pit Ltafltfi I Are wonderfully free irom pimple*, red- I ness. roughness, and minor blemishes un ■ drr all conditions of exposure. Nothing ■ better for the skin. Samples Free by Mail ■ Cutlcir* Soap and Ointment sold everywhere. H l iberal sample of each mailed free with 32-p. book. ■ Address post-card "Cuticura," Dept. 13G, Boeto*. I'l : ! | General | I I /lartranft making n«.uj I / friend./ con- Uf ytajilly, a.nd h.01d.1110 adl the D ' ! | old out j. A J I 9oU mo/l ■ everywhere. ■ Five- cent/. | j BvAW.W.V.V.SW.VbVW'^AS Stock Transfer :• Ledger ? The Pennsylvania Stock ■! I Transfer Tax Law (act of June J I 4, 1915) which Is now In effect, J ! I requires all corporations In the / ' I State, no matter liow largo or ? j I how small they may be. to keep ! I a Stock Transfer Ledger. We % j I are prepared to supply these f I Ledgers promptly al a very I I nominal price. J I The Telegraph \\ Printing Co. \ Printing—Binding—Designing i Photo Engraving J I HARRISBURG . . p.\. J EUI'CATIOSAL ■School of Commerce Hroup Building 15 So. Market Sq. Day and Night School 2'.!d Year and Stenographic Courses Bell Phone 1946-J ■arrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping. Shorthand, Civil SerTlce Thirtieth Year K9 Market St. Barrisburg, Pa. The ■ffice training school Haufman Bid?. 4 S. Market SQ ■ Training That Secures ■alary Increasing Positions In the Office ■ Call or s*nd to-day for interesting ■loklct. "TLe Art of Getting Alone !■ He World."' Bell phone 694-R. ■umberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Eftect June 27, 1915. leave Harrisburg:— ■ For Winchester and Martlnsbure a» *7:52 a. in.. *3:40 p. in. ■ For Hagerstown, Chambersburg Car lisle. Mechunlcsburg and Intermediate at *5:03, *7:52. *11:63 a. m_ H:4O. 6:37, *7:45, *11:00 p. m. ■ Additional trains for Carlisle and at 9:48 a. m.. 2:16. 3-ia ■ For Dlllsbui g at 5:03. *7:62 and a. in.. 2:16. *3:40. 6:37 and C:3« H m. ■ 'Daily. All other trains daily excent ■inday H. A. RIDDLE. ■j. H. TONCE. q. p. Lf CHAS. H.MAUK HM THE 1L UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kelker strrcti establishment. Best facilities < ■ear to you as your phone. Will go' ■ ywliere at your call. Motor service K| funeral too small. None too expen-' Chapels, rooms, vault, etc.. used charge. BKAOQVARTERS FOB 1 ISHIRTS ■ Sim.fr & ■Dr. H. Hershey Famsler Hias removed his office from j ■1463 Market street to 1438 MARKET STREET Want Ads SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 5, 1916. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania I .ingles town. Miss Alice Mountz died yesterday at the home of William Clay. Funeral Tuesday morning from Sandy Hollow church. Lewisbcrry. Philip Bai»nes, a Civil War veteran, who has been blind for many years died here yesterday, aged 78. One son, F. G. Barnes, of York, and a daughter. Mrs. Carrie Slotliower, of Harrisburg survive. Social and Personal News of Towns Along West Shore Miss Edith Sadler of Altoona. was j the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Miller at New Cumberland this week. Mrs. W. A. Cookerly entertained the Sunshine Workers' Class of Trinity I United Brethren Church at her home in Reno street. New Cumberland this afternoon. WOMAN FOUND DEAD Special to the Telegraph Hagerstown. Md., Feb. 5. Miss A. Savilla Welty, aged 65 years, was found dead at her home al Fairplay. WII.I. Bl'Y FIRE ENGINE Special to the Telegraph Xewville. Pa.. Feb. 5. Borough council last evening decided to pur chase n La France fire engine at a cost not to exceed $5,800. BARN BURNED Elizabethville. Pa.. Feb. 5. A l large barn on the farm occupied by 1 Mark T. Davis, in Upper Powl's Valley ! was burned to the ground Thursday. OLD FOLKS NEED "CASCARETS" FOR LIVER, BOWELS I Salts, calomel, pills act on bowels ; like pepper acts in nostrils. Enjoy life! Don't stay bilious, sick, headachy and constipated. u - iffil I Most old people must give to the bowels some regular help, else they suffer from constipation. The condi- ! tion is perfectly natural. It is just as natural as it is for old people to 1 walk slowly. For age is never so active as youth. The muscles are less elastic. And the bowels are muscles. So all old people need Cascarets. One might as well refuse to aid weak eyes with glasses as to neglect this gentle aid to weak bowels. The bowels must be kept active. This is im portant at all ages, but never so much i as at sfty. Age is not a time for harsh phy sics. Youth may occasionally whip ! the bowels into activity. But a lash can't be used every day. What the bowels of the old need is a gentle and natural tonic. One that can be constantly used without harm. The only such tonic is Cascarets, and they cost only 10 cents per box at any drug store.—Advertisement. Medicated Smoke Drives Out Catarrh Simply Write a Post Card to Address Below. Dr. Blosser, who has devoted forty years to the treatment of Catarrh. Is the originator of a certain combination of medical herbs, flowers and berries to be smoked In a \ pipe or ready Bm —' 1 prepared cigar- W Cm ~w ' \ ette. The emoke- QrC. jC-' va /-—v- 1 \ vapor reaches VV |/M/( all the alr Pass is. l/trri \ a ß es of the head. ■ nose and throat. 1 As the dis ease is carried Into ' th ft? e ti pa ( sa ? es 1\ breathe, so 'the • antiseptic, heal _ , . , ing vapor of this Remedy is carried with the breath di rectly to the affected parts. This simple, practical method ap plies the medicine where sprays I douches, ointments, etc., cannot pos sibly go. Its effect is soothing and ' healing, and Is entirely harmless, con taining no tobacco or habit forming drugs It is pleasant to use. and not sickening to those who have never smoked. No matter how severe or lonir standing your case may be. we want to i show you what our Remedy will do i To prove the beneficial, pleasant 'ef- I feet. The Blosser Company. 650 Walton St.. Atlanta. (ia„ will mail absolute"? j vertfy°thel 3 r SffiSTl the° Remedy" tor^'" 8 U ««"• ° f smoking and also some of our ' jjJi |<J*i i medical cigar- I ettes. If you ,/"Vry' | wish to continue' )l t the treatment, itV i Xf x | will cost onlyf* j one dollar for a s ; month's supply ( (M \ l for the pipe, or j a box containing X]K one hundred l cigarettes. We pay postage. If you are a sufferer from Catarrh, Asthma, Catarrhal Deafness, or if sub ject to frequent colds, send your name S and address at once by postal card or I letter for the free package, and a copy j of our illustrated booklet. Cenuine Barron strain of S. C. W. Leghorns. This is only the second gen eration from the Imported stock. We won at Allentown in hot competition. Won at Harrisburg this year first pen. Stock, eggs and baby chicks for sale ! in season. LOUIS LIBRANDI i 22 £. Hick St., Mlddletown, Pa. | iPQULTßy^nevesi Precaution the Best Way to Avoid Sickness in Poultry RED PILE GAME BANTAMS COPYRIGHT 1916 Almost from the beginning of poul try culture, there have been fanciers who sought to establish breeds of Bantams, modeled on the shape and type of the larger or standard va rieties of fowls. The game fowl at one time was the most popular fowl in England, hence it is natural that bantams of this fowl be among the first originated. Sixty years ago the Game Bantam was short-legged, loose feathered, carried a big spread tail and long drooping wings; which paralleled the standard Games of that time. About 1552 the first Game Bantams of good quality were reported, and by 1567 considerable progress was shown, un til now we have now even better quality in the Bantams than in the larger Games. They have been brought to a high state of develop ment in England, and many of the best specimens have been imported by American Breeders. This imported Select Breeders Which Are Physically Perfect and Free From the Taint of an Earlier Disease Hatching, Brooding, Feed ing and Housing All Influ ence Future Welfare of the Flock By H. L. Goodwin. Fancier and Well-known Breeder COPYRIGHT, 1916 A knowledge of how to avoid sick ness in poultry is one of the most valuable assets the poultryman can have: and. yet it Is. after all, a very simple matter. Only tliree things arc necessary to produce and maintain this highly desirable condition, and these three things arc pro|)er breed ing. proper t«re and proper feeding. WITHOUT a good foundation no man would expect to build any thing of great value. The health and strength of a flock of poultry depend very largely upon its founda tion. In breeding or selecting the stock from which to build up a flock the greatest care should be taken to start your strain from a line of ances tors which have been physically per fect and free front illness of any kind. Like breeds like, and with strong ancestors there is no difficulty in rais ing a flock of strong young birds. Filth breeds disease, and the greatest care to avoid tilth is necessary even from the time the hen is set or the incubator is started. If one is buying his foundation stock, whether young birds or old ones, it is wise to be pretty sure there are no germs of disease lurking near, and great care should be used in mak ing your selection. If all is clean about the place where the birds you are looking at are kept, the chances are that it is a good place to buy; but if there are signs of filth every where it is better to be cautious, for where there is filth there is pretty sure to be disease. Disease germs do not often pene trate the oviduct and a fresh laid egg is usually free from them, though germs may be acquired under a hen in a very short time. Eggs rubbed With a dampened cloth dipped in alcohol will be absolutely free from germs, and if then placed in a clean incu bator or In a clean nest under a hen that is free from lice and mites will hatch chicks that are free from dis eases of any kind, for inherited dis eases are rare and can be absolutely avoided by never using for breeding purposes hens that have ever shown signs of sickness. Feeding Governs Future Conditions In the first days of the chick s life, even if they have been hatched under the perfect conditions just described, there are two great dangers—that they will be overfed and that they will be come chilled —either of which is likely to prove disastrous. Although over feeding is not as dangerous as chill ing. either is likely to lead quickly to white diarrhoea, and the two condi tions combined is likely to result fa tally to the entire flock, or at least the greater part of it. But this does not make it necessary to keep the lit tle birds too warm or to starve them; there Is a happy medium both as the feeding and protecting them from | cold, which is not difficult to reach 'if one uses judgment and care. A I little food often, removed before it j can become filthy or sour, water so i arranged that they cannot get into it and scatter it about, getting it on themselves or the litter; coarse sand or fine grit for the digestive organs, a uniform temperature of 70 degrees or thereabouts, and the little fellows have all they need to make them thrive and grow. It is not the purpose of this article to deal with the feeding of poultry, but it may be said that proper feed ing is of Ihe utmost importance. This means that the birds should at all times have a balanced ration suited to their age and condition. With young chickens in particular it is necessary that they have everything they need and nothing more, for they will often eat all they can get, whether they need it or not. Tt is quite important that all food, either animai or vegetable, which has soured or become putrid, be kept away from them, and, indeed i stock has been most successfully han l died, and there is a specialty club — The American Game and Game Ban tam Club—devoting Its attention to the development and extension of the breeding of Game Bantams. • They are exclusively a fancier's fowl, for the eggs and carcasses are not salable on account of their small size. They require but little space and small expense for feed, however, and make excellent pets for the boy or ; girl. The Red Pile Game Bantam is one of the handsomest variety of the breed. The color of the male is white, excepting the head, neck, hack, top of wings and secondary flight feathers, which are red. The female is white, excepting the breast, which is salmon red and the neck, where every feather is edged with lemon color. The legs, feet and beak of both are yellow. from hens at all ages—or disastrous results are quite likely to follow. Plenty of fresh water at all times is also essential to health. So are grit, shell and beef scraps. Fine charcoal in the dry mash is a great health pre server and the hens like it and will use It In the proper quantity if given the opportunity. It should not be given the little chicks before thev are four weeks old, but after that a'little will be good for them. If the young chicks are given milk it should be so fed that they cannot get into it or scatter it about, for dampness from milk is as bad as from water, and must be avoided. Filth the; Greatest Monaco to Health A good many people get into the habit of putting off until to-morrow many of the things that ought to have been done to-day. This will not do at all in the care of poultry. It is work to take care of a successful flock of poultry, even if it is a small flock, and it is work every day in the vear. '»ne day or one week of neglect will >ndo the work of a week or a vear. There are no vacations on the "one man poultry plant. All the many necessary steps must be taken every day, or some sort of disease or para site. which is just as bad, will appear, rhere must be dropping boards under the roosts, and these must he cleaned off every day. The roosts must be fre quently washed with a good disinfec n?. nt ~l kerosene is as S° od as anything. Ine deep litter must he stirred up e\er> day and. removed as often as it shows the slightest signs of filth or dampness, and new litter thrown in its place. The litter question is of more than ordinary importance, for It is verv necessary that the hens he kept active, especially in winter when thev are kept in close confinement. The grain should be buried deep in the clean lit ter so that they will have to dig for it and dig deep. The hens will get fat and lazy and will not lay unless thev have to work for their food. In no other way can they be induced to ex ercise. Without this incentive some times they will stand still and freeze rather than move about. Plontv of Sunlight and Air Necessary A good many poultryhouses are e " tlreI >' wrong principles, notwithstanding the enlightenment resulting from the extensive investi gations of recent years. Every poul trynouse should face as nearly south as circumstances will permit, and should never face the west or the H 0 , 1 ?,. Thls is Particularly true in cold climates, of course. The impor tance of sunlight and fresh air can not be overestimated, nor can the danger from drafts, which produce colds and eventually roup, and must be avoided at all cost. It is abso lutely essential that the houses be so situated that they will get the early morning sun In every nook and cor ner, which means they must have large windows and many of them, and these should remain open at all times except in extreme weather. With no openings on the north or west, how ever, houses can be so arranged that windows may be left open even In blustering weather without any drafts reaching the hens. The best way to ventilate a house has been demonstrated to be by the mmmmmmmm hto GET FERTILE EGGS IhtHtn " la ' ays ** Ak Your hens and male blrdi should be in the pink of ihnt condition, then you get healthy, fertile esgs for p'jyj jv / ' vjfs.' 1 hatching. It will pay you to give them a course of jft /; Jf DR. HESS Jtm POULTRY PAN A CE A 1 rtfh* now. Pan-a-«e-a le not * stimulant, but contains Nux I Vomica and Quaatle, the best tonles known to sdenco. It pro- Of ' -f M duces appetite, promotes digestion, makes hens lay. Pan-a-ce-a v / also contains Iron for the blood, internal antiseptics that destroy J disease germ a that may be lurking In the system. It assures a healthy, (r s,n K in ** Paying poultry flock. IS lbs., 2!»c; & lbs., «0c; 25-lb. pall, ■ * 2 ' S t' QnA * ANTttD ' Bo, d by most first-clsss poultry and seed stores. piWjf DR. HESS INSTANT LOUSE KILLER I ■ Rev'd kills lice on poultry. Sprtnkle It in the dust bath every other week and the ■ * M hen * wlll do the re,t * GCAJUKTitr.D. 1 lb. can. »sc; »-lb. can, —c. mm dfp 0 * DR. HESS A CLARK. AshUx>4. Ohio ■■■■■■■■■■ j The Telegraph Bindery j Will Rebind Yeur Bible Satisfactorily j \ j Flexibility NE of our largest city's good stores took occasion to comment upon "Flexibility" in its advertising several days ago. €J How it easily adapted itself to varying conditions, was told in a manner both entertaining, and worthy of repetition by any other good store. ■ <n>\ In storekeeping, however, there is another closely allied factor, by which every person in a good store's organization must be II A Inflexibility <1 It takes hardened nerve and tempered will to foster Certain prin ciples which make for better storekeeping and more efficient service. <1 It requires unswerving loyalty on the part of all store workers to uphold the standard under which their store has grown; stead ily and substantially, through years of what not! •J The written word of the store must be one of sincerity, and it is usually found where the reader is left no cause to doubt. <J Inflexibility of Policy goes before the ability to seize opportuni ties offered by flexible market conditions—always! CALI- 1801—ANY PHONE FOUNDED IS7I use of muslin curtains instead of win dows, and this may be modiiied In very cold climates by using part cur tains and part windows. The curtains may be closed in extreme weather and there will still be plenty of air. If windows are ali closed, however, even In zero weather, the result will be unhealthy conditions; the breath of the birds will congeal, forming thick coatings of frost on the walls and ceiling, from which moisture will quickly form, and sickness in the flock will be the very quick result. With closed glass windows extremes of temperature are reached in the twenty-four hours of the day, which are very bad. Because of the frost and dampness on the walls the great est degreo of cold will be reached during the night, and in the day time the sun shining through the glass will produce a far greater degree of warmth than would be the case with either an open window or a curtain. This is often the cause of serious trouble, and sometimes fatal epi demics of contagious diseases result from the continuation of such condi tions. With careful attention to such de tails there need be no serious sickness in any flock of well bred poultry. 111 Case of Sickness There are many remedies offered for the cure of the various poultry diseases, but if proper conditions are maintained there will be very little need for them. The ax can be ap plied to the sick bird as soon as a malignant disease is discovered, for unless it Is a show specimen which has taken many awards, or has rare winning qualities the affected bird Is not worth the trouble and risk of try ing to cure it. Kill it at once before it has a chance to spread its trouble to the entire flock, burn the carcass then cleanse the entire section of the plant that the sick bird has recently visited, and the trouble will be ended. In case of a severe epidemic, which need never occur if sanitary conditions are maintained, It will be necessary to disinfect the buildings and all the implements very thoroughly, and seed down the ground used for the poultry plant, transforming it again into a fresh, clean spot, or the. disease may be expected to crop out at some fu ture time. Should lice or' mites ap pear, they may be disposed of by the use of a simple disinfectant, without serious injury to the birds; but this will be a job, and it is a job that should not be delayed. The Preacher's Poultry Plant Next week's article will he the story of a minister's success with poultry, when, as the result of broken health anil other misfor tunes. ho was obliged to give up his clerical work. Quartet Will Sing at Christian Endeavor Meeting New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. 5. To-morrow evening at li o'clock the Christian Endeavor Society of St. Paul's Lutheran church wiil hold a special meeting with Grover Negley in charge. A male quartet consisting of Oren Kaufman. Grover Negley, Miles Rockey, and Mr. Wise will sing. Miss Ida Hoyer will accempat:;' them on the piano. $2,000 FIRE NEAR CARLISLE Special to the Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Feb. 5. Damage amounting to over $2,000 was caused by a fire which started in the smoke house of D. A. Hoy, Middlesex town ship yesterday morning. The lire spread to a nearby ice house, burning quantities of meat, corn and feed, a chopping mill and garage. INCREASE INDEBTEDNESS Special to the Telegraph Lykens, Pa., Feb. 5. Last eve ning the Lykens Borough School Board decided to ask the voters of the borough to increase the indebted ness of the school district $20,000 for improvements. the Price of Roofing ■ " Price is of least consideration where gj|f durability and service are desired", says «R | Poultry Book Free " Building a Poultrv House" rnn- ® THE STANDARD PAINT CO. DUllUing a routtry nouse con- Woolworth Building, New York tains information valuable to the ~ Send nnmples of ItTT-BEU-OID nnd books oppo amateur poultryman. Mail the J •'«> *hich i m»rk x. i intend 10 roof■ coupon and get it or other helpful J ~ Roofing* * li'.m" 1,0u,e books free. ■ : S I{!. , r n ,f a,ow I _ Htiil<ll»c Your Own C.arnjce The STANDARD PAINT CO. I BSKBffiteSS , a " orr NEW YORK and CHICAGO | ° <h ' ck "' re ° Address , _________ i DO YOU KNOW { j| Just what you are entitled to when you |j i| throw down a nickel and ask for A CIGAR? || i! Say, II KING OSCAR I 5c CIGARS 11 next time and you'll find out mighty quick. || I! The Paddy John C. Herman & Co. II : Of Them All MAKKRft I !; HARRISBURG, PA. 3 Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Eppley Celebrate Silver Wedding Marysville, Pa., Feb. 5. A silver | wedding anniversary was celebrated by Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Eppley on their { twenty-live years of married life at | their home at Front and Verbeko streets yesterday afternoon and eve , ninß. KIHOKMIC OF MUMPS Carlisle, Pa., Feb. 5. The at tack of mumps which first began to I show among Dickinson students this week threatens to assume epidemic proportions in tbis section.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers