1 4 IHARRISBURG TELEGRAPH \A. A NEWBPAPER FOR THE HOME Founded 1831 Published evenings except Sunday by THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Telegraph RulldlnK, Federal Square E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief S*.*R. OYSTER, Business Manager GCS. M. STEINMETZ, Managing Editor (A. R. MICHENER, Circulation Manager Executive Board r JJP." McCULLOUGH, n BOYD M. OGLESBY, F. R. OYSTER, GUS. M. STEINMKTZ. I Jlsmbers 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. i , t Member American Newspaper Pub- Assocm- Bureau of Circu lation and Penn sylvania Associa ated Dallies. Building, Western office', Story, Brooks A I Chicago, 111! ' K ' Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. .jjgJSHESfr. By carrier, ten cents a 4> week; by mail, $3.00 a year in advance. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2s, 1919 The man of pleasure docs not know Hrhat pleasure maws. —Savage. SAME OLD STORY BEWARE of a petty woman with a smile and a scheme to raise money. It ought not to be necessary to warn businessmen against the wiles of this type, but recent occurrences In Harrisburg would indicate that ■while such women continue to be very efficient as collectors they are by no means reliable when it copies | to turning over the cash. They are I not in business for sweet charity's sake, but for their own, and their victims go down in their note book as "easy marks." The Chamber of Commerce should be consulted every time a collector for charity solicits a subscription. If he or she has not received the endorsement of that organization it would be well to postpone contribut ing at least until a card is presented guaranteeing that the money will not go for the payment of expensive dresses, hotel bills, garage hire and the like. PROPER MOVE L a CTION of the Harrisburg Ro- I tary Clu.b, in pledging not only | ita moral support, but in offer- Sng the services of its members in •ny way the authorities may need Yn the campaign now being waged t# free the country from dangerous radicals, should inspire other or ganizations to similar action. Mere passing of resolutions is not always helpful, but where they ex press forcefully the rising tide of public opinion and especially where they are accompanied by promises of material assistance, they are well worthy of more than passing atten tion. The Rotarians express the belief that at least 95 per cent, of the peo ple of the country are opposed to! radicalism in any form, and in this 1 they display the faith that all good j Americans have in American citizen ship—a faith that has never been ■ put to shame and never will be. | BLOW AT RADICALISM j NOW that the full results of the French elections have become known and it is evident that France has elected the most con servative Chamber of Deputies since ! 1871, isn't it about time for ultra radicals to take a lesson from events ? France, It would seem, to use a •poker term, has seen Massachusetts and has gone her one better. France was to Europe what the Bay State was to this country —the prov ing ground for democracy under fire—and, as in Massachusetts, law and order have won hands down. The people want no "red" revolution nor any other kind of a revolution save only the variety we always have with us, the slow turning over of Old institutions and customs by the ! orderly and lawful means of the ballot box, which, in countries like ;France or our own. really does ex press public opinion, much as some folks with their own little dull axes l*o grind would like to have us be tjieve otherwise. The French not only turned their ftiacks on the radiculs, but even the |9nild Socialists, who were gaining (Strength in France before the war, Received a slap in the face wher ever they showed their heads. The ■Silent voter went to the polls and re jbuked the noisy fellows who had ibeen making so much racket that dUmld folks believed there really might be danger of a turn over of the government. They silenced Bolshevism for all time in France f*nd registered their unshaken belief >ln law and order wherever the Pssue was raised. Indeed, there is no indication any fSrhere that any considerable portion $Df the populace of any nation out |side Russia has been contaminated Iby "red" doctrines. The I. W. W., •the Bolshevists, the radical Socialists gnd others of their ilk have been making a lot of noise. They have beea-loud in their threats and they MONDAY EVENING, have exploded a few bombs. They have well laid plans by which they expect to stampede the people or to guin the upper hand over the people, but Americans are not terrorised nor are thpy fooled by the doctrines that have ruined Russia. Wher ever the "reds" have been put to the test they have fulled. Everywhere the people have turned them down and turned them down hard. Tf they do not desist in their activities in the United States, they may find themselves subject to treatment be side which the American Legion's vengeance at Centralia would be mild indeed. The American people are long-suffering and patient, but they are a hard-hating, hard-hitting lot when aroused. NEWS FROM RUSSIA | TTTK SUSPECT that the corres -IA/ pondent who sent out the dispatches from Ohio follow ing the recent elections has trans ferred his base of operations to Mos cow. Instead of telling us one day that the "wets" had carried the State and on the next that the "drys" had won a big victory, he is now cabling his papers back home that the Bolsheviki are sweeping everything before them and again that the anti-Bolshevik forces have "won a great victory." Just as we imagine he used to do in Columbus, getting his news one morning from the Brewers' Association and the next from the Anti-Saloon League, he is now spending one day with General Lenine and the next with the armies opposing him, and he appears to be very impartial in his judgments. The news from Russia may mean anything or nothing, the way it is coining out just now. Truth to tell, we should take it all with more than the proverbial grain of salt. We might throw in a whole bag of salt and still have a balance against the facts. Both sides—or all sides—in Russia are "prone to the drawing of the long bow when they get possession of the cables and some times we suspect that not a little of the "news" that does leak out may be tinctured with the feelings and sentiments of some, of our recent —we almost said late — allies in Europe. It is impossible not to believe that somewhere Rus sia is beginning to feel the effects of European diplomatic tinkering. All the great powers have their eyes on Russia's depleted markets and not a few merchants would be able to silence their conscientious scruples if the way were opened for trade with the Bolshevik or any other Russian faction that could guaran tee payment in gold or marketable securities. Wc must not fear too much or hope too much of Russia. This much only we know—that Bol shevism has tailed there as ail or derly governing force, that blood shed is an everyday occurrence, that the people are worse off than when the Czar ruled them and that years will be required to re-establish the nation on a decent, law-abiding basis. Past that all is darkness, and not even the League of Nations, if it becomes a fact, will be able to stop the lighting there. The "dark est Russia" of the old days was mild twilight as compared to the Russia of to-day. THEY COME IN FORDS What has become of the country folks, The- farmers we used to see? Who came to Billtown on Saturday morn And hitched to a friendly tree? Hitched to a rack on Market Square. Hitched to a lamppost or any where; With never a sign that read "Not here;" i In the days that used to be. So questions the bard of the Williamsport Gazette and Bulletin. Dear bard, we think we know. Most of them are still coming to town, but they are driving Fords, and the rest are being driven in once a week. In winter they ride in closed cars; in summer they hit the landscape with tops down and whiskers blowing free. But they are not the furmers we used to know; not the fellows the city lads used to advise to "take the hayseed out of their hair." That type of farmer has gone along with the liitehing posts and the one-horse buggies. "Court week" means noth ing to the farmer of the newer gen eration, for he comes to town any day he likes and makes the trip in an hour or two, where his father, who drove the sorrel nag in the one hoss shuy required a whole duy for the journey. The old-time farmer used to sell his butter for twenty-five cents a pound and eggs for eighteen cents a dozen. If he got more he seemed ashamed to take the money. Gaso line and other tilings make a lot of difference. The farmer of s to-day gets to town so often he has learned the shifty ways of city folks and he drives just us hard a bargain as the merchant to whom he sells his faint produce. The merchant used to buy cheap from the farmer and sell dear; nowadays the operation ap pears to be reversed. At least that's what the merchants say. Of course, money is more plentiful than it used to he, but as for us we would fain go back to the good old days of the hitching post on Market Square; when a dollar bought a whole bas ketful of marketing and food was not so expensive as to make us choke every time we think of the price while swallowing a bite. Of course, the farmer is better off, and he ought to be. Every time farm life is made more beuruble, every time some device is put 011 Ihe market to make the farmer's work lighter and his crops bigger, just so often are city people benefited, for we all depend upon the furmer and we would be 111 a bad way Indeed If he made 110 more trips to (own. And so, however they come, we arc glud to see the furmers, for they are "hayseeds" no more, but city folks who have sense enough to live In the country, coming to town only once in a while and, as our friend of the Guzette and Bulletin con cludes— hat has become of the country folks? ,„bn. It's nil quite plain to see. chey ve all been changed Into city folks. _J P even as you and me. <>ld Dobbin's gone from the hitchraek bar. Once wearying miles now are miles not far And the y smell of the smoke of a motor car— The rustics that used to he. FOUTICO U By the Ex-Committeeman The wide difference between the | lotal in the official count of the vote for superior court judge this month and that cast at the September pri mary is being studied with interest by officials at the Capitol. There is a difference of over 150.000, which is considered here to be due to the fact that there was no opposition to "Judge William H. Keller, many people not going (o the trouble to mark in the nonpartisan column because there was no opposi tion and also many who marked straight tickets did not mark in other columns. The official count shows only 527,777 votes east in the whole State at the superior court election, which is a quarter of a mil lion less than at other judicial elec tions. The scattering vole against Judge Keller was one of the smallest known in recent years. Generally there are a couple of hundreds of such votes at State-wide elections. This year there were only 114 and they were cast in sixteen counties. Jefferson county had eight and four counties, including Allegheny, had seven each. Philadelphia did not return any scattering votes. There were only 126 scattering votes at the primary. The time for filing' election ex pense accounts at the State Capitol will expire next week. There will he few accounts to fllo here. The forms for the 1920 primary petitions have been sent to the State printer by the elections bureau of the State department. They can not be circulated before February, but there are many inquiries being made about tlieni. —Chester people fully expect Governor William C. Sprout to be a receptive candidate lor ttie presi dency. The Governor has been like a clam on the subject, but his friends have been enthused by the splendid things being said about him in the \\ est as the result of the Governors' Conference at Ball 1 ,ake City and in New England because of his speeches for Coolidge. The return of the Governor to Chester yester day was occasion of much attention to the presidential possibilities, which was renewed when Attorney General A. Mitchell Rainier ap peared us his week-end guest. The visit of ex-President William How ard Taft to the Governor here is be ing made much of in Philadelphia, although it was said by both lo be purely social and not political. —Another interesting develop ment in the Sunday newspapers is the boom for Highway Commis sioner Lewis S. Sadler for Governor. Mr. Sadler, however, says he is con concerned with building roads anil nothing else just at present. —Schuylkill county Republicans, like Luzerne men, have started to clean house and the election fraud charges have already resulted in ar rests. One judge of election was arrested on a bench warrant. —A Chester dispatch says: "Governor Sproul is said to be look ing for a man to represent Delaware county in the State Senate. Two men have been mentioned for the office. Gen. William G. Price, Jr., and Mayor W. S. McDowell. It is more than likely (hat Mayor Mc- Dowell will be the man chosen by Mr. Sproul to go before the voters for the Senate seat. Allentown newspapers are look ing for a "sane" administration, ac cording to what a review says. The determination in caucus to elect Claude T. Reno city solicitor lo suc ceed Mr. Gross meets with universal approval. Mr. Reno, who several years ago was the Allentown assem blyman, is now president of the State P. O. S. of A. A high class young lawyer, Mr. Reno has had experience not only as a member of the Pennsylvania Legislature, but he has also to his credit a term as county solicitor. The new adminis tration intends to make the most of the work of the City Planning Com mission, of which Gen. Harry C. Trexlor is chairman. This commis sion did excellent work for several years, but for a year or two has been dormant. —District Attorney liotan, of Philadelphia, says he will make known his position concerning the action of Magistrate Pennock in granting bail to Dr. Charles H. Brieker, Jr., charged with perform ing an illegal operation, when the physician's case comes up for a hearing next Friday. "The facts in tliis case speak for themselves." said the district attorney yesterday. "I will not' make any statement until the case comes up for hearing, at which time llie position of this office In regard to the magistrate's action will he clearly defined. —Philadelphia newspapers gen erally commend .\luyor-clecl. Moore for his stand in insisting that the problems of the city, transit includ ed. be fuccd and his declaration tliul he will not. be hamstrung in finances h.v the budget of an unfriendly council. —Pittsburgh people are com mencing to Ht?urf upon u population of 600,000 in 1920, which will mean that there will l>e a renewal or the opposition to Pittsburgh and Scrnn ton being in the sunte class. Head ing is figuring 011 getting out of the third class next year. —An interesting comparison is being formed between lite now char ters of Philadelphia and Norfolk. Norfolk is to have a council of five and to get a city manager. The councllnien of the big Virginia port are to receive $1,200 a year. The manager will get much more and will he the mayor and pretty nearly everything else. Students at Swarthmore, where Rproul and Palmer graduated, have formed a Palmer flub to boost the Attorney General for President. —Nathan G. Nutter, recently ap pointed a select councilman in Philadelphia, is the first, colored man to be n member of that body. —-It is not probable that the may oralty election In Altoona will he reopened. The contests are not meeting with favor. This means that the present city manager plan will be continued. —Appointment of a district at torney to succeed Judge-elect G. W. Muxey, in Lnckawanna, is attracting much attention and it looks as though Muxey would secure the pro motion of his first assistant. HXRJRIBBURG TELEGRXPH WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND by BRIGGS fi\v^ #trt< ■m / /L\ . , #■ M 7 uT, L J . j m#V -Mr # '•' •£y / \\ \v/Y/ ,s 60, M' To \ 7 \ W/xi-\Y/A / / A) A I 1/ "vl'/.'k -? 1 &CHOOU .50 I 7/ i cam look uKe i / r rii' "r'ty ; / lr —o\ I' S ,HftrT K,DNi \ (r \l > ) / W\'7 ' / 'slSsiig) L LiKa A Bank / - i i - I A HOME ROOM IN THE "Y". THERE were 2,823 women secre taries of the Y. M. C. A. in the European war work. There were 215 women secretaries of Ine Y. M. C. A. in the camps and naval stations of the Department of the East. Since the beginning of the war the total number of women sec retaries who have been selected, trained and inducted into service is 3.058, three-fifths the number of all secretaries listed as employed of ficers of the Y. M. C. A. in the I'nited States previous to the war. These women have rendered a new type of secretarial service. The well nigh universal testimony of all those familiar with their work is a testimony of appreciation and high est praise. General Pershing writes to Mr. Carter in his letter of last April: "Another service of great value has been the creation of and the work in leave areas, where the prob lem of giving the men occasional respites from the routine of army life lius been solved. The facts which made this possible have been the recreational facilities in the leave areas, and especially the pres ence and splendid assistance of the American women with the Y. M. C. A. Generul Wahl. the Commanding Officer of the Tth Division, has just lately written to Mr. Kindley, the secretary at Camp Funston: "In France the great value of these fine young women was proved beyond doubt. Their loyalty to the organization with which they served and devoted service to the men con tributed greatly not only to the mo rale of the command but also to the morale of the men. You must be well aware of the fact that the life of the soldier in cantonment is such us to require all the assistance that can he given to maintain the high standards we so earnestly desire for our soldiers. * * * "These girls supply a need which cannot he ex pected of men secretaries. They are constant reminders of home, of the mothers, sisters and sweethearts of the men. They receive their confi dences and give their sympathy. The inevitable result is that men become loyal and devoted to them." Colonel Sweeney, of the Staff of the 28th Division, says: "1 speak for the entire 28th Di vision when 1 say that the service of the American girls with whom we have been fortunate enough to be associated hus been invaluable." In the opinion of Lieut. Colonel Lyon, | Chief Welfare Officer of the entire A. K. F., women in the welfare or ganizations can be reckoned as a military asset. Such distinguished service as this challenges the thinking and the prac tice of the Association throughout the Cnlted States to adopt and adapt this great new asset in the exten sion of the character-forming work with men nnd boys. In establishing a Home Room at the West Side Branch, Mr. Wilson has demonstrated a simple and prac tical way of adapting this service to the needs of our city men, soldiers still In uniform and those trying to adjust themselves to city life. The Home Boom was developed in the only available place in the already crowded building, a large corner of the lobby divided off by high screens. This Home Room is different from all the rest of the building, intentlonully so. It has different furniture, different decora tions andv a different atmosphere. There is a llreplace which makes the room congenial for cold nights and a -refreshment table with cooling drinks for summer days. It has a woman's touch about it. There are rending tables with magazines and shady lamps and howls of flowers. The room Impresses one with its so ciability and refinement. There is a sense of friendliness about it the moment one comes to the door. It is a place of friendly counsel, just whut its name Implies, a Home Room. In this Home Room the woman secretary welcomes the men and boys who care to come to her. She mends for them, plays the piano for songs, hymns, starts games, serves lemonade or tea and helps them in many ways, but best of all she is simply there as their friend, ready to talk over their problems, to cheer, to scold or to encourage, always upholding the highest ideals of American womanhood. It has been astonishing to us how quickly lonely men, far from their own homes, have come to these friendly women, telling them of their trou bles and trials, talking over their problems and relying on the com fort and inspiration that the woman secretary can give. An average of over fifty (50) West Side men a day have sought the privilege of these quiet talks, beside the men who stop in for a friendly greeting or to join in the singing or sit and read maga zines in the restfulness of the Home Room. The woman secretary is in uni form. She has been trained for her work. Her presence in the build ing means no change in the organi zation of association activities. She j classifies as a special secretary, do- j ing a special piece of work. She is the soul of the Home Room and whether she deals with visitors, one by one, or is the center of the group of dormitory men who gather there in the evening, she manifests the leadership which gives to the best American homes their attractiveness und power. She does in the Asso ciation the same thing that she has done so well in her work overseas and in the camps of the Department of the East. She adds the great new force to the secretary equip ment of any association in its work 'for young men. William Kings ley has written: "I consider the Home Room the most important and successful development of the West Side for many years." What is the heart of the matter so far as the Home work is con cerned? What is the idea? Let's be very clear about it. It does not imply structural changes in the or gan zation of the Association. It does not imply that women shall go on boards of directors. It does not imply that an Association shall in troduce groups of volunteer women workers into the lobby or other parts of.the building. This idea is that there be added to the staff of any Association one uniformed woman secretary, (or I possibly two), a woman with un usual qualifications, selected with the greatest care, specifically trained for this difficult and important work. The right women rightly trained— these and these alone can do this I work successfully. Of course, opportunities will vary 1 according to local conditions und ac cording to the secretary in charge. As a rule the service of the woman secretary will be strictly confined to the Home Room, though at the re quest of the secretary in charge, she would gladly assist in other activi ties of the building either with men I or boys. Though it does not lead to Y. M. I ('. A. work for women, it may lead in some instances and probably ought to lead to a co-operative work under the joint auspices of the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. aiding the Association In the developing of j a fuller social program for young j men and women, living in the ab j normal conditions of city life, and | aiding them in the development of ■ a social life surrounded by whole j some, Christian influence. But it I need not lead even this far unless I those in charge so desire. It may remain Just a Home Room for men in the Y. M C. A. ■ The question will be at once I asked: Is it not a depurture from Y. M. C. A. troditlons? Possibly so, 'but not from any fundamental tra ditions. It is In line with Y. M. C. A. traditions in putting at a maxi mum the power of personal religious work in friendly counsel, in chur " t "V NOVEMBER (24, 1919. acter-building efforts, and is on the basis of thoroughly tested experience and clearly defined principles. Perhaps the strongest tradition of the Y. M. C. A. is to render the larg est possible service in the character formation of men and boys. This idea is in line with that tradition. Does it not involve the dangers of women "mixing in" on the man agement of the "Y"? if the wrong women are employed, or if volunteer women are selected locally and put to work untrained, "Yes." Frankly, here is a danger, but it can easily be avoided if the right women are se lected with care, duly qualified, thoroughly trained, preferably em ployed from without the community, not related by ties of kinship to any secretary of the staff. Such women have proven their ability to do this work. There are many of them re turned from overseas, ready to un dertake this work if the brotherhood be prophetic enough in its vision of its own largest usefulness to engage them before they are scattered into other forms of service. What is necessary to incorporate the Home Room in any Association? Very little! Procure the furniture and decorations. Vote the small sum necessary for incidental ex penses. Get a trained woman secre tary with overseas experience from the Women's Division of the War Personnel Board, War Work Coun cil. In a limited number of Asso ciation Buildings her salary will be paid by the War Work Council a.s part of their demobilization work, so long as that work continues. In connection with this whole matter, it will be interesting to look over the letters from the secretaries in charge of the associations in the camps. They are from William F. Hirsch, Guy V. Aldrlch. J. I>. Suth erland of the Dengue Island Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Thomas R. Jor dan of Camp Dee, O. C. Post of the Casino Hut, Newport News, Glen I. Folsom of Camp Stuart, Va., Olaf Gates of Camp Dix, W. H. Cox of the Naval Training Station, Charles W. Gulick of Camp Mills and Her mon Kldredge of Camp Upton. To these are added the letters re garding the work of Miss Watts (of Harrisburgl and Miss Daurie (of Bellefonte) of the 67th Street Branch, by Walter Dyack, William Kingsley and Graham Wilson. "Going South" Group upon group do the soft birds cluster Over the fields where the seeds | drop down. Then, in a hurry of sudden flurry. Sweep away in a flare of brown. Silently slip through the leaves fast thinning. Never a chirp of the cheery spring When mates are wooing and gently cooing, Making a nest where they brcod and sing. Irregular lines of the wild duck flying. Seek a harbor in southern streams. All through the night the gray geese hying, "Honk" and "honk" till the dull dawji gleams. | O'er ruddy hollows a blue Jay winging, i Talks to his friends of a new freehold. Where shining live oak and gray moss clinging. Breathe of a summer that ne'er grows old. 'Would T might follow the dear birds along, Down where the clear green rivers run, Where fishes leap under jasmine blowing, And winter's cold is forever done. —T,. C. Wood In the Philadelphia ledger. Washing 'Em in a Glass Now lFrom the Dallas News.l What hus become of the ohl-fash ioned belle who used to manicure her teeth with u snuffstick'f ] New Industrial Conference tFrom the Public Ledger] No one can doubt the individual professional or business ability of the inen who have just been ap pointed by the President as mem bers of the new industrial confer ence which he lias called for De cember t. Their personal qualillca tions as men of affairs and as think ers and publicists will also not be questioned by any one. Hut, despite all the qualifications of the new con ferees as able men and as sound Americans, it would seem as if the coming conference were doomed to a more immediate failure than the tirst one. If the President In his new selections has tried to avoid the difficulties find the differences grow ing out of the make-up of the first conference as an irreconcilable "group conference." composed of organized labor and capital and "representatives of the public," he hus apparently fallen info a much greater error ol thinking that a sup posedly dispassionate groupless con ference will get anywhere. ft is true that each individual composing the coming conference is probably in a position, as are hun dreds and thousands of other Ameri cans prominent in finance, in busi ness and in public and educational life, to utter sage counsel that it might profit the country to follow on any issue. Hut this is hardly the occasion for this kind of soothing individual or collective wisdom. For the first conference, it will be re membered, was criticised not be cause it was a group conference, but because those who were supposed to represent each of the three groups were viewed as not altogether typi cal of their groups, and, also, be cause large groups of people, such as the farmers and the small busi ness man, and the unorganized worker generally, were either not represented at all or were repre sented so indirectly as to arouse their criticism and suspicion. In other words, the first confer ence was considered too little repre sentative, though it was composed of many practical men, to solve really the broader, national issues, even if it had been able to secure some com mon labor action from the industrial groups. Hut the new conferees are even more unrepresentative of the actual industrial groups which do exist in the country and whose dif ferences are to he adjusted. And it is difficult to see how these conferees are to reconcile these great groups and l.ow they are to say anything more to the country than has been said by all sorts of publicists ever since the question of a better under standing between labor, organized and unorganized, and capital came up for discussion. No one will desire to see the conference come to naught; but when what the country wants is an immediate practical so lution of a condition, not a theory, it hardly will view the new con ferees, considered collectively, with any degree of enthusiasm. Reading an American City [Williamsport Gazette and Bulletin. I Evidently there is a considerable portion of the population of Read ing, Pa., which is determined to counteract the impression held in some quarters that the Berks county capital is not a strictly American city. As might be expected, the Ameri can Legion is at the forefront of the movement to remove whatever taint of un-Americanism may have ad hered to the municipality through rampant radicalism in the past. At least the Legion is opposed to having it go forth that Reading is in sym pathy with the movement to create sympathy in favor of the release of Eugene V. Debs, conscientious ob jectors and others held for obstruc tion of the enforcement of the selec tive draft law during the war, and at the solicitation of the Leglon aires the proprietors of the thea ters have agreed to refuse the use of their places for un-American meetings and the mayor has can celled a request for a permit to hold a Debs sympathy meeting. But that is not all. The executive committee of the Patriotic Order Sons of America, which has 12,000 members in Reading, has petitioned President Wilson td invite James 11. Maurer, one of the most radical of radicals, to "get out of America and betake himself to Russia." The P. O. S. of A. indictment against Maurer is not stated in the dispatch telling of this action, but it may have been based on the charges made in the National Labor Journal, official organ of the Central Labor Union of Pittsburgh, which has made the following accusation: "In 1917, during America's parti cipation in the World War, Maurer was a member of the executive com mittee of the People's Council of Democracy and Peace. This was a radical organization opposed to America's participation in the w " and opposed to military service. Mau rer made speeches for this 'Red' or ganization. He was to have been one of the speakers at the convention scheduled in Minneapolis, which the Government prohibited." There is more of the same kind in the Labor Journal's editorial, which asserts that Maurer "was particular ly enraged over editorials protesting against the activities of scheming radicals to capture the labor move ment," but the passages quoted give an idea of the charges. The sympathizers with the draft dodgers and conscientious objectors evidently will get cold comfort in Reading or any other place where Americanism is dominant. Other People's Money [Girard in Public Ledger] "Operators offer miners $1.50 a day increase in wages," says a newspaper headline. "Ha, ha," laughs the haughty miner ffom his auto, "no such chicken feed for me. I want $3 or nothing." Of course, the three dollars he de mands is yours, because you know very well it will not be the oper ators, but the public, who must foot the bill for every rise in coal at tlio mines. An engineer who wore a colonel's eagle upon his shoulder in Franco said to me one day this week: "A year's absence from the Fnited States will convince any returning American that our chief national [fault is that we are willing to let things slide." Being extravagant with other ! folks' money would not be so fash tionable if the folks resented it more vigorously. Healing H. C. L. fFrom the Philadelphia Record] The sailor who crept under a bungalow at Norfolk and slept for 51 days has discovered the real remedy for '#c high cost of living. Instead of endeavoring to wake him up and keep him awake, the medical commission which is studying his case should devote its attention to discovering how the rest of us can follow his example. If we could all sleep for a couple of months we would be relieved of all expenses.ex cept the rent, or the interest on the mortgage, and accomplish some roul conservation. Nobody ever heard a beur complain of the high cost of I lfving. It is because he sleeps all through the winter. iEtmttttg (Eljat The Sproul administration plana to make the study of the Constitu tion of 1873 by the Commission of Twenty-five announced by the Gov ernor last night one of the monu- mental achievements of the Dela ware countian's term and it is the plan to have the work of the body which will be called to meet in Har risburg within a month or so go before the people the November fol lowing the inauguration of the Sproul successor. Two Legislatures will be called upon to vote, upon tlio proposition for revision or omission before they are submitted to tlio electorate. Voters of Pennsylvania have ratified changes to the Consti- 5> tutiou at six elections held in us many years, the Legislature of 19 19 having agreed to submit a couple of propositions as well as advancing • others. The Constitution of 1873 is the fourth under which Pennsyl vania has been governed. The first was the document of 1776, adopted in Philadelphia under the presi dency of Franklin; the second was adopted in Philadelphia in 1790, im mediately following the adoption of the Federal Constitution, and was presided over by Mifflin; (lie third was adopted in Philadelphia in 1838, the convention moving from Harris- ,i burg where it met in 1837 with John Sergeant, of Philadelphia, as presi dent, and the fourth, the present, adopted in Philadelphia on Novem ber 3, 1873, the convention having met here about a year before and moving to Philadelphia. William M. Meredith, of Philadelphia, was chairman, John H. Walker, of Erie, being chosen to succeed him when he died. The tirst constitutional convention was composed of 96, the. second 69, the. third of 133 and the last of the same number. * The Constitution of 1873 was rati fied by 253,714 to 108,594. A dozen years later dissatisfaction with it led , to efforts to bring a new convention, but the only such proposition to go before the people was defeuted No vember 3, 1891, by the decisive vote of 420,598 to 173.813. Since then there have been efforts to pass bills for constitutional conventions, the campaign of 1912 stimulating such projects. In the last session three bills for constitutional conventions appeared, but the administration sponsored the idea of a commission to study and recommend revision rather than hold a convention at this time, a course which has been ap proved in many letters coming to the State Capitol. The. first amendments to lie rati fied were those voted upon in 1901, when the three amendments relative to voters and their qualifications were adopted, this theme having been much discussed in the nineties. The largest number of amendments ever made was in 1909. when nine, with a schedule for operation, were adopted. One was defeated. These amendments abolished the spring elections and changed tenures of of fice and made other alterations mainly in public office. Two years later the Philadelphia debt limit and courts amendments were adopt ed, the first having to be changed by another amendment adopted In 1915. In 1913 there were five amendments submitted and three, including the first proposed bond is sue, went down. Two years later four more amendments went before the people on a referendum and one was defeated. The last change was the good roads bond issue of 1918, which was ratified when Governor Sproul was elected. In the last session of the Legisla ture more than a dozen amendments to the Constitution were proposed in resolutions submitted and many more were projected, but did not get to the legislative stage. The commission named to study the Constitution is virtually authorized to include the whole State govern ment in its recommendations. There is nothing inhumane in reeding garbnge to hogs, such as is done in Harrisburg and other places in Pennsylvania coder municipal contract, hut which has been both ering officials of the Lehigh County Humane Society, who wrote to Sec j rotary of Agriculture Frederick • Rnrmnssen, asking whether he | thought it a good thing to do. The secretary, who has been studying live stock raising, promptly replied that feeding garbage to hogs elim inates waste and really produces meat of a satisfactory quality, but he declined to go into the question of the feeling of the hogs on the matter, except to note that they quickly cleared up vegetable refuse. The Lehigh people were troubled as to whether the feeding of garbage to hogs as sole diet did not make it monotonous and if that was so whether it could not be construed as not humane. The secretary replied that for centuries hogs had been fed garbage and appeared to thrive upon it. while there was no question as to the fact that it eliminated waste and fattened the animals. '[ DO YOU KNOW 1 —Francis Newton Thorpe, one of the commission on constitutional re vision, is connected with one of the Pittsburgh colleges and is an author of works on history. —Victor C. Mather, prominent Philadelphian, is active in the for mation of a remount association to keep up with needs for the horse in war. —General Frank K. McCoy lias been visiting his old home in the Juniata valley. —Councilman A. C. Keeley, of Philadelphia, is head of the con fectioners of that city. —The Rev. Dr. M. L. McPhail, of Pittsburgh, has accepted a call to Auburn. —Judge J. J. Buffington, of the United States courts, occupied th pulpit of one of the Pittsburgh churches yesterday. —P. L. Craig, of New Castle, president of the State Sunday School Association, has been taking an ac tive part in the discussions against Sundny games in western counties. —Col. J. Y. Brinton, prominent Pb|ladelphian, who was on the Ar menian mission, has returned home. | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE "] —That Hurrishnrg is a big distributing center for soft drink manufactures? HISTORIC HAKKISBUIUi —John Harris' advertisement in Philadelphia newspapers announc ing the sale of lots here called at-, tention to the fact that it was on the main highwuv from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh. It still is.