14 PHOTOGRAPHS THAT SHOW HOW R1 VERT ON CONSOLIDATED WATER COMPANY HAS SPENT ITS MONEY TO GIVE PEOPLE OF WEST SHORE TOWNS PURE WATER " I~~• AN OTI ETR. '-RBJERVOIR. ! •FILTER PLANT • AND - OAM -ON • VErLLOIV •BRE-fcCHfcJ-CRErErK* THE Rlverton Consolidated Water Company has. since its organization, expended something like ?r>oo,ooo In an effort to give Camp Hill and other West Shore towns pure filtered water In unlimited; supplies. Its rates are not based on any desire or attempt, to hold up its patrons. All that it Is asking is a rate that will Rive it a fair return on the vast amount of money invested. The pictures presented herewith illustrate beyond the power of words the effort the company is making to serve its customers as they should be served. No effort has been saved to give them water second to none in the ' State. The etching of the old pumping station shows the first, development of the company at Wormleysburg, where raw river water was pumped into the. mains and reservoirs. Al'erward, when it was found necessary to filter the I water, this station was used to distribute water bought from the city of Har- I risburg, the filtered, product being brought under the river from the island 10 the pumping s' jrflon ;ind thence to the Washington Heights reservoir. The picture of the liUer plant and pumping station at New Cumberland illustrates the measures the company has since taken to filter its own water. This sta tion Is located on the site of the old Ross Mill on the York county side of the Yellow Breeches creek and the photograph also shows the large dam from Which the raw water is drawn. Thousands of dollars have been expended to make this plant as efficient as modern silence can provide and the company Is not afraid at any time to have expert comparison made between the quality of water it turns out with that from the noted filter plant at Harrisburg. The. view of the sedimentation basin shows how the raw water is received by the filters for the first step of filtration. The Interior view of the plant shows only a comparatively small portion of the elaborate equipment, said to be one of the most modern and complete in the State for its size. The standpipe at Washington Heights, which is sixty feet high, Is situated on one of the high est promontories in the lower end of Cumberland county and was erected at large cost in order that Camp Hill and other towns supplied would have at all times a proper flow and adequate pressure. It holds nothing but the purest filtered water. The Washington Heights reservoir has capacity of 500,000 gal lons, Is lined with concrete, recently re-constructed, and is also located on the hilltop back of the river. The Boyer reservoir has a capacity of 1,500,000 gallons and Is located in Falrvlew township, York county, and the Haldeman reservoir, with a capacity of 1,000,000 gallons, Is located In the same town ship. All are of concrete. Forty miles of new mains, IG, 12. 10, S, 6 and 4 Inches in capacity, have been laid to serve the growing communities on the West Shore. The total investment for filter plants, concrete reservoirs, pump ing stations, standpipe? _,id about 40 miles of pipe Is ,as has been said, about a hair million dollars It is the desire of the company first to give its patrons the beßt water obtainable In quantities sufficient to meet their needs. In the second place the company wants to serve its customers as cheaply as possible, at the same time setUng aside funds to cover deterioration of plant, sinking and a proper return to investors.—Advertisement. Held For Threatening President Wilson's Life Special to The Telegraph Newark, N. J., Feb. 21. George Bernhardt, a cook, was arrested yes terday In West Orange, a suburb, charged with writing threatening let ters to President Wilson. The post office Inspectors traced to Bernhardt | M M.-,", . ALL that a good 10c cigar should be—all Havana tobacco blended to the point of perfection that it satisfies all tastes. MOM Wc CIGARS Moja quality gives more for the money than a dime's worth of nickel cigars—it's neither too heavy nor too mild. It's right. Made by John C. Herman & Co. SATURDAY EVENING, letters signed "God's Son," which have been mailed to the President for three months past from Newark and neigh boring towns. The writer complained of hard times and threatened death to the President and destruction to the city of Wash ington. The police say Barnhardt es caped three years ago from an insane asylum near Philadelphia. He was held in default of SI,OOO bail to await action of the Federal court. ASK SCHOOL BOARD TO BOOST APPROPRIATION [Continued From First Page] 4,153 and In February to the 19th, in clusive, 2,160. The number of read ers at the library in January was 4,- 404, of whom about 54 per cent, or 2,389 were children. The readers in February to the 19th, inclusive was ,2,221 of whom 789 were children, the Inclement weather preventing the usual attendance in the last wek. The registration from January 1 to Feb ruary 19. inclusive, was 5,4 39, of which 1,376 was of children, the par ents signing for each child. Estimat ing 75,000 as the population of Har risburg this registration is better than 1 in 15 with the library in use only a month and a half. The registration is bound to Increase as In many cities the size of Harrisburg it runs 1 In 5. Increased registration means increased ; demand for books and therefore of j expense. The library is In need of ; books for children, less than 400 of 'the 2,000 of that class remaining on ! the shelves to-day. The expenses of the library can be estimated upon tho experience of the first month, the total v and the book service 11,888. The stand kiu uutuoi.i.i on ij ii the United States, the "American Li brary," by Bostwick, gives on page I 132, C cents as the minimum cost of : circulation of a book and 10 cents as the maximum. Taking the January figures the service of the Harrisburg I public library shows a cost of less than 6 1-3 cents oer *>ook." Moutn Tlygienc Aside from hearing the trustees' committee the board did little else than transact some routine matters. 1/ ' I The Price You ' Pay For Glasses WHETHEH YOU PAY I'S $3, $5 or $8 you get the highest grade glasses that can be bought for the money. We use no guess work methods as we are equip ped with the latest scientific eye testing Instruments. Try us. Gohl Optical Co. 8 NORTH MARKET SQUARE Where Glasses Arc Made Right) ' «■ HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Mouth hygiene, was discussed and it was decided to investigate the ques tion of establishing a system in tho schools. In order that ail possible data may be obtained on the subject the board appointed a committee con sisting of President Boyer, Dr. F. E. Downes, city superintendent, and D. D. Hammelbaugh, secretary, to confer with the Harrisburg Dental Society on the matter. Beside awarding a few small con tracts the board received the appli cation of J. H. Killinger for a janitor ship; appointed Miss Myra Stutzman from the substitute list to succeed Miss E. B. Shnffner, resigned, as teacher In the Camp Curtin building, and refused the request of Poor Di rector C. L. Boyer for the use of the old church at Sixth and Forster Btreets to serve as a mission ecauso the build ing Is being considered as a possible domestic science school site. The re quest of the school teachers that school re-open during the second In stead of the first week in September was refused. The contract for laun dering the towels of the Technical High School was awarded to the Troy laundry at its bid of twenty-five cents 'per hundred. No definite conclusion i was reached as to the award of the lcontract for furnishing brick for the new grade school at Seventeenth and Catherine streets. Mr. and Mrs. Bowman Give Dinner at Berwin Park Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., Feb. 21. —Last even ing the handsome residence of Mr. and Mrs. Leigh ton G. Bowman, of Berwin Park, was the scene of a happy and rather unique affair when they entertained a party of friends at a fine dinner at their home. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hench, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde P. Love, of Harrisburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles I). Weirlck and Miss Mabel Weirlck, of this city. In connection with the dinner, the affair also served as a reunion inasmuch as this was the first time that the Harrisburgers and Mr. and Mr. Bowman have been together since their trip to the Pacific coast last August and September, when they went to San Francisco, Cal., with a special Pullman train of Phlladelphians and other Pennsylvan ians, who attended the triennial con clave of the Knights Templar of the United States l.eld in the city of Den ver. Another pleasant incident of the occasion was the fact that several years ago Mr. and Mrs. Weirlck ac companied the Harrisburg friends to " "list on the occasion of the Shrlneri rnd Knights Templar con ..eld in Caiuornia. Mr. Love and Mr. Hench are prominent Masons and Knights Templar of the State Capitol. Mr. Love Is a past officer in several of ■ .via:- ml' Ml liis!->t tons of TPirrls burg. He is » passenger conducto on the Pennsylvania railroad. The visitors arrived here in the after noon and were met at the Reading de pot by Messrs. Bowman and Weirlck, who escorted them to Berwin Park. 'Yesterday afternoon Messrs. Love and Hench were also shown through tho Lebanon club's handsome quarters in the Muim building and in the local Masonic Ten.pit, Suii k buii-ium, Nintn and Willow streets. Letters to the Editor THE LITEM AC Y TEST To the Hd : *or of The Telegraph: In your editorial of February 18, you say all good Americans will approve the reported Intention of President Wilson to veto the new immigration bill If it comes to him with the literacy clause attached. P'o tlie readers of your paper, myself included, understand by this that our National Congress at Washington, who pussed this bill by a 252 to 12b, precise ly a two-tliird vote, and all people who favor it are not good Americans? I. for one, will say all good Ameri cans favor the bill as passed. We could not expect anything but a veto from President Wilson, Judging him by his passed actions. It seems very strange that you wish the literacy test omitted for fear it might bar the father of a Lincoln from our shores. We will admit that there Is a very large number of illiterate em igrants who possess good character, a strong body, and a determination to get there. Hut the great majority are under tlie Illiterate yoke in their na tive land, and after landing on our shores fail to take advantage of our educational Institutions, consequently thoy fall back under the same llliter- j ate yoke. Many of them are opposed to our free schools, free speach, free press, and our Republican form of govern ment. May there not be a hidden purpose of foreign influence back of it all. Hoping you will give this space In your valuable paper. , Yours for the bill. A CONSTANT READER. Harrlsbnrg, Pa. Feb. 19, 14. Washington Banquet of Hummelstown P. 0. S. of A. Ilummelstown, Pa., Feb. 21. —Cainp No. 306, P. O. S. of A. last night cele brated the anniversary of Washing ton's birth with appropriate exorcises and a banquet. The meeting was pre sided over by Deputy Prothonotary Homer Hummel Strickler, of the Su preme Court; and excellent addresses were delivered by George B. Marquart, ex-mayor of Lebanon, and Early Z. Hitter, of Hummelstown. A history ot tho local camp was also given by Henry M. Horst, cashier of the Farm ers' Hank. Music was furnished by tho P. O. S. of A. orchestra. Covers .vere laid for seventy-five members md guests, i Mr. Strickler acted as toastmaster nd toasts were given by the following brethren: Joseph Burkholder, William I. Earnest., R. C. Stecker, Henry M. lorst and William F. Shoemaker. The meeting was enjoyed by all present. PLANS FIGHT AGAINST OISEASK Washington. Feb. 21. —Contending that It was just as proper for the fed eral government to spend money to eradicate malaria and typhoid fever as to investigate ithe cattle tick, hog cholera, or dourlne in horses. Senator ißansdell to-day Introduced a bill to 'appropriate $500,000 to light malaria and typhoid. i FEBRUARY 21, 1914. Know Mrs. Newlywed? Well's She's Going to Be Here Next Week I ! y° u Know Mrs. Newlywed? <>f course you know the girl around' tho corner who was married not long ago. and who. with her husband, has 1 fheen dubbed "the newlvweds" by the ] I neighbors, but we mean-- Uo you know llie real Mrs. Newly- • wed, who lives In the Sunday news- i j papers, and who has such beautiful hair, and oh yes the mother of i ! Snook urns? The Mrs. Newlywed of the Sunday! comic section -is a creature of the im- ! agination of George McManus, one of ' the best known newspaper artists in I ihe world, and to Mrs. McManus belongs i the credit for the inspiration that brought about the successful carica- i tures. The artist's wife was really the ' model for Mrs. Newlywed, and next week Mrs. McManus is going to be in Harrisburg. She is a sister of Mrs. Hi S. Erloks °n, who with her husband. j i will he at the Orpheum in a musical comedy act, and Mrs. McManus will j, spend the week here with her relatives l —Advertisement. *| ; " MWKXTURKS OF KATIILYN," j "TIIK IIOYAI, SIiAVK," I PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY To-day the most interesting of this , world-fatuous series, "Adventures of ; Kathlyn, which have proven to be i tho most wonderful pictures ever pro- ' ' " The R °y al Slave" is full of | , thrilling and sensational incidents. I i Knthlyn's marvelous escape from tho . elopard's den is truly wonderful audi keeps you spellbound from start to 1 | finish. The next adventure, "A Colonei I in Chains," will be shown In this the ater in two weeks. —Advertisement. WHO LOSES? | i When you read announcements of' five dollar glasses for one dollar Just stop and think. When I sell a frame or mounting for 50c, SI.OO or $3.50, It is worth all of the price I ask. I When I make a pair of lenses for $1.50, $2.50 or SIO.OO a pair they are worth all of the price I ask. When X examine your eyes I charge you SI.OO. My service would be cheap at, $5.00. 1 don't sell you a pair of glasses for $5.00 or SI.OO to ruin your eyes, If you don't need them. You pay me for my service. The "eyes exam ined free" man makes his profit. Think It over. I , With H. C. tlMtcc, Ml Market St HH