THE GLOBE AT THE FRONT • At the head of every organization in America, whether social, political or commercial, there is a man who LEADS the way by the very force of his ability to grasp the situation. So it is with business— every particular line has its leader and in the business of supplying Men's and Young Men's High-Grade Clothing. "THE GLOBE" has always been the undisputed LEADER in VALUE GIVING. //i\ At these prices M % '25 better suits than the new, snappy GLORE-TARTANS, ffi'-'iwFm*Ti are no * obtainable. They sprang into instant favor *i If with well dressed men because of their exceptional style-merit and superior excellence of fit, finish and ■i J%f GLOBE-TARTANS are built along the youthful I |y§ 1/ g lines Young Men want and Older Men refuse to get 'I along without. See them —you'll like them. xtra F* ants Suit For the Boy *1 vf.ff m V Means an Extra Wear Suit M I® More parents are buying their hoys' Extra Pants Suits than " ever before. And little wonder—it requires two pairs of trousers to equal the wear of the coat, thereby doubling the p-~— — service of the suit. GLOBE-SPECIAL TWO PANTS * i: 11 u a. i.t > good, warm sweater "fills the bill." A distinctive O ne °U r snappy I all hats—they re novelty this season is the new accordion knit, full of vouthful "pep." A new hat certainlv DUOTONE SWEATER, (two colors) In either rfnes "freshen i,n" * MI U ! J shawl collar or V-neck style. Special » o • with ehawl collar and new inverted pockets— Uur Own opecial are J(?2.00 they can't sap—guaranteed not to stretch out of Schoble Hats are S3 OO B af p r:! h ! > :". r r. f. F ?" .^ 1 . U . e . 8 . $5.00 Stetson's are JV.oO THE GLOBE AUDITOR GENERAL TAKEN INTO COURT Indiana Nonnal School Trustees Bring Suit to Compel Payment inadn to si ■ i-> tiornia|"schools by this appropriation act of 1913. It is claimed that the trustees ex pended money on the improvement of the property and that the Auditor General claims that the cost is not properly payable out of the appro priation, which is for maintenance and for making debts. The trustees con tend that the improvements were nec essary to keep up the property. The writ ia returnable on October 12. Mine Cases T7p. —The hearing l of the action of mine workers against the Chief of Mines, involving question of issue of certificates to men who take examinations for mine foremen, be gan in Judge McCarrell's court to day. The officials of the Department of Mines are in attendance. New Candidates. —Theodore C. Har ter, of Bloomsburg, to-day filed a nomination paper to run for Congress in the Sixteenth district on the Inde i I; The National Theater | Sixth and Dauphin Streets WILL SHOW TO-NIGHT THE TREY-O-HEARTS THE GREATEST PICTURE EVER PRODUCED "THE OUTLAW REFORMED" FULL ORCHESTRA TO-NIGHT ■ * 1 FRIDAY EVENING, HXRBISBURG & TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 25, 1914. pendent Policy ticket. H. M. Tlll brook was to-day named as the Bull .Moose candidate for the House in the First Lancaster district. Adams County Recorder. —C. W. Gardner was to-day appointed regis ter and recorder for Adams county to fill a vacancy caused by death. Appointed Trustee. —Mrs. R. D. Ma son, of South Brownsville, was ap pointed a member of the board of trustees for mothers' pensions in Fay ette county. Caught Auto Thieves.—Requisitions were honored at the Capitol to-day for automobile thieves wanted in New Jersey and West Virginia. They stole machines and crossed the lines into this state, but were trailed by de tectives and arrested. C. J. Collies, who worked a confidence game in Cook county, Illinois, and escaped to Pittsburgh, was also ordered to be extradited. Depa i t mental Bulletin. The new bulletin of the Department of Labor and Industry calls attention to the advances in sanitary arrangements in industrial establishments and says: "It is the consensus of opinion among those who have had the widest experi ence with the installation and op eration of these advances in industrial sanitation that it is a paying propo sition, both for the employer and em ploye," says the bulletin. It also con tains an article directed against spit ting in establishments. Inspe