SECOND SECTION. PAGES 9 TO 16 m SULPHUR IS rSURE TO RELIEVE I TGHING ECZEMA an Ounre of Hold-Sulphur Cream Heal Skin Eruptions Right Up breaking out or Irritation on face, arms, legs or body when ac- by itching, or when the ■i is dry and feverish, can be read- by applying a little bold- cream, says a noted derma informs us that bold-sulphur allays the angry itch'ng and and soothes and heals the right up leaving the skin clear smooth. Bold-sulphur has occu- a secure position for many years treatment of cutaneous disor- Hs because of its parasite-destroy property. Nothing has ever been to take its place in treating the and inllaimnatory skin af- While not always establlsh a permanent cure it never fails to the itching irritation and drive Eczema away aml it Is often years before, any eruption again ap- on the skin. troubled should obtain at any an ounce of bold-sulphur which is applied to the affected in the same manner as an ordl- cold cream. It isn't unpleasant the prompt relief afforded, parti- in itching Eczema, proves very —Advertisement. in Estes Park, Coo ado you like to spend your this year in a place where can climb mountains, play golf ride, drive or motor, fish out, with a climate of a quality and an air that is and sweet, and will make your glow and refresh you ? Park, with its streams abun- with gamey trout; its beautiful I rare wild flowers; its stupen high Longs Peak; its drives wonderful mountain scenery; glacier; its line hotel and accommodations; will do all for you. Truly, it is the ideal place. me send you our Estes Park with many pictures and a fine map of the Park and every- K about its high class hotels and ranch houses, where you live at very moderate cost. Let you tli best way to go and the low excursion fares. I'll glad to attend to all the de- Call or write for an Estes Park Ht —to-day before you forget. Austin. General Agent Passenger Hs„ C. B. & Q. K. R. Co., 836 St., Philadelphia. >k k ox the new HIIMMKI.L NEXT WEEK are being completed by the j Hv Construction Company of Phil-! to begin early next week on of the new L. S. grade school building at and Catherine streets. structure, It is expected, will be for occupancy by January 1, No formal ceremonies incident laying of the cornerstone will but there will be appropriate in the Spring when the will l)e formally dedicated. H OKI N FILL MOUTHS WHTII I M.\RBLES; BOTH ARE DEAD. Mass., April 11.—Sher- V'eryl Puss, children of about tried last night to see which ' stuff the most marbles Into his | The result fatal to both, i .nd black in the face the | ran to their mother. She was; to extract the marbles, but the! died a short time later. Phy- ] said they had been frightened Bn Pay llomag? not surprised to observe tho of men who come into the storo 'Mother's Friend," " remarked druggist. expectant mother If she hasn't of this splendid embrocation is not reading the papers to much And if she does it is a happy to send hubby to the drug store, t rlend" Is applied externally abdominal muscles. a gentle, soothing lubricant, pene to the lino network of nerves the skin and has a marked to relievo the muscular strain these broad, fiat abdominal are subjected. Tho cords, ten- ligaments are thus permitted to without the corresponding surface so often Involved during the period And particularly to young value since in thus keeping firm but plaint It enables to go through the ordeal without of the epidermis often the case tl'ln gentle attputinn Is Friend" is highly recom- by a host of women. Writ a Regulator Co., 408 Blilr-, Ga.. and we will send you a vt.i little book to expeotant mothers, WjgX ES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED r First Glasses Are Important e devote our entire time ex vely to fitting glasses. Oei :ed RIGHT. We guarantee every to be first quality lenses. j )HL OPTICAL CO. h 1I VRKET SUIARK. Tiorp Ulustea are niafle right.) HARRISBURG ifllplll TELEGRAPH TENER WILL FIND OUT TIE ASSETS [Continued from First Page] schedule of assets. It Is the plan to obtain figures on every piece of prop erty, real, personal and mixed, to which the State has title and to ap praise it at a fair market value. The heads of departments, of Institutions owned or controlled by the State, everyone administering property in which the State has an equity, is to be asked to furnish a list of the property and their ideas of valuation. The commission will also have its own ap praisement made. The commission will make a report to the Governor this Fall. > Just what this appraisement will show no two people on Capitol Hill think alike. It will amount to mil lions, probably thirty, maybe forty. The sinking fund, which is hard cash in bank and earning interest, will more than wipe out the debt, which umounts to probably $625,000. The State could pay off every cent of obli gation due and have probably $200,- 000 left over if the holders would only present the bonds, and it had author ity to stop paying Interest to Itself on the half million of State College bonds which it has in the Treasury. Money Ahead at Start So that, starting with no debt and money in the bank, the State's newest commissioners, who will serve with out pay, will have to appraise the State Capitol and its wealth of furnishings, paintings and other things, on which probably $13,000,000 was spent; then the Capitol Hill property and the sl,- 150,000 of properties bought in park extension, the executive mansion and the State Arsenal and other proper ties in Harrisburg, together with such automobjles and road building equip ment, military stores and dear knows what that is located here. Then there will be over a million acres of forest reserves appraised and thirty-five ar mories located in various parts of the State; three or four fish hatcheries and some tugs and ipotorboats, to gether with certain riparian rights. Then will come the State hospitals and institutions: State College and Scotland Orphans' School; the char itable and educational Institutions which the State owns In part and the hospitals, colleges and other establish ments against which the State has liens; the normal schools now owned by the State, lnoluding the West Ches ter property, which may be worth nearly a million, and those against which the State has a claim. Next will come bridges, testing stations, high way equipment, agricultural experi menting apparatus and office furniture in various parts of the State. Also the State school fund. The beauty of the appraisement will be that the State will know just what is own 3 and a« appropriations are made hereafter they can be added to the value and the government run like a great corporation which it really is OEiCBATSICIE 1 IDE DEFENSIVE rContinued from First Page] was receiving free transportation and making the remarkable assertion that the sending of this free transportation was in accord with "invariable cus torn .' Inasmuch as many remember when Colonel Guffey's use of free tickets was considered a near-capital ottense by the reorganizers this state ment has a singular ring to it to Harrisburgers. Caravan Gets Home The machine caravan, spellbinders campaign thunder, attendance adding machine and all the rest will get back to Harrisburg to-day for a few days' rest after having been dragged through twenty counties and encoun tering early Spring frosts. The cara van comes home at a sad time because of the various scandals and the pros pects of a row at the State committee meeting and a big Ryan rally loom ing up. The Ryanites are making strenuous efforts to have a crowd at Chestnut Street Hall next Ilturdat but the machinists say that it will be a poor aftair, and that only the men are sore at the present leaders will be on hand. The reorganizers are that ..L f the K - Van men do not do better with what they have at their hands than they did at the State defe gate election battle in iai2, there will ?? big majority for McCormtck in his home city. A Pottsvllle View A special dispatch from Pottsville to the Philadelphia Press gives the following about the activities of Wil! son Bailey In Schuylkill: "The state crat*iccountv 1 ? ight from f county headquarters to the effect that Democratic postmasters in Schuylkill county had received de mands for contributions of 5 per cent of heir salaries from the Democratic State committee doubtless will insure the investigation of campaign contri butions asked for by Senator Penrose and Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer during the last week. It lq now charged that Wilson Bailey, said to have been an agent of the State Demo cratic committee, visited Postmasters James Kingsbury, of Pottsville- P Max Hirsch, of Tamaqua and Durkin. of Frackville, in his tour of this county in search of funds tho latter part of last January. He intro duced himself by presenting his pe - sonal card it Is said, with •Democratic his name " QUar 8 ensrraved beneath Penrose Comments rl ®^ tor Penrose found considerable yesterday in commenting upon | the fresh atacka upon the Democratic State leadership, ".f the Democratic State committee Is purchasing free LSM1 P0 ' " ls ev| dent that it is Fifl mo , np L from somewhere— from fI. fflcehol(ie r s or elsewhere! I,' 8 TLt known that transportation runs Into large amounts." said he The senator then took up the Schuvl kill county charges. "I am everv d'av n receipt of additional information in ffl ßrd l ° i he harter and s ale of post offices under the present adminls rra on ' 5 sald " The charge is that o per cent, of the salary has been stipulated for prior to the appoint ments and that printed blanks ema nating from the Democratic State committee have been Issued to iZ signed by the prospective appointee promising to pay these amounts. Let- I he De J» ocr atlc State com mltee will be produced indicating par ticipation In these proceedings, to gether with efforts to collect the money within the precincts of federal buildings, contrary to the penal laws of Congress. Information has been voluntarily submitted with respect to tills practice in four or Ave confrres sional districts. At the proper time, in case the investigation Is started subpenas will be issued for the par ties concerned.' [SUNDAY] 1 BavseLall 100 I £||| Now every one is playing it—on the One hundred years ago this summer, IS A | diamond, on the bleachers, or on the Sports' Uncle Sam and John Bull signed up to quit H 3 Page of the Public Ledger. fighting and be good. This peace was |B gig 8 The Sunday Ledger will have two pages signed at Ghent, but nobody knew then that Pj | of baseball stuff—pictures and stories. The these two nations were arranging for such a |tj I pictures will show the players in action, not long peace. H | merely posing before the camera. The Warwick J. Price, who knows all about §9 I stories tell how things are with each team — it, has written an interesting page to tell fpf $ a page for the Phillies—a page for the what he knows. This long peace will be g|l I Athletics. celebrated this summer not only in Ghent, H vv| I It's going to be a baseball year, and you but in Philadelphia, Baltimore, New York, |H il I want to get it right from the start. London and other places. jp 01 OO H II H There art good business chances on the History says that Napoleon lost the |{ islands of Hayti and San Domingo for Battle of Waterloo because one of his Field H t i \ • u • j- Marshals was five minutes late. H kJ young American business men, according A , ~. B j|| to Roger C. Babson, the well-known light- officers moved to Philadelphia—though not H gill ning calculator. the Field Marshal who was late. H |y He has been down there looking around, n P " bl j C , L / dger will the ■ Pg , T . * One Hundredth Anniversary of the Battle ■ pi an reSU 1S a 6 page of facts and of Waterloo with a full page illustrated ■ Hi figures,about the industrial possibilities of story of the descendants of these refugee H H I these two fruitful and rapidly growing French Generals now living in and about ■ ■ Eg . , . i j. a Philadelphia. This is one of the things that |j| 1 islands. All they need is American money will make next Sunday's Ledger a paper not || I and American "get-up-and-git." to be missed. PUBLIC LEDGER I I .iAKRISBURG NEWS COMPANY H , ■ HARRISBURG. PA. WEST SHORE NEWS DEATH OF DAVID ASHEN FELTLR New Cumberland, Pa., April 11. Yesterday morning David Ashenfelter died suddenly of pneumonia at his home in Reno street. Ho was 64 years old and moved from Lewisberry to New Cumberland six months ago. His wife, who is also very ill of pneumo nia, and the following children sur vice: Mrs. William Shuler, of New Market; Mrs. Chapman Nebinger, of Hillside; Mrs. Mas Yinger, Mrs. Nor man Nichman, of New Cumberland; Mrs. Stahl, of Lemoyne, and Mrs. Frank Stoner, of Enola. Funeral serv ices will be held on Monday morning at S o'clock at the homo of Mrs. Yinger. REDUCTION IN YARD FORCE Enola, Pa., April 11.—Effective to morrow. the Pennsylvania Railroad Company at Enola will make another reduction in the yard forces. ORANGE SOCIAL LAST NIGHT Last evening the ladies of the United Evangelical Ohurqli of South Enola held au orange social in tlie Midway Fire Company building, the proceeds to be used for the benefit of the church fund. SHOWER FOR MRS SHEMAN Enola, Pa., April 11.-—A very pleas ant miscellaneous shower was given Mrs. B. Frank Shuman at the home of Mrs. J. M. Jones, In Enola road, on Thursday evening. THREE MAILS DAILY Enola, Pa., April 11. Citizens of Enola will have three mails daily, starting Monday, April 13, at 7.30 a. m., 12.30 and 6.30 p. m. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED Marysville, Pa., April 11. An nouncement has been made of the — I COUGHING? Coughing these days? Throat tender? Lungs sore? Better take the 75-year-old cough medicine—Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Ask ! j t marriage of Lee Barrlcks and Miss Eva Weiser, both of Rye township, by the Rev. E. K. Thomas, pastor of the; First Baptist Church, of Hagerstown. i Mr. Barricks is an employe of the i Pennsylvania Railroad Company in 1 this place. • j STUDENT SERIOUSLY INJURED J Special to The Telegraph Shippensburg, Pa., April 11. —Ship-j pensburg witnessed a very serious I accident. Thursday evening, while motoring around the Normal School, Herbert MacDonnald ran over Clar ence McVitty, a student at the Nor mal School. His leg was broken in two places, two ribs broken and skull fractured. He was unconscious till yesterday afternoon. , Elmer Heiser Found Dead in Stable at Millerstown Special to The Telegraph Millerstown, Pa., April 71. — Thurs day evening at 6 o'clock Elmer Heiser was found dead in A. H. Ulsh's stable. Mr. Heiser was employed by Mr. Ulsh at his warehouse and he had just fin- i —- This Coupon and 10 Cents Will entitle the holder to purchase a copy of a 25c waltz—at the Ideal Music Store, 33 S. Second Street FOR ONE WEEK ONLY COURTESY OF WINTERDALE BALL ROOM (LIMIT—ONE COPY TO A CUSTOMER, f < SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 11,1914. Ished his work for the day and was leaving the stable when he was seized by an epileptic attack and In fallng his head struck a large log, producing concussion of the brain. FUNERAL OF MRS. EIVDKRS Flshervllle, Pa., April 11. Funeral services of Mrs. Israel O. Finders, who died sudenly on Thursday, will be held to-morrow afternoon, at 1 o'clock, at her late home, here.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers