A Different Kind of February Furniture Sale CALL 1991-ANY M Opens At Tomorrow ► Jf • HARBISBUPGS POPULAR DEPARTMENT STORB I GUARANTEED BRASS BEDS ARE MARKED AT say A h /' pful distribution of trustworthy furniture at liberal ; : FEBRUARY SALE PRICES. THERE ARE MANY g /lv ~.. , . .. ' NEW DESIGNS TO CHOOSE FROM ' 1 ) lncluclin g low P nced furniture worth ■ * « a ' having. • |-l ; ► JlJ'iS 55 Of the tjecond (2) kind above referred to we have procured choice pieces ► i ; if iiiii ll'P i I a * trade discounts rarely experienced, they being sample pieces of the (Jrand " 111 111 11 P ■ lIOIWIM ® ITr 1 S2O 00 Colonial Ouartered Rapids Furniture Show. We are obligated to not print the name (though we ; pCTOH Oak Buffet, 46 inches wide, mind telling you when you come to the store). ► picture. February Sale All home lovers and people who are interested in the finest of furniture ► nuR Brsuw Bod S2B 00 This Brass Bed siß.»s price, craft will be able to save considerable on these pieces, most of which is "period" r ' $12.00 Guaranteed Brass Beds $7.75 OR i ► ft* /aa , j r>~..d„j„ (tio 7C 7U Concerning the lower priced furniture we have prepared with perhaps the $16.00 Guaranteed Brass Beds $12.75 ▼ . ]argest quantit K y sillce the o f peilillff of the furniture st ore. " SIB.OO Guaranteed Brass Beds $14.50 $4-.00 Quartered Oak Buffet { *■ <* oi aa n Tiorlo ilzl Qft flfl Entire fifth floor crowded with new goods, our warehouse filled to the roof i $21.00 Guaranteed Brass Beds $ 14.V0 4>JD.UU and additional store house rented for the purpose. ' $35.00 Guaranteed Brass Beds $28.00 $35.00 Quartered Oak Buffet . ... \ ► $55.00 Guaranteed Brass Beds $39.00 $27.50 inspect'the UP ° U VB ' U ™ ] • 2-inch continuous post Brass Bed-one inch filling 14.50 $29.00 Quartered Oak Buffet xi .• ■ + . ■, * «•. j • rods—bright or satiu finish, guaranteed lacquer, .... tf ffc TP No word m print Wlll conve . v a c ' lear 1(lea ot the hmsh < design, construction T — I J and general worth of the furniture. You must see it. v •! HIM fjmil , Lh I I: . ► * $3.50 Genuine Leather, g, —marked at February Prices to give home- I i ► ° _ - jp •" ► J picture. February Sale | junction with the February Furnfture Sale. | A Hf 9 4.C 12c roll Sc roll I < . Furniture pur- .W» . I < * j • 1 IfxilL A group of Bed Room Fur- $2.50 Box Seat Diner, chase j| 2,000 rolls in lot }°\ i . chased during our #W®f\ nit«re in Tuna mahogany, leather, $J.75 | Borders | 1 « ► February Sale will $12.00 Golden Oak Exten- U\y #1 w2v ye maplC ° r ma " HOO Oenuine Leather'seat 1 St, ' ipf ' 12VsC Stripe Papers 1 1 Bion Table-—extends six feet, M M 5V,;,,.™, iw«,„ Diner ®0 QQ 1 H ?" j in yellow & green I < ►be held for future 42-inch top—like picture. ~ | [ < ChifFoiiifv " _ | ' ltc^en Papers | Cretonnes " | delivery if you so Februa^ Sale price ' i I )ivss«t 3 U | ~ I < ; !ii on MMftM 3 ; : °" k ' Any of these matched pieces JaTL I IfcFtaXi GtS, I ; xmmmji&w:.imvz.mmm3T!jmjms!3ss ot bea room turniture, pat- /u/ j n g February Sale price, 1 Paper for Parlor goods n •ip . A , | tern like picture, mahog- // /v \\ u 1 25c Oat Meal, all 30c Duplex Figured j® * Special February Announcement jj any bird . 3 . eye mapl ; // K/ \\ QC | shades Oat Meal Papers | ; . ConcerningFloorCover-1 y _ mwß l E d'ecou„n M at- I in rr oii ! Idr roll : " | n-nA I $24.00 Dresser - tress, art tick- /IQ JL*\J ■V/ \ / \ I Draperies | $24.00 Chiifonier =::== mg ' 5p4.4y g 200 rolls in lot Quantities are lim- j < ► I Many people who will attend the Fumi- 1 $24.00 Princess Dresser ° a=:=ss:: == 5 - 50 Cotton | 50c Leatherettes in j ited as they are |Jv ► 3 ture Sale will likely be interested in new 1 ° Mattress, ii KU | red and brown : High-Class Goods | , ► I draperies and floor coverings. 'j f1 fi Cft ® (in To Silk 40c Duplex Import- 60c Satin Damask m < ► t ™ U * r «. i MOtjU O J ™ 00-Lo-Sleep Silk | c d Oat Meal in tan Parlor Papers I | We therefore direct attention to the spe- I " floss Mattress Mat- 4 75c Areo Cromes in | , -• cial prices on Oriental and Domestic Rugs, | ' x tress de H>| ,1 7.1 I I on account of the «*- tan m Curtains, Upholsteries and materials. I .. enn n . , _ . luxe, v 1 j treme reductions we re- „r ( i r] , | " : 1 Assortment are comprehensive *iml the ! sl ®-°° Quartered Oak ® , $ 16 .00 Imperial 801 l Edge I I StfXW&fX Preied Paper to I : 1 thl I Princess Dresser, like pic- $13.98 Quartered Oak Dress- Felt Mattress. .This Mat- g 1 ■—» gr een ' ' I L n rv. c,, „ iU ... , 1 ture. February Furniture er, like picture. February tress weighs sixtv pounds, f .. e ► On Sale on t.lie Fourth Floor, Bowmnn s. w .. " JL • , /t» '•* f\ mr\ b? on the iourth floor, Bowman s. fc * LI B Sale A OPT Furniture Qft is extra G?1 AKA | g ! 1 tPXV/.00 Sale, fPU»UO thick, vav.uu FOOD INSPECTION ! WINSSTATEMONEY Cost Far Below the Income From the Enforcement of the Pure Food Statutes Pennsylvania 8,000,000 people each spent annually about S9O for food, making their food bill reach the gi gantic total of *720,000,000. The State Dairy and Food Commissioner Is charged with the supervision of the food trade to see that the foods are clean, sound and unadulterated and their Bales kept free from fraud and he figures that the cost of the ser CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought ft V Jl. I MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 2. 1914. vice is about twelve cents for each SI,OOO of food purchased, but that the receipts from fines and licenses , fees are about twice the expenditure; jso that there is no direct tax upon I the consumer. | The commissioner notes that the jcold storage act has been in force only about four months, but that the ev perience gained shows the desirabil ity of improving the act so as to make it less vague at certain points, so as to make the owner and warehouseman jointly responsible for promptly dis posing of foods made legally unsale able by over-long- storage, and to pro vide more perfectly for the care of cold storage foods after their with drawal from the warehouse for sale. The facts set forth by the commis sioner are: Year. Receipts Expenditures 1907 $ 55,702.63 $ 78,455.88 1908 54,580.62 69,968.20 1909 86,594.15 83,700.00 1910 110,802.95 79,661.65 1911 120,993.48 83,083.15 1912 136,125.49 81,858.55 1913 178.789.76 75,687.12 $738,619.08 $552,314.55 Comparing the receipts and expen ditures for the seven years, the total recepts were $186,304.53 more than the expenditures. Telegraphic News in Condensed Form Special to Ttii Telegraph New York. —General James Grant Wilson, a member of the staff of Gen eral Grant In the campaign against Vicksburg and later famous as a writer and lecturer, died yesterday in St. Luke's Hospital after an Illness of several weeks. Paris. —lt was announced to-day that the national subscription for the French aerial war fleet amounted to $1,200,000 a*id that 210 aeroplanes would be bought for the army. Washington.—Much, discussion haa been aroused in educational circles by an article In the Educational Review, written by Rear Admiral French E. Ohadwick, in which he said that women teachers in the public schools of America has resulted in "feminized, emotional, illogical nutnliood." Washington.—The Mouse uosl office 2 committee arranged a hearing for - Monday of next week, when argu- ] 5 ments in favor of the reduction of - letter postage to 1 cent will be pre .l sented by representatives of the Na il tional One-Cent Postage Association. Falmouth. England.—Captain Ix>r enz, the first officer, and seventeen of the crew of the German bark Hera, from Pisagua, Chile, for Falmouth, lost their lives yesterday through the 1 vessel striking a rock as she had almost concluded her voyage. The remaining five men were saved t through the gallantry of the first offi cer, who, realizing his own end was I near, handed his whistle to a comrade with orders to blow It. This attracted * the attention of the crew of a lifeboat, f who rescued the men from the rigging. y CHARACTER STUDIES AT CLUB ® Special to The Telegraph s Hershey, Pa., Feb. i. —On Thursday evening, February B, Will A. Rogers, * of Wllllamsport, will give a fine en tertalnment in the Hershey Men's !. 1 Club rooms. His subject will be * i "Posies Gathered From Various Gar- | 8 ' dens and Tied Together With a String jof l\ly Own." Mr. Rogers' program a cuiists of character studies. I ' News Items From Points in Central Pennsylvania Marietta.—Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Waller, residing at Accomac, celebrat ed their golden wedding anniversary. Har.leton. —Thirty-nine residents of Hazleton Heights have petitioned the ' city council to investigate the ln , creased domestic lighting rates of the Harwood Electric Company. Hatboro.—The Hatboro branch of i the Montgomery No-Licenße Campaign i has been formed with Elmer Walton . as president and Charles Crouthamel , as treasurer. Bridgeport.—Burgess George Geh ret, of Bridgeport, has issued an edict that all Sunday celebrations by mem bers of the foreign quarter shall be halted by the police. ' Marietta. —Mrs. John Cashmere, , aged 60, Is dead after an illness of . several years. i Wrlghtsvllle.—There are a number , of robberies being committed In this section, the latest attempt being made ■ to force ah entrance Into the station r of the Northern Central Railroad, i Bloomsburg.—The scarlet fever quarantine was lifted yesterday from the public schools. Shamokin.^—A revival campaign started here ve weeks ago by eight I local churches, the Rev. W. P. Nich olson, the Irish evangelist, doing the 1 preaching dally, ended last night. Morrlsville. —Morrlsville real estate dealers have plans under way for the , erection of nearly two hundred houses \ here following an order of the Penn sylvania railroad to all its yard and \ car shop employes to remove to Mor ! risville, so they will be nearer their work. Chambersburg.—Central Presbyter ' fan church held a congregational ! meeting with the Rev. Dr. John Allan Blair, as moderator. The Rev. George A. McAllister, of Chester, N. Y., was ' unanimously callecf as pastor and It t 1b believed he will accept. ' York.—The Rev. Dr. Charles Lewis Ehrenfeld, who died yesterday of pneumonia, aged 81, will be buried > at Springfield, 0., on Wednesday ' morning next. He was at one time Pennsylvania State Librarian. ' "I suppose this talk about beating ! your altitude record gets you rather 1 angry, doesn't it?" asked the abla tor's friend. • "Yes," said the aeronaut, "it cer i tainiy makes me soar." • ' V OPTICIAN RECOVERS BRIGHTS DISEASE H. W. Smith is a wholesale optician of Mason City, lowa. Hearing that ha had recovered from Bright's disease w« wrote him and take the following items from his letter ill reply: "Specialists pronounced mr case Bright's disease and incurable and ad vised me to go south to prolong my life. Went to Mineral Wells. Texas. Became terribly bloated. Physicians there made tests and found casts and almost solid albumen. Several at the Wells who had been oured by Fulton's Renal Compound pursuaded me to tak« it. Dropsy dropped forty-flve pounds in fourteen days. In three months t was back to business. • • • I con tinued the treatment over two years and during the last four years have not found It necessary to u»e any medicine. I have received many letters, all of which I have answered. Through jny correspondence I have learned of a number of recoveries." If you have Bright's disease do you not owe it to yourself and family to try Fulton's Renal Compound before giving up? It' can be had at J. R. Boher. druggist, 209 Market street. Ask for pamphlet or write- John J Fulton Co., San Francisco.—Advertise-* went. - *•>> ■ 3