6 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established lljt PUBLISHED BY THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. E. J. gTACKPOLB frssidttlt and Editorin-i hitf F. R. OYSTER Stcrttary CVS M. STEINMETZ Managing Editor Published every evening (except Sun. d*y) at the Telegraph Building. 21t Federal Square. Both phone*. Idember American Newspaper Publish, ers' Association. Audit Bureau ol Circulation and Pennsylvania Aisoel ated Dallies. Eastern Office, Fifth Avenue Building, New Tork City, Hasbrook, Story & Brooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago, 111., Allen & Ward. . Delivered by carrier* at /Binwiygmrs six cents a week. Mailed to subscriber* fct $3.00 a year in advance. Bntered at the Post Office In Harris- Pa., as second class matter. 3 nor a dally average for the three ★ months endlnii Jan.31,11)15. 4 21,757 ★ Average for the year 1t»14—23.213 Average for the year 1013—21,077 Average for the year 1012—21.17S A verajce for the year 1011—IN.S51 Average for the year UMO—i7.4»6 TUESDAY EVENING, FEB. 23 THE FEDERAL TRADE BOARD THE United States Senate, which will be called upon to confirm or reject President Wilson's newly-appointed Federal Trade Hoard, is fully Justified in its opposi tion to the make-up of that body as announced from the White House yes terday. The President, erstwhile sworn foe of lobbyists, has included in the board's membership Edward Nash Hurley and George Rublee, two men whose names have been bandied about the halls of Congress daily for the past two years as confirmed lobbyists. To be sure, they have been accused of jlobbying only for bills in which Pres ident Wilson lies been interested, but iho President must not expect us to "believe that all men who lobby for ad ministration legislation arc liigh- | minded and honest, while all opposing I lobbyists bear the stamp of the beast. | Either the President owes an apology jto those men he threatened to "drive [out of Washington," because they in sisted on urging their views upon l<'ongressmen with respect to bills then Ijit issue, or lie must admit that he has [elevated several doubtful characters to high places in the affairs of the na tion. And, it may be added, Mr. Hur ley was appointed with full knowl edge that for years he has worn the collar of the notorious Sullivan ring of Illinois. The new Federal Trade Board is to exercise extensive powers of regula tion in the business of the country. .Its influence will be most keenly felt ;in the great manufacturing centers. (Yet Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New I York and other centrally located States wherein the bulk of the coun try's manufactories are located have been left without representation what soever. The Senate will have the ap- proval of the country in insisting upon a commission made up of men of un questioned integrity and of high men tal caliber which, at the same time, snail be thoroughly representative of the great interests involved. Frank P. Walsh, says the Philadel phia Ledger, is the biggest misfit of the AVilson administration. Which, we sub mit, is "going some." PAYING BOUNTIES DIIIECT IF, as has been stated by people at the Capitol, the State is loser to the extent of $50,000 in the payment of bounties for the scalps of noxious animals and birds, it is high time that Home steps to correct this condition are taken. The bounty act, passed in the aid of the farmer, who has been . deprived of insect destroyers by the j growing scarcity of certain birds, lias been a source of trouble for years. Successive Legislatures have failed to make adequate appropriations and when the money was supposed to have become automatically available through the hunters' license act the ••specific appropriations'" law was invoked to tie it up. On top of this situation there i developed scandals in the handling of jthc scalps and charges were made that 'rats and other vermin were being sub stituted for weasels. Soino jugglery 'about the head of hawks was also talked of and there have been other instances which indicate that the State # has been getting the worst of it. It would seem that the sensible way j •would be for direct payment by the State of the bounties and the elimi nation of any action required of county Authorities. The provision that county commissioners should pass upon the scalps after they had been inspected Iby a magistrate has been a nuisance and occasionally commissioners, con vinced that pot hunting was going on, irefused to pay the bounties until they were ready. Under the plan outlined by the Game Commission the scalps would be put into the hands of State wardens and when passed by the chief execu tive officer proper papers would be drawn and payment made directly by |the fiscal officers of the Common, (wealth. This would take away the red itape and end the frauds. TIIK 'FRISCO SHOW SAN P ItANCISCO, having demon strated that it cares nothing for such trifles as earthquakes and tires, is now demonstrating the quality of its pluck and enterprise by putting on its big show despite Mie ifaet that a large number of the coun tries which had agreed to participate are now cngagefl In a conflict involv i ing their very existence. However, [no less than forty-two foreign na jtions, including thirteen of those now )*t war and their dependencies, and TUESDAY EVENING, n forty-three States of the United States, as well as the United States itself, complete the roster of the Panama- Pacific Exposition. A general average both of the foreign nations and of the States have erected pavilions, !n many.instances duplicates of famous national structures or historical State buildings. Hamlet's Palace at Kron borg has furnished Denmark with the design for its national pavilion and the Palace of the Legion of Honor at Paris has been copied by France. Appropriations for exhibits range from $1,700,000 by the Argentine Re public- in varying sums down to an average of $500,000 by other nations, and from a gross total of cost for building and exhibits by California of $2,000,000 to an average of approxi mately SIOO,OOO by the States of lesser appropriation, so it will be seen that the show has not been so hard hit by the war, after all. With such a vast sum expended by the foreign nations and by the States, a sum that goes considerably in excess of $12,000,000, there will be repre sented the very quintessence of the articles of commerce, art, science and industry of every form that each State and nation is noted for. The "see America first" tourists, who have adopted that motto this year largely because they cannot go to Europe, will find plenty to repay them for a visit to the city of the Golden Gate, regardless of the handicap of war abroad and hard times at home. To-day the Rotarians will meet in Philadelphia to commemorate their tenth anniversary, if other organizations in America were half as effective as the Rotary Clubs all the wheels would be turning and the only unemployed would be the pessimists. And if all Rotary clubs were as ac tive and energetic as the Harrisburg Rotary Club the country would be at high tide on a continual flood of pros perity and goodfellowship. INTO HIGHWAYS AND I.YWAYS THERE appeared in the "Go-to- Church" advertising column of the Telegraph last Saturday a well written, forceful little ser mon on the lenten season, its mean ing, observance and application to the life of the individual both in and out of the church. It reached the eyes or multitudes who do not attend church. It must have impressed hundreds with the zeal for soul-saving and right-liv ing of those wiio stood back of the ad vertisement the active, devoted Christian church members of Harris burg. » There those who do not believe in church advertising. Some have contended that it smacks too much of commercialism. Others that it lacks in dignity. But neither of these ob jections could be applied to such a ser mon as the "Go-to-Church" advertise ment in the Telegraph of Saturday, nor to any of the companion pieces that have gone to make up the series of which it was a part. No preacher—be he ever so zealous —can go out into the highways and the byways to preach the gospel of Christianity as can the newspaper. It is a welcome visitor where the door | would be closed to him. it can preach and repreach the little sermon of I which it is the messenger in a thou sand different ways and in places where the voice of the church seldom if ever penetrates. It can talk to a man or a woman in the quiet of the home circle, in the crowded street car or the lobby of the hotel. Every where that a newspaper goes it can and does carry its message of Chris tian faith and hope. And If it does nothing else, the church advertise ment awakens the man out of touch with the church to the fact that those within are not selfish or Pharisaical, but are so anxious that the straying sheep be brought back to the fold that they scatter their invitations broadcast throughout the land that all who read may know the welcome that awaits their home-coming. Skirts are to be wider and shorter the cominp summer. Think of the pos sibilities if it had been possible for madam to remain in style by simply snipping off six incnes from those en velopes that went by the name of skirts last year. I'OOU POLAND POLAND is the Belgium of the western field of the European war. Poland, the battle grounl of the ages, the field over which the east and the west have fought for a thousand years, is now suffering the worst disaster of its disastrous his tory. Overrun by the Russians on one end and the Germans on the other, it has been the scene of battles In re cent months that make the conflicts in the eastern theater of war seem like mere skirmishes by comparison. It has been estimated that since the war began more than 500 Polish communi ties, large and small, have been laid waste. The Poles have bled, starved and died as heroically in the west as the Belgians have in the east. In Poland, Poles have been fighting Poles. The army of the Czar has forced brothers to fight against broth ers who have been conscripted into the ranks of the Kaiser's forces. The Poles are in sore plight, indeed. The land of Kosciusko and Pulaski, to whom the people of the United States owe so much, calls loudly for the sym pathy and the assistance of the Amer ican people that have been so gener ously extended to Belgium. Unfortu nately for that country, it is so situ ated geographically that it Is difficult to do for it what we have done for Belgium. Nevertheless, we owe such a large debt of gratitude to Poland thnt some means must be found to aid it in its distress, and it is gratifying to learn that Harrisburg's gifts are to be in the first cargo that by a round about way is to be sent to the home less and starving victims of this war ridden country. j The Niagara Peace Society Is consid ering un international conference to | end the war In Kurope. Is this the i.same body that announced some months ago that It bail concluded negotiations for peace In Mexico? One. of the benefits of the present war has been a distinct falling off In the number of inlorn-anlatlonul marriages. 1 EVENING CHAT I Some of the flowers along Front street appear to be forcing the season as they have pushed their blooms above the mould and others are send ing forth their shoots as an earnest proof that they will blossom if the unusual weather continues. Front street flowers are more favored than perhaps those on any other street be cause they get the afternoon sun, which is apt to be warm at this sea son of the year, and as most of the beds are well made and sheltered it is nothing unusual to have snowdrops and even crocuses blooming before the end of March. However, it is rather unusual for flowers to bloom on Wash ington's birthday and yesterday the display of tiny, bright colored flowers in several yards attracted general at tention. In various parts of the city there are reports that tulips and hya cinths are showing a disposition to fol low the crocus into the Spring air. 1C the weather continues the flowers will bloom up in Capitol park as some of the bods have bulbs which are show, ing signs of becoming restive. About the only remonstrance that was withdrawn at the recent license court came from an unusual cause. It was nut against the character of the place or against the application on the ground of necessity, but because the applicant owed a bill. The bill was apparently settled and the license put on the list to consider. It is the first time that such a course to secure a settlement of an account has been re sorted to. | The Rev. William Tell Johnson, the new postmaster of Bristol, is well known here as the "fighting parson" of his home town. He took a promi nent part in the various temperance conferences with political slants which were held here during the last cam paign and attracted some attention by the vigor of his speeches. Air. Tell was born in this State and educated himself. When he got into the min istry he started to correct things and has succeeded and failed in a num ber of instances. He is one of the few ministers to be named to a post office. More golf has been played, more automobile trips taken, more tops spun and mora diamonds laid out this month than known in any Febru ary in years in this city. The weather has been so mild that everyone desir ing outdoor amusement could have it. barring tennis. The golfers have been unable to withstand the itching of their arms and every owner of an au tomobile or motorcycle has felt the call. The problems attending supervi sion of rural schools, which has been an .important part of the work of the Pennsylvania State Board of Education in the last year, will be told at the meeting of the convention of superin tendents of schools of the country at Cincinnati this week by Dr. J. George Becht, secretary of the Board. Dr. Becht used to be superintendent of schools in the country and before that lie taught school so that he will be able to k ivc some first hand informa tion in his concise manner. There seems to have been a lull in the claiming of bounties for the scalps of foxes, weaslcs and other animals upon which Father Penn puts a price upon which aFther Penn puts a price in order that farmersonay do well and prosper. For a time there were some men in the county who made it a busi ness to kill off the animals and birds against whom the law placed its hand, but lately tlie county commissioners have not been bothered. Old time records show that Harris burg lias always been a center for shooting matches and the weekly pa pers published when Harrisbtirg was young have articles showing that there were regular occasions in the Spring and Fall when the marks men from Cumberland and Dauphin counties tried their skill. Some of the old established inns like Coxestown, Hogestown and other places which fig ured in stagecoach travel were noted far and wide for the matches held in their yards. These old-time shoots were run much as are those held to-day at hotels in the country. Dr. John J. Moffltt, of this city, a member of the State Board of Dental Examiners, is among those who have been selected to give dental demon strations in the new Evans Dental In stitute at the I'niversity of Pennsylva nia. Dr. Molfltt is a graduate of the university. Considerable attention is being given these days by students In the city schools to pending legislation and some interesting debates are being held on the various bills. It hap pened yesterday that a high school student "stumped" a business man by talking of workmen's compensation in a learned manner. "The rate of compensation is a mat ter which you've got to think of," said the student. "What do you mean by rate?'" "Why, what you must pay." "Say. where can I get a copy of that bill. I want to see what I am up against," said the business man. He had not kept track of legislation. 1 WELL KNOWN PEOPLE. | ' —Dr. W. J. Bangfitt, a Pittsburgh Physician, presented one of the city hospitals with u building costing *30,000. —The Itev. B. T5. McHatton, of Pittsburgh, declares that the kaiser Is not a war tord and is one of the most maligned of men. % —Wiley Hartman, of Batrobe, is home from a trip to Cuba. —Mayor Joseph Cuufllel, of Johns town. is in a new class with his city council over an ordinance just passed. —Charles T. Connarre, Warren banker/is home from his annual hunt ing trip down the Mississippi. —George C. Wagenseller, promi nent Snyder countian, is visiting in Western counties. < —Dr. W. F. Teal has been re-elected president of Schuylkill Theological seminary. I OO V6U KNOW—'I Tliat Harrisburg used to be a center of bicycle making anil is quite a motorcycle depot now? More Truth than Poetry A little type A little Ink It hn often caused A mail to think And put hard tlnira K pon tlie blink. —from lOdltor nnd l'ulilinlier. The lesson concealed In this > bit of doggerel is this: Newspaper advertising ndt I only makes people think but I It makes them think of your product, your store, your service. It makes your name or trade mark come to mind when there Ik a want to be supplied. Newspaper advertising is a mighty weapon against dull times. *- HXRRISBURG TELEGRAPH PALMER MAY LAND FAT FEDERAL JOB New Trade Commission May Need Expert in Making Political- Industrial Probes ASK RICE TO RUN AGAIN » - Judge Orlady Voices the Opinions of His Colleagues and Himself on Subject —-According to rumors which are in the air at Washington, Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer, whose term March 4, will be in line for any of the legal work which the new Trade com mission may have at its disposal. This is the commission with which the President and the Democratic leaders j plan to turn up material for campaign | thunder and "investigations" will | probably be set afoot promptly. —Palmer will be preferred when any specially spectacular, and re munerative work, is to bo done, and it is believed at Washington that he will be mighty well taken care of in the next few years. —The snarl over Pennsylvania post offices has reached the ears of. the President, according to Washington advices, and it is said that he is an noyed over the manner in which cab inet officers and Democratic congress men-elect have come to disputes. —The Philadelphia Record to-day prints the following about one of the recommendations of the Economy and Efficiency Commission: "With the intention of wiping out the large num ber of sinecures for lawyers, attached to various branches of the State gov ernment. and creating one general legal force for the Commonwealth, a Dili will shortly be presented to the Legislature for the complete reorgani zation of the Attorney General's De partment. This measure is now being drafted under the personal direction of Attorney General Brown and will have the full backing of Governor Brumbaugh. The Attorney General at present has only three assistants, and his payroll does not aggregate $35,000 a year. The special legal help, on the other hand, cost the State more than SIOO,OOO in the past two years, with extra counsel attached to the Dairy and Food, Health, Mines, Fish, Game, Education. Insurance and other branches of the government." —E.R.Wood,a Philadelphian, active in poliUcs, says that lie is satisfied in response to his letters to prominent progressives that the return to the Republican party this Fall will be even more pronounced than it has been in the last eighteen months. —lt is probable that the conditions In the Philadelphia post office will be brought to the attention of Congress. An Investigation is even now under way. —Congressmen Donalioe, I.ogue nnd Edmonds yesterday celebrated their birthday. They were all born on the same date as Washington. —The Supreme Court has decided that J. 8. Marshall was legally elected tax collector of Union town and not Charles T. Cramer, Republican, in No vember, 1 SI3. This means that the' Democrat will get the commissions on all taxes collected since Cramer as sumed office. —Judge George B. Orlady, of the Superior Court, in a letter to Alex- t ander Farnham, president, and Joseph D. Coons, secretary, of the Luzerne County Bar Association, declares that he and his colleagues are satisfied that the reasons advanced by President Judge Charles E. Rice for retiring are not convincing, and urges the friends of Judge Rice in his home city to start a movement to induce him to with draw his statement of retirement, in his letters Judge Orlady says in part: 1 "Judge Rice has sat at the head of our consultation table for nearly twenty years, and there has never been the slightest friction in our work under his administration. His loyal adher ence to duty, his alert mind, his untir ing industry, his attractive judgment, especially fit him for the office he has adorned. The reasons hp gives for withdrawal from further judicial serv ice are not convincing to any of his colleagues. My confidential intimacy with Judge Rice since the creation of the court warrants me in insisting that he has not diminished in the least in ability or usefulness .and it is my sin cere hope that the friends of his home will induce him to withdraw his statement. His opinions are more fre quently cited than any living or dead Pennsylvania judge, and I regret his present attitude. Every reason he sug gests continuing Judge Head and my self applies with special force to him. and his retirement at this time would be an appreciable loss." H®UG® AB °UT I I PENNSYLVANIA v Quito spryly and chirn as any young ster of 20, David Stafford, of lvinzua, who isn't a minute younger than TO, led to the altar as his blushing bride no other a person than Mrs. Angella Krb, who passed her flflth milestone the other week. "l>o I believe in late marriages?" coyly laughed the brule. when ques tioned by one of the inquisitive young reporters in that section. "I should say I do: And I believe in early ones, loo." "You see, I've been wedded twice be fore,' she explained. First tUne X was sweet IB; second time 1 was 110, and this time I'm just about old enough to know how to handle a man." The face of the bridegroom—as you might expect—was wreathed with smiles. For added to the joy of the oc casion was the fact that when he got the license "Judge" Bassett remarked: "IT ain't gona cost you a penny, Davy. There aint any charge made in this office when a veteran of a Civil War desires to marry the widow of another veteran!" The groom is well-known in Warren county, being the author of that Interesting volume entitled: "In Defense of the Flag." • 0 • Charles Latham, a Bradford man, who Is compiling a new directory for that town, reports that there Is every indi cation the population up that way Is growing. He says there are many ——— The importance of reserve strength and pure blood at this period cannot bo vs/"****' over-estimated and Nature's pur® V\ nourishment in Scott't A imports that strength that enriches ' a|K the blood, strengthens the bones and tVSt isTig orates the whole system. lO PhyHclant eeerywAere prescribe it. ••• J while." THE VOTHELESS Salesman— j That horn doesn't j blow, sir. De G r o u c h— j Wrap it up. That fIW is the kind of a _ horn I want. « !| jll 111 1J ' |ij i| CHEAT SKATE. 'UUIj'.M Does Fred re ■' Jr t; member you J . every Christmas T niTZVfi 1 Yes, indeed. He usually Is caljed ■ krHB IfyVJ out of town for a I mVi B Mil week or so around nj {SfcJ: Christmas, and ha | writes me a nipe NO WAY TO DO IT By Ming Dintfr 'Twas demonstrated once again To me. the other day, That to please everyone there is No solitary way. Some friends were talking of this month— Its shortness and sport. Put lip a kick because it is So very, very short. He's weekly paid, ami while his wage Is this month smaller far Than in the longer months, expense Remains the .same at par. Another chap expresses his glee O'er this short month, because The first day of each month he gets The same pay in his paws. And on the first of March he'll set For four weeks' work as much As in the longer months, when he Must make an advance touch. And so I say, there is 110 way Of pleasing everyone, For some are bound to kick at rain And others at the sun. AN EVENING THOUGHT The method of the enterprising is to sketch out a map of possi bilities, then to treat them as probabilities.—Bovee. i " lw £ t^wsul [From the Telegraph of Feb. 23, 1865.J I'riNonerM Arrive Baltimore, Feb. 22. Union prison ers arriving here from the .South are In a wretched condition. Three hun dred were taken to the hospital. Murderer t might Cleveland, Feb. 23. David B. Biv ins. a recruiting officer, murdered his wife and parents at tlieir home ami then fired the house. He was arrested at Grafton and confessed the crime. (Irniil'K Army Unlet Washington, Feb. 23. Owing to the bad condition of the roads, Grant's army has made no advance movement. IN HARRISBURG FIFTY YEARS AGO TO-DAY [From the Telegraph of Feb. 23, 1865.J Mayor Kliicm ( lti/.en» Several citizens were fined by the Mayor to-day for not removing snow and ice from the sidewalks. Doctor to Give Free Treat ill rut Br. J. W. Stewart. El in Ira. x. y„ will be in the city on the 2Tth to treat the sick free of charge. « Utile 1 ' Observance No public demonstration was made In the city on Washington's Birthday, but several social gatherings honored it. / \ STORY RITEN' By tlic Messenger Boy | Hoppy Hopkins, the circus and the-ater manager, give me a tickut to see his Orfeeum show last nite; so I went, and had some laffs, and seen some sites, with music, costumes, singin, colors, seen-shiftin, slick stunts and much variety that set me tliinkin. The shows at the Orfeeum is mostly good, but occasional there is a rottln one that Hoppy cant help letin slip in. Hoppy is a pretty good ringmaster and tries to get neks that Bint too cheap; and he should he patted v on the back for his entlrprlze, in entertalnin Har risburg. Of course he aint a evange list like Doc Stow, but ho does his best to please the people aceordin to what they clap for. When you see a show that's good you say you'll go again; but a rottln one makes you cuss. If most of the acks is worth seein, it tickles your lmagi nashun anil knocks your grouchlness; and you sleep better after laftin anil work harder next day after somethln Pneumonia Prevalent Loral physicians report much pneumo nia due to changeable winter weather. They caution against neglecting even slight coughs and colds because Pneu monia sets In quickly after exposure to cold or wet. It can be avoided by tak ing Goff's Cough Syrup in time. Goff's loosens the congestion of a cold, drives out the inflammation that causes the cough, and heals the soreness, almost always stopping the development of pneumonia. Contains no opiates. If you have a cold or cough get Goff's today. Guaranteed by Grocer» and Druggists. 26 and 50c. ' FEBRUARY 23, 1915. ■NRHH^^HBHMHHnpHNfIRNB99HHBNMBHHOK3SrMBKMHHMHHBM« Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind Yon Have Always Bought has borne the signa ture of Clias. H. Fletcher, and has been made under liis I personal supervision for over JW> years. Allow no ono to deeeive you ill this. Counterfeits, Imitations and •' .Tust-as-jpood" are but experiments, and endanger tho health of Children—Experience against .Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, MorpMne nor other Narcotic substance. It de stroys Worms and allays Peverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic,all Teething Trou bles and Oiarrluea. It regulates t lie Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THECEN7AUH COMPANY, NEW VOBK CITV. different to think about. arts fixed up with pretty seenerv, and The orckestra is usually O. K. with gorgous kositumes. In fackt ail tli« Mister Yager dio-p-in Into tiie pianna ackters Is well dressed anil most of tlie and beat in time with his head, and ackteresses; but part of which is some keepin the fiddles, and drums, and times detlshunt in apparrel and look horns in proper tune. Mustek is a like tliay Had either forgot to finish thins that smooths things, and most dressln or else Rot cheep dresses that fellos like it as well as the (juris, who you can see thru. are the dauters of music, accordin to Some acks seems mostly made up of Solomon, who ought to know, he havin ll'in less and tlimv skirts, and thev 40ft wives and other ladies in his tempel. are almost as attarektive as ladles get- Some of the various acks at the tin into street ears on rainey davs. Orfeeum are klever. inspirin. Instruek- (Jenrally speakin, tiie Orfeeum is very tive. educashunal, extryordinary, and entertainln. and is one of the fixtures cant-be-beat, and some are side-splittin of Harrlsburg. and helps to bring ' with .lokes, new and old. full of slick toorists here from Mlddletown, I'en dancin and good slngln, and • 111 of them brook. Dauphin and I^ernoyne. I am a Traveling Man with a wife and little family that I see once a week. Since the inauguration of the Western Union Day Letter and Night Letter service my wife and I have exchanged Night Letters regularly. My wife says these daily notes keep her from being lonesome. Tam assured daily that everything is 0. K. at home. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. I. LEWIS CIGAR MFG. CO.. NEWARK. N. J. The Urged Independent Cigar Factory in the World H . i I FINAL I CLEARANCE 1 SALE I On Clothing and II I Furnishings ALL SUITS and d>lQ ftA OVERCOATS . . SJ> J.0.0U The greater portion of these Suits and Coats formerly sold for S3O. 535, S4O ISIDES-SIDES