f®,® © © m§ aw wi a&ai§T ®CO g&KTO J®» TBI »C®fOMm MM niai /® cam? TO wok) yke wm Boys of Pennsylvania! come away from the ball fields, turn from vacation .frolics, put aside Jhe pleasant lures of boyhood and give heed to serious do- You have g heard the song of the bugles and the rattle of the drums; you have seen the dust-stained troops in highways and byways; you have cheered with the shouting bystanders and through these things you person ally have come to know that the na tion is at war. The stirring military scenes no doubt have impressed you with the greatness of your country's martial might. They have given you a comforting sense of security through visible assurance that thousands upon thousands of steel muscled, splendidly equipped fighting men stand as living barriers between you and your country's foe. And you, perhaps, have turned back to your sports and games In the con fident belief that these chosen legions of a free nation have but to meet the enemy to oweep him from the field. But in that belief there Is danger. It Is a belief which, if permitted to spread unchecked, would place the ar mies of America in deadly peril. All of these inspiring troop move ments you have witnessed relate only to one phase of war activity—the mili tary side. There Is another phase of war and it Is the more important one because properly directed it backs up the sol dier in the field with the entire re sources of his country. Valor Not Enough. It is this phase of war activity that must give the American fighting men more and better cannon than the ene my possesses; more ammunition, more food and more of everything that is vital to the prosecution of war. For If the nation permits its armies to be overmatched in these things their valor will count for nothing. Mere bravery will not avert defeat and de feat would mean a reign of terrorism in this free land too shocking to be pictured even In a part of Its bar barity. That is why no one —not even boys —should be allowed to think that war !s only the soldier's business. This war is the business of every man, every woman, every boy and every girl in America who, by their work, can be of use to American troops. Primarily, war, because it is de structive, taxes to the utmost the pro ductive energy of the nation engaged. At the same time it weakens the pro ductive forces by taking all of the able-bodied men from farms, work shops and business to do the fighting. One million American soldiers, the pick of the country's manhood recruit ed from the various industries, will soon be at grips with the enemy, and workers must be found to fill their places. Additional workers must be located to produce the excess quanti ties of supplies that these one million soldiers will require, and the supplies our European allies need. Where are these workers to be obtained? Boys, the answer rests with you. Perhaps upon witnessing parades of fighting squadrons you have felt regret that you, too, could not have a place in the heroic files. But there is no need to harbor regret. You ind every other boy between the ages of 16 and 21 years may help your country fight and win the war. You may not be able to shoulder a rifle or man a gun, but by working to sup ply everything needful to the men who do these things you will be making your country's guns effective. President Wilson's Call. The war has made a place for you. That place is 1n the ranks of the Penn sylvania Division of the United States Boys' Working Reserve, an organiza tion created by the United States gov ernment to furnish emergency workers - so that there will be no shortage of the labor needed to keep the American soldier in victorious fighting trim. So important is the Reserve consid ered by the government that President Wilson has issued a message urging boys of Pennsylvania to enroll. Here is the President's message to you: "Let me express the hope that the young men of Pennsylvania not now permanently employed may eagerly en ter th? Hers' Working Reserve to fit themselves by training and study for good citizenship and productive serv ice. In this way they can show them selves worthy of patriotic fathers who fought for democracy in the past, sus tain their patriotic brothers who are fighting for it today, and command the affectionate pride of the brave mothers who are silently bearing the burdens at home." Under the direction of the Pennsyl vania Committee of Public Safety the Reserve is now recruiting an Industrial army of 25,000 boys. They will be guided in their activities by John C. Frazee, Federal Director for this State, and a corps of district superintend ents. The aims of the Reserve are: First, the organization, and, second, the preparation of boys for emergency service In all lines of work. The mot to of the boys who enroll is "I will be ready." The Reserve will find use ful work for them and if necessary will instruct them In the work. Service Badge Given. / You may enroll by obtaining the con sent of your parents or guardians, whether you are now employed or not. Boys who are employed join with the idea of becoming more useful to their country by learning to produce more at their present work. They will not be urged to change their employment, but only to become more proficient at it. Boys who are not now at work, but who attend school, may enroll and will be instructed in some line of industry fitted to their abilities. Working hours will be arranged so that their educa tion will not be interfered with. All boys enrolling will receive at once the handsome button of the Pennsylvania Division. By loyal service they may earn the bronze badge of the Reserve which Is a reproduction of the seal of the United States suitably inscribed and numbered. Appropriate wages will be paid while boys are at work. Working conditions will be carefully supervised so that members of the Reserve shall be protected against all forms of physical and moral injury. There is nothing of a military charac ter about the Reserve, its training or its work and members may withdraw whenever their parents or guardians so desire. It is not intended to keep the boys working on the same basis as workers who are regularly employed. Service is of a temporary nature and will be called for In emergencies only. The Reserve doe s not seek to shift the employment of boys who are working for their parents or interfere with their wage arrangements. But these boys may become members and earn the badge of honor as such. The Reserve will encourage school boy or student members In their studies, as it holds that mental im provement is a form qf proficiency by which the country and its Industries benefit. Workshops, farms and business are depending upon the loyalty of the American people to Insure sufficient working forces while hundreds of thou sands of brave Americans are decid ing the national destiny in a far-off land. And the American soldier is go. ing about his stern task with Implicit confidence that he will receive the right kind of support from those who remain behind. Whether he Is justified in that con fidence is up to you. Your big brothers, perhaps, are al ready near the firing line or soon will be on their way there. For every man at the front there must be five workers at home producing the food, the clothing, the ammunition, the weapons and other supplies without which the bravest troops would be defeated before they even began the fight. Boys of Pennsylvania enroll to give the American soldier the thing? he needs to win the war! And, fathers, mothers, let your boys enroll. They are needed, sorely need ed, and it is public service that calls The Iron and Steel Industry New Methods Reduce the Unit of Cost and Increase th* Volume of Production. By E. A. NIEL. i x UNLOADING AN ORE BOAT AT GANSON BTREET DOCKS OF THE BUFFALO, ROCHESTER AND PITTSBURGH RAILWAY BUFFALO. Many well informed and experienced business men hold to the theory that the commercial barometer of the Unit ed States is the iron and steel trade. When conditions in that particular in dustry are good, or "looking upward;" there should be a rising tendency in all lines of business generally and in all parts of the country. Iron ore is the basis of the manufacture of iron and! steel, and the volume of ore produced in the Minnesota and Michigan ranges during the year 1916 exceeded 04.000,- 000 tons, nearly all of which was trans ported down the great lakes in large steamers to the ports of Lake Michigan or Lake Erie, where a portion Is con sumed in the furnaces at the ports and the remainder, which constitutes the majority, transshipped by rail to inte rior points. The tonnage during the past year exceeded the previous .vear A CLOSE UP VIEW OF THE GIANT GRAB BUCKETS WHICH MAKR BHORT WORK OF A CARGO. by over 17,000,000 tons and was a rec ord movement. Pig iron furnaces are located on the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Rail way at Dußois, Punxsutawney and Josephine, Pa., in the heart of the coal region along this line. These furnaces consume annually about 650,000 tons of iron ore, which is converted into pig iron, the first process in the making of manufactured iron or steel. Production of a ton of pig iron re quires about 2,000 pounds of coke, 1,400 pounds of limestone and two tons of iron ore, the proportion of each vary ing with the character and metallic content of the ore as well as the char acter of the coke. Pig iron is so called because the molten metal is run from the furnace in a long trough cut in the sand, from which run shorter sections, the long mass being called the "sow" and the shorter ones the "pig." After cooling these shorter sections of "pigs" become the pig iron of commerce. The quantity of pig iron produced in the United States in 1916 was approxi mately 40,000,000 tons, of which about 300,000 tons was charcoal pig iron, the latter being made by the use of char coal instead of coke. The volume of pig iron last year was also a record breaker and reflected increasing de mand of iron and steel over the entire world. In the beginning of iron manu facture all furnaces used charcoal for fuel, but with the invention of the hot blast in connection with improved fur nace construction the use of coke rap idly became universal in smelting iron from the ore. The ruins of many of the old charcoal iron furnaces can still be seen in Pennsylvania and other states, and some of them are visible along the Buffalo, Rochester and Pitts burgh Railway. Many changes have taken place In the last decade in the method of min ing, transportation and smelting of iron ore, which have resulted in reducing the unit of cost and increasing the vol ume of steel production in this country. Powerful steam shovels are now used in open cut mining of the ore at the principal mines in the lake region, and double track railroads haul the loaded cars of ore in long trains to immense docks at the head of the lakes, where improved loading facilities enable a 10,000-ton boat to be fully loaded in five hours. The type of steamer employed in the trade on the great lakes enables the ore to be transferred at destination port to the cars or dock by means of expensive ore unloading machines, re sulting in a minimum cost for transfer as well as prompt dispatch for the ves sel, all of which contributes to the eco nomical and expeditious handling of the ore. When we realize that the season of fake transportation covers only eight months of the year and an average of 8,000,000 tons per month was last year's record movement of ore. we can form an idea of the magnitude of the busi ness and the necessity for efficient han dling, both on the lakes and on the railways. The ability to secure iron ore by steamers at relatively low freight cost through Lake Erie ports, coupled with its proximity to the limestone and coal deposits. Is the basis of the Pittsburgh district's supremacy in the manufac ture of iron and steel. Pig iron contains a large percentage of silica and other Impurities making It necessary to refine it by melting and eliminating these deleterious sub stances. By the addition of scrap iron and heating in a puddling furnace the product is rolled iato bars and sheets which form the wrought iron of com merce. The conversion into steel re quires a change in the character of the metal by increasing the amount of car bon, which modifies the texture and greatly increases its strength. Two processes are generally in use for mak ing steel, the "Bessemer" and the "open hearth." After being converted into steel, the molten metal is cast into large ingots, these in turn being rolled into blooms and then into smaller masses called bil lets, which are ready for commercial use, and can be utilized in making plates, bars, wire, rods and other forms required by the various manufacturing plants. Many of the larger plants now con vert the ore into pig iron and thence into blooms or billets and produce the finished products such as plates, beams, angles, rods, wire, etc., in a single plant, making it unnecessary to remelt the iron, as it is taken direct from the fur nace to the converters while in a mol ten state. HOW A RAILROAD EARNB A DOLLAR. If a drayman charged you fifty cents for carting a ton of freight one mile from the railroad depot to your resi dence or place of business, you would not accuse the man of being exorbi tant in his charges and refuse to pay him unless he reduced the amount Knowing that a ton is quite a load, and that the drayman's expenses have increased in the same ratio as your own, you would consider his charge extremely reasonable and, perhaps, hand him an extra dime or a good cigar as evidence of your satisfaction. Now, as the freight was carted from the depot, It was evidently hauled there by the railroad, and, wishing to learn how much the railroad company re ceived from the shipment, we quickly ascertain from the company's statis tics that the average rate for hauling a ton ope mile is a trifle less than one half of one cent, or the one hundredth part of what the drayman received. For that dime which you may have given to the drayman, the railroad hauls a ton twenty miles, or farther than from Rochester to Mumford; for the price of a dollar hat, the railroad hauls a ton two hundred miles, or from Rochester, N. Y., to Dußois, Pa.; and for the amount paid for a flfteen-dollar ready-made suit of clothes, the ship ment was hauled three thousand miles, or nearly across the continent!— Bu ffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Rail way Employes' Magazine. HIS EFFORTS TO RESTORE EFFICIENCY AT RIGA LOST A jflpr mMmm Photo by American Press Association. PREMIER KERENSKY. EXPERTS OVER NIGHT Wonderful How Soon War Eligible* Become Proficient In Industrial Lines. Pittsburgh, Sept. 4. —Members of the appellate draft board have discovered that many young men of military age have suddenly become expert in cer tain industrial lines. That numbers of youths are endeavoring to escape service through this contention and that corporation officials are deliber ately helping them to escape is the claim made by the board. "We have found that men have be come experts in the short space of thirty days and officers of corpora tions are actually attesting to the fact that these men are indispensable,"* said Dr. Woodburn, one of the mem bers. "Men who were farmers and laborers a few months ago and so registered June 5 when they made out their registration cards have suddenly become experts in their particular in dustrial calling. "Some of the claimants have sud denly leaped into the expert class *n one, two, three and six months and most of their contentions are absurd. My own opinion is that many of these claims are being made solely for the purpose of enabling the claimant to escape military service, rather than to the importance of his position." SAILORS THREATEN STRIKE Great Lakes Men May Go Out This Week. Chicago, Sept. 4. —A strike of sail ors on Great Lakes freighters may be called by the end of this week, uo less ship owners agree to extend the so-called Atlantic agreement to in clude lake lines. This was intimated by Victor A. Olander, secretary of the Illinois Fed eration of Labor and vice president of the Seamen union. LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN Pittsburgh, Sept. 4. Butter —Prints, 45% @46 Vic; Ohio creamery, 42@ 43c. Eggs—Fresh, 42c. Cattle —Prime, $12.25 @12.75; good, $11.25@12; tidy butchers, $10@11; fair, $8.50@9.50; common, $7@7.75; heifers, $6@10.25; common to good fat bulls, $6@9.50; common to good fat cows, $4.50@8.75; fresh cows and springers, $40@90. Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers, 910.75@11.25; good mixed, $9.75@ 10.50; fair mixed, sB@9; culls and common, $4.50@7; heavy ewes, s6@9; lambs, $ll @15.75; veal calves, $15.50 @l6; heavy and thin calves, $7.50@11. Hogs—Prime heavy, heavy mixed and mediums, $18.80@18.90; heavy Yorkers, $18.50@18.80; pigs, sl6@ 16.50; roughs, $15.50@ 16.50; stags, $l4 @l5. Cleveland, Sept 4. Cattle —Prime shipping steers, $ll @11.50; good to choice, $9.50@10.50; good to choice butchers, $8.50@9.50; fair to good, $7.50@8.25; common to light steers, $6.50 @7.25; good to choice heifers, $7.50 @8.50; choice fat butcher bulls, s7@B; bologna bulls, s6@7; choice fat cows, s7@B; fair to good, $5.50@6.50; canners and cutters, $5@5.50; milch cows and springers, $60@90. Caives —Choice calves, $15.50@16; mixed, $14.50@15; heavy and common, s9@l2. Sheep and Lambs—Choice spring lambs, $15@15.35; fair to good, $11.50 @l3; common, sB@9; choice sheep, $8.50@10; culls and common, ss@6. Hogs—Yorkers, choice heavies and good mixed, $l7; pigs, $l5; roughs, $15.50; stags, $13.50. Chicago, Sept. 4. Hogs —Bulk, $17.50@18.60; light, $16.90@18.65; mixed, $16.75@18.65; heavy, $16.65@18.60; roughs, $16.65@ 16.95; pigs, $12@16.75. Cattle —Native beef cattle, sB@ $16.50; western steers, $6.90@13.80; stockers and feeders, $6@9.20; cows j and heifers, $4.80@13; calves, $12@16 Sheep and Lambs —Wethers, $7.05@ 11.25; lambs, $11.25^17.40. Chicago Grain Market Close. Wheat. Corn. Oats. September 56% December 1.08% 56% Too Much Simplicity By ALAN HINSDALE Well, I've come to grief at last. Three of us held up a train and got away with a lot of money there was in the express ear. The citizens livin' by the road made up a posse and got after us. We separated, each man lookin' , out for himself. I knew of a house where lived a girl that I'd had some experience with a good while before. I thought I'd rather risk myself in that house than any other. The experience I speak of was this: I was on the road lookin' out for some place to make a haul when I passed a house that looked kind o' tempting. I knocked at the door, and a very likely lookin' gal opened it 1 told her that I was down on my luck. I hadn't had anything to eat for two days and wouldn't she give me somep'n to eat. That's all I wanted— somep'n. to eat The gal didn't give me a hunk of bread and a slice o' meat and tell me to move on. She went to work and cooked me a meal. While she was in the kitchen I was in the llvln' room. I had learned that some people are in clined to put valuables in such places as no one would be expected to hide 'em in, and that's where I did my in vestigate'. I dived into a pair of old shoes in a closet, a vase on a mantel and other such places as nobody but a fool or an expert would think of look- In', but didn't find anything. But when I opened a clock that stood In a corner and swept the bottom with my hand I ran against a stockin'ful o' somep'n. I yanked it oat and opened It and found It full o' bills and gold and silver. I put it in my pocket and said noth ln' to the gal about it till after I'd eat en the dinner she'd cooked for me. Then I said to her: "You're a mighty good gal to treat me so well, and I'm goin' to repay you for your kindness by givln' you a point If you have valuables to hide don't put 'em in such places as no thief would be expected to look for 'cm. The best place for valuables is in a safe. If you're goin' to keep 'em In your house, bury 'em where any one'll have to dig up a lot o* dirt to And 'em. Thieves are too lazy to work." When I had said this I showed her i the stockln' full o' money. You should I a seen the expression on her face—an expression of surprise that I should have thought to look in the clock for valuables. "Well, I declare!" she said. "What made you think of looking for our valu bles at all, and how did you come to think of looking in the clock? I'm much obliged for the lesson you've taught me." m She put out her hand to take the swag. Do you know there was such dead innocence in her that for the life of me I couldn't make a more to stop her. I was Just paralyzed by her sim plicity and confidence. She took tbe stockln' with all there was in it right out of my hand. Before she did so I had no more idea of returning the find than I had of glvin' her a ten dollar gold piece I had in my pocket. But after her display of misplaced confi dence I took a half dollar out of my pocket and offered to pay her for the dinner. But she wouldn't take it "The lesson you've taught me is worth a hundred dinners," she said, "and I shall always remember it" I Just went away without say In' a word. It didn't strike me ho\# a gal had come it over me till I'd got away from her, but I didn't go back on what I'd done. I says to myself, says I, "Let her alone. I may have occasion some day to vouch for what a pure, noble good man I am." And so it waa that when they were after me for holdin' up the train—we did the Job not far from the gal's home —I made for the house and found the gal mighty glad to see me. "There's been a holdup of a train on the railroad," I said. "A posse are lookin' for the robbers. They're takin' up everybody they find. If they come here Just you tell 'em you know me to be an honest man." I hadn't time to go any further for there were sounds of horses' hoofs comln' full tilt. Several men rode up to the house and bolted right in. They found me readin' a good book I'd taken from the library shelves. But they pounced on me right off. The gal pro tested, and they asked her who I was. She told 'em that I was one 'o the best men she had ever known in her life. I put on & look so good that butter wouldn't melt in my mouth. Some of | 'em said I couldn't be a train robber; I didn't look it at all, but one of 'em said they'd better take me along anyway. Finally those who wanted to leave me prevailed and they rode away. But they hadn't gone far before they came back, and one on 'em said to the gal: "What do you know about this man anyway?" "Why, he come here one day and asked for something to eat While I was cooking It for him he taught me a lesson." "What lesson?" "That it's foolish to hide valuables where thieves are not expected to look for 'em." There was a guffaw all round, and without waltln' to hear the rest of the story they yanked me out put me on a horse and carried me off with 'em. I caught sight of the gal as I was carried off, and she waa the most sur prised person I ever seen. Well, here I am, caged for first beln' melted by a gal's simplicity and second trustin' her to vouch for me. I reckon I won't get out o' this, but if I do I'll be keen enough not to be outdone again in any such fashion.