12 D. B. KIEFFER & CO'S Annual Spring Opening Sale 1915 150 Head of Acclimated Horses Mules and Colts at Public Sale! ON FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1915 At the Farmers Hotel, M. Snyder, Proprietor MIDDLETOWN, PA. will sell the following (gg[ LIVE STOCK Sale Begins at 12.30 P. M. 40 Head of Extra Good, Big Finished Draft Horses weighing from 14 to 16 hundred lbs. each. The kind with plentv of Size. Shape and Quality that belongs to a Good. Big. Draft Horse. Will have some closely mated teams in Greys, Blacks and Bays, weighing up to 3,000 lbs. to the pair, suitable for Ice. Coal or Generai teaming. Also Good. Big, Single Truck Horses, a good smooth lot of big fellows ready for work. These horses range in age from 4 to $ years. 35 Head of All Purpose. Carriage and Fancy Driving Horses Among this lot of horses you will And All Purpose Horses, Busi ness Horses. Farm Chunks. Single Line leaders, Carriage Horses and Fancy Drivers, and some few fast stepping horses, both trotters and pacers, and in fact a horse to suit almost any person, young or old. that is looking for a good horse, as we have taken the greatest care in se lecting this bunch of Horses. These horses are all young and chancv and are broke to all harness and city objects and are the kind that have the Size, Style. Action and Conformation that belongs to a horse of this class. These horses range in age front 4 to 10 years. 25 Head of Horses and Colts shipped by W. M. Grove last Fall, and sold by us during November and December. 1914, to the farmers in and around the surrounding coun ties. who have fed and broke them for the market. Among this lot of lorses you will find Good. Big, Draft Horses, Farm Chunks, All Pur pose Horses and a few Drivers. Also a few well mated teams in Greys, Bla> \S and Bays. These horses and colts are all acclimated and broke to all harness and ready for the Spring work, range in age from 3 to 6 years. 25 Head of Commission and High Dollar Horses ranging in age from 4 to 12 years, and weighing from 1,000 to 14 hun dred lbs. each. 25 Head of Mules of All Descriptions ranging in age from 2 to 15 years, and weighing from 700 to 1,200 lbs. D. B. KIEFFER & CO. Sale Friday. March 26, 1915, at 12:30 P. M. at Middletown, Penna. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE THE following: ordinance was read in '■'•"•e in the City Council at Its meeting Id Tuesday Afternoon. March 16. 1915. and is published as required by Article V, Section 3. Clause 10. of the Act of Assembly approved June 27. 1913: AN ORDINANCE To authorise the pavin and curbing of Cumberland Street, from Four teenth Street to Fifteenth Street, and providing for the payment of the cost thereof. Section 1. Be it ordained by the Council of the City of Hr-rrisbure. and it is hereby ordained by authority of the same. That Cumberland Street, from Fourteenth Street to Fifteenth Street be and the same is lierebv au thorized to be paved with sheet asphalt, on a concrete base, and curbed with granite or granolithic curbing, the cost and expense thereof to be assessed ac cording to the foot front rule, said cost not to exceed two dollars per square yard for paving and one dollar per linear foot for curbing. Section 2. That all proceedings and work Incident to the improvement herein authorized shall bp taken and done, and the cost and expense there of 51.f.1l lie paid for. and the assesr ent levied on the abutting properties shall be collected as provided by Ordinance No. 19, Session of 1914-191.*.. and Ordi nance No. 24 Session of 1914-1913. CHART.ES A. MILLKR. Clerk of the City Council. Office of tile City Clerk, Harrisburg. fa.. March 16. 1915. I'Vnur sai.i; of rem, estate In tlie Aulfiird EMate of C. A. Erkard PURSUANT to an Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County i-n March 3. 1915, the under>igned As signee for the benefit of creditors of C. A. Eckard, will offer at public sale at tn<» Court House at Harrisburg, Pa., at 2 o'clock, Wednesday afternoon. March 31, 1915, the following real estate: All that certain lot or piece o£ land situate fn the Eighth Ward, of the City of Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Penn sylvania, bounded and described as fol lows. to wit: Beginning at a point thirty-six feet southwardly from the southeastern cor ner of Sixteenth and Juniper Streets lhance southwardly along the eastern line of Sixteenth Street seventeen feet more or less, to the northern line of a ten feet wide alley; thence eastwardly along the northern line of said alley eighty-three feet, more or less, to a point five feet west of the western line of another ten feet wide alley; thence northeastwardly six feet, more oi less to a point on the western line of the last mentioned alley five feet north of the northern line of the first mentlon e alley; .hence northwardly along the western line of the said last mentioned alley twelve feet, more or less, to the line of property N0.523 North Sixteenth Street: thence westwardly along said line through the center of-the partition wall between said property and prop erty herein described, eighty-one feet more less, to the place of beginning' Thereon erected a three-story brick dwelling house. No. 521 North Sixteenth Street. Harrisburg. Pa. Said property will be sold subject to a mortgage of Ellen C. Rtdle of Twenty !lve Hundred Dollars <52.50n.00), with interest from January 11. 1914. Ten per cent, of the purchase monev shall be payable on the day of sale, and tlie balance on the confirmation of the sale 1 v the Court. April 1 2. 1915. OSCAR G. WICKERSHAM, Assignee for the benefit of creditors of A. Eckard. WM. H. EARNEST. Attorney. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of John J. Weltmer, late of the City of Hai-risburg. Pa., deceased. NOTICE Is hereby given that letters Testamentary upon the Estate of said decedent have been granted to the un dersigned. residing at No. 4.15 Ver beke Street, in said city. All persons indebted to said Estate are requested to tnalte payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will make them known without delay, to SAMUEL, KMNE, Or to Executor. JOHN E. PATTERSON. Attorney. < WEDNESDAY EVENING, LOCAL ELKS TO INITIATE LARGE CLASS AT YORK Officers of Harrisburg Lodge. No. 12. Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, -will have charge of the initiatory work at the York lodge mooting to-morrow night. A large number of Harrisburg Elks will go to 1 ork with the Harrisburg officials. The train will leave Union Station at 5.30 o clock. A special session will follow the meeting of York lodge and an interesting program has been planned. MKXGER IS CHOSEN TECH COM MEN CEMENT ORATOR Cornelius Menger was chosen class orator yesterday by members of the senior class of the Technical high school. He will be the principal speaker at the commencement exer cises in June. TO -PEN" FOR STEALING HORSE Raymond Bierbower, of Harrisburg, in York county court yesterday was sentenced to the Eastern Penitentiary for a term of one to three vears on a plea of guilty to stealing a horse and Dayton wagon in York. The team was only recently recovered in posses sion of Bierbower near this city. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE THE following Ordinance was lead n place in thi City Council at its meet lleld Tuesday Afternoon. March 23 191 a, ajid is published as required bv Articie V. Section 3, Clause 10. of the Act of Assembly approved June 27 1913- AN ORDINANCE To authorize the paving and curbing of Brown Street, from Seventeenth Street to Eighteenth Street, and pro viding for the payment of the cost thereof. Section X. Be it ordained by the Council of the City of Harrisburg, and it is hereby ordained by authoritv of the same, That Brown Street, from Seventeenth Street to Eighteenth Street be. and the same is hereby authorized to be paved with sheet asphalt, on a concrete base, and curbed with granite or granolithic curbing, the cost and ex pense thereof to be assessed according to the foot front rule, said cost not to exceed two dollars per square vard for paving and one dollar per linear foot for curbing. Section 2. That all proceedings and work incident to the improvement herein authorized shall be taken and done, and the cost and expense thereof shall be paid for. and the assessment levied on the abutting properties shall be collected as provided by Ordinance No. 19. Session of 1914-1915. and Ordi nance No. 24. Session of IMI4-1915 CHAP.hKS A. MILDER Clerk of the City Council Office of the City Clerk. Harrlsburir Pa.. March 23. 1915. NOTICE Letters of Administration on the Estate of Charles E. Yount late of Harrisburg. Dauphin County Pa deceased, having been granted to the undersigned residing at 1502 Green Street, all persons indebted to said Es tate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims will present them for settlement. ELIZA J. YOUNT, Administratrix PAUL A. KUNKEL, Attorney. Harrisburg. Pa. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of Edmund S. Martin, late of th« City of Harrisburg. Pa., deceased NOTICE is hereby given that Letters Testamentary upon tne Estate of said decedent have been granted to the un dersigned. residing at No. 1731 Green Street, In said city. All persons in debted to said estate are requested to make payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will make them known without delav to EMMA C. MARTIN. Executrix. FORMER PASTOR TO SPEAK IT CHURCH Missionary Night Will Be Observed as Part of Christ Lutheran Anniversary I! taawM Missionary night at ' Christ Lutheran } Church this evening will continue the. week , of special exercises in « .1 celebration o £ the t WN sary. The Kev. Dr. ,JH. M. H. Stine, of I^eb /".rkJ/VM- anon, the second pas ' - tor of Christian Lu theran Church, will HullL make the principal ■ address on "Missions." At the services l:ist night, in charge of the Christian Ku d eavor Society, the first pastor of the church, the Rev. T. L. Crouse, of Sharpsburg, gave reminiscences of his early work | before a large audience, j The full program for to-night fol lows: Prelude. "Triumphal Maroh" from "Aida," Verdi: evening service, con j gregation; hymn; Scripture; anthem, "From Greenland's Icy Mountains,' j Ashford; prayer; solo. "The Plains of I Peace." Bingham, Mrs. J. F. Krohn; i offertory, Berceuse No. 2. Kinder; ad dress. the Kev. M. H. Stine. D. D.; an them. "Fling Out the Banner," I»orenz; hymn; benediction: postlude, march, j Gaul. I To Address Car Bum Mpeting.— The Rev. Albert J. Greene, pastor of the Second Baptist Church, will have charge of the regular week noonday service on Friday in the car barns of the Harrisburg Railways Company. Two Hundred Boys Whistle.—More than two hundred boys whistled "The Boy's Plea to Voters," an antibooze song, in the Pennsylvania Railroad Y. M. C. A. last night at the meeting of the boys' Bible classs. Lantern | slides of "The Life of Joseph" were shown. Young Baptists of City Effect Organization A permanent young people's organi sation of the four Baptist churches of the city was formed last niglu in the First Baptist Church at a meeting of about 300 persons, representing at I least 1.000, who will be included in the | new society. The chief speaker was | the Rev. H. K. Williams, of the Alpha I Baptist Church. Philadelphia, who re- I viewed "Baptist History aud Prin- I ciples." The following officers were elected: I President, the Rev. W. S. Booth, of the ! First Baptist Church: vice-presidents, the Rev. W. H. Dailman, of the Market Street Church; Ray Shoemaker, of the Tabernacle Church; the Rev. A. J. Greene, of the Second Church, and Harry Shaner, of the First Church: gen- I era! secretary. George Sharp, of the j Tabernacle Church; general treasurer, j Horace Jackson. Market Street Church. ' More positions are secured by those out of work and more help is' found by those needing it through the me j dium of Telegraph classified ads than j any other medium. I Every day the Telegraph carries the ! messages .of employers lo those who I want positions—messages to employers front those who want work. Turn to jthe classified page NOW". Deaths and Funerals Miss Catherine Birch Dies at Age of 80 Miss Catherine Birch, aged 80, a I life-long resident of this city, died at her home, 119 South street, yesterday afternoon. She was an active mem ber of Zlon Lutheran Church, until several years ago when sickness con lined her to her home. Funeral services will be held Fridav afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home, the Rev. S. W. Herman, pastor of Zion Church officiating. Burial will be made in the Harrisburg Cemetery. CONTRACTOR BECK'S YVIFK DIES FROM CANCER Mrs. Ella Brenneman Beck, aged .".3, wife of O. 11. Beck, 320 Strawberry street, died at her home yesterday af ternoon. Death resulted from can cer. She is survived by her husband and the following sons: John Hamilton, Harry Beck, Paul Beck, John R. Beck, and three daughters, Mrs. Ella Wiland, Mrs. Mary Quiger and Mrs. Emma Tagg. Funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock in the Fourth Street Church of God, the Rev. William N. Yates officiating. Burial will be made in Paxtang Cemetery. MRS. HUMBERT SERVICES Funeral services for Mrs. Emma Humbert, 237 North River street, will be held to-morrow afternoon at the home at 2 o'clock, the Rev. U. G. Leeper officiating. Burial will be mado in Lincoln Cemetery. MACHINISTS' FATHER DIES Adolph Stpeter. father of Albert Stpeter, machinist, 1619 Penn street, died suddenly at Syracuse yesterday. Besides the son. a widow and sister survive. The funeral will take place Thursday at Syracuse. BUSINESS AND PLEASURE in nearly every theater in Great t Britain "recruiting rallies" are being held on the stage after each perform ance. Between acts actors, managers and public officials exhort the audi ences to greater patriotism. One man ager—and not the one. by the way, who has produced the dramatization of "It's a Long, Long Way to Tipper ary"— is credited with recruiting more than one thousand men. How about u recruiting station in New York for English actors'.'—April Green Book. EDITORIAL PAGE FILLERS BLEVATED PLAYGROUND In order to provide a public recrea tion place in New York's densely popu- ' lated East Side, an elevated playground has been constructed at the west end of the Williamsburg bridge. A picture of the playground appears in the Popu- j lar Mechanics. It is of street width, 480 feet in length, and affords a 1 breathing space for several thousand persons during the sultry davs and I nights of summer. In its cetiter is an ' openair pavilion, where dancing and . band concerts are held, while at con- ; venient Intervals seating accomntoda- . tions are provided beneath awnings for tiie benefit of those who frequent the : place during the heat of the day. Basket , weaving and sewing are taught the neighborhood children by instructors. A THREE-SHEET "I have always tried to keep away front personal glorification. 1 am a bad mixer, although 1 am more or less a three-sheet—to use the phrase again—for myself. I have become used to being a near-spectacle, but I don't know what I would do if I were a celebrity like the President of the I'nited States, or a prize-fighter." — [George M. Cohan, in the April Green I Book. HARRISBURG &MI& TELEGRAPtr GEN. SCOTT EASILY PACIFIES INDIANS [Continued front First Page.] In the evening- and I Just asked them how they were. 1 told them I did not feel very well and did not want to I talk to them until the next day. They helped us kill a beef, and we Rave them a good meal, the first they had hud for weeks. They were poorly clud and we save them some blankets. Po sey and his men did not have any weapons, but I have reason to suspect that they had hidden them in the rocks nearby. "The next day Polk and Hatch and about twenty-five others came in to see me. I asked them to tell me their troubles. They said the cowboys had come in the daylight on horseback and surrounded them, shot their children and wounded a squaw. They said they didn't like the cowboys. It seemed they had previously had troubles with the cowboys. Told His Troubles "Then I told them some o£ my trou bles. 1 told them 1 didn't think they would like to have their children chas ed by soldiers and cowboys all over the mountains and killed. I told them that 1 wouldn't like to have my chil dren treated that way and that 1 wouli be glad to do anything I could to stop it. I didn't try to push matters wltn them. 1 told the agents to see that they had provisions and blankets for the rest oT their people and for their squaws and children. 1 told them that after thc.v had thought matters over I wanted them to tell nse what they wanted to do about it. They talked together and then said they wanted to do just what 1 wanted them to do. "Then we sat down in a circle and I said: 'The marshal wants you and | you and you," Indicating Posey, Polk, Hatch and Posey's boy, 'to go with him to Salt Lake. The rest of you can go back to your people and so to the re servation with the agents. Is that all right?" They satd it was and fur ther they said that if I said so they would all come to Salt Lake. "Then we broke camp and all rode ponies back into Blufi. We rode ahead and let the Indians follow us. Thoy have never been ironed or shackled, never even led to believe they arc prisoners. They never tried to get away. Why, I don't believe we could get rid of them if we tried. At night they have slept together and nobody has stood guard over them. Indians are Satisfied "They are perfectly harmless now. All the Indians are satisfied. Tha whites are over their scare and there | will be no more trouble from this band of Indians. These Indians are just children, easy to alarm and some times hard to appease. They had worked themselves up to a pitch where they were getting very dangerous. They were attempting to get a large band of Xavajos to join them In an outbreak. Where they were camped in the wild broken country near the grand canyon, they would have been mighty hard to dislodge. It would have taken a large force of cavalry, two regiments probably, to subdue I them, and it would have cost the gov jernment $25,000 just to get the sol diers in here." Xone of the four Indians talk Eng lish. Through an interpreter Tse-Ne- Gat or Hatch said he was not guilty of any crime. When asked about the Mexican lie is accused of killing, he said: "The Mexican was my friend. We camped together. 1 did not kill him. Why should I kill my friend?" You'll never really know the joy of life until you live in a home of your own. Whether you have all the pur chase price now or not is beside mark. Own your home—for cash if you pre fer—or on deferred payments as hun dreds of other Harrisburg people do. There is a number of properties that no doubt would interest you—they are tinder the head of "Real Estate for Sale" on the classified page. Turn to the classified page NOW and read them. FIREPROOF HOUSE In order to demonstrate the fireproof qualities of his new residence on Long Island, a former chief of the New York 1- ire Department recently started a fire in one of its rooms and allowed it to burn unwatched. The chamber was thoroughly sprinkled with kerosene be fore it was ignited. In an adjoining room dinner was served to a partv of guests, some time after which the fam ily retired for the night without ex amining the blazing room. At 9 o'clock on the following morning the door was opened, disclosing that everything that had been in the room had been entirely consumed, but the chamber itself aside from its decorations, was uninjured. A picture of the building during the fire appears in the Popular Mechanics Magazine. Hi:LI) FOR UNITED STATES COURT J. H. Chapman, charged with using the mails to defraud, was yesterday held for United States Court by United States Commissioner Leroy J. Wolfe. MOTHER OF SCHOOL GIRL Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham'* Vegetable Compound Re stored Her Daugh ter's Health. Plover, lowa. —"From a small child my 13 year old daughter had female wea^ne9S - I spoke to three doctors ■ about it and they did help her any. * 7? "Lydia £. Pinkham 'a f~ Vegetable Com i yfflv P° ur| d had been of L — lpkS great benefit to me, vC \ lliPll 60 I decided to have TO her give it a trial. Vn\ She has taken five '! W' - ''.* I bottles of the Yege- — ■ ■ table Compound ac cording to directions on the bottle and she is cured of this trouble. She was all run down when she started taking the Compound and her periods did not come right She was so poorly and weak that I often had to help her dress herself, but now she is regular and is growing strong and healthy." Mrs. MARTIN HELVIG, Plover, lowa. Hundreds of such letters expressing gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has accom plished are constantly being received, proving the reliability of this grand old remedy. If you are ill do not drag along and continue to suffer day in and day out but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vege table Compound, a woman's remedy for woman's ills. If yon want sperinl adTlce write lo Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will b? opened, read and answered bj a woman and held In strict confidence. U. S. INTERVENTION IS OPPOSED BY GIBBONS Declares Those Who Have Coun try's Interest at Heart Approve Wilson's Action Sftt-ial to The TeUgraph Baltimore, Ml, March 24. "Armed intervention in Mexico by the United Stales should never take place. We who have the interest of the country at heart approve of the course of the pres ent administration in withholding troops from Mexico." This declaration was made last uight I by Cardinal irlbbons, who has returned ■ from New Orleans, where he conferred ! with Archbishop Jose Mora, of Mexico City, on conditions in Mexico. "It is true there is much internal dis ! order In Mexico." continued the Cardi t nal. "and this is to be regretted. There are about thirty dioceses in Mexico, each with a bishop, but I am informed that about twenty of these, with the Archbishop of Mexico City, have taken refuge in San Antonio, Tex. They have established there a seminary and will remain until conditions become settled In their own country. "None of us have any faith in Car ranza or Villa. I have had full reports on both of them, and neither man is to he trusted. They are a disgrace to their country, and I know that the people have no confidence in them. They have ruled with a mighty hand, atifl I have heard that Villa has per netrated atrocious murders. Their jule. however, seems to ne near an end. I feel sure that the proper man will be elected if an honest election is obtain ed. . "Villa and his men have perpetrated the nrreatest crimes against the Catho lic Church, and for no reason. That will ail he taken up. though, through diplomatic channels, and I do not care to go into details as to what has been done." .. Cardinal Gibbons, referring to the war in Riirope. declared that the pres ent conflict would have a good effect, as it would he the means of impress ing the neople with the importance of their religious duties. "There are now thousands upon thou sands of Frenchmen going to confes sion and communion." he said, 'ana religious fervor is evidenced in all narts of France. In Germanv. too, there has been a return to religious prin ciples. This is one of the pleasing asnects of the war. "I do not look for any lasting peace if the countries now nt war go on wth their determination to try to crush the enemv. ThTe can only be one out come. and that i« for the Powers to ap"-ee liDon some honorable terms that wMI b«tck ♦ o p&i'li Power llißt which has been lost and to return to Tteleiutn. that noor. suffering, hleedintr country, her liberty and independence. G. A. R. REUNION PLAXXF.D Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa.. March 24.—Susque hanna District Association of the G. A. R.. at a meeting at Watsontown. decided to hold the annual reunion and picnic at Edgewood Park, Sha mokin. where it has been held for sev eral veat-s past, on Thursday, August 12. A special train will take the vet erans there. XKW GAKAGE AT GETTYSBURG Gettysburg. Pa.. March 24. —Work was started on Monday morning on the erection of an up-to-date fireproof garage, fronting on York street and occupying a part of the property own ed by P. Ward Stallsmitli. The new building will give space for 100 cars and will be conducted by J. Herman Bream and John C. Shealer. FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS a Kerr Home Care That Anyone Cu Use 'Without Dlacomfort or l.o■ ■ of 'limp We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try It at our expense. No matter whether your case Is of longstanding or recent de velopment. whether It Is present as oc casional or chronic Asthma, you should lend for a freo trial of our method. No matter lit what climate you live, no latter what your ago or occupation. If vou aro troubled with asthma, our method should relieve you promptly. Wis especially want to send It to thosa apparently hopeless cases, where all farms of is:!ialers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, "patent smokes," etc., have failed. We want to show «veryci:ie at our own expense, that this r.ew method Is doeigr:od to end all dif ficult breathing. all wheezing, and all those ten-tola paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer Is too Important to neglect a slngU day. Write now and then begin the method at once. Send no money. Simply mail coupou oeiow. Do :t To-day. FIIEE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO.. Room 573.1, Niagara and Hudson Sta„ Buf- | fclo, N. Y. j 6euJ fro* trial of your method to: | * * i I AMUSEMENTS MA J ESTI C 1 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, AT 8.15 Charles Frohmaa presents MAUDE ADAMS In J. M. linrrle'a Comedy QUALITY STREET Trices s<»c to 92. Sent* To-morrow. ——— 111 I I „4 r ™! j Ptc»nre*i 12 Noon to II P. M. Flrat prenentatlon by nrrnnare- ' nienta with THOMAS H. INt'E, fea turing the popular netor, WII.LIAH S. HART. In hla grentewt auceeaa, | "THE lIARGAIN." Added attraction*, Wedneadny, j March 24th, The Little Detective, I dramai In the Plumber* Grip, com edy. Friday, Mareb 26, Saturday, 27th, MARIE DRESSIER, lu "TII.I.IE'S PINCTI'RED ROMANCE." aupport. I'd by Clinrlea thnpln and Mnbel I Normand. * ' PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY' Charles Chnplln. in 2-reel S. tt A. "THE CHAMPION" Returned at the requeat of huadreda, "IN THE DRAGON'S CI.AW'S," 2- rerl l.ultln. Cuming, Monday, Mareh 2V. 11115, ANITA STEWART AND EARI. WILLIAMS In "FROM HEAD QUARTERS." * MARCH 24, 1915. Do you dread the hard work back break. Hot water and hard scrubbing not needed. Use Fels-Naptha in lukewarm _ water for housecleaning.* You'll find l Fells-Soap Powder is the better kind you've been wanting. WHAT EVERY HOUSEKEEPER SHOI U) BO IX APRIL April is the-month for every house keeper to do the following things, says the April Woman's Home Com panion: '•'This is the month. "To put away the winter clothes and furs, pasting a list of contents on each package and bag. "To take down the storm windows and doors and repair the screens. "To have the furnace cleaned and put in order. "To plan summer curtains and cov ers." ENTHUSIASM "Enthusiasm for your work." as serts Evelyn Greeley, the film actress, in an interview in the April Green Book, "is a percentage of fifty towards success, for it includes serious inter est, sincere, untiring effort, apprecia * FOR RENT PRIVATE ROOMS FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS Fireproof Storage WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTION Harrisbnrg Storage Co. 437-415 SOUTH SECOXD STREET - j Regularly Smoked by thousands of smokers because the quality is regularly good-. King Oscar Cigars did not start off with "bang-up" quality and closed their career soon after with a "bang." Nay! Nay! King Oscar 5c Cigars first brought home the fact that a nickel cigar can be made of good tobacco 24 years ago—and—they —are —still—going—the—same—pace. There cmn only be one leader--that's King Oscar standard nickel quality. You'll Laugh—That IF YOU SEE "TILLIE'S PUNCTURED ROMANCE" 4T THE VICTORIA THEATER The Home of the 925,000 Pipe Organ. Children, sc. Adult*, 10c. Reserved Seats, -Or. r " > o ROYAL o o DRAGOONS o GIRLS Vaudeville's Best Musical Act *NUF SED 3 Othe. Cood Acts and Pic- CLAIKE ROCHESTER "tures. Matinee, 5c and 10c—Even- Big Surrounding Show ing, 10c and 15c. tion of opportunity and the disposi tion to accept trials and failures as mere experiences. The remaining fifty per cent, is made of talent and personality—the latter that myster ious quality that 'gets one over' on the screen or on the stage." TO STAY COMFORTABLE IN BED In the Woman's Home Companion appears a department called The Ex change. in which readers set down practical suggestions that have de veloped out of household experience. One woman tells as follows how to make an invalid comfortable: "Last year one member of the fam ily was unable to be out of bed. I took a fhoe bag that had ample pock ets and pinned it neatly with safety pins to the side of her bed. In tlin pockets 1 put her books and various articles that she needed. Everything was within reach."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers