10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published eveningu except Sunday by rilß TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. pltgT>h Building, Federal Sqssre E. J. STACK POLE President and Editor-in-Chief RTr. OYSTER, Business Manager BUS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor A. R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board gj|P.~ McCULLOUGH, M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMETZ. 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. rights of republication of special herein are also reserved. Member American Newspaper Pub lishers' Assoc^a- Bur'eau of Circu lation and Penn sylvania Associa ated Dailies. Eastern office. Story, Brooks & Avenue Building, New York City; Western office, Story. Brooks & F-inley, People's Gas Building, t Chicago, 111. Kbatered at the Post Office in Harrls burg. Pa., as second class matter. By carrier, ten cents a CBnfsraß) week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 101# 9*. Hut little birds sang cast, and the tittle birds sang west, End I toiled to think God's great ness .lotoed around our incom plentemss. Bound our restlessness, his rest, lfrs. Browning. FORWARD! FORWARD, Harrisburg! Again we are on the verge of another big progressive move ment In municipal affairs. We are about to take up our pub lic improvements where we laid them iown to fight the war to a finish. Four Important loans come before Rie people to-morrow. The most important items on the ballot. 80 far as the future of Har lisburg is concerned, lie in the four loan items at the bottom of the feheet. Forward, Harrisburg! Over the top to-morrow for all the loans! It has developed since Arbor Day that hundreds of fine trees were planted throughout the eity and it is not tmprobablo that the Spring Arbor Bay will see still more general re sponse to the movement. Meanwhile let us hope that the City Council Will provide for a Shade Tree Com mission. which will give definite di rection to the planting and care of the trees of the city. YOUR DUTY NOW, if ever in the history of the Nation, men should exer cise their right of franchise. This country, its institutions, its laws, its advantages, its progress, | are Just what a majority of those Who go to the polls make them. If you do not vote you have no fight to criticise. Make no mistake about it, the Government of the United States is precisely what we, the people, will it to be, and if we neglect our voting privilege, we not only fail in a duty to procure which for us our fore fathers fonght and died, but we are guilty of countenancing by our in difference every shortcoming, every pvH we note in the conduct of pub- He affairs and their relation to pri vate life and the well-being of pociety. And at this moment, with a vacil lating and unpopular administration control at Washington and the fcorces of anarchy knocking at the feery doors of the capital Itself, it behooves every Republican to go to Bie polls to-morrow and register his K1 in terms that will stiffen tlie dership of his party to even sturdier resistance to policies of the Bieorists, and worse, which have driven the country almost to the brihk of ruin. The great rank and file of the Republican party wants B. change in national affairs —real- izes that a change must come if the Nation Is to grow and prosper—and 10-morrow is the time to write those desires into majorities that will spell Mctory in 1920. In Harrisburg and Dauphin county Bie opportunity to register a telling blow is at hand. The tickets are ptrong, the party is harmonious and both districts are normally Repub lican. But the chance will be lost un less every Republican does his duty. Vote to-morrow if you want the Hid party, with its policies of pros perity and patriotism, returned to pawoe In national affairs In 19 20. • GOING TO IT r* IS very evident that the school authorities of Pennsylvania have taken the advice of Governor IWllliain C. Sproul and his new head Of the Department of Public In struction and have been preparing to build schools Instead of waiting for prices to readjust themselves, seek a new level or go down. Some time ago the Governor said that he wanted the school districts of the State to provide quarters for the children so that education would go on. Re cently Dr. Finegan declared that. MONDAY EVENING, compared to the withholding of edu cational advantages from youngsters, the halting of building until prices fell was bud business. Figures compiled by the bureau of municipalities of the State De partment of Internal Affuirs, which is studying just such propositions, show that in some of the cities of the third class alone the loans to be voted upon to-morrow for school improvements run Into the millions, while loans to be submitted to voters in boroughs and smaller districts pile up millions more. This is one of the best signs of the times. Neither the aftermath of a terrible war, labor unrest nor ultra conservative school directors have been able to hold back Pennsylvania districts from providing education. It's the good old principle that lias come down from provincial days that every youngster is entitled to a share of knowledge that is being applied. Many Harrisburg employers have been cited by the War Department for conspicuous patriotism in pro viding employment for returning sol diers, sailors and marines. What we need now to cap the climax with respect to our local war activities is to quickly provide through cash and pledges for the splendid Harris burg memorial, which will be erected at the eastern approach of the State street viaduct by the grateful citi zens of Harrisburg. THE PUBLIC AWAKENING PUBLIC opinion is finding expres sion in many directions as steps are taken to overcome the Bol shevik tendencies which have been developed in the reactionary period since the war. Bulldozing methods of employers or employes, in big corporations or little, have about reached the limit, so far as the public is concerned, and the attitude of the people who are most injured in these struggles between capita! and labor is rapidly changing to one of resent ment. Unfortunately for labor, the radicals of the United States have taken advantage of the unsettled conditions to inject their impossible theories of government into the here tofore sane policies of the great working class. But it is the hope of all reasonable people that conserva tive labor leaders will crush out the menace which has grown up through the intrusion of the disturbing ele ments from overseas who have ut terly failed to appreciate the liberty and opportunity vouchsafed to them by this country. "The public has waked from its lethargy and is at the moment a dominant, irresistible power, before which politics cringes submissively," says an analyst of the present-day conditions. He continues: It is not an easy thing to arouse thef American public. Two or three months ago there wus a fa vorable feeling toward labor—an impression that it was not getting its proportionate share of profits in the great era of money-making which is going on, and various plans of profit-sharing were being considered. Then came the Boston police strike. This rudely jarred the whole country. It awoke with a start. It began to be apparent that back of the labor movement was the red hand of anarchy and revolution. The developments of the steel strike and General Woods' unearthing of the Red plot back of it has thoroughly aroused the whole country. Ihe public is alert to the danger and the authorities are ready to cope with it. But while there are still uncom fortable developments here and there, there are likewise indications of more sanity and an active Ameri canism where for some time there has been an atmosphere of radical ism foreign to our institutions and our common heritage. The I. W. W., the Reds and all the rest of the undesirable elements in the United States are going to find out presently that millions of American workingmen and women will not permit the overturning of an ideal form of government handed down to us by heroic ancestors and perpetuated through the blood and sacrifice of thousands of their sons. There can be no doubt of the ulti mate outcome. Industrial peace will be achieved through a recogni tion of the inherent weakness of the theories which have been widely promulgated by thoughtless and reckless men having no real interest in this country or in the preserva tion of its splendid institutions. The people are talking now and they will make themselves heard through all the tumult of a restless element of the country's population largely composed of foreign-born radicals without sympathy for Ameri can ideals or interest in our insti tutions. FAIR PRICE CONFERENCE SOME people who do not under stand the fundamental idea of the conference of mayors, bur gesses and district attorneys called to meet here next Thursday are giv ing vent to grotesque remarks. This conference is not to make any one the goat and neither is it | to exploit the Attorney General of ' the United States any more than tho Mayor of Duquesne or Carbondale. Governor Sproql did not originate It. *lde simply called it after a con ference of attorneys general and deputies from all over the United States, In session at Washington, had come to the conclusion that a Minne sota official who suggested the plan had a good idea. The State Depart ment of Agriculture Is not framing the program and the Food Adminis tration has nothing to do with It. This conference is going to be held to devise some means whereby Fed eral and State governments can get what are considered fair prices be fore the people so that authority may act where it can under existing statutes and that Intangible, but ex tremely potent force known as public, sentiment can biff somebody when | it is necessary. There will be sub-. mltted plans evolved from the con ference In Massachusetts and various' other meetings, and the Pennaylva nla rulers of cities and enforcers of the law in counties can either tear them apart or make up their own. It's going to be a conference to get officials into step in proceeding after food croaks, and every man who has to fill a market basket will wish it good luck. All who travel the William Penn Highway will rejoice over the an nouncement that the State and the smaller municipal units will Join in the construction of a subway in order to overcome the dangerous railroad crossing at Dauphin. It is through the co-operation of the Commonwealth's various active departments that much of a constructive nature is being ac complished. politico IK By the Ex-Committecman Bond issues to the amount of $8,075,000 will be voted upon in ten of the thirty-four third-class cities of Pennsylvania to-morrow, accord ing to data assembled by the bureau of municipalities of the State De partment of Internal Affairs and there will be numerous other bond elections in the boroughs and school districts, with Bradford and other counties voting on road loans. The cities where loan elections are being held include several of the largest of the class. In Johnstown a $2,000,000 school loan is to be act ed upon and in Bethlehem the loan proposition amounts to $1,700,000 for the purchase of the water com pany supplying that new city. Head ing also has a water loan, $1,000,000 being up for approval for extension of the water system and also for sewers, motor tire apparatus, high way and bridge improvements. New Castle has a bond issue for $1,000,- 000 for new schools. Cities having less than a million | dollars to submit include Easton, with $700,000 for sewers and sewage disposal; Huzelton. $500,000 for general, improvements; Harrisburg, $490,000, which includes a proposi tion to transfer $300,000 already voted so that it can be used for the city's share of the Soldiers' and Sail ors' Memorial Bridge, this being the first election of the kind ever to be held in the State; Pottsville, $470,000 for street, sewer and other improvements; Willlamsport, $200,- 000 for schools, and Titusville $15,- 000 for school improvements. —The strike situation toAlay inter fered with the usual observance of election time at the State Capitol and most of the departments were open and in touch with the situa tion. Ordinarily, owing to the fact that many of the men connected with the State government live in other counties, the day before elec tion finds few people here. This year, owing to the strike, men in various departments remained at desks and left late in the day for their homes to vote. For the same reason various offices will be open to-morrow, although the day is gen erally a holiday. —Now that the local campaign of 1919 is about ended in the sixty seven counties, forty cities, a thou sand boroughs and 1,700 odd town ships in Pennsylvania it is said by Republican leaders that things are in good shape generally as in spite of the primary battles the Republi cans seem to have gotten together, while the contests at Democratic primaries only appear to have ac centuated the 111 feeling between the men who acknowledge the bosship of A. Mitchell Palmer and those who follow the fast fleeting colors of Judge Eugene C. Bonniwell. The Palmer machine is being speeded up since the Attorney General got to be the sole owner and there will be more action in getting national delegate and State Committee can didates set up after this election is over than there is among street sweepers after Hallowe'en. —Various Philadelphia newspa pers which have been devoting much attention to their own cam paign yesterday devoted consider able space to the counties and the signs indicute that the Republicans enter upon a good clear track for 1920. The 1920 election will be most important as, in addition to the re-election of Senator Boies Penrose, Pennsylvania has to elect a Supreme Court justice, a Superior Court judge, auditor general, State treas urer and thirty-six congressmen, twenty-five senators and 207 repre sentatives. —Congressman J. Hampton Moore predicts his election by over 100,000, which Joseph MaeEaughlin, the Charter party man, says will not happen. Henry D. Wescott, the Democratic nominee, says he will poll 75,000 votes and build tip a, strong minority. The Philadelphia voter will have six tickets to choose from. The Inquirer predicts "a clean sweep" by the Republicans and the Public Ledger, in an article by T. F. Healey, says that Moore is only concerned about council as he has a cinch himself. He says he will judge the leaders by what they produce. The beer drivers' organiza tion has came out for Wescott. —The Philadelphia Press in a re view of the Quaker City situation brings out this thought: "There is ample reason for the independent voter to be watchful and to do his share. This is because there are all sorts of rumors afloat about at tempts to "knife" the ticket, and secondly, as,a matter of policy on the part of the independent. This matter of policy is fundamental. We may start to consider it with the as sumption that Congressman Moore will be elected Mayor and the as- I sumption that the full Vare organl- I nation vote will turn up at the pools and support him for the office. If the hitherto observed apathy con tinues to hold sway on election day and the total vote cast is compara tively small, it will be the independ ent voter and not the organization man who will be found wanting. In other words, the Vare organization will have elected Congressman Moore and not the Independents." —The Kiess boom for Governor Sproul for President and the Potts ville people's demand for Auditor General Charles A. Snyder for State treasurer have given plenty to talk about. The Governor has several times said he is not bothered by bees. Mr. Snyder will be a candi date. As to the auditor general nomination Col. Joseph H. Thomp aon is doing missionary work in western counties, while friends of Samuel S. I.ewis, of York, are mounting guard along the Susque hanna. —Senator Boies Penrose was 59 on Saturday and got many remtnd r ers of It from friends. Mayor I Thomas B. Smith, of Philadelphia, was 50 yesterday. I —Chairman Joseph Wyatt, of Schuylkill, "says the Republican mu -1 joritles in his county will not be less than 5,000. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MOVIE OF A MAN TAKING A SHOWER BATH jTUDiei I I r*..~c~r .. OFF FAUCETS /■ Ti' lr. (| L HOT | . FAUCET 1 LV t" |_, ~ i't •j j, "f 71— nNK ir-azIPjgWTT. if •sks*. lljl' 1 "! SFf Tu ,r s . ATUjje I I R,6„T || 1,1 COLC | | BACK ' if "Vlj 1 I'P 'I * M'" 1^ If#ip® as, t is ,i 11 \AJITH j 1 HEMSIv/E Ji AMD (, T^r/\PERATURE ill y ***** I ' I -TAKSS t fc rEf^ERJTURE ! i " ll /sasptcioos i '|J )| k -HAKX36S il' ? I Li i k SHRMPO °' 1 ' ' Pennsylvania Leads [From Philadelphia Public Ledger.] While the fifteenth annual con vention of the American Civic As sociation is giving up a good deal of its time very properly to studying the Philadelphia district as a sort of Exhibit A in the matter of up-to date emergency housing, parks and parkways, zoning, urban and subur ban, it is to be feared, in the crush of the wide range of subjects cov ered otherwise relating to the coun try at large, that a tremendous ad vance step that has been made by the State of Pennsylvania will be overlooked. It Is all very well to discuss the everlasting virtues of Letchworth, England, a very much overrated garden city, and to harp incessantly on the contribution of Boston and vicinage to municipal progress; but, after all, the most significant thing that has yet been done by any commonwealth in the interest of municipal planning and the preservation of historic sites and localities of great natural beauty lies at the door of Pennsylvania. To begin with, the possibilities of the Pennsylvania act of April 4, 1919, which enlarges the functions of the Bureau of Municipalities, now under the jurisdiction of the Depart ment of Internal Affairs, are only just being realized by the state itself and are comparatively little known outside. And yet this bureau al ready has a most creditable record growing out of its activities when it was a part of the Department of Labor, since from the start its work has been marked by a sense of great practicality and utility without over looking the esthetic possibilities that inhere in any planning for munici palities or for any housing project. But now the new bureau, which is the only bureau of its kind in the country, has been given important functions, which are already making it the most valuable agent in the improvement of municipalities that the country has ever seen. Its activi ties and powers not only relate to what so many think is the dilettante side of the city-beautiful scheme, but involve all questions of the proper commercial and industrial and civic development of towns, and the bureau is also in a position to give advice about municipal meth ods; and already the group of train ed men, acting under the direct stimulus of Secretary Woodward, have made such an impression on Pennsylvania communities that they are being turned to eagerly as true guidps, advisers and friends. When it is remembered that but recently the question of making a pai'k out of a primeval forest given by a generous citizen of Itenovo, of turning an ash dump into a public park in Lewistown, are but a few of the details of what might be called the bureau's routine work, some idea of its great usefulness is given. And it also must be remem bered that when this new bureau gets down to its real possibilities that a signal era will dawn for Pennsyl vania. And, after all, this kind of actual accomplishment by an actual bureau of the State is worth tons of rhetorical hopes and promises that the people of other commonwealths have been fed upon in this matter of municipal Improvements, just as the law creating the Art Commis sion for the State is far ahead of legislation along similar lines hat has been attempted or suggested elsewhere. With the Health Depart ment co-operating from the sanitary and hygienic point of view and with the Department of Public Instruction also playing its part and the Art Commission acting with and after the Bureau of Municipalities has brought city planning into the open, it can easily lie seen that the next few years will make a great differ ence in those civic matters in Penn sylvania whose improvement twenty years ago seemed to belong to the i sphere of mere theory; an indiscreet | and unattainable dream. Education May Solve Problem ! [Fourth Estate] The present strained relations be-1 tween capital and labor, in which , the general public is certainly most vitally interested, may result in bringing about some action by Con gress on the Americanization bill, which provides, in effect, for the education of illiterate persons in this country, whether or not of foreign birth or extraction. It will be remembered that the matter came before the last Con gress In the form of the Smlth- Tlnnkhead bill, but, owing to the great pressure of business In the last few weeks, the bill did not come up for passage. The idea still lives, however, and is embodied in a bill before the present Congress. This Is not a partisan measure, of course, and there is no doubt that it will receive the earnest sup- I port of leading men of nil factions 1 who have the best Interest of the country at heart. "Gibson Girl" May Be First Woman in Parliament LADY ASTOR, whose candidacy : for a seat In Parliament is ] arousing the interest of British . politicians, is one of the Ave Lang- ] horne sisters of Virginia, noted for their beauty. Charles Dana Gibson, who married one of them, made this type famous in the "Gibson girl" a generation ago. As Nancy Witcher, daughter of Chiswell Dabney Langho'rne, of Miradoh, Greenwood, she married Robert Gould Shaw. Shortly after his death, she married Waldorf As tor, who later was elevated to the British peerage. Writing from London, Edwin Hul linger says; An American-born woman may take the tlrst woman's seat in the House of Commons. For Lady Astor has decided to accept candidacy for the Parliament, and her popularity bids fair to "see her through." Here is the telegram which set all political circles buzzing and prom ised to lend a heaping dash of piquancy to forthcoming politics. To Plymouth Unionist Asso ciation; F"ully conscious of great honor and grave responsibility, I accept your request that I be a candidate. NANCY ASTOR. She will run for the place in Com mons vacated by her husband. Major Waldorf Astor, who has just suc ceeded to the title and seat in the House of Lords left by his father i who died the other day. If she wins the election' — and she is expected to, because her many philanthropies [ have brought her much in public favor she will be the first woman ever to sit in Parliament. Adds Piquancy to Politics It is true that her candidacy is received with mixed emotions in political circles. But, whether they agree or not with the innovation, politicians are unanimous in the declaration that the action of Lady Astor promises "something" piquant in politics. It is understood her husband did not altogether agree with her desire to run for Parliament and made every effort to divest himself of the peerage and remain in Commons. When he found this was impossible he reluctantly consented to her can didacy, it is said. The real rub among many poli ticians is that Lady Astor is not "English born." They admit her popularity in Plymouth and regard her chances of election as excellent because of the large unionist ma jority there. But, despite the re- Fix the Responsibility [From the American Legion Weekly] Disclosures by The American Legion Weekly of cruel neglect of disabled soldiers by the Government are the basis of a resolution in Con gress for an investigation of the Board for Vocational Training. Rep resentative Rogers, of Massachu setts, has presented such a resolu tion and has asked that The Ameri can Legion Weekly's investigators testify at the hearing. This they will do, reiterating the disclosures made in the magazine, all of which were prediccted on fact and care fully considered evidence. While Chairman Prosser of that board has resigned and the ma chinery provided for an effective operation of Vocational Training for oisabled soldiers, sailors and marines, that is not enough. We v&nt Congress definitely to fix the responsibility for the blackest case of neglect in American history, and we want those responsible dealt with in such manner as the facts seem to justify. Duds [The American Legion Weekly] Farmers in France have been having considerable trouble in plowing the shell-torn lands. When a plow strikes an unexploded shell, all sorts of unpleasant things may happen. A French scientist. Dr. Gutton, has come to the rescue with a shell detector, which is set on the ground and rings a bell if there is a loaded projectile buried beneath. At least the papers fay It does. At Last! [The American Legion Weekly] You know that saying about the mills of the gods grinding slowly but surely? It comes to mind when we read that *5,000,000 of the gold which Prussia took front France in *,871 has Just reached New York as first payment of the sum which Cermany owes us for food recent ly shipped to hor. markable change in women's posi tion during the war, the idea of a woman in Parliament is a shock to the conservative elements, particu larly a woman of Lady Astor's widely known disregard for conventionali ties. Newspapers Take Sides The press has devoted itself to picturing possible scenes in Com mons with Lady Astor appearing in a leading role. The Times Lady Astor is un conventional and if she gets to Par liament we may expect some breezy incidents forthwith. With all her goodness of heart and charitable manner, she is extremely outspoken and would have little use for tra ditional euphemisms and parliamen tary procedure. The Express lt is a melancholy reflection, that Nancy Astor, an American by birth andr the first woman member of Parliament, should really be Mrs. Grundy. Lady Astor does her best to keep to the Grundy tradition. She is a pussy foot and very, very particular. She believes in two things, high thought and high society. Other papers, however, have adopted a kindlier attitude. "It may be safely stated that Lgdy Astor will get into Parliament," declared Lloyd's News. "Brains, beauty and personal charm make a strong combination. No candidate is likely to give her much trouble. • Silenced the Hecklers "There will be rejoicing in Ply mouth if the beautiful 'Gibson girl' becomes a member of Parliament. They have had a taste of her racy political quality and like it. She is no haughty dame, freezing her in terrupters with the chilly silence of aristocratic disapproval. 'Shut up, you villains,' she cried to a party of noisy youths during one of her speeches in interest of her husband's candidacy recently, and they were silenced. A Virginian of old lineage, as these things go in America, she will bring the grace and vivacity of her home state into the dullness of British politics. She has the art of gaining the confidence of the work ing class of women because she ap proaches them on the plane of human sympathy." Still other newspapers intimate that Lady Astor likely will be a source of constant embarrassment to her party because of her independ ence and advanced views. Lady Astor's opponent will be W. T. Day. In the last election to Parliament Lady Astor's husband carried Plymouth district by a ma jority of nearly twelve thousand. The Supreme Duty [From Editor and Publisher.] Whatever their political faiths ox affiliations, the newspapers of Amer ica hold in common one conviction. They believe that every ill, political, economic or social, can be cured under the law and order treatment. They believe that a democratic form of government, perhaps best exemplified in our own, offers the surest safeguard ever devised by men for the protection of peoples. I They recognize no problem so grave that it may not bo solved through the orderly processes established by our political system. In a democracy the people rule— through instrumentalities created ex pressly to put into force and effect the will and conviction of the ma jority. But impatient minorities, suffering under temporary injustices or in equalities, are often eager to substi tute for the democratic processes those alien policies of class domina | tion which bring to wreck nations t which submit to them. Here in America we have felt so secure in the strength and stability of our institutions that we have been inclined to look lightly upon out bursts of so-called radicalism. We have felt that these afforded the necessary vents for the discharge of pent-up anger and resentment smouldering in the hearts and minds ! of men. But when we see class antagonisms growing—when we see great indus trial leaders clinging to outlived, autocratic ideas and great groups of workers resorting to force to compel a redress of their grievances—it is time for the newspapers of the coun try to sound a clear note of Ameri canism. Thoughtful of It [From the Boston Herald] The Federal administration will return the railroads with increased equipment—of problems. NOVEMBER 3, 1919. Labor's Responsibility [From the Railroad Employe, New ark, N J.] As unauthorized after unauthor ized strikes follow each other in ever-increasing succession, bringing the paralysis of destructive radical ism nearer and nearer to the heart of the business prosperity of the Na tion, it is high time that the reput able and responsible element within the ranks of organizations of labor denounce the prevailing spirit of brigandage in no uncertain terms. In the light of recent events it is a case of labor run riot. Agreements are made only to be broken; no guarantee is good over night; no promise wbrth the breath used to make it; no compact of the value of a grain of sand. Employers are un able to figure their labor costs from day to day or know what the raor ror may bring forth. Confusion and disorganization reign in the marts of trade and centers of com merce where peace and prosperity should obtain through a fixed and understandable relationship be tween the man who works and the man who pays. Nearly two decades ago before the Bolshevism of the present had been defined and I. "W. W.ism was in its infancy this publication suggested as a means of stabilizing the relation ship between organizations of labor and the employers a form of con-1 tract containing a stipulation for collectable damages in the event of forfeiture. The wisdom of this sug gestion must be plainly apparent at this time when disregard of contract or obligation on the part of the membership of an increasing num ber of the organizations is becom ing the rule rather than the excep tion, and the constituted authorities of the unions are apparently power less to enforce the provisions of agreements entered into in good faith and with the full approval of the membership. In the situation that at present confronts us it is not to be expected that moral suasion or cold logic will present a solution. Reason and ar gument are of little avail. The les son will have to be driven in and the public which in the final analysis endures most and suffers most will have to do the driving. It should be brought about through national legislative enact ment that no organization of what ever scope or description should be accorded recognition that cannot or will not, through its membership collectively and individually, enter into a wage agreement which, if un duly or illegally broken, would in volve financial as well as moral re sponsibility, whereby the individual membgrs would be held equally liable with the employer, and prop erty or funds in their possession sub ject to seizure under due process of law. We say it, and say it positively, that the labor organizations of the future must so regulate their affairs as to he enabled to enter into a bind ing legal agreement with their em ployers with mutual stipulation for collectable damages. Both must stand on an equul footing. The workingman and his associates should become contracting parties, business men in short, with whom may bo had proper and responsible business dealings. WELL KNOWN PEOPLE —General W. C. Black, chief of engineers, who retired on Saturday, is a former resident of Lancaster county. —Col. C. A. Hatch, late of the Marino Corps, has bought an inter est in an automobile concern at [ Philadelphia. I —W. A. McCutcheon, prominent Pittsburgh man, has been named as delegate to the mining congress by the President. —John G. Milburn, noted lawyer, presided at the Hill school corner stone laying at Pottstown. —Dr. C. R. Erdmnn began his twenty-sixth year as speaker at Philadelphia Y. M. C. A. exercises. —Chaplain P. P. Houghton, of the Pennsylvania Engineers, is de livering a scries of addresses in the State's cities. —President S. C. Black, of Wash ington and Jefferson College, preached yesterday in Philadelphia. —Mayor W. P. T-ler, late Nation al Guard officer, will remain in the army after overseas service. j DO YOU KNOW —Thnt Hands Kerry was a shipping point for supplies for Fort RtttT \ lEwttfttg (Eljat Ninety years ago, within a few months, the father of Eugene Snyder, the lawyer, sold the lot whereon the Harris House stands at Third and Strawberry streets, for SSOO. The price generally believed to have been paid for the corner when the Commonwealth Trust Company bought the famous hos telry site from George Rovai recent ly was $60,000. This Is an interest j ing sidelight upon the way property values have developed in the heart of Harrisburg and possibly an indi cation of what is to come in the way of business movements before many years. The Harris House will pass from the list of Harrisburg hotels in a few days and go to join the ghosts of the Bell, the Swan, the Washing ton, the Globe, the Bull's Head, the *- Jones, the Commonwealth and others whose tables, rooms and bars have figured considerably in the life of the State capital in the years 1 gone by. "The Harris for oysters and eating" has been the word among those who knew good things and who liked to go about the tav erns for a long, long time and the big bar, the steam table and the low eeilinged room,- which was Harris burg's nearest approach to a chop house, have been frequented by rapidly moving generations of poli ticians, bankers and business men, journalists and newspapermen, printers and plasterers, officials and railroaders, in fact, men of every walk in Harrisburg. It was nothing unusual in the last twenty or thirty years to sit at a table and eat a < steak and onions and have next to you somo man whose word was law in affairs in Harrisburg, leaders of the bar, prominent merchants who were enjoying a "fry," while next would be men either right "ofT the engine" or workers in one of the iron mills. The Harris House has had its ups and downs and in the memories of the bon vivants it will occupy quite a place. A good many men in Harrisburg for legislative sessions, conventions or on business at the Capitol used to drop in for beer and oysters and when the "low ceiling" was filled they would drag a stool to the bar and eat "salts" as . fast as opened. The Harris House had few rows, very few in fact, and it always closed at a fixed time no matter who was lined up in front of its mahogany or sitting at the tables. * * Long before the corner occupied by the Harris House became a hotel it was a sort of legal headquarters. Mr. Snyder, father of our fellow townsman, who is the Nestor of the Dauphin county bar and one of the oldest and most active attorneys ia the central part of the State, sold the property to a man named Henry who was connected with the Ingram family. By one of those coinci dences that occur in a place like Harrisburg which has families whose members follow the same professions, Eugene Snyder has rep resented subsequent owners of the property in their legal affairs. The late Congressman John C. Kunkel had his law offices in a building at this corner and it is said that the late Jqdge John W. Simonton once had an office there. It was in the Civil War that the property became a hotel. John Gross, who later gave his name to the Gross House which stood on the site of part of the Co lumbus, was the first boniface and Mr. Snyder got him his license at the license court in April, 1863. Gross had Just come out of the army and was one of the best known of hotel men in Harrisburg. He ran the place for quite a while and was fol lowed by the late James Russ, of Senate fame. It is generally be lieved that it was the success which he had at this site that gave "Jim" Russ his start. He went from there to Brant's hall and then to the Grand, the Commonwealth and the Senate, known to people all over Pennsylvania. Then came "Johnny" Bracken, long a figure in Harris burg's hotel and restaurant life, who is said to have introduced the first steam table. It was when Bracken was landlord that it became really famous all over Pennsylvania for the quality of its oysters, which people from Philadelphia and York used to say were equal to those sold at Baltimore. After Bracken was a succession of landlords, including Edward Pclham, "Cooney" Kahler and others and then Rovai and Gon nella bought it. And there are a good many men well known in Har risburg who will remember the Italian cookery which they intro duced. "Pete" Gonnella died a few years ago and since then Rovai has conducted the place alone. He is planning to close the doors for the last time very soon and to return to Italy. It probably would not be polite to give the names of some of the men who "tended bar" In the Harris House in its history of over half a century any more than it would be good taste to say who used to be amont the "regulars" back at the corner tables when the December snows had come and the "salts" had their own delicious flavor. Some men who are pretty well known in politics and business have worked either at the tables or at the liquor or. oyster bars. The men who used to gather there after 8:SO and go home at 10:45 always had "Dutch treat" and there were more moves in politics and deals in business, matters in litigation and plain ordi nary arguments settled there than T can write. Suffice it to say that some of the "regulars" have gone and those who survive will some times think of the way those big oysters used to look and how fine it was to drop in around 12:10 right after the Court Hodse bell rung for noon and eat a steak that was cooked to just the way that you wanted. The Har is House had a register. Tears and >ears ago it used to ha\e men who stopped there regularly, but of late the register was more of " a relic than anything else. Some pretty prominent names used to ap pear on Its pages and while they were apparently recklessly ustd they make good reading now. For instance, it is said that on August 23, 1885, there were registered there M. S. Quay, C. E. Voorheos, David Martin and Charles A. Porter, of Philadelphia. That was the time of the famous "Hog Combine" fight and there were registered soon after Daniel Hastings and E. .Household er. In any event the register while not accurate, perhaps, reflects light on contemporary events. , • • Beer has gone and the Harris House is going, but for the benefit of the memories of members of many a congenial group It may be recalled that the "first of the bock" used to be had at the "low ceiling." HISTORIC HARRISBURG The first well in Harrisburg was sunk near the foot of Washington street