14 SUPERVISORS OF ALL lIOIiSmPS OF STATE BEING ORGANIZED Work Will Be Completed by State Highway Department oo April 16 On the IGth of this month the bureau of township highways of the State Highway Department will com plete tlxo formation of organizations of township supervisors in the counties of the State as provided for in the legislative acts of July 22. 1913. and of May 8. J»1 a, the latter of which authorized formations of such asso ciations of officials in charge of the construction and maintenance, of pub lic roads in every county of the State. Under tlic direction of Joseph W. Hunter, First Deputy State Highway Commissioner, in charge of the bureau of township highways, assisted by E. A. Jones, Second Deputy State High way Commissioner, and W. A. Wynn, maintenance engineer of the bureau of township highways, these county meetings have been held at the rate of six and eight a week and in counties Where the supervisors already had an association their meeting this year was held for the first time under the aus pices of the State Highway Depart ment. ■ During the woe I; of April 13 two final meetings will bo held. On the 1 sth, the Lawrence county association of supervisors will be formed at a meeting to be held at .10 o'clock in the morning in the court . bouse at New Castle. This meeting will be addressed by Air. Hunter, who will outline the procedure necessary to perfect the formation of an asso ciation of supervisors. On the follow ing day Mr. Hunter will attend the meeting to be held at 10 o'clock in the morning in the courthouse at Tionesta, when the Forest county association will be formed. This will be the final county meeting and the work of the bureau of township highways during t he coming year will be in co-operation with the various county associations thus formed. Boy Shot in Spine by Companion; May Die (Shortly before 8 o'clock this after .looll, Raymond Fagle, aged 9 years, of 2142 North Fifth street, was* acci ] dentally shot and probably fatally I wounded by Gilbur Trombine, a com panion, with whom he was playing. Trombine shot Fagle with a 32-caliber revolver. The bullet lodged in the back near the spine. Mother Claims Damages For Son's Death; Company Declares He Is Alive j By Associated Press Buffalo. N. Y.. April 9. —The Wick wire Steel Company in answering the suit of Mrs. Susan Hargraves in Su preme Court here for the alleged death of her son who, she claims, was burned to death in a huge furnace after being shut in when he entered to make some adjustments, claims there i.« no evidence to show that the man is dead, as liis body has never been seen. The steel company took this unusual stand after .Mrs. Hargraves made the claim that her son's body was entirely consumed in the furnace. The mother's contention is that her son was sent into the furnace and while inside some one closed the door and shut off the air and lie was burned alive. The question which now con fronts the jury is whether Hargraves is alive or dead. John C. Nissley Is Popular in the County The announcement that John C. Nissley will be a candidate for the ■Legislature on the Republican ticket in the county district has aroused much interest in political circles. Mr. Nissley is a well-known attorney, re siding in Lower Paxton township, and liis friends say will poll a big vote both at the primaries and general election. He is a staunch advocate of good roads and is well known among the farmers. SNOW FLURRIES MARK FLAREBACK IN WEATHER By Associated Press Williamsport, Pa,, April !t.—Early vegetation suffered severely in a sud den drop of temperature in the city to-day. The temperature changed r.<> degrees in ten hours, falling to 2G de gress. and there were snow Hurries throughout the day. In the northern tier of Lycoming county one-half inch of snow fell during the night. CONVICTS MIST WORK By Associated Press Albany, X. Y.. April 9.—Bricks for use in constructing highways in New York State will be made at the Eltnira State Reformatory, as soon as building and apparatus are. erected. Oovernor -Glynn to-day signed a bill appropri ating $75,000 for this purpose. The plan is the fif-st step in the Governor's recommendation to the Legislature that convicts be employed in manu facturing road material. FREEZING WEATHER RECORDED By Associated Press Memphis, Tenn., April 9.—Freezing and near-freezing temperatures were reported from West Tennessee, Ar kansas. North Mississippi and Okla homa by the local weather bureau to day. At Fort Smith, Ark., the mer cury fell to 30 degrees. At Jackson, Miss., a temperature of 3fi was re corded. and Vickshurg reported 38. In Memphis the freezing point was reached. MER EDITH A CANDIDATE By Associated Press Des Moines, lowa, April a.—E. T. .Meredith, a farm magazine publisher, to-day announced liis candidacy on the Democratic ticket for the United States Senate to succeed Albert B. Cummins, Republican. BRYAN RETURNS TO DESK By Associated Press Washington, D. C., April 9.—Sec retary Bryan, who has been kept in doors for a week by a hard cold, re turned to-day to his desk at the State Department. WANTS $5,000 FOR SLANDER t In a suit filed this morning against Mi nephew, Ma* Gordon, Joseph Gor don asks so,ooo damages for certain Glanderous statements he alleges his youthful kin mado. Joseph contends that his nephew called him a "thief and a beat." THURSDAY EVENING, OXIfiUSBURG TELEGRAPIJ APRIL 9, 1914. MORGENTHAU SENDS $25, New York, April 9.—ln preparing to make his departure for Constanti nople, where he is now establshed as the United States Ambassador, Henrv Morgenthau, who was treasurer of the national Democratic committee, neglected to send a present to Miss Jessie Wilson on the occasion of her wedding to Francis B. Sayre. A beautiful Oriental rug, valued at not less than $25,000, has just been passed through New York, en route from the Turkish capital to the Sayre home at Williamstown, Mass. Attached to the rug is a card bearing the compliments of Air. Morgenthau. NEW YORK GUNMAN j TO MAKE CONFESSION! [Continued From First Page] first intended to go to Albany to-day; to make a personal pleu to Governor j Glynn. But when the delegation ofi rabbis failed yesterday to move the. Governor to '"reconsidering his decision Wahle determined that the interests of his clients would best be served by forwarding the memorandum by special messenger. The rumors regarding the expected confession had it that he one gunman most likely to talk was "Gyp the Blood" Horowitz. An alibi affidavit for "Dago Frank" Cirofici. the existence of which was rumored yesterday, will be sent to the Governor with Wahle's memorandum. The affidavit Is signed by Frederick Reo, a special officer in a Harlem dance hall. Reo says that on the night! Rosenthal was killed he took a note : from a womari who had been arrested j on a charge of disorderly conduct to | the home of "Dago Frank" and met j "Dago Frank" there. It was then 1.56 o'clock in the j morning, about the time Rosenthal was murdered. The memorandum also culls to the Governor's attention the fact that ten of the twelve jurors who convicted the gunmen expressed themselves in favor of a reprieve. Wages at Iron and Steel Mills May Be Cut Special to The Telesrafh New York, April 9.—The Iron Age says to-day that it now seems likelp 1 that wages will be reduced at iron and steel works if conditions as to-prices: and demand continue as unsatisfac-; tory as in recent weeks. Reductions • have already come, in fact, at the i plants of some of the smaller com-1 panics. Common, labor, which for, nearly two years has been receiving $2 i at a good many mills. is now paid I $1.75 at others and in some cases as' low as $1.50. The probability of early' action on all wage schedules at the : I larger steel works is indicated by a! i conference on the subject held at, Pittsburgh Tuesday and attended by! the presidents of five independent steeii companies. PIiAX BENEFIT CONCBHT Th« fifth annual concert for the ' benefit of St.Augustine's Church, which : will be presented Tuesday, April 14. at !the Chestnut Street Auditorium, prom- : isess to bo an extremely interesting! event. Excellent talent has been se cured for the occasion. Blanche Esther I Williams, soprano. will appear in a ' group of S. Coleridge Taylor's songs and "Songs of American Negro Com- i posers." The Tuskegee Quartet, from ' the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial institute In Alabama. Booker T Wash ington's school, will sing plantation melodies, Southern songs and appear in dialect readings. Professor S E tiurris' orchestra will play. BURY PAGE SATURDAY j Funeral services for Daniel R. Page 1 | the moulder, of 226 North Fifteenth i street, who committed suicide in the ! Harrisburg cemetery eativ yesterday morning, will be held Saturday after noon at 2 o'clock from his home. The Rev. J. A. Lyter, pastor of the Derry Street United Brethren church [will officiate. Burial will be made in the East Harrisburg cemetery. RAN FORK IN FOOT While using a pitchfork, George I Fetrow, aged 23, of 1717 Hunter! street, employed by the Harrisburg; Gas Company, yesterday aceidently ran a tene Into a toe of his left foot. I He was treated at the Harrisburg i hospital. SHOT SELF IN HAND Howard Proudfoot, of 623 Reily street, accidently shot himself through ! | the palm of his left hand yesterdav afternoon while cleaning a revolver at the homo of his aunt in Halifax. Change Moving Day to Relieve Burden of Meter Changing In many American cities leases are j written to expire on April 30 or Sep tember 30, so that, by long-establish ed custom. May 1 and October 1 have i come to be regarded as "moving day." • A large proportion of the population |ot the cities is transitory, and it fol , lows that a great burden of making meter changes, disconnections and connections falls on the public utility companies by reason of the moving day custom. ' An effort is being made in Chicago under the auspices of the Chicago Real Estate Board to cause renting agents to co-operate with the board in an endeavor to have leases terminate at various times during the year rath er than almost entirely on the two dates mentioned. The movement is one that deserves general encourage ment In all cities. In Chicago rep resentatives of the electric service l company, the gas company, the tele phone company and of the van and j warehouse interests have joined with I the real estate men in an effort to j bring about the proposed reform, j which, by general consent, is believed | to be to the advantage of all the busi ness interests concerned as well as of the general public.—Electrical World. General Villa as Dressed For Torreon Battle I This is the latest photograph of General Villa before he left Chihua | hua with his troops for the battle that I has raged at Torreon for several days, j Three months ago Villa didn't have a • uniform. He fought in the ordinary 'clothing of a citizen and he had not | then made much of an effort to get i uniforms for his troops. But since I his capture of Juarez, Ojlnaga anil I Chihuahua, he has arisen to the dig nity of a general. In the old days v hen he was merely a bandit he didn't ! know what creased trousers meant, but before he posed for this picture he had his uniform ironed out by a tailor. ) NEEDLESS NOISES HAVE BAD EFFECT ONNERVOUS SYSTEM So Says Dr. Dixon in His Weekly Health Talk; City Dwell ers Suffer There are many noises which can be avoided that are permitted in the cities and they all have their effect upon people's nervous systems. This is the opinion of Commissioner of Health Samuel G. Dixon, who takes a fall out of people who allow rackets to go on. In his talk on the subject the commissioner says: "All city dwellers suffer from the harsh, unnecessary noises which have grown to be the inevitable accompani ment of life in a metropolis. "The noises in nature are seldom discordant. The whisper of the wind through the trees or the swish of the waves on the shore, the chirping of insects or the songs of the birds are • ill harmonious. Contrasted with these the roaring of trains, the clanging of the trolley, the rattle of vehicles over tlie stone pavements, the honk of au tomobiles, are violently discordant. "We accustom ourselves to these sounds to a great degree. We learn to work amid the clatter of machines and the babble of voices through con entration of mind. Despite this ac quired ability, however, the continued ff'ect of discordant sounds upon the lervous system is injurious. "Let even a trifling illness occui nd these discords become almost un bearable. it is impossible to carry on he activities of a great city without ome accompanying noises, but a large nortion of those which we exhaust out nerve force in resisting are unneces ary. 1 "In one of the large cities of this ■ountry a 'Society for the Suppression of Needless Noises' has accomplished much genuine good in securing a quiet :one about hospitals and schools and n reducing the shrieking of whistles -•tc. "In conducting our daily business an ffort toward the elimination of un necessary noise would In many in tanees undoubtedly be repaid by the tdditional concentration and efficiency 'f employes." Electrical Device to Lessen Damage and Loss to Motorboats An electrical device has been de signed recently which renders ignition engines on launches and automobiles inoperative until a certain predeter mined combination is solved. Its use will minmize the loss through theft of vehicles and boats requiring storage battery energy for ignition. The lock ing mechanism is contained in a case having the outward appearance of a clock, the hands on which are set to a certain combination of figures by turn ing two knobs on the case. If an at tempt is, made to start the engine when the mechanism is locked, an electric bell will sound an alarm. By using this electric lock, It Is as serted, the cost of burglar insurance and the number of accidents caused toi Incompetent drivers will be consider ably reduced. It is impossible for a person riding in an automobile equipped with this device to learn the combination used, for as soon as -the car starts the hand locking the battery can be turned to any position while the magneto-lock hand can be moved nbout five spaces from the predeter mined position. When using this lock the fire insurance risk is not increased, for the car can still be pushed out of the garage in case of fire.—Electric Wcrld. "Movies" as Aid to Demonstrations For Safety on Railroads The increasing use ot' the moving picture film in electric railway educa tional and safety work shows the alertness and wisdom of managers in utilizing a popular agency for doing a much-needed work. The surest en trance to the intelligence is through the "eyo-gate." The moving picture film is expen sive, but the apparatus for projecting the picture is comparatively cheap. The needs of one railway company are akin to those of another, and a picture which teaches a safety or other lesson in one place can do the same thing in another. The moving picture theaters use films In circuits, thereby cutting down the expense of exhibitions and preventing the accum ulation of unusable films. There is a suggestion here for electric rail ways. A cent ra I agency eoul have scenes "staged" and films printed for circulation at nominal cost among! subscribers. The money now being I spent by individual companies for films is probably nearly enough to finance the proposition. Electric Railway Journal. Will Carry U. S. Mail on Electric Railway The West Chester (Pa.) street rall j way has restored the early mail serv ice between West Chester. Kennett Square, Downingtown and Coatesville. When the contract between the United States Poet Office Department and the railway expired the company refused to renew on account of the greatly I increased amount of mail carried and the small compensation allowed by the government for the service. The com pany will continue the service for one month and negotiations for a new contract will be started.—Electric Rail way Journal. Reos For Rubbernecks at Panama Exposition Reo trucks will carry the sightseers of the world at the coming Panama Exposition. It was a truck in Tahiti that brought about this decision. Last summer a cocoanut grower In that mid- Facillc Island decided to buy a Reo, equipped with a sneclal body, and st-.irt a "rubberneck" service in Tahiti. This ! sneclal hody wa« constructed in Frisco. The mcker of It was struck with the (originality of the design, and put to , gether a replica of it for n Frisco slghtsee'ng company. As a result of the nerformanr-e of that rubberneck ■ during the past few months, the Frisco corporation Is ordering a complete fleet of Reo« to serve during the coming CHILD DIES Charles Ross Kuhlwlnd, aged 1 year, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Ross Kuhlpvlnd, died last evening at the home of his parents, 275 Hamilton street. Private funeral services will .be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Burial will be made in the East Harrisburg Cemetery. \ J DOWAGER EMPRESS OF JAPAN DIES [Continued From First Page] Namazu, where they prayed for an hour in the death chamber. All the theaters have been closed and entertainments cancelled and It is considered • probable that the em peror's coronation, which had been arranged for November 10, will be postponed. The ministerial crisis was cast into the background by the death of the dowager empress and the new cabinet has not yet been formed. The Dowager Empress flaruko was the widow of Emperor JMutsuhlto, who died on July 30, 1912. She was born on May 28, 1850, and was the daugh ter of a nobleman, lehijo Tadado. In 1869 she married the late emperor and was declared empress. Seen Troubled I'eriod Ilarttko by the side of her husband passed through the troubled period of the transformation of Japan at the beginning of Mutsuhito's reign. She saw him transfer his capital from Kioto to Yedo, which was later re named Tokio. She watched with curi ous interest the opening of the coun try to foreign commerce, its departure from old world customs and its adop tion of western civilization. She awaited in the imperial palace news of the Japanese armies at war tlrst with China and then with Russia, and saw the complete evolution of Japan into a world power. Simple In Tastes Haruko was simple in her tastes. She presided over court functions with vreat dignity, on most occasions wear, ng western dress, especially when she ame into contact with Americans or Europeans. When the function was purely Japanese she occasionally re turned to the picturesque costume of her youth. The dowager empress was greatlj tffected by the death of Mutsuhito suffering for many months from an ift'ectlon of the heart. She died at he imperial villa at Namazu, a water ing place near Yokohama. Cruelty Prevention Folk Pass Resolutions on Eby The llarrisburg Society for the Pre vention of the Cruelty to Animals has passed resolutions of respect in appre ciation of the services in its cause o£ the late Maurice C. Eby. The resolu tions (ire as follows: "Whereas, during his lifetime Maurice C. Eby was marked by a de votion to the cause of the humane treatment of animals, and by his pub lic spiritedness and personal activity accomplished much to lessen and pre vent cruelty in this community; and, i "Whereas, His Interest in such mat ters caused him to be of much assist ance in the organization of the Har risburg Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, to act as a direc tor thereof, and to exert his influence in its behalf; now. therefore, be It "Resolved, That the Harrisburg So ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals realizes that in his death it has lost a staunch friend, an able ad vocate, and a faithful director; and, be it further "Resolved, That the society make a public and pu-manent recognition of I 1? worth an d services in its cause ot this deceased director and honorarv member, by setting aside to his mem ory a page in the minute book of its proceedings, and causing to be inscribeu thereon these resolutions. "MRS. DAVID WATTS, "JAMES W. BARKER. "JOHN T. OLMSTED. "J. CLARENCE FUNK." Washington Bureau Predicts Relief Soon By Associated. Press Washington, April 9.—Winters be lated touch enveloping- the entire East set new records to-day at official ther mometers. In New Orleans straw hats and Spring finery were replaced with win ter overcoats. Throughout the South Atlantic and Guff States heavy dam age to fruits and early crops was fear ed. A thirty degree drop in a few hours was recorded at Mobile. Snow flurries were recorded as far South as Greenville, S. C., breaking the April records of several years. Fruit trees in blossom in the Norfolk tidewater section were caught in the nipping frosts. April snow in Richmond was recorded for the first time since the Spanish war. The Weather Bureau predicted heavy frosts us far South as North ern Florida to-night and cold weather nearly everywhere east of the Rocky Mountains. Partial relief is expected by Fri day except on the Atlantic coast. ASK NEW TRIAL Twelve reasons which Attorneys John Fox Weiss and J. G. Hatz, coun sel for Dr. John T. Ensminger, .Jr and Miss Martha Osten, set forth for i. new trial, were directed to-day to be placed on the next argument list. Judge Albert W. Johnson, Snyder- Union district, specially presiding, handed down the' order. The reasons include, among other things, errors in the court's charges relative to the ir relevancy and incompetency of the testimony of Mrs. Long, the prosecu tion's chief witness. The defense also objects to the plaintiff's use of "sweet- ] hearts" in speaking of Ensminger and ! Miss Osten's relations. Exception is also taken to the court's failure to charge the jury on the subject of on I alibi. INCENDIARY F'RE DESTROYS i FAN HOUSE AT COLLIERY i By Associated Press , Washington, Pa., April 9.—Fire al leged to have been of Incendiary ori-1 gin early to-day destroyed the fan house of the Cherry Valley mine of the Pittsburgh and Eastern Coal Com pany near Burgettstown, Pa„ making It impossible for the mine to be op erated until the fan is replaced. The mine has been shut down for a week, the miners refusing to work pending the signing of the wage scale. ANOTHER CITY PROTESTS j By Associated Press Omaha, Neb., April 9.—Officers of the National Banks of Omaha to-dav] drew up a protest to be sent to the I secretary of the treasury, objecting to the placing of Omaha in the Kan sas City district of the reserve bank-1 ing system. The protest is the for-! mal action of the Omaha Clearing! House. MAN'S LEG AMPUTATED Jacob Bard, aged 34, of 1905 Swa- ' tara street, had his right leg below the knee amputated last evening at the Harrisburg hospital Bard is employed by the Pennsylvania Steel Company as an electrician. While repairing a broken wire his foot was caught In a gear of a machine. THE Harrisburg Polyclinic Dispen sary will bv open daily except Sunday at 3 P. M, at Its new location, 1701 North Second street, for the tree treat ment of the worthy poor MONEY COR SALARIED PEOPLE and others upon their own names. Cheap rates, easy payments, conttdsu tial. Adams * Co., H. 3M, 8 W. Market ttm. FIGHTING CONTINUES IT TIMPICO I Continued From Mrst Page] tleships are supplying arms to the rebels.'' The admiral added that he had di rected Admiral Mayo to give refuge to Americans and other foreigners on American vessesl as far as possible. The department to-day suggested to Admiral Fletcher the possibility of taking the marines off the transport Prairie at Vera Cruz and sending that vessel to Tamplco to receive the refugees who cannot be cared for on the other ships without more or less inconvenience. State Department officials said to day that foreign property, especially the oil plants In Tampico, were in grave danger, but there was thought to be little danger to the lives of for eigners in the trouble zone. Statement Issued Concerning conditions in Tampico, the State Department Issued this state ment: "From Vera Cruz, wireless reports on the Tampico situation Indicate that the situation as regards foreign property is complicated and serious. The Waters-Pierce oil refineries have been occupied by attacking forces dur,- ing the last two days and as a conse quence have been under tire from the federal gunboat in the harbor. A loss to tho entire property Is feared. The warehouses of the Agenda Comercial, a German property, were burned with a loss of $500.000." Prom Ensenada it Is reported that the situation at Mazatlan Is tranquil. Five Americans arrested at Vera Cruz as a mllltnry precaution were released to-day. A consular report from Tor reon says "very good order" has been re-estaWished there. Brigadier-General Hugh L. Scott, at El Paso, reported to the War De partment by wireless to-day that fight ing was said to be in progress at San Pedro and Paras, but he gave no details. ' The Red Cross to-day called upon Dr. Stephenson, head of the El Paso chapter, for a report fconcerning the aeeds of the Spanish refugees just arrived there. CROPS REPORTED DAMAGED Atlanta, Ga., April 9. —Extremely low temperatures, in many eases breaking weather bureau records of ears standing, were reported to-day >ver the South Atlantic and Gulf States. Reports says fruit and vege tables in Alabama, Georgia, the Caro inas and Virginia have been greatly lamaged. Announcement Our friends and patrons, and we think the public at large, will be interested in knowing that we have opened a savings department, and hence there is now a National Bank in Harris burg where savings deposits, large or small, can be made. To popularize this department, we have canvassing the city and nearby towns a crew of bonded solicitors. They will loan free to new depositors little self-recording home safes the most desirable and most expensize safes manufactured. THESE MEN ARE AUTHORIZED TO COLLECT MONEY FOR DEPOSIT HERE. For n short time .... To one |t we will lonn free only necessary to thrne little «nfe*. "tn rt an account ante*. |W " ftj, Mode of steel und 11,1 on nny amount— nickel plated >\ ' /J »WIO.U<», #IO.OO, they hold about J®"®- » 3WW " r $30.00 lu silver. " * n "■■nd re d h of They are locked |||t th ° " "ll'ttl * f°' ed. You can drop •'•§• It-T- "J IR "T" '"tie"' a'Sd'^by In your dally or frlE 1 H* W- „-J * nHf iislnts tlicni huu weekly Havings »I|- tlj- •» ajfj drcds or thoiis. and lirlUK safe In Brj-3- Mm ands of wise pco every 30 or 00 «)»- |J§. .3 ."4 4 J®| lile have hullt up days as convent- E- ——. l E" i ™S wr savings accounts enl and we uu- \jr amounting lu lock and credit some cases to your account with thousands of d«I --conteuts. - lars. If you have or expect to have surplus cash, deposit with us. This is an OLD, THOROUGHLY ESTABLISHED, NA TIONAL BANK and the only bank in Harrisburg with a savings department UNDER U. S. GOVERNMENT SUPERVISION. INTEREST RATE 3 PRR CENT. COMTOIiXD SEMI-ANNUALLY Total Resources Over $1,932,00).0J FIRST NATIONAL BANK 224 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT TO BUTCHERS I take pleasure in announcing that I have en larged and remodeled my abattoir and cold stor age warehouses, under the direction of Victor J. Goetz, of Philadelphia, one of the leading engi neers engaged in the sanitary construction of buildings for butchering purposes. I now have one of the most up-to-date establishments of the kind in the State and am prepared to Kill and Store For Other Butchers My new plant has a capacity for killing and storing 40 Calile, Cal;es and Sheep, D.ily Unless you are equally as well equipped I can save you money on your killing and storing, and give you a service unexcelled from a sanitary standpoint. Call and Let Me Give You Facts and Figure* J. A. REICHERT, 714 and 716 Race Street Call 88 on United or 881R on Bell Phone Give the Soil WkatitNeeds to Make Things Grow You can't make things grow unless you keep your soil rich and fertile. This can only be done by putting back the vital elements that every crop takes away with it Nothing will do this so well as good Manure. Wizard Brand SHEEP MANURE is most convenient and econom ical —"A Way 011 Load In a Hag" —Dry, linely pulverized, without weeds, waste or refuse. If you really want tho greenest kind of a ' velvety lawn and gardens that will be a delight to possess, (lowers of rare foliage and bloom, fruits and vegetables and berries that come, near to perfection, give your soil a good dressing of Wizard Brand Sheep Manure the ilrst thing this Spring. Scatter it broadcast, 10 lbs. to 100 square feet (10 by 10 ft.) or 100 lbs. to 1,000 sq. ft. ORDKR WIZARD BRAND TO-DAY We deliver it for pou. Price List . 0 lbs., $0.25 100 lbs., $2.00 10 lbs., .40 500 lbs., 8.00 25 lbs., .75 1,000 lbs., 11.00 50 lbs.. 1.25 2,000 lbs., 25.00 Wal er S. f chtll Quality Seeds 1307-1300 Market Street, Hurrishiirg, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers