Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 09, 1914, Page 3, Image 23

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    X&offlervAlriTeßfrys
Are We Forgetting Thomas Paine?
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX
12388 Thomas Paine
"The
is my coun-
to do good is
my religion."
The man who
named our country.
The man first to
advocate indepen
dence for our coun
try.
The man who did
more to achieve this
independence than
any other man, glv
ing his pen, tongue,
swor d and pocket
iJhn»ir to the cause.
•'""ICS© At® the Times That Try Men's
Souls"
The man who in the darkest hour
of the Revolution wrote the "Crisis,"
commencing with the words. "These
are the times that try men's souls."
i General Washington ordered this
mighty work to bo read to the army
once a week.)
The man who was joint author of
the Declaration of Independence with
Jefferson.
The man who borrowed ten million
dollars from Louis XVI. to feed and
clothe the American army.
The man who established the 1 ank
of North America In order to supply;
the army.
Napoleon said In toasting him at a
banquet, "Every city in the world
should erect a gold statue to you."
The author of the "Rights of Man,"
acknowledged to be the greatest work
ever written for political freedom.!
This masterpiece gave free speech and |
a free press to England and America, j
The man known as "The Great Com- j
moner of Mankind," the "Founder of i
the Republic of the World."
The man first to urge the making i
of our Constitution.
The man first to suggest the Fed
eral Union of the States and to bring
it about
The man first to propose the
Louisiana Purchase.
The man first to demand justice for
women.
The man first to plead for dumb
animal*.
The man first to advocate interna
tional arbitration.
The man first to propose old age
pensions.
The man first to propose "The land
for the people" (single tax).
The man first to propose the care
for the children of the poor at public
expense.
The man who invented and built
the first Iron bridge.
For a century the world has for
gotten its debt to Thomas Paine.
Indeed, that name has been branded
b> biggots and fanatics with all imag
inable obloquy.
He was calied an atheist a Free
Thinker, a blasphemer, simply be
cause he could not believe in some
old traditions which to-day are
known to be allegorical, and which •
I c-c I
JE The importance and magnitude
of this offering and it* opportu
nities for price tarings warrant
|Xa a special trip to New York |JLI
|j Million Dollar ||
® Oriental Rug Sale gj
At Warerooms of KENT-COSTIKYAN, Incorporated,
|i 8-14 West 38th Street, New York City &j|
S2B jtt Over $1,000,000 worth of choice Ori-
RK oJ ental Rugs, all personally selected by
h j Mr. S. Kent Costikyan in the Orient, to
32 sell at r;
SS Less Than Wholesale Prices fiS
The discontinuance of a department for
ffl the sale of rugs In bale lots to the wholesale WTI
Pa trade presents to the public this rare oppor-
X tunlty to participate in and profit by the M
O most extensive offering of Oriental Rugs
ever made In this country.
The Sale will positively close on May 29th.
WJ An illustrated catalogue will be mailed upon request. IWI
Storage and Insurance free until Fall. gCI|
35 KENT-COSTIKYAN
PG I NCORPORATII
!j! 8 WEST 38—STREET
Q NEW YORK CITY jg|
fe oumwKi fHKiisga a
Coal Is Cheapest and Best Now
To buy co(U 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 Monttjomery coal
now is to buy the best quality of the best coal at the lowest prices
Place your order. knc '■
J. B. MONTGOMERY
Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets
New Series of Building and
Loan Association Stock
The Franklin Building and l,oan Association of ilarrlsburg. Pa., Is
now issuing stock In a new series. Shares can now be taken at the
office of the treasurer, S. W. Fleming. No. 26 North Third street. Tills
association has been doing a successful business for twenty-six years.
Shares can be cancelled at any time, and interest at six per .ent. will
be paid on all cancelled stock that is one or more years old.
J. H. IVf USS ER , Secretary
213 \VAI,.M T STHF.tIT
I few Intelligent minds regard seriously.
Thomas Paine was one of the
| founders of our gTeat United States
of America. We would undoubtedly
be under British rule to-day but for
the wise and wonderful efforts of
Thomas Paine.
In Jahuary, 1776, he wrote and
published a plea for American inde
pendence. Previous to this he had
made a strong argument, urging sapa
ration from the mother country.
No one had been daring enough to
i think of such a move before.
All tne colonists had rebelled
against the unjust taxes and imposi
tions, but Paine was the bold rebel
who dared say Liberty.
After his pamphlet. "Common
Sense," was published the people were
electrified. No pamphlet ever written
sold in such vast numbers, nor did
any ever before or since produce such
marvellous results. Paine donated all
the financial proceeds of the pamphlet
to the cause of liberty (as he did with
all of his other works). Washington,
now converted, wrote to his friends
in praise oi; "Common Sense," assert
ing that P&ine'e words were "sound
doctrine and unanswerable reasoning."
All Great Statesmen Fell in With His
Words
Jefferson, John Adams, Franklin,
Madison, all the great statesmen of
the time, wrote praisefully of Paine's
"flaming arguments."
In July, six months after "Common
Sense" had awakened the people, the
Declaration of Independence, embrac
ing the chief arguments of Paine's
great pamphlet and much of its actual
wording, was signed by the commit
tee of patriots in Philadelphia.
The #teat Revolution commenced
at once. The oppressed colonists took
lup arms at a great disadvantage, by
reason of the lack of food, clothes,
money and munitions of war, but in
spired by the forceful message of
"Common Sense," they fought bravely
and well.
His Writings Inspired the Poorly Clad
Soldiers
When winter set In, however, the ill-!
clad, poorly nourished little army had
been greatly reduced in numbers by
desertions from its ranks. Many of
the soldiers were shoeless and left
bloody footprints on the snow-covered
line of march. All were but half-!
hearted at this time and many utterly
discouraged. Washington wrote most
apprehensively concerning the situa-1
tion to the Congress.
Paine, in the meantime (himself a
soldier with General Greene's army
on the retreat from Fort Lee, N. j!.
to Newark) realizing the necessity of
at once instilling renewed hope and
courage in the soldiers If the cause
of liberty were to be saved, wrote by
at night the first number of
his soulstirring "Crisis," commencing
with the words:
"These are the times that try
men's souls. The summer soldier
and the sunshine patriot will in
ice of thp'i " k from the ach -
stand, w country, but he who
am? th«nk W » deserv °B the love
Tyrnnnv Hv J" an and w «man.
conauer«*H • f • not easily
solaUnT^'.j: 6l We have thl " <"°n
solation with us, that the harder
trlumnhV-u 6 more S'orious the
chean ♦ We obtain too
cneap we esteem too lightly it is
° nl , y * that Klves everj'-
how to nnf n" 6 Heaven knowß
its tr proper price upon
5 ; and U w °uld be strange
freedom "h cel * BtJal an article as
rated/™ Bhould not be highly
reJd a «^m,5 t °. n ordered 'he "Crisis"
armv Th» » e Y ery r egim«int of the
waT'renTS-Zf? Wa * magical. Hope
era reS » n t breast - Desert
had hiw? K to the ranks; men who
artedls ' withheld from
from P . atriot arn »" took courage
sho^hw»i ne 8 I thril "V words and
eat m t with the rest. The
totterln £ °n the brink of
n - was saved Paine's
Crisis" did it. aine s
"PH«!!.» W i nßr the I flrst "umber of the
others—thirteen in all
'••Thf commencing with the words:
over " tFied mens »ouls are
and a i?»t- Wa " not . only a great author
R ninnfli ut he was distinctly
' an originator; an inventor
for mlt? ; hlm we are indebted
Ind
ah oil Hon who , flrßt proposed the
fh» fli.f » negro Blaver >"; Paine was
he first to suggest arbitration and in
ternational peace; Paine originally
proposed old age pensions. These are
f*t!kT 2 the other great ideas he
fathered. He first suggested interna
tional copyright: first proposed the
education of children of the poor at
public expense; first suggested a great
republic of all the nations of the
world; first proposed "the land for the
people ; first suggested "the religion
of humanity"; first proposed and first
wrote the words "United States of
America ; first suggested protection
for dumb animals; first suggested jus
tice to women; first proposed the pur
chase of the Louisiana territory; first
suggested the Federal Union of States.
Paine to* Be Put in the World's Tem
ple of Fame
It is time the world awakened to
his merits. With that end in view
the Thomas Paine National Historical
Association was organized in New
York some years ago. Through the
efforts of this association, Thomas
Paine is at last coming into his own.
The association Intends that Thomas
Paine shall occupy that niche in the
worlds Temple of Fame where he
properly belongs, and to that end
it bends its every endeavor. The as
sociation has established its home at
New Rochelle. N. Y.. in the house
that Paine built
PEHSTCTOSEiT ~
SUCCESSFUL TOUR
Candidate Speaks in the Mononga
hela Valley and Lines Up
Washington County
Senator Boies Penrose closed his
tour of Western Pennsylvania with a
big rally In Monongahela City last
night and addressed 1,000 persons.
The senator started for Philadelphia
early this morning.
The tour has been virtually a tri
umph. In two weeks the senator has
visited points in Mercer, Lawrence,
Butler. Beaver, Indiana and Washing
ton counties. In Pittsburgh he re
ceived delegations from Greene. Fay
ette, Cambria and other counties. He
said he had met personally thousands
of voters, including business men,
working men and manufacturers, as
well as politicians, and that he had
had an exceptional opportunity to
analyze public sentiment In this sec
tion. In Pittsburgh last night he re
peated his statement that J. Benjamin
Dimmick would not beat him in a
Western Pennsylvania eountv at the
primary election.
"Washington county, as well as the
other counties in this section, will lie
back in the Republican column in No
vember," Senator Penrose declared
"Pennsylvania will go Republican on
the tariff issue and I expect the West
ern Pennsylvania counties to repeat
old-time majorities for the Republican
ticket. The Monongahela Yallev un
mistakably shows the ill effects of the
Underwood tariff act. The coal min
ers and mill men who are out of work
arc sick of Democratic administration.
I They will vote the Republican ticket "
Remarks for Wasson
A dispatch from Monongahela says:
"Henry G. Wasson. ex-chairman of the
Republican State committee, was ac
| cused by Senator Boies Penrose to
day of having been willing to with
draw from that office, which he held
during the 1912 campaign, for a cash
consideration. The accusation canto
in reply to a recent attack of the Pitts
burgh lawyer upon the senior sen
ator. "Wasson was willing to get out
if we would pay him ? 15,000 to resign
the chairmanship," said Penrose, "but
we refused to have anything to do
with him. We don't treat with such a
creature. He was trying to dance on
two tight ropes at once." Senator
Penrose said the Washington party
had tumbled to pieces because Flinn
had gone out of the "angel" business.
Dimmiok's Campaign
A special dispatch to the Philadel
phia ledger front Somerset says:
"When J. Benjamin Dimmick, candi
date for the Republican nomination
for United States senator, reached this
the county seat of the banner Wash
ington party county of the State, this
afternoon he found the only available
place for a meeting taken by the local
Board of Trade, which had arranged
a smoker for to-night. It did not
prove to be a disappointment, but an
opportunity. The impression made by
Mr. Dimmick at a reception this after
noon at the Arlington Hotel was so
favorable that the Board of Trade
gathering was hardly assembled be
fore It passed a resolution inviting him
to address the body. A committee of
two, Robert S. Seull. editor of the-
Somerset Herald, and Captain C. J.
Harrison, president of the County
Trust Company, escorted Mr. Dimmick
to the courthouse, where he was greet
ed with hearty applause."
WKDOIX; A>'\Ol \CRHEXT
Special to Tlir Ttltgroph
Millersville. Pa.. May 0. Announce
ment was made yesterday of the mar
riage of Miss Florence Kaliler. of Wer
nersvllle. and Dr. T. K. which
took place In this place on March
I#l4 It was s great surprise to their
many
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
Grand United Order of
Odd Fellows to Hold
Mass Meeting
The Grand United Order of Odd
Fellows in Harrisburg and vicinity
will celebrate the anniversary of the
order with a meeting to-morrow even
ing at 7:30 o'clock in the courthouse,
which will be attended by Brotherly
Love Lodge No. 596, Armstead Roman
Lodge No. 3569, Past Grand Master
Council No. 7, Patriarchs No. 5,
Household of Ruth No. t, Naomi
Household of Ruth No. 4 595 and Sa
mple Juvenile N0.4. All of these or
ganizations will appear in full regalia.
Harry Burrs, chairman of a joint
committee of twenty-one having
charge of the affair announces that
Henry Lincoln Johnson, recorder of
deeds of Washington, D. 0., has been
secured as orator of the occasion. Mrs.
Josephine Davidson, of this city, will
deliver an address. There, will be
solos by Mrs. Lizzie Page, Mrs. Emma
Rideout, of Carlisle; Mrs. Daisy
Thompson and Dr. M. >l. Layton. of
this city, with Mrs. Rachel Middle
ton Johnson as the accompanist. A
chorus of thirty voices, conducted by
Marshall Fickline, will sing.
Henry Lincoln Johnson has a na
tional reputation as an orator, and is
deputy grand master of the G. U. O.
of O. F. of America and will be here
in his official capacity. Harry Burrs
will preside.
AMUsewefiis
MAJESTIC
This Afternoon and Evening Julia
Sanderson in "The Sunshine Girl."
Monday Night, May 11—"Peg o' My
Heart."
JULIA SANDERSON IN
"THE SUNSHINE GIRL"
Charles Frohman will present his
newest star, Julia Sanderson, in the
musical comedy triumph. "The Sun
shine Girl," which set all New York
a-talking during the long stay at the
Knickerbocker Theater there last sea
son and this. Miss Sanderson comes
to the Majestic this afternoon and
evening. Prominent in her support
will be Joseph Cawthorn, Alan Mudie,
Flossie Hope, Florence Morrison, Fred
Leslie. William Sellery, Yra Jeane and
Queenie Vassar. The score of "The
Sunshine Girl" is by Paul Rubens, of
"Three Little Maids" and "Hook of
Holland" fame, and it is said to be far
superior to either of these famous
pieces in tuneful rhythm. Joseph
Cawthorn as Schlump. a dead-broke
cabby, has the funniest role of his
career in "The Sunshine Girl." —Ad-
vertisement.
"PEG O* MY HEART"
The much-heralded Oliver Morosco's
production of "Peg o' My Heart,"
which is enjoying an enviable engage
ment with Laurette Taylor, now enter
ing into its second year of uninter
rupted success at the Cort Theate.r,
New York, and which the critics have
declared one of the greatest successes
In years, will be the attraction at the
Majestic Monday evening. The action
of the play, which takes nlace in Eng
land. tells of a little carelessly raised
Irish girl, who. when she is trans
planted into an aristocratic home of
unknown relatives, meets with a chilly
reception. She is unwelcome and tol
erated simply for the income they
derive through her, a legacy left her
by the will of a wealthy uncle, but
how she overcomes their dislike and
wins for herself a titled husband is
well acted by Elsa Ryan. Others in
the cast are Fanny Addison Pitt, Wilda
Marl Moroe, Henry Stanford, Gilbert
Douglas. Frank Burbeck, Roy Coch
rane and Dorothy Hammond.—Adver
j tisement.
VICTORIA THEATER
"Scrooge," Charles Dickens' Christ
mas Carol, is the leading attraction to
day at the Victoria: also Renfax mu
sical motion pictures, and "Out of the
Xight." a two-reel drama of thoughts
of what might have been. One of
George Kleine's attractions, "Between
the Savage and the Tiger." a thrilling
six-reel reproductions of jungle life in
Indiana, teeming with excitement and
adventure—Advertisement.
PHOTOPLAY THEATER
in the last instalment of the "Th«
Perils of Pauline." the villain is disap
pointed at his failure to injure Pauline
in the airship accident, plotting with
another villain in whose power he is.
They decide that they must lure Paul
ine away from her home to be success
ful with tlioir plans. They locate an
old sailor who agrees to tell Pauline a
history of his life. The pirate leads
Pauline to believe that he was ship
wrecked once and he escaped ashore
with a vast treasure and buried it on
an inhabited island. Paulina falls for
the story and agrees to help him to
tind his treasure. Then follows a thrill
ing story. This picture will be shown
to-day. This picture is the great $2.1,000
prize story which is being published
in many papers of thp United States.
A great program will be shown to-dav.
—Advertisement.
IOWA WOMAN
TELLS OTHERS
How Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg
etable Compound Carried
Her Safely Through
Change of Life.
Cedar Rapids, lowa.—"At the Change
of Life the doctor said I would have to
VC U P "W W °rk and
ffipjgli take my bod for
Bome time as thcro
■y 1 waa no help for ma
fjia *° " e *
o'w ««'•• took Lydia E. Pinl:-
: ;V| yj ham's Vegctablo
*'■ ff | Compound and kept
u p m y work sni
'y' \T\y /\ now am over tha
/ fa Change and that is
/ / p>/ all I took. It waa
all the doctor*B medicines I tried. Many
people have no faith in patent medicines
but I know this is good."—Mrs. E. J.
RICKETS, 354 Bth Avenue, West, Cedar
Rapids, lowa.
Such warning symptoms as sense of
suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, back
aches,dread of impending evil, timidity,
sounds in the ears, palpitation of the
heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu
larities, constipation, variable appetite,
weakness and inquietude, and dizziness,
are promptly heeded by intelligent wo
men who are approaching the period in
life when woman's great change may
be expected.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound invigorates and strengthens the
female organism and builds up the weak
ened nervous system. It has carried
many women safely through this crisis.
If there are any complications 1
you don't understand write Lydia
K. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi
dential) Lynn, Mass. i
POULTRY^neWS
SPACE NO BAR
TO KEEPING HENS
Small Blocks in Cities and Towns
Are Growing in Popu
larity
The number of smalt flocks kept by
people living in citleß and large towns j
Is rapidly increasing each year, and
with the prospect of eggs soaring In
price next winter this increase prom
ises to be more rapid this summer
than ever before.
The fallacy of the belief long ad
hered to that there is no economy in
keeping hens closely confined is be
coming understood. Even commer
cial poultrymen practice close housing
nowadays: on many such plants the
fowls go into th*' laying houses in
the Fall and are not liberated there
from at any time during the winter.
Ten hens can be kept in a space
much smaller than that required to
keep a dog. The no-yard house Ts
entirely practical: a house six by
eight feet will accommodate ten hens
and there need be no concern about
their comfort or health if a little at
tention be given them and ordinary
judgment in their care used.
May Get New Record
at Storrs Contest
With the close of the twenty-sixth
week, the International Egg Laying
Contest at Storrs is half over. It is
interesting, therefore, to make some
comparison with the records of the i
preceding contest. The best individual j
score that has ever been made in any
American egg laying contest was made!
by ail English White Leghorn at j
Storrs last year with a record of 282 |
eggs. In the first six months this In
dividual produced only 132 eggs, or 45 j
per cent, of her total yield for the con- !
test year. In the present contest an j
English White Wyandotte has to date j
produced 137 eggs. If this individual j
can only keep the same pace that the]
Leghorn did last year, it will mean'
a record of 304 for the year or better j
than the famous 300-egg hen produced
at the Oregon station.
STATE COLLKGE MAX TO \
STt'DV AT WASHINGTON
Miliigan C. Kilpatrick, instructor in
poultry husbandry .at Pennsylvania !
State College, will leave, Monday to!
spend the summer with the Bureau of:
Chemistry, United States Department!
of Agriculture, as an investigator in j
poultry and egg handling. During the j
greater part of the summer he will!
work in Oklahoma and Missouri. He I
will resume his duties at State about j
September 1.
Makc
Young
Grow Quickly
and keep ihem free from disease. «
To succeed—to com egg-money next
fall, you must use now
Drafts, Poultry Regulator
JT *. ?SC. sOf. «(*-. fl IX,, S5 lb. pail ti.SO
This (treat tonic and digestive aid. insurer the r-3*d develop- £2y-l
ment of all young stock and keeps the older birds In prime condi- "^t.~
tion; fully competent to take care of your egg demand. Use
OffittS Poullry Disinfectant and >35
/ — 0 Pratts Powdered Lice Killer
to rid the poultry and houses of lice, mites, etc.. and to destroy disease germs.
Refuse substitutes; insist on Pratts
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Back
V titt Pratt* 16L page Poultry Book
Walter L. Schell, 1307 Market St.: Elkview Poultry Supply House,
1 703 N. 3d St.: Holmes Seed Co., So. Second St.; Mock & Hartman. 7th
and Emerald Sts.. and live dealers In towns surrounding Harrisburg.
Never Mind How Strong You Are —
What d'ye Know?
That's the point—"W hat d'ye KNOW?"
To-day it's a battle of wits—and brains win.
Muscle and brawn don't count so mucli as they used to.
In the fight for good jobs and big salaries it's brains
—not brawn—that win. "What d'ye KNOW?" is the
one great question that draws the line between defeat
and victory—between "wages" and "salary"—between
you and the Boss.
\\ hat do YOU know? Arc YOU so expert in some
line of work that you can "make good" as a foreman,
superintendent, or manager? If not, why don't you mark
and mail the attached coupon and permit the Interna
tional Correspondence Schools to show you how you
CAN "make good" on a big job?
For 23 years the I. C. S. have been showing men how to
do better work and earn bigger salaries. Every month over 400
students write of promotions or salary increases through I. C.
S. training. What the I. C. S. are doing for these men they can
do for YOU.
So matter where you live, how old you are, what hours
you work, or hov.- limited your education—lf you can read and
write and are ambitious to learn the I, C. S. can train you in
your own home, during your spare time, for a more important
and better-paying position.
Mark and mail the attached coupon—it won't obligate
you in the least—and the I. C. S. will show you how you can
acquire this salary-raising ability by their simple and easy
methods.
It will cost you nothing to Investigate—it may cost a life
time of remorse if you don't.
Mark and Mail the Coupon NOW.
INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS
Box 1331, Scranton, Pa.
Please explain without any obligation to me how I can oual
ify for the position before which I mark X.
Electrical Engineer Mechanical Draft* Show Card Wrltlnir
Elec. lighting Supt. Refrigeration Engineer Advcrtlnlng
i. ;l ? F i rl £ V '" 1 "" £ ,tll Engineer Saleamanahlp
Tel. * Tel. Engineer Surveyor Teacher
Architect l.oco. Fireman & Eng. Encllah Rrancbea
Architectural Draftaman Civil Service Agriculture
Structural Engineer Railway Mall Clerk Poultry Farming
Building Contractor Hookkecplng Plumb. A Steam Fit.
Concrete < onatrurtlon Steno. X Typewriting Chemlatry
Mechanical Engineer Window Trimming Automobile Running
Name
St. and No. ..
City State
Present Occupation
11l RUNNER
MORE THAN A FAD
Fowl Is Coining Into Prominence
and Likely to Be
Enduring
The Indian Runner duck is coming
more into prominence and its promi
nence is destined to be enduring.
There Is a reason. The fact is fast be
coming recognized that, the fowl with
a capacity for high production in the
one that pays.
Indian Runner eggs are nearly all
fertile, many breeders being willing to
guarantee every egg. There is never
much doubt as to how the eggs will
hatch and when Incubated under hens
100 per cent, hatches aro quite com
mon. They are easy to raise and pro
duce full growth and feather at ten
weeks.
A Pennsylvania farmer made an In
teresting experiment with a pen each
of Indian Runner ducks and White,
Leghorn chickens. There were ten
fowls In each pen and they were In
competition one year. For that pe
riod the feed bill for the chicks was
$2.79 greater than that for the ducks,
but the ducks, on the other band, laid
900 more eggs than the Leghorns. The
900 eggs sold for $22.50. By reason ol
having consumed less feed and laid
more eggs the ducks were, therefore,
credited with $25,59 more than the
chickens. If the profit from a duck
in one year is $2.53 more than from a
chicken, why keep a chicken?
There Is much suspicion in the
minds of many persons as to the qual
ity of a duck egg. Whether or not
this suspicion is well founded, the fact
remains that there is a steady demand
for duck eggs, with the price usually
5 cents the dozen above that paid for
1 hen's eggs.
THIRD INTERNATIONAL
SHOW AT ATI.ANTIC CITY
| The Third International Poultry Ex
position will be held on the Million
i Dollar Pier, Atlantic City, July 4 to
j September 1.
There is no show held in any coun
try that is just like this summer expo
sition. The best exhibition poultry of
j all countries is shown here for two
months and, on an average, 40,000 1
| care-free people view the exhibition I
j daily during this period.
i EXPERIMENTS WITH WHOLE
GRAIN DIET IX MISSOURI '
In order to determine how well ■
> chickens could be fattened on whole l
, grain, R. V. Mitchell, of Missouri, ex- 1
i perimented with a number of pens fed
[on different rations and reports that'
| birds confined in small pens and fed :
I shelled corn for three weeks made j
i gains of less than one-fifth of a pound
■ each, and that birds fed on corn meal |
mixed with butter milk made a gain of |
one-half of a pound each.
'■l.l ■ m
MME. ISE'BELX
Superfluous Hair
Removed Without Pain
MME. ISE'BELL'S D. C.
Depilatory Powder lias
been the favorite superfluous
hair reipover for more than a
quarter of a century. It acts
quickly and satisfactorily,
without pain or injury. It is in
demand the country over bv
actresses, stage beauties and
society women who know how
to preserve and emphasize the
advantages of a clear skin and
a good complexion. Price.
SI.OO.
Other Time-Tried Toilet Aids
Miiip. Ise'bell's Turkish Bath Oil.
50c ami SI.OO.
Mme. Ise'bell's Exquisite Face
Powder. 50c.
Mme. Ise'bell's Natural Blush Rouge,
50c.
Mme. Ise'bell's Rose Blush Stick
Rouge. 25c.
Mme. Ise'bell's I.llac Hand Whltener.
25c.
Mme. Ise'bell's Skin Food and
Wrinklo Paste. SOc and SI.OO.
Mme. Ise'bell's Flesh Worm Eradi
cator. SI.OO.
Sold by Gooil Stores Everywhere.
Ontrnl
GEO. A. GEORGAS,
11 X. Third Street, llarrisburg, Pa.
(iICORGE A. GORGAS
Pennsylvania Railroad Station
Hill District
w. n. r.oortVFAR
Nineteenth and Derry Streets
Central
GOLDEN SEAL DRUG STORE
11 South Market Square
West End
C. E. KRAMER
3rd and Broad Sts., Harrlsljurg, Pa.
■fill District
niMMM.E'S PHARMACY
Thirteenth nnd Derry Streets
Made by Mme. Ise'bell
W. 2 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago. 111.
If your dealer's name is not In the
above list lie can get Mme. Ise'bell's
Toilet Preparations for you from his
wholesale druggist.
Coal Is
Cheaper
in May and June than it will
be in July or any other
month this year. Then, why
wait to fill your bins for next
Winter.
Kelley's Hard Egg, Stove
and Nut is 50c a ton less now.
Does this saving appeal to
you ?
H. M. KELLEY & CO.
I N. Third St.—loth State Sts.
H——HM (HI
Eyes examined anil glasses Right.
Not the bargain counter style
glasses hut high grade lenses
ground to your individual need
fitted after a painstaking examina
tion of your eyes. Consult us.
Gohl Optical Co.
8 X. MARKET SQ.
Cumberland Valley Railroad
TIME TABLE
tn Effect November 30. 1913.
TRAINS leave Harrlsburg—
For Winchester and Martlnsbura at
5:03. *7:62 a m.. *3:40 p m.
For Hagerstown. Chambersburg, Car
lisle, Mechanicsburg and Intermedial*
stations at 5:03, *7:52, *11:53 a. in
•3:40, 6.32, *7:40. *11:15 p m.
Additional trains for Carlisle an( j
Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m 2:18. 3:27
b 30, 9:30 a m.
For Dlllsburg at 6:03, *7:tl and
•11:63 a. m.. 3:18. *3:40. 6:32 and «:3U
p. m.
•Dally All other trains dally except
Sunday. H. A. RIDDL.E,
J H TONGE, O. P. A.
<»upt
We Can Hatch
40,000 Hen Eggs
In lots of 150 each or more at 3c
for each egg set.
Send eggs to
Stouffer Poultry Farm
WHITE HILIJ, PA.
or write to
C. A. STOUFFER,
Box 224, Harrlsburg, Pa.
V———————— ,i
S. C. RHODE ISI.AND RED
S. C. BI.ACK MINORCA EGGS
FOR HATCHING
Stock for nale. My birds got their
share of prizes the last two seasons
at York, Carlisle, Middletown. Har
risbrg. Red Lion, Hanover, Steelton
and Biglerville shows. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
M. H. BANK*. Mddnneburg, Pa.
3