I We Have a Roofing | I for Roofs that are Flat | II —a permanent roofing that will not rust, as fell does, of *\ 111 crack and leak as tar roofs do. For the roof of your store, 111 [|| porch of other fiat surfaces we recommend fire-resisting, 111 111 rot-proof, leak-proof and permanently satisfactory l|> JJJ I nmgfc&in | W 1 -COSTS MORS-WEARS LONGER '/J W It's nneqnalled. too, for peeked Rtt-BK-OQ w*ar» longer than f/i V| roof* and will look well and treat cheaper roofings because it ia made ft. \\ well on your home, barn and other of better material*. It contain* no « S\ buildings. paper or wood fibre to rot, nor tar f t SS We have sold many roll, of or asphalt to crack or melt. ft V KU-ttlt O Come in and let u« quote you JIJ plaint Our customers tell us that prices on ftll'Bflt'OlQ and Colored \ RU-BCR-OiQ K IW " perfect satisfac- RUMROtfI (Ka-lor-oid)—Tile Red Z Stion wherever it is used. nn d Copper Green, we have the A |)ll-*C*-Ol0 roofs put cm 20year« mnuint, with the " Ru-bcr-oirl // ago are good for many years longer. Man " (shown above) oo every roll | Henry Gilbert &S«n, »nl>t n. | SOCIAL KOH MISS lIVKKK Slilppensburg. P»., May 15. Class No, Id. of Messiah United Brethren Sunday school, held a social at the home of Mrs. Woods In honor of Miss May Baker, who is soon to leave for her home at Harrisburg. i" 1000 Barred Plymouth Rock Chicks from our strain of Pro lific Layers for Sale, May 17-18, at 12c each. Call or phone. CAMP HILL POULTRY FARM CAMP H11.1.. P*. k Earn SI.OO an Hoar Keeping Poultry Yoor can raise poultry profit- I •My in your back yard—ln m | ■roaTt space and with only a E i limited capital. Turn your spare time to account. In a few minutes' time, night and morning, you can care for a flock of j chlcfcsm that will supply your table with fresh eggs and mcst and give you a surplus to sell at the top prices. Many back-yard poultrymen— stu dents of the International Correspond ence Schools—are making their spare time pay them a dollar an hour. They succeed because they know how. Start NOW to Learn a Profitable Business The L C. S. Course in Poultry Farming will give TOU the special in formation that will enable you to succeed. It will train you in the methods that have built up paying businesses from small beginnings. "My hen. lead more eggs I in the first half of this year than they moer laid in a whole year be fore. The J. C. S. Coarse taaght me how fo do it, "says W. Scheide, Lima, Ohio. "The I. C. S. Poultry Farming Coarse taaght me many thing s that would have taken year* to find oat; any one who finishes this Coarse can start right in and maJte a sac ceee of poultry raiting, " says C. L Ssoartx, Detroit, Mich. "In fifteen years of poultry keeping I have not had each a suc cessfal season as / had last winter and I have only the I. C. S. to thank for my success, " says J. B. Gal' lagher, 418 Broad St., Bethle hem, Pa. "I thought I knew how to keep poultry, bat every lesson taaght me new points. I consider the Coarse the best investment of my life." Poultry Book Sent Free Marie and Mail the Coupon Mark and mail tho coupon and you will receive a handsome 64-page book giving full information regarding the opportunities in Poultry Culture. irrERVATIOiAL. CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS Box 1080 SCR ANTON, PA. Expiate, wiifcout Mmy obligation on my part, hew I can qualify (or tUe poeldoo before which I mark Xl Poultry Farm In* Median. Fnataeerin* Poultry Breeding Mechanical Draftinc G&aerel Penning Automobile Running Soil lAfronißMt Gee Badnee rmit and VaMhlea gtatfea arr logineeHn* fibre Sleet aarf De*«jl»a Electrical ftacineerfn* Clrfl Serrice Klertrle A Ball .ay. 1 Bookkeeping Clrtl Ro gineerlnt | ' Steaeflpapfcy SaJaamenafcip BniidMf Ceotrectbvff A^ritihlnr Death** TaatilV. h Pla«'f Window 1 rimnUeg |l 1 "'I Name. 1 Pwnt Bmplorer j Street No. ; _j City -J SATURDAY EVENING. RAISING SUMMED CHICKS FOR BROILERS ID ROASTERS Timely Advice to the Ama teur About Best Methods of Rearing, Feeding and Marketing For Profit How to Feed and Fatten to Get Biggest Prices By RKF.SK V. HIOKS Manager International Poultry Farms, Browns Mills. X. ,T., and Former President of the American Poultry Association. COPYRIGHT, 1915. There Is plenty of room for ama teurs in the raising of broilers and roasters for summer markets. Th« demand Is always great and the sup ply never sufficient. Some breeds are better than others for tills jHirimso and It is important to make a right selection. Some com mon mistakes that can lie easily avoided are pointed out and alterna tive* suggested. There are comparatively few plants devoted exclusively to raising broilers and roasters for market. The ma jority of poultry plants are devoted to producing eggs for market or breeding for exhibition stock. These turn only their surplus stock into broilers and roasters. Thus It Is that the majority of the broilers and roasters that reach the market go as a by-product of the egg farms and of the exhibition breed ing farms and the greatest source, the average American farm. The plants that do cater to the broiler business are mainly those which have worked up a special private trade. The ma jority of these plants that make a specialty of the broiler business make it a point to hatch out the eggs in tended for broilers early in the win ter, some as early as November and some in December, as the broilers bring better prices in the early Spring and the late winter months than any other time of the year. Three ("lasses of Broilers Broilers may be divided Into three classes: squab hroilers, Spring broil ers, or friers and large broilers or small roasters. Squab broilers have been in demand only for a few years, and have become quite a delicacy in the centers of popu lation. They should weigh from three quarters of a pound to one and one quarter pound. The best average is, perhaps, a pound. If they weigh over one and one-quarter pound, they be long in the Spring broiler class, or friers. These may go as high as two pounds. The largest broilers are from two to three pounds. Any broilers over three pounds should be classed as "roasters," as they are too large to broii successfully. The roasters run from three pounds to the size of full grown fowls, often as high as ten or twelve pounds. However, the largest demand is for roasters that weigh three and one-half to five pouhds. The "soft roaster" is a term given to any young, tender fowl to be used for roasting. They should be young and tender, and they bring the best prices on the market. They usually run in age from six to nine months. The age at which a fowl can be marketed in the various classes of broilers and roasters depends very much on the breed as well as how they have been pushed along. It is very important that they be mar keted as early as possible, because the prices are better early, and in addi tion. the longer they are kept the more they cost, and with some varieties they are liable to become "stringy" and tough. American Varieties Popular Much depends also on the breed used for broilers and roasters. It is essential that the breed be of a quick Sure Death to Lice ||| g mites—all vermin and disease germs if you use Drafts* Powdered Lice Killer £sc and 50c 72® A great money saver. Lousy hens cannot lay neither can lousy chicks grow. Pratt* Poultry Regulator If* the beat tonic and dareloptaß UVJ ' Tyvar help. Picn. 15c. 60c. 60c, $1.00; 25 lb. pail *2.50. Refuse ■/ •übatitntaa; ineist on Pratts. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Back 18 Get Pratts HO Poultry Book ~~ 'i CONRAD BROS., WAI/TER S. SCHELL, ELK VIKW POULTRY SUPPI.V HOrSE. HOLMES SEED CO.. MOCK & HARTMAN ANT A LI, FIRST CLASS DEALERS IN HARRISBURG AND VICINITY, O. S. EBERSOLE, I'ENBROOK —#l7o. ipoiiLTim-newsi Copyright, 1916. WHITE JAPANESE BANTAMS The little brown man of Nippon is a wonder for taking: nature by the nose and leading her into ways she doesn't want to go naturally. He grows trees which, after fifteen years, will measure less than two feet high; fowls which have tails eighteen feet long and Japanese bantams with their tails running up along their backs toward the head and with legs but one inch long. Tie's been breeding them this way so long that they won't grow any other way. It Is this oddity that accounts for the popularity of the Japane.se bantams. There i are several varieties of this little bantam, separated only by colors. In shape they are identically the same. , Tt Is very popular among the ban tam breeders of England, the United States and Canada, and every winter notable specimens are exhihited at our poultry shows. Their oddity attracts considerable attention from the lay- growth arid develop rapidly. In Amer ica, yellow skin and yellow legs are favored by the majority of markets. This moans that the varieties known as the "American varieties," such as Plymouth Rocks, Wyandottes and Rhode Island Reds, make the best roasters as well as broilers. For the large roasters and soft roasters, the Light Brahma has long been a favo rite, owing to Its largo growth and the fact that it holds the tenderness of its flesh until it is well advanced toward maturity. White Plymouth Rocks and White Wyandottes are also used by some farms for soft roasters. For squab broilers by far the largest proportion are young cockerels, mainly Leghorns, that come from the com mercial egg farms. When the hatching season is over some farms take advantage of the low price of eggs and load their incu bators with eggs from which they hatch chicks that are later used for broilers for the broiler market. These late chicks do not require any differ ent treatment from earlier hatched chicks, except that of shade In cli mates where there is extreme heat in the middle of the day. Generally the later hatched chicks grow rapidly to the broiler stage, and as grain is usually cheaper at this time of the year than any other, these hatches usually give broilers that can be pro duced at a lower cost than any other time of the year. It is truo that the market is higher earlier, but later broilers make good fillers, especially when one is raising poultry on a small scale. Directions For Feeding Young chicks should not be fed -for the first forty-eight hours, whether of early or late hatches. After that they should be fed a little oatmeal or bread crumbs. Owing to the high price of oats this year, a little bread crumbs or a good commercial chick feed should be given the first few days. They should be fed five or six times daily, a little at each time so that they will clean It up quickly. After they are four or five days old they should have mash composed of cornmeal, bran and middlings or low grade flour, equal parts of each. Afttfr they are ten days old ten per cent. , meat scrap should be added to the mixture and the cornmeal increased fifty per cent. This is for growing broilers for the market, and this course of feeding js designed to fatten them. When the young broilers or roasters are within ten days of the size when they are to be sold on the market they should be confined in a smaller pen for fattening purposes. Before this they should be given the same treatment, care, range and attention as the other growing chicks, but It Is important that the last ten days or two weeks of their lives be given to fattening them. By the term "fattening" is not always meant putting on surplus fat tening substance, but making the lean meat fill with fat, so that It will be delicate and toothsome. All poultry should be fattened for market, as it' is usually a waste of money to allow the produce dealer to buy fowls at low prices, and then make the quality better by fattening. It Is especially important that they be fat tened where they are dressed by the producer, and then sold to a private trade. The length of time required POULTRY—GaI Two—May 22 . . to fatten a fowl depends on the age of the fowl, time of year, care and feed, as well as the breed and kind of fowl. best results are obtained when they are fattened for ten days or two weeks. Young fowls make better but slower gains than the Leg horns and smaller breeds. The smaller i breeds should not be fattened over ten days. In many plants the cost of fat tening is estimated at 7 cents a pound : sain, but owing to the high price of [feed at present, no doubt this will be increased materially to 8 or 9 cents per pound gain. This does not take into consideration the increased qual ity and increased value of the bird on the market, which is ten or fifteen cents a pound more than the scrawny, unfinished one. Fatten in Pens or Crates It will not pay the amateur poultry raiser to use cramming and fattening machines, but he should either use pen or crate fattening methods. By pen fattening is meant confining: the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH • men, and many have been sold tor | purely ornamental purposes on coun i try estates. Good specimens command {profitable prices, and in fact the fowls are rare enough to be more or less ex pensive. The little hens lay well, set, hatch and rear the chicks. The chicks are I not easy to rear, and prohably require more attention than chicks of any other variety, except Hamburg and I Polish. j When finally reared, however, they i are a source of great pleasure to those I who exhibit. Among the breeders i there is a keen rivalry to produce the I best and longest fantail and shortest legs, as well a.s the smallest fowls. I The standard calls for twenty-two to twenty-six-ounce weight on males and ! twenty to twenty-two ounces for fe -1 males, but the winning specimens in | our better shows never approach these weights. J | fowls in a small house, or a pen in a ! house, allowing each about a foot and ia half space. The feeding and water ! ing troughs are hung on the wall, and the birds are kept in flocks of 50 to !7 5. Crate fattening is done by having j slatted coops, usually several tiers i deep. The crate is usually six feet ! long, 18 inches high and 20 inches ] wide, and will accommodate ten to j twelve birds. There is a partition through the center and five or six 'birds on each side. The slats j on the top and sides are two Inches apart, while on the bottom they are ! usually an inch apart. A V-shaped 1 trough around the sides is used for i feeding. The flesh of the fowls when | fattened under the above-described j conditions is much softer thpn where i the birds are allowed free range. | Where possible to obtain it, milk I (either sour or sweet) Is one of the | best fattening feeds, and the fatten j ing ration should be wet up with It. A j good fattening feed may be made of two parts cornmeal. one part mid- Jdlings, one part' ground oats, to which |is added ten per cent, meat scrap, and for the last few days of fatten f ing, an ounce of mutton tallow for I every ten birds. This is fed in soft condition, about like thick cream, just :so it will pour. It should be kept be j fore them half an hour and then re i moved, feeding them three times a I day. How to Dress For >larket. Where it is at all possible, poultry raisers should dress the broilers after | fattening them for a local market. I They should not be fed for twenty | four hours before they are killed. The j best method of killing is to insert a ' knife in the roof of the mouth, and by ; plunging it into the brain paralyze j the bird, then cutting across the roof lof the mouth, sever the arteries, and I let the bird bleed freely. The bird is i then hung up by the feet with a cord, ' and picked quickly by plucking off the 1 feathers, downward. The majority of 1 markets demand dry-picked fowls, but I some markets will pay as much for ' those that are scalded as for those | that are dry-picked. Scalding makes j the skin spotted and discolors it, nor do fowls keep as well if they are | scalded. It is easier and quicker plek | ing to scald than to pick dry. The | majority of markets demand poultry ! that is undrawn, and •It will keep ! longer. Where fowls have to be sent a long distance to market, it is neces ' sary to grade them according to size, j and they have to be iced. The majority of producers on a large scale find it advantageous to send their shipments to market alive, if the distance is such that it is neces sary to ice if dressed. The amateur poultry raiser ought to study his mar -1 kets and ascertain the demand over a ; period of years, as the demand is 11- ! able to vary from time to time in each I locality. I . \ How to Raise ; Summer Chicki 1 Success with poultry depends ! largely upon the care given the j chicks during the summer, for the i next year's egg production will be | determined largely by the vigor of j the pullets. I The poultry raiser who knows how to overcome the difficulties can be successful even under ad verse conditions. These diffleul ! ties, and the way to meet them, i with rules for the proper care of | growing stock, will be the subject i of an instructive article to be pub ' Ushed next week. L.ook for it ap ■ pearing next Saturday, exclusively 1 in the Telegraph. I ] SEWING CIRCLES ENTERTAINED Special to The Ttltgrapli Klain, Pa.. May 15. On Thursday ! afternoon the members of the i Sewing Circles, of this place and New I Germantown. gathered a t the home of j Mrs. J. C. Martin, at Andersonburg, where they were entertained with musical and different forms of amuse ment. Supper was served at 5 o'clock. Those present were: Mrs. Benjamin Urlng, Mrs. H. C. Showvaker. Mrs. Ver non Smith, Mrs. Omer Kell, Mrs. J. A. Noll, Miss Mabel Noel. Mrs. J. A. Rhea, Mrs. C. M. Bower, Mrs. W. W. Woods, Mrs.'. Annie Woods, Mrs. F. A. Kern, Mrs. K. M. Smith, Mrs. Grace Sheaffer, Mrs. D. G. Keck, Mrs. D. P. Stokes, Airs. J. C. Rlckard and Mrs. W. H. Sheaf fer. FISHING ON ASCEN'SI&N DAY Special to The Telegraph Blain. Pa.. May 15. Recreation was sought In different ways on Ascension Day, but most of the pleasure-seekers of this place and vicinity wended their way to the creek with fishing rod and line and spent the day. The school ball team played a game with a pick-up nine of the town; score, 12 to 6 in favor of the school. .SHIPPENSBCItG NEWS SOI.D Special to The Telegraph Shlppensburg, Pa., May 15. Tester day the office of the Shippensburg News was sold to Charles E. Hoke, who will take charge on June 1. Under J. C. Fleming the paper has become the leading one■of the eorpmunltv. Mr. Fleming has been the proprietor since 1301. ' 'f '~y °'' 11° !»!"I ^ l«* l°i k»ij I I A Little Country Lad | I Once Moved to the City t« Everything about his home had to be packed securely for ths 2* trip by freight. « j ■§\ Now railroading happened to be this boy's ambition, and a c. V wonderful system of trains, tracks and wrecks was his constant 1 pastime. J 1 His childish instinct told him that a number of days would $ I o pass before the journey would be completed, and being the good • • railroader that he was, realized the length of time his trains would fc ? be idle; so he thought of a scheme to avoid delay. Meanwhile, full *3 schedule was in order until moving day came, and then he placed r©[ his engines and cars in a small box and carried them right with him. B Store-Keeping Is Our Ambition I o_ Business must go on and on without interruption—not even I 3- rebuilding dare interfere with serving the public's desires. All £ % ¥ 3 delay has been, and will be avoided while building operations J[ continue. 0 . o £ Space has been curtailed, to be sure; but assortments are just 5 as complete as ever, with duplicate merchandise at our fingertips I | H to replace quick sellers in the shortest possible time. c % 1 JSaamaaX j W V CAM 1001—v Plin\E ' FOUNDED 1871 ' W JL h Deal to Merge Electric, Gas and Trolley Companies in Cumberland Valley Special to The Telegraph Chambersburg-, Pa., May 15. - It was ■ announced yesterday that a New lork . firm of engineers has obtained options ' for the purchase of electric Mgrht, trol ley and fcas companies of Chambers- j burg, Shippensburu, Greencastle and , Waynesboro. The deal has . brought about through H. B. McNulty. Options have been secured on the fol lowing plants and railway lines: Shlp pensburg Gas and Electric Company, Chambersburg Gas Company, Cham bersburg and Slitppensburg Street Rail way, Chambersburg and Gettys burg Street Railway. Chambersburg, Waynesboro and Groencastle Railway Company, Greencastle Electric Com pany, Waynesboro Electric Company, Waynesboro Gas Company and Mercers burg Turnpike Company. It is stated the engineers represent i four large trust companies of New York City and that a $4,000,000 com pany is proposed. While it will not take more than $2,000,000 to purchase the companies, it is hold a similar amount will be used . in extensions. '\ Popularity of New Dictionary Grows Lawyer Praises 800k —Money Well Snent He Declares _ I Appreciation of the offer of the New Universities Dictionary being made by this paper to its 'readers is shown in the steady increase in the distribu tion. The popularity of the book has become rrtore wide-spread as those who were among the first to secure a copy have told their friends about the dictionary or have shown It to them. Each day the distributing clerks have been besieged by crowds of coupon holders. Many comment on the work in terms of highest praise. "I never spent ninety-eight cents to better purpose in my life," a well known lawyer declared. "I have long been wanting just such a dictionary. It is thoroughly up-to-date, gives a simple, accurate definition of a lot, of new words, and the illustrations are both interesting and instructive. Its convenient size and practical style of binding further recommend it." The New Universities Dictionary was designed to serve as a guide to the correct use of to-day's English. It is accurate in its definitions and con tains the latest and newest words whose general usage warrants their Incorporation into a dictionary de signed as this one was, primarily for everyday folks who want to speak and write English language correct ly and well. EDUCATIONAL Harrisburg Business College 329 Market St. Fall term, September first. Day and night. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. Market Sq„ Harrlabnrg, Pa. Sutch Bros. CONTRACT PAINTERS 446 Delaware Ave., City. I UI work guaranteed. Lowest pricea in city. TRY US. • X«a ' MAY 15, 1915. ATTENDING CONVENTION Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro. Pa.. May 15. Profes sor J. C. McCullougn, principal of the Waynesboro High School, is attending the annual convention of the Pennsyl vania State College. MICE CAUSE FIRE Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro. Pa.. May 15. Mice chewed some matches in a closet at the home of Charles Dunson, yesterday, and a fire started that burned clothing valued at S3O. Day and Night /% M r\ /L_ Every Hour A m Chemists inspect ALPHA Portia*! Ce*** 9 • <|B m ment to make sure that the raw materials % m are of the proper grade, and mixed, burned and ■ ground exactly right. Their constant watchful- ■ ness, and the extra care in manufacturing, make the strongest, safest Portland Cement that can bs . produced. We recommend it for all concrete % work where strength and durability arc de- m sired. Don't experiment with "just-as good" cements. Build with ALPHA jand the job will be everlasting. We warrant ALPHA Portland Cement to more than meet the U. S. Government requirements and all other standard tests. In composition, fineness and tensile strength, ALPHA is an exceptional cement —the finest grade that we can offer to discriminating users. Call, phone or write for prices. COWDEN A CO., 9th and Herr Streets, Harrisburg JOSEPH BURKHOLDER. HnmrnAlw. GEORGE S. PETERS. P>lwn H. R. DURBOROW. Hi.h.pir. MUTH BROS.. Elixatwthtowa SAMUEL DULL. New Ctrnitx.rl.nl J. W. MILLER. Mechuiubart IVEST SHORE SUPPLY CO.. W~t Farriew A. J. SPOTTS. Cmiiul* S. E. SHENK. Newrfll# ammmmmammmaaaammamma^mmamam^m^aaamamaammamaa^m^mmammmmmmammmmm. r > wi New Universities Dictionary w COUPON MM BSEgg fresenled byih4t> How to Get It For tha Mara Nominal Coat of _u«„_ „.;,u Mnnufactara and Watribatiom above With ninety-eight _ cents to cover cost of IbOlipOfl handling, packing, clerk ami 2/OC hhir e « - secure this NEW authentic MAIL MitmPomm, Dictionary, bound in real ORDERS UpE jooTiU.:; '.?• flexible leather, illustrated WILL uSH with full pages in color BE F"C': l> '! l^ and duotone 1300 pages. FILLED lw 25 DICTIONARIES IN ONE All Dictionaries published previ ous to this year are out of date 1 —J FOI RTKEX TO GRADUATES Special to The Telegraph Phlppensburfr, Pa.. May 15. Four teen pupils graduated this year from the Shippetisburg high gohool as fol lows: Maria Arnold, Mary Brown, Ella Book, Morn Clough, Ethel Mac Donald. Melva Shuman, Harold Beatty, William Crlswell, Chester Maclay, John Maolay, John Robertson, Wendell P. Sherrlck, Harry Shank and Chauncey Walter. Tha honors are: Melva Shuman, valedic torian; Chester Maolay, second honor, and Mary Brown, third honor. 3