2 WEEK-END PIRTIES ENJOY SEMEME Summer Cottages Filled With Jolly Parties of Young Folks Over Sunday fly Special Correspondence Stoverdale, Pa., June 22.—Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Speas chaperoned a house party during the week-end at Idyle wyld cottage consisting of the Misses Ruth Runkle, Vera Runkle. Marie Longenecker, Margaret Plank and Helen Marshall; Dennis Cocklin, J. Wilbur Drawbaugh, Edgar Cooper and Herbert Zimmerman and Albert Coop er. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Runkle, Mr. and Mrs'. J. K. Runkle, Winton and Graydon Runkle, Harold and Erb Runkle motored here from Harris burg on Sunday and spent the day at Idylwyld cottage. Mr. and Mrs. E. Forrest Weaver and daughters Iva and Elmira, of Hunter street, Harrisburg, spent the week-end as the guests of Miss Myrtena Allen at Edgewood cottage. Mrs. Elizabeth Mutzabaugh and daughter Mildred are spending the summer months at Pine View. The week-end guests at Pine Dodge were Miss Mary Miles, Miss Elizabeth Delone and Miss Jean Lelone and Jay Eyler. Miss Katherine Shull and Miss Es ther Brinser were guests of Miss Ruth Kilmer at Pine View. Miss Jane Rothe, of Harrisburg, has returned home after a pleasant visit at Pine Lodge. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kilmer, Miss Marjorie Nissley and Miss Esta Kil mer spent Sunday at Pine View. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Musser, of Mari etta, were at their cottage, Marietta Mansion, and had as their guests Dr. and Mrs. E. Y. Rich, of Marietta. The Ayuda Club was entertained at Clyfrest cottage during the week-end. Miss Mary Elder and Miss Mary Burch Chaperoned the members of the club and their guests, Misses Katherine Gerber, Irene Gerber, Jean McHol land. Pearl Behney, Otta Emerick, Jessie Niebert, Anna Sutcliffe. Re becca Sutcliffe, Margaret Mengle, Laura Mengle, Mary Grove, Lillian Gresh, Esta Kilmer, Mary Bolton, Marjorie Nissley, Harry Leonard, Gus Gulbrandson and Ira Kindler were the guests of Mrs. W. S. Craig yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hill and daughter, Lillian, and Mrs. Maggie Hill, of Steelton, are occupying their summer cottage, the Sulphite. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Knisely, of Harrisburg, and Miss Nina Ruth, of Ilighspire, are at the Susse Ruhe. Frank Knisely was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Knise'y yesterday at Susse Ruhe. Miss Alice Straub, Miss Sadie Crist, and Miss Carrie Crist were the guests of Miss Luella Lehman yesterday at the Oleander. Miss Lucy Grier, of Columbia, en joyed a brief visit at Marietta Man sion last week. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Engle and chil dren, Claude Jr., and Sara, of Harris burg, returned to their home after a week's visit at Clyfrest cottage. Mr. and Mrs. F. Marion Sourbeer, of the Chelsea, are spending several days at their Harrisburg home. Ben Gipple, of Harrisburg, is spend ing several weeks at Stoverdale. Miss Annie LeVan and Peter LeVan of Pleasant Hill, spent several hours at the White House on Saturday. Miss Katherine Phillips and Miss Sara Bowers and John W. E. Phillips were guests of Mrs. Margaret Ellen berger during the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. T. Thorley and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Thorley motored here from Harrisburg on Saturday. Four Horses Burned to Death Near Hummelstown Special to The Telegraph Hummelstown, Pa., June 22.—Four horses were burned to death and a large amount of grain and some farm machinery was destroyed when the large barn on the farm, about one mile west of here, owned by Willard Young, of Harrisburg, was complet ly destroyed late last night. The farm is tenanted by W. K. Leedy, and the loss is estimated at about $5,000, partly covered by insur-i ance. "Tea and Coffee are just as harmful to children as alcohol is to grown-ups," says Dr. Charlotte Abbey, superintendent of the Women's Directory, New York. The reason why coffee and tea injure anybody is because these contain the poisonous drug, caffeine, (from V/ 2 to 3 grains to the cup), which physicians have long known affects the heart, stomach and liver. Children especially, with their delicate nerves, are susceptible to the action of caffeine, and should never be allowed to have tea or coffee or any other beverage containing drugs. Thousands of adults have found that their headaches, narvousness, indigestion and sleeplessness have vanished when a change was made from coffee and tea to POSTUM "There's a Reason'* Postum contains no caffeine or any other injurious substance Made from whole wheat and a small percent of molasses, it is a pure food-drink, having a delightful flavour and containing the nutritive values of the grain. That's why it is good for both children and grown-ups. Postum now comes in two forms: Regular Postum —-must be well boiled. 15c and 25c packages. Instant Postum —a soluble powder. Made in the cup with hot water. No boiling required. 30c and 50c tins. 19 The cost per cup of both kinds is about the same. —Grocers everywhere sell POSTUM MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH * JUNE 22, 1914. Ten Minks Visit Poultry Yards and Kill Chickens Mother, Three Feet Long, and Her Little Ones Play Havoc in Mrs. Ditch's Coops at Pen-Mar Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., June 22. —For the past several weeks Mrs. D. M. Ditch, of the Wayside cottage, Pen-Mar, Md., has been missing young chickens from her coops almost nightly and could not fathom the cause of the removal of the chickens, as the door of the house that surrounded the coops did not bear any marks of having been tampered with by chicken thieves. Recently the coops ere again vis ited and when Mrs. Ditch opened up the chicken house Sunday morning she found thirty-seven of her chickens, about the size of partridges, lying in a heap in the pen. She knew then that a mink was re sponsible for the deaths of the chick ens, as their neck's had been chewed up, showing that the mink killed the fowls by grasping their necks in his mouth and then sucking the blood from their bodies. This operation the animal had performed on all of them. Mrs. Ditch also discovered that the mink had gained entrance to the place by tunneling from the outside and coming tip through the dirt floor. Mrs. Ditch thought she would pre vent further onslaught upon the chick First Rattlesnake in Half Century Killed at Marietta Special to The Telegraph Marietta, Pa., June 22. —On Satur day the first rattlesnake seen ,in this section for fiearly a- half century was dispatched by George Bowers after the reptile had put up an ugly fight and made an attempt to strike him. The reptile was killed in the pigeon fly of Harry Dugan, where he had gone to get a drink from the fountain, and presumably this has been the cause of Mr. Dugan's pigeons being badly frightened for some time. The length of the snake is 25 inches and it is 3 feet inches in thickness around the body. It is of a southern variety and may have reached this section in a carload of railroad ties. Man Charged With Killing Companion, Released on Bail Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown, Md., June 22. —Judge M. L. Leedy, of the circuit court, af ter hearing testimony in the habeas corpus proceedings brought in behalf of Harvey B. Hertzler, charged with killing Roger M. Hemphill in this city on June 9, decided to admit the ac cused to bail in the sum of $2,000. Hertzler and Hemphill had a fight, as the result of joking with each other and the latter, according to physi cians, died from shock. Death of J. Miller Martin, Chief Burgess of Ephrata Special to The Telegraph Ephrata, Pa., June 22. J. Miller Martin, chief burgess of Ephrata, 45 years old, died Saturday from a com plication of diseases after a long ill ness. He was engaged in coachmak ing many years, was a member of the board of health, the United Brethren Church and affiliated with a number of secret organizations. His widow and one daughter, Miss Helen Martin, survive. RAPHO TOWNSHIP'S RECORD Special to The Telegraph Marietta, Pa„ June 22. Rapho township has more horses (1,444), more cattle (1,686), more cleared land (28.535 acres) and many more male dogs (312) than any district of its size in the State. In Lancaster county there are at present 7,432 dogs. MERCHANT CHARGED WITH ARSON Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown, Md., June 22.—Ros coe Hammond, a merchant of ICeedys ville, this county, was arrested at his home by State Fire Marshal George E. Myers on the charge of attempt ing to burn his store, above which four persons were sleeping. ens by having a galvanized roof floor ing placed in the hennery. This seemed of no avail, as Sunday night the mink came back to the premises and succeded in working a hole through the floor and killed twenty more of Mrs. Ditch's chickens in the same manner as before. Yesterday morning Fred Gallion, superintendent of the Rouzerville Water Company, which furnishes water to the cottages of Pen-Mar dur ing the summer, saw the mink that killed Mrs. Ditch's chickens near her premises. It was going in the direc tion of its haunts in a huge rock near the reservoir of the water company. With the animal were nine little minks, the mother and her family, all of which had spent the night feasting off Mrs. Ditch's chickens, and were then homeward bound. Mr. Gallion said he was going to annihilate Mrs. Mink and her family to-morrow by the use of dynamite, which he was going to place in the opening of the rocks that led to the minks' abode and set it off. He said the mink was as fine a specimen as he ever saw and would measure at least three feet in length. Union Services in Churches of Dillsburg During Summer Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., June 22. —At the meeting of the ministers of the vari ous churches of Dillsburg it was de cided to hold union services during the month of July and August and the fol lowing schedule was arranged: Sunday evening, July 5, In the Mona ghan Presbyterian Church, by the Rev. O. E. Krenz, pastor of the United Brethren congregation; July 12, in the Lutheran Church, by the Rev. J. W. Lcng, of the Methodist; July 19, in the Methodist Church, by the Rev. G. H, Eveler, of the Lutheran; July 26, in the Calvary United Brethren Church, by the Rev. J. H. Wolf; August 2, In the Presbyterian Church, by the Rev. G. H. Eveler; August 9, in the United Brethren Church, by the Rev. J. W. Long; August 16, in the Lutheran Church, by the Rev. A. L. Burkett, pastor of the United Evangelical Church; August 23, in the Methodist Church, by the Rev. C. E. Heffleger, pastor of the Reformed charge, and August 30, in the Presbyterian Church, by the Rev. O. E. Krenz. Invalid Chair Bought For Woman With Broken Back Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa.. June 22.—Two years ago yesterday Mrs. Joseph Harvick, of Warrington township, fell from a cherry tree while picking cherries on the farm of Ira C. Myers, breaking her back near the hips, and she is still liv ing, although a helpless invalid. Im mediately after the accident Mrs. Har vick was taken to the Harrisburg Hos pital, where she remained ofr several weeks, but nothing could be done to relieve her, so she was sent to her home, where she lay in a helpless con dition in her bed until several months ago a subscription was taken and an invalid chair purchased for her. With the exception of the lower portion of her body being paralyzed, Mrs. Har vick has been in fair health and suf fers no pain. '■ PASTOR RESIGNS Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., June 22.—The Rev. L. G. 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