6 XfcZoMen AsUnreßg-s Helping Husbands to Success By Dorothy T»li A few days ago a at 14, had gone to work in one of the largest manufactories in this country as an of fice boy, took his seat in the president's chair as the head of it. He had risen by his own ability from the very bot tom to the very top of the ladder that he had started out to climb, and he gave much of the credit of his success to his wife. "She helped me at every foot of the way," he said. "She was always be hind me boosting me up. urging me on. She never put any obstacles in my Way. For instance, for many years I spent almost every minute when I was at home, and not eating or sleep ing, in studying to try to remedy my defective education, and to find out all that had been written about the par ticular line of business that I was en gaged in. "Many a woman Would have ob jected to this and demanded that her husband entertain her of an evening, or go out with her, but my wife al ways saw that I had a quiet place to study and that nothing interrupted me. She even studied with me when my Interest showed signs of flagging. Any man with that kind of a wife is bound to get. on." Which Is too true. Any man with that kind of a wife is bound to suc ceed if he is not a hopeless clod. Let a man have an ounce of talent, or abil ity, or one particle of energy and am bition, and that kind of a wife will pull, or haul, or shove him Into some sort of success. The Universal Wish Every woman in the world desires above every other earthly thing for her husband to succeed. First, be cause it realizes her ambition. No personal success that a woman ever achieves brings the same thrill of gratification to her that she experi ences when her man is acclaimed a big man Among other men. Secondly, a woman wants her husband to suc ceed because it means the prosperity and well-being of herself and her chil dren. This being the case, it is passing strange that the average wife never LOW WAGES CAUSES INDUSTRIAL UNREST [Continued From First Page.] satisfaction was said to have reached "proportions that already menace the social good will and the peace of the nation." Workers Blamed Responsible for the condition un der which they live was placed primarily upon the workers them selves. who, "blind to their collective It Pays to KNOW To make money with poultry, you have got to know how 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 before 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 I had learned the principles contained in the /. C. S. Course in Poultry Farming that I was able to meet with 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. S. Course 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 you." 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, h«w to build poultry houses, how to estab lish and operate a money-making poultry farm, and how to breed stock that will win prizes. To get this valuable book, simply Mark and Mail the Coupon fiN^Tiisrc^R^PMosnsoLs] Bos lOSO SCRANTON, PA. I Explain, without any obligation on my part, how I I can qualify for the poaitlon before which 1 mark X: I | □ Poultry Farming FHMedian. Engineering a I. Poulety Breeding _ Mechanical Drafting I _ General Farming _ Automhile Running ■ - Soil Improvement _ Gna Engines I Fruit and Vegetables _ Stationary Engineering I | _ Mr* Mark nnd Dairying _ Electrlca 1 Engineering I I. Civil Servlca _ R««trU Llfbi'rAllallw'js I - Bookkeeping _ Civil Engineering ■ - Stenography _ Salesmanship I _ Building Contracting _ Advertising I ÜBeatlag ▼ant. A PluaTg LJ Window Trimming i | | I Present | | Street and V" j JjClty State - | SATURDAY EVENING, really sits down and tries to figure out how she can help her husband to be a success instead of a failure In life, and it is more than strange that her vision is so short that she cannot see how you must sacrifice the little thing of to-day in order to gain the big thing of to-morrow. For instance, take a young couple who are just starting out in matri mony. The first five years of their life together absolutely settles whether the husband is going to be a prosper ous, successful man at middle age, or whether he is going to end his days as a clerk in somebody else's office. If the young wife is willing to not only live well within their means, but just as economically as health and comfort will permit, if she helps her husband save his money, if she takes care of his health by making him physically comfortable at home, if she is interested in his business and ambi tious for him to get along, he is just as sure to succeed as the sparks are to fly upward. But if his wife is bitten by the so ciety bug, if she tries to keep the pace with people better off than they are, if she drags her husband about to parties, and sends him dull witted and sleepy to work the next morning, that man has no more chance of getting on in the world than a snowflake has to exist on a red hot stove. The Terrific Fear The fear of the bill collector Is the deadly fear that takes away a man's courage to light, and no man who lives with that dread always hanging over him can win in the business struggle. No man who has gone to bed at 2 o'clock in the morning, even if he has been innocently playing bridge and dancing the tango with his wife and his friends, is a match In energy or wit for the man who has gone to bed at 10 o'clock and who arises mentally and physically refreshed. Domestic unhappiness Is another handicap that will keep almost any man from winning success in life. The man who goes to his business after having been nagged half of the night, or from a breakfast table row with strength and often times deaf to the cries of their followers, have suffered exploitation and the invasion of tlielr most sacred rights without resistance." The report in part follows: "We find the basic cause of Indus trial dissatisfaction to be low wages, or, stated in another way, the fact that the workers of the nation, through compulsory and oppressive methods, legal and illegal are denied the full product of their toil. "We further find that unrest among the workers in industry has grown to proportions that already menace the social good will and the peace of the nation. Citizens numbering mil lions smart under a sense of injustice and oppression. "The extent and depth of industrial unrest can hardly be exaggerated. State and national conventions of labor organizations numbering many thou sands of members, have cheered the names of leaders imprisoned for parti cipation in a campaign of violence, conducted as one phase of a conflict with organized employers. "Employers have created and main tained small private armies and used these forces to intimidate and sup press their striking employes by de porting, imprisoning, assaulting and killing their leaders. "Elaborate spy systems are main tained to discover and forestall the movements of the enemy. The use of State troops in policing strikes has bred a bitter hostility to the militia system. Wage-Earners Have Belief "Courts, legislatures and governors have been rightfully accused of serv ing employers to the defeat of justice and, while counter charges come from employers and their agents, with al most negligible exceptions, it is the J wage-earners who believe, assert and i prove, that the very institutions of! their country have been perverted by | the power of the employer. "To the support of the militant and aggressive propaganda organized; labor, within recent years, a small, but j rapidly increasing host of ministers, j college professors, writers, journalists, and others of the professional classes,: distinguished in many instances byl exceptional talent which they devote \ to agitation, with no hope of material! reward. "We find the unrest here described to be but the latest manifestation of I the age-long struggle of the race for| freedom of opportunity for every in- 1 dividual to live his life to the highest j ends. In rest Augmented by Changes "The unrest of the wage-earners has been augmented by recent changes and developments in industry. Chief of these are the rapid and univrsal In troduction and extension of machinery by which unskilled workers may be substituted for the skilled, and an equally rapid development of means of rapid transportation and communi cation, by which private capital has been enabled to organize in great I corporations. "Work formerly done at home or in small neighborhood shops has been transferred to great factories where the individual workers becomes an impersonal element, under the con trol of impersonal corporations. Wo men in increased numbers have fol lowed their work from the home to the factory and even children have been enlisted. "Now, more than ever, the profits of great Industries under centralized control pour into the coffers of stock holders and directors who never have so much as visited the plants, and who perform no service in return. "We find that many entire com munities exist under the arbitrary economic control of corporation offi cials, charged with the management of an industry or group of industries and we find that in such communities political liberty does not exist, and its forms are hollow mockeries, family in Employer's Hands "In larger communities where espionage becomes impossible the wage-earner who Is unsupported by a collective organization may enjoy freedom of expression outside the workshop, but there his freedom ends. And It is a freedom more apparent than real. For the house he lives In, for the food he eats, the clothing he wears, the environment of his wife and children, and his own health and own safety are In the hands of the employer, through the nrhitrary power he exercises in fixing his wages and working conditions. "The responsibility for the condi tions . which have been described above, we declare rests primarily upon workers, who, blind to their collective strength and often times deaf to the cries of their followers have suffered exploitation and the invasion of their most sacred rights without resistance. A large measure of responsibility must however, attach to the great mass of citizens. But, until the workers them selves realize their responsibility and utilize to the full their collective power, no action, where governmental or altruistic, can work any geulne and lasting improvement. "We call upon our citizenship, re gardless of politics or economic con ditions to use every means of agita tion, all avenues of education, and his wife, goes with his nerves on edge, his soul surcharged with bitterness and his temper at the boiling point'. He is in no condition to deal calmly, dispassionately and wisely with any situation. On the contrary, he Is irri table, morose and surly. His point of view is warped and he is In a state of mind in which he alienates clients and throws up the position he has been working for years to attain. Many a man's prospects in life have been blighted by a foolish quarrel with his wife, and if women had no other reason in the world for trying to make their husbands happy they might And it in the selfish one that only the happy man and the quiet and contented one can give the full meas ure of his mind and his energy to his work. A woman who loves her husband well enough to die for him if neces sary often makes her very love a burden that crushes him down into defeat. She won't be separated from him for a few months, so he must forego some great opportunity. She cannot deny herself the pleasure of his society, so he must talk to her of a night when he should be studying, or working. I heard an old physician once advise a young one never to maTry, because every time he tried to do the reading that was necessary to keep up with his profession, his wife would have hysterics and declare that he loved his nasty old books better than he did her. Other women blight their husbands' careers by their inability to under stand that Pegasus cannot be used as a plough horse. Many a great poem has been lost to the world because a poet has had to walk the floor at night with a howling infant. Many a man has wasted the energy in hanging pictures, and matching samples, and cutting the lawn that should have carried a big business enterprise to success. Let women consider these things and realize that oftener than they know a wife writes her husband's price tag, and determines whether he fails or succeeds. every department and function of gov ernment to eliminate the injustice ex posed by this commission, to the end that each laborer may 'secure, the whole product of his labor.' " PAXTAXG VAUDEVILLE For the closing week at the Paxtang Park Theater Manager Davis proposes to give his park patrons a show that they will remember as one of the best five-act vaudeville bills they have ever seen for the money. The show will have as a headline attraction the Mllane Opera Company, with five peo ple who sing selections from the stan dard operas in a manner that has won them a world-wide reputation. This is an act that promises to be one of the best classical singing offerings that has ever played the park theater. Two other features of the coming week's bill worthy of special mention will be Dickie and Billle Warfield, two clever girls in songs and patter, and the Aerial Bartletts, one of vaudevile's most sensational acrobatic stunts. The big day of the coming week at the park will be Wednesday. Manager Davis has chosen this day for a park bargain day. By buying a strip ticket for ten cents those who visit the park on Wednesday are entitled to a ride on the merry-go-round, a trip through the giggler, a ride on the roller coaster and an ice cream cone. Numerous prizes will, lie offered for races and contests of all descriptions. The pro gram of events Is scheduled to start at 11 o'clock in the morning and will con tinue until late in the evening.—Ad- vertisement. THE WHO'S PDNtfIEU THAN CHAW,IE CHAPLIN AT COLOXIAI, THEATER Frank Daniels—the man who's fun nier than Charlie Chaplin, according to the best critics in the large theatrical fields of the country—is playing in "C'rooky Scruggs" at the Colonial to night. Everyboqfc- decided from his first appearance as Convict of 9999 that he was a killer as a movie come dian and they didn't change their minds a bit—you can gamble on that. Daniels plays Crooky Scruggs, who escapes from the "pen" and swaps identities with Colonel Boh Roberta, a wealthy rancher. The antics that oc cur from the time Crooky becomes "the Colonel" until he goes hack to his nice, quiet cell are so funny you almost have to hold yourself to keep from going rn to hysterics. The Pa the News Pictorial, No. 67, and a comedy film. "Blng, Bang, Biff," augment the program. Herman Yeager will play the "Marche Romaine," from Gounod; "La Glnquantaine," Gabriel, and "Gavotte," from "Mignon," Thomas. Monday's feature will be "The Mil lionaire Baby," the great detective story, by Anna Katherlne Green, featur ing Harry Mestayer and Grace Dar mond.—Advertisement. MAJESTIC VAUDEVILLE Owing to the entirely new regula tions in the way of offering Keith vaudeville in Harrlsburg this season, there are some quite Important things to remember by the theatergoers, who have been frequent visitors at the Or pheum. They must bear in mind that there are two entirely different pro grammes presented each week. Th<; first appears on Monday afternoon and remains for a three-day showing, and the second makes its bow on Thursday afternoon to remain for the last three days of the week. There will be the daily matinee and two complete shows each evening, making three complete performances at the Majestic every day of the week. The matinees will start at 2:30 o'clock, and the first evening show will begin at 7:3 ft. A second complete performance will follow Im mediately. Patrons who enter the theater some time during the first per formance will see the farly part of the offering by remaining over into the next show. All this will be made pos sible because seats are not reserved and patrons can remain over into the last show without any discomfort and an noyance. The best seats In the thea ter will be only fifteen cents each aft ernoon. and twenty-five cents each evening, that is excepting the box seats.—Advertisement. BOY T>IES OF LOCKJAW .Sfecial to The Telegraph Kinderhook, Pa., Aug. 28.—Ephralm A. Lewis, aged seven years, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ephriam Lewis, i?r,, is dead following an attack of lqckjaw. The youth about ten days ago trampled upon the body of a dead bird, and a small bone became imbedded In his foot. Despite the efforts of medical attention, lockjaw developed. niES AT BLUE RIDGE SUMMIT Special la The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Aug. 28. Mrs. LUlle C. Meek, wife of George A. Meek, Baltimore, died at her summer home at Blue Ridge Summit, from peritonitis, aged 37 years. The body was prepared by Undertaker Grove, this place, and was shipped yesterday to St. Thomas, Canada. ZIEGLER DIES OF INJURIES Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., Aug. 28. After lying unconscious for twenty-seven hours, John H. Zleglor, one of the town's best-known merchants died at his home in Chambersburg street Fri day morning of concussion of the brain. Mr. Ziegler was thrown from the running board of an automobile when he was returning from a corn bake held by the B. P. O. E. HARFUSBURO TELEGRAPH pouLTßy^ne\gs PROFITS IN EGG PRODUCTION DEPEND UPON CULLING STOCK ROSE COMB WHITE ORPINGTONS COPYRIGHT, 1915. The Orpington breed has come into popular favor within the last few years. It was originated by the late William Cook, of England, who pro duced both single and rosecoinb va rieties. The Rose Comb Whites were the first rosecomb variety produced. They bear considerable resemblance to the Rose Comb White Dorkings, which were used in their development. Mr. Cook felt that a rosecomb variety would be desirable in sections where the winters are so severe that single combs might be frozen. The single comb varieties lead In popularity, but £he variety illustrated has attained fa It Does Not Pay to Keep Weaklings; Breed From Birds With Good Records For Production Early Hatching Will Enable Owner to Have Pullets Laying When the Market Is Highest By Reese Y r . Hicks Former President of the American Poultry Association, and now Gen eral Manager of Rancocas Poultry Farms, Brown's Mills, New Jersey. COPYRIGHT, 1918. ERR production is affected greatly by the mating, hatching and selection of the stock used. Mr. Hicks advises the selection of a strain bred for lay ing and the constant culling of birds that lack vigor. He advises that early liatchinß be practiced, so the pullets may bcßin laying in the Fall. THE production of market eggs has always been the most profitable end of all poultry enterprises In the past, and there is every prospect that this condition will continue for years to come. Anyone who Is producing broilers and roasters must replace his flock every year. This makes his incubation and brooding problems far greater than those of one engaged simply In producing eggs for market. A hen will lay profitably two years, and many of them for three years. Since the greatest profit is in the production of eggs, it is Important that eggs be produced In the greatest quantities when the demand for them is strongest and the prices highest. The time when the egg production is the lowest is from September to Janu ary. v ... In the early Fall months, the hens going through a heavy moult and the majority of the pullets raised on the average farm are not yet ready for heavy laying. As soon as the hens have completed their moult, cold weather begins to have a serious effect on egg produc tion. In fact, even in February and March, when the production has In creased considerably, sudden changes to cold weather prill lower the egg production materially, and this will raise the price of eggs on the market. Selection of Breed Important In connection with egg production an important thing to consider is the breed best suited for the purpose. It must be a breed that will come to maturity quickly, stand heavy feeding, and go "through the moult quickly and easily. Nonsittlng Is another impor tant factor. The White Leghorn has proven itself to be by far the most economical pro ducer, considered from practically every standoolnt. The Leghorn, how ever, Is not a meat-producing breed, yet many people engaged In egg pro duction realize a nice amount from young cockerels, sold at IV* to 1% pounds, and known as squab broilers. In the early part of the season they bring as -high as forty cents a pound gross. The effect of mating on the produc tion of eggs Is only shown after years of careful breeding. It does not show quickly like an Improvement In color or shape, because the production of eggs is largely a matter of high vital ity and ability to digest large quanti ties of feed. Inrrcase the Average Production In mating for egg production both males and females should be used that come from a strain tha' has been bred for egg production. They should be from a family of heavy egg producers, rather than from any one particular bird that has a high egg record indi vidually. but has no ancestors behind It with a similar record. In other words, instead of breeding up for in dividual records by means of trap nests the most important thing Is to Increase the average production of the entire flock. • It Is better to breed from the hens that have made good average records. Eggs from the hen that has made the highest record, do not usually hatch as well or produce as strong and vigorous chicks as those from hens whose pro duction Is only slightly above the average. The most Important thing in breed ing Is never to use birds that have been sick or stunted in growth. In order to avoid this It Is well to cull out constantly any slow growing youngsters as well as any that are sick, and put them In a pen by them selves or market them, so they will never be used later for breeding stock. Often a slow growing or slow feather ing bird will develop and look prac tically as good as thofce that grow and feather quickly. Yet such a bird Is lacking In stamina, and will produce weakly chicks and females that will vor in many sections as a winter layer. In size, growth, early maturity, and table quality it is equal to the Single Comb White Orpington. Full-grown specimens weight from 8% to 10 pounds for males, and 7 to 8 pounds for females. They have estab lished a reputation for having tender, juicy flesh. They have white skin, legs and beak, and are full breast. Their plumage Is white in all sections, which contrasts sharply with their blood-red combs and wattles and the green of a nice lawn or meadow. This fowl is In good market condi tion at all ages from broiler size to roaster. not show the highest egg production, Begin by Selecting: ERRS Selection becomes an important problem for every poultry grower. It Is not a matter of selecting right at the time the males and females are put together, or "mated up" as it is called, but the selection should be made from the • time the eggs are placed Into the Incubator. Only choice, even eggs should be used. Eggs that show a weak germ on the fourteenth day should be re moved from the machine. All chicks that do not hatch by the twenty-first day should be destroyed, while all the crippled and defective ones should be done away with. It may look as if some of them might be saved, but they are only an incumbrance to the flock and will not give a high enough aver age when it comes to egg production. Many poultry establishments have made the mistake of hatching from all kinds of eggs, keeping all the chicks that are hatched, and afterward breeding from them indiscriminately. If the percentage of weakly chicks is heavy and the poultry raiser wishes to convince himself that it will not pay to keep these weaklings, he should keep the healthy and weakly birds separately and then give both groups the same treatment and feed. He will soon find that the heavier death rate will be among the weakly chicks and by far the larger proportion of culls will come out of this weak group. He will find later on, too, that the pullets that come o\it of the weak group will not begin to lay as early as the others, nor will they make as good an average egg production throughout the year. They will also lay a larger percentage of small eggs that will not bring as high a price in the market. In some communities any egg is an egg, without regard to size, but the choicest markets are now dividing eggs into No. 1 and No. 2. No. 1 must weigh 26 ounces or more to the dozen to meet the requirement. Early Hatching Important Early hatching is important for two reasons: The pullets will begin to lay in the early Fall and lay through the winter, while the pullets that are hatched late In the season will not begin to lay, sometimes, until well into the winter, and this will hold the egg production The secorid reason Is that a pullet down. lays small eggs at first, and when hatched early In the season will lay all her small eggs and begin to lay her large eggs when the market is high. If she does not start to lay un til January the majority of eggs will n© small and will not bring as much on the market. She will not begin to lay large eggs until after the price has considerably depreciated. It is also contended that the early hatched pullet will make a better yearling layer than the late one, be cause the late one does not seem to have as much size and vitality. The terms "early" and "late" are relative, ana what would be early in one local ity. would be late in another. For a climate such as New Jersey the fif teenth of March is early enough, ivhile the 15th of May is beginning a little late. Perhaps tjie ideal time would be from the first to fifteenth of April In this latitude, White Leghorns that are hatched as early as March fif teenth are inclined to go through a light moult of wind and neck feathers, and this has the effect of stopping their egg production for the rest of the year. Preparing Poultry For the Market Dr. T. J. Clemens will tell next week how to care for and feed poultry for the market. He will explain 'how to secure the most rapid gains in weight at least ex pense, and how to put the birds in condition to bring top prices. Dr. Clemens will tell how to con duct pen feeding and crate feed ing and give suggestion for rations. Watch for his article exclusively in the Telegraph next Saturday. V .i DR. CHASE'S Blood and Nerve Tablets Fill the shriveled arteries with pure, rich blood. Increase the weight in solid flesh and muscle that give you strength, the brain and Jierves with fresh vital fluid that force new life and vigor into every part of the body. WEIGH YOURSELF BEFORE TAXING Price 60 cents; Special Strength 75 centa. Dr. Chan Co., 224 N. 10th St.. Philadelphia. Pa, fCHAS. H. MAUR THE UNDERTAKER Sixth sad Its Dear Street* Larieet Baet (edlltlee. Near (• rou .. jroer phone. Wn l to Mr*here a* roar call Motor service. No fmseral too SJBSIL Nose tea expensive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc. Mad wife AUGUST 28, 1915. Let us make it as strong as we can: Fels-Naptha is not like any other soap. No other soap ever made, whether you call it hot-water or cold-water It's the naptha combined with other harmless cleansers that loosens the dirt and dis solves the grease and does what hard rubbing and boiling take twice as long to do. Just as wonderful for all household cleaning. Simplex Contact System Now Used by a Big Firm The American Steel and Wire Com pany has placed an order with the George T. I.add Company, Farmers Bank Building, Pittsburgh, to install and equip approximately 1,270 feet of their crude ore trestle track at the Donora Zinc Works, Donora, Pa., with the Simplex Surface Contact System. The George T. Ladd Company are sales representatives for the Simplex Construction Company, Union Trust Building, this city. The Simplex system is being rapidly recognized by mill and coal mining op erators as the most practical and suc cessful system of electric haulage, re quiring no third rail, overhead trolley or storage battery, and insuring abso lute safety to the employes. The trans mission wires are placed underground, enclosed In conduit, and thoroughly in sulated from the switch board of the generating plant to the terminus of the line, so they cannot shock or maim the employes, short circuit, ground or effect any other machine in the plant, insuring to the user the highest, most economic and safest electric transmis sion known to-day. Current is sup plied to the moving locomotive or car from the condulted feeder cable by means of a contact box. made of a heavy reinforced insulating material, lagholted to the ties In the center of the roadway, and spaced sufficiently close to one another that a locomotive passing along always has at least one The Concrete Silo Is I Cheapest.by the Year Build your silo of concrete, and you will save the cost and trouble of 1 ° I constant repairs. A concrete ailo will not burn, rust, shrink, burst, v ■** crumble, or blow over. It is smooth, sightly, air-tight, and leak-proof. fILFHfI'pgCEMENT makes everlasting silos that grow harder and stronger with age. ALPHA I is made of the purest materials, mixed, burned and ground with unusual cars, and tested every hour. jMBHJN ' H We sell ALPHA because we know its strength and binding-power. You take a risk when you buy cement not guaranteed for strength, but you are sure of satisfactory results when you use ALPHA Portland Cement. Come in and get ALPHA for the jjrcl improvements that you are planning. COWDEN & CO., 9th and Herr Streets, Harrisburg JOSEPH BURKHOLDER, Hummel.town GEORGE S. PETERS. P.lmrra H. R. DURBOROW, High«pire MUTH BROS., Eliz«b«thtown SAMUEL DULL, New Cumberland J. W. MILLER, Mechanicaburc WEST SHORE SUPPLY CO.. W«I F.IRRIEW A. J. SPOTTS. C.rIUU S. E. SHENK. New*ill* I Avoid Future Waste ji Think of the many dollars you have spent for which i£ you have received no good return and consider how | I ' much money you would now have if these dollars had ! been deposited at 3% interest in our Savings Depart f ment. Open an account now, and avoid future waste. De | | | Buy Coal Now—Cheapest ! This Is the month to order next winter's supply of coal. Thera's ! a material saving to be affected, and the wise folk are taking advantage ; of present low prices. Buy before the advance oomes, and buy Mont- ; | gomery coal thus Insuring the moat quality for your money. J. B. MONTGOMERY ; Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets contact box directly beneath It. Sus pended beneath the locomotive is an electric shoe of such length that it reaches from one box to another. This shoe conveys the current from the tops of the boxes to the motors of the mov ing locomotive. A switch in each box, held magnetically closed, is operated by a magnetic device carried on the loco motive, so it is only in the closed or alive condition directly beneath the lo comotive, and as the locomotive passes off the contact, the switch, which is en cased In a dust-proof and water-proof aperture within the box, is rendered lifeless and the electrical currerft is cut off, permitting walking over or touch ing the boxes with perfect safety. The tracks equipped with this sys tem can be run in and out of doors, around corners and in corners where it would otherwise be impossible to operate an electric locomotive, under many industrial conditions. Other re cent installations of this system are at the plants of the Wheeling Steel and Iron Company, Bethlehem Steel Com pany Logan Iron and Steel Company, Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company. FORMER HARRISBURGER IS CHARGED WITH STABBING Reading, Pa., Aug. 28. —Fred Ceim mings, son of A. B. Commings. for merly of Harrisburg, was arrested here late yesterday, charged with stabbing Frank Hain, a salesman, during a quarrel In front of the Windsor Hotel, of which Cornmings is proprietor. Hain is in the Homeopathic Hospital in a serious condition.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers