12 MZLJL ANOTHER GREAT BARGAIN DAY UJZYI mm FIRE-SMOKED CLOTHING Srhra Just as great values are to be found he r« to-r narrow a last' Saturday. SEBtßmWmmlilllll ■ Week prevented a great many from coming her, to see the remarkable values we ■ ■ Zhlm Z7ir* y Z!7oor P l2lyZT™Z W be I Men's, Women's and Boys' Clothing at ONE-HALF PRICE and LESS I 111 r 7 f __ Es B j hams hlTherf m f iSSeS ' ™ a ; h f b,e d ? sses in ra,iMS ' linens and si " B " 1 Men's and Young Men>, Overcoats at $4.90 1 Kj 'I ular prices ud to S7 0Q S *P m colors; many different styles. R eg- Overcoats of heavy dark cheviots, shawl collars and belted P' =53 |B P" ces »P to » 7 - 00 79 in Boys' Clothing, »4.r,0 to *5.00. Boys' Snits jpQsWlj B r ' /ff\ ■;] mm i HHifck , our furs > including the civet cat, mole, raccoon, tiger, fox and manv t c . Wl i i|J I \ /i ■IH other stylish furs are reduced to half price Just thin' ot it, boys wool suits, double breasted coats, knicker- ?/. / Yw-t lC B\S%\ §\\ slso ° to $18 " 50 Raincoats at $7.50. V~i /I k 'MwSStJz HSS Ladies' and men's double texture raincoats of extra eood oualitv and ~ ' /-A W= WKM %/ I / M guaranteed strictly rainproof; these coats were formerly sold from SIS sls -°° Me " S and Y ° Ung Men 8 S^ lts t0 Go at S(U)O * <*!s> B- H VI //SAW to $18.50. To go on sale Saturday at $7 50 One lot of men s all wool suits in this season's leading styles in both jf gj®| I Ifi 47MV Waists of fine lingeries, voile's, lawns andcVepes;' regular prices' up Norfolk and regular models. All to go on sale Saturday at ........ $6.90 H| M M [3 M n jM to $ 2 -°°- Special 490 $18.50 Suits to Go at $7.90. n ES Plaid skirts in the newest peg top styles. Special $1.89 * n t'" B lot y° u W 'N Rnd a ' ar B' e number of styles to choose from; ma- = -~" \ J/k K1 I ■BJ II 1 //If"" $1 79 ot a s ' n^c su ' t ' n this lot worth less than $18.50. To go on sale Satur- M IH ||| I /jfl //I Crepe kimonos in all colors ll' & I'. $7.->0 ■ "p=J Bl IH II««J i //I 'I ti, 'isii f.. ! " Here is a Hummer, Men—Up to $25.00 Suits—Your Unrestricted Choice, 111 ! (/I I Ihe season s most wonderful sale of women s and misses top coats. «jt9 90. ' |JU II 'II I These coats are of the latest materials and styles. Some are lined in high ' " ' L- - "^r / I I grade peau de cj'gne or satin. All sold at half price. Just 200 of the finest hand tailored suits in the land in all this sea- jdMS • ( | Men's trousers up to $2.50 values at »8«. son's styles in 2 and .j-button models; pants are semipeg top and nude so I ■ II , r , rs\ " as to be worn with belt or suspenders; materials are solid crrays. rrav Hi ir ERj ' 'ens trousers up to $3.50 values $1.98 mixture and herringbone blue serge—same materials we are now buyinc Corduroys included. for Spring. f&| A Daily Bargain Event Until Entire NATIONAL SUPPLY CO. I^l ■fflj-# 8 SOUTH FOURTH STREET Open Evenings j1 FiREWELL DIIEH | TO BEV. MB. MULOGK ! Bible Class to Entertain Paxtoni Church Pastor This Evening The James Boyd Biblo class of Paxton Presbyterian Church i will to-night Rive a farewell dirfner to the Rev. Edwin Mc / itliS Cord Mulock, the re / Mgi tiring pastor of the , * -KM., church, who will J'.TkJ/MUt leave for Ypsilanti, •*' - J fT Michigan, on January wHtaw* 19 to take the pulpit " f ttle First Presby terian Church. The James Boyd Ifer. . /LAAT Bible class is one of M n rrr' ,T • the institutions estab lished by the Rev. Mr. Mulock while ut Paxton church, and the annual din ner held by the class has been usually held in February. This year, how ever, the date has been shifted so that the Rev. Mr. Mulock can attend the yearly banquet before he leaves. The ladies of the church will give a tea and reception next Tliursday afternoon to the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Mulock. Plan Brotluirlioo our. Preparatory Services.— Holy com- r munion will be held this evening at 8 _ I ITO RELIEVE RHEUMATISM I tf«g body-waste producing uric acid must be gradually arrested and the blood purified. j HI Correct diet is essential. Abstain from tea t ■KO Jj&y anything containing alcohol; eat meat ) only once a day and take SCOTTS EMULSION 1 SCOTT'S EMULSION makes new blood free from the poisonous products which irritate the I / joints and muscles; its medicinal force relieves the enlarged, stiffened joints; and mono, SCOTT'S EMULSION stimulates the forces to expel the poisonous adds by its con* An centrated nourishing properties. Physician* everywhere prescribe v|)i Scott's Emulsion for rheumatism. ft\l , '"-•'■"T I pun FRIDA > EVENING, v , HAKRIBBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 9, 1914. [o'clock in the Lutheran Church of the j Redeemer. The communion services I will be held on Sunday. FiMliera of Men. Wen of Westmin ster Presbyterian Church, at a meeting | last night organized themselves into a Bible class with the motto, "Be Fishers 2. en -" These officers were elected: President, Alfred P. Davies; vice-presi dent, Percy Harris; secretary, James Bates; treasurer, Russell Ritchie; teacher, Claude Kunklel. I ■forty Hour. Devotion will be held at Sylvan Heights Orphanage beginning on Sunday morning, at 7 o'clock. The Rev Father W. W. Whalen, of St. Pat rick s Cathedral, will be in charge of the services, which will last until Tues day evening, when they will close with benediction and a procession of other clergy of the city. "Billy" Sunday Glad For Wheeling's Gains Wheeling, W. Va., Jan. 9.—Evan gfflist Sunday In Pittsburgh, finds time to observe what is going on in other cities. Police Chief Thomas Layland, who closed the segregated district here January 1, received the following from the evangelist: "I have been keeping in touch with affairs In Wheeling from time to time through the daily press and through friends, but nothing has given me more ,loy than to note your recent action in cleaning up things over there. It takes backbone to go after such evils, but I know you've got the right kind of stuff in you to do things, and when once such a campaign is stated, it is up to the decent people to a city to get bacw of a man and stand by him. ' "I remember you well, as you stood at the door near Fred's room. Be sure and come around where X can have a handshake and express in per son my appreciation of what you are doing. "With kind regards to all the crowd. "Cordially yours, "WILLIAM A. SUNDAY." V. GRANT FORRER IS REPORTED DOING WELL V. Grant Forrer, park superinten dent who was operated upon at the Harrisburg hospital on Tuesday is getting along well. He is much im proved this morning and received a few of his friends. Forrer will prob ably be at the hospital for three weeks. I Relic of St. Anne Is Stolen From Church By Associated Press New Haven, Conn., Jan. 9.—The parish of St, Louis' French Roman Catholic Church was greaty stirred to-day when it became known that the reliquary of the church had been broken open and a small gold casket, containing a piece of finger bone, venerated as a relic of St. Anne, had been stolen. Discovery of the dese cration was made early In the week, but news of it was withheld by the church authorities and police. The relic regarded as a rare treas j ure, had been in the church for thir j teen years, and was believed to have : specillc powers of healing. It was secured in Rome by a former pastor of the church. The casket was sealed by Pope Leo XIII. Aged Woman and Small Boy Die From Burns Miss Sarah O'Toole, aged 66, of 212 Mulberry street, who was burned when a lamp at her house overturned died last night at the Harrisburg hos pital. Little John Renicker, the 4-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Renick er, of Enola, died as the result of burns received Monday afternoon when his clothes caught fire from matches with which he was playing. I The boy was playing on the second I floor of his home with his little sister when his mother heard screams. She ran to the room and found the lad enveloped in flames. In her effort to put out the fire, she, too, was burned but not fatally. Miss O'Toole was burned Tuesday night at her home when she over turned a lamp and set herself and the room afire. j OSTRICH "DIRECS" TO MEET At the meeting of the board of di rectors of the African Farm and Feather Company to be held In Bloomsburg to-morrow, the place and time of the annual meeting will be decided upon. Officials at the local offices said this morning that the an nual report would be prepared at this meeting and when it is given out for publication all criticism of the com pany will be silenced. The new cata log of the feather business of the company is being sent out. BOSTON BANKERS HEARD By Associated Press Boston, Jan. 9.—Members of sev eral Boston banking houses and rep resentatives of various New England industrial organizations presented their views on the question of the es tablishment of a regional reserve bank in this city at the opening to-day of a two days' hearing by the Reserve : Bank Organization Committee. i COURT LAW CONSTITUTIONAL ] Philadelphia, Jan. 9.—The municipal court law passed by the last Legisla- : ture, which provides for nine new t judges for Philadelphia, was declared 1 constitutional by the State Supreme i Court to-day. The decision was writ- I ten by Justice Elkin. The vote of ( the court was 6 to 2. i STRIKE MAY SPREAD Philadelphia, Jan. 9.—A strike which started in the Taubel Hosiery Mill hero several days ago to-day J spread to several other concerns with \ the result that about 1,200 workers, 1 ill women and girls, are now on strike 1 iccording to the union leaders. It 1 nay spread to other towns In (he f State. REDUCTION OF CITY TUX RATE IS LIKELY ID ISIHOIM City in End Will Gain Largely Through Extension of Capitol Park City Commissioner Bowman holds out the pleasing prospect of the re duction of the city tax rate next year. He believes the rate for 1914 will be the same as last year. Incidentally, it is stated that valua tions of city property will be reduced to the extent of nearly $200,000 by the elimination of property in the Capitol Parle extension district. There is some difference of opinion on this point among those who have observed the course of events since the move ment of enlarging the State park was started about two years *go. It is contended that already one million dollars has been paid out by the Commonwealth for the various properties that have been acquired and that most of this money has been reinvested in new plants, improved fac tory buildings and dwelllnghouses. It Is also pointed out that under the pol icy of the Capital Park Extension Com mission many persons have been per mitted to occupy their premises after the State had paid for the same, with the understanding that all the city, county and school taxes should be paid as before, pending the actual removal of the buildings. Among some who were discussing the question to-day, it was contended that in the end there will be a sub stantial gain in the valuations through a better class of business and residen tial properties; that while the city seems to have lost in revenue for a time, it will In the end have gained not only in the improvement of the city Itself, but in the actual returns from Increased valuations. There haa been general commenda tion of the commission for Its fair treatment of property owners In allow ing them to retain possession of the buildings for a year or two while they were relocating their business places and homes. It Is also stated that the city has been protected In the taxes under this arrangement, Inasmuch as the property owners paid the city, school and county taxes for a year or two after the properties had actually been conveyed to the State. As an illustration of the Increase in I values, property Interests formerly lo cated In the Capitol Park extension zone are the six-story elevator and warehouse of the Brandt Flour and Feed Company in South Harrlsburg, the fine concrete and steel factory building of the Moorehead Knitting Company, In Cameron street the Harrlsburg Light and Power Com pany's handsome new plant In Ninth street, and other Important structures that have been moved out of the park district and have added greatly to the realty valuations. TRAFFIC IS SUSPENDED Cape Town, Union of South Africa Jan. 9.—Railroad service In the Trans vaal and the Orange Free State prov inces was badly disorganized to-day by the strike of 'railway employes Traffic: was suspended this morning as far south as Kierksdorp, about 1?0 miles out of Johannesburg. jMoyer May Direct Strike of State's Copper Miners Houghton, Mich., Jan. 9.—Governor Ferris wound up his personal work in the copper strike district to-day I and left for his home. "I got what I came for," he said. "This strike cannot be settled in a week or a fortnight. I think that if it were left to the miners and employ f ers themselves that :'t would be settled very quickly." Charles H. Moyer, president of the Western Federation of Miners, prob ably will decide to-day whether he will remain here to direct the strike in the copper country or go to Wash s ington to petition the executive com " mittee of the American Federation of • Labor to call a general strike of min " ers in Michigan. i President of Road Has ; Narrow Escape in Wreck 1 By Associated Press Macon, Ga., Jan. 9.—John B. Mun i son, president and general manager of . the Georgia Southern and Florida ' Railroad, had a narrow escape from ' death early to-day in a wreck near ' Cordele, Ga., in which three persons 1 were killed and twenty-seven were • injured. Mr. Munson's official car was on the train and turned completely over, throwing the president out of his bed and badly bruising him. Details of the wreck are meagre on account of broken wires. 600 APPLICATION'S RECMVRP FOR MOTHERS' PENSIONS By Associattd Press Pittsburgh, Jan. 9.—Six hundred ap plications for mothers' pensions under the new Pennsylvania law were ready for action by the trustees of Allegheny county when they took up their work here to-day. Every possible effort is being made by the trustees to show the women they are not objects of charity. The operation of the law, its first trial in the State, is being closely watched. TAFfr FOR CHIEF JUSTICE •Special to The Telegraph New Haven, Conn., Jan. 9. —It is said here by a New Haven man who had just returned from Pass Chris tion that President Wilson is consid ering the appointment of ex-President Taft as Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court to succeed Chief Justice White when the latter retires. ENDS UFE IN STREET By Associated Press Wilmington, Del., Jan. 9.—William 8. Wood, aged about 60 years, com- i mitted suicide in the street, this morn ing, by shooting himself In the right temple with a .32 caliber revolver, while at Spring alley and Walnut street, immediately after leaving the home of his daughter, nearby. ( ■ • g| CASTOR IA • TOT Infants and Children. Tin Kind You Kavs Always Bought Eleven Deaths Involved in Crimes in Germany Berlin, Jan. 9.—Two crimes of vio lence involving the death of eleven people were committed to-day in Sol dau, Province of East Prussia and Hamburg:. At Soldau an entire family consist ing of a man and his wife with their five children, were found in their house this morning with their throats cut and the gas turned on. A dog with its head almost severed was ly ing beside them. Pecuniary difficul ties are supposed to have driven the parents to kill the children and then commit suicide. At Hamburg to-day a city police man killed his three daughters and then himself after a family quarrel. PRESIDENT HELPS CHILD RESTORE CRIPPLED DOVE Special to The Telegraph Pass Christian. Miss., Jan. 9. —Presi- dent Woodrow Wilson stood on the veranda of his cottage at sunset last night and, acting on the request of a little brown-haired schoolgirl, released a white dove whose broken wing she had nursed back to strength. The bird fluttered for a moment, then paused on a heavy-limbed oak, as if preparing for a long flight, and soon was lost in the evening shadows. WANT CHILD LABOR LAW By /issociated Press New York, Jan. 9. —A nation-wide campaign of women in behalf of a Federal child labor law was started yesterday at a meeting held here which was attended by a larger num ber of representatives from societies affiliated with the national child labor committee. King Oscar Cigars as good to-day as they v r ere yesterday and as good to-morrow as they are to-day. Such is the assurance of this quality nickel smoke uniformly good tor 22 years. 5c Give Your Blood A 603 D Searching Bath An astonishing? record of serlou* blood poisoning; is dally brought to our attention. And most if not all these conditions could bo averted were the blood primed, toned and purified In advance by that wonderful remedy known everywhere as S. 8. 8. ?w people realize how quickly the becomes infected with the acids and ferments from undigested food, con stipation and inactive kidneys. The symptoms of fever, thirst, ex citability, dry skin followed by rash, and rryny indications are often wrong ly diagnosed as Ptomaine poisoning Many people who act hastily frotn violent temper are simply suffering from the effects of poisoned blood, produced by faulty elimination. But by far the greatest peril Is the daily danger from bruises, contusions, the scratch of a rusty nail, and vocational poisoning. The medicinal properties of S. S. 8. ar® rela tively jn3t as essential to well balanced health a« are the nutritive properties of the meats, grains, fata and sugars of our dally food. And if you will hear this fact in mind and get youi blood under tho dominating Influence of S. S. 8. you will not only drive out those Impurltlei that cause Rheumatism, Catarrh, Eczema, Plm plea, Bolls and thin anemic blood, but yon will feel anew the thrill of health than can com« only from a purified blood stream. Do not accept anything else in place ol 8. 8. It. ; pay no attention to the "Just as Oood" claims of those who would sacrifice your healib to mako an extra profit. 8. S. S. contains nt minerals, no crude drug*, nothing but the mosi beneficial materials. So be sure and get 8. S. 8. and avoid disappointment. Get a bottle to-dnj and write for free advice to The Swift Speclfii Co., 802 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, da.