will become more so. We are headed for the biggest holiday business since Christmas buying began and December is just around the corner. It will be on us before we know it. So "do your Christmas shopping early" is not out of plaoe. It might be amended, however, to read, "do your Christ mas shopping a little each week." GENERAL STRIKES time Is inopportune for a I general strike." the Central j Labor "Onion of Boston an nounces In explaining why it is not supporting the strike of the police men in that city. It might have ROM further and said the time Is never opportune for a general strike. A general strike can not succeed irr • the United States and no condßion j can arise that would warrant it. ! No man who Is truly American j would for a moment consider such ! a move, for a general strike is next • door to revolution, and a revolution- | ist Is a man to be shot on sight as j a traitor to the best government man has ever devised. The Central Labor Union of Bos ton simply yielded to the inevitable. There can be no reason for a un ionised police force. Civil sendee takes care of police needs and any- j thing beside can be threshed out j between their own representatives and those of the public, whose safe ty they have taken oath to preserve. Their duty Is to protect the pub lic, regardless of rank or station, and they cannot be subservient to the orders of labor leaders. They cannot sen'e two masters, and the public comes first. The Boston police put themselves beyond pardon when they left the city at the mercy of the criminal Aiaasesk They lost public support THURSDAY EVENING, and sympathy, without which no , strike can succeed, the moment they ! left their posts. To have declared a [ general strike to enforce police de- I mands woud have been suicidal to union labor interests in Boston, and ! the heads of the Central Union j were wise enough to see it. GOOI) ADVICE THE Labor World, of Pitts burgh, a newspaper devoted to the interests of labor in Amer ica, is trying to anchor the swaying sentiments of alien workmen and to lead them to understanding that there is no place like America; no place where opportunity is greater or where better chance to make a decent living offers, even under present abnormal conditions. Be neath the flare heading—"Some Reasons Why You Should Stay in America," the World says: Europe is bankrupt financially and a wave of Bolshevism has swept into every country there. Food and clothing aro so ab normally high that Europe is having trouble in sustaining its present population with the bread of i'fe. Here are some high prices and conditions in the Czecho-Slovak Republic: Flour is 50 cents a pound, a cow costs $4,000, fat is $3 a pound, a horse costs $4,000, shoes arc S4O a pair. Cotton and woolen goods arc not to be had. so the people are in rags. Meat is very scarce, and a poor quality costs $3 a pound. Sugar, tea, coffee and other luxuries aro not to be had. Drugs are very liigo and in most places not to be had at any price. Beer and all kinds of liquors are scarce and so high only the rich people can buy. The eronin is worth only 30 cents on the dollar and foreign merchants demand the French franc or the pound sterling. The war taxes ire five times higher than they are in America. New farm implements are not to be had at any price. Seeds are scarce and of poor quality. industry is at a standstill' and wages aro so far below the American standard that you would not be satisfied. Send for your friends and relatives and stay in America, where peace und plenty reign, with years of prosperity and good times ahead of you! It will take from one year to live years for the coun tries of Europe to go through tlio reconstruction period and get back on their feet! Stay in America! This, of course, was written for the benefit of the alien who may bo tempted to leave these shores to try his fortunes in his old home, and very good advice it is. Wise labor leaders want these men to remain with us, both for their own sake* as well as for ours. We need them and they need us. But the messages the Labor World addresses to foreign work men is excellent reading for dis gruntled Americans, as well. We are apt to become discouraged over the difficulties of present day condi tions. Prices are high and taxes oppressive. Making ends meet is a daily puzzle. But we are so much better off than the people of the rest of the world that the poorest of us is rich by comparison. In stead of brooding over our own troubles, if we gave a little thought to the rest of the world our con ditions would seem easy and our burdens light by comparison. ARMENIA AGAIN WH I> WAIt I) RAFFEItTY, just returned from Armenia, writes that a quarter-million Christian people are in starving con dition there. The need is great antl thousands of these must die unless America sends them food. The cry of two hundred and fifty thousand homeless, father less. motherless children Is Arme nia's great challenge to the youth of America. Prohalily one hun dred thousand of these do not know their names, Kven re cent 'y babies have been found deseited in caves and at the roadsides, living on grass and cauion. Every American boy and girl, every young man and wom an who has a home and parents should answer this appeal and make possible food, clothing, shelter and education for these destitute thousands, many of whom are now in orphanages in the very land where Jesus took the children in His arms and blessed them. Groups of young people in Sun.ay schools.' high schoo's. Y. M. end Y. \V. C. A.'s must not turn a deaf ear to this pathetic call. I spoke one Sun day morning to seventeen hun dred of these orphans in one or phanage at Aleppo and dreamed of the new Armenia that sat in front of me. The young of Am-rica must go in'o partnership with the young of Armenia to meki possible the pernetulty of a nation whose God is the l.ord. In nil probability more than sever.! y-five thousand unfortu nate christian Armenian girls and women are yet held as Moslem slaves in the harems of Turks, Kurds and Arabs. Many of these found and photographed by the wri' e i bore the horrible tattoo I marks indicating Moslem owner ship. even as a Western ranch i man brands his cattle. Refore ihey were rescued and brought to Refuge Homes they suffered in descrlbab'o ngon'es. The captives must he set free and th rescued ones must be nurtured back into health and wholesorr > home life. Their need megaphones a pitiful challenge to American young i people. J America has never turned a deaf | I ear to the suffering. \Ve must give j I and give generously. Organized ef- ! I fort is being put forth in this direc- j tion. it should, and no doubt will. | j meet with prompt and generous I I response. In the elder days Armenia ' I stood for Christ;..pity when the re- 1 1 ! ! gion was. on trial. In these days j Christians everywhere must reeog-1 | nize their obligation | AN INALIENABLE RIGHT THE American colonies declared their independence in order that the inhabitants might be free to enjoy their Inalienable rights life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. The Government was or ganized in eonntitut'onal form in order to protect those rights. In the maintenance of life and the pursuit of happiness, work is necessary. It follows, therefore, that the right .to work is Inalienable. t must be pro tected by the Government and can not be denied by a labor union whose memberß decide that they will discontinue their own employment. fMUcstn.- ' P'-lv flea. i By the Kz-Oominlttccmao 1L Few questions of the many grow ing out of the count of the votes cast at the primary have attracted more attention throughout Pennsyl vania than the proposition that what is known as a "tick" or "check" niark has the same value in marking of a bollot as the "X" established by usuge, custom and statute, which ruling has been made by Philadel phia judges sitting in the election count in the Quaker City. For the time being this question lias overshadowed in the minds of men who follow politics In this Stato the interesting situation which has developed through the demand of John it. K. Scott for the opening of numerous ballot boxes, the discov ery of blunders and what are classed by some individuals and newspapers as worse in certain wards and the closeness of the vote. Newspapers and lawyers do not believe that enough can be devel oped in Philadelphia to overturn the majority of Congressman J. Hampton Moore, but the delay of the count and the cropping out of political animosities will not be without ef fect. The Philadelphia judges have determined to complete the count in time for ballots to be printed and it may be that some of the mooted questions may come up later. I —The Philadeliihie Record says concerning the ruling: "The judges I yesterday handed down a decision which is considered revolutionary, as far as the compilation of primary I votes is concerned. They ruled that ' a pencil marking, commonly referred I to as 'a tick,' has the same weight I and effect as a cross in the marking lof a ballot. The question came up [ when it was found that 23 ballots in the Nineteenth division of the Sec ond ward bore the "tick" marks in stead of the ordinary crosses. Judges Audenricd and Ferguson decided that the marking of crosses opposite J the name of candidates is imperii - : tive only at general elections, and j that the rule did not hold for the primaries." When Judge Audenried ruled that ! the "tick" mark had the same weight 1 and effect as a cross, ex-Judge James j Guy Gordon pointed out that in the ■ event a cross was marked opposite , the name of Congressman Moore and 1 a "lick" beside the name of Judge i Patterson the second would invali- j date the first and make both void. Decisions were even read to show I that in the past the law has recog- | nized only a well-defined cross as a j metnod of ballot marking. —The Evening Ledger joins the Philadelphia Inquirer and Bulletin In demanding a clean up on elec tions in that city. It says: "Good daylight let in upon the methods employed in some of the wards at the recen' balloting will reveal sonio amazing tliinys. Judges Audenried and Fcrgusoi. isr to be commended for their appuent determination to see the tiling thiough, to take the. lid off and let the people see what has been under it, 10, these many years. The effect of such an rxai •- ination as the court lias ordered is sure to be felt at future elections. The day of the personally conducted election is almost past. —Not only In Scranton,' but in j various other cities results have ! been changed by the official count j and there has been much dismay among some candidates. In Union- j town the school director candidates j I are not those thought nominated. I —Cumbria county judges have rc- j fused to order ballot boxes rc-opened, i although it was contended that the i j election was illegal because county ' commissioners numbered both ballots , land stubbs. Johnstown papers inti- ! I mate that there may be formal con- j I tests filed. I —The general attitude of judges | ! is that ballot boxes can not be open- l !ed on imaginary errors, but that | : there must be real cause shown. , —By 26 votes Councilman I>. J. I ! Campbell has been declared the i fourth nominee for council in I I Scranton. There were 24 candidates i 1 in the field and four were noml- j ; nated. The opening of ballot boxes j • from borough districts in Mayficld | ! and Olyphant brought a switch in • j the votes of four candidates for the I ' Republican nomination for school j | directors. The two men shown to . j have been nominated by the sealed | I returns lost out on the recount in j court. —ln Bucks county the official | count showed thut not enough otll | clal ballots were provided for some j 'districts, and upon using up their i I supply borrowed from others. West j Bristol township, for instance, ex- j I haustod its supply of eight ballots! i and borrowed from Bristol borough. I I Several up-county districts which ran | i short of official ballots used sample • j ballots instead. This procedure has i | raised the question whether other I I than official ballots cast are legal and can be counted and may be a j question for the courts to decide. —Col. George Knox McCain says in the Evening Ledger this about a ! man well known to many here: j | "Henry K. Moyer was one man who • I did not hesitate to tell Quay just I what he thought. And his expres | sions were not always to Quay's lik- I ing. Boyer's fearlessness in this re ; spect was due to his unswerving loy | alty as a member of the organization i Quay was aware that no matter what I happened in the course of events at i Harrlsburg. or elsewhere ' over the I State. Boyer would stand by the raa i ehinc. And his faithfulness to "the j old man," as the Senator was known ' among his intimates, was rewarded • with high offices. I once heard Sen ! ator Quay say that Harry,Boyer was I the ablest parliamentarian that ever ' sat in the speaker's chair, and that | A 1 Crawford came next." —The Public Hedge r speculates about whut the Governor will think about the returns from Vare wards in the Philadelphia judgeship elec tion, the Governor having said that he would regard any organized ef fort against sitting judges as an un friendly act and some figures now showing that Vare men in certa'n wards voted heavily for Eugene C. Bonniwell, who was most emphati cally not favored by the Governor. The Governor has said nothing, but has been interested In the returns. The Ledger remarks: "Vare knif ing" of the judicial candidates sup ported by Governor Rproul failed to do them any injury in Tuesday's primary. Judge Joseph P. McCul len. in the Common Pleas Court: Judge George Henderson, in the Or phans' Court, and Judges Thomas F. McN'ichol. and Charles E. Bart lett. i the Municipal Court, wqre nominated —and virtually elected— despite tho opposition of tho Or ganization. Under a recent decision of the Supreme Court candidates for Judgeships go on the ticket In tho general elections upopposed if they receive 51 per cent of the total vote cast in the primaries. All four received the necessary 51 per cent and consequently will go into office without further contest." HXRRISBTTRO (ALB TELEGR3LFH! AIN'T IT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEELIN'? ByBRIGCS A BOPOCH OF -AMD F-R.EMD WIF6 INFORMS _ AMD Y AU MEARL Y TOUR..ST "FRIENDS" DROP IKI VOU THERE °^ Y J NE DLSLOC/ME YOUFT UIYEXPECTEDLY POR TH/MG FOR YOO TO DO ARD HECK TH£ WEEK FND THAT S TO -SLEEP ON THE PAWENPORT FOR THE RVJEXT THREE MIGHTS ''' -R, ,C-I- -AMD THEN ON THE THIRD AND TBO CAM HOP IMTO YOOR - AND YOU OUS DAY THEY B.D YOU • ONVN BED - - BY ' OH"M"H- BOY?! AIN'T YOUR FEET - , T A • GR R R RFSND AMD GLOR-R - RIOVJS L ' ' ' fr66U,Nj No Wonder Germany Quit By MAJOR FRANK C. MARIN Of the Army Recruiting Station "Most people seem to think that the multi-colored devices you see on the left shoulders of our returned oversees men are something new." "As a matter of fact the particular patterns used are new, but the idea is so old that it goes back before the days of history. In the days of the barbarians the men from a certain village, clan, or district would each wear the tail of a raccoon, a boar's tusk, or some similar device that marked them as belonging to a par ticular group, in the days of the early Egyptians the men of a corps each wore the sign of Isis, Osiris, or some other God. Each Roman le gionary wore a geometrical device of the same design as the standard borne by the legion's standard bear er. The standard of the legion cor responded to a present day flag. During the middle ages, as heraldry came into being each family or lead er adopted some sort of device which his followers wore. For many centuries these devices depended solely on the fancy of the individual leader, but about the time of the .second crusade in 1147, an agree ment was reached that each family of noble birth would adopt a fam ily crest or coat-of-arms. Before these crests could be used they must be approved by the feudal sovereign and entered in the records of the School of Heralds. Thus all mem bers of a noble family and their re-1 talners were authorized to wear a certain insignia and as there were thousands of these approved in the course of centuries it became a matter for profound study and in terest to trace out and co-ordinate the heraldic devices. As modern armies came into existence in the latter part of the seventeenth cen turv. troops were organized unt- Iformlv into brigades and squadrons each uf whom was fora dis- ( : trict or a member of the Royal fam ! iiv. On the collar or sleeve each man would wear the crest of colors | of the person or district for which ; his brigade or squadron was named. To this day in the English army that approximate condition is carried out. Organizations are known not as the | 110 th Infantry, but as the Argyle I Highlanders, the Dublin l-usileers, the Coldstream Ouards, or what not, i still wearing the insignia adopted centuries ago. Our early American • units were distinguished by piping 'of a particular color on the seams iof their uniforms and by patches of the same color on their cuffs and ! collars. Then in the Regular Army ' thoy oddod about the time of tne War of 1812 the numerals of the 1 regiment and permanently assigned certain colors as the distinctive col ' or of each branch. For example, the, : infantry was and Is blqe, the cavalry I ! yellow, the artillery red. Since then, i the maroon has been added -or the medical corps, buff for quartermas | ter corps, green for air service, pur plo for motor transport, etc. In our Civil War special marks were adopted for each corps and division and these were worn on hats and caps. In this war each rtivjs on commander submitted a drawing for his divisional Insignia to the War Department, which, U P°" her ir.g approved became the official mark for all officers and men of that division. The reason for these markings is that it is always inter esting and f'equently of vital im portunce to know without, hav'.ngr to j .-top and ask to what organization iiion belong For instancj a man becomes separate from his or ganization and meets another sol dier. He asks 'have you seen the 2 Bth Division.' 'Sure, I saw a bunch of Red Keystones in a woods about two miles up this road.' In France the military police controlling trar lie at a crossroad would simply glance at the shoulder insignia of Jl pproachinvr troops and point pißht, I 'e'U or straight ahead as his orders ! required. Some of the insignia have i a ,special significance such as a big I red "1" for the First, a "Keystone" for the Pennsylvania Division, a "YD" (Yankee Division) for the New Englnnders. a "Statue of Lib erty" for the 77th of New York city, while others were chosen arbi trarily." 4 A Suggestion to De Valera (From Punch, London.) According to an American report China raises 100 million pigs an nually. An expert statistician cal culates that, if the whole 100 mil lion were gathered together in a flock and their tails pulled, very little would be heard of the Irish question. END TO NOTED OLD SHIP The Richmond, in Fur caput's Fleet at New Orleans, to Be Scrapped. From the New York Sun. IN a few days the U. S. S. Rich mond, once a part of Admiral David G. Farragut's fleet, will be consigned to the scrap heap. After long service as a training ship the vessel has been sold by the Government to a Philadelphia firm of metal dealers. The Rich mond, once the flower of the Ameri can Navy, on her last voyage will depart from Norfolk and sail up the Delaware to Bridesburg, Pa., where the dismantling will begin. The Richmond made a proud war record in Admiral Farragut's fleet. In his attempt to open up the Mis sissippi river from its mouth, the Admiral first employed camouflage in smearing the sides of his ships with mud to conceal them from the enemy. So successful was this shrewd practice that when the fleet was later ordered in 1862 to the Southwest the mud bath was again repeated. The old Civil War "battle wagon" No "Innocent Bystanders" [From the Philadelphia Ledger] Efforts to represent the State con stabulary of Pennsylvania as hire lings, eager and ready to interfere with the liberty of the people, are wholly unwarranted by their pres ent activities and their past history. Nothing is more dastardly than the way in which a certain class of radical labor agitators apply such epithets as "Cossacks" to the troops of the constabulary. These leaders know better; but they assume that they can stampede the more ignor ant by their shrill denunciation of a splendid group of State employes who merely obey the constituted au thorities and only act to preserve law and order and the common rights of every citizen. In every strike, when the irre sponsibles wish to do as they please and the innocent citizen goes where he has no business to go, tragedies occur which these same labor leaders, the direct and indirect cause of them, blame on the supposed class hostility of the constabulary. The facts, however, will not bear this construction. The public should re member that in the clash at North Clairton the State Police were prop erly in town at the call of the bur gess and were engaged in preserv ing law and order under his direc tion. Moreover, the State Police De partment has done a public service in calling the attention of all citizens to the fact that In times of riot the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has 1 decided that there are no "innocent | bystanders." If "innocent bystanders" come to grief during a riotous outbreak it is through their own fault, and no amount of misrepresentation should he allowed to obscure the fact that the State Constabulary of Pennsyl vania has never been the Instrument of oppression of any citizen's rights, but instead has been a bulwark against the disorder which respects no one's right, least of all the rights of the "average citizens" who make up that helpless thing "the public," which is not a party to the industrial disputes from which it is so apt to suffer without redress. THE BLUE JAY [By Louise Driscoll.] Villon among the birds is he, A bold, bright rover, bad and free; Yet not without such loveliness As makes the curse upon him less, If larkspur blossoms were a-wing, If Iris went adventuring. Or, on some morning, we should see Heaven bright-blue chicory Come rifting by, we would for give Some little sins, and let them live! Verlalne among the birds is he, A creature of inquiry; And yet, what joy for one who sees An orchid drifting through the trees! The bluebell said a naughty word In mischief, and there was a bird. The blue sky laughed aloud, and we Saw wings of lapis lazuli. So fair a sinner surely wins * A little mercy for his sins. shows upon it scars received in the battle of New Orleans and of Mobile Bay, where it covered itself with glory. In the Spanish-American war the Richmond was stationed at the Philadelphia Navy Yard to serve as the receiving ship there. During the last war she afforded quarters for the training school for firemen at Berkly, Va. The Richmond first splashed water in 1860, her hull having been built by the Richmond Navy Yard and her engine constructed in Wash ington. In October, 1861, the Rich mond fought the ram Manassas in the Southwest Pass. Somewhat damaged in the battle, she emerged from convalescence with sufficient strength to join Admiral Farragut's fleet for the attack on New Orleans. Disabled in this battle by the ter rific Confederate fire, she underwent further repairs and fought her last battle of the war on Mobile Bay under the command of Capt. Thorn ton A. Jenkins. Dooley Sees the World [From the Kansas Cily Star.] In his latest volume our old friend, Mr. Dooley, discussing vari ous matters, comes upon Mr. Bryan's peace proposals of several years ago. They Included an inter national police force. The philoso pher of Archie Road comes to this conclusion: "An" there ye ar-re. I don't know whether 'twill succeed or not I hope so. But there's wan thing I am afraid iv, Hinnissy. Ye see, me boy, the wurruld is a pretty old hunk of mud an* wickedness, an' I've been here a long time an' I've observed this sad thruth. Ye don't have to lend a man money. Ye don't have to amuse him; ye don't have to take care iv him if he's sick; ye don't have to do anny thing f'r him but wan thing." "An' what's thtft?" asked Mr. Hennessy. "It he wants to fight ye, ye-ve got to accommodate him," said Mr. Dooley. The world is a pretty old hunk of mud and wickedness, and the man who fails to take this into the account isn't going to get very far as a peacemaker. Wages and Production [From the New York Sun] Wages are not money. Wages are the commodities into which a day's work will exchange. If, to live the American people need 110,000,000 loaves of bread and 110,000,000 pounds of provisions a day, and the production, through whatever cause, fell to 55,000,000 loaves of bread and 55,000,000 pounds of other food you might raise average money wages to SSO a day, but that would not add a single ounce to the provis ions. The American people, on whatever money wage, would have to go hungry. To increase its re ward—which means to reduce its cost of living—mankind must in crease its production. Under the laws of nature there is no escape by a people from that economic compulsion. When labor increases its productiqsi it has the right to insist upon getting that increased production as its reward if labor alone achieved the increase. It ought to exerc'se that right. In the possession of Its faculties it will ex ercise it. But it will demand till doomsday what is not produced, what does not exist, and never get it. The Story of Midas [McLandburgh Wilson In the New York Sun] Midas, favored of his god. Walking on the autumn sod Touched the field of goldenrod. Bright it gleamed on every side, Glimmered far and shimmered wide Over all the land to bide. Oold he sniffed with every breeze, Midns started in to wheeze. Snuffle, snort and weep and sneeze. Keener still his anguish grew Till he cried in sorrow true: ' "Gods, take bag your gift! Achoo!" SEPTEMEER 25, 1919. The Boston Outbreak [Front the New York World] What is happening in Boston can happen in any other large American city in like circumstances. The great majority of the people there as else where are predisposed to law and order and never need the restraints of law translated into terms of physical force. But it is equally true that a numerous minority are held in respect for the personal and property rights of others only by compulsion, and when that is with drawn they revert at once to the control of primitive instincts. For this situation of general mob rule and riot and looting and mur der the Boston police, organized as a labor union and acting as such in affiliation with other labor unions, stand forth as wholly responsible. They knew exactly what would re sult from their action. They delib erately invited such a result. They made the certain conseqtiences all the more immediate and widespread by the very publicity and concert of their action so carefully and showily calculated. They not only deserted their sworn duties in the face of the enemy, but they did their best to inform the enemy of the precise time when the city was to be disarmed and delivered over to the mob. The developments in Boston a.re the Immediate concern of every city in the country. The fire there start ed demands precautionary measures everywhere against its spread. And what started the flre there will start it wherever tolerated. Soon or late the Boston police union as a militant strike organiza tion will have to give way and dis solve. Tt is incumbent upon other cities to see that such unions are not allowed ' i start. Dr. Finegan's Congress [From the Philadelphia Evening Ledger. ] Doctor Finegan, the new State Superintendent of Public Instruc tion, is reported as expressing the opinion that there should be an ad justment of the work of the schools to meet the new conditions that have arisen as a result of the war. He has called a conference of men and women interested in education to meet in Harrisburg i ■ November and to discuss the question for a week. Prominent college professors, high school teachers and city and county superintendent will be in vited. It has not yet been announced whether any one save persons pro fessionally interested in education will be asked to be present. The fact that the conference has been called should be encouraging to those who are hoping that Doc tor Finegan will make the public schools of the State equal to those in any other commonwealth. He has come here with the hearty in dorsement of educational experts as a man who knows how to get re sults. His appointment of Dr. Wil liam D. Lewis, of the William Penn High School, as one of his deputies indicates that he knows how to choose men to assist him. Doctor Lewis is a man who is not content to follow the methods that have been in vogue for a generation merely be cause they have been followed by his predecessors. He has been more intent on results than on method and has shown himself willing to discard everything that does not produce the results he is seeking. Doctor Fine gan is understood to be the same kind of a man. Why the Prices Are Up [Knoxville Journal and Times] With the men wearing silk shirts and getting tired of working, with women forgetting cooking and the family demanding the services of a chauffeur, with everybody studying how they can pass the buck to everybody else—why shouldn't a fellow have to have more money to keep up the paces? A young man, or the older one, who works four days in the week, then oft two days, to spend what he has made, will probably complain the longest and the loudest of hard times and the high cost of living. He spends much of his time in spending what he has earned and has received. He puts none of his earnings In the bank, carries it in his pocket, gets rid of it, fearful that it might burn holes in his pockets. Not That One [From the New York World] The kaiser's late war-kitchen is to be added to the trophies at the Smithsonian institution. It is a field affair, of course, and not to be con founded with the culinary depart ment In which Wllhelm and his gen erals cooked the goose of Imperial t Germany. lEumutg (Eljat p Bernard Brady, who is now a resident of the United States Sol diers' Home at Washington, has sent official papers from the War Depart ment for record in the Pennsylvania State Capitol which officials of the State government believe make him the youngest soldier of the Civil War in the Union armies. The doc -- ments, which have been passed upon by the Adjutant General of the United States Army, give the age of Brady when enlisting as a drummer boy in the Fifty-Eighth Pennsylvania Volunteers as eight years and eleven months, although his enlistment papers gave his ago as fifteen. Brady's claim nuvkA-t him younger than were several otuer men who became notable as youth ful soldiers in the army of the Union, among them the late Captain John C. Delaney, long State factory inspector; John Clemm, the western veteran who figured at the fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Get tysburg, and Daniel A. Clemmons, a Lancaster countian, who enlisted in the Seventy-Ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers July 13, 1863, after fol lowing the regiment for some time because his father was one of the soldiers. The Brady papers which are supported by the War Depart ment notation and a certificate of his baptism at a Catholic church in Newark, show that he enlisted at Suffolk. Va., October 17, 1862, giving his age as fifteen; but that he was born in New Jersey, October 29, 1853, and baptised the following November 30. After the war Brady went to Wyoming county, but soon entered the regular army, serving in the Fourth and other infantry regiments. While in the army he lost a leg and for years has lived at the Soldiers' Home. Jacob Stauffcr, of the Ad jutant General's Department, who has looked up many records of sol diers, believes that Brady can safely lay claim to being the youngest sol dier He is familiar with records of many Pennsylvanians and has fol lowed up the Brady and other claims. Officers of the Adjutant General's Department have also studied the papers and Adjutant General Frank D. Beary intends to see the veteran when in Washing ton. According to reports coming hero from western counties, a law passed to prevent unnaturalized foreigners from hunting in Pennsylvania, which was passed because of flagrant viola tions of the laws protecting game, has been found of value in curbing the foreigners in various industrial districts. In Mercer county the homes of foreigners were searched under the law forbidding aliens to own dr possess firearms and a car load of weapons seized. During the war this law was invoked in this city by the late Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, Secretary of the State Game Com mission, on general principles and he took dozens of guns and revolvers from foreigners in Sibletown and other parts of the city. Similar steps were taken in nests of bad foreigners in Bedford and other counties dur ing the war and now it is coming in handy in "pulling the teeth" of the foreign element which has armed itself and is making the trouble in the steel districts. It is not everyone who can pay out a two and a half-dollar gold piece for a penny in street car fart; and can get it back in ten minutes. Here is the story and it comes from a West Shore town, illustrating how street car conductors can win and hold the affections of the people who ride on lines. One of the Valley Railway cars was speeding up to ward Camp Hill the other evening when the conductor suddenly called out to know who had given him a two and a half-dollar gold piece in mistake for a penny. The conduc tor was counting up his cash and spotted the gold coin. The passen gers looked at each other and grinned, but no one said anything until a young woman made a con vulsive grab at her pockotbook, glanced through It and declared she was "out." Identification of the gold piece was promptly made and the conductor was given a bouquet of remarks for being just right. A number of the men who enlisted or were drafted in Harrisburg draft board districts and who have taken up homes elsewhere since returning from France have been writing to friends here asking all about the welcome home next week. A num ber of them will come here for the Sunday exercises and some may re main over for the Monday parade. The parade is going to be a most interesting one, as the second divi sion will be entirely composed of veterans of the World War, who will be guests of the city and they will all have the same rank as far as that goes. State laws and city ordinances do not seem to have any terrors for some automobile drivers and motor cycle operators wlieij it comes down to operating with cutouts open. They do it every day, and night, Front, Derry, Cameron and some times on Sixth streets. The way some of the cars arc driven is enough to make people nervous, but when & cutout is open it is worse. The motor cycles that dash along the river drive with cutouts open seem to have things their own way and seem to need a few policemen in plain clothes to bring home a lesson. j[ WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —Senator C. J. Buckman. of Bucks county, who was president pro tern, last Senate, was here on legal business. —Mayor A. M. Hoagland, of Wil liamsport, who Is a candidate for re-election, has been a prominent figure in Third-Class City League af fairs. Representative Leopold Glass, of Philadelphia, is taking part in the election count controversy. H. I. Koch, New Allentown councilman, has been secretary of the Chamber of Commerce of that place. Judge Eugene C. Bonniwell will preside at the meeting of the State Firemen at Lancaster next week. [ DO YOU KNOW —That Harrisburg'* war gar dens were among the most pro -4 ductivc of any city of its size in the country? HISTORIC HARRISBURG —Canal boat service began here Just about 90 years ago. Rewards For Mercy and Trulji Let not mercy and truth forsuko thee: bind them about thy neck; write them upon the table of thine heart: So shalt thou And favpr and good understanding in the sight of God and man.—Proverbs ill, S a ltd 4.