5 7. Vv what trouble is.’ At The SUMMER GARDEN | Week Commencing, March | 2th. SATURDAY, EVE., March 10 TRIANGLE PROGRAM with Mae Marsh. Here is a story of real life and real people. Mae Marsh disguised as a boy makes an alluring picture in her ef- forts to save her grandpa from the consequences of his crime but final- ly succumbs ito the call of love when she sees her boy-pal slipping away from her. There are gripping situa- tions, suspense and loads of action from start to finish, Mae Marsh and Robert Harron at their best, and there will be one of those always funny two part Mack Sennate Keystone gloom chasers, Don’t miss this Saturday Triangle program. PARAMOUNT PROGRAM MONDAY, March 12th, __ with Victor Moore. ‘ Victor - Mord a’mew star to mast of the picture fans of Meyersdale will be geési {A the title role im “The Clown” the five part Lasky production on the Paramount program for Monday night Manth 12th, Music by Prof. Lew Bitt- ued, Aldo otle of those funny Bray car- toot domedles “Farmer Al Falfa's Selentifié Dairy” don’t miss this, learn a fé% HéW Bnes about sefentific farm- ing. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14th. WILLIAM FOX FEATURE With Ormi Hawley. A pHotYplay that is different, is fornd ih the Fox feature for Wednes- day, Mech 14th, In “Where Love Le You want to see this plc mi fh on ng Ormi Hawley, the new Fox Maged in the old Fox way, «Wild Lvs Leads” is a problem to- any. RUSSIA'S GREAT CLOWN. Durév Hid a Biting Tongue, and Me Dearly’ Leved Pigs. Thé tasaots Russian clown. Anatole Durov, field that. whatever your voca- tion, the only thing thet brings you suc- cess i8 work. Accordiugly he became the most industrious, successful and Beloved clown in Russia and probably the richest clown in the world, too, for when be died he left a fortune of §1,- 000,000 and a collection of trained ani- mals that brought visitors to his home from all over the world. Born of an ancient and noble family, he was a pupil of the renowned cadet oeorps, but before his graduation he ran away and joined a circus. But he had no ambition to be an or- dinary clown. He kept in touch with politics, with everything that took place in Russia, and applied to it his wit. Soon he became an unlicensed censor of Russian society in motley. Evil he rebuked by jest and gibe. No man was in too high a place for his tongue, and furious officials once brought about his exile. Russia loved him too well for that, however, and soon he was back in the ring. To show that he meant to be more discreet he appeared with a padlock attached to his mouth. He was a very famous animal trainer. The pig was his favorite pupil, and it is said that his pigs could do almost 1 13th, 7 TRIANGLE PROGRAM TUESDAY, March, with Frank Keenen. This Triangle program for Tues- day. March 13th, featuring Frank Kee nen in the five part Triangle Kay- Bee “The Sins Ye De” is a wonder ful photoplay. It has received the best of comments from all the motion picture trade papers. If you miss this Tuesday program, you are miss- ing the best Triangle program shown at the Summer Garden this week, al- 80 om of those Triangle comedies, “The Danger Girl.” I wonder If she is, see it and be convinced, Music by ths Auditorium orchestra, the real musi cal four. everything that human beings can do except talk. , A team of trained pigs drew him about the streets, and so did he love them that a pig’s head with a “D’ to the left was the device upon his seal. He used to enjoy telling how, when be was on tour in Germany, 6ne of his pigs ran away and came finally to a farm not far from Berlin. ‘Thé farmer. who was a kind man, gave the tired looking heast food and drink. To his consternation, the visitor solemnly | mounted an upturned barrel, looked gratefully at his host and stood on its | head as a token of appreciation.— | Youth’s Companion. Maximinus, the glant Roman em- peror, could twist coins into cork screws, powder hard rocks bis fingers and do other s possible things. When often broke the jaw ofsa h skull of an ox with his Bast praceicr sScrvceu A Giant Emperor. | | | | every «aay i slxty am ra an Pra C . £ | pounds How the Days Go By. Frank looked up thoug! his engine and cars game ing, piayed oul Lue primitd five-year-old boy. 80 DY, Ol train of cars witl gine.”—Harper’s. Wife—1 dreamed last night that was in | 3] ausvanc—isaa J dre amir 2 10W. a aon t Know —W 4 ha Herald. | ours figures have to be made for each scene! PARAMOUNT PROGRAM “THURSDAY March 18th. see with Margaret Clark. Thé chine of policy d4y proRFAI, showing a Paraousit five pl Pehture along with each epi scdé of M8 Crimson Stain Mystery,” will be & Bik addition to the ali fea ture Fah at this popular pleture resort, ® paramount feature for this datd his been secured by the Managyt of the Summer Garde by request, féitiring the “Adorsblé Wed gnerit Gr in a picturisatiol of Fléanos well Abbott's celebrated and dg romance“Molly Mike Belle special musit | Audi drchestra. If you Abe Bot | joy following ‘The Crimson Stali tery” sel you will have & Sllfes every Thutdey to see & BE Hild fol: ture, no adn ce in price. ; ‘MOTION hours NOVELTY. Statues Thit Are Made to Dance, Act, Jump and Fight. The motloti nicture folk have hit upon 8 novelty called “animated seulp- ture,” whicl. means that they take statues und u:.ake them move. Tie feat isn’t as hard as it seems, although the work required is much greater than drawing hundreds of pictures with pen and ink for a movie cartoon. The figures are first modeled In clay, then changed to different poses and photographed one by one. The photos are thrown on the screen without a break, so that they jump about as if rr granite AONE 4 HOW TO SET A HEN As the time aprroaches for tne Les t+ become broody or sit, if care is taken to look into the nest, it will be seen that ther are a few soft, downy feathrs being left there by the hen; also the hen stays longer on the nest when laying at this time, and on be- ing* approached will quite likely ro- main on the nest, making a clucking noise, ruffling her feathers, and peck- ing at the intruder. When it is noted that a hen sits on the nest from two to three nights in succession, and that most of the feathers are gone from her breast, which should feel hot to the hand, she is ready to be transfered to a nest which has been prepared for her beforehand, accord- ing to the poultry specialists of the U. 8, Department of Agriculture. The normal temperature of a hen is from 106 degrees to 107 degrees F., which varies slightly during incubation. Dust the hen throughly with insect powder, and in applying the powder bold the hen by the feet, the heéid down, working the powder well into the féathers, giving special attention to regions around the vent and y tbe wigs. The powder stiould a be sprinkled in the nest. i out-of-the-way place, where the — ben will not be disturbed. a from the regular laying nest t #ad handle her carefully in ine I*dt a china é8g of two in the th where she is to sit, 4nd place a board Sa Je hing so that she eamnot ward the evening of the day quistly go in where she is sitting, leave home feed and water, re move the bord fom the top of the nest, and let the hen eome when she is ready, Bhour she return to sie fast atter teeing, témove the és or egg and pt ender those dre to be ihcubited, he res slightly datken the hens are es to y restless. At tine they should be camfined andl on a dlbturbsd untll thé hateh is Sosipidtad, linlebd they become rest: 88, When it fay ‘be best to remove the chicks that are hitched. first. In ool wedther it ih Best not to put more than 10 eggs under a hefi, while later in the spring one can put 12 to 15} ac- cording to the size of. the hen. e.g. COMFORT HOUSES gr! (by Samuel G. Dixon, M. D.) Comfort houses in cities and towns are essential to the health and com- fort of our people, yet in Pennsylva- nia the traveling public that comes to town for a day or two for sightseeing is not provided with lavatories or comfort houses. These good people, often are strang- erg in our towns, are driven into sa loons in search of lavatories, and men often buy a drink before leaving as they were real. The effect is startling- ly realistic and highly amusing. In one | of the films only recently completed | there are no less than nine figures, all | | of them moving about as if they were : flesh and blood. The rather jerky ac- | tion serves only to enhance the amus- ing result, To appreciate the amount of work required in making these new films it must be remembered that each time one of the sculptured figures moves a new pose must be made. This means. in other words, that the camera must stop until the sculptor goes over each plastic figure and molds it into the cor- rect position before he can photograph it. There are sixteen different poses to a foot of film. Hence for the ordinary reel of 1,000 feet there are 16,000 sepa- rate poses for each figure. Imagine the Work required when three or more —Popular Science Monthly. | politics the principle of equal treat- | tury, | any vested | tion’s > | railroad c THE “OPEN DOOR.” What Is Meant by the Term Invinter- national Politics. The “open door” is in international | ment in trade with oriental countries { for all trading nations as opposed to the policy of effective monopoly¥ in favor of any one nation. The phrase came into popular use toward the end of thé nineteenth cen- | when various European nations were trying to establish “spheres of influence” in China. The United States was opposed to | to any nation of exclu sive | the grant tradin ges in these “sj in 1899 J ir ence,’ | | retary ‘of state, address A cir ular | note to the interested powers, asking them to pledge themselves not to in- terfere with any treaty port or with interest within | their re- ive Sphere to en 1d sph upon subj subjec i leduing a diin “ | made with vinegar and water. } a { dred they feel indebted to the innkeeper. Ip many cases, this drink may be tak. en for the first time by one of weak character, who has not sufficient force of mind to deny himself another. It js the beginning of a sad ending for the young fellow. On Sundays and holidays, when the |: stores and taverns are closed, our visitors are hard set to find places of rest and comfort. Comfort houses, kept in sanitary condition, cost some money, but how essential they are! The absence of such houses, not on- ly cause discomfort, but ill health. When Governor Tener gave the Health Department charge of Gettys-, burg to prepare it for the great meet- ing of the Blues and Grayg at theFif- tieth Anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, and we were’ reviewing the necessary things to be done, such as an ample water supply, hospitals, dispensaries, sewage dispoal, etc., we, conceived the idea of having a liberal supply of comfort stations, well placed throughout the town of Gettysburg along the roads leading to and from THE GRIM REAPER MrS, Margaret Brisky. Mrs. Margamneft, (Beachly) Brisky, wife of Samuel Brisky, who resides near Garrett, died at their home on Friday, March 2ad ,aged 75 years 11 months and three days. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Micheal Brisky, and was born in Maryland. She is survived by her husband and one sister, Mrs. John Kime of Salis- bury. stone bottles of soda and ale that were] oo fam coming down and, Webster, you . [may be sure of this—if you raise a fin ‘ zer against me | shall kill you." to see Webster standing with a stone .ale bottle in his hand ready to throw. Charles Bodige “quarreled or even exchanged a Cross the old battlefield. These houses had male and female ; attendants—thousands upon thous. ands of people made use of them—angd these places of rest and comfort re- 1; presented a large factor in making ; nur phenomenal health’ record of thls memorable occasion, During the gathering of the Blhe and. J the Gray at and around little Geltys- | burg, with a norml popultion of about | | eizht thousand peo ple, during the gev- | en days, with a census of one hup- | dred thousand people, notwithstand- | | ing the old age of the veterans and | their families, the records cnly show- | ed nine deaths. | Let our health boards and councils awake to i necessity of comfort 5 mainta ned 1% i and they only the advance not but the morals of our peopie. will help to health, ting personal ani 'y. If you desire a personal use i of the Lar Bittner’s Grocery. IS | “courtship afte | $hings. ( among the i inquisition.—London Standard. She was a life member of the Breth- ren church and will be sadly missed in the community in which she lived where every one loved her for her kind, motherly qualities and gentle manners. Her funeral was conducted by Rev. ‘oyal 7 required. 1 i cup sugar 7a cup water 3 eggs 1 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder Peck at the Summit Millg church of the Brethren, and burial was held at the Lichty cemetery in charge of W. fi 2 undertaker, on Sunday March PEWEY'S IRON NERVE. How, When a Young Officer, He Sub- = ' desd an Vely. Mutineer, In Admirel *s ‘autablograpitis; f° written for-Hearst's Magazine, is the following woey, which shows that as a youlig 1 t commander tho 0 bf Manila gas y already possessed ¢ iron nerve that characterised his later life: . “Commodore B. K. Thatcher, ln com- mand of the Colorado, welcomed me on board heartily, notwithstanding my youth. He said the abip was in a bad state and gave me full authority in the government of the crew of 700 men. 3 “Gradually 1 was eble te identify the worst characters. They werd the ones I bad to tame. The ringleader was a red headéd Englishman named sbister. Many of bis mates were in a fear of this great brute. The prison belag full, I had him put down the bold in trons. day | heard a breaking of! ? and the orderly told me that | 1 cup flour 1 teaspoon salt 1£ cup cold water 1 teaspoon flavoring BAKI NG | Saves Eggs ‘king Powder makes it possible to pro- duce apoetizing and wholesome cakes, muffins, cornbre.d, etc., with fewer eggs than are usually in many recipes the number of eggs may be re- duced and excellent results obtained by adding | an additional quantity of Royal Baking Powder, : about a teaspoon, for each egg omitted. The. : illowing tested recipe is a practical illustration: ‘ SPONGE CAKE made from Cream of Tactar, dérived Sieky gripes, and adds none but heaithful qualities & the food. DIRECTIONS: — Bell uj and water until it spins a thread and add to thy @ify beaten whites of until the misture fo together threo time, the flour, the white mixture with Spe rae ane me od bets fn SE POWDER No Alum No Phosphate EAA ws Pi oo» = HORRORS OF WAR. MOIVIBUAL THRIFT, | dunlling As They Were Depicted by a Minister he Be in Cromwell's Time. A ak. baa Jorsors aad if 2. be a4 od ¥ Webster had broken free of his irons, | ‘28 mankind has protested against the d driven the sentry out of the hold 8nd, in a blind rage. was breaking up stored there. a“ io i ba sent, the master-at-arms to arresi | ol writing Ih 1640 about war. and the wmaster-at-arms canie back to repost.that Webster had sworn.’ hie would kilt thé first man that tried te come down the ladder into the hold “Such a situation was not to be en- dured. | took my revolver and start ed for the hold. When I came to the | ladder Webster yelled up the threat which bad made the others hesitate in view of his known ferocity. O» course, any one going down the ladder would expose his whole body to an at tack before his head was below the deck level and he could see his adver- sary. But any temporarizing with the fellow meant a bad effect on the whole ship's company. . “i* “Webster, this is the executive offi. cer, Mr. Dewey,’ I called to him. * “1 stepped down the ladder quickly But he did not throw it and submitted to arrest peaceably.” : WEDDED SIXTY-FOUR YEARS. And a Cuss Word Has Never Passed Between This Couple. in & day of hasty divorces, when minds are turning to seek ways in which marriéd couples may live hap- plly, credit is due to Mr. and Mrs. of Philadelphia, who have been married sixty-four years. The fact that they have lived together that long is interesting in itself, but their chief claim to publi€ notice is in their statement that they have never ‘word. . The wife ascribes her happiness 0 these causes: “Because I think there is no one like ‘father.’ , “Because 1 am always willing to humor his little ways. “Because 1 wili do anything in the | world to please him. ; “Because | have always given im plenty of good food. : : “Because: i hive miways praised him when he deserved it.” The hasbandisviewpoint of thé mari tal partnersiip and the ¥easons which be finds for the unmirrel’ fe icity of himself. and his wife are contained iu the following z “Because | tuink my wife is tue tines woman in the work “Because. i never have a vacation uu less she goes too . “Bec e 1 have always been ready ta listen to what she has to say “Because 1 have never wanted any- body eise but ‘mother.’ ” The fact is that this couple continued Y masiage and each con- tributed to the union love; respect ond Willingness to mole sacrifices, each fc the other, in the little'as well as the hig Most marital unhappiness is pased on selfishness.—Exchange. Twelve Was a Mystic Number. Why should a jury number twel Blackste ttributes the #¥ing or the puml ber. Stephen, i “Commentaries,” supperts this idea and gives i regard paid to twelve Teutonic law ad Bnd dence that twelve n ANglo-8Saxol to torm an | think o ing and wastefulness: caused. PY battle. . Here, ‘for-tastance, ev. William | Hooke, a New Haven minister, whe | later bécame a chiplain to Oliver Crom- | Qeath dealing. instrument of that day might now seem almost harmless by comparison with the implements used in these advanced times, but the New - Haven mafi was keenly alive to the | smddening aspect of their use. “Warre,” he writes, “is the conflict of enemies enraged with bloody re- ' venge. The instruments are clashing swords, rattling spears, skull dividing Halberds, murthering pieces and thun- dering Cannons, from whose mouths proceed the fire and smell and smoke : and terror, death, as it were, of the very bottomless pit.” : ‘The preacher's description of battle : hep all the vigor of early pulpit rheto- ric. “Here ride some dead men swag- gering in their deepe saddles,” he pic- tures; ‘there fall others alive upon their dead horses; death sends a mes- sage to those from the mouths of the : muskets; these it talks to face to face and stabs tliem in the fifth rib.” War becomes more terrible as man’s ingenuity brings forth new instruments of torture.—Clevelard Piain Dealer. “DRINK STORM” VICTIMS. New Study of Why Some Men Go on Periodic Debauc!.es. There has recently been organized in Hartford, Conn., a foundation for -a new line of research work relating to the alcoholic question. This research will have for its object the explanation of “drink storms,” which attack men | who are not regular drinkers, but sud- denly plunge into a debauch and use Hquor" to excess for a limited period; after which they resume their usual condition” of temperate living, % Thi§' subject is treated by Dr. T. D. .Crothers of Hartford, Conp., in, the New York Medical Record. He says: “What condition of body and mind fur. nishes the §oil, plants the seed ahd fa- vors the growth in inebriety and .alco- holism 1s yet to be studied. What laws of growth, heredity, culture, surround- ings, nutrition and mental impression favor the development of the drink evil are questions for the future. “Why the degeneration from the use of alcohol is in one instance slow, con- cealed and breaking out only after a lifetime in various diseases; in another rapid, positive and most emphatic, apd in a third concentrated on the brain and nervous system or on the oreans of nutrition, list of questions as to why and how this or that particular phase of disease breaks out, are questions for future study. “This is the new scientific field where exact study is called for, groupir facts and studies of their mean show the causes of alcohol addiction.” EL a His Name Was “lke. I venture fo assert that Bo one has the nerve to say that he ever hailed the late Warne Mc ac Veagh as “Ikev.” Bnt Ike he was in his boyhood. His parents christened him Isaac Wayne MacVeagh, and his first law sign in Wes t Chester read, “I. Wayne Ve Thomas Woodrow Wi! + In | 3%: oh cis cannot / as lie = Philadelphia “The and so on through a long | s of | to the Nation. . it to encourage the peo. try to curb extravh- and to give money is rapidly \§, and R is a good thing that W4 néed such a campaign, pel of thrift should cat ‘throughout our land, ple must save. ird to waste. £2 | bron | Dasdmerican I can do longer It was the tedatudous natural wealttf © © of this country t made Americans: 2 palion of spendthrifts. Now the end. nature's bounty is actually in sight. All of the better public lands have been taken up. The § estimating our Meources of coal sid oll. Water power 1s being and husbanded. Wealth is not half sé: easy to create as ounce it was, and. .for+’ that reason there is a nation wide 8p- Man What Conserve: Gi my 33s MT & an 4 ARE AY -~ P t EN Sak we preciation of the necessity for conpepy- . ing it. Thrift means to the life exactly what conservation does to : the nation. This movement for saving money means a good deal mare than the gurb- | ing of individual extravagance. - ‘RB means more capital available the uses of commerce. It means thaf'when Goin you have.saved $1,000 you will find ft & good deal easier to borrow another $1,000 if you HEYS 4 Food fuVestraent in view. | CLOTHES. _ON THE LINE. Putting a Bit of Postr Poetry Into a Very | ; - Prosaic Task. * A Tide sions the interurban cars ‘on a . fine Monday will show You line after . line of snowy clothes fluttering in the breeze, and if you are a’ woman who has ever tried her hand at the e washing game you'll envy the woman who has the bright afternoon before her to do as she pleases since she has spent her morning so profitably. Did you ever pin freshly washed clothes on a line out in the sunshine and breeze—clothes that you washed with your own hands? You haven't? Well, you needn’t say it with such a scornful tilt to your nose. You're to be pitied more than | envied,’ for you've missed one of the joys of being a woman: Maybe the real work of it, the scrub- bing and boiling and rinsing part, couldn’t be called pure joy, but hang- ing the pieces up, clean and sweet and white, then standing back to view proudly the whole long row—ah, then you taste the glory of real achievement, and it gives a satisfaction that few achievements give. It’s such a ‘worthy work, making the “world a cleaner, more wholesome | place, by beginning on your own soiled ralment.—Indianapolis News, o Big Chaifis Are Handmade. In thi is ds /£ Inachine manufacture i Ips surprise some to learn ing of big chains is large- ly, confined to methods Land labor, says the Sci- erican. There are probably ins being made in the Unit- ed Siates by. the use of ma wchinery. There ale varieus appliances emplc )¥- ed, but re hand operated or per- sonally d,” This situation ap- | pears to be due that th ly, if not ér dependent on | f | | | | entice An | no big ch: | | | | | to: two things. First, as | the proverbiial -eXpression has it, “a | chain 4s: no: stronger than the weakest | of its Hinks” = A handmade chain is | naturally made: link by Ba. If the workmen are not only caref , but cox | scientious. as to details, > re is a considerable Sian equivalent to continu The makir f bi old time bla | Tightwad. “1 understand tl ) nasi known ‘ nvthi it of hin? “And even then they had to give him dor olor to zet that.” min ——i— Sw A for 1 day ! pure : Fayr | ing ! ble ¢ ; ter i offici + visor t culty Se : derft tallke sens: © triun | Hols 4 Mn home urday - m. ntl Mrs and « She 1 this « < du interr ccmet “F.oh Lr) vas ago o Mr. MN from ¢ the ti ‘ loceon severs "Refi men’s Tuesd the cl dale bl weeks ment. take o claim found soning > * Nirs. week ° Nett ner sis land. Mrs, end w dig of Wes. ing ca hours | wire g Karl least c the mc him?” y Bob man on Ben are sel spendin 1y’s su; Rev. well se we are Maric with he Cumber PRAT SAVE 7 25 ANI HABEL =