A Good Place V AT oz y P^ ace to Eat ifi i to Sleep Restaurant and Hotel i— -40 Telephones JiT E invite your inspection of the finest restaurant in the city of Harrisburg, the * Crystal, at 418 Market street. The most approved equipment to make the sur- "y ■■ • . t> i r» roundings inviting and to insure absolute cleanliness. Snow-white dining room with I I m _J With Private Branch Exchange white tiie table t? ps and lunch bar. Q M 1 1 C Our kitchen facilities are unsurpassed for convenience and sanitation. An inspec- | % II Have Been Installed in the Crystal Hotel by the tion will convince you that it is as modern as any in the State. None better. A com- . petent French cook has been engaged to prepare the best quality of foods in any *de f*s 1 | 1 \7 11 sired style. Tables and lunch bar open for service this evening at seven o'clock. mper 13.rid V StllGV Roses for souvenirs this afternoon from 2to 5. Orchestra music. • Telephone Co. Hotel Rooms Open Saturday „ D r ■ Furniture, Ranges, China, Forty rooms are equipped with the finest heavy brass beds and circassion walnut "furniture. Best mattresses and box springs procurable, and excellent carpets in Silvpr anH PCitfhpn .jTORxII? every room. Hot and cold water and telephone in every room. Showers and tub baths ' Ollvcl allU ivllUlcn ' on every floor. Fire escapes on all three floors and splendid ventilation. Rooms at # * SI.OO per night. ' Equipments For Hotels Rate For • 418 MARKET STREET and Restaurants :: : I Equipment \|l j 1/'ilo. n P a & e are grouped a partial list of the firms who have aided in the con- ||i Ij j | jjlj Mj| struction, furnishing and supplies. I Bowman's Scores Again In I . Fi ne Interior Furnishings Harrisburg should and will feel a sense of pride in claiming one of the best appointed hotels in this section. In its completeness, the — ——— > THE New Crystal Hotel ~ ~~ ~~ will stand out prominently as an example of modern hostelry, not alone in P. FOSTER H. STEIN B. IT J! FISHPAYV -j • M PPiflP H 1 VillfPC Contract for equipping this hotel with furniture and floor coverings was Tkp Painfinrr Rr O/Oonvafinfr C* n 11/JLC CLI JLU 1 1A t 111 CO awarded to this store, and we're justly proud of the results, adding one more to 1 lie F dlllllil g V,O. our growing list of interior furnishing contracts. PHONE, UILMOR 334-M of the Crystal are among the excellent examples In carrying out the idea of the management, superb qualities in every 228 N. Fremont Avenue BALTIMORE, MD. we have in stock. We make a specialty of supplying P"; ce ?\ fur . n ' t . ure and c , ve /. v )'? rd of "rP et we J e Procured and the following . , , , . , , . ,\. • f ' lst °* furnishings speak for the grandeur and comfort that await Crystal BRANCH OFFICE. contractors and builders with everything electrical. guests . „ we]l as for Bowman efficiency. ' Elscheid's Hotel, N. Fifth St., Harrisburg, Pa. __ . _ _ . —Fine Wilton Velvet Carpets in every —Brass costumers to match beds. __ T> • • Ir< • m Harrisburg Electric room, and hall and on the stairs. —Walnut dressers in Period design and HoUSe Painting and FreSCOemg A O^A —Window shades and cool scrim draperies. beautiful dark finish; with bedroom chairs O l —Linoleum and bath mats in every bath- to match. • Churches, Moving Picture Parlors and Theaters OUP L)iy room. —Quartered oak writing tables with arm Q SDecialtv —Massive 3-inch post Brass Beds in special chairs to match in lobby. y 124 SOUTH SECOND STREET satin and bright combination finish; fitted » —Large overstuffed leather fireside chairs, The Academy, Crystal Restaurant and Hotel and the Lenox Hotel N with box springs and mattresses. also in lobby. * arc am 0,,8 exwn P ,os - I Stokley & McNelis Hotel and Restaurant I I ■* CALL 191)1—ANY PHONE FOUNDER 1871 CONTRACTORS v 222 Market St., Harrisburg Fa. S Interior Marble, Mosaic and Tile Work "Univer- _ sal" Composition Flooring ~~~ 1 "DT TOO DDAC Kitchen Appliances, Etc., Prices and woTk " nical Hißh Sch ° ol " |\ \j 131\ WO • Specifications Upon Application ' • - ....The.... Gold Class. Caned Wood and ELECTRIC SIGNS T T "I J_ T Velvet Ice Cream s. b. Sexton stove . r nAI , IT Aii . and Mfg. Co. J. S. POULTON Will Be Served at t* St n XT c the Crystal Restaurant The Crystal Restaurant Kitchen OF EVERY DESCRIPTION ============ Outfit Was Furnished By This 307 MARKET STREET HARRISBURG, PA. Establishment \ _ . I ■/ ■■ ' FIRST 801 BABIES '' FOUND INFERIOR Scientist Urges Parents to Rear Families of Five or More Children Washington, June 24. — First-born children are on the average inferior, physically, mentally and morally, to the brothers and sisters who follow them. Such is the conclusion of Professor Karl Pearson of the University of I.ondon. His statistics, covering many thousands of cases, are published to day in the July number of the Journal THURSDAY EVENING, of Heredity, organ of the American Genetic Association of this city. Professor Pearson his dis covery when studying the population of a sanitorlum for consumptives, where he found that there were many more first-born than theer should be, if tuberculosis selected Its victims at random. On the other hand, the later born children were fewer In number than was expected. Since then he has applied elaborate statistical analysis to data of many kinds. He finds that flrst-born chil dren show the highest percentage of still births, and are most delicate dur ing childhood. Further, they weigh less and are shorter at birth, than are later-born children. Study of the inmates of homes for the feeble-minded and insane asylums shows him that flrst-born childern are there in disproportionate numbers. Criminality appears also to be a prerogative of the eldest members of the family. Statistics of English pris ons revealed 717. flrst-born, where calculation led him to expect only 557. Epilepsy, albinism and congenital cataract are likewise studied, and in each case an abnormally large num ber of the affected persons are found to be first-born. This inferiority, as brought to light in statistics, is partly due to the fact that many weak parents die after hav ing only a single child. Such a child of course counts as a first-born, and naturally inherits some of the weak ness of his parents; but his Inferiority is due rather to the bad stock than to the fact that he is a flrst-born. But aside from this. Professor Pear son holds that the flrst-born are, on the whole, actually handicapped. This may be partly due to the youth of their parents, and partly to physiolog ical conditions in the mother. Believing that the eldest children are thus handicapped, Professor Pear son sees great danger to the race In the present tendency to make families consist of two children. » In a normal family of about five, the first-born only make up one-fifth RXJUUSBURG TELEGRAPH of the population, and their Inferiority is swamped. But in many classes of society nowadays, the number of off spring is limited to two. Professor J. MoKeen Cattell of Columbia University has shown this to be particularly true of American men of science. Under these circumstances, the first born make up half, Instead of one fifth of the population, and their in feriority must necessarily be a much more serious menace to the efficiency of the race. In the interest of the race, therefore Professor Pearson declares that par ents of eugenically superior stock ought if possible to rear a family of i five or more children. DEATH OF STEPHEN W. KEYS Special to Tht Telegrap West Falrview, Pa., July 22.—Ste- L phen W. Keys, a veteran of the Civil ; War. died at his home in Second street yesterday at the age of 71 years. , About two years ago Mr. Keys suf . fered a paralytic stroke and since that time had been confined to his home. On Tuesday he was again stricken, which resulted in his death. He en listed In the Twenty-sixth Pennsylva nia Emergency Regiment and after the expiration of his term re-enlisted in Company D, Two Hundred and First Regiment, Pennsylvania Volun • teers. Mr. Keys was a member of I Post 58. G. A. R., of Harrlsburg; West 'iFairvlew Conclave, No. 145, Improved Order of Heptasophs. and West Fair i view Council. No. 716, Order of Inde ■ pendent Americans. He is survived - by his wife and these children: Ed • ward and David Keys and Mrs. Wil liam Hopple, all of Harrisburg; Ste phen, Jr., Warren. Mrs .John Yarnall. Mrs. Irwin Bretz. of West Fairview, and Hannah and Walter, at home. Ft:neral services will be held to-mor row afternoon at 2 o'clock, the Rev. i J. A. Shettel, pastor of the Grace : United Brethren Church, officiating. Burial will be made at Enola. The pallbearers will be his four sons, Ed : ward, David, Warren and Stephen, Jr. , JULY 22, 1915. H it is Something Worth Aiming For j| | Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads 9