8 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established lijf PUBLISHED BY TBI TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. E. J. STACKPOLH Ffliidevt and Editer-m-C htef, T. R. OYSTER Secretary GUS M. STEINMETZ Manaeii't Hditor Published »v«ry evening (except Sun. dsy) at the Telegraph Building, 211 Federal Square. Both phones. tfember American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau o 1 Circulation and Pennsylvania. Associ ated Dailies. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New York City, Hasbrook, Story & Brooks. Western Offtoe, Advertising Building, Chicago, 111., Allen & Ward. .rfgßiaSfc. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. Mailed to subscribers it $3.00 a year In advance. Entered at the Post Office in Harris burg. Pa., as second class matter. Sworn dally nverage for the three ★ months ending Jan.31,1915, 4 21,757 Jt Average for the year 1#14—234113 Average for the year 1918—31,577 Average for the year 1912—21,175 Average for the year 1811—18,851 Average for the year 191f«-17,495 THURSDAY EVENING, FEB. 18. COAL AS A UTILITY ONE of the problems which the present Legislature may be called upon to solve will be whether coal and ice can be 1 onsidered as utilities and should bo included in the list of those covered by the act known as the public service company law, on which the work of (he Public Service Commission is based. The suggestion was made a year or so ago that because of their peculiar relation to the consumer the purveyors of these commodities were in the same position as companies, persons or firms which supply water. The public service company act gave the commission jurisdiction over a long list of utilities from railroads to steam heat corporations. No com plaints have come in under some of the classifications, but the commission has undertaken to regulate them and Jo provide systems of charges and standards of service. In many respects the commission act is like the school • ode, in need ol'a nood tryout, and It should not be disturbed any more than is absolutely necessary to secure efficient and speedy handling of mat ters brought before it for adjudi cation. However, if there are lines in which the police power of the State should be invoked to secure a square deal for the consumer of coal or ice, tho advisability of adding these ar ticles to the services over which the commission has control is worthy of serious study. HARD WORK AHEAD MEMBERS of the Legislature would do well to rest up during tho recess which has been ar ranged to extend until the first day of March, because when they come back to Harrisburg they will have to hustle if they are to get away in the latter part of April. It is understood that there will not be many bills passed this session, that is, compared to some which have gone before. There arc, of course, many appro priation bills which make up the rec ord of a session, but the prevailing impression appears to be that there will be fewer general laws than here tofore. When the legislators assemble again the Governor will have the workmen's compensation and other big adminis tration bills in shape to present and the codes and municipal legislation and other measures which generally attract attention will be in shape for committee consideration. Local option is to hold the boards in March In the House and there will be other things to seriously discuss. Not much has been done by the General Assembly up to date, but it will have an opportunity to make up for lost time, and inspections and other things should be gotten out of the way now. POTATO MEAL BREAD THERE is nothing very new in the government experiments with the use of potato meal in bread. Our mothers knew that the ad dition of potatoes added to the flavor and preserved the moisture of bread. And there never was "baker's bread" to comparo with that which mother used to make in tho good'old days when tho barrel of flour had its con stant place in every home, when "bake-day" came as regularly as "wash-day," when the "doughtray" was a household institution and when it was one of the regular duties of the small boy of the family to go for a "penny's worth of yeast." But any thing that tends toward keeping down tho cost of the staff of life in the pres ent emergency is worthy of considera tion. Austrian bakers are now compelled by law to use at least 30 per cent, po tato meal in making their bread. The United States Bureau of Chemistry's potato-meal bread has been baked with from 25 to 60 per cent, potato meal and the remaining per rentage wheat. The most satisfactory loaves in combining economy and appearance were those made with the minimum percentage allowed in Austria or less. The loaves made with more than 30 per cent, potato meal were not so sat isfactory, as they were heavier and less attractive in form. The bread has a rather coarse texture and dark appearance, but possesses a distinctive and agreeable flavor. It also retains moisture for a much longer period than ordinary wheat bread. The question has been raised as to whether the ordinary cooked potato might not be satisfactorily substituted THURSDAY EVENING, for the prepared potato meal. The experimenters believe that It might serve the same purpose If used in just the right proportion, but this would be difficult for the average housewife to determine, as there is great danger of using too much and producing a very soggy loaf. Dried bananas, ripe and unripe, and chestnuts are other substitutes for wheat flour with which experiments are being made by the Bureau of Chemistry. Still other products which offer promise of furnishing the public with a cheap and nutritious bread are bran, soy bean, white bean, millet, kallr, mllo, dasheen, cottonseed flour, oatmeal, cassava, buckwheat, rye, corn gluten, kaoliang, rice (polished and natural), peas, potato (sweet), corn meal (white and yellow). The breads made from these various ingredients have already been photo graphed and analyzed. The flours from which tl>e breads were made are being analyzed that it may be known exactly how nutritious they are in comparison with the pure wheat flour. The soy bean and cottonseed flours, when mixed with wheat flours in prop er proportions (about 25 per cent.), give a bread with about twice the amount of protein (muscle-building element) that ordinary wheat bread contains. The American public is so 'set in its ways" of eating that it is difficult to persuade it to change its standards of diet. Its attitude toward "potato bread," therefore, when it knows it to be such. Is difficult to fore cast. THE REASON' THE Ohio State Journal, a bright, breezy and usually well-in formed newspaper that ought to know better, publishes the fol lowing in its editorial columns: Pennsylvania is still a wild coun try, wilder in big game than Idaho or Arizona. Think of it. that in the hunting season just closed 378 bears and 1,100 deer were killed in the Keystone State, the center and seventh of the arch of the thir teen original States. Civilization must have had a hard time keep ing up in that State. Here in Ohio, the next State to Pennsylvania, there has not been a deer or a bear killed during tho past year, and no bears for several years. Can it be possible that it is the bad politics in Pennsylvania which is keeping that State so attractive to wild ani mals. and so disinclined to the beautiful ways of civilization? No, dear Journal, it is not because civilization is behind hand here that we in Pennsylvania have forests and that these forests teem with wild animal life. On the contrary, it is be cause we in Pennsylvania enjoy an advanced stage of civilization that these things are true. We have been wise enough to preserve some of our forests and to take care of our wild game in a manner that it would have been entirely fitting for Ohio to follow had that commonwealth realized its duty to future generations. We do not desire to be boastful, but we in Pennsylvania were prac ticing conservation of our natural re sources long before that phrase was adopted by politicians largely for their own selfish purposes. Not only are we not ashamed of the fact that we have thousands of acres of woodland where the hunter may still delight in the chase, but we are adding, year after year, to our wooded area, and our Legislature will during the pres ent session set aside large sunts for the purchase of private land of this kind to be turned back into the public domain. Instead of poking fun at Pennsyl vania, Ohio should take a lesson from us in this respect and go and do likewise, if her opportunity to do so is not already passed. COMMKM>ABI>F, ACTION NOTHING is so timid as capital, unless it is the capitalist. And it docs not require a million dollars nor yet a hundred thou sands dollars to make a capitalist. Let a man or woman have a bank ac count, be it ever so small, and he or she at once enters the capitalistic class, and the germ of timidity begins Ito get in its work. That's what takes [the small depositor and the large de positor post haste to bank to draw his money at the first whisper of finan cial stress. More than 9 9 per dent, of all banks are honestly and efficiently conducted, according to official statistics cover ing more than a century, and these honest banks in Pennsylvania have been injured, every onS of them, by the disaster at Schaefferstown recently. The bankers realize this and they are going to have no more happenings of the kind if they can help it. They arc going to have their banks examined by examiners employed by an associa tion of bankers, as well as by State and national bank examiners. They want to know for their own protection, and the bank that is not willing to pay some insurance of this kind will be looked upon with suspicion at once. Not all missteps that bankers take are premeditated. Sometimes ignor ance is at the bottom of the trouble, sometimes an inability to say "no" at the proper time. In either such case the bank examiner would be able to set the local banker right and possibly save some such wreck as that which has just caused so much loss and sor row at Schaefferstown. The timid de positor will reap the benefit. THE TRADE EXTENSION TRIP THE trade extension trip which members of the Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce are now enjoying is a good thing for all concerned. In the first place, the little journey being made to other towns and centers of commercial activities gives people of those places a better idea of the snap and vim of business as It is conducted in Harrisburg. The city is advertised in a manner that it could not hope to attain in any other way. Neighboring town newspapers print much of a complimentary nature about us and our representatives ex change ideas and rub elbows with their fellows elsewhere. But of far more value than this is the opportunity such tours afford for our own people to become better ac quainted. llarrisburgers cannot know each other too well. Familiarity docs not breed contempt, but confidence, and It is to bo hoped that the results will be so beneficial that the Chamber of Commerce will And it advisable to make them a regular part of the year's program. iTVENING CHAT 1 Of all of the tributes that have come to him from friends throughout the State there is none which Is more ap preciated by Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh than that sent him by the trustees of Juniata College, where he was educated and where he reallv be gan his career as an educator. This tribute was sent the day before his inauguration and is signed by the whole board. It reads as follows: The trustees of Juniata Col lege on the eve of the inagura tion of one of their fellow mem bers and brethren, Dr. M. G. Brumbaugh, as Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, wish to oxpress to hint their sin cere congratulations on his elec tion to that high office by the voice of the people. They want to tell him of their high regard for him, as they have known him in the intimate association of col lege and church. They would record their belief in his splendid qualities of mind and heart and his ivhole souled devotion to every good cause in which he is associ ated. They unite in the prayer that the Governor mhy be blessed by God with continued good health and sound mind and strong purpose and that the same skill, devotion and spirit that distin guished him as student, teacher, president and trustee here, and his educational work everywhere may characterize his conduct of the affairs of the State. Curator Boyd P. Rothrock, of the otate Museum, has placed on the walls of the Museum a collection of the but terflies of the State which is of par ticular local interest because so many of tho varieties have been taken in this section. The specimens are large and every detail is perfect, the care the Museum gives to its mountings being demonstrated. In the collection are a number of moths which have been studied by pupils from the city schools. It is the intention to gradu ally extend the collection which now includes the animals, birds, reptiles and fishes of the State to take in the insects especially those of value to the farmers and those which are plain out and out pests. Alexander Simpson, Jr., noted Phila delphia lawyer and partner of Attor ney General Brown, was among the visitors to the city yesterday. Mr. Simpson came to appear in a case before the Public Service Commission and called up a number of officials. He is well known here because of his activities in cases in the Dauphin county court. Another Philadelphia visitor was John P. .Connelly, the Philadelphia councilman who is figuring in the financial business of the Quaker City cbnsidcrably these days. The bill before tho legislature to make the mountain laurel the State flower has attracted considerable at tention to the flower and the lawmak ers have been receiving numerous let ters about it. The laurel campaign appears to have been well organized as many requests for favorable consid eration have been received. The Sen ators are now receiving mail about it. Pictures of laurel in bloom have con stituted a considerable part of the campaign in its behalf. A man with something on his mind stopped two cars on Market street hill last night. He was walking across the street and took a diagonal course which brought him' between two cars. The car going up stopped to let him get off the track and one coming down was stopped with a jerk that sent passengers reeling. The man was right between the cars and the motor men were as uncertain as ho was about which track he would take. Capitol park beasts and birds have been setting a new line of diet lately. It is rice. Some one who could not buy peanuts or the hardshelled rari ties the squirrels prefer thought of rice and bought a package at a groc ery. The pigeons assembled in force when distribution began and the squir rels appeared to like it, although they did not carry any off to their home's that anyone could notice, evidently re garding the food as for emergency use. People who observe birdlife de clare that robins and other birds, which are usually noted before this time in February, have been very slow to appear, and they are making uncomplimentary remarks about the groundhog and other prognosticators of the weather. One man who has observed birdlife for years says that robins are unusually late. I WELL KNOWN PEOPLE 1 —Mayor Blankenburg was sev enty-two yesterday. —Professor Paul Cret, of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, who is serving with the French army, writes that life in the trenches is a bore. —Justice Potter, of the State Su preme Court, takes exception to the President's statement that justice is ■ delayed in this country. —E. R. Buckalew, head of the Scranton Y. M. C. A., is increasing the J membership by leaps and bounds. ■ — W. IJ. Sanders, the new president of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, was formerly connected with Pennsylvania manufacturing plants. —Judge C. E. J'ice, of the Superior Court, used to be district attorney of Luzerne county. Ex-Attorney General \V. U. Hensel has gone to Southern States for re cuperation of his health. —William T. Elliott, Philadelphia banker, is in Florida. I M VOU KNCW=n That Harrlsburg used to he a cen ter of car manufacturing and has facilities now? AT ANOTHER HOUSE By Winn Oinjsrr I met a friend of mine to-day, Who unto mo these words did say: Wing Dinger, I did read your poem On how someone up at your home Had set your bedroom clock ahead And made you lose an hour in bed. But Bomeone in my family Put up a worse joke on poor me. I fix the thermostat each night To start the fire next morn all right, But recently at fifty-four I set the thing, and what is more I wound the clock that runs it, then I set that so that at 6:10 The fire would start and heat for me The room in which I dress, you see. But someone else got busy, too, They set the thing at forty-two. And changed the hour to start the Are From six to eight—next morn my Ire Was roused as I got out of beil— The room was cold as ice X said (Dear friend, wo do not pr'nt such stuff As ho said, but it was enough). Harrisburg tSmm teleghxPH JUDGE RICE WILL LEAVE THE BENCH Superior Court Head Announces That He Will Not Seek Re election This Autumn TRIBUTE TO COLLEAGUES Judges Orlady and Head Are Commended; Crow Doubts Early Adjournment Date Announcement was made last night from Wllkes-Barre that President Judge Charles E. Rice, of the Superior Court of Pennsylvania, will retire and not allow his name to go before the voters in the coming campaign. This announcement is made in a letter written by Judge Rice to Joseph 13. Coons, secretary of the Luzerne Coun ty Bar Associativa* wbich recently in dorsed him, along wrm Judges Orlady and Head for re-election. —Judge Rice in his letter pays tri bute to Judges Head and Orlady, his associates, and declares they were fit for ten years more work. He refers to them as "able, high-minded, honest and fearless judges. They have dem onstrated by their work their keen ap preciation for the responsibilities of the oifico ana their fitness to discharge them. Much of the usefulness of the court has been due to their loyalty to It and to their interest in the work it was created to do and to their fidelity." Concerning himself. Judge Rice says: I would like to rjsmain in the judicial service as long as I can do the work. I have no wish to leave It to enjoy the ease that would follow. No feeling of that kind enters into the determination of the Question of my candidacy for re-election. But, although I am in fair con dition now, my bodily health, as has been demonstrated, is unre liable. Taking this into consider ation with my age, the probabil ity of my being capable of long sustained mental effort as a judge ought to be, for any considerable part of the new term, to speak within bounds, not strong. It is enough to say they have led me to a definite conclusion as to what my duty to the court and to the people of the Common wealth. who have so generously honored me, requires. —These postmasters have been named through influence of the Demo cratic machine in Pennsylvania: James C. Jacobs, Burnham; William Fairchild, Sr., "Dawson; Daniel J. O'Brien, Everson: Joseph G. Lesher, Huntingdon; M. M. Maginey, Mllroy; Nathaniel S. Byers, Perryopolis; Ori gen lv. Bingham, Slippery Rock; John P. Hines, Stoneboro; .1. W. Keating, Towanda: Thomas P. McCormick, Forest City; L. B. Rowley, Greenville; Grover C. Boozer, Hummelstown; Ralph W T . Simcox, Sandy Lake; Otis H. Davis. Bellsboro: Edmund J. Raf ferty, Conshohoc-ken. —Senators McNic-hol, Vare and Crow leavd to-day for Florida where they will spend a week. Senator Crow has not been in the best of health, but hopes to get good and sound again for the hard work of the session. —The Suntingdon County Bar As sociation has strongly endorsed Judge George B. Orlady, of the Superior court, for re-election. The judge ap pears to be strongly backed in every county in the State and his renomina tion is regarded as a foregone conclu sion. —The indications are the Governor will have difficulty in getting an amendment through the Legislature exempting boroughs from the opera tions of the public service law. Some of the legislative leaders say that they will not stand for this enactment. They might agree to some modifica tions, but will fight any attempt to take all supervision of borough utili ties away from the commission. —Bills to strengthen the hands of the State censors of moving pictures and to repeal the act creating the su pervision of films and pictures will probably appear in the House next week. A. C. Stein, of Pittsburgh, will present a bill for repeal of the censor ship law on the ground that It is not necessary, this being the contention of exhibitors. The State Bureau is pre paring to meet this by a bill Increas ing the force of inspectors and mak ing more stringent regulations. The difficulty, from the standpoint of the officials, is that the output is far be yond the ability of the force of the bureau to handle. —Senator Crow had hoped to see the Legislature complete its work by April 15. "I am now doubtful whether this can be done," he said. "The Legislature will really begin to work on March 1 and wo may not be able to get everything through in six weeks, it is to be expected that many people will want to be heard on the big legislation which we will have to consider. When we come back here on March t the new election bills will be ready for introduction." —Democratic leaders yesterday con firmed the report that the Rev. Riley M. Little, secretary of the Society for Organizing Charity in Philadel'phiu, had been selected as warden of the Federal Prison at Atlanta, Ga. State Chairman Roland S. Morris said that | Mr. Little's appointment was not a political one. "He was chosen solely because of his attainments," he said. "There is no politics connected with it." EASY "How useless girls arc to-day. ' I don't believe you know what needles are for." "How absurd you are, grandma," protested the girl. "Of course I know what needles are for. They're to make the graphophone play."—Louis ville Courier-Journal. Keep Your Lungs Strong This advice is doubly important with the knowledge that every three minute® some one in the United States succnmh* to consumption and many refuse to realize they are afflicted until it is too late. It is after colds or sickness, from over work, confining duties or when general weakness exists that tubercular germs thrive because the resistive powers of the body are weakened. Only with fresh air, ronshine and abundant rich blood can one hope to arrest their progress, and the concen trated fats in Scott's Emulsion furnish fnel for rich blood, and its rare nourish ment helps strengthen the lungs while it builds up the forces. If you work indoors, tire easily, feel languid or run-dovrti Scott's Emulsion ia the most strengthening food-medicine known and ia free from alcohol or stup*- fying drugs. Avoid substitutes. IMI ft Bowat, MoanOcM. K. J. J I OUR DAILY LAUGH | ■ in tsar safe. I thought you'd (7 swore off tobacco P ' er s y* ar - Say, if you can find any tobacco in one of Nick's — *'.-r-~ r - 10-for-a-cent see gars, I'll eat it. MAD! "own Ist Office Boy: * 'JI * " I 3ee! Wot's de —<A- — C— natter wit de "'* - 2nd Office Boy: sh, he's wrote it /A?"* 'l9 14" l»raln, lat's all. Dobbins has a very orderly desk. Yes. He is one of these men who won't leave a pa per lying around. He promptly put.i it in a pigeon hole Bl and loses it for- I : [From the Telegraph, Feb. 18, 1865] lienurcguard Killed? Annapolis, Feb. 17. —Rumor in this fity is that Rebel General Beaure guard had been killed in a battle with Sherman's army. * Kxtra Session Called Washington. Feb. 17.—An extra ses sion of the Senate, to begin at noon, March 4, has been called by President Lincoln. Capture Expedition Washington, Feb. 17.—A secret Rebel expedition has been captured. A $2,000,000 fire is reported from Danville. IN HARRISBURG FIFTY I YEARS AGO TO-DAY I [From the Telegraph. Feb. 18, 1865] Snow Lays Too l-ons City officials are having trouble again with citizens about' removing snow from the pavements. < Raising Infantry Captain Harry C. Demming has been given authority to raise a troop of infantry. Bible Society Anniversary The fifty-first anniversary of the Harrisburg Bible Society will be held Sunday. ABOUT | PENNSYLVANIA The Lock Haven Express says the basing of the fox hound on the trail of the sly and swift footed Br'r Reynard is not heard much this winter in the wooded places in the town's vicinity. The reason given is that some greedy hunter has been placing poisoned meat where the foxes can get it. and the fox hounds have been the victims. Along the Bald Eagle mountains east and west of Castanea and in the Hammer dinner Hollow is where the mightv hunter is getting in his dirty work. The Express suggests that a good, wide-awatce game warden wouldn't find time to sleep o' nights, he'd be kept so busy in that vicinity. * * « You just can't kill some people, that's all. Simon Rupert, aged 70. a veteran of the Civil War. who had five hats shot off his head in that great con flict is one of them. The other day while Simon was driving to the Cogley mine, near Kit tanning, his team went over an embankment seventy feet high, and struck a tree at the bottom. The aged man was bruised a bit here and there, but he unhitched his horses, and rt.de horseback to get assistance at the mine. Punxsutawney boasts of a girl. Miss Waleska Sadler, who served as a Red Cross nurse for Belgium. France and V ————— DON'T USE SOAP ON YOUR HAIR When you wash your hair, don't use soap. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil. for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats soap.s or any thing else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a tea spoonful is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every par ticle of dust, dirt and dandruff.— Advertisement. FREE 1 ILLUSTRATED LECTURE i Westinlnste/ Preshj terimi Church, Corner Ureen and Kelly Street* Thursday, Feb, 18,1915,8. P. M. i —BY Mr. George B. Coleman tilvinar vlewa of the Holy Land, the Philippine Island*, the Orient, (he Mediterranean Sea and nil points vlalted by the Battleship Squadron on their trip around the norld la MM>B, also shon-tDK vlrni of the erec tion of the Stough Tahernacle at i HarHshurK, under nusplce* of the YOUNG MEN'S BIHI.K CLASS No Children admitted unless accom panied by nn adult. Educational ns well as Entertaining*. No Admission Charged. Silver Collection. EVERYBODY WELCOME ———— l FEBRUARY 18, 1915. 'THE QUALITY STORE" Economy For Friday's Selling Only stock of Ladles'! Misses' and Clill- welgTu?M^Vw^-lnrlillejns?re£2tart? SoteKTRKt 8 CS " a9< " : SPetlal f ° r ,ri,,,,> % h , ; One Black Pony Skin Coat—full length aJul of M'portor qmiUty— 25c Gingham Aprons, made or was originally SBS; special for Fri- splendid, serviceable gingham a> at ; $-1:5 <>o,or guaranteed fa«t, In blue only, large size; special for Friday Ladies' Serge Skirts—a small lot at ' eac ® l 19^! in navy bine and bluck, small sfewoM&y St ,Wr qua,Hy " tra ,Kavv Cn " *ri«aj at ••• ffll.Utf bleached Canton nannel, heavy —— twill back with thick fleece; spe- Baldwin or double service House clal for Friday at, per yard, (ilAri Dresses, made of black and white /2V cliecks and striped powales. i^egu larty SI.BB and $-.15; special for ,s «' DUCKLING IXB3JCE in a Friday at Uil in beautiful style and color range— 'P i ■ ' all new patterns: special for Frl ,, . , day at. per yard 11 ff. Colored Voile and Near Silk 1 " Waists, all sizes, low necks and . mier long or short sleeves, very Our entire stock of the famous iN'autirul waists, worth $1.25; to Lu/.erno Underwear for men, wom •lose out, special for Friday at, en und children at GREATLY RK cac" gt, DUCED PRICES. We are closing Men's Auto or Rain Coats «l*e« 34 to 16; the kinds rcgularlv sold Indies' Longcloth Night Gowns, at $5.00; special for FHrf«v n» ,iM '' and embroidery trimmed, low ■ij, Jkt , neck and short sleeves; were $1.00; •p I JO special for Friday , . 690 EXCEPTIONAL— Curtain Lace in wldte autl ecru, the latest Spring Men s SI.OO and $1.50 Stiff Bosom designs, excellent, qualities, worth Percale Shirts: special for Friday— -25c and 2»c; special for Friday at, !81 - 00 grade at 75f* PCr >a,< ' "• • 170 $1.50 grade at .()() 27x34 high grade Wilton Rugs, beautiful |>attenis, worth $4.50 and Men's heavy weight Cotton Union $5.00; siK-clttl for Friday at. each Suits, stout ami regular sizes; spe- Jj'i Xi 1 eial for Friday— fd.OU SI.OO kinds at 790 8.3x10.0 Tapestry Brussels Rugs $1.50 kinds at Jfel 11) unique designs and rich colorings. 1 2V.l y «„ Sot ~leß° ,oft - ''egularlv $1.5.,>0: special for Friday at All Linen Torchon Lures and C|W Insertions. '4 inch to 2 inches •po.Jo wide; special for Friday at, per ~ yard •> /, Remnants or Scrim, Voilo and "V Marquisette in 1 to 3-yard lengths. lo 20c; spcelal for Fri- Lot of Swiss Insertions in widths uaj at, per yartl f . from 2 inches to 5 Inches; special for Friday— Genuine "OREGON CITY" Wool 25C t0 35c Ta,UCS at * 170, ? rd Indian Blankets, made of high 1 lit]/^(ft yarns; only a left; spe- 35c to 00c values at. per yard clal for *ricla.v— i , $9.00 quality at I SIO.OO quality at $7.75 Hand Mirrors, good size, with —— long handle anil heavy glass: very Turkish Bath Towels, large size, special for Friday at OS* heavy weight, hemmed ready for use. full bleached. 25c quality: spe cial for Friday at. each.... IV *. Individual Folding Drinking Cups Iff —made of aluminum with good ——— leather case: special for Friday— Shirtwaist Linen. Hue, fight 25c grades at »B/'< weight. 30 inches wide. 50c value- —•Xffp special for Friday at, per yard oo< ' Srades at 350 370 Small lot of 25c. Breast Pins and EXTRA SPECIAL Longcloth, Brooches; special for Friday at our own brand, made of liner clean 50 1 inches wide aud'liut'un hV'io' '"i Enameled liar and Beauty Pins tuss-j"* « cial Friday at. |>er piece.. 9s* y 2o<j! Japanese wide vm - soft and iiu'h? ,'"i i? dozen on a card, white only, worth made of ' com!>cd yarns' st " * l>C< "" f ° r I VU,I, v »«' ««l suitable for lino underwear and 10 children's use. 10-yard pieces, sells ntS t.vT!io» a^. 85 ° ~Cr. ya, ' ll: , "Petal Palm t)llve Soap; special for Fri lor Friday at. per piece. .{jsJ day at, i>cr cako Germany. she was in Paris when Austria declared war on Servia, and went from the French capital to Ger many. Later she went to Ostend, Bel- i gluni, where she served as a nurse. IN order to make room for Spring Mer chandise we will sell all our Suits and Overcoats l/ 2 PRICE This includes all Blacks and Blues SIDES & SIDES Many Men Buy Nationally Advertised Goods. Hats, suspenders, razors, shoes, clothing, knives, col lars, shirts and what not! / Why? Because the superior quality, style or serv ice of the goods backs up the advertising. If you wear or use standard goods, why not be consistent and smoke a standard nickel brand— King Oscar 5c Cigars Regularly Good for 23 Years Not nationally advertised, but known and smoked by many men who live outside the State. | hen Belgium was Invaded, she re turned to Paris. Miss Sadler's tales lof the war as she saw it's deadly re sults in Held and hospital are mitfhtv interesting-.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers