12 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH I&iJfirWSPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published eveningc except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Tekcrafk Building, Federal Square E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief -OYSTER, Business Manager GUS. M. STEIXMETZ, Managing Editor LA. R. JUCHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board *" > BOYD M. OGLESBT. P. R. OYSTER, GUS. 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 fiaper and also the local news pub ished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. t Member American Newspaper Pub ay Associa- Eastern office Avenue Building. Western office'. i Chfca B go, Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1919 Only so far as a man believes strongly eon he art cheerfully, or do anything that is worth doing. —ROß- T.TSON. PROGRESSIVE ALTOONA ALTOONA is fairly on its toes and, with Harrisburg as an example, it is going ahead with a great community hotel move- j ment. Indeed, so much progress has been -made that the hotel is as- j sured, an architect and manager j having already been agreed upon. I Also, a central site has been pur chased not far from the main rail road station and in the heart of the business center. The total invest ment for site and building wili ap- i proximate three-quarters of a mil- | lion dollars and in the campaign, which has been responded to with spirit by the community, the same general appeal was made as that which resulted in the construction of the Penn-Harris here. Plans will be rushed and it is ex pected that the new place of enter tainment in Altoona will be ready within a few months. The city at the foot of the Allegheny* is also having a thorough planning survey , made by experts with a view to cor recting some of the mistakes of the earlier days. Like Harrisburg. tin city at the other end of the Middle Division of the Pennsylvania Rail road Is throwing all kinds of "pep" j into its public activity and the fu- ' ture is full of promise by reason of . the aroused interest of the people in ' their own community welfare. President Wilson is about to learn that the present Congress is not like the old. It has a mind of its own and it does not see much virtue in rum. The country is "dry." There is no rea son why we should go back to an orgy of drink, even if the President does approve, and the Senate may be expected to follow the course of the House in passing the enforcement bill over the executive's veto. A GOOD MOVE CHIEF STONE, of the Brother hood of Locomotive Engineers, has made a move toward low ering the high cost of living that, if properly handled, may got some where. His plan is to get together a party of consumers and producers and outline plans for getting foodstuffs from one to the other without man\ of the unnecessary transactions be tween them that now add so much to the cost of provisions. Some middle men are necessary. There can be no doubt about that. But others are in the market purely on a profit-making basis. They serve no good purpose and could be elim inated with benefit to both producer and consume:. Lot us hope that Mr. Stone is suc cessful in his effort, in order that his example may be followed by others. At Lewistown the county jail holds no prisoners and there has been no body in the lock-up for five months. Lewietown is dry. TIME TO MOVE IF HARRISBURG is to get into step with the capital cities of other States and to keep pace with Brie, Meadville, Greensburg. West Chester and other county towns of its own Commonwealth in the mat ter of facilities for its military or ganisations, it has to move right now. Much has been stud and written In this city the last ten years about the armory that the State is going to build for Harris burg aome time. The State is not building armories as presents. It is building them where municipalities or communities provide the ground and some cash to help pay for the cost of construction. Places smaller than Harrisburg have given fine lots and the lake city not only presented the State with half a TUESDAY EVENING, block, but donated )75,000 beside j for n building. j Hnrrlsburg is an important mtlt tnry center both from official and transportation standpoints. Ita ar mory facilities were woefully In adequate before the war. If this | city is to have any place in the new National Guard worthy of its pa triotism. its sons and its standing as a capital something has to be done, and the time to start to buy that property for the new armory is : right now. Other cities are already I moving. A LIMIT TO LAW HE Railroad Brotherhoods , I threaten to strike as a protest i against "nonstrike" legisla tion in the railroad bill now .M'ore i Congress. i They are perfectly right and rea ' sonable in opposing an attempt to stop strikes by law. it was nonsensical to include such a provision in the railroad : measure. Nobody can prevent a man front leaving his job if he be ; so inclined, and what one man can | do a thousand or a million can do. J If a million railroad men chose on ' a certain day to take "vacations," who could prevent? Their em ployers might dismiss them and the i law although that is very doubt ! ful —might indict them, but it ! could not compel them to return to j work. The way to prevent strikes is not I by legal prohibition, and to try to I do it that way would be merely to i make a laughing stock of law j makers and law-making. The Brotherhood leaders have the right end of the argument and Congress will do well to heed. A clause to forbid men to inter fere with others in their desire to ! work would be all right, but a non , strike provision is hopeless. I Is this Indian summer or Just H of the regular variety? THE NEXT STEP INASMUCH as City Council is in lull sympathy with the important Italian Park plans and the devel opment scheme which comprehends important street changes and deci sion of water so as to provide for a small park, we may expect prompt action to the end that all of these matters shall he determined before the coming of winter. The city is now ready for its next step forward and the election next week will he a signal for greater activity in all directions. Harrisburg officials have never failed to respond in a public-spirited way when the eonun inity has indi cated definitely its wishes. Then can be no doubt that the plans for the development of the Italian Park district will be worked out without unnecessary delay in any particular. Pressrt sugar prices do not tend in sweeten the disposition. IXDLSTRIAL CONDITIONS AS indicated in an authoratative business publication to-day the real object of the Wash ington industrial conference was to arrange for business* to proceed un disturbed hereafter by unrest and dissatisfaction on either side. Many theories have been advanced for the solution of the industrial controversy which has been so widespread, but the determination tof the disputes seems to hinge upon a change of view as much as upon wages or working conditions. What the worker may do with his money, as has been suggested by a recent writer, is the affair of the worker, but it is believed that a remedy for j the situation must lie found either l]| certatptv draw a h'g crowd. L'otitenan' Oovernn- Reidleman w"l h" one of tbc rpeekers. He ncds '•o introduction to the voters of this citv. for he has been a stnnn-h friend of the workers Auditor G"n jeral Charle- Snyder will be another ! sneaker. He has frequently visited i the city, has always been an enter j tainer. sneaker and famous as a good | story teller. Deputy Attorney Gen- I eral Collins will also be here. He ■ is a fluent orator and a man that lent i his voice and time in assisting to jkeep America alive nnd patriotic dur ing the World War." Buausscno U!Q9fti telegraph WONDER WHAT Al9 MONTHS' OLD BABY THINKS ABOUT? .... .... By BRICGS V m 1 " T ' ■ T i r ■ --TTlr-i t .. \ JUST Love TO I DOM'T S'Poae They A LOT IP I pAPJCG draw PICTORP6- The marks \ MAKE "to ME. MY Father I'm <®oin6 To BE Am GIVE ME A PENCIL ON PAPER MEAM S* YS HE'S AFRMD CTR "i"'V.^r^ .. n Paper Aiol> I A TVHIM& To YoO (OOIM.CJ To BE AM PtAMO KeYS TwCY vTtJS £n^TCAReWMT VT _ ARI-.AT- OOT MOTHER KNOW I'VE A MUSICAL. m OS OPTIN\ISTtC CAREER BCFoRE me . So IT DOSSM'T make Guess You 3>OM"T I vWowl l Got SO MUCH XIFFEREMC E. - AW,ALL T„ E W Al£-. , WUCPSP MM* u"*7r,n SAO TViinWS 1M A < ts AQA.NST .TUB Diwt 00 NOTHIM' A i' KE ,^ T ORN MORAL K£2*A"S,ALm I BUT **'""= ON THt FOR A PICTURE ITS PAIN Yep. —IP MO TAKE, a chance - j OLO WALL MV DA ' D OIUE IS U>OKINCA - " -2^T( Iron Ore From Bacteria rFrom the Youth's Companion] The most imaginative among us would hardly suspect that bugs are responsible, at least in part, for the common tlaiiron and other useful articles made from the same nietal. Yet European physicists have known for some time, says Chase P. Os horn. former governor of Michigan, in his autobiography, that there are "iron ore bacteria," and the fact is now commonly accepted in America. Iron bacteria live in either stand ing or running clear waters that con tain iron compounds: not in turbid waters and those containing much organic matter. So active are they in establishing deposits of ferric hydroxide that water pipes of cities where the water contains ferrous carbonate have been known to he completely closed by them. Sheaths of dead iron bacteria have been found in multitudes in linton ite deposits, and enormous deposits of several kinds of iron ore are known to result from their work. Yet we know little übout them. They may even be at the very threshold of life. It is interesting, however, to note i that the greatest deposits of iron' ! ore in the world that are being . mined are in arctic and subarctic ' : regions, or in zones where nearly i half the year is winter, as in the ; lake Superior country. The greater commercial activity in the colder j regions may partly account for „this, > , for there are extensive iron ore \ formations in the tropics and sub tropics. But the fact remains that ! iron bacteria live in pure water and that in the colder regions water is i most likely to be pure. Although iron bacteria ate nianu- j facturing new deposits all the time.' this is not of great importance nsj far as the supply of iron is concern- , od. Bodies of ore are being formed i 'more rapidly than we used to think. Hut Nature probably cannot create : iron as fast as we are using it. "Moira's Keeping" lb N'OITOV- Jcphson O'Couor I From "A Treasury of War Poetry."! Houghton-Mittlin Company, Boston] i