2 High School Class in Longfellow's "Evangeline" RECEIVED TWO CARLOADS OF SIIRIBBEKY Special to The Telegraph Hershey, Pa., April 27. —Two car loads of shrubbery containing 10,000 plants, were received a few days ago at this place. Gardener Harry H<>ver etick has a force of men at work to plant them on the new Park hotel grounds. Several carloads will be re ceived later. rp' PPQ' —mi II -ii—■ S L ■■ : y I like fren'ship : JL and so forth, is : the better for bein' jPlßPlfc : mellowed by age. ; VELVET Smoking: Tobacco owes its "aged in the ■ wood'' smoothness to more than two years' curing. T Full weight 2 oz. tins, 10c. ■bpqpanrni— ii— u —II-* SOiKH>OCH>ODO<><>OOO'OCH>O<>aOCH>OCH>WOWO<>CHXKKKKH> o 5 5 If It Were Yours— •o D 5 • Supposing that you had lost your purse last o evening— -5 g What would you do about it? 6 5 A man who knew just what to do ran this ad— K X LOST A purse, on Market street ? . with $, r >.oo in change and 10c in stamps: [? also card of owner, reward if returned g to addressed cHrd in purse. ° in the LOST and FOUND columns oi the Tcle- graph recently. 5 He found the finder. He has his purse to-day. p The people oi" Harrisburg are honest. They look to Telegraph WAXT ADS to furnish the g names of losers so that they may return the articles d the}' find. ft \ D g Count nothing lost unless Telegraph WANTS § fail to find it. | 6 o aOQQOOO<:OOOOOOCH>O-000ooo00<}00000000- CHARLES DICKENS if FREE LIBRARY COUPON j| H * Imported Six Volume Set ill Introductory DNtribution by 3r §|| j|| HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ' Wtl 3 L ast Dickens Coupon May 2 ■j Great Authors Library j|M MOW TO OET IT! t'lp the I.ihrnry Coupon and bring or (tend to the Telegraph office, with the ripmnc Item of »Sc for the entire klv volume set of hooka. This amount we nak you to pay to rover the coit of tranaportatlon, 11. s. run to in duties, handling, ete. , If you desire to have the act aent by mall or expreaa, all charges prepaid, add 17e, or sl.ir> In all, and 1111 in name and address below. Name Address TUESDAY EVENING, ItXKfIiBBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 28, 1914. AFRICAN' CAT ADDED TO ZOO Special to The Telegraph llershey, Pa., April 28.—An Af rican Civet cat has arrived here and added to the Hershey'zoo. This spe cies of animals inhabit the tropical portions .f Africa, and are of a brownish-gray color, marked with dark streaks. These animals are characterized by the great develop ment of certain glands which secrete the perfume known as civet. | WEST SHORE NEWS Young People of Enola to Present Dramatization This and to-morrow evenings the Enola high school will give a drama tization of Longfellow's "Evangeline." The story is based on the expulsion of a colony of French settlers from Nova Scotia, or Arcadia, in 1755. These colo nists. or French Neutrals, as they were called, were ncc.used of furnishing aid to the French in resisting the English and were condemned ius British rebels. On Friday, September 5, 1755, the men of Arcadia, unarmed and unsus pecting, met in the church and heard the decision of the English crown, namely, that all their lands and dwell ings and cattle of all kinds forfeited be to the crown and that they themselves be removed from the province. In spite of some show of care on the part of the authorities, many par* <*ts were separated from their fami lies and were driven into difterent ves se's. husbands and wives lost each other and maidens parted from their lovers forever. | On the night of the embarking the | \ Wage was burned before the eyes of , the horrified and heart-broken Arca ! dians. Evangeline Bellefontaine was j separated from Gabriel Lajuenese. She sought for many years through the colonies and finally found him dying in an almshouse in Philadelphia. Those jn the picture are: Bottom I?*. '® ft . to right, Esther Shuinan, i. ~ Smith, Miriam Neuer, Sara Dice Nellie Gruver. Margaret Black, Helen Humer, Theresa Gutahall, Mary Strick ner, Clara Swlnn; middle row, Ada Morgan, Ethel Mcßeth, Kroka Gaul, Mary Lutz. Mae Byrun, Esther Fa mous. Etta Myers. Bertha Gutshall, Beulah Parks. Esther Ncidig, Helen Keigel, Hilda Wagner; standing, Harrv Hoffman. Edward Hassler, ller Fisher Ralph Webster. Roye McClain, Paul Harkison, George Siever, Sara Lackey, Jame Minnick, Jojin Spangler, Walter rlora. William Shuey, Robert Ncid hcimer. David Burd and Paul Fisher. DEATH OF MBS. MORRISON Mrs. Barbara Morrison, 35 years old, of Second street, Wormleysburg, died yesterday afternoon at the Har i isburg Hospital from uremic poison ing. She is survived by her husband. George \V. Morrison and one. sun Hugh Morrison. Mrs. Morrison was a member of the Wormleysburg Church of God. Funeral services will be held Thursday morning at 10 o'clock from the Church of God. The Rf.V- ( *' W. Getz, pastor of the church, will officiate. The body will be taken to Lancaster by Undertakers T. M. Mauk and Son, for burial. PICNIC COMMITTEE TO MEET New Cumberland. Pa., April 2S.— Committees appointed l'rom the Sun day schools to arrange a program for the union picnic which will be held at Williams Grove will meet at the | hose house on Friday evening, May 1. | MRS. SNELL 11,1, | New Cumberland, Pa., April 28. I Mrs. Elmer Snell of Fourth street, is j seriously ill with pluro-pneumonia. SERMON TO OI)J> FELLOWS New Cumberland, Pa., April 28. The Rev. J. V. Adams preached an excellent sermon to the Odd Fellows in Baughman Memorial Church Sundav morning. Music was rendered by the i choir and men's chorus. TO INTRODUCE I To music lovers of this city. The Edi json Diamond Disc Phonograph and , the Stoddard Ampico Electric player I piano—an evening of music at Techni cal high school auditorium, Thursday | evening, April 30. Tickets may be had free of charge at the J. H. Troup Music House. 15 South Market Square. | —Advertisement. R. E, Myers, Newport's Chief of Police, on Duty ! r Jf CHIEF R. E. MTERB Newport, Pa., April 28.—Newport's chief of police may now be seen daily on his beat, attired in a nobby and up-to-date uniform. He is Officer U. E. Myers and is making good in the community. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania ! Penbrook. —-Urs. Margaret Fisher, | aged 6!i veurs, one of the oldest resi dents of Penbrook, died yesterday af ternoon at her home at 2438 Elm street. Mrs. Fisher lmd been ill for several weeks. Surviving are her hus band and five children: Mrs. Harry Geiger, Daniel, Henry, George and John. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the church. Services will be in charge of the Rev. Mr. Lingle and burial will be made in the Penbrook Cemetery. Elizabethvllle.—Miss Gayle Botts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Botts, died at the Harrisburg Hospi tal on Monday morning, after an op eration for appendicitis on Friday. She was 12 years old and is survived by her parents, one sister and four brothers. Funeral on Wednesday af ternoon at 1 o'clock with burial at Berrysbnrrr New Bloomfield. —Relatives have re ceived word of the e'eath of Frank Mortimer, at the home of his daugh ter, Mrs. Harry Briggs, in Englewood, iNew Jersey. His death was due to a .'paralytic stroke which he suffered last i Monday. He was born in Franklin, ■Mass., March 4. 1829, and was 85 : years old. He came to Perry county tin 1864. After a short residence in jGreenpark he came to New Bloom j field in 1865, and engaged in raer 'cantlie business. In 1866 he founded the Perry County Times, and con tinued as its editor until August 1, 1904, when he sold it to William C. Lebo, the present editor. He was the first president of the Perry County Railroad Company. Kidney Trouble Causes Lame Back 1 am pleased to say a good word lor Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Hoot, as I was troubled for a year or more with jmy kidneys and annoying symptoms. | My brother advised me to try Swamp | Root. I took several bottles of this j remedy with excellent results. At the I time Swamp-Root was recommended to me, my condition was such that I found it an effort in stooping or bend ing and in attending to my duties a* Manager of the $9.99 Store at 122 Main St., Evansvllle, Ind. Very truly yours. J. E. ALVEY, 519 Walnut St., Evansvllle, Ind. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 21st day of December, 1911. EDW. A. TORCHE, Notary Public. I Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., j Binglianiton, X. Y. ! Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Harrisburg Tele graph. Regular tlfty-cent N and one dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores^—-AiKwtisement^^^^^^^^ FOOD KBUIHE ADOPTED TODAY BV CITY COMMISSION; Council Receives Ordinance Cre ating Bureau of Health and Sanitation Council's Action in Session Today New food regulations, covering every phase of food inspection, i housing conditions, harboring, bak- ; | eries. markets, and ail other health supervision and inspection, adopted. | City Treasury balances reported showing actual cash on hand April S, mi l, $11,809; Water Department, $27,000.25. William A. Adams appointed gen- I oral paving inspector; salary, $3 pet day. Supplemental ordinance creating Bureau of Health and Sanitation presented; creates oflice of director of health and sanitation bureau. Measure means that Dr. J. >l. J. ltaunick will be secretary of Board of Health, city health officer and di rector of health and sanitation. Only president and vice-president may be members of board. Ordinance appropriating $2,500 for ",900 street index signs intro duced. Four signs to be provided for each of 975 street intersections. Bond of City Solicitor D. S. Seitz, sum of SIO,OOO, Commonwealth Trust Company, surety, approved. Permission received from Dr. Samuel Dixon, State Health Com missioner. to build Spring creek sewer. Drain is already half way finished. City Treasurer authorized to re fund fifty cents to David Reamer, overpaid for plumber's license tax. Better from Peter Vanderloo ask ing for information as to whether Derry street is to be paved this year, received and filed. Commis sioner Bynch announced there would be no delay "n work. City Commission will arrange to meet with County Commissioners to confer on cost of prison mainte nance. New ordinances offered: By Mr Taylor, authorizing purchase of two horses for fire department, ::,000 feet of hose: by Mr. Bynch, authorizing construction of Jonestown road bridge; paving Wharton, Uruber and Blizabeth alleys; by Mr. Bowman, placing water pipe in Cloverly Heights and in Fourth street. Ordinances passed finally: Pro vidiiigf for sixteen cluster lights* pavftig Derry street. Twenty-first to Twenty-second street. City Council and the bureau ot health and sanitation after all have the last laugh on the barbers—espe cially the barbers who raisei the price of a shave from ten to fifteen cents. Tlie laugh is embodied in a whole section of the new city food regula tions recently adopted by the bureau of health and sanitation and approved at this, afternoon's session of City Council. Other sections deal with every phase ot food inspection and supervision and among other important matters that are amply provided for besides the barber shops, are milk and meat in spection, markets, ice cream manu facturers even unto "cone" and "snow ball ' salesmen and manufacturers, moving picture shows and other hous ing conditions generally. Here are a few of the high light features of the new regulations: Barbers must sterilize all mugs, bushes, shears and clippers after each "shave" and "hair cut"; cuspi dors must be cleaned daily; individual sponges and powder puffs must be provided; septics must be in liquid or powder form; no treatment for skin diseases permitted by barbers; every i patron with inflamed, "broken-out" face must have individual brush, cup and razor. Manufacturers and salesmen of ice cream, ice cream cones, snowballs, cream or milk must contain not more than 500,000 bacteria per cubic centi mer; "cones" may not be sold on and "sand wiches" must be wrapped in proper paper under supervision of inspector. Bread sold on highways must b< wrapped in impervious paper covers. I Thin Blood Causes Backache Every muscle in the body needs a j supply of rich, red blood in proportion > to the work it does. The muscles of the back are under heavy strain and have but little rest. When the blood is thin they lack nour ishment and rebel. The result is a sensation of pain (n those muscles. The best medical authorities agree that backache seldom or never means kidney trouble. Real organic kidney disease may have progressed to a critical point without developing a pain in the back. Doctors detect its I presence by the excretions of the kid-1 neys themselves. Pains in the back should always lead the sufferer to look to the condi tion of the blood. It will be found in most cases that the use of Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills to build up the blood I will stop the grumbling of the 111- I nourished muscles of the back. How much better It is to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the blood than to give way to unreasonable alarm about your kidneys. If you suspect your kidneys any doctor can make tests in ten min utes that will set your fears at rest or tell you the worst. All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. A free book, "Building Up the Blood." will be sent on request by the ' Dr. Williams Medicine Co.. Bchcnec-j tady, N. Y.—Advertisement. I "^EDISON "Diamond Disc Phonograph RECITAL Assisted by the STODDARD AMPICO PLAYER PIANO This will give the Public the opportunity of hearing the two greatest Musical Instruments of the Age. EDISON'S DIAMOND DISC is the successful culmination of thirty-five years of endeavor to perfectly reproduce sound. STODDARD AMPICO PLAYER, a pneumatic Player by whch the playing of the greatest artists may be reproduced for the entranced listener. By the most skilfully devised mechanical means every shade of expression or variation in phrasing, all the beauty of tone, color of the, original per formance is reproduced. Concert at BP. M., Thursday, April 30th | Technical High School Auditorium Tickets of Admission Free Tickets may be secured Free of charge by calling at our Warerooms, 15 S. Market Square J. H. Troup Music House, no seal or stamp may be pasted on bread; all raw food materials in mar kets or stores must be properly pro tected from handling. Lodging houses must be licensed and State maximum rooming capacity; inspections necessary; moving picture shows or other places of entertain ment in which there are more than two productions daily must not have carpet or other dust collecting ma terials on floors, plush chairs. This does not apply to the regular theaters which do not change audiences more than once every afternoon and even ing. City Must Pay for Apparatus Harrisburg will have to pay from its own pocket the repair bill of $558.43 for damages to the Paxton chemical apparatus caused by the col lision between the lire wagon and' a Cumberland Valley train in Mulberry street some months ago. The collision occurred while the fire apparatus was on its way to a fire and for n time Commissioner Taylor hoped to havt. the railroad company help foot the bill. In a brief opinion on the sub ject, however, City Solicitor D. S. Seitz holds that the city alone is responsible, as the law requires the driver to "look and listen." The ordinance offered by Commissioner Taylor this afternoon makes the necessary appropriation. Mr. Taylor also offered ordinances authorizing the purchase of two fire horses and 3.000 feet of lire hose. Bids will be asked as soon as the ordi nances are passed. To Purchase Royal Company Plot In submitting the monthly state ment of expenses of the Fire Depart ment Mr. Taylor showed that only $207.12 was spent, leaving a balance of $3,792.88. This sum will be more largely drawn upon next month, how ever, when the $1,300 is expended for a new fire house plot for the Royal company. The commissioner said he expects to introduce an ordinance next Tuesday authorizing him to advertise for bids for the purchase of motor tractor Ore apparatus from the SIO,OOO provided from the $25,000 fire loan item. I Tea Room Opening We beg to announce the opening of a Tea Room at 231 North Second street. The spacious, well-lighted and ventilated quarters have been re modeled and furnished with a view to providing JIF pleasing and comfortable surroundings for our pat- J am rons, and will appeal strongly to those seeking a quiet, homelike place with rest-room conveniences. All pastries and refreshments will be prepared by us from the best products the market affords, in our own sanitary kitchens and pastry departments, which will at all times be open to public inspection. An excellent assortment of confections will be fea tured at popular prices. Thorleys Tea Room 231 N. Second Street Divorced Couple Remarried ! After Two Years' Separation Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., April 27.—Announce ment was made to-day of the remar riage of George H. Hain and Miss Charlotte Thomas, who were divorced on August 14, 1912, after living to gether nine years. They were origi nally married on September 1. 1903, The ceremony on this occasion was performed by the Rev. J. Leonard Hynson, pastor of Fourth Street Pres byterian Church. They have one son. The couple are well known in the city and their reunion was attended with many felicitations on the part of friends. TEMPL.AHS TO INSTAI.I, OFFICERS Officers of Pilgrim Commandery, No. 11, Knights Templar, will be installed to-night at the Masonic Temple in the presence of a number of notables of the order. The following will be in ducted into office: Generalissimo, Sir John C. Shumberger; captain-general, I ir Clyde P. Love: treasurer, E. Sir How- i ard Rutherford; recorder, E. Sir N. | Frank Matter. VETA STOVE POLISH is the handiest thing ever put on the market. . SHOE POL T SH vV the uioat vuav«nicat aliape for luataot us*. Jut prc»» os the tube. _ Tan or btark. 10a ail itoaltrs. Vata Mf*. Co.. Allaatown. Pa, i Y. M. C. A. ANNIVERSARY Shippensburg, Pa,, April 28.—Last evening the Y. M. C. A. held its anni versary in the Methodist Church. Spe cial music was rendered by an orches tra. C. L. Rummel presided and Dr. Ridgway, of Coatesville, gave a lec ture in which he said that "nearly all the leading men are Christians." A chorus of men composed the choir. SIOO Reward, SIOO The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there la at leant one dreaded disease that aclenec lias been able to euro in all Its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hull's Catarrh Cure Is the only poaltlTe cure now known to the med- i leal fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional V disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting < directly upon the blood and raucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundstlon of tbo disease, and giving the patient strength bv building up the constitution and assisting na ture In doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 73c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The Reliable House For Pianos YOHN BROS. ■ i PMPEKTARBM RUDOLPH K. SPICER Funeral Director and Embalmer ■l3 Wailaat si. Bell Phon