j lly lirrr not alone lircauxe price* arc loner, but bfouw qualities are bet jj /oWoi\ Extraordinary Values in [(pS*! New Millinery |! Prices Are For Monday Only | pj: $1.50 to $2.00 Actual Values: $4.00 to $5.00 Actual Values: j| Black Hemp Hats, large and OQp Genuine Panama Hats, latest £Q CO i ;j small shapes shapes. Monday price vwtuU ! SI.OO Actual Values: SI.OO Actual Values: White Hemp Hats. Monday Children's Hemp Hats, all colors. Q|- | P"ce Monday price ZDC $2.00 Actual Values: ; 1; Genuine Panama Hats, latest QQ MILLINERY RIBBONS ;; shapes. Monday price OJ/C 20c Millinery Colored Grosgrain Q ; Ribbon. Monday price *J C ! j $3.00 Actual Values: 25c Georgette Satin Face Color- 1 C II jj Genuine Panama Hats, latest "1 /»Q ed Ribbon. Monday price IOC ! || shapes. Monday price V——————' TRIMMINGS SOUTTER'S Trimmings of aii kinds in jq (q 26c Department Store | Flowers, Wreaths. Fruits, 1 IV " W " WIWI C I 11 Wings, Ostrich Fancies, etc Where Every Day Is bargain Day {! 10*, 15*, 39* and oOs 3 ' * * ; |; 215 MARKET ST. OPP. COURTHOUSE : 5 ( DEATH IS HURRYING WHEELS OF THE LAW JLJ L ill wheels of the more or less ponderous j$ machinery of the —' aw which have set HI " le release from ithe penitentiary of 'HJh SPMBSBI " 1P r ' m Guai rlinn uminous presence is making W. h. Loeser, attorney for Solbrig, hurry. Solbrig was sentenced fifteen months ago, to serve from three to ten years It Pays to KNOW To make money with poultry, you have got to know hotv to hatch, feed and care for them. Guess-work is expen sive and unneccessary. The International Correspon dence Schools will give you the exact information that you need. Their course in Poultry Farming is sensi ble, comprehensive and practical It will help you to get the last dollar out of your flock. Learn Poultry Keeping Avoid Costly Mistakes The time to learn how to keep poultry is btfore you make costly mistakes. The I. C. S. will train you in the methods followed by the most profitable poultry plants. Hun dreds of money-making poultrymen owe their success to the I. C. S. "I made several attempts to establish a poultry business; but it was not until / had learned the principles contained in the I. C. S. Course in Poultry Farming that I was able to meet unth any de gree of success," writes C. M. Burr, Meshoppen, Pa. "I now have a well established and suc cessful poultry business." " The I. C. 5. Coarse In Poul try Farming is full of valuable information and very practical," writes Frank Borton, Elba, N. Y. " I have had the best results from applying the methods taught by yoa." Poultry Book Sent Free The I. C. S. will be glad to send you free, a handsome 56-page book that tells how you can get the special training that you need to make poul try-keeping profitable. They will ■ show you the best way to hatch, how to feed and raise poultry, how to build poultry houses, how to estab lish and operate a money-making poultry farm, and how to breed stock that will win priies. To get this yaluable book, simply Mark and Mail the Coupon Bos SCRANTON, PA. I Explain, without any obligation on my part, how I I I can qualify for the poeitloo before which I mark X: | I QPoultry Farming OMechin Engineering f ■ _ Poultry Breeding J Mechanical Drafting L I _ General Farming _ Automblle Banning « ■ _ Soil Improvement _ Ga* Engine* I _ Prull and Vecetabiee _ Statiesarv P.sffn»M-lnr | I _ Lit* flterk mtDatrylag _ Electrics I Engineering t ■ _ Civil Service _JK*etrle Mskt'r* leUw'yt 1 _ Bookkeeping _ Civil Engineering j • _ Stenography _ Salesmanship 8 » Building Contracting - Advertising I Ljßtstlsc Teat. A Pfaa*g □ Window Trlmminc r I Nimt ■ I Present Bmptoyer j I Street and Vri & State J SATURDAY EVENING, in connection with the death of an I inmate at the State asylum and when j he was taken away, hia counsel plead ed that he was anything but a well i man. Mr. Loeser visited Solbrlg in his I cell yesterday ana there learned of the i swift ravages of the "white plague"! that has Solbrig in its grip. The at torney wanted some information to i present to the Pardon Board at its] next session. This will be in Sep-1 temher. "How serious is Solbrig's condition?" inquired Mr. of the prison | physician, as they were passing out of i the corridor. 'Well," casually replied the doc- j tor, "he might live until September!" > Building Permits To-day—Building 1 permits issued to-day include the fol lowing: Dr. C. E. Jauss, single story! garage, rear of 1323 North Sixth street 250; Shein and Klwansky, remodeling 941 N'orth Seventh street. $250. I/ewis Hast Shoemaker l>e«fl.— Lewis Kast Shoemaker, for whom the Dauphin county court only one week tsrrtn . > j /▼ " ~A- " t 7f I 11 U TT"" J I /!KD ii * I • « U Q coww Jl » I • Ll \ A tOkOCS • M.N.. j - " i i |-,o J '* i |[ >»{ J £ i® Tuo « . S*«l!*J!4 ?! I 1 r / 3 *-ui- VI C " .j ; i II I I II ICI-B-VATIOM) * ©4J*Pr*w>r**W*Te.K' S vsTtn COPYRIGHT, 1915. i The plans above show the construc | tion of an economical water system | that is sanitary, easy to construct and [adaptable to any poultryhouse. The j water is stored In the barrel, which is I connected with the source of supply :by a feed pipe. A hand forcepump lor a pump driven by a small engine, may be used in filling the barrel. Near I the bottom of the barrel is a spigot i with which the flow of water Is regu | lated. | The spigot delivers the water into a j trough, made from a galvanized eaves Everlasting JfclSJillir Concrete keeps you out of mud and slush. Concrete walks, steps and porch floors are even, clean, attractive. They are easy to free of snow,, last like stone, save paint and repairs. Such improvements will add many times their cost to the value of your property. _ Insure the quality of your improvements by using the best materials. Don't risk using either inferior cement or sand. ALPHA is a superior grade of Portland Cement that makes everlasting concrete work. It is tested hourly while being made; you can depend on every ounce being of full binding strength. ALPHA always gives* satisfaction. Call on us for more information about concrete work. We will give you a copy of the large, illustrated book. "ALPHA Cement—How to Use It," which cells how to make floors, steps, walks, driveways, foundations, and scores of other permanent improvements with ALPHA, the Guaran teed Portland Cement. COWDEN & CO., OtH and Herr Streets, Harrisburfl JOSEPH BURKHOLDER. Hummel.town GEORGE 3. PETERS. Palmyra H; R- DURBOROW. Hl,<upi« MUTH BROS.. Ell.ab.thEw" "lir 1 „ W " MILLER. M.ch.nic.bur, WEST SHORE SUPPLY CO.. W—t Fairrfew - A. J. SPOTTS. C.rli.U S. E. SHENK. NawrUU I ago had been asked to appoint a 1 guardian to handle his estate, died at the State insane asylum to-day. Commissioners to Meet Monday.— The County Commissioners will in ! spect the Suburban Country Club near ! Rutherford on Monday with a view to investigating its possibilities as a | temporary house of detention. The I midweek meeting of the commis sioners will be held Monday instead of : Wednesday as on Tuesday morning the board will go to Stroudsburg to at ! tend the annual State convention of I county commissioners. Holler Has Paid In $13.»81.24. iWith the payment yesterday to County I Treasurer A. H. Bailey of the $4,468.47 i of the 1914 excess fees, Prothonotary I Harry F. Holler has paid tnto Dauphin I county all told for 1914 and 1915. $13,- 981.24. In addition to excess fees, Mr. Holler has paid in by quarters the fol lowing sums in fines, costs and Jury fees first quarter. $3,989.70; second, 2,119.05; third, $3,193.87; fourth, $2,- 210.24. trough and fastened to the wall of the building as shown in the drawing at the left. Above this trough is a board which prevents the fowls from getting into the water with their feet, but en ables them to drink. For ease in craning the trough this board is hinged, as shown. An overflow pipe is arranged as shown in the diagram to the right, and a drain pipe is added to permit (drawing off the water when there Is I danger of freezing In the coldest niicnts. HARPJSBURO TELEGRAPH SANITARY WATERING ; SYSTEMS FOR POULTRY ARE EASY TO MAKE Barrel May Be Used as Storage Tank to Provide Ample Supply at All Times; Small Engine Saves Labor of Pumping Galvanized Rain Gutter Makes an Ideal Drinking Trough, Which Is Kept Clean Without Difficulty By H. Armstrong; Roberts Practical Poultr.vman. COPYRIGHT, 1915. The providing of fresh water for poultry is a matter that is often neg lected, ami the results of such neglect are quickly evident in deoTea-sed egg yields and often in disease among the flocks. In this article Mr. Rol>erts shows how the lMiultryman may In stall an automatic system that will insure a constant and sanitary supply of water. A CHICKEN would rather drink from a cow's hoof-prlnt than from a fountain of clean, pure water, yet that is no reason why she should be allowed to do so. any more than she should he permitted to eat tainted animal food, which any fowl will devour with great relish. Clean water in large quantities, easy of ac cess, is one of the chief essentials to success with poultry, and the provid ing of it is one of the most laborious tasks in a commercial plant, unless there is some system of distributing it hy mechanical power or gravity. The way in which a fowl drinks would seem to Indicate that she con sumes only a few drops of water in a day. yet in reality she drinks close to a half-pint, especially during the heavy laying season, for the egg it self is something like sixty per cent, water. Thus we find that in a house of five hundred layers the actual dailv water consumption is more than thirty gallons, or almost a barrel. If this were to be carried by hand, five gallons at a time, six trips to and from the well or other source of sup ply would be necessary. But this merely allows for actual consumption, with no surplus for cooling or sanitary purposes—a highly Important consid eration. Water Should BP Kept Clean Every time a fowl drinks she in variably washes her beak in the water. This may leave in the water only a few grains of dirt or mash feed, but in the course of a day the quantity of foreign matter carried into a drinking fountain is surprising. Moreover, un less the fountains are very carefully arranged, a certain amount of litter will also be scratched or dusted into the water. Where fowls are strong and healthy, they can throw off a fair amount of this contamination. As it is almost impossible to insure abso lutely pure water in a fountain or open vessel of any kind, it is advisable to have such fountains of large capacity, in order that the degree of pollution may be lessened and the dangers re duced to a minimum. It is far more economical to pro vide five times the quantity of water actually consumed, than to attempt to keep fountains fresh and sanitary by scrubbing or washing: them. For'this reason, and because it seems to be human nature to forget to give ade quate attention to drinking facilities, great pains should be taken to make the watering system as near automatic and germproof as possible. With a little common mechanical ability and a few tools, this can be done at mod erate expense. If a poultry farm has access to a municipal water supply, or if there Is a storage tank on the premises, the work of equipping the buildings with an ideal system is half accomplished, since it Is then a simple matter to lay underground pipes connecting each house with the main supply. Where this convenience is not avail able, a small gasoline engine of about one horsepower, with a pumpjack erected over an ordinary forcepump, may be installed at a cost not exceed ing SSO, and will prove entirely satis factory. If this outlay is too great, the forcepump may he operated by hand, a few minutes every day. Instead of an overhead storage tank, barrels (preferably charred whisky containers which will serve to clarify the water) may be stationed in the various building at a trifling cost, and will give sufficient pressure for a uni form supply. The barrel should be stood on end with the head intact, and a neat hole bored in it for the feed pipe. In this way the interior of the barrel is protected from direct cur rents of outside air, consequently the water will not freeze to any extent in cold weather, at least not enough to retard its flow in a temperature above 10 degrees Fahrenheit. Rain Gutter as Drinking Trough An ordinary galvanized sheet Irori ralngutter, or eavestrough. makes an ideal contrivance for placing the wa ter before the birds, and one that is kept clean most easily. It should be about fifteen feet long in a house of five hundred layers. This trough Is fastened to the front wall of the build ing with hangers manufactured for the purpose. The rolled or rounded edge of the trough should face the side from which the birds drink, and be about ten inches off the floor, with a slight drain toward the end farther from the barrel. The tinsmith will solder a plate at each end of the trough, and also fit the end that is to be farther from the barrel with an overflow pipe and a drain. Both of these may be of tubing half an inch In diameter, fitted so that they discharge outßld< the building. The drain, of course, should lead from the lowest point In the trough, and be rounded nicely so that an ordi nary cork may be used as a plug or stopper. This arrangement facilitates washing out the trough, and, If the overflow pipe Is properly located, there need be no fear of the trough over flowing to the floor of the building. About three Inches above the edges of the gutter, allowing Just enough space for the fowls to raise and lower their heads in drinking, it is advisable to fit a ten-Inch board over the entire length of the trough. This will pre vent the birds from jumping into it or fouling the water. This board should be hinged as shown in the accompany ing sketch, so that it may be raised for cleaning. Directly over the end of the trough bore a hole In the lowest practical point in the barrel and fit it with a wooden faucet or tap. The water supply is then under control, and may he allowed either to trickle or to run In a steady stream. In the winter, when there Is likeli hood of the water in the trough freez ing over night, It may be drained off at closlng-up time, and the spigot wrap ped with a piece of woolen cloth. Un less the temperature is extremely low, the trough will not freeze in the day tlma, inasmuch aa tha fowia are con tinually drinking It; and the spigot JTVI v ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ » r ▼ ▼ ▼ t » *. ▼ ▼ T "T T'V IT ▼ ▼ T ' JSx>t V7IKM y < CALL 1991—ANT PHONE - FOUNDED 1871 | : oamatib ■parhnent Store l 'j| ► // n\ < /l k. y\ iwr KVGSAnwmi. \ •«* A»V«#«W>v\V) \ w \\ I ► »ww\»w6 vfc. \ .viv. \\ i "~ ~£\ m. j X. JBoamari& \ . _—.», ; Monday Will Be Your Last ; | Opportunity to Buy Bowman < : Toy Grocery Stores at 15c : ► Monday evening this very special offer comes to a close —or rather, y sometime during the day; for 500 cannot last the day through, and only i y 500 are left to buy. 4 ► . < ► The store contains 11 samples of good groceries and a card entitling < ► holder to a bottle of milk—in all considerably more than 15c worth. -< ' 77T ZZ j 77 Besides, it affords a ; We Read Your Toy Grocery barrcl of fun for the ; ► Ad. in Saturday's Telegraph little folks and they'll < ► ~,, XT delight in "keeping < Child s Name ft „ 1 ► store." < ► Parents' Name . ,« Llip the coupon— A ► Address COME EARLY— and < 1 Pip, sign and bnng it with you. / wkh I 4 ► i ▲ ▲. A A A At A -A A A A A A. A, -A. -A. -A, A A will not freeze because the water in the barrel is considerably warmer than the outside air. System Proved Satisfactory I have used a system of this kind for several years, for flocks of from 500 to 800 birds, and have never ex perienced a single disappointment. Occasionally some of the fowls will develop colds, or even roup, but they are promptly caught, treated, and Iso lated, thereby removing any danger of an epidemic. An abundant supply of water is furnished at all times, on the principle that if dirt does get In the trough it will quickly drain off. The troughs are brushed out daily, and about once a week a disinfectant is used. For the poultryman willing to con sider a little more trouble, I have contrived a similar arrangement that it is absolutely impossible to contami nate. A trough is constructed ex actly as before, and three inches above ] the center of this trough a half-inch | galvanized iron pipe is run, drilled on | the under side with holes 1-32 of an | inch in diameter, spaced four inches > apart. The pipe is connected to the | barrel with a gatevalve that controls i the pressure, and in this way just enough water is allowed to enter the pipe to maintain a slow drop from all the holes. When the hen reached for a drop, capillary attraction takes place, whereupon the drop instantly increases to a tiny stream. The trough, of course, takes care of any waste, and it is covered with a wire grid so that the fowls cannot drink from it. No cleaning of any kind is required for this apparatus, since it is Impossible for the birds to contami nate It. It is the nearest approach to an absolutely practical, sanitary water supply that I know of, and has but one disadvantage—it will not operate In a freezing temperature. Summer Care of the Back Yard Flock During the summer months the • poultry kept in limited quarters | require more careful attention than at any other time. Lack of free range and Insects and other foods which the farmer's flock se cures, must be compensated for If the amateur poultryman is to se cure best results. Next week Prof. A. C. Smith, head of the Depart ment of Poultry Husbandry, Uni versity of Minnesota, will tell how to manage a back-yard flock most successfully, giving rules for care, feeding and sanitation. Watch for his article exclusively in the Tele graph next Saturday. 23 RESERVISTS ARRESTED By Associated Press Chicago, June 26.—Twenty-three reservists of the Serbian army al leged to be United States citizens, either native born or naturalized were held by feedral officers here tb-day for appearance before a United States Commissioner for examination as to a violation of the neutrality laws. GERMAN OFFENSIVE REPULSED BY FIRE OF RUSSIAN GUNS By Associated Press Petrograd. June 25, via London. June 26. 3.4R A. M.—The following Russian official statement regarding the progress of hostilities was given out here to-night: "During the course of the night of June 24 and the whole of the follow ing day in the Shavll region an artil lery duel proceeded with advance guard ancountara on the front of Lati i kovc-Fopeli&ry and along tha right TUNE 26. 1015. bank of the Niemen River. To the west of the middle Niemen the Ger man offensive during: the night be | Put on a Roof | f That Defies Sparks | 'fi Why take chances with an inflammable roof when wc can l\ fli supply a roofing that insurance companies regard as " equal 111 [ll to tin, slate or tile" in fire-resisting qualities. This roofing is 111 Pronounced *RU"as In RUBY _ m 1 RU-BER-0 Q 1 \l =J ** 111 IV COSTS MORE - WEARS LONGER 111 W In a recent test "Piles of wood Ru -BCR-OIQ Roofs laid more than Ik m shavings and sawdust, saturated 20 year* ago are still watertight ill with gasoline, were burned for and apparently as -good as new. f! S\ 19 minutes—until consumed — No other prepared roofing has this 11. on the surface of ||ll-BER-010 record. Our customers who have ft Roofing. At the end of this time used |ttl-BER-OIQ never have to ft the embers were removed and it worry over leaks or repair bills. was found that the roofing was Come in and let us show you this blistered but still intact. good roofing. We have it in attrac- yj S HU-BER-010 contains no coal tar, tive slate gray and in beautiful ££ asphaltum oils, wood fibre, paper, colors Tile Red and Copper \ or other inflammable substances. Green. Our Ku-ur-010 is the It costs much less than either tin, genuine —the " Ru-ber-oid Man" slate or tile. (above shown) on every roll. | Henry Gilbert & Son, harrlsS pa. | M" - oTA ALL HAVANA A Smokers who imagine that an all Havana cigar is made for tastes used to heavy to bacco should try Moja quality and know how ' fragrant, smooth and pleasingly good some Havana tobacco is. Mmde By John C. Herman & Co. —loc CIGARS — 1 tween tho Kovo-AVirbaJlen. railway - and | thi Amalva marshes was repulsed by our fire." 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers