UUUUuUuUUUUUUUOCM^UUUuUUuOUUOOuUUUOUOOuOtiMjO^ Better Bargains and Bigger Values Than Everl ®BBmg2& In This, The Greatest and Best ef All Sales j To-morrow Will Be a Record-Breaking Bargain Dayf Daily at Women's and Misses' Women's and Misses' Girls' Winter Women's Kid Women's Kid II 5.30 P. M. Winter Coals, Serge Dresses, . Coats, . Gloves Gloves \ c , t . :1 | Worth up to ft) m ftr Worth up to ft Jg QC Worth up to fyM nc 150 Pairs ofp/v 100 Pairs of ft A S 1 Satardays at ss,oo ' £or \§ H. 50, IC | $3.50, A n V, VV "'lff II VI),T! Made of all wool ilf 1 One-piece Serge til I ~ Made of all wool iff M— — C J 3S P GloVesmWl!■ clasp Kid G/OVeS if mW I C» 9PM Choice ~ Dre.se., Choice of RI u e Chinchilla. fof > frr > C> ■ of Black or Blue and ' n Blles - Black - Blue or Brownand all alzes. Size. 6to 14 yeara. - SI.OO Value. Black & Colors & Sizes. Black & Colors. $1.25 I faille. C 1 Our $30,000 Garment Stock at Tremendous Reductions—There ACleanSweepof all Women's 8 Has Never Been a Sacrifice Sale Like This Blouses-Remarkable Prices 1 SUITS, COATS and DRESSES J A CLEAN SWEEP OF FUR FABRIC COATS «wt§ S ARABIAN LAMB, URAL LAMB AND PERSIANA Choice of % and Full Length "£"£ TZTL*. 1 8 DOMEI'S AKD MISSES' (PA 75 WOMEN'S AND MISSES' AJAU MSMEI'S All MISSES' iMPU SSJiT Lace and I Handsome Silk, Net and Q Q SALTS URAL LAMB COATS SJ}'= SALTS ARABIAN LAMB Jfcl/= Finest Persian* Coats 815= aiuizes'' 0 value u|l f! © VALUES TO 516 FOR——V= COATS, VALUES TO S2O FOB—VALUES TO 525 fffl t053.00. Cl AQ $4.00. CO LO J § C„ w pu* « ££"""* —" • " Choice for—f .1? Choice for-» ]>*.*? J, g Hundreds of Astrakhan, Boucle and Mixture Coats A u clean Swee P of Women's Newest § © Women's and Misses' d»0.95 I Women's and Misses' (top fin I Women's and Misses' tf*o 75 I Women's andMisses'fM 475 Neckwear at Less Than Wholesale 2 I I I ..i'wjioi | JBSft 511 i CKt tmmttow 1 g Extra Large Size Coals for Extra Large Worn ;n at Clean Sweep Prices ftff 8 ALL WOMEN'S AND MISSES' COAT SUITS „BB„, DIVIDED INTO 4 LOTS , „ I § Women's and dJP.OO I Women's and (&Q.so I Women'sandfo* \ .75 I POO Fittvd,, , H / $ Q Misses' Suits, !b{J= \ Misses' Suits, SS= M/sses'Su/7s,Xl 1 = A»/sses'Sui/s,SlS== Neck4ar vaiut up'to styMS "vXeTtofi Q Values to sl2 for- | Values to $16.50 for+> | t/a/ues to $22.50 for V *■■*•= | Values to s3ofor*>> §" r Tremendous Reductions on All Extra Large Coat Suits. Sizes 3T to 51 -w Women's sweaters >s4 § RADICAL PRICE REDUCTIONS ON ALL Bovs' Winter Suits 3>l.Z" | | Men's Winter Suits & Overcoats and winter over- Infants> c *p s § Q An enormous clearance of all Suits and Overcoats that means Record- 1 M e Y er ? ! tables of ! nfa, ? ts ' caps just slightly I 511 O O Breaking Bargains for Men and Young Men. COfltS soiled, but you will find values to SI.OO. O « To-morrow at 19c. O g CLEARANCE LOT NO. 1 CLEARANCE LOT NO. 3 T r|wp< , t l> r :~ 3 @ $8.50 to sl2 Value Winter sls to S2O Winter Overcoats, i? M - n Here Are Real Clean Sweep o O Overcoats and Winter Suits . Fancy Mixtures Quoted Prices on Desirable Furnishings S §\i <6J. *7tZ At fiO CA Boys' Overcoats at $1.49 for Men and Boys R /ml ■Cr Vvevll Values to $3.00. Small Sizes. Men[s Shirts and Draw- blue Hsndkerchiefn. X O ———_—— -— _ © rs - Value to 50c OQl* devalues 4' ® O CLEARANCE LOT NO. 2 . Th p Boys' Overcoats at $2.49 *lc g g $lO to sl2 Value Winter Suits 2"! u! BUSiIMSS si s(i v.1w.... $ 6 .00. Sl„. S IS r..,. Men', and Boys' Su»- Bo ys -Flannelette P.-S 0 and Winter Overcoats Pan,s, Values to $3.00, at . . | 1 At $6.75 SSB-IH-. v £ S -.... Pants. Values to $2.00, at ... . »"t Boys' Chinchilla Overcoats,s3.oo at I values, * (f, ■ IL Wk| X' JL Arm m. values to $6.00. Small Slzee ■ a | l |N one Hundred Pairs Fine Rib-lined Cor- qa Boys' Norfolk Suits at $2.90 I 11 \<feJ X g duroy Pants. Values to $3.50, at , , W»vl) That Would Cost You S4.SO Elsewhere | QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQOO&QQQQQQOQQ&QQQ OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^wwLfcS * GRAY HORSE STOLEN Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Jan. 21. —Chief of Police Staley was notified yesterday of the theft of an iron gray horse, weighing about 1,100 pounds, from the stable of G. D. Budderke at Blue Ridge Summit on Monday night. LECTURER TELLS OF CALAMITY Speriai to The Telegraph Sunbury. Pa., Jan. 21. —Charles Ed ward Russel, a great Socialist lecturer, author and writer, spoke to over 600 persotw at. Sunbury Monday night and told them how he had seen eighty children trampled to death in the re cent disaster in a public hall nt Calu met. Mich. Quick Action Prescription Cures Colds in a Day The best and quickest prescription known to medical science for colds and coughs is as follows: "Prom your drug gist get two ounces of Glycerine and half an ounce of Globe Pine Compound (Concentrated Pine). Take these two Ingredients home and put them Into a half Pint of good whiskey. Shake It well. Take one to two teaspoonfuls af ter each meal and at bed time. Small er doses to children according to age." Be sure to get only the genuine Globe Pine Compound (Concentrated Pine). Each half ounce bottle comes | n a tin screw-top sealed ease. Anv druggist lias it on hand or will quicklv jjet it from his wholesale house. There ;ire many cheaper preparations but it don't pay to experiment. This treatment is certain. This has been published here for six winters. Published |, v the Globe Pharmaceutical laboratories of Chicago. i J WEDNESDAY EVENING Reading Club Formed For Benefit of Members Dillsburg, Pa., Jail. 21. —A reading club with twenty-one members has been formed in Dillsburg. Each mem ber is required to purchase a late book of fiction or other popular sub ject and after reading his own book it is passed on to the next member of) the club in alphabetical order, no one j to keep a book longer than two weeks. The books selected are "The South-1 eruer." "Peg o' My Heart," "Tern- j barom." 'The Millionaire," "John | Sherwood." "The Broken Halo," "The, White Jvlnen Nurse," "The Fool and I His Money," "The Hous*' of Happl- I ness." -Th- Iron Trail." "The Heart of the Hills," "The Amateur Gentle man," "Samantba on the Woman Question." "The Inside of the Cup," "Hagar," ''The Story of Waitstill Baxtar," "A Son of the Hills," "The Keeper of the Vineyard" and "V. V.'s Eyes." The members of the club are Mrs. M. J. Bailey, Kathryn Mumber, Mrs. W. D. Brougher, Mrs. Jame Williams, Mrs. Charles Sidle, Miss Gretna Beitzel, Mrs. M. W. Butcher. Miss Myrtle Mayberry, Mrs. A. C. Hartman, Mrs. J. H. Wolf, Mis* Retta Bauman. Miss Kesta Firestone, Mrs. Logan Bailey, Marietta Menear, Ethel Rearick, Laura Williams, Grace Butcher, Mrs. J. B. Spera, Dr. W. L. Crawford, M. C. Thumraa and R. B. Nelson. HEARING IS POSTPONED London. Jan. 21.—The sudden ill ness of Baron. ss May de Pallandt. for merly Marie Dugas, of Chicago, caused an Indefinite adjournment to-dav of tb. suit brought against her by' Dr. Ernest Villiers Appleby, formerly lec turer at the Vnivoralty of Minnesota, for the recovery of $20,000. Chicken Thieves Operating in Vicinity of Dillsburg Special tv The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., Jan. 21. Thieves have been making almost nightly raids on chicken houses in this section for the past three weeks. There is: j scarcely a farm within a radius of four miles of. Dillsburg that has not' I visited recently and many fowls j j taken, in some Instances as high as ■ forty and fifty chickens at one place . in a night. At the home of Jacob Sheffer, near I here, all the chickens he owned were stolen. Several farms were visited and com hauled away several nights ago and when the thieves were tracked along the road the party found a large rooster with his legs tied lying in the road, but lost trace of the thieves. Sulzer Will Testify at John Doe Inquiry By Associated Press New York. Jan. 21.—William Sulzer, former Governor, now an assembly man, was the chief witness cited to appear this afternoon at the resump tion of the so-called John Doe inquiry into political graft, especially as con cerns State road construction. During thep eriod before and after his re moval as governor Sulzer made charges against his enemies, but he did not take the stand at the im peachment proceedings, and his ap pearance to-day was the first under oath. It was understood that District Attorney Whitman insisted that the witness sisu a waiver of immunity. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH mosey for cemetery ! At the annual meeting- of the stock ' holders of the East Harrlsburg Ceme i tery Association, yesterday, a fund of | $6,150 was added to the surplus set I aside for improvements. The fund now ~ totals $14,400. Directors elected were: j John H. Mcllhenny, S. A. Reeme, 8. S. | Miller, D. 11. Swope, Edward N. Knupp, Clayton M. Hershey. The directors elected these officers: President, John 11. Mcllhenny; secretary and treasurer, Joseph A. Miller; superintendent, Ed ward M. Knupp; assistant superinten dent, Albert Farllng. WILL, REBUILD THEATER Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Jan. 21.—William Übby, of Philadelphia, owner of the moving- picture palace at Pen-Mar Park which was destroyed by the heavy snowfall of two weeks ago, when- the roof fell in and the sides of the building fell out, was at tho mountain Monday and decided to re build the structure on a larger scale than ever. SERVICES AT ANNVILLE Special to The Telegraph Annville, Pa.. Jan. 2,1. —The Rev. A. A. Kroh. of Zlon United Evangelical Church, is conducting a series at evan gelistic meetings at the church In White Oak street. A number of con versions have resulted from these meetings and the services are well at tended. The Rev. ,T. E. lleberling, of St. Paul's Evangelical Church, is in tho second week of a series of services whirh are interesting and well at tended. 4 PRESIDENT FORTY YEARS Annville, Pa.. Jan. 21.—At the an nual meeting of the stockholders of the Annville National Bank a board of seven directors was chosen. An drew Kreider, the president, heads the directorate in point of service, having ■ | been elected for the forty-first con secutive year. The other officers are: i Vice-president, Judge C. V. Henry; cashier, George W. Stlne; solicitor, Samuel T. Meyers; teller, F. A. Henrv, and clerks. Clay Deaner and H. M. Bowman. The board set aside $5,000 as a dividend and added a sum to the undivided profits and surplus fund, making the total over $130,000. After the Age of Fifty From this age the human system gradually declines and the accumulated i poisons in the blood cause rheumatism in Joints, muscles and back. These warnings should be promptly relieved and, serious Illness avoided by using the following prescription which comm from a noted doctor and is said to have , no equal In curing rheumatism and re- , storing physical vigor. Good results! come after the first dose. "From your druggist get one ounce of ToriH com pound (in original sealed package) and one ounce of syrup of Sarsaparllla compound. Take these two Ingredients home and put them into a half pint of good whiskey. Shake the bottle and take a tablespoonfui before each meal ana at bed-tlmn.*' If your driißsrint does not have Toris compound in stock 1 he will get it for you In a few hours I from his wholesale house. Don't he r JKI ,ak ? "i D a,Pr, t medicine instead of this. Inslut on JiaviiiK tho' genuine Toris compound In the original! one ounce, sealed, yellow package, pub lished by tl.o ( <l<'l>e Pharmaceutical • laboratories of Chicago. 1 JANUARY 21, 1914. Thinking of Quality ! These days, most men when they think of a smoke, think of King Oscar 5c Cigars It's the way quality always affects the mind. Its influence is simply irresistible. Think of soap, silver, flour and what ! not and the quality kinds arc the ones you instinctively, j think, of. | It's a good thing, too. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers