TUB WORK OF THE BRITISH CAVALRY ON THE BATTLEFIELDS IN FRANCE BRITISH LANCERS PROCEEDING ALONG A ROAD IN WESTERN FLANDERS. IV , th ! c °" rs ,f of an " rtlHe on ,he work of ">e cavalry at the front a correspondent stated that "in this particular portion of the battlefield 111 tt estern Flanders] the cavalrymen were relieved at night Frequently the men have to change bivouac two and three tln.es In the night A cavalry reg< " after " "; ns da " T ( ln * he trench «. saddles and goes ott, not to the camping ground already selected but to an alternative spot. I'ertiaps one of the ee, l ff cuatry abounds Is selected. The ropes are stretched from tree to tree, and the men prepare to turn In for the night S?! ." t I 1* T SCCn fr ° lU " nelKhboriu ' ? ' arn, house. Immediately the order is given to mount, and while the regiment «|j.» ™ into th». daikuess a stiong dismounted tnen goes oft to examine the farmhouse." HOTEL IROQUOIS South Carolina Avenue and Beach ATLANTIC CITY, N, J. Pleasantly situated, a few steps from Boardwalk attractions, close to everything, including Pennsylvania railroad station. Ideal family hotel. Every modern appointment. Many rooms equipped with running water, 100 private baths. Table and service most excellent. Rates SIO.OO, $12.00, $15.00 weekly, American plan. Booklet and calendar sent free on request. DAVID P. RAHTER, SILAS WRIGHT, Chief Clerk. Manager. Calendars of above hotel can also be obtained by applying at Star-Independent Office LICENSES NEEDED HOTEL Court Declares That Alleged Minors Looked to Be of Age Towanda, Pa.. Feb. 27.—(Boyle's ho tel, at KumincrfieM, was granted a li cense by Judge Maxwell here yester day. This application was objected to on (he ({rounds irf no necessity and law violations. Judge Maxwell ruled that Mummerrteld being a big shipping point, a hotel is necessary. As to law violations, the Court says the evidence is insufficient to warrant refusal ot the license. The miuors mvmed in the case are men in size and appearance, and claimed to be of age. The Court said the hotel had 'been con ducted as well and as safely as possi ble, and was entitled to a renewal of tiie license. Suppose your husband did as this one - Decided that you were entitled to the very best in Kitchen appliances. Consulted the gas company and found that he could secure a Cabinet Cras Range with glass door, heat indicator and enameled parts, oil small monthly payments spread over an entire year—and a Gas Water Heater on the same liberal terms. Thus freeing you from the drudgery of the coal bucket and the ash box. Then he would do as this husband did, He'd get you this all gas kitchen Investigate or ask us to send a representative to your home. , HARRISBURG GAS COMPANY J | Horse Killed, Old Driver Dying Williamaport, Pa., (Feb. 27.—George Botts, aged 71 years, was probably fa tally injured when thrown over an 80- foo't embankment along Lycoming creek near Powvs, yesterday afternoon, when a horse and wagon in which he anil his nephew, aged 36, were riding, skidded and went over the bank. The horse rolled 150 feet to the bottom of the gully and was killed. War Hurts the Trappers York, Pa., Feb. 27.—The European war has come as a life-saver for the fur bearing animals of York county. Most of the small skins collected 'in this section are shipped ab-oad for troat iniyit, arid the bottom has naturally fatten out of the market, mafking trap ping unprofitable in this locality. HARRISBTTRG STAB-INDEPENDENT, SATURDAY EVENINO. FEBRUARY 27, 1115. HARiiISBUKGC. E. CHORAL ONION TO GIVE CANTATA 200 Voices to Participate in Concert ! to Ba Rendered iu Tech High Au | ditorium March 12 Under Direction of Frank A. McCarrell Great interest will be manifested by j ; the music-loving people of the city aiul i vicinity when a high-class concert will be given in the Technical High school ' Friday evening, March 12, by the Har j risonrg Christian Kndeavor choral Un-1 j ion. A rehearsal will be held on Moa-1 day evening in the social room of the | 1 ine Street Presbyterian church, when J the cantata entitled, "The Nazareue, 1 , "will be practiced. The membership is near the 200 I mark and the members are enthusiastic j concerning the leadership of Prof. l*iauk A. McC.'irrell and his earnest] way of conducting, «s well as (the de-1 gree of efficiency to which he has i 'brought the society. The soloists are Mrs. ltoy G. Cox ' soprano; Mrs. H. L. Hertzler, contralto; I y Karl D. Riioades, tenor, a/ul George . Sutton, baritone. Catharine k Heikes is the pianist. ■ c F he orc ' loBt:ra ' 8 composed of the j k following players: First violins, W. i WaJley Davis, Claude R. Engle and i James McCormick, .Jr.; eello, I. M. Ri l der and \\ . J. Dunlap; first clarinet, K. • S. Wise; first cornet, H. D. Sollenberg « er; second cornet, W. D. Reed; flute George A. Roberts, W. P. Brandt ami '-Miss Duulap. M. A*. Dean, president of the Harris i i burg C. E. Union, will preside. The C. E. Choral Union invites every ' one interested to become a sustaining | member for the season of 191"). The! membership fee is very reasonable and j entitles the contributor to two choice I reserved seats at. the annual concert. j Remittances and requests for further i information may be made to Miss Mary I B. DcHart, treasurer, 1033 North! Fourth street, or any other members of | the C. E. Choral Union, including the j following officers: President, J. Frank j Palmer, Harrisburg Trust l'o.; vice | president, Forest E. Schwartz, 438 Boas street; secretary, Miss Anna McKel vcy, 1810 Walnut street. A Christian Kndeavor rally will be held under the auspices of the United j Brethren C. E. Society at Millereiburg • | on Sunday, March 14. Among the speakers wil Ibe Charles W. Black. 1 president of the Dauphin County C. E. j j Union. An interesting program is be- 1 ing prepared. 11 Hold Preliminary Debate ' Eleven students of the Harrisburg <1 Academy took part in the preliminary j debate yesterday afternoon. On the ] 1 Greeks' side, Robert W. Seitz is cap- j i tain, with Burgess Broadhurst and Ray- I 1 mond Holmes as his colleagues. Wal-1 ter White will be alternate for the | j Gieeks. For the Romans, Mercer B. ( i Tate, Jr., was appointed captain, while 1 William A. Smiley and John Wallis t arc the other members and Onofrc Cas- s tells acting as alternate. Undergoes Serious Operation t Mrs. D. S. Bachman, 2146 Green t street, was taken to Rochester, Minn., t by Dr. C. C. Rtouffer, 1928 Green s street, where she underwent a serious \ operation. The operation took place c Thursday afternoon and was pronounced t successful. . A Personal Statement There are so-called "honey and tar" s preparations that cost the dealer half t as much but sell at the same price as f the original and genuine Foley's Honey o and Tar Compound. We never offer o these imitations and substitutes. We t know you will buy Foley's whenever v you need a cough syrup if you once c use it. People come long distances for i the true FOLEY'S—over thirty years 0 the leading remedy for coughs, colds, ii croup, whooping cough, bronchial and ~ lagrippe coughs.—George A. Gorgas, IB ~ North Third street, P. K. R. Station.— • Adv. 1 n Lectures on Canada , e An illustrated lecture on "Canada" was delivered last night by Prof. W. H. s Jacobs, supervisor of the fourth school u district of Harrisburg, at a meeting of the I>ay-Calder-Wicker»hani Parent- £ Teacher Association in tho Calder building. The meetinj; was marked by a large attendance. ' j j The Daily Fashion Hint. | i /{ r " v v. Silk coats have replaced in some | cases the silk sweater. This tan silk ! coat is xvoru with a tan iiueu skirt j and a Panama hat. j William Farnum at the Regent | Tcilay William Firnum, the original | Ben Hiu'. will appear in tWit famous masterpiece "Suniscn" (not a Bi'blical : play) at the Kegent Tiisaitra. William j I'arnuni needs no introduction to the theatregoers of this citv. He has ap j peared in our loeail theatres where you j have paid $2 to see li'mi. He appears in [ one of the most extraordinary moving ' picture productions featuring as "Sam j soil ' at the most beautiful theatre in | the city, the Regent, j "Samson" is a |>lay of tremendous j force and sustained dramatic action, j with climax following climax, in start ling succession. William Pnrnum plays the principal | part, that of Maurice Brachard, the j do'Ck laborer who rose to be Samon of I finance, with terrific power and at times with a ferocity that is positively j stunning. Housed to titanic wrath by t'he false ness oif his friends and by the fact that thp wife he worships spurns his devo tion this modren "Samson" pulls down the structure of wealth that he him self has erected, ruins the rake who is pursuing his wife and crushes the crowd of sycophants and hangers-on that his 'benevolence has enriched.—Adv. * The Chair of Torture The most prominent building in the ancient city of Nuremburg is fche cas- j tie. One of its two towers was used j for torture; the other served as a pris on. The castle also contained a museum of horrors until it was purchased by the Earl of Shrewsbury and Talbot, in whose possession these relics now lie. One of those wa« the chair of torture. It was very heavily made and studded over the scat and at the elbows with blunt topped spikes. To it the victim was tightly bound, and in a short time discomfort began to manifest itself and in time became unbearable. During its continuance the torture was increas ed in several ways by .means of wedfjes being pasted between the legs and screws being applied to tho thumbs until, they began to bleed. See Coupon , for Thurston on Page 9 Breakfast Fruits^^P ' How Florida Oranges and Grapefruit are Grown and Marketed By«Fredricka Kettleson All the time is sunshine Jime in Flor ida's oranre and grapefruit groves. That is why Florida's citrus fruits have such a widespread reputation for superiority. Sunshine, warmth, showers, dews and semi-tropical ocean brrer.es are essential In the production of the thin skinned, fine texture, abundant juice, sweetness, aroma and general health-giving proper ties of oranges and grapefruit. No sec tion of this country can boast of official records showing so many days of sun shine as Florida. No locality is favored with such a generous and general distri bution of gentle showers. No state in the Union has so many real growing days. There Is practically no period in the life of a Florida citrus tree when it is dormant. It is growing all the time— developing every day in the year. It bursts forth into fragrant bloom in the early spring when most of the country is under a mantle of snow. It then sets its buds into fruits that grow and mature during the late spring, summer and early fall months. The ripened golden globes are gathered in the winter, in time for the evergreen tree to recuperate and begin over again. Florida! Oranges! These two words have been closely associated for centu ries. Wore then four hundred years a~o Ponce de I.eon, that grand old Spanish cavalier, with his retinue, came to this continent in search of the Fountain of Youth. Among the stores on the three vessels were oranges from Spain. In their fruvels through Florida Ponce de Leon and his followers either planted or scattered the orange seed. These grew into thrifty trees, and the native Indians, finding the fruit pleasant to the palate, planted groves of their own, and the or ange was firmly established in Florida soil never to be eradicated. The Indians planted their groves in the most out-of-the-way places, mainly in isolated hammocks where they usually established their camps. It is not unusu al, even today, to come across wild or- h m / The Kiddies Enjoy and Thrive on Florida Oranges and Grapefruit ange trees in hammocks never before penetrated by white men. While the In dians confined the planting of their or ange trees to the obscure hammocks, as a security against t he intrusion of sol diers and the early white settlers, the Spaniards, a few years afterwtard, took the seed from the fruit of the trees plant ed by the red men and made groves out in the open —on high land in the more accessible places. And from this small beginping in the sixteenth century. Flor ida's leading industry grew to its pres ent proportions. When Ponce dc I.eon came to the southernmost peninsula of North Ameri- I ca it was a new country. He landed near St. Augustine on Easter Sunday, and christened the territory Florida, the I.and of Flowers. He found Indians in possession of the country, hut had no serious difficulty with them. In the years following other Spaniards came and es tablished colonies. Then after the Span ish came the British. The indolent, slow going Knglishman found the orange fair ly well established, and he very soon saw in it the mtans of making a comfortable living with the expenditure of a mini mum amount of labor. He planted groves, gave them very little attention, but gathered profitable crops. As the years passed, Florida became a very popular rendezvous for the "remittance" man—that is to say, the Englishman whose home folks sent him across the pond with the promise of a regular re mittance so long as he remained away. These settlers made more groves, tend?d them when they felt so inclined, but never failed to gather the fruits thereof. As time passed a more thrifty class of ■ettlers came to Florida, noticeably af ter the territory passed out of the pos session of Great Britain to that of the United States. Then the orange indus try took on a new lease of life and was developed along more satisfactory com mercial lines. New methods of plunting and cultivating were introduced. The "remittance" man either modernized his efforts or retired from tne orange grow ing business. The romance was gone out of the raising of citrus fruits. It had proved its adaptability to the genial Flor ida climate and hundreds of men came into the state to engage in orange cul ture. For many years no other indus try was followed, save, in the northern lections where cotton was king and in some portions on the cast coast where To Abandon Old Block Tower Three signalmen working at NH block towor, near Newton Hamiltou, were notified yesterday that the station would be abandoned March 1. The men have been requested to notify Di vision Operator W. H. Balsley.at what point they prefer employment. NH is the oldest block station on the Middle division and the last to be closed be fore the adoption of the automatic block signals. indigo Hnd sugar cane growing, syrup and sugar-making were found profit-able. Today the growing and marketing of Florida oranges and grapefruit has reached the maximum of efficiency through the organization of the Flori da Citrus Exchange. This is the con necting link between the grower and the consumer, and it is growing stronger ev ery year. It looks out- for the handling of the crops of its members until they arc in the possession of the ultimate consum er. Each step of the way both grower and consumer are amply protected. The Exchange is a non-profit making, co-op erative organization, and stands for per fect, tree-ripened fruit, uniformity of pack, safe and speedy transportation, marketing at the right time, and a care fully planned distribution. Close at tention is given to every detail, for it is the pride and boast of the members of the Exchange to give the consumer the very best. In the Exchange packing houses the utmost care and vigilance are exercised; modern machinery cleans, sorts and grades the fruit. It is handled only by white gloved workers so that there is no possibility of contamination. The juice content of the Florida or ; ange is from forty to sixty per cent greater than that of the California na ve!.', and its rich and pleasing flavor is unsurpassed. Orange juice is an elixir that no doubt would have rivaled the beneficent effects of the waters of the lamed Fountain of Youth, if that ever had been found. It is recommended by physicians for children and invalids who can take little or no other food. Its soothing, refreshing and stimulating properties create a healthful combination that no other medicine can supply. It is a blood cleanser and regulator of hu man organisms; it requires no alcohol to preserve it or Migar to make it pala table. There is no known fruit that can compare with the Florida, orange as a delightful tonic for tired nerves or as a stimulant for the weary. It would seem that the golden globes compass the healthful properties gathered from the rays of the semi-tropical sun, the vigor of the gulf and ocean breezes, the cleans ing power of the rain drops and dews, imparting them all to the human system as nature would have them dispensed for the beneficent use of man. Is it a habit with you to begin your breakfast with* a Florida grapefruit? If not, it is only a question of time when you will find it a necessity; just as much so as your morning cup of coffee. Your health, your joy in living and your pal ate will demand it. Florida grapefruit is a food tonic. Its content of citric acid keeps malaria out of the system j it is a liver purifier and stimulant, and aids di gestion. In Florida its cultivation has been studied and followed scientifically during the past two decades, and today Florida grapefruit has no equal on the face of the globe. In some sections of this country it is not yet known, but wherever it has been introduced it has been speedily appreciated as a delicious breakfast food as well as a healthful tonic. In the growing, gathering, pack ing and marketing of Florida grapefruit as much attention is given to every de tail by the Florida Citrus Exchange as with the handliP't of its smaller brother, the Florida orange. No child labor is used in any of the packing houses of the Florida Citrus Kxchange. All of the work is done by skilled men and women. In order to distinguish its fruit other than by its excellent quality and supe rior pack, the Exchange uses a brand which is stamped in red upon every box and printed upon every tissue wrapper around each orange and grapefruit, bear ing a design and the words "Florida Citrus Kxchange." This is the guarantee of the Exchange that the fruit is tree riprned, sound and first class. The most satisfactory and economical way to keep jjjjjll^ A Wide Range A young woman with ail aspiration to shine in the chorus applied to An dreas Dippel, who has managed opera singers all >his life, for a position in his company. "To sing in a chorus of mine," said Mr. Dippel, "you must have a good voice." "Oh, but I have one," replied the girl. Mr. Dippel led lier to the piano and asked her to dem onstrate her vocal powers. Sitting at the instrument and then swinging i a supply of Florida Citrus Exchange fruit constantly on hand is to buy it by the box. All the leading grocers and i fruit men in the large cities buy and sell Exchange fruit. When the box is de livered to your house be it grapefruit or ■ oranges, or both, remove the tissue wrapper, dry the fruit with a soft cot ton cloth and place in your cellar or pan • try where the temperature L as nearly ■ uniform as possible. Lay on floor or shelves with the fruit close together, but not actually touching, and it will keep sound for weeks. To all those who de light in fresh, juicy grapefruit and or anges this method really places the kitchen or fruit cellar just beside a Flor-' ida grove. It is the next best thing to going out into the grove and gathering your oranges and grapefruit from the trees. It is wonderful to relate how many different uses Florida oranges, grape fruit, tangerines, kumquats and limes may be put to. For the edification and White-Gloved Lassies Packing Florida Citrus Exchange Fruit. delight of the women folks of the family, the Florida Citrus Exchange has pub lished a most fascinating recipe book, telling of scores of ways of preparing and serving Florida's sweet and juicy citrus fruits; how to use them in cookery and confections, and how to convert them into healthful and refreshing drinks. The book, for instance, tells of sixty differ ent methods of u?ing Florida oranges. From how to serve them uncooked, down through the salads, fritters, pies, short cake, rolypcly, puddings, sponge cake, tea and loaf cakes, fillings, custards, ic ings, jellies, marmalades, candied rinds and straws, sherbets, ices, ice cream, caramels, syrup:-, juleps and extracts. The second division of this recipe boo!; gives directions for the preparation of the Florida grapefruit in various deli cious and appetizing ways, and there are dozens of recipes for the treatment o. tangerines, kumquats and liir.es. Exchange Oranges and Grapefruit Reach the Housewife in Good Order. Following are a few intrrt sting fac u taken from the Florida C'ilrus Exchange recipe book: The juice of the thoroughly ripenc. Florida orange is recommended by phy sicians in many instances for childre and invalids who can take little or n>. other food, as it contains soothing, yet refreshing stimulating properties, a com bination no medicine can supply. You can use the juice of Florida lime* for nnv purpose for which lemon juice is used: household cleansing, medicinal, food and beverages. Florida limes have more juice in proportion to their sise than have lemons; more citric acid, and a more pleasing flavor. Put down in brine, they will keep indefinitely. This season's crop of Florida oranges and grapefruit is greater than ever be fore in the history, of the state; the iin cst in quality, the most uniform in grade, yet each individual fruit in the millions of boxes which the Florida Citrus iM change distributes this season is as fully handled as if there were but one hundred boxes. around, sho smiled sweetly and asked. "Shall I sing 'The Chairs iti the Par lor All Miss you' or something light!" —Pittsburgh Dispatch. 4MUSIC €| QO ROLLS 5M2! All new SS-note rolls Catalogue on request MUSIC KOI,I. CO. 1-15 Market St., rhlluUt-l vlilu. 11