tttW>%WW>tV»HIu .T here uot *lonr brrauac prices srr lonrrr, but because qualities are bF<Icr4MMW«W*M«Mr | i: Surprising Reductions in Millinery Prices j I For Monday Only ii Untrimmed Velvet Hats, all of exceptional quality in a wide and attractive assort i i ment of the newest styles, including it LARGE SAILORS—TRICORNES—PURITANS—POKES—TURBANS—ETC. ii Prices are for Monday only—visit this greatest one-day Millinery Sale of the season. ii $1 to $1.50 Actual Values $2.50 &$3 Actual Values $2.00 Actual Values i i One lot of odd hats. O £ Lyons' Black Silk Velvet Lyons' Black Silk Velvet j; Monda y price \ choice ' and Hatter's Plush Hats, all of a „ q{ the Utest es SI.OO Actual Values || Black Silk Velvet Hats, all P nce tPXcXV |! of the latest shapes. D ______________________ !; Monday price ••• • $1.50 Actual Values I _ . $1.25 to $1.50 Actual French Felt Hats , inElsie Irimmmgs ir | Moore and large Sailor Shapes. , , .. . . Values Monday Q Q 0 doZCn lateSt Novelt,es <! Black Silk Velvet Hats, all of price OOC in Ostrich Fancies. Flowers, * the latest shapes. /JQ Fur. Gold and Silver, etc., j| Monday price D%/C 50c to SI.OO actual values. CQ cn~TT i~V 1 s2 * so ActUal Va ' UeS Monday price. $3.50 Actual Values Velour Hats in black and | Imported black Velour Hats, colors, large assortment. j Monday CC Monday "1 O C ! price *J) 1• # O price *J) A ———————— SOUTTER'S lcto2scDepartmentStore j! WHERE EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY. x2mn6Sx 215 Market St. Opp. Courthouse SECOND REFORMED MUSIC The music at tbe Second Reformed Church for Sunday is a.* follows: Morning—Prelude and Fugue, Bach: soprano solo. "Open the Gates of thCj Temple," Knapp. Mrs. Ada Culp Bow man: anthem. "Sweet the Moments j Rich in Blessing." Reichardt: post-1 lude. "Triumphal March." Costa. ' Evening—Prelude, (at Ave Maria. (b> i "There Is a Green Hill Far Away," | Gounod: contralto and tenor duet. I "Come I.'nto Me." Miss Ethel Henry 1 and R. Zarker; antliem. "Praise Ye the Father." Gounod; postlude, "March Sollenelle.'' Gounod. ' m i I It Pays to j KNOW To make money with I poultry, you have got to t 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 1. C. S. "I made several attempts to establish a poultry business ; but it was not until I had learned the principle* contained in the I. C. S. Coarse in Poultry Farming that / was able to meet with any de gree of success," writes C. M. Burr, Meshoppen, Pa. "1 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, how 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 Box las " SCRANTON, PA. I Explain, without any obligation on my part, howl I can qualify for thepoeitioa before which I mark X: | | - Poultry Farming QMachcn. Engineering ■ I. Poultry Breeding □ Mechan leal Drafting I - General Farming LJAutombile Running ■ I - Soil Improvement _JGaa Engines - rrult and Vegetable _j*;atJeeery Engla»»rlaff I _ I 4»» £t»«k sad Dairying J FJectrlra I Fnginrrring | I. Civil Service Jfaetrl# L»fht r a RaU«'yt I « Bookkeeping iJCivll Engineering J : I _ Sinography .^Salesmanship _ Building Contracting 1 Ndvertiaing LjHaettac Teat, k Plaa'g LJ Window Trimming ■ | Name a I ' I Present Employer | | Street and No. __________ j ■ City State J SATURDAY EVENING, STATEFUNDSDROP WITH DULL THUD iGeneral Fund at End of Sep | tembcr H;id More Than Total Balances Today State treasury disbursements ran ahead of the receipts aguin during the month oi October, the statement of the business for the month showing a further decline as compared with the statements at the end of Sep tember and <if August. The cash re ported on hand nmounts to only $3,- •<65.161.31 in ail funds, the lowest in years. The detail of the statement shows: Receipts—General fund, $3,117,- 904.35; school fund. $3,299.98; motor license fund, $23,102; game fund. $..98: bounij fund, $10,497.45; State fire insurance fund. $75.91; total. $3- 155.477.69. Disbursements—General fund. $3,- 903,941.12; game fund, J12.549.98; bound fund. $2,453; total, $3,919,- 244.10. • Balances—General fund, $2,305,- 070.65; sinking fund. $651,1 10.02; school fund, uninvested, $23,948.72; game fund, $500,276.90; bounty fund, $11,000.40; State lire insurance fund, $173,754.62; total, $3,665,161.31. Balance at end of September, $4.- 428,927.72. of which $3,068,005.42 1 was in the general fund alone. NO CHANGE OF POLICY By Associated Press London, Oct. 30.—The Times to-day publishes the following statement from Premier Briand, head of the new French cabinet. "I desire to declare emphatically to our allies as well as to our enemies that the change in the. ministry is In no way a sign of change of policy. The policy of France is summed up in the word "victory." " SMIITH WILL FILED .j The will of Sarah Jane Smith, late of this city, was tiled for probating | with Register Danner this morning. IThe Dauphin Deposit Trust Company ! is made executor. Everlast i ng ! Walks Concrete keeps you out of mud and slush. Concrete B \s alks, steps and porcli floors are even, clean, attractive. FHey i 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 nsk using either inferior cement or sand. ALPHA is a superior i grade of Portland Cement that makes everlasting concrete work. It is I ' 'Vrll • loa T ,y w hile being made; y° U can depend on ever-' ounce being H of full binding strength. ALPHA always gives* satisfaction. Call on us for more information about concrete work. We will give M you a copy of the large, illustrated book. "ALPHA Cement—How to Use It, which tells how to make floors, steps, walks, driveways, foundations, N and scores of other permanent improvements with ALPHA, thr Guaran teed Portland Cement. ICOWDEN A CO., 9th and Herr Streets, Harriaburg JOSEPH BURKHOLDER. HammaUtown GEORGE S. PETERS, Palmyra H. R. DURBOROW, Hifhapirc MUTH BROS., Eliz.bcthtowa IAMUEL DULL, N.w Cambariand J. W. MILLER, M.ch.nic.burx •TEST SHORE SUPPLY CO.. Wast Fairview A. J. SPOTTS, C»rli.U Try Telegraph Want Ads I. ALLAN LINER WAS SUNK BY TORPEDO I*. S. Naval Experts Say Frag ment Found on Board Was Not Part of Miue By Associated I'ress Washington. Oct. 30.—Secretary Lansing announced to-dav that the N'avv Department had definitely es tablished the fact that the fragment of the engine of war which sank the Allan liner Hesperian was a part of a torpedo. The German government has persistently denied that the Hes perian was torpedoed. In the opinion of United States naval experts the fragment could not have been a part of a marine mine. APPOINT VIEWERS Paul G. Smith. Clark E. Cowden and Harry Fahnestock were to-day ap pointed a board of viewers to assess damages and benefits, if any, incident to the opening and grading of Seven teenth street, from Herr street to a point 220 feet north of Verbeke street. TO IMPROVE HOUSES Christian \V. Lynch obtained a building permit this morning to build an addition to the two and one-half j story property at 13 South Front ! street, the improvement to cost SI,OOO. David Rogers will remodel a two story dwelling on the north side of ! Woodlawn street 100 feet north of ! Twenty-Sixth street, to the extent of ' READING BOY KILLED BY AUTO Special to The Telegraph Reading, Pa., Oct. 30. Robert Ger j hard. 10 years old. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gerhard, was fatally injured | here last night by being struck by an automobile. FIRE DESTROYS LOCKUP By Special Correspondence : j Mechanicsburg, Pa., Oct. 30.—What's . | believed to have been an incendiary 'lflre about 2.30 o'clock this morning ■destroyed the borough lockup. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ipouixtmneygsi FEEDING OF MASH ! SAVES LABOR FOR ! THE POULTRYMAN I ! By Dr. Thomas J. Clemens Practical Poultryman. Judge anil Lecturer. COPYRIGHT, 1915. Increasing: egg production in winter, when prices arc high, is one of the biggest problems with wliicb tiie ami i teur poultryman lias to contend. In | this article Dr. Clemens shes some valuable pointers for overcoming this ; (lifTiculty by mash feedhi". and tells | why the dry mash is better than the i wet. WHEN* poultrymen introduced mash feeding as a regular ra tion. It not only relieved them of a great deal of the labor of feed ing, but it also enabled them to con siderably increase their output of eggs. In fact, mush feeding practi cally revolutionized the poultry indus try. Winter egg production has al ways been and is to-day the stumbling block of many amateurs. Thousands of birds have been idle during the months when eggs were bringing the highest prices, notwithstanding the fact that they were quartered in com fortable and sanitary houses. The mash feeding method has slmplilied this problem, and to-day anyone may get good results by employing this method and using common sense. The proper feeding of fowls is a matter that requires good judgment. The most careful balancing of rations is of little avail, unless good judgment is used in administering them. It ' s possible to lay down some rules and to mention the proper ingredients, hut the feeding itself is not, and never can be, a mechanical matter. The feeder who keeps in touch with his fowls, watching their feeding, study ing their needs »nil their behavior, ob serving carefully the manner in which they respond to their treatment, can i get results that are obtainable in no other way. Individual consumption varies from meal to meal, and from day to day. and is noted only by the close observer. Slash feeding not only effects a great saving in labor—in downright hard work —but it gives excellent re sults in health of the flock, and in the yield of eggs. It relieves the poultryman of considerable anxiety as to whether the fowls are being fed ac cording to their likes or dislikes. Some poultryrnen offer the objection that this method of feeding is likely to cause the fowls to overeat, get lazy and take too little exercise to keep in a healthy condition. This objection brings up a~discussion of the subject of Dry Mash vs. Wet Mash feeding. Wet Ma.-ih Feeding Wet mash or cooked mash consists of preparing a mash or dough of mixed meals; in summer cold water and in winter hot water Is used in pre paring the mash. The ingredients are mixed thoroughly, until the mass Is crumbly and not a wet or moist "dough." Frequently cooked vege tables are boiled until soft and then mashed: the liquid is drawn off these boiled vegetables and used instead of plain water with the ground meals, often cut or ground alfalfa which has been steeeped In boiling water is used as the basis for this mash. This wet or cooked mash is fed to the fowls the tirst thing in the morn ing. In warm weather, when there is no danger of the temperature drop ping below freezing during the night, this Irish may be put in the feeding trout after dark. Then it is ready for the birds as soon as they come off the roosts in the morning. It is nec essary to feed wet mash in troughs and these feeding troughs must be kept scrupulously clean. They should be cleaned and hung up in the sun to dry after the fowls have finished feeding. All this means hard work and it has to be done every day—seven days a week and fifty-two weeks every year. Cooking and mixing the masli, feeding it in troughs, cleaning and drying the troughs involve hard work that must be done thoroughly in order to get the best results. Mash must be fed within a reasonably short time after it is prepared. Otherwise there is danger of fermentation, which Is likely to cause trouble. r \ Improving the Quality of Table Poultry In next week's issue Prof. W. G. Krum. Poultry Husbandman, Cor nell University, Ithaca, New York, will describe special methods of fattening fowls for home and mar ket and will give rules for grading carcasses. The illustration by Louis Paul Graham will be of Buff Cochins. • Deaths and Funerals MllS. W. S. FILLING DIES Mrs. Wilhelminu S. Filling, aged 61, wife of William H. Filling, a well known retired passenger engineer on the Middle division of the Pennsyl vania railroad, died last night at her home. 1408 North Sixth street. She is survived by her husband, two sons and one daughter, William H. Jr., Harry J. and Mrs. Jose'ph W. Gross. Funeral services will be held at the home Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock, conducted by the Rev. Henry W. A. Hanson, pastor of Messiah Lutheran Church. Burial will be made at East Harrisburg Cemetery. JOHN HOOPES DIES John Sherman Hoopes, aged 29, dieu this morning at his home, 1631 Keglna street, after a lingering illness. He is survived by his wife and one. child. Private funeral services will be held at his home Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, the Rev. A. E. Hangen, pas tor of Park Street United Evangelical Church, officiating. Burial will be made at East Harrisburg Cemetery. MRS. MISAVIU I*. KIESTEK DIES Special to The Telegraph New Cumberland, Pa.. Oct. .'!0. Mrs. Misauri Prowell Kiester. died at her home in Fourth street last evening at 9.40 o'clock after a long illness. She came to New Cumberland many years ago. She is survived by two sons, Edwin, of Harrisburg, and Wil liam. of New Cumberland, and a daugh ter, Nellie, also of New Cumberland. Funeral services will »e held at the home on Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock, conducted by the Rev. J. V. Adams, pastor of Baughman Memorial Metho dist Church. Burial will be made in Mi. Olivet Cemetery. RUSSIANS SAli FOB BULGARIA By Associated Press Copenhagen, Oct. 30, via London, 11.53 A. M. Large contingents of Russian troops have set sail from the Black sea ports of Odessa and Sebas topol for the Bulgarian coast, the Ber lin Tageblatt" says. I Lifting the Standards Of Storekeeping fr Ir j ANY of our fathers and mothers and grandparents i A remember when store-keeping had its mysteries and J 4 M shopping was an adventure. 19 j' But those were the "Buyer Beware" days. 711 With the passing of secret price marks and other anti . JL i quated methods, that period has almost deserted mem- XT //T ry an d Honor in storekeeping prevails generally. a)' ~ i Keeping store is becoming more and more a study of scientific application. i * Progressive merchants all over the country are striv ing to know the needs of Humanity and serve it properly. To extend greater opportunities to em ployes is their universal code, and by such action, benefit the public in an indirect way. It is generally admitted that storekeeping has. in the last few years, made the greatest stride in the uplift ment of standards. To possess the most modern store is a worthy aim. JSjotvmanZ ! CAI.L 1901—AMY I'HONH POIMIKD IS7I Phelps Now Advertising Manager of Dodge Brothers George C. Hubbs, assistant general sales manager of Dodge Brothers, Just before leaving on a business trip to the Pacific Coast, announced the appoint ment of George 11. Phclos as director of advertising. For the past ye:ir Mr. Phelps has been assistant to Sir. Hubbs, who has tilled the position of both assistant general sales manager and director of advertising. His duties as chief assistant to A. I. Philp, general sales manager, have made such demands on his time that the greater part of the work of the advertising department has devolved on Mr. Phelps. Bids For Erection of Lyme St. Bridge Opened W. H. Murphy & Sons likely will be awarded the contract for the con struction of a re-inforced concrete bridge over Paxton creek, at Lyme street, immediately north of Market, that firm having submitted the lowest bids of. the tive proposals opened at noon to-day by Highway Commis sioner William H. Lynch. The bids were as follows: W. H. Murphy & Sons. $645; G. W. Ensign. $992: Ferro Concrete Company, $978; Whittaker & Diehl, $1189; Henry Op perman, $1023. Allison Hill Firemen Leave For Spring City Accompanied by members of the City Council, and other prominent res idents of the city, nearly a hundred members of the Allison Hill Fire com pany left for Spring City this after noon. They will be the guests of the Liberty company over the Sabbath. Prior to leaving this city on a special train the firemen paraded over the principal streets of the city, head ed by a band. t Serbs' Position Becomes More Desperate Daily London. Oct. 30, 11.46 A. M.—The j position of Serbia is becoming more desperate daily. Nish is threatened ' by the Bulgarians while the Austrians 'and Germans are gradually opening the way toward the great Serbian 'arsenal at Kraguyevatz. Rome re i ports that the Serbian capital has ! been removed "to a certain point." Peabody Pays Tribute to School Fire Victims Peabody, Mass., Oct. 30.—This busy manufacturing town hushed its ma chinery to-day to pay a silent tribute to the memory of the twenty-one little girls who lost their lives in the fire which destroyed the St. John's Paro chial School Thursday. I>K PALM A MAKES NEW RECORD New York, Oct. 30. —What is said to be the fastest speed ever made on a track was attained here yesterday over the Sheepshead Bay Speedway where Ralph De Palma drove his car one lap in one minute. 2 4-10 seconds, an average of about 116 miles an hour. This time eclipses the best American record average of 111 miles, made by Barney Oldtield at Chicago. $350,000 FIRE IN MAINE By Associated Press Middeford. Me.. Oct. 30.—A loss es timated at approximately $350,000 was caused by tire which swept through half of the large store house of the Pepperell Manufacturing Company easrly to-day, destroying several thou sand bales of raw cotton and much of the finished product. BRUNO LANGER KILLED By Associated Prest London, Oct. 30.- —A dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company from Copenhagen says a report has been re ceived there from Berlin that the Ger man aviator, Bruno Langer, who had several world's records to his credit, had been shot down and killed while flying over the western frontier. WARN AGAINST SOLICITORS Large cards warning members of the Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce against solicitors, will be mailed Mon day OCTOBER 30, 1915. W. c. T. I'. MEETING Special to The Telegraph Penbrook, Pa., Oct. 30.—T0-morrow afternoon Penbrook W. T. IT. will meet in the Reformed Church, with Mrs. Frank Zeiderti presiding. Mrs. u. 13. Houston will make report as dele gate to the State convention at York. I mmmmmmA Trial Package FreeaHnaa JhtHen thalLaysis Dr. Hess Poultry I Ml m Pan-a-ce-a /' i ai >y °* 'hese Dealers rfh&\ We want Vou to go to the nearest dealer named I ['ayinff \ below and get a trial package of Pan-a-ce-a. H 1 time of year your hens need a tonic to I J Jhelp them over the weakening effects of moult- I ' nc anc ' K et them started laying regularly. I- '."w Dr. Hess Poultry Pan-a-ce-a is the finest tonic you can I ® ct to on< "" on Vour Hens —Help Xtiem Lay. H It makes thcra vigorous and hardy— tones iit> (he dormant I T . | T T2r etc organs and keeps hens cackling The trial package is I Mark Jit til ' ret " your nearest dtuiirr bolow. w " f "' d DR . HESS & CLARK, Astiland. Ohio 0 Get your package from any of the following dealen: IlliirrtMlMirg —Walter S. Schell, 107-1> Market St.; Holinoa Seed Co., I 119 South Second St.: C. F. Krainor, Third and Hroad Sts. Pen- ■ Irrook—Geo. H. Ilaverstick, 25fiy-71 Main St. Went Knlrvlen—H. W.M Neldlg. Enolu—J. R. Harkinson. Uhrrlin—G. A. Stengle. White! nil i in .1 "■■■ £1 On Saturday, Nov. 6 j I will sell at Public Sale at Elizabethtown, Pa., 1000 head of I White Leghorn pullets; some of these pullets are now laying | ind arc all in fine condition. Starlight Poultry Farm, Elizabethtown, Pa. M. E. MNDEMIiTH, PROP. Trees Grow Faster |f/ in Blasted Holes JSjSSf/ Trees planted in blasted holes averaged 1207 inches new ttSZZI NXV/ growth the first year; trees in spade-dug holes grew only \SSf/555 inches, the New Jersey Experiment Station found. YouWJgo sSaf/get bearing orchards two years sooner and have bigger, thriftier, Vy/stronger-rooted trees when you plant them in holes blasted withllKj 3/ Atlas Farm Powder. \k 7/ VE If Iks Original turn Puder 11 9LIA small charge digs the hole and Atlas Farm Powder is made espe- Hi* breaks up the subsoil for several cially for farm purposes and is sold W$S feet in every direction, putting it by dealers near you. It is safe, #JN in condition to promote rapid convenient, and most economical £>t\ growth. It costs less than hand- for you to use in planting your digging, and is easy, and effi- trees, blasting stumps and clear- #JN^ cient —docs its work instantl), ing land, digging ditches, etc. fJKSs Send Coupon for "Better Farming" Book FREE SKA! Our valuable new book. ' Better Farming," tella how to regenerate • WSXS old orcharda, how to plant new orcharda most successfully, how f to increase the fertility of the land, and how to do many kinds ffWVs /yygll of work with Atlas Farm Powder. Get it now—mail the coupon. aJKKKK YOK%Sk ATLAS POWDER COMPANY o»r« wilmington,DEL.^KS§§s Krmlachta, Bwtoa, IMZHIU, K*. Or !(•« Twk, rbll»4«lpfcu, SI. Lsula ■ Atlas Powdtr Co., Wilmington, DeL ( \ J . Send me your book,"Better Farmint." Name. * J I may use Atlas Farm Powder for J Addresa J ' We Sell ATLAS FARM POWDER AM) HEfOMMEXD IT TO OI H TRADE. CALL OH WHITE FOR TRICES. RUTHERFORD BROS. UELL PHONE. PAXTAJIO, PA. ALSO COAL, WOOD, LIME, CEMENT ELK MEMORIAL 1)BC. 5 . Klks Memorial Day will be observed Sunday, December 5 by members <>f Harrisburs: Lodge No. 12, l!. P. o. 10. The committee in charge of arrange ments includes Horace A. Segrelbaum, past exalted ruler, chairman; (Jeorso 11. Heed, Laurence !•'. Kreldler, A. W. I Hart man and George W. Deiker. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers