Sproul Stand Gets Wide Commendation Governor William C. gram to William Z. Foster, the leader of the strike at Pittsburgh, declaring that he will stand for no disorder and that armed mobs will be treated as invaders has brought numerous telegrams of congratula tion to the Governor's office. The Governor is not here and nothing has been given out here regarding the Foster reply. Most of the telegrams commend npt only the Governor's stand, but his notice that he expects Foster and his colleagues to stand with the con stituted authorities In putting down Riot and Civil Commotion Insurance do not wait until you need it; it may then be unobtainable. Rate quotations and analysis of contract on application. P. G. Farqnharson INSURANCE SERVICE Kunkel Building Harrisburg, Pa. ONSIDER the reputation and SSI 1 the construction of the phono- Jr J I graph you contemplate buying. i I You may. not be a mecnapical i| I expert, but you will easily under -1 stand and appreciate the advan- II I tages of such II INSTRUMENT Of QUALITY 18 I features as the following:— I K The patented tone con- | exclusive ''bulge" design M l| (curved outlines), the | patented motor meter, and | j | i|i jl || SSO to SIOOO Pmfft II Come in and lei us demonstrate to you why the Sonora is 11] | jH V YOHN BROS. If ■ - 13 North Fourth St. ■■ U Across From Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart I Bottom Is licensed and operates under BASIC PATENTS II I of the phonograph Industry Ii The Globe Is Determined j|{ To Sell The Best Clothes In j ; Harrisburg and We KQOW We Are Doing It ||| § By selling the best we don't mean the highest Ift price—we mean the best QUALITIES —the best [jjlj STYLES—the best TAILORING, and at prices consistent with the average man's income. taL* These reasons, coupled with the best SERVICE, are now put up to you when you ask yourself. c "Where shall I buy my suit?" 2is| II I We leave it to you to decide. Come to THE GLOBE and StKj compare values, fabrics, style and tailoring before you buy, See the wonderful suits we are offering at !| • $35 S4O to SSO || f| | It won't take you long to make up your mind. i|| :11 ENGLISH MOTOR COATS 1 Of Cravcnetted Donegal Tweeds, reversible on leather fabric. A popular coat for rain or shine—for city or club. S Smartly styled belted model, SSO. jjjj - THE GLOBE FRIDAY EVENING. the lawless and the men who seek to overturn American ideas of order. Red Cross Steamer \ Remains on the Sand By Associated Press. Stamford, Conn., Sept. 26. No attempt to move the Red Cross steamer Rosalind, which went onto Cow's Reef yesterday has yet been made although a wrecking tug is standing by. A jagged hole in her bow must be pugged before she can be pumped out. As conditions are now the vessel is in no danger of further damage. Tl(e passengers taken ashore this afternoon have all been 3ent toward their destina tions. TOWERS TO GOUP IN FIVE COUNTIES Forestry Department Rushing Work on the Observation . Places For Forests The fi rß * of U*® V \\ $ //J steel observation i\\\ jw// towers authorized estry Association aa a P al "t the jX-Srajglforest fire protec- WJWqqSqk tion service in I Pennsylvania will '■ flUjHjflL be ® rectetl within = jgacle next six or eight weeks and mmammmmdKmmllm be put Into im mediate service. Some of the ma terial has arrived and it is hoped to push the work so that the towers may be ready In the fall when de structive fires have occurred In State forests because of lack of observa tion and report facilities. The first towers will be erected in the following locations: Near Coudersport In Hebron township, Potter county; near Galeton In Pike township, Potter county; we3t of Austin In Portago township, Potter county; near Annonla In Shlppen township, Tioga county; near Tam arack*, Lcldy township, Clinton coun ty; near pump house In Brown township, Lyconlng county, and on Big Poe Mountain, Coburn town ship, Centre county. These towers will be 60 feot high and located on high ground covering districts for miles around. They will have enclosed cabins. State Forestry officials will en deavor to Increase the number of such observation towers as rapidly as possible. It is figured out that there should be a dozen more por vldod If funds are available. There are several fire observation towers operated In conjunction with the Anthraclto Protective Associa tion, composod of coal compnnles owning largo tracts of tlmberland In Schuylkill and Luzerno counties. Woodcock Hooson—Pennsylvania's new season for hunting woodcock will open next Wednesday. The last Legislature moved up the season for woodcock from October 20 to Oc tober 1. The season runs until the end of November and the bag limit Is six a day and twenty for a season. Bridges Approved The State Water Supply Commission has grant ed permission for the construction of four county bridges In Eastern Pennsylvania counties. Two will bo built In Ransom township, Lacka wanna county, ono In Washington township, Northampton county, and ono in Exeter township, Berks county, A number of brldgo and similar improvements by coal and railroad companies have also been authorized. The State Highway Department will let a number of contracts for bridges on State highways on Oc tober 3. Tlio New Bureau—Steps will be taken within the next few months to organize tho new State Bureau of Rehabilitation which in to bo a part of the Department of Labor and In dustry. Data relative to Industrial accidents In Pennsylvania Is bolng gathered by the Workmen's Com pensation, Industrial Hygleno and othor Bureaus and other branches of the government so that informa tion upon which to begin will be available. ASTHMA SUFFERERS KHKK—26-eent bottle of our wonder ful \m-No-Mor, for Asthma, sent ab solutely free. Gtvea Instant relief. Has cured thousands. Will euro you. Guaranteed. Four months' treatment. A-\o-Mor handled by all leading druggists. Send to-day. AS-NO-MOlt CO.. Dept. 49 Dcs Moines, lowa HAHRISBTTRG USSkfL TELEGRAPH Wanted: A World Leader •The International Sunday School Lesson For September 28 la "Review: Jesus Our Saviour ami King."—Matt. 21:1-0, 15, 16. % By WILLIAM T .ELLIS World-crises, like the present, usually produce a world-leader, one dominant figure rising above his time. To-day there is no such mor tal on the horizon. Great men there are; but, in the test, none has been great enough to stride forward in an old or new path so that bewil dered and wandering' humanity will follow him. Cause? must have leaders. Great movements seldom get far without one strong llgure to front them. Amid the confused voices of our troubled day; amid the pulling and hauling, criss-cross and everyway; amid the uncertainty as people halt between the old and the new, the world's greatest felt need is for a lender; one whose steps do not stum ble and whose voice does not falter and whose eye sees clearly the true goal. Men have tried dtaclpleslilp to this world figure and that one, only to fall back baffled; the hero for the hour has not yet emerged from the common level of states men, thinkers and men of affairs. Only the fool falls to perceive that humanity, puzzled and questing, stands now at a crossroads of his tory. Our time is like no oth'ST'; de cisions made to-day are more mo mentuous than the decisions of yes terday. Strange impulses and pur poses, some noble, some base, sway the newly-awakened common con sciousness of the race. Mass move ments are seen all over the earth. One of our newer poets, Thomas Curtis Clark, puts it: "Around the world truth speaks in • new-found voices; The darkness flees and all the world rejoices. The people's God has heard the peo ple's plea; It is the dawn, the dawn of lib erty." Wliefi we come to examine the qualities essential to such a leader, we And that no other possesses them than tho Hero and Saviour about whom we have been studying for the past three months. Marks of tlie Great Leader Check up tho characteristics of Christ, and at once they are reveal ed as the essentials of the World- Leader for the present hour. Let me indicate a few appealing ever to the readers' judgment for confirma tion: The new World-Leader must be one whoso judgment is not swayed by a sense of expediency. The cal amity of the Paris Conference was that other considerations than right eousness entered in as decisive fac tors. Compromise, concession, fear, pride, revenge, self-aggrandizement all went to make up tho conclusions which have left the world dissatis fied and rebellious. Statesmen have arisen from their seats at the peace table and gone home to face indig nant nations whose moral convic tions were higher than those of their leaders. It now seems as if China and Korea and Egypt, to cite oply three conspicuous instances, will ultimately secure from the pub lic opinion of mankind the justice denied them at Paris. Perhaps statesmanship will yet learn, in the bitter school of experience, that what is not morally right cannot bo politically expedient. When lead-' ers make truce with their con science they automatically abdicate their real leadership, though not necessarily their position. What do we find when we apply this test of integrity to Jesus? He simply scored expediency. None of the parties of his day could adopt him, because he was "impossible": he did not know how to compromise. His clear-cut utterances sometimes alienated his own followers: as they did also the great and powerful of his time. "Trimming" was simply out of the question for him. He never stepped aside from his plain path for self's sake, even when he know that path led to a cross. All who trusted him wholly, found him wholly true. By tho Soldier's Test War taught millions of men that tho supreme quality in character is courage, Among the soldiers no other virtue counted at all, if this were lacking. Wo are applying the same test now in political life. The world will follow no timorous, half hearted, "safety-first" leaders. Only one gifted with a splendid spirit of self-abandonment can command the hearts of men to-day. The single word, "coward," would brand into oblivion tiny man who sought to lead his fellows; No hero of romance ever rode more valiantly into the face of em battled wrong than tho Strong Son of God. As a study In heroism, there 's no other character'so fruitful as Jesus. Nature's storms, molr perils, ecclesiastical jealousy, officialdom's deadly enmity, nil left him serene and unafraid. By battle-test, Jesus rings true. Sings the poet already quoted: "We serve no weak and timid Christ, We would not heed a futile Lord: The Man we follow unto death Was not afraid of rod or sword. "He asked no ptllow for His head, He sought no luxury of ease; The tides that swept His daring soul Were dauntless us the 1 mighty seas. "A soldier of ihe truth was He: His anger flames at vested wrong: He challenged kings to fateful war, And sounded clear his battle song." Politicians Wlio Profiteer That shrewdest of books, the New Testament, makes it oleftr that tho especial temptation of office-hold ing is covetousness, How uner ringly the public has laid its finger upoh this weak spot In the conduct of the new Russian lenders. We have an American word, "Graft er," for the who prof iteers. Lloyd George never stood higher in Great Britain's estimation than when he refused to take any decoration or gift for himself, as a reward for his war work. Great leaders can never become such if animated by love of money. Recently, I met an oriental official whose name has figured frequently /n the cablegrams: and whose future place is problematical. I quickly learned that he is manacled with chains of gold. He is not his own master-. He cannot do what he wants to do for his people, for he fears the loss of his money. I can see his early end, sinee no man can at once be a slave to avarice and a master of men. Of Jesus, who chose poverty as his life portion, it is written that he "emptied himself." He poured out reputation as well as worldly oppor 'unlty. in order to serve and save •be world. This Idealist, without a •Mace to lay his head, is to-day wor shipped by earth and heaven: hav 'ng come to flrjft place by setf-re i nunclation. More human beingß fol low him than ever followed all of earth's leaders; self-emptying love has allured them. The Torch-Spirits of History Two other qualities an ideal leader must have —the spirit which en kindles other spirits; and the loyal ty which inspires loyalty. "Magnet ism" is tho word oftenest applied to great personal leaders, such as Na poleon. Their souls are as flames from which lesser souls take fire. Theodore Roosevelt was of this sort. So was Robert E. Lee. Garabaldi was another. Along with this quality goes loy alty. "Men would die for him," we say of such a person. Unless a man himself possesses the loyalty which I calls forth kindred devotion from j his followers, he cannot go very far in leadership. Herein Jesus excels. His life has been a torch which has set ablaze! millions of other flaming lives. For I his sake, myriads have literally gone to death —cruel, foreseen, avoidable death—and with a song on their lips. No other personality has been so attractive and compelling as his. At the present moment, an uncount ed host confess him the dearest de light and highest inspiration and sweetest satisfaction of their spirits. His name is the slogan for noblest warfare. Behind his banner joyfully march the servants of mankind, the i heralds of a new era. What is the conclusion of the whole matter? Simply that the one ' qualified Leader of our wavering, wandering, puzzled time is Jesus, our Redeemer. He has the word; He knows the way; He is the Man for whom the world waits. Living still, more keenly interested in the present crisis than anybody else, and eager to show a plain path through our perplexities to real peace, Jesus is the Man of the Hour. Unless it follows Him now, human ity will go astray again. No "Raids" Going to Be Made on the Hill Reports that a lot of raids are going to be made upon officeholders in the State government in the next six weeks are not correct, it is stated by Governor William C. Sproul. After every primary there are stories circulated at the Capitol that there will be a general decapitation, but they are wide of the mark. There will be no wholesale changes made and precious few at all. "I don't know of any raids going to be made. And you can rest as sured that as far as I am concerned the State's business is not going to be upset by putting in inexperienced people to handle important work," remarked the Governor when asked about the matter. Only the usual number of changes, which come every year, will take place in various departments. The new Bureau of Rehabilitation will be organized before long and some personnel of departments will be brought within appropriations. The Public Service Commission may bo a place where the latter may occur. ON LAND AND SEA "What is a revenue cutter, pa?" "A revenue cutter is a coupon clipper, my son."—Houston Press. Simple Rome Remedy Advised For Rose And Hay Fever Anyono Can Make a Pint For Trifling Sum and Ued In Time May Prevent Annual Attack "No matter how severe your yearly attack be, No matter how distressing or hu miliating— Its Intensity can be reduced to a barm - less, mildness," says a Kentucky druggist who bellevet from what he has seen that this slmpl* home made remedy Is a most Im portant discovery. He has seen the most severe an 4 apparently unconquerable cases re duced to what might be called a mild cold In twenty-four hours. In many cases where the patient started treatment a week or ten days before the expected attack the unwel come yearly visitor failed to appear with anything like Its usual Intensity. People who want to try this new treatment can make a pint In a few minutes. Pour one ounce of Menthollsed Ar cine Into a pint bottle then fill the bottle with water that has been boiled. Gargle dally as directed and snuff or Spray the nostrils twice dally. That's all there Is to the treatment which so many sufferers have found t* be a true friend. Menthollzed Arclne In one ounce vials la dispensed by all the better pharmacies. FASCINATING TEETH How Every Woman Can Quick* ly Charm Her Friends With Lovely Teeth, Clean, White and Brilliant If you want the cleanest of white teeth and healthy gums free from dlw ease, an easy and quick vray to get both Is to use a tooth paste so effective and perfect that astonishing results usually come In a week's time. And the cost Is so little. Just go te any drug or department store, and get s large tube of SEN&ECO TOOTH PASTE for 85 cents. Not only will It make your teeth clean and white, but It will at once removo any filmy coating, help to check the ravages of Pyorrhea and banish acidity in the mouth. It is used by thousands of dentist* an,, its sale has been remnrkabla When you visit your dentist, which you should do at least twice a year, ask him about SENRECO. It'a e most delightful and refreshing tooth paste* Headaches and Headnoises Quickly Relieved By Man-Heil Automatic Inhaler Auk Demonstrator Gorgas* Drug Store 19 North Third Street, i / - .... To the Person Who Buys Bread For the Family This is a straight-from-the- shoulder talk about It is one thing to say you make good bread and quite another thing to make it. All the fine words and happy phrases in the world will not make good bread. In these days of high cost of living every family is en titled to the best bread possible to get. You must have bread, but that is no reason why you should eat any kind of bread. When we say that we use the very best flour milled in Bricker's O. K. Bread, we mean ex actly that. Nothing would give us greater pleasure than to have the public come to our bakery and ask to see what kind of flour we use and the other materials we use in Bricker's O. K. Bread. There is no secret about the making of this bread. It is a simple process just like the bread you would make at home, excepting it is made uniform each time. The bread you would make at home would not be uniform each time. You would use, perhaps, a little more of this and a little less of that and it would be good bread, but it would be much better if it were made the same /■ each time. There is a great difference of opinion among bakers as to what kind of flour makes bread the easiest. Sometimes an inferior flour will make a loaf of bread, but it will not make the best of bread. Bricker's O. K. Bread is made in the good old-fashioned way —all wheat flour. There is no question in our mind as to what is the best flour. We know what is the best flour and we use it. It costs us more, but it does not cost you any more. You pay as much for an inferior loaf of bread as you do for Bricker's O. K. Bread. If you pay less for other kinds ypu get less. In these days you cannot get more of the same quality for less money and above all things it is folly to sacrifice your health and * nourishment for price. Bricker's O. K. Bread is a good size family loaf. It is as large as possibly can be made with the kind of flour we use at the popular price of bread per loaf. Its flavor pleases, its quality satisfies. i f. You get more bread satisfaction and nutri tion from Bricker's O. K. Bread tha:\ from any other kind. Bricker's West Shore Bakery ■' \ ' ] • A. SEPTEMBER 26, 1919. 17
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers