2 Xfcfowen rgJDTeRfi-s GETOUT OF THE WAY human obstacle in their pathway. They can't get by him, nor around him, nor over him without killing him, which they would dearly like to do if murder didn't entail so many unpleas ant consequences. You know the woman who, in the midst of looking at goods at a coun ter, stops to greet an old friend and tell her the story of her life, and just exactly the state of health of every particular member of her family, and what she said to John and John said to her. It's nothing to her that she's taking up a dollar or two of the clerk's time and that there are dozens of other women waiting impatiently to be served. She doesn't care that 6he's disarranging the day's schedule for a lot of busy men and women and putlng a stumbling block in the way of their success. All of us also, have friends, charm ing friends, who have nothing to do themselves, and who never realize that anybody else has anything to do *hat has to be done at any particular time. They feel an affectionable im pulse toward you, and they call you up over the telephone to have a nice, long, liesurely chat at the very mo ment when you have just reached the high note of your morning's work that calls for every bit of concentration and force and enthusiasm that is In you. Or else they happen to be passing by your office, and they drop in to pay you a visit, though a blind person could see that you desk is piled moun- NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE The Original Germ-Remedy for Dandruff. Makes liair soft nnd fluffy. Stops Itching ot the Scalp. Don't Blame Your Mirror i (L I £ Many ladies compel (their mirrors to bear \ \S» A ■o' silent witness to needless hair destruc xf tion. Day after day they see beauty and jQ' attractiveness despoiled by the removal °' sreat combfulls of slightly diseased MEmMit hair that could be saved - If your mlrror could talk It would plead with you to "save your hair —not the combings." It { A ) § can be done with Newbro's Herpicide which eradicates the contagion that \ % causes dull, brittle and lusterless hair, also dandruff and falling hair. Correct OIIM& •• th ' s and the hair ' B natural luster and HERPICIDE WILL WE IT abundance will return. Almost extraor /■—' dinary results. An exquisite hair dress ( r o\ A Send 10 cents in stamps to The Herpicide V J & Company, Dept. 10715. Detroit, Michigan, X J 0 for sample and booklet. A /n Two Sizes—so cents and SI.OO. Sold and i L J J guaranteed at all Toilet Goods counters. ( \Vlien you call for Herpicide, do not ac- GONEML eept a substitute. Applications at proin rOOLWEFOHHERPICIBS inent Barber Shops. KENNEDY'S MEDICINE STORE, SPECIAL AGENTS. Sister: Read My Free Offer! ®l am a woman. I know a woman'i trials. I know her need of sympathy and help* If you, my sister, are unhappy because of Hl-nealth, j 7? u unfit for household duties, social pleasures, or daily employment, write and tell me just how you suffer, and ask for my free tea days' trial of a home treatment suited to your needs. Men cannot understand women's sufferings. What wo women know from experience we know better than any man. I want to tell you how to cure yourself at home at a cost of about 12 cents a week. If you suffer from women's peculiar ailments caus ing-pain in the head, back, or bowels, feeling of weight and dragging down sensation, falling or displacement of pelvic organs, causing kidney and bladder weakness or constipation and piles, painful or irregular periods, catarrhal conditions and discharges, extreme nervous ness. depressed spirits, melancholy, desire to cry, fear of something evil about to happen, creeping feeling along the spine, palpitation, hot flashes, weariness, sallow com* flexion with dark circles under the eyes.pain in the left breast or ft general feeling that life is not worth living, I INVITE YOU TO SEND TODAY FOR MY REE TEN DAYS' TREATMENT ftnd learn how these ailments can be easily and surely conquered at home without the dangers and expense of an operation. When you are cured, and able to enjoy life again, you can pass the (rood jrord along to some other sufferer. My home treatment is for young or old. To Mother, of D.u.b tert, I will explain how to overcome grreen sickness (chlorosis), irregularities, headaches, and lassi tude In young women and restore them to plumpness and health. Tell me if you are worried about yonr daughter. Remember it coat* TOO nothing to give my home treatment a ten days' trial, and does not Interfere withdaily work. If health i. worth aaking for. then accept my generous offer and write for the free treatment, including my illustrated booklet,''Women'. Own Medical Advi«er." I will send all in plain wrappers postpaid. To save time, you can cut out this offer, mark your feel ings, and return to me. Send today, os you may not see this offer again. Address, MRS. M. SUMMERS, ----- Box H. SOUTH BEND, IND. Coal Is Cheapest and Best Now To buy coal now Is to buy It at the cheapest price for which It can be obtained during the year. And then you gain in quality, too, for the coal sent from the mines at this time of the year may be thoroughly screened before delivery, a difficult matter In cold weather when frost will cause the dirt to cling to the coal. So to buy Montgomery coal now is to buy the best quality of the best coal at the lowest nricen Place your order. J. B. MONTGOMERY Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets Pennsylvania Men & Women i Wear a Red Rose on Suffrage Day, May 2d ij Call at 109 N. Second St, and Ask Why ! NO VOTES FOR WOMEN ' \ SATURDAY EVENING, • HARRISBURG tfifidSl TELEGRAPH * MAY 2,1914. By DOROTHY DIX tain high with work, or an Important customer is watting to see you, and that nothing on earth is so inoppor tune as the social call in working hours. What She Would Do. Now if I was a reformer which praise Heaven I am not, the first thing that I would do would be to ex terminate these breeds of pests. I would smooth the path of progress for those who were traveling forward by removing from it all those aimless individuals who stand in the middle of the road and block the way. Further more the one lesson that I would im press more firmly than any other on every youthful mind would be this: If you are not going anywhere in par ticular yourself, get out of the way of those who are. One of the most pathetic and ex asperating things in the world is that people who do things spend nine tenths of their strength in fighttng the people who don't do anything, and who don't want anybody elso to do anything. Nearly every bit of the criticism you ever get is destructive, not constructive. The very men and women who are most insistent on telling you that you mustn't do things the way you are doing them have no suggestions to make regarding the way you should do them. Constructive criticism is a boost up the ladder, but destructive criticism is the weight of the universe pulling you down. Probably nobody is so lucky as not to have had some near and dear rela tive who was one of these Standing Objections, who conceived it to be his or her mission in life to stand by and throw cold water on every project that was broached in the family cir cle. Sometimes the Standing Objector is a wife, who is always sure that her husband shouldn't conduct his busi ness in the manner in which he is doing it. She's certain that every trade will turn out disastrously, and so sure that any changes will be for the worse that she takes all of the heart out of him, and he either gives up or learns to keep his plans to him self. Sometimes the human obstruction to happiness is the husband, £nd he knocks everything his wife does, not because he really objects, but because he's just built that way. He doesn't like the way she dresses. Nor man ages her household, nor raises the children, but he hasn't got any Im provements to offer. Not long ago I met a beautiful and attractive woman whom I hadn't seen for a long time. "No," she said. "I scarcely go about at all now. My mother and my husband are chronic objectors, and by the time I have had an endless argument with each one of them about why I accepted that par ticular Invitation, why I was going, why I was going to wear a certain dress and so no, I was too exhausted to go. I can't put on a low neck gown without being warned that I'll catch my death of cold, or a high neck dress without having a lecture on the folly of coddling up your throat. Be lieve me, I'm bruised from head to foot with combating objections that even the objectors don't object to in reality." SOMETIMES PARENTS Sometimes the objectors are par ents who have been wise enough to. plant out any successful careers for their children, but takl out their in terest in the matter by objecting to everything the boys and girls want to do. They don't want John to be a merchant or a doctor, but they don't provide him with some other career or business. They don't want their girls to marry, neither do they wont them tp go into business. They don't like the young man who coi es to see Sadie, but they don't know why, and by the time the girls and boys have gotten through fighting their parents' objections their own flower of en thusiasm has faded. The objectors are the wet blankets on effort that 'account for many fail ures. Heaven keep us from belong ing to the tribe! If we can't do things ourselves, let us at least not stand in the way of those who can achieve. Let us keep out of the way of those who are marching on and give them a clear path. ALL GOWi\!S MUST BE BROAD IIT THE HIPS The Pattern Is Serviceable For Silks or Filmy Summer Fabrics itPw 8241 Semi-Princesse Dressj 34 to 42 bust. WITH OR WITHOUT RUFFLES AND COLLAR. WITH ELBOW OR LONG SLEEVES. | Every variation of the peg top skirt is in demand. Here is a gown that shows one very prettily draped and which can be made with the ruffles that enhance the j broad effect at the hips or without them as ! the figure demands. In the illustration, : the rpaterial is one of the very charming foulards with lace frills and chemisette of net but this gown would be pretty made from cotton cr£pe or from light weight wool crepe or from the taffeta that is such a pronounced favorite while the model also can be used for the voiles and the like of real summer. Without the collar and without the ruffles over the hips, the costume becomes much simpler, well adapted to washable material. By simply using a casing at the waist line and inserting ribbon or tape to regu.ate the size, the gown becomes adapted to maternity wear whereas it is perfectly suited to general use when the fulnesa is stitched into place. For the medium size, the gown will require 7% yds. of material 27 in. w»de, 6% yds. 36, 4?-$ yds. 44, with 1 yd. 44 in wide or 3 yds. of lace 4 in. wide and 3 yds. I in. wide for the ruffles. The width of the skirt at the lower edge is 1K yds. The pattern 8241 is cut in sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure. It will De mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. \ P- A. LUTZ, M. D. fs *59 H I'rnctlclnK Physician U Medicine nnd Electricity ! j jgKj Practice Confined to Office Only 105-A Market Street MAJESTIC To-night—"Little Lost Sister." I Friday night. May B—.."Within the Saturday, matinee and night, May 9 Julia Sanderson In "The Sunshine Monday, May 11—"Peg O' My Heart." ORPHEUM Keith Vaudeville. COLONIAL Vaudeville and Pictures— Every after noon and evening. "LITTLE LOST SISTER Should "Little Lost Sister" save some of these tender blossoms we call sis ters, tire author, Miss Virginia tlrooks, and Edward E. «Rose, who dramatized the book, will feel well paid for their efforts. "Little Lost Sister" closes its thiee days' engagement with a matinee ana night performance to-day.—Adver , tlsement. "WITHIN THE LAW" Local playgoers will be glad to learn • that the maangement of the Majestic has secured For them "Within the Law," which comes to this city next Friday, by Bayard Veiller, the play dealing with present day conditions in New York City, which has remained for two years at the Eltinge Theater, and which has had the distinguished endorsement of the President, not to mention many other notables. When : Woodrow Wilson visited the metropolis I recently, he sent for a box, from which lie witnessed Mr. Veiller's intense melo- I drama with tremendous interest. At the conclusion of the play he turned to the friends who accompanied him and observed, "I was never more thrilled and interested in all my life." —Adver- tisement. I JULIA SANDERSON IN "THE SUN-! SHIISE GIRL" 1 The Majestic Theater is to have one of tlie big things of the season soon, as it is announced that this playhouse will offer on Saturday, matinee and evening, May 19, Julia Sanderson, Charles Frohman's newest star in the musical comedy triumph of London and New York, "The Sunshine Girl." Little Miss "Sanderson Is said to live up to the titlo of her vehicle in every way, but she has been surrounded by many bright particular rays of sunshine, in- I j eluding Joseph Cawthkorn, Alan Mudie, Flossie Hope. Florence Morrison, Fred I Leslie, William Sellery. Yra Jcane and , Queenie Vassal'.—Advertisement. i MIL HOPKINS TO GO A-FISHING 1 King Vaudeville leaves for his happy hunting grounds to-day. Manager Hopkins says he is going fishing, but emphasises the fact that he isn't going ; for fish. He's going to look about for I big catches in the way of vaudeville features and late in the summer he'll be here to show his wares. Anyway to-day he's all packed up, with his knapsack of funny folks, daring acro bats, pretty girls and such, and after the last performance of the current of fering to-night he departs for cooler climes. Throughout the bill is elever and diverting and according to reports from the box office the last bill will make its exit with colors flying. Ad • vertisement. Foil THE LITTLE FOLKS This will be a day for Young Ilar rlsburg at the Colonial. "Mother l i Goose" and ull her familiar characters from fairyland, all so realistically por trayed that one would actually think they stepped from the pages of a story book, are going to entertain the little folks aside from their regular turn of frolic, song and dance. At this after noon's performance the players of this production are going to give a stage re ception to the "kiddies" in the audi ence, and when the children come up- I on the stage to meet them they will be the recipients of a nice candy treat. —Advertisement. PALACE THEATER At the Palace, Monday, J. Warren Kerrigan and Vera Sisson will be fea tured in Victor's latest three-reel com edy drama. "The Bolted Door." Harry Stafford, magazine writer, physician and for several years a prominent actor on the legitimate stage, is the author of this exquisite , three-reel comedy drama adapted from the novel of the same name by George Gibbs. This novel was one of the best sellers of the year 113, and was chosen from a score or more of books as be ing the most adaptable and suitable story for the famous Victor star, J. Warren Kerrigan. Of the modern so ciety plays that Mr. Kerrigan has ap peared in during his screen career, he has never had a role more suited to him, one that gave him more opportu nity for disclosing the more refined and delicate side of his art, or that gave him more emotional scope. The play, possessing a cleverly wrought plot, moves swiftly; the inter est of the spectator Is assured from the first and as the action moves among the climaxes with occasional sidelights of delicious humor, the spectator is held in rapt attention. . Vera Sisson, who has won remarkable success as a leading woman within a few months, enacts the part of the wife, opposite Mr. Kerrigan as hus band. The story concerns the falling In love of a wife with her own hus band. Tiie young couple are forced in to the marriage through financial rea sons through a will of an uncle. The young man needs money to carrv on his mechanical experiments and tiie wife to complete her social triumphs. But while outwardly married, they live apart: a bolted door separates them. An exciting, emotional and most un usual four-reel drama of the French Revolution, entitled "Charlotte Cordav," will also be shown. The rare genius'of Constance Crawley and the magnetic, forceful characterization of Arthur Mauds are shown in this feature. Ad vertisement. SEE THE GOLD PIANO On exhibition in the window of Yohn Bros, music store, 8 North Market Square. This piano was made to order by the famous manufacturers, Bjur Bros., New York. The case, which Is iof special and handsome design, is en tirely covered with solid 22-karat gold. Nothing like this piano has ever been seen here and is well worth a call to Yohn Bros, store. The piano will be on exhibition only a few days and will then be delivered to the fortunate owner.—Advertisement. Business Locals TALK OF THE TOWN People who are fond of photo plavs are looking forward to a great treat on Monday next. May 4th, when they will- have the pleasure of witnessing that grand production of "The Last Days of Pompeii" at the Victoria theater, afternoon and evening. It is the play of all plays you should at tend. THE GIFT HUNTER Will find many articles of home fur niture which will please and make very handsome and useful gifts. Co lonial Sewing Tables, Mahogany Hand Painted Cake Baskets, Gold and Ma hogany framed Mirrors, Glass Mounted Serving Trays and many other dainty pieces. J. \ Harris & Son, 221 North Second St. THAT'S WnAT You will never find more choice i fruit than we sell. Big luscious Cali i fornia Grape Fruit that will make ■ your mouth water just to look at. Western grown Apples that have a de lightful flavor, as fresh as the day they were picked, and all seasonable fruits, domestic as well as foreign Lverything fresh here. S. S. Pomc roy, in Maiket Square. IT'S A WINNER Wc have a .special man's shoe that we call the Scout and Outing shoe. The best quality ever shown at 11.95. Would sell for 12.50 or $3.00 any where else. A shoe ttat is chuck full ol' endurance and comfort, and only found at the 20th Century Shoa Co., 7 South Market Square. POULTRYtfieWS WHITE LEGHORN MAY LOSE CHAMPIONSHIP Twenty-fifth Week of Interna tional Contest Springs Some Surprises The twenty-fifth week of the Inter national Egg Laying Contest at Storrs,- developed two new high records. The | best previous single day's production lof 536 made in the twenty-third week I was bettered b 25, or a total of 561 1 eggs. The yield for the week was 92 eggs better than the preceding and 36 eggs better than the best pre vious record of 3,646 made in the twenty-second week or a total for the current week of 3,682 eggs. Twenty-five individuals including Barred, White and Buff Rocks; White and Buff Wyandottes; Rhode Island Reds: White and Buff Leghorns; Buff Orpingtons, and "hens" proved to be every day layers during the week, each of these Individuals beinng credited with seven eggs. The breeds with the largest repre sentation in the contest have in the I twenty-five weeks the contest has run. made averages per bird as follows: I Barred Plymouth Rocks, 4 pens, 56 'egE's; White Rocks. 7 pens, 4 9 eggs; White Leghorns, 33 hens, 56 eggs; White Wyandottes, 5 pens, 80 eggs; Buff Wyando'tes, 4 pens, 52 eggs; Rhode Island Reds, 13 pens, 56 eggs. The supremacy of White Leghorns us layers, it seems, is being threatened more and more every day. INDIFFERENCE O^LY THOUGHTLESSNESS ' After bis exciting experiences over the threatened sale of Montieello, the home of President Thomas Jefferson, Representative Levy, of New' York, in troduced a joint resolution to make "The Star-Spangled Banner" the oftlcial anthem of the United States. It was also decided that whenever "The Star- Spangled Banner" is played on any occasion, at "any public place where persons belonging to any branch of the Government service are present, they will stand at attention and all other persons are expected to do like wise, such positions being retained un til the last note of the anthem." This has been commented upon by some as "compulsory patriotism," but American travelers are inortilied in going about this country to find indif ference of people to the national air, a sharp contrast to the popular feeling in other countries. I The effect of this joint resolution is difficult to determine, but the facts are that if one or two persons in an audi ence arise when the national anthem is played, there is a ready response, for what seems like indifference is only thoughtlessness. The American man's mind is so filled and surcharged with things going on about him that he is prone to forget the formality attached to the national anthem. "Affairs at I Washington," .foe Mitchell Chappie, in National Magazine for January, I'Jl4. ORPHEUS QUARTET SANG The Orpheus Female .Quartet sang several songs at a me'etlng of the Brotherhood of the Methodist Episco jpal church last evening. Lively Chicks Disease proof, healthy little ones prove prM&PoulSry Replator Plcgs. 25c, 50c, 60c, $1.00; 25 lb. pail $2.50 best for parent birds and young stock, It help 3 digestion keeps the liver on the job and purifies the blood. Makes more eggs and better chicks. The first three weeks chicks need Baby Ctilck Food just the right combination to nourish without straining baby stomachs. 25c, 50c and SI.OO. Refuse substitutes; insist on Pratts. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Back 3 Get Pratts 160 Page Poultry Book Walter L. Schell, 1307 Market St.; Elk view Poultry Supply House, 1703 N. 3d St.; Holmes Seed Co., So. Second St.; Mock & Hartman, 7th and Emerald Sts., and live dealers In towns surrounding llarrisburg. CHARLES DICKENS I! FREE LIBRARY CCUPO.S jjj raj Imported Six Volume Set i|||| 111 Introductory Distribution by ]«|^ | HAiIRISBURG TELEGRAPH 1(3 Last Dickens Coupon May 2 . |&i j Great Aulhors Library |B HOW TO OET IT! Clip the Library Coupon nuil bring or irml to tile Trlreraph office, with tlie rxpcuNe Item of ItHc for the entire Nix volume set of book*. Thin amount we usk yon to pay to cover the coat of transportation, U. S. custom duties, handling, etc. If you desire to have the set sent by mail or express, all charges prepaid, add 17c, or 91.15 In all, and till In name and address below. Name Address } SEMES SYSTEM TOSET SITTEI This 1$ the Way to Induce Hen to Move to Another Place s I It is not always an easy matter to set a sitting hen and induce her to sit on a setting of eggs. To begin with, she is apt to bo set in her ways and unwilling to sit where set unless set just whore she is willing to sit. Of all instincts, the maternal is most immovably fixed. So. if you wish to move a broody hen to another place than that which she has chosen, go slow. Leave her for a few days until her broodiness has become an obses sion from which she is not easily freed. Then, having arranged a new nest just where it is wanted and plac ed within it a decoy of useless eggs, steal out quietly at night, without a lantern if possible, and gather the hen into our arms, take her to the new location and put her gently Into | the next. Be as quiet and gentle as possible in making the transfer. . | Don't forget to dust the hen liberal- | ly with a good insect powder as soon j as she has become well established; j better forget her food than this. Work the powder well into her feathers, and ( repeat this about once a week while she is upon the nest. A sitting hen j cannot protect herself from vermin, I and she may be bled, even unto death, 1 If not protected. This is the easiest time in the world to rid the mother of lice and protect the future chicks, i TESTING EGGS Testing eggs is the most interesting part of the work of hatching. There are four important reasons for testing eggs. Probably the most important of these is to leuru the per cent, fertile and the strength of the germs. When | this is known it is often possible to make some changes of great benefit in the breeding pens, or the conditions of environment. FUNERAL or THE REV. H. S. GABEL, I). 1). Special to The Telegraph Mt. Joy, Pa., May 2. —Yesterday af ternoon the funeral of the late Rev. H. S. Gabel, D. IX. pastor of the Mt Joy United Brethren Church was held I and sermons were preached by the Rev. G. D. Batdorf, of Lancaster, and j ' the Rev. H. E. Miller, of Lebanon, j The Rev. S. E. Rupley, of Harrisburg, land the Rev. J. T. Spangler, of Har risburg, the former pastor at Mt. Joy, also assisted in the services. A beau tiful tribute to the life of the deceased was read by a representative of the Mt. Joy Ministerial Association. Thir ty of the ministers of the conference attended the funeral. Last evening the body was taken to Dayton, Ohio. LECTURE ON MISSIONS Penbrook, Pa., May 2. —There will bo a lecture on Missions in Zion's Lu | tlieran Church, Penbrook, by the Rev. George M. Diffenderfer. of Carlisle, ' Pa., Tuesday evening, May 5, at 8 o'clock, for the benefit of the Mission larv Society. A silver offering will be I lifted. MM IS. ISE'BELL Keep the Hands Soft and White |WSME. ISE'BELL'S Lilac • 1 Hand Whitener, applied after washing, makes the hands soft and white and prevents chapping. Only a few drops, rubbed gently over the surface, are required. The hands de serve as much attention as the face, for, if not given proper care, they become rough, red and creased, indicating age pre maturely. Price, 25c. Other Superfine Toilet Aids Mnie. lse'bell's Turkish Bath Oil, 50c and SI.OO. Mme. lse'bell's Exquisite Face Powder. 50c. Mme. lse'bell's Natural Blush Rouge, 50c. Mme. lse'bell's Rose Blush Stick Rouge, 25c. Mme. lse'bell's Skin Food and Wrinkle Paste, 50c and SI.OO. Mme. lse'bell's Flesh Worm Eradl cator. SI.OO. Mme. lse'bell's D. C. Depilatory Powder, SI.OO. Sold by Good Stores Everywhere. Central GEO. A. GEORGAS, 10 X. Third Street, Harrisburg, Pa. GEORGE A. GORGAS Pennsylvania Railroad Station Hill District W. R. GOODYEAR Nineteenth and Derry Streets Central GOLDEN SEAL DRUG STORE 11 South Market Square West End C. F. KRAMER 3rd and Broad Sts., Harrisburg, Pa. IHH District BBIIVDLE'S PHARMACY Thirteenth find Derry Strecta Made by Mme. Ise'beli 352 Xo. Mlcblgau Ave., Chlengo. 111, If your dealer's name is not in the above list he can get Mme. lse'bell's Toilet Preparations for you from his wholesale druggist. i ■. —— rnmrnmm MlHM———— Good Locust Fence Posts Are the only kind to use where you want a fence to last a life time. They cost just a lit-* tie more than chestnut or hemlock, etc. It's not necessary to be rebuilding fences every f-iw years. Use the right kind of lum ber and the job is done for years to come. United Ice & Coal Co. MAIN OFFICEj Fornter and Cotvden Sts. >. ■ J The lice question is settled if you dust youc fowls wjth^L B Conkey's Lice PowderM ■ It's safe, quick and sure. 1 B H Saves your poultry profits because it H Kills the Lice B Doesn't Harm Chickens M Price 25 cents, 50 cents and 51.00. jy For the mites that hide in the cracks Ivy day and prey on chickens at night, spray k .l c or your poultry house with Conk«y'» Conkey's Lice Liquid Cleans them our thoroughly. Quart 35 I cents, half gallon 60 cents gallon 51.00. H | Kiw^6Sm]| For the deadly litad louse use H j CONKERS HEAD LICE ■ j PpH Effective and doesn't harm chicks. 10 H | JnaßT V and 25 cents. Money back if these lip ■ preparations do not satisfy. jj .TWG. E. Conliey Co, Cleveland, Ohio ' Walter S. Sehell. 1397 Market St.! E. SR. UroNM, IHI Mlirket St., Elk View Poultry A Supply Huuitr, 1701 Lugaa St. It. H. Holiiit-», Kuolii, I'll. / 1 We Can Hatch 40,000 Hen Eggs In lots of 150 each or more at 2c for each egg sot. Send eggs to Stouifer Poultry Farm WHITE HILL, PA. or write to C. A. STOUFFER, Box 224, Harrisburg, Pa. 1./ ———————y S. C. RHODE INLAND ItED AND S. C. BLACK MINORCA EUUS FOIt HATCHING Stock for aale. My birds got their share of prizes the last two seasons 3* York, Carlisle, Mlddletown, Har rißbrg, Red Lion, Hanover, Steelton and Biglerville shows. Satisfaction guaranteed. M. H. BANKS. Slddonaburg, Pa. Eggs For Hatching from my prize-winning and heavy laying Barred Plymouth Hocks and Single Comb Rhode Island Reds. 91.00 iter Setting. IRA E. BIGLER CAMP HILL* PA. FOR SALE 2 White Wyandotte Cockerels out of tna bred from .lotas S. Martin. Also t cook bird, Spd prize vtfiin.tr, Havrlaburv Shun. W. K. WITMEB. 1883 North Street