CHJIIIY WILL SPfHD mm in ism First Budget For Dauphin Com pleted by the Commis sioners Yesterday MILL RATE FIXED AT FOUR Various Sources of Outlay and Income Are Set Out; Some Items Higher Dauphin county's estimated expendi tures during the coming year will total 1348,992.18, according to the first bud- Ket comploted late yesterday afternoon 1 y the County Commissioners. The mill rate, as had been expected, was fixed at four mills. The budget contains twenty different times and the larger of these include Ihe $60,000 for the Poor Directors and P27,000 for the Prison Board. Aa a pule the expenses for the coming year tfill be much the same, although some jf the items will be larger. Of the $12,798 asked by the County Commissioners, $3,600 goes for the sal- MT of threo clerks, and SIOO is al lowed for traveling expenses. Of the >4,161 to be allowed the County Con troller, $2,500 is for his own and $1,320 'or his deputy's salary. The renialuder s for stationery, telephones, a coutin (ent fund of $75. and so on. The Cor i>ner is allowed $2,690, with an allow »nce of SBOO for physicians and SBO tor jurors. To the District Attorney e appropriated $8,697, including $4,000 for the county's attorney and $2,400 tor the two assistants. The office of County Inspector of Weights and Measures is allowed $1,250, SIOO of which is provided as salary for Inspec tor Harry A. Boyer. The items of ex penditure and the receipts follow: Exi>enditurea Commissioners' office ..... $12,705.00 Treasurer's office 2,931.00 Controller's office 4,161.00 Coroner's ofllce 2,960.00 District Attorney's office .. 8,697.00 bounty Solicitor 7,500.00 Constables and Police .... 11,650.00 Assessments 9,650.00 Bridges 13,700.00 Roads 3,000.00 Court expenses 28,642.00 Courthouse 13.093.00 Elections 18,250.00 interest and sinking funds, . 33,843.35 'enal institutions 15,500.00 2are?of insane 25,300.00 *'ee offices 7,288.00 General contingent 31,730.03 Requisitions 87,000.00 Total expenditures $345,992.1S Receipts 'ounty tax $266,000.00 State tax 40,000,00 ji*luor licenses 5,500.00 nterest sinking fund 5,000.00 Maintenance insane 1,500.00 Maintenance city prisoners, 2.000.00 nterest daily balances . . . 2,000.00 Premium county fairs .... 1.000.00 Primary elections( from Statet 7,500.00 Recorder 3,500.00 3 rothonotary 6,500.00 Register 200.00 Miscellaneous 700.00 County credits 1,592.13 Total revenue expected. . $345,992.18 HKPTAROPHS Wil l, INSTALL Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., Jan. 15.—Dillsburg Conclave, Xo. 306, Improved Order of rleptasophs, will hold its annual in stallation of officers on Thursday night, yhlch will be followed by a supper, served in the hall. The installation vill be in charge of District Deputy Supreme Archon Gails, of New Free iqm. VALUABLE HORSE KILLED . Johnestown. Pa., Jan. 15. While >V. S. Cope, a farmer of Swatara town ship, was driving through this place, lOmeone emptied a bucket of water nto the street, the horse shied and ell, breaking its leg. The animal had 0 be shot. It was a valuable animal. Pimples Will Not Be Pardoned Pile Failure to Use Stuart's Calcium Wafers, a Proved Remedy I'or Pimples, Convicts You of Un- Itardouablc Negligence Pimples are an offense to others and 1 crime against yourself. People have inly tolerated you because they con sidered the condition of your face to >e a misfortune against which you had lo remedy. But now that it is unlver ally known that Stuart s Calcium Wa ers will cure the worst cases of pim )les, blackheads, blotches, eruptions, md liver-spots, your continued negli tence will be considered inexcusable. The person with a pimply face is al vays unattractive and at a disadvan age in society. Those ugly disflgure nents set at naught the effect of the nost perfect features. If your face md figure had the classical outlines of i Greek statue, a mass of pimples vould still destroy your beauty. A :leur, fresh skin is absolutely essential ,o any real beauty. •I Feel Like I Am in Jail, II Am So Ashamed of These Pimples" A beautiful complexion is entirelv lependent on a rich, pure, abundant rapply of blood to the skin. Calcium iulphide has long been recognized as he most effective of blood purifiers Quickly converting all Impurities into ;aseous form that readily escapes from he pores, it purifies the most vitiated ilood in remarkably short order. Cal :ium sulphide is the chief constituent if Stuart's Calcium Wafers, which con aln besides, certain mild alteratives hat Invigorate the blood. You will be lurpriaed at the rapidity with which ill face disorders will disappear, once he blood has been cleansed of Its im purities through their use. Stop being a nuisance and an annoy ince to other people. You have a right o beauty and health and happiness fou have a right to the admiration nd respect of others. Take the step hat will gain you all of these. Get a iOc box of Stuart's Calcium Wafers of our druggist and win back your birth- Ight of beauty.—Advertisement. THURSDAY EVENING, IHOW PIPER IS BOOMING STUART Tribune Declare! That He It the Logical Candidate 'For the Governorship Under the caption of "The Logical Candidate" the Altoona Tribune prints l this editorial: "In a recent editorial discussion of prospective Republican candidates for the office of Governor the Philadelphia Bulletin declares that 'two names are beginning steadily to come to the front over and above those of all other can didates who have been proposed or mentioned —Philander C. Knox and Edwin S. Stuart.' And while the Bulletin names Knox first, It adds In another part of its article that 'the ex-Governor, with his far-reaching ! personal popularity in the rank and file of the progressives, as well as of the Republicans, not only hero, but In the State at large, seems to be as much stronger over Knox as Knox is over all the others.' "This statement gives the Tribune an opportunity to repeat what it has said upon various occasions during the past few months, that the one un- ! assailable Republican candidate, the ' candidate with an impregnable rec ord, would be former Governor Edwin S. Stuart. During the campaign of 1906 he was fiercely antagonized by the Democrats and their independent allies. In his progress through the State he took the voters into his con fidence, telling them plainly, simply and earnestly that in the event of his election he would be the Governor of all the people; that he would have the Capitol scandal exhaustively and im partially investigated; that if it was discovered that any had robbed the State he would do all in his power to secure the triumph of justice and the punishment of the guilty. "The people believed him. Nobody could look into his face, nobody could listen to his voice without the over whelming conviction that here was a man and a statesman. The people be lieved him. we say; and they made him their Governor. He went to the discharge of his high and responsible duties with a single dominant pur pose: he meant to serve all the people. He originated, advised and encour aged the Capitol investigation; he sympathized with its purpose and ap proved the action of the courts. When efforts were made to secure the re lease of the convicted men he frowned upon- them and steadily declined to encourage any movement having for its purpose their pardon. In this and all other matters his business sagacity, his stern sense of probity, his love of justice, his appreciation of the re sponsibilities of his position, guided him from the beginning to the end, winning general confidence and ad miration. "During the four years in which Edwin S. Stuart was the chief servant of the people of Pennsylvania he per formed his part with such clarity of vision, with such single-hearted de votion to the right, with such eminent ability that the mouth of criticism was shut. From the opening day of his administration until he gave place to his successor nothing was alleged against him and he returned to pri vate life amid the general praise of all the people. We are not eulogizing Governor Stuart; we are not paying him unmeaning compliments; we are simply recalling the facts of recent history. In every official incident he was true to the highest ideals. Recall, for instance, his favorite road bill, a measure upon which he had set his heart. Yet, he resolutely vetoed it when he saw that if it became a law the helpless wards of the State might not be properly cared for. "Edwin S. Stuart is an ideal citizen. He was a great Governor. He has a warm place in the affections of an overwhelming majority of his fellow citizens. lie is a Republican, ani mated by progressive sentiments, and he has proved his worth by splendid achievement. Edwin S. Stuart is the logical Republican candidate. He must be persuaded to subordinate private inclination to public duty. Let Repub licans everywhere rally around his stainless standard." PUBUCIfYTiiE BEST WEHPON IN VICE FIGHT [Continued From First Page] lowers, but poor leaders— effective as a rear guard, but worthless for scout duty. The judge has some favorable opportunities to excite a lethargic public conscience, but to avail himself of them is to earn a reputation as a sensationalist—a result extremely dis tasteful to the judicially minded. Im memorial usage, the obligation of judicial decorum, a conservative en vironment and the inflexible letter of the law combine to discourage judicial Initiative. There is little to be hoped for in this direction except that the courts may be depended upon for gen erous responses to a well-defined pop ular demand for a thorough-going en forcement of the law." When Virtue Sleeps Judge Carter, further along in his letter, after discussing the adminis tration and enforcement of the law, says: "In a state of political quietude with no pronounced pressure for law enforcement, the considerations that make for a course of conciliation toward influential lawlessness are ir resistible to the average public official. The inevitable result is that the sur face is glosst'd over and*hat vice and crime flourish underneath. There is nothing more natural than this evo lution of protected vice. It has its genesis not so much in the corruption as in the timidity of public officials; but, once rooted, graft inevitably re sults. The primary responsibility for such conditions attaches to indiffer ent, somnolent virtue. Virtue sleeps; vice never does. Virtue awake is the stronger and can always command official allegiance; asleep, political do minion is lost to her weaker adver sary. "In the darkness of public indiffer ence society has been corrupted; in the light of awakened conscience she must be purified. Publicity is the remedy. Insistent, persistent, relent less publicity. Every soul that loves Its fellow and hates the enemy of humankind should delve for the truth and proclaim it from the housetops. Tho Church should wake from her dreams of peace and enlist in the holv war. To free society' from evil domi nation It Is always necessary that the truth be made known. This was abundantly demonstrated in the cam paign of publicity by paid newspaper advertising recently conducted in At j lanta, Ga. "Upon the sheer reason of the thing, as well as from the results accom plished in Atlanta, I am persuaded that everything in the way of law en forcement and the suppression of legal ized vice that Is possible of accomplish ment through human agency may rea sonably be expected to result from the application of this one remedy—pub licity. In it is the alchemy that will transmute the base metal of public indifference and official delinquency Into the pure gold of active virtue and efficient public service." || I Another Great Picture ! 1 | I of William Penn | | I Next Sunday, January 18th | I I The sixth instalment of the superb supplements \ j I 1 reproducing in full color j Violet Oakley's I Paintings I 1 O g 2S B ss -ty I I —the famous William Penn Pictures in the Pennsylvania Stats FS § Sin Capitol at Harrisburg £ 1 Est I Is n g| Copperplate Pictorial Section If] | ? I 1 Sixteen page? of news photographs reproduced in halftone B | | on coated paper H : | Magazine Section 1 I f Woman's Interests Foreign News 1 1 Complete General News 1 | Home Departments News of Sports m I j ! PUBLIC - 1 j H 1 DAILY TWO CENTS SUNDAY FIVE CENTS jI j j || I F* rs t Thing in the Morning Since 1836 jjjll S == | Agent for HarrUfrarf, Pa. 11l S I 1 I HARRISBURG NEWS AGENCY § H I 102 8. Second St. B«U Phone 1667 W. United Phone 781 ||| || I Miss Chronister Dies Two Weeks After Her Parents Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., Jan. 15.—0n Tues day the funeral of Miss Amanda Chronister, of Washington township, who died on Saturday of pneumonia at her home near Mulberry Post Office, was held. Miss Chronister died just two weeks after the death of her par enls, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Chronister, who died within one hour of each other of pneumonia. She was deliri ous at the time death came to her father and mother and was not told of the death of her parents until a short time before she died. TO FORECLOSE MORTGAGE Formal steps were begun yesterday by C. H. Bergner and Lyman D.Gilbert, counsel for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company to foreclose the mortgage to the extent of $130,982.02 against the Summit Branch Mining Company, Summit Branch railroad, Lehigh Val ley Coal Company, Lehigh Valley Rail road Company, the Northern Central and Isaac D. West, terre tenant. The action grows out of the condemna tion proceedings brought some weeks ago to recover the amount due on Judgments. The ground in question includes the property that had been leased by the Pennsy. irsur OR MM! PAIN Dr. James' Headache Powders Relieve at Once—lo Cents a Package Nerve-racking, splitting or dull throbbing headaches yield In Juat a few moments to Dr. Jam«' H«adach« Powders, which cost only 10 cents a package at any drug store, it'g the quickest, surest headache relief in the whole world. Don't suffer! Relieve the agony and distress now! You can. Millions of men and women have found that headache and neuralgia misery is needless. Get what you ask for. —Advertisement. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Greater Loss in One Fire Than All of Last Year Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., Jan. IB.—Local volun teer firemen were this week congratu lating themselves on the good records made during 1913, during which term there were thirty-five fire alarms and a total property lo: i of only $3,246, when an alarm sounded and in two hours a fire loss of $5,000 wm re corded in the damaging of C. W. Ret tew's grocery store and two adjoining dwellings. RANGE YYKEUKEI) BY EXPLOSION Special to The Telegraph Newport, Pa., Jan. IB.—Considerable commotion was caused yesterday In Fourth street near Market by the bursting of the waterback In the kitchen range at the home of Thad Hurry Up Coal Orders 100 horses to deliver it. Some morning you will wake up and want coal in a hurry. No fire—coal bin empty —everyone in a bad humor. That's the time to think o,f us. We can have the coal starting for your house im mediately. We also have two coal yards and always keep a large stock of coal on hand so that quick delivery docs not mean inferior ser vice. Try us for the next order. United Ice & Coal Co. ranter » Contra Third A Bona 15tfc * Cknlaat Hummel A- Mnllirrr; * ALSO STEELTON, PA. * deus G. Stephens. Pieces of iron flew every way, one striking Mr. Stephens' little daughter, Pauline, and making a hole In her leg. An apron worn by the maid, Hannah Acker, was burnt. The stove was so badly damaged that it will be sold to the Junkman. SUNDAY SCHOOL OFFICERS Special to The Telttrap t Annvtlle, Pa., Jan. IB.—St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Sunday school at its regular meeting on Sunday morning elected the following officers: Superintendent, Professor Charles G. Ditter; assistant superintendent, A. S. Ulrlch; secretary, Jacob Kendig; treas urer, Mervin Meyers; organist, Virgle Bach man; superintendent primary de partment, Mrs. Willis J. Heffner; as sistant superintendent and organist, Miss Elizabeth Shaud. JANUARY 15,1914. r • Your Friends Smoke Mr^U : j v Alloc CIGARS |ft Why Not You? A smoker s delight is to find a cigar to suit his indi vidual taste. MOJA ALL-HAVANA 10c CIGARS have that happy combination of quality and fragrance which satis fies the smoker who is used to "black" cigars, as well as the man who likes the mellow smoke. Made by Jehn C. Herman & Co. /* Good Coal Means Less Coal Bar only gond fuel and you'll bay Itm. Good coal glvea off heat atradlly and the consumption la leaa than It would be If mixed with alate I and other Impnrttlea which decreaae heat value. To buy our coal la to buy uuod coal. It coat* no more—try It. J. B. MONTGOMERY BRANCH OFFICGi BOTH PUONF