IF YOU FOLLOW THESE SPECIFICATIONS YOU'LL HAVE SOME TREE Jf WS&Jr''- ' Jetecr ntrer/es rwr weu orvncpro , a*> ' «lr •*-jit rne/ve /rr H**e,seuea nr/tas Afd sooo **/' *A4f9W'&' " ***s<*m£L * consuls city mecsrett J /VO/vr to PftC- MfM 7Z>OC6//7/yor vP .Sf* Kf//r CHAr/r/G --lcss rmrr seven not /%!«•£■ r*#7 c/&/r I I W aoovc rn£ aeourro W, y/ SEZIp !i GALYAmzzo mez" 1 fKB"! GUAea ssx /ktr [rwccswmtsretwrmmAj 1= MO*. **Lnne*fKf» \ AnnuALL r r/ctnsriAnrcD., U r f neec rxorr assesses on >§ h f ' mjukioi/s /nrccrs jj-c Bp ff c*£/muT jr/)K£ zi /news Ir] • //7 O/ATt. AT TOP- /S/*r Lon/s I'] | {pe/v&r jrr/nro z/ZQunp , I *rtest/r rwo,viDortcmw\ / i !-] ;i \ //y s/voMrrercK ort£ rooT / t jrl \ | tsovr r/fc arouno I "I \ I-t \ jm sooaxc rr or apesr arousro I rt \ svx neee 3 m/rt D/Ar*./rrcecusf "~{ | Me* 'sarr rruee/tcntm o/*n. ipiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii nil immniniu^^ — \ ,•) |f ~<W>tt7J{K>ZibxSzSEfts. ■ , oo pouswj re penc il—— | __ eo w/r* rorso/L ox *eu orvfLopeo \i: ,'*• '. "* "v' neeous eoors 4, ». o• .' * '* / -TV .' _ -, ' J pro woe *ax> oeA/stsiae races Ate pguneo \. * i- J 1 s " .■ S ay sisetswus>a rr/rn OYr/Arrsre see* rep Aste ret> er*tsi set y \ - ♦ * , , / _J Sy retirrg stoKricuLTUKi/rj # ' '•/ svssciLirt& issrccess/vgY tomclp tmc recc live trr rt*e city unoee A£Y/r/c/AL cosfQ/rioris: CCPT mCK/ AnD PUBLIC PBOPCETY **■ o met. or CITY rORt/TCK. __ rr yPCCITICftTJOrV FOR /TRELT /HAOC TRLL * » mr-' DOES YOUR TREE FILL ILL SPECIFICS Forester Mueller Has Prepared Plans and Drawings For Proper Kind of Shade Producer IF FOLKS WILL ONLY FOLLOW! City Should Boast of Splendid Growth in Few Years If Tips Are Complied With Do you know that there are certain ; proper plans and specifications for a shade tree? City Forester Mueller haA prepared j ji drawing and some tips as to plant- j Ing, pruning and caring for shade trees ! in the city streets which, if properly tarried out. would insure Harrisburg during the next few years a splendid prowth. The accompanying etching fihows in detail just how the tree (should appear according to the for estry Hoyle. In the first place, in selecting a tree one of the varieties that flourish in Uarrisburs should be chosen, and in making the choice it will be best to consult with the forester. The tree should have a well-developed head and leaders, the head to begin not less than eeven or more than eight feet from the ground; It should have a straight tA lesson of the European War Once more, among countless times, has the great food value of chocolate and cocoa been demonstrated, both serving as a part of the rations of the troops in ACTIVE SERVICE. BAKER'S SWEET CHOCOLATE has always had this guarantee b« (urea "The ingredients of this Chocolate are guaranteed to be pure cocoas of superior blend find sugar." The genuine has this trade-mark on the package, and is made only by Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. SATURDAY EVENTNG, HARRISBURG sSSfe TELEGRAPH % MAY 8, 1915. trunk, free from diseases. One foot above ground the trunk should be two and a half Inches in diameter, the roots should he well developed and fibrous, the trunk should Vie supported! by a two and a half inch chestnut stake fifteen feet long and driven about three feet in the ground. Attached to this should be a galvanized wire mesh guard six feet high and with a bit o'' hose at the top rim to serve as a pro tection against chaffing of the bark. Six square feet of open ground should be provided for a tree three inches in diameter, the area to be increased on the basis of an additional square foot for every two inches increase in trunk diameter. The pit for planting should be made by removal of fifty-six cubic feet of earth, replaced with top soil or otherwise enriched. Subsoiling is nec essary to help the tree live under arti ficial conditions. Good drainage may be provided by subsoiling with dyna mite. If you follow all these tips you'll ha< - e a tree what IS a tree. BANK DECLARES DIVIDEND Special to The Telegraph Jonjstown, Pa., May B.—Stockhold ers of the Jonestown Bank re-elected the board of directors and the direc tors met and declared a semiannual dividend of 3 per cent and added a substantial amount to the surplus. THIRTEEN CARS WRECKED Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa.. May B.—Thirteen freight cars loaded with coal, east bound on the Western Maryland rail road, went into a confused mass of scrap at midnight Thursday near Graceham, Md. The wreck was due to the bursting of a wheel on one of the gondola cars. LEGISLATIVE TREATIES ARE WOT VIOLATED BY ACT Attorney General Gives an Opinion in Regard to Secretary Bryan's Complaint Attorney General Brown in a letter to Secretary of State Bryan at Wash ington expresses the opinion that the proposed workmen's compensation acts do not violate treaty provisions of the United States and the kingdom of Italy. Mr. Bryan wrote to the Gov ernor in April, calling attention to some statements made in Washington to the effect that the bills apparently discriminate against alien dependents, widows and children not residents of the Untied States, as compared with residents, in the matter of computing future instalments of compensation. Mr. Brown says: "The proposed workmen's compensation act Is in no sense violative of the rights secured by this treaty." He reviews the rights to recover compensation as set forth In the bill, calls attention to the fact that the provisions of the act are not com pulsory and says "it denies to no one any subsisting rights." KITIOIL JCT IS IW EFFECTIVE Governor Approves Measure to Pay the Way For the Educa tion of the Youth Bills establishing the State Bureau of Vocational Education and reorgan izing the Attorney General's Depart ment and twelve others were approved by Governor Brumbaugh to-day. The vocational bill was presented by Mr. Mtlliron, Armstrong, and is designed to carry out the Governor's ideas on that subject. It establishes the bureau in the Department of Public Instruc tion and arranges for two divisions, agricultural and industrial, each under a chief at $4,000, two supervisors at $2,000 and two stenographers. The Attorney General's Department bill provides for a first deputy at $7,000, a deputy at $6,000, two depu ties at $5,000 each, two deputies at $3,500 each, private secretary at $3,500, three law clerks at $3,000 each, tive stenographers at $1,200 each, messenger at $1,200 and a telephone operator at S9OO. All deputies are to be appointed by the Governor. In ad dition the Attorney General may em ploy special attorneys, but may not spend over $20,000 per year. The act also carries '52,000 for salaries to June 30. The act is designed to make effective the centralization of the legal business of the State. House Bills Signed The Governor signed these House bills: Providing for alteration of boun daries of counties to straighten boun daries. the bill being designed to en able Philadelphia to take in 200 acres of Montgomery under certain pro cedure. Regulating appeals from accounts of borough controllers. Authorizing boroughs to make ap propriations to libraries. Regulating accounts in estates not exceeding S3OO. Authorizing WilliamsporV to acquire and maintain a dam. Amending act relative to discharge of prisoners under insolvency act in certain cases. Fixing fees of appraisers in estates at $5 per day. Appropriating $23,487.24 to Foun tain Springs State Hospital. Senate Bills The Governor signed these Senate bills: Fixing salaries of court criers, inter preters and tipstaves in counties con taining between 250,000 and 1,000,000 population. Reviving act of May 22, 1878, re lating to Ranking companies so that they may bring suit for recovery of property. Amending act of May 14, 1874, by extending jurisdiction to persons hav ing an undivided interest in land or j coal or timber thereon and giving right lo compel partition. I Providing tliat debt of a bnrotiirh nr A Monday Sale of Untrimmed Hats The Crowded Condition of Our Temporary Store \ Compels This Sacrifice of \ ) 900 Untrimmed HATS / in . ord€r to make room for our new lines of Summer xr-'-M <, / Millinery and with this one purpose in view we are go • ing to give you on Monday the Biggest Bargains ever offered anywhere. Cost and Profit Have Been Entirely Ignored Sale Starts Monday Morning at 8.30 O'clock and Is For This One Day Only \ Every Hat in the sale entirely new and you have \ the choice of Hemp Hats, Chip Hats, Rough Straws, Me > [ dium Shapes, Large Shapes, Small Shapes, black and all I the good colors. For quick selling we have divided the V /\ J 900 Hats into three special lots. I n f]W n 1 NEWEST UNTRIMMED HATS ir 11U# 1 Positive SI.OO to $1.50 Values For 1 DC / Small, large, medium shapes, in assorted straws and all colors. I W\ IntNn 7 N£ WEST UNTRIMMED HATS on \ Positive $1.75 to $2.00 Values For \ Q z' f J Small, large, medium shapes, in assorted straws and all colors. \: ]y I n f lU n X NEWEST UNTRIMMED HATS in < L,Ulnu * o Positive $2.25 to $3.00 Values For Small, large, medium shapes, in assorted straws and all colors. township Rnnexed to a city shall be as sumed by the consolidated munici pality. Validating bonds of any school dis trict issued since May 18. 1911, under prescribed conditions. ■ The Governor also signed the reso lution requesting all officers of state departments to purchase and specify products of the United States and that the various counties, cities, boroughs, townships, boards of education and school boards and boards of public and private institutions be urged to do the same, and resolution for print ing 50,000 copies of act to prevent desecration of the flag. Bills Vetoed Governor Brumbaugh last night an nounced his veto of the Dunn House bill providing that school tax in first class districts might be levied at differ ent rates in built-up and rural dis tricts, holding that it is unconsti tutional and is mistaken policy. The Governor says: "The reason for the bill seems to be that because in certain outlying districts the school facilities are claimed to be not equal to those in the more congested dis tricts the tax levied in these outlying districts should be less than in the congested districts. If the law were to conform to this idea it would spell a hopeless outlook for the childhood of this outlying territory. The remedy Is not to make a lower tax rate, thereby accepting a cheaper form of education for these children, but the remedy is to continue the uniform tax rate as the law requires and establish for these children educational opportuni ties commensurate with the rights of the people. In other words, the remedy lies with the boards of edu cation in these districts whose function it is to provide education equally ef fective for the children of the entire district." The Farley Senate bill, providing that all elevators he equipped with air cushions, was vetoed for the reason that a restriction to one class of safety devices would work a hardship and that the act does not provide for pun ishment of officials or directors of cor porations guilty of violations. The Governor vetoed the Spangler House bill validating any acts of a corporation between issuance of letters patent and recording of charters, hold ing that the implication of the bill Is too wide. The bill for the deficiency for Coal dale Hospital was reduced from $17,209.21 to $13,019.«7 and a reso lution for recall of a bill signed last night was vetoed because the measure had become a law. Exclnalve Optical Store Eye* Examined. I.enara Ground. Open WfdnmiKy anil Saturday Evenings Until 9. 205 LOCUST STREET New Modern Optical Offices Repair Work Done at Reasonable Prices When you break your glasses bring ihem to us. We do our own grinding. The latest scientific methods of examining eyes used. No drops put into your eyes. GOHL OPTICAL CO., 34 North Third St. (Formerly at 8 N. Market Sq.) CHAS.H.MAUK THE UNDERTAKER Sixth mmd Kelk.r Stmb Largest establishment. Beet facilities. New ft lou it your phooe. Will go anywhere it rour call lotor service. No funeral too •mall. None too expensive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc.. o*ed wilfr ftaat Friedman and Nori, Former Indian School Officials, Indicted in U. S. Court Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., May B. The grand jury in the United States court here returned true bills against Moses Friedman, ex-superintendent of the Carlisle Indian school, and S. J. Nori, his ex-chief clerk. Two counts are alleged, one fs that they embezzled United States moneys, the other that they took money from Indian stu dents. ' The Indian girls were brought here to testify. Miss Margaret Buffalo, a Chippewa, told th 6 grand jury of al leged transactions with the pair, she saying she gave Nori and Friedman money to keep for her that she never got back. Susie Wallace, a Crow In dian maiden, who was a studept at Carlisle, made the same statement be fore the grand jury. Nori also appeared as a witness against his former chief. It is under stood that he is appearing State's evi dence and has declared that any amount of money that he received from Indians that were not account- Resorts r ~ P All *|7<7 Mralr •'«>» All * '#/ fJCfptfd. Both Expositions and a com- S .. plete Tour of the West. ;3 Special Teachers, Doctors, ; Nurses, Moose. Masonic Trains. Write for booklet. World's Fair Company | D* Arinnnd I.lnden, Mgr. 1420 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Peaaa. DONDI ECZEMA REMEDY A positive and upefdr rrmrdy for Eczema, Barber'* Itch, _ Hlnic Worm and Itch. The formula of a famous akin special- J P Ist now offered to the public. J Clean your akin with a few applications. Don't auffer—Get relief. - » The remedy may T>e purchased at the follonlns atores In liarrls liurgi—Forney Druvc Co. 420 Market St.J Roher's Druse Store, 2(MI Mar ket St. | Brlndle'a Pharmacy, 13th and Derry Sts.i Alt house's Dru K Store. 13th nnd Market Sts.i Uoodyear's Drug Store, 10th and Derry Kts.i Wllhelm's Drug Store, 2nd and State Sts.i Cotterel's Drue Store. ISOO X. Oth St.! Thompson's Drug Store, 2027 N. oth St.) and In Steelton at McCurdy's Druic Store. AUTOMOBILE OWNERS WHY WORRY? SHIFT THE RESPONSIBILITY TO US unavoidable accidents will occur. Then again some other machine may run into yours while standing still. WE PROTECT YOU FULLY against Liability for injury to the Public; also against Fire, Theft and Collision. Van Haagen & Backenstoss 406 KUNKEL BUILDING Ed for he turned over to Friedrtian. The pair were indicted last Janu ary on charges of embezzlement of money's and failure to make satis factory accounting of money's re ceived in the Athletic Association of the school. This case has been con tinued to the October term. TEN GRADUATE AT MARIETTA Special to The Telegraph Marietta, Pa., May B.—Commence ment exercises of the Marietta high school were held yesterday in Aeri's theater, and a class of ten was given diplomas by the principal, George Far rell. The orator was Dr. Charles H. Gordinier, of Millersville State Nor mal school. The salutatorian was Miss Elizabeth Johnson, and the vale dictorian, Henry S. Rich, Jr. Carpenters like easy working material There is scarcely anything more exas perating than pitchy course grained lum- - her. It slows up work and necessitates fre quent sharpening of tools. Use our Michigan White Pine. It is soft, easy to work and easy on tools. You will be pleased with the lumber we fur nish. United Ice & Coal Co. MAIN OFFICBi Forater and Conden Sta. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers