"Deech-Nut .Lg Tomato jw American housewife is fll X j * especially critical about deli-' gjl ' fmf fIMRi And when she plans a meal T H|ll| 1 1 mm where catsup is called for, you see (Mm |l her insisting on Beech-Nut Catsup, llilli I i ■ lt's not an accidental choice with IfflßlP [jiilHW er * aiows Beech-Nut Tomato Catsup is made from the ' whole tomatoes direct. No materials I recooked. That our tomatoes come fresh from the vines on nearby farms. Ml And, as with the foods she makes her i self, the knows that care, patience and Wi3'-x&s H delicacy of treatment show in the flavor. j Order a bottle of Beech-Nut Tomato | Catsup from your grocer today. Two jjjll "K f 8.1 t.fl'ijß Bl or'|K| Maker* of America's raoit fa j! lOtjjljnJH BEECH-NUT PACKING COMPANY J > | [ |||| 0 f if, Wa,ch this P"P er for new s about Beech-Nut Bians. The GIVES HOSPITAL SIO,OOO Two Other Institutions Also Benefit From Williamsport Woman's Will Williamsport, Pa., MarcOi s.—The Williamsport hospital gets SIO,OOO, the Home for the Friendless $5,000 and the Boys' Industrial Home $3,000 by the will of Mrs. Mary Alice Williams, widow of Samuel X. Williams, an ex- Mayor of Williamsport, which was filed foT probate yesterday. The directors of the hospital are au thorized to use the SIO,OOO for any improvements they may see fit. The bequest to the Home for the Friendless is to be paid on the death of a relative of Mrs. Williams. The remainder of the esta/te is divided among relatives. RAILROAD BRAKEMAN FREE Clarence Snyder, of Philadelphia, Re lieved of Charge of Manslaughter Norristown, Pa., March s.—Clarence Snyder, of Philadelphia, was relieved of the charge of manslaughter yester day when a Grand Jury ignored the charge against him. A Coroner's jury made 'him responsible for the death of Charles U. Fisher, of Reading, and Joseph Springer, of Tamaqua, in a wreck on the Rending railway at Roy ersford. Snyder, a brakeman, at the direction of Fisher, threw a switch in the face of a red light, which caused the side swiping of a freight train by an ex press train. Paul fireman of the express train, left the Plhoenixville hos pital for his 'home in Pottsville Wednes-, day. Ho was seriously injured in the wreck. SMUGGLED 925,000 IN JEWELS Friend of General Iturbe's Wife Pleads Guilty in California San Francisco, March s.—Samuel Saleevy, arrested hero January 15 by customs officers and charged with smug gling diamonds valued at $25,000 into the United States from Mexico, pleaded guilty yesterday in the United States District Court and paid a fine of $2,- 000. These jewels, it was found, were the property of the wife of General Itur.be, of Carranza's had commit ted them to Saleevy, so that he could sell them in the United States to raise funds for the maintenance of an or phanage in Mexico, where 200 children, whose fathers had been killed in the ! war, were starving. It is said that the jewels probably will be returned to Saleevy. <• DOCTORS FIND DOPE NO JOKE Make Prescriptions Which No Drug gist Dare Fill Altoona, March s.—Many local phy sicians, who regarded the new Federal "dope" tew as a joke, were shocked to find that no druggist would fill their prescriptions which contained heroin, cocaine, or other favorite drugs be viMtse they were not registered; and now applications for registry are going to the head of the Ninth internal reve nue district in bunches. Missing Man on Distant Farm Mt. (armel, Pa., March s.—Walter Weissinger, member of the firm of AVeissinger Brothers, owners of a big locking house, who mynteriously disap peared from this place two years ago, since w*h>ich time his wife and other relatives have searched inanv places for him, was located on a farm near Syra cuse, N 7 . Y., yesterday. What prompted him to leave is unknown. Lancaster Wheat, For Italy Lancaster, March s.—Grain Dealer T . 11. Hawkriij'ht has closed a deal with the Italian, government to furnish a cargo of Lancaster county wheat. stexa6g.Otcte>ij£i&i^ Bick headache, biliousness, piles and Dad breath are usually caused by inac tive bowels. Get a box of Rexall Orderlies. They act gently and effec tively. Sold only by us at 10 cents. George A. Gorgae * HAKRISBURG STAB-INDEPENDENT. FRIDAY EVENING. MARCH 5. 1915 The Daily Fashion Hint. | igm I IHIIHHi ImmWWKtm I Simplicity In morning froi-ks is their charm. This blue serge dress, on youthful lines, button* down the front, Is finished with white collar and cuffs and hag a juuuty silk tie. The ruffles are overbound with black braid FRANCE BUYS AUTO TRUCKS Fifty Cars, Capable of Carrying Ten Tons Each, Bought at Grove City Grove City, Pa., March s.—An nouncement was made here yesterday -by the Bessemer Company that a con tract had been awarded tdiem by tlhe French government for fifty auto trucks. These trucks are to be 'built on specifications calling for strength and great durability. They fire to be ca pable of carrying not less than ten tons. The order will keep the big plant running on full time for several weeks. Additional orders have ibeen promised in the event of the company fulfilling its contract in specified time. The val ue of the order was not made public. Coal Company Reduces Output Reading, Pa., March s.—Tihe mines of tihe Reading Coal and .Iron Com pany closed down yesterday for the re mainder of the week and indications arc that they will work on the same basis during March. Coal dealers aro reported as having a large stock on hand and, as the annual reduction of 50 cents a ton soon goes into effeet, orders for fuel are falling off. Iron Mills to Resume Work Reading, Pa., March s.—Announce ment was made here yesterday by the Reading Iron Company tlhat tlhe three puddling mills of tlhe concern, which have 'been idle for some time, would re sume operations on Monday. The men were notified that the resumption would 'be on a 7a per cent, scale. THE EV. GEORGE W. ROTH DIES Was One of Oldest Reformed Clergymen in Berks County Boyertown, Pa., March s.—The Rev. George W. Roth, one of the oldest' and best known Reformed ministers in Berks county, died Wednesday night at i his home here of a complication of dis | eases. (He was 71 years old and was a veterhn of the Civil war and was com mander of the Boyertown G. A. R. For a quarter of a century he served as pastor of Falkner Swamp'church, St. Paul's Reformed, Amityviflc anil Trin ity Union, Bechtelsville. He has two sons in the ministry—the Rev. Charles E. and tile Rev. George L. Roth. Miss Esther Roth, student at Ursinus Col lege, is a daughter. POLITICIANS LIKE BANDITS Mayor Willingly Shakes Hands With Old "Pal" of Jesse James Chicago, 'March 5.—A little, old man with white hair, who felt his way with a cane, walked into Mayor Harrison's office yesterday. "I'm Jim Burton, the last of the Missouri bandits," he said. I've wanted to shake hands with you," "I'm glad to know you," responded the Mayor, oft'eriug his hand. "You don't look very desperate though." "I'm not carrying weapons any more," said Burton. "I'm making an honest living. I d'.dn't know whether you'd shake hands with me, though. 1 was once a bandit." "Oh," replied the Mayor, "we're all in the same class —politicians, out laws and bandits. 1 'm very glad to have had the pleasure of meetiug you." And they had a little chat. BALK BOLD DOPE SMUGGLE Seeking Opium on Uncle Sam's Ship, Raiders Find Cocaine for Canal New York, March s.—Customs in spectors, searching for opium aboard the steamer Alliance, which was about to sail for Cristobal yesterday, found sn,0 l o'o worth of contraband cocaine concealed on the ship, but no opium. The discovery of the cocaiine was a surprise, as the officials had not sus pected»that this drug was 'being smug gled from here to the Isthmus. Cocaine, which is worth sls an ounce here, sells for $l4O an ounce in tho Canal Zone. The Alliance is owned ibv the Pana ma Steamship Company, which is con trolled 'ay the United States govern ment. FIND GOLD COINS SHORT Banks Receive Many That Have Been Robbed by Means of Acid Philadelphia, March s.—Slhortweight gold coins have made their appearance recently in several of the local banks in considerable quantities. A number of $5 gold pieces that were 60 cents short were discovered in the sub-treas ury, having been sent there by banks which received them from out-of-town connections. Experts say that tlhe coins have been treated with a bath of nitro-murdatic aicid, which removes part of the gold in such a manner that only by weighing can the loss be detected. Allies Order Prairie Hay Houston, Tex., March s.— Orders for 80,000 tone of prairie hay haoo tons to be shipped before June 1. Jail for Holiday Shoplifter Altoona, March 5. —Mrs. Annie Zeb roski, who reaped a harvest at shop lifting here durinig the holiday rush, •w»s yesterday sentenced to serve five months in jail. When the police search ed her home they found over 11,000 worth of goods that had been stolen from local stores. Machinist Killed in Mine Mt. Carmel, March s.—Oscar Kahler a prominent machinist of this place, while loosening a column pipe in the Reading's Alaska stoaft yesterday, was instantly killed by the pipe also'being loosened and crushing him against the side of a gangway. COMMUNITY ORGANIZED FOR NEIGHBORHOOD PATRIOTISM Interesting Outline of HUM for Se curing Co-operation la Buataeae »n4 Social Affair* Among the Sural Population Washington, D. C., March 5.—A scheme for the organization of rural communities for both business and so cial purposes is worked out in an article which is to appear in the forthcoming Yearbook of the Department of Agri culture, and which has already been printed as a pamphlet for the use of the department's office of markets and rural organization. The scheme calls for ten committees, five of which are to deal with needs, and five with social needs. Every member of the organization is to serve on some one of these committees. In addition, there is to be a central er executive committee composed of the president of the organization, its sec retary, its treasurer and the chairman of the ten other committees. This cen tral body is to direct the general policy of the organization, raise all funds and control their expenditures. The com mittees that are to deal with the busi ness interests of the community are as follows: Committee on farm production, com mittee on marketing, committee on se curing farm supplies, committee on farm finance and accounting, comity&tee on communication and transportation. Similarly, the five committees that attend to the community's social inter ests will deal with education, sanita tion, recreation, beautification, house hold economics. The work of most of these commit tqps is indicated sufficiently clearly by their titles: for example, the committee on production can do much good by im- I roving the breeds of live stock in a community through co-operative pur chases of pure-bred males. It can en courage the formation of corn, poultry, pig, cattle, canning and gardening clubs which have already demonstrated their value in the sections where they have been established, and it can carry on useful studies of the type of agricul ture best fitted to local conditions. In the same way, the committee oij marketing can secure the standardiza tion of the community's products and thus obtain better prices than are pos sible when nondescript goods are dump ed upon the market. The committee can also search out the best markets, make contracts on a large scale which will be more favorable than any individual can secure for himself, and in many other ways economize in the selling of the community's goods. Even if co operative marketing i| not actually re sorted to. the Information which the committee collects can hardly fail to be of great assistance to the individual shippers. Just as the committee on market ing can facilitate selling, the commit tee on farm supplies can economize in buying. Farmers are warned, however, not to underestimate the cost of run ning a store or commercial agency, and not to overestimate the saving which this can effect. The co-operative so ciety, of course, does away with the necessity af the store's making a profit, but somebody must manage the store and that somebody must be paid for his time. His salary, therefore, corresponds in a way to the ordinary store's pfoflt, and it is not always possible to secure a good man for less than he would be able to make in 'business for himself. There are, however, several methods of purchasing farm supplies co-opera tively; which will be found to be of advantage. The simplest is the joint or der, in which a group of farmers can buy a given article in large quantities, thereby\ effecting a considerable saving in the expense of handling, commis sions, etc. .Sometimes when this method is adopted a warehouse is added which is owned or rented co operatively, and in which the goods are stored nutil the associated purchasers need thcfti, If these two methods have been tried and found successful, it may be desir able to carry them out to their logical development and conduct a co-operative store which renders the same service to its customers that a private enterprise would. This, howeVer, inevitably leads to complications and should only be undertaken after some experience with simpler methods of co-operation. With the committee on farm finance and accounting, the first duty is to as certain what farm enterprises can safe ly be financed. This is only possible when accurate accounts are" kept and carefully analyzed. After this has been done, the next step is to secure the most favorable terms for financing proper and sound enterprises. This is frequently not difficult if the commit tee has thoroughly mastered the sub ject and is able to put it clearly before local bankers. Where the local bank ers are unwilling to*finance genuinely productive enterprises at n reasonable rate of interest, the committee must consider other ways of securing capital. One of the simplest plans for accom plishing this is a credit union or co operative credit association. The essen tial feature? of this plan are that a group of farmers organize themselves to receive deposits and make Id&ns. By keeping the expenses dow u to a mini mum, it has been possible in some cases for such associations to pay interest on deposits that is within one per cent, of the interest it charges on loans. The committee on communication and transportation should deal primar ily with the .roads and telephones. The keynote of the work should be organ- Dandruff Soon Ruins The Hair Girls—if you want plenty of thicjt, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your bair and ruin it if you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid of dandruff ia to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when re tiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it In gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or fonr more applications will completely dis solve and entirely destroy every single sign And trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never fails.-—Adv. |Pr J| HI 6 W H Say that over the 'phone Eat Sunkiit Oranges in MM H H to your dealer now. salads and desserts—eat them nH MW| " brings the very finest whole between meals and BWV fruit of its kind—fresh from at bedtime. < Ds^m California, fully ripe, juicy, Order today —a dozen or ny |H sweet, firm, tender, d/licious a box. Low prices place jffff BB just as ittastes when picked them within the reach (w mm mh direct from the tree. of all. JHW BH I California I I I Sunkist Oranges II H Picked Ripe from the Tree—Shipped to All Markets by jkl H Fast Freight—Sold by Best Dealers in Your Neighborhood hB Juicy, tart, practically seedless. J™Beautifnl Silver Premiums"] HIM slll» halved—to serve with | exchange these wrappers for beautiful Wm. MjmWy Jr MHH fish > meats and tea. I Rogers ft Son tableware of pure silver plate. M Igf&j BPCTwllipy. Pure Bnnkist Lemon . Exclusive design.- No advertising. Illllllllr m rrlfli J«lce In place of doubt- I We refund the trifle you pay to get this silver H 1/ jf WSM Ehc fSftil vinegar adds a dainty lif not satisfactopr In every way. M' g IM ETTfe. JL2J? flavor to scores of dishes. | The pictures the popular pieces. G«|'/ jffl I y cO Py now. fm( X Sara |SM California Fruit Growers Exchance wrapper, 1 139 N. Clark Street, Chicago fTTT>^ljg ized self-help, not appeals to get gov ernment help. Just as the five business commit tees are to grapple with the funda mental problems of producing and sell ing in their various forms, the five social committees should direct their efforts to the improvement of living conditions in the country. To increase the farmer's income is not the only thing needed to make rural life what it should be. As a mat ter of fact,'says this article, it is the prosperous farmer who is more inclined to move to town than-his less fortunate neighbor. Having accnmulated a com petance he wishes to enjoy it, and there are five principal reasons which lead him to believe that he can do this bet ter in the city: First, there arc usually better facilities for educating his chil dren; second, the sanitary conditions are frequently much better in towns, and the time does not seem to be far distant when the cities will be actually more healthful than the country. Again, household conveniences such as hot and cold water, heating and lighting sys tems, etc., are more abundant in the {"owns and add greatly to the comfort of living. Finally, there is more oppor tunity for recreation in the city, and frequently, strange as it may appear, more to appeal to the sense of beauty that is inherent in practically every man. Co-operation on the part of rural communities can do as imieh to alter these conditions a 9 it can to increase the average cash income. The commit tees that have these matters in charge should, therefore, be -regarded as quite as important as those which deal with business questions, arid they should re ceive the same support from the ontire community wlijoh thov are endeavoring to 'benefit. The result will be a com munity spirit which, in its way, is capable of producing as valuable results as the national spirit. In fact, says the article in closing, "Patriotism, like charity, begins at home—that is, in the neighborhood." Copenhagen Hotel Burned By Associated Press'; London, March 5, 2.10 P. M.—The Hotel D'Angleterre, at Copenhagen, was destroyed bv Are Wednesday night, according to a dispatch received ■by the Exchange Telegraph Company. Many of the 200 guests had narrow escapes. Vast Quantity of Salt in Ocean Washington, D. C., March s.—The volume of the saline matter in the is e>omewhat more than 26i>,906,- 133,600,000 cubic feet, according to the United States Geological Survey, or enough to cover the entire surface of the United States, excluding Alaska, 8,448 feet deep. HEAD AND NOSE STOPPED FROM A (WIRY THIS! "Pape's Cold Com pound" Ends Severe Colds or Grippe in Few Hours Your cold will break and all grippe misery end after taking a dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" every two hours until three doses are taken. It promptly opens clogged-up nos trils and air passages in the head, stops nasty discharge or hose running, relieves sick headache, dullness, fever isimesß, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. , Don't stay stuffed-up! Qui! blowing, and snuffling! Ease your throbbing bead —nothing else in the world gives saich prompt relief as "Pape's Cold Compound," which costs only 25 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistanee, tastes nice, and causes no inconvenience. Accept no substitute. —Adv. POTATOES FOR SHIPMENT MUST BE SECURELY PACKED Federal Inspectors Point Out the Need for Simple Precautions in Forward ing Food Through the Tropics to South America Washington, D. C., Mairch 5. —New markets iu South America opened by the war to potato growers in this coun try are being endangered iby lack of j care iu packing and shipping, accord ing to reports received by the United States Department of Agriculture. Before the war South America was sup plied with its potatoes, in great meas ure at least, from Europe, and these orders have now been diverted to this country. Federal inspectors stationed in New York wiio have inspected po tatoes offered for shipment to see that they compiled with the requirements of the importing countries report, how ever, till at because of the long voyage and t'hc higlli temperatures encountered in the tropics, certain shipments from New York to Brazil and Uruguay have arrived in bad condition. Some of these potatoes were found to have 'been attacked by fungi, camsing a soft rot, and others which appeared perfectly sound externally were black in the center. To obviate this difficulty, shippers are urged to take a few simple pre cautions. In sorting and packing po tatoes for export through tihe tropics the following points should be care fully observed: 1 I —All badly bruised or cut potatoes | should be thrown out. 2—Frosted potatoes should be ex-' eluded. 3 —No {K>tatoes that have even small i spots of dry rot or that show tihe j sunken discolored spots caused by late I blight should be included. 4—Barrels should be well ventilated by cutting a liberal number of holes in their sides. > ! s—The shipper should insist that < the potatoes be stowed in a cool, well ventilated part of the vessel. Even a few potatoes damaged in one ' of the ways mentioned may be sufficient to spoil an entire barrel under the un favorable conditions of high tempera ture and little or no ventilation. The j blackening of the center, known to the ! trade as "black heart,' can be brought! aibout by exposing potatoes for 18 hours ' to temperatures ranging from 100 to I 112 degrees Fahrenheit. Such tempera- 1 tures arc b»y no means unknown in un-1 ventilated compartments of vessels in the tropics. Moreover, even at consid erably lower temperatures, the warmth and the moisture arising from the po tatoes themselves create conditions naturally favorable to tihe development of tho spores of various kinds of fungi which are always present in air-borne dust. These spores gain entrance , through cuts and bruises and cause soft rots. At thiß season of the year also many potatoes are affected with dry rots that have developed in storage, and also spots of lute blight infection. If such potatoes are exposed to a warm, humid temperature, it is almost certain that soft rot will take place in the affected spots. u SHE JUST LIKES THE JOB Therefore Postmistress Will Not Sur render to Successor Matteawan, W. Va., LMtarch s.—Mrs. Mary White, postmistress here, says the Civil Service protects her job, and she is going to stick in spite of the fact that President Wilson has appointed Alexander Hatfield as her successor. When Hatfield came to take possession, armed with his credentials, Mrs. White made him "scat" and refused to budge. An interesting situation has resulted. The office pays $1,200 a year, and , Mrs. White says she likes tho job and ' that she intends to keep it. Hatfield , has informed the department at Wash ington of the situation and develop ments are awaited with interest. "Daylight Manufacturer" Dies fly Associated Pren. London, March 5, 4.40 P. M.—Wil liam Willett, whose proposals several years ago to "manufacture daylight" ' by legislation to move all clocks for ward a few hours attracted world-wide j attention, is dead at Chislehurst, near t London, . 11 CLUBS Alf) RELIEF WORK Fraternal Organizations and Churches Contribute $250 In Week After a week of solicitation among church and fraternal oiiganizations of the city for contributions to the funds of the Home aud War Relief commit tee, a total of close to $250 has been received by Treasurer Sweeney. The first donation was made last Friday night by the Keystone Motorcycle club. Members in their eagerness to be the first organization to aid the relief work, hurriedly canvassed those of their number and made a trip late in the evening fo Treasurer Mwecney's residence with the receipts. Because they did not wait for banking hours to begin before making their contribution, they lead the list. The organisations aiding the relief work to date are: Keystone Motorcycle club, Harris Street U. E. Sunday school, Pino Street Presbyterian church, Cen tral Democratic club, Grace M. E Sun day school, Capital Street f'resbvterian 'Sunday school, Mount Calvary episco pal church, Camp Hill; A. M. E. Wc«- ley Union Zion church, Harrislburc Re pu'obcan elwo, primary department, Market Square Presbyterian church. Dauphin conclave, Improved Order of Heptasophs, John Harris lodge, Knights of Pythias and College club of Harris burg. Collections will be take# up number of other churches this Sundflv it is expected, for tho benefit of the committee's work. OFFICE BOY WAS HIS WIFE Death of Invalid Woman Brings Out Physician's Secret Knoxville, Tcnn., March s.—Knox yille was shocked yesterday on rcadiii"- iu the morning paper the following pe culiar death notice: fk r -paries M. Drake announces the death on Tuesdav, March 2, of his wife Emma Rosalie Drake, eldest daughter of Captain anil Mrs. C P Powers, of this city. Owinjr to tho persistent ill health of Mrs. Drake and lie* efl'orts in regaining health, no an nouncement o 1 her marriage was made, except to a few intimates.' The marriage, supposed to have been solemnized within the past two ■ciime about through association, Mi's. Drake having be?n a trained nurse. Suffering with a malady, the treatment of Which required her to be outdoor* much of the time, and in order to make this convenient and at the same time conceal her identity and the fact of marriage, boy's clothing was adopted. 'Mrsr Drake resembled a 17 or 18- year-old boy when about the physi cian 'a office or riding horseback. was known as the doctor's nephew,'and talked to his patients frequently with out any suspicion of her masquerade. Lifts Keg of Beer and Dies York, Pa., March 5.—A strain caused by lifting a heavy keg of beer at Helb's brewery several days ago caused the death Wednesday night of Charles Franklin Sheffer, 39 years old, a West York Councilman. Blindness in Tin Can Bomb York, March s.—lmprovising a i bomb from a tin can, which he stuffed with gunpowder and set off in tihe barn, Charles Blausser, a Dillsburg, York • county, novel reading boy, was so bad ly injured his sight" is thought to have been destroyed. Diver Dies, Head Down Lancaster, March s.—Charles Wag ner, of Georgetown, met death while diving. He lost his helmet and fell for ward, with his head down. He could not get back and died from strangula tion. U. S. Gold and Silver Output Washington, D. 0., March s.—.'Pile value of all the gold produced in tho United States from 1792 to January 1. 1914, is estimated by the United States Geological Survey at $3,549,- 799,400; th.e value of the silver at $1,709,517,600. '' GET Rid OF THE DANDRUFF 1 KEEP YOUR SCALP CLEAN I Make your Hair soft and fluffy with BESNORES^DMURUFF Y our druggist sells it at 25c., 50c. and «1. Ask your barber to give you a Bcshore's Rub for 10 cts. to keep vour hair frdm t «£"jng gray. E. 8. Beshore Company 400 N. Brd Street, Philadelphia, Pa.