tVAVATATATATATAT>P ______________——i £ THE GLOBE OPEN SATURDAYS 'TILL 10 P. M. THE fIT.ORF 2 g T | © Thousands Saw— 9 | v | The Globe's Style Show fjpfe' I For the first time in Harrisburg's clothing {F) St history, Men's Fashions were exhibited on a living model. clothes and accessories displayed were ! \ U taken right from our regular stock. That swell suit you saw \n7 fe "The Seneca" on the model, will look just as well on you. "The Dartmouth" | Globe Famous "Fifteens" Exactly Right Suits 3 M pOR the man of moderate purse who A DLER-ROCHESTER and FASH- _ 3 SS r ,-1 S, LOBE . FA " <J>T IT ION PARK hand-tailored suits of dis- fAA T S - Cmi " I tinctive fabrics in all the Prevailing fashion- IB g fcS ♦ Styles and models that would do justice I*l ab l e models. Specially tailored for us by mas- £|l| 5 to suits sold at much higher than ter workmen. Exceptional values at | For Men Who Discriminate Suits at $25 and S3O i . ere are suits that will give the greatest amount of pleasure and f service. Styles as brilliant and tailoring as perfect as produced by the best custom fa3l ta y ° u w ' Ys' 0 %\ Have You Seen Our New Fall Hats? /Rro •4 . Every season men who are most critical are coming here for j A \\l A Is reciation of . the UNUSUAL STYLES we show and our Ml fOfeV 5P 1S t' ie reason. It will be a source of keen satisfaction to show YOU 2 'frit ft the new Fall Styles in Soft Hats and Derbies. Matchless d»0 O <t»l iPI » % IJ, ili $2 &$3 yr yCT *^ r| ' Accessories in Haberdashery tViP g "The Admiral" . , , . J bor every style of dress—Sweaters in rare abundance—Shirts to "The Finchley" 5 please tlie most exacting—and Neckwear that fairly glows with the ► new Autumn shades. " 2g £ Globe Clothes Are the Right Clothes For Your Boy £ k M ° t f? er and Father will save time and money by coming here first, for their % % The Globe "Dubbel-Hedder" Suits at, * r Boys' "Right-Posture' Health Suits Kn § They're wear-proof suits with two pairs of Knick- I hese National Health Suits will help ers. Every boy who wears one becomes a member #■ >our boy to grow straight and sturdy a if 8 ' * of The Globe "Dubbel-H'edder" Club. Join to-dav patented device in the back of the coat does up PV the trick—it prevents "stooping." §« THE GLOBE, Big Friendly Store" % 3 Land Speculators Block Settlement Forest Service Statement Says Western Farming Problem Can Be Solved by Development of Logged-Off Tracts j Washington, Aug. 9. During the last decade, the Forest Service has classified as agricultural and open to public entry more than 15,500 Indi vidual scattered tracts of land in the national forests, comprising more than 1,700,000 acres, says an article by the chief forester, published in the Year Book of the Department of Agri culture, just issued. Within the last two years, in addition, several large blocks have been eliminated aggregat ing more than 2,500,000 acres, while nearly 2,000,000 acres more are now under consideration for elimination. All the remaining agricultural land in the national forests is confined chiefly in isolated tracts scattered here and there; to restricted areas re quiring irrigation, where water cannot be obtained; and to certain river bot toms and benches which are not cov ered with very heavy and valuable timber. A constant pressure is being brought ||/ APPROPRIATE il\| H\l / / is the only word that adequately ex- LVj || H\l/ / presses the opening of the new I \f || P Li/ "Campus Togs" Shop at this time W vw.\ ' n tbe history of Harrisburg. I / jaj \\ 1 / Riding on the crest of the wave that p / j P \\f I bas brought to Harrisburg so much I [y W- J in the way of improvement; this ] / |fc HM / new shop is g° in S to brin g to Har " \ in Sgjl\\/ risburg a new comfort and con- \v i B J® s\y venience to the young men and men I » A m gj \s. / in between. T f jpj j During the days of the Improve- 1| j sjc| a'y W ment Celebration, we invite every- \5/ B( jfe i V °ne to step into our shop. We want M j|i \ the public at large to understand \ \ St i / and appreciate what we have given \- > w jflj 8\ iI / to tl ? e city in the way of q ualit y and l\ (SH \ i ]j service. We'll be glad to see you. l\\/ At A - *• Holman r I Js|/: jyj FRIDAY EVENING, to bear on the government by pri vate individuals who want to acquire possession of these heavily timbered agricultural lands, single quarter-sec tions of which often have a value as high as $20,000 for the timber alone. In spite of the fact that some of these I lands have soil suitable for agricul ture, t<s" throw them open as home steads would not result in farm de velopment. This has been proven over and over again where lands of this kind, acquired under the Home stead Law, are to-day held not by homesteaders but by lumber compan ies, who promptly purchased them from the settlers as soon as tltlff passed from the government—a speculative process which effectively prevents men of smaii means from acquiring land and establishing homes. The government Is withholding from agricultural entry all such heav ily timbered land until after the tim ber is cut off. As soon as this is done, the land will be opened to entry and settlers will be able to acquire it di rectly from the government without cost, instead of having; to pay from S4O to S6O an acre to land speculators. For example, on the Kaniksu National forest in Idaho and Washington, the government's timber sales have -be.en made lo include much of the remain ing timbered agricultural land. With in eight years fully 10,000 acres will be made available for settlement. Per manent homes will be established by the settlers, and there will b avail able for the use of communities, ap proximately $225,000 for roads and schools, their legal share of the pro ceeds from the timber sales. Private ownership of heavily timbered agri cultural land blocks farming develop ment, says the article: government ownership insures such development under conditions that give opportuni ties to the small settled whose only capital is his strength and courageous perseverance. One of the most serious agricultural problems of the northwest to-day is the development of the logged-off | lands in private ownership. In Ore gon and Washington alone more than .three millions acres of such logged - j off lands are lying idle, although much I of this area has fine agricultural soil .and a climate that insures abundant : crops and the development of thriv ing communities. Yet in this same region hundreds of settlers are seeking Ito find places in the national forests, usually remote from transportation, high in the mountains, where the cli mate is harsh and the soil relatively poor, simply because the good lands at the lower levels outside the forest are held by the speculators at prohibitive prices. The true solution of the prob lem of agriculture in such sections is to develop the rich logged-off private land that lie outside the forests, and not to throw open the nonagricul tural lands within the forests. To show how thorough is the land classification work of the Forest Ser vice, the Kootenai Valley in Montana may be taken as an example, continues the article. Here a large river winds for 150 miles through the national forest. At many points steep, densely forested hllla drop clown to the wa ter's edge, making the valley a gorge or canyon. Here and there bars in the river have resulted in deposits of silt, I forming long, narrow bottoms, or level! islands, which are very fertile. Part way up the mountain slopes occasional benches of land aiTord a few acres of fertile soil. At first it was proposed to throw out the entire valley, a strip three miles in width on either side of the river. Ninety-five per cent, of this belt, however, is nonagricultural land whose cultivation should not be attempted. Its best use to a local community, as well as to the country at large, is for timber growing. So in stead of opening the whole valley to public entry by settlers, the Forest Service has painstakingly surveyed every little river bottom, island, or bench, which contains enough arable land to support a home. Many of these patches are small, but their soil is so fertile that homes can be main tained on them by intensive truck farming or orcharding. Tn this fash ion, more than three hundred farms have been carved out of this valley of the Kootenai National Forest. -J SECOND FLY CONTEST of the Civic Club for 1915. Ancoat Ist to September 25th. Five cents a pint (or all Olea, and many prlaes la sold. S—— HARRISBURG 1&S8j£& TELEGRAPH VETERINARIANS UNDER BOARD NOW Attorney General (lives Opin ion to the State Board of Examiners ""TT*™The State Board \\\ \//J Veterinary Med [\\\ ical Examiners has \SNA\ftj £<< Power to regulate { veterinary dentistry, TTOv su'Keryand all other Spqffubranches of • vet- urinary science, ac -1 JMlttfllVln'lnjNr wording to an opinion i KjPnuii!! IS IJ loli •' ust Kiven by the ; Attorney General's BP*— , 'J* i i*r j Department to Dr. ■■BBSKKfifiß® J. W. Sallade, sec retary of the State Board of Medical Examiners. This authority is conferred by the act of 1915, which codifies the veterinary laws of the State. Some o.uestions arose as to the su pervisory authority over veterinary dentists, who were not Included in former statutes and of whom there sre now u number in the State. It is held that they are specifically included and all persons engaged in other tranches of veterinary surgery must likewise come under the State board. Those who were engaged in various branches prior to September 1. 1915, may register and secure a license. Others must take the examination. The Attorney General has also held that the board may name agents in various counties of the State to prose cute cases for violation of the act. After Tanneries. —Names and loca tions of a dozen tanneries in northern tier counties have been certified to the Attorney General's Department by the Department of Fisheries because of pollution and Attorney General Brown will notify district attorneys of the proper counties to take charge of the informations. Commissioner of Fish eries Buller says that the owners were warned to stop polluting streams after inspections had been made. Expect Action. Officials of the State Board of Education expect ac tion to be taken Monday on the pro posed sale of Slippery Rock State Nor mal School to the State. The propo sition is now being considered. Want Improved Routls The State Highway Department is receiving a number of applications for State aid in improving roads. Most of them will have to wait until funds are in hand. Conduit Case Off. —The contest over the Keyatone Telephone Company con duits in Philadelphia will not be heard by the Public Service Commission until October 6. Senator Here. —Senator S. J. Miller, of Clearfield county, was among the Governor's callers yesterday. To Take Census.—From what view point Philadelphia employers of chil dren between the ages of fourteen and sixteen years regard the new child labor law, which Roes into effect on January 1, 1916, and what proportion of the child workers will be discharged from local establishments before the firsi of the year, is part of the in formation to he ascertained by ten in spectors of the Department of and Industry, who will inaugurate on Monday a survej of the local situation as effected by the, Cox law. This is the first step to be taken by the local school system to definitely ascertain the attitude of local employers toward the provisions of the child labor bill. The State inspectors have been as signed to co-operate with the local school authorities. Commission Session The Public I Just Plain Folks I ' Twenty-two and a half years ago, we opened the first Doutrich store in a small town where everybody knew everybody else and the people were just plain "folks." !■ It was therefore due as much to I force of circumstances as to our own moral convictions that we started "On the level," "WERE FAIR" in all our dealings, and treated every customer as the friend and neighbor that he was. On this basis we established our business and saw it grow' to success. I As time went on we opened othei I stores in larger towns. They were all pat terned after the 'Mother Store" in catering to people who were •just plain "folks"—who wanted good style, good quality and good value for their money. i But when we came to Harrisburg I in 1908 we did so with a great deal of trep idation. We expected to encounter a different class of buyers than we had known before—a public whose mental processes we might be unable to fathom. | We resolved, however, to apply 1 to big-city retailing the same principles that had proved so successful in small town store-keeping. And after fifteen years of doing business in that way we hardly knew how to do it in any other. 1 But we soon found out that in 1 Harrisburg too, people are just plain "folks," I quick to appreciate fair dealings, good style, good quality and good value for their money, and loyal friends of the store that gives them these things. I Thus it happens that this Live 1 Store has become the largest of its kind in Central Pennsylvania, and is still growing. I Our Fall stock is ready, but we I cannot attempt to describe it in this nor any other single advertisement. The complete story of what we are prepared to do for the man who wants Good Clothes and his money's worth will come, chapter by chapter, throughout the season. 1 But don't wait for that, nor for I a formal invitation, nor for the weather to force you. Drop in any day and we'll show you something you won't see elsewhere—in Harrisburg or out. I 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. I Service Commission continued its ses sion to-day. The complaint against the condition of the Lancaster and Marietta Turnpike Company's road way has attracted much attention among automobillsts and owners of turnpikes and may set a precedent. Attending Anniversary. Commis sioner Jackson is at Kennett Square, Ms boyhood home, attending the an niversary celebration of its founding. Important Hearing. The Public Service Commission sat until late last evening to hear the complaint of the New Jersey Zinc Company against the Central Railroad of New Jersey. It Involves a contract which. If It con tinues, will affect many interests. Quarantine Order.—The State Live stock Sanitary Hoard quarantine or der against Illinois is as follows: "The importation into Pennsylvania of cat tle, sheep, other ruminants or swine originating Ih any part of the State of Illinois lying north of the northern 1 oundarles of the counties of Calhoun, Jersey, Macoupin, Montgomery, Fay ette, Effingham, Jasper and Crawford for any purpose is hereby prohibited. SEPTEMBER 24, 1915. This regular supersedes amendment 1, effective September 16, 1915." Commission Orders. The Public. Service Commission to-day ordered the Eastern Pennsylvania Railways Com pany to improve station facilities at the Coaldale State Hospital and the Lehigh Valley Railroad to make a re fund of $125.78 to the Lake Transit Company on coal shipments in the Harvey's Lake region. Governor to Visit. Governor Brumbaugh left to-day to visit his father at Marklesburg over to-morrow. He will return to speak at Oberlin on Sunday. Aitoona Visitors. Among Altoonu visitors here yesterday were M. Poet, one of the school directors, and S. T. Knox. Representative Here. Represen tative Joseph Phillips, of Clearlield was a Capitol visitor. Vork to Survey. The State Water Supply Commission has arranged with the city of Vork to make a compre-1 => hensive survey of the Codorus creek ' through the city so that future im provements and development can De carried out without | danger Qf flood. The matter has been arranged with city officials. Sold Impure Milk. State pure food agents have raided people in Northampton, Northumberland and Montgomery counties on charges of selling milk that was not in accord with State requirements. The State has also won its suit against persons who sold a borax mixture as a canning compound and secured convictions at Meadvllle. Hourd Adjourns. Members of the State Compensation Board left the city to-day to make some inquiries in regard to their work and will meat here next week. The arrangement of the districts and details of the blanks for employers is about finished. Meetings Here. The Public Serv ice Commission will be In session here next week and the week following. Ad journment will be taken to-night. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers