YOUR BABY THRIVES ON FRESH AIR It builds ii]) sturdy little body aud gives liiin foundation for his later manhood. The Right A Special at $19.50 A carriage with springs that do not jar the spine —one that looks well and runs lightly. We have tliein in all finishes at prices ranging from $15.00 up to 532.50. SI.OO will deliver one of these handsome car riages to yon. The balance can be .paid in our club plan. 312 Market Street I'A TKI WiZ :i> Mil.K PLANT Pci'brcok Man Pioneer in Serving Lac-! toal in Sterilized Bottlss Charles A. llna 14, of Penbrook, is the i original milk dealer who first delivered! clarified pasteurized milk in sterilized bottles iii Harrisburg. Mr. lloak h:n been in the milk business for eighteen years. The business was first established bv bis grandfather in 1850. fatheS succeeded him for a number of years and | this was followed b,v Chas. A. Honk ' AMUSEMENTS j AMUSEMENTS ATTRACTION EXTRAORDINARY j* JOINT RECITAL Maud Powell Ji Evan Williams JflS REIGNING QUEEN OF VIOLINISTS AND .AMERICA'S GREATEST CONCERT TENOR Thursday Evening, April 8, Chestnut Street Auditorium Prices—7sc, #l., *ll .80. Mail Orders Now. Seats now on sale at J. H. Troup Music House, IB So. Market Square ' I MAJESTIC THEATRE Photoplay To-day ST I WKF.K, lU I'ERKOHMANCES ''. rPI !' S "»K-Hlt of the Season, jr,* IIEOI\ mm; IIONI>IY \ I'"!'- Shown in .I,Olio feet of Motion IMc- Elt.\OON,Urßil, 5 tore*. | I , Wayto'^ppfrary" !.Kl)(i|SHjl|.:vi'\ix(' I.EDGEK .1 '"'"I'llfIII 3-net ilrnouillc proiluc- Fii —l"lii!iiilel|ihia. - j • io "- MM Direct from t wrrka nt the llarrl«burn'n l»o> Soprano, A. £3 Then ire, l»|i iljidcl|»hin. HI best way to win n girl's love Is: •If she be under twenty make poetry In her honor. If she lie more than twenty make money.—Philadelphia Ledger. LAWYERS' PAPER BOOKS Printed at this oHi«-e in best style, at lowest prices and on short notice. IF YOU ARE I DRINKING MAN You had better stop at once or you'll lose your Job. Every lints of business is closing Its doors to "Drinking" men. It may be your turn next. By the Rid of ORRINK thousands of men have been restored to UVes of sobriety and Indus try. We are so sure that ORRINE will benelit you that we say to you that if nfter a trial you fall to get any bene lit from its use, your money will be refunded. When you stop "Drinking." think of the money you'll save; besides, sober men are worth more to their employers and Ret higher wages. Costs only SI.OO a box. We have an interesting booklet about ORRIXE that we are giving away free on re quest. Call at oi)r store and talk it over. Geo. A. Gorg.is, 16 North Third St.. and Pennsylvania R. R. Station, Harris burg, Pa.; John A. McCurdy, Steelton, Pa.; 11. F. Brunhouse, Mechanlcsburg, Pa.—Adv. JOHN H. BENDALL DIES For Many Years Was Bookkeeper for L. W. Cook Following an illness of three months. John H. Bendall, aged 42 years, died at his ihome. 314 Herr street, yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Mr. Bendall wat} born in Harrisburg October 17, 1873. When quite young lie started working for the Lyter & Falinestock dry goods store, and when the store was later purchased by L. W. Cook he continued there as a book keeper until the time of his death. He was a member of Warrior Eagle Tribe, Improved Order of Red Men; the Arti sans, No. 25, and the Ridge Avenue Methodist Episcopal church. He is sur vived by his mother, Mrs. Josephine Bendall, and one sister, Mrs. Pierce. Funeral services will be held at his home Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, the Rev. Dr. S. C. Swallow officiating. Interment will be in the Harrisburg cemetery. Alexander Stober The funeral of Alexander Stober, who died Wednesday night at the Har risburg hospital, will be held from his home, 905 North Fifteenth street, Mon day afternoon at 2 o'clock. The Rev. Lewis C. Manges, pastor of Memorial Lutheran churoh will have charge of the services. Interment will bo in Shoop's church cemetery. The Harrisburg Polyclinic Dispensary will be open daily except Sunday at 3 p. m., at its new location. Front and Harris streets, for the free treatment of the worthy poor. UNGARY'S WORKS FOR WAR MATERIALS =——— '' ' === ~ HEAW„ " U £•/ WATERfAL AT BORING AND « u V/// BUDAPEST TURNING ITALIAN TRnnos ( "$* ( S^fe^ eST / 0 LANG WORKS LAT THI' N ' \r. ( Wv/ SANJ EL works t R - H UN\S ary /U7\ BUDsresr '«* i V§ ( _ \ MOTIVE WORKS LOCATION OF »ul> _> v V~ /* { \ VULCAN WORKS LARGEST WAR yC / J )^ PLANTS AND H •' s -- v / \ < 35. / . -STRATEGIC . "X.. \ x\ C RFSIC2A RAILROAPS IN 6ff®SV N /\_ ) V WHERE TROOPS V fa *f*> 6 J ARE BEING i "' ri " The Russian advance across the Car pathian Mountains is large !n possibilities for the upkeep of the Russian army. Enor mous iron and steel works devoted to the manufacture of great guns and war ma terial lie within grasp of the forces of the Tsar once the plains of Hungary are reached. Budapest within recent years has at tained to an importance in machinery con struction ahead of any city in the Austro- Hungarian kingdom. The Qana works, one of the first electrical works in Eu rope, are located there. So also are the Lang works, the Budapest locomotive works, the Vulcan works, the State Rail way locomotive works, and a branch of the Resicza works, while not far from Budapest, lying to the north and east of the city, are the Hungarian small arms works. All of the above plants are engaged In the manufacture of munitions of war and artillery equipment, and In addition are turning out every conceivable form of electrical supplies, railway material and bridge equipment Just across the Hungarian frontier. In Northeastern Moravia, are the greaj Wit kowitz works, which in importance rank almost as great as the Krupp works of Germany. At Resicza and Wltkowitz the heavy gun forgings for the Austrian ar tillery are produced and all the armor plate for the Austrian war ships comes from these works. Witkowitz employs during normal times of peace fuly 28,000 men, and Resicza normally carries on its pay rolls T, OOO men. The Russians are now on the two main lines of railways leading toward Budapest. The Eastern army is on the Stry-Mlskolei line, the direct route from Eastern Silesia to the Hungarian capital, and the western Russian army has reached Bartfeld on the Hungarian side of the Carpathians. Bart feld connects by rail with Epercies, and CATTLE PLACUE WIPED OUT 124,141 Animals Have Been Slaugh tered, but T&at Does Not Cover the Total Loss Washington, April 2. Practical eradication of the foot and mouth seotirge disease of live stock in the United States was announced last night by the Department of Agriculture. Officers in charge of the campaign waged against the plague said that, with the single exception of a herd of animals near Syracuse, N. Y., which had been designated for slaughter yes terday, telegraphic reports from the in spectors throughout the country showed that the disease had been, to the best of their knowledge, wiped out. Figures compiled by the department show that 124,141 animals have been slaughtered because of the foot and mouth infection from the time of the outbreak in October to March 26, last. It was pointed out that the totai loss caused by the disease could not be estimated alone by the number of ani mals killed. Interference with the op erations of the stock yards at Chicago and other shipping points, the quaran tining of infected regions in practically all of the cattle-raising States and other precautionary measures ordered by the department to prevent the spread of the disease (hiring its worst stages, it was said, had caused indeterminable losses. Only a few infected herds have been reported since March 25, and it was said all these had been slaughtered. There is little probability of future trouble from the. disease, the depart ment declares. BIG BOA ON MODERN AUK i Old Tom Trapped Dining on Two Por tions of Bird New York, April 2.—The steamer | Terence, from South America, reached j street, Brooklyn, lust night with an old-time cargo of snakes, mon keys and other tropical creatures. Old Tom, the biggest true boa, broke out of tiis box oft' the South Carolina coast and hustled for the engine room gratings. On lus way he fell in with a crate of paroquets, according to Cus todian Ferdinand Bartels, and broached the box. When Old Tom was over hauled he was scoffing two paroquets at once, and seemed to be relishing them. He was caught with a crotched stick and soon was put back into his crate. Bartels fell ill with jungle fever in Rrazil. After the natives cured him they guided him to the animals and ] he got everything he wanted —twenty boas, boxes of smaller serpents, a grovii 1 Golden Fruit I —That Brings. Health to Whole Families them at every meal. Eat \|(||li v \ AW is ihe lime to see that oranges are them at bedtime. \ v v 31 f a daily food in every home. This is the fruit of which Ira \t 'k They purify the blood have a cooling children can eat all they want Wi.i effect —and contain just the right amount w ith only good effects. W\ of fruit acid to keep the digestion in California Seedless Sunkist Or- MM perfect condition. anges are juicieit, sweetest, tenderest ||| ■ This, of all seasons, is the season and most delicious NOW. All homes can MS llj when oranges do the utmost good. 1 afford them. Prices are low. Don't go W WL Have them handy, where the family without them through merely forgetting Wr < ||| can get them between meals. Urge the to o or^ e .u" J eating of oranges in this way. Serve / California fci*.™- C 1 • . f\ / Fr ££zr I ounkist Uranges v' Y": \yiupvf A we will send you our compli . Famous Seedless Navels oTways to use sa»i .. ~ W W»t (Jrances and Lemon*. Yon PS U,e Sunkl ' J t , Lem °i u » Uo —i uic y. tart, practically f pr^iu^go^ichTen^?^ i ful of monkeys, a heap of armadilloes | and a baby black bear, Theodora. Also j they brought brilliant birds, troupials, cardinals, macaws, 20 parrots and | paroquets. A wildcat was double caged, and jtar.F.gers were assigned to big cages, so | they would sing all t lie trip. I FINDS CAVE OF SNAKES Findlay, Ohio, April 2.—James Bookwalter while ploughing on his farm in Amanda township saw a snake crawl into a small opening in the ground. He investigated, picked up a shovel and with a little digging discovered a small cave occupied by scores of snakes, i Mr. Bookwalter called for help and when the small army of men were through with the slaughter 125 had been killed. All were of the blue racer variety, Several of the larger ones showed fight, />ut they were killed without mucu trouble. 13