■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□l THE GLOBE " KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE CLOCK" OPEN SATURDAYS TILL 10 p. M The Globe's One Thousand Suit & Overcoat Campaign A •ale of Higk CI ass Clothing—A sale of Honest Values— A Sale of Honest Red uctions. These are the magnets that are drawing crowd# daily to this "Big Live Progressive Store." yi The reductions are unusual—the values beyond comparison and every garment sold bears THE GLOBE GUARANTEE of satisfaction. Every garment in the store has been reduced. NONE RESERVED. We are sure to reach our goal of ONE THOUSAND Suits and Overcoats —and that means—-every buyer JHk of a Man's or Boy's Suit «r Overcoat, during this great sale will receive, in addition to these extraordinary 4SXmh^ values, a cash "bonus" of FIVE PER CENT, of his purchase. Men's and Young €4 MSO Men's and Young 1} 50 Men's and Young €J A 75 Men's and Young CAA Rfl /liOrfh » Men's Suits and /I Men's Suits and - | Ifr U Men's Suits and ||_ Men's Suits and 0U /M Overcoats, originally | t T 1 Overcoats, originally 111=== O'coats That Sold at O'coats That Sold at /i/i= ,i values to S2O, at values to $22.50, at.. $25 to S3O, now S3O and Over, now... W Elegant Silk Mixed Worsted Suits— The season's most desired models and 1 lie Suits are exclusive Suits and Overcoats that cannot be ex- 'MjgF* fMf ~ , t-. , o f . , . ~, , , ... fine Worsteds and rough Mixtures in suit- ~> smf Cheviots, Cassimeres and Flannel Suits. tabnes from the world s best makers, includ- able styles for every man. The Overcoats celled by the finest custom tailors for rich- : 'r&vTrMnf Overcoats of Frieze, Shetland Cloth and mg the Fashion Park tailors. Styles for include the special "lot of Fashion Park "ess of fabric or elegance of tailoring or fancy mixed styles. men of every age sizes for every build. Overcoats that sold to S3O. distinctiveness of style. Extra Special Men's Trousers Reduced Any Men's Mackinaw j | ® a 'l* Robes, House Coats and 1 » MOCA O tic OvPrrnaK a f -B £\ F.n«t ,5.00 Worsted Trousers ,*.95 C oat in the store, Rain Coat, at Lowest Prices men S «pl£.Ju Ol iplj UVCIIUdW dl I■ ■ Mens $4.0.0 Worsted Trousers $2.95 Values tO $7.50, nOW Men's $7.50 Bath Robes are $5.00 | A special collection of elegant Overcoats of Shet- 111 ![ en ' S !!'!! m" 6 ! eW 1101I 101 " 6 ™'"!!'!! <& Men ' B ,<5 - 50 and $7 - 50 Mouse Coats . *%, , „ ~. , , • « / —\ r , A Mens $4.00 Blue Serge Trousers... $3.50 a re . « Bl M, irfrr • Jwfs land Cloth. Fancy Mixed fabric, and C xford Young Mens *2.50 Cheviot Trousers v , t *' J t ; > IsiPw 4 Frieze a saving of $2.50 to $.->.OO on every gar- $1.95 % W Mens $12.50 Raincoats are ... $10.95 / Blli ment. Men's $3.50 Corduroy Trousers. .. .$2.95 Men's SIO.OO Raincoats are ... *8.95 H) I \ A s ,fe of Boy,' HIG r CLAS. SUITS |IH AA.

% V C DUOFOLD, the hygenic underwear, is constructed of two <111(1 f I.JU ullirtS NUW j; 'iffl 'i3 ? j ' xV.t fabrics—warm worsted outside, and soft cotton inside, with j, 'p J "4. ; ; i Wjf ventilating air space between. Best for health and comfort. [• ♦] * . cy'A Inventory brought to light these superb values. There are 115 Suits —————————— f j'l ?■ .4 C( L od Swea,ers Wtre N«ver Lower Than A., -HH™™. § 87//lf jpfffigi wl " «"-y advantage o f «h is oppo rt „„i, y . These-$3.50 and $4 Values at $2,50 1 , 13mmIS Boys' Mackinaw Coats Boys* Chinchilla mostly Oxford Grays with "a sprinkling of other colors in * | I / flira I 1 Overcoats al $4.39 Af„, s,i,.i M , n '. Ij MMH SSJltSyr. High Grade Hats |j'fffl|||l weather —made of heavy all-wool belted back Blues, urays ana 25c Xeokwcap 19c I Boys' $1.25 Flannel Shirts.. .79c Included in tlite sale are Stetson. Sclioble 1. fi JsH f ® mackinaw cloths in striking plaid Browns plain or plaid linings 50c Paris Garters .*s9c I S?'?', f? S? Sweatere .. .. sl.:i» and other fanious niakes of Sort and Stiff Hats. IV ft }X * S:-8f Vi-.mg&i effects—all sizes. —sizes to 8 years. 25c Parts Garters 19c I 5i.25 Fiiire Su'lt t'ases a er! ">ii. 00 !fS!! atS arc S'fS! v ->nih 111 r I "Boys' 50c Knee Pants ...396 Boys' $3.50 \'elvet Junior jw* W y 1 All $2.00 Hats are $1.40 Suits $2.85 1 ■ ■ 1 J ■ I M 1"" 1 I A special lot of Soft Hats and Derbies—good FV'flfl-vl P3 -Boys SI.OO knee Pants Boys'S3.9S Raincoats . .#Ct.IU I fl h. ITI>II KS M. s r^.B:so, ,tett t STe Bovs' $1.50 Knee Pants, $1.29 Boys' $2.95 Bathrobes . .$3.39 ■■■ JmJLiJmmm Jmam Jkmm all go at Jbl.lO iriBnBnBDBDBDBDaDBDBD ■ □■□■□■□■fITITTITITITITITIM 'RISON LABOR TO BE ESTABLISHED vow System Is Being Worked Out by the New Com missioners Pennsylvania's \\ \ $ //J new system o£ v\ \ \ fiXV, prison labor. VvX\\A whereby articles f used in State in stitutions and other public establish- ments can be It HmMWwtew manufactured in ! je'JlilSnillffll the penitentiaries a nd reformatories g^s—— 11. ■ t and the prisoners paid for what they lake, will be established in the course f a few months, the preliminary fork being well in hand. The system las provided for by the last Legisla ure and the Prison Labor Commls ion has been having the needs of artous institutions investigated by I. B. Henderson, of Kittaning, so that t will be in position to purchase the ppliances needed for the articles of ering the best field. The workshops will be established n the two penitentiaries and the luntingdon Reformatory as soon as mssible after plans are adopted and he work will be started with $75,000 et aside for the purpose. Under the aw prisoners are to be paid for what hey make and certain portions are HAS. WATSON 1.. ■ FINAL REDUCTIONS | In Our January Clearance of ■ WORTHY CLOTHES I !■ We have grouped together all remaining S2O and $25 Suits I I and Overcoats into one lot and priced them for final clearance I I $14.50 There are still many desirable garments in our stock of I $1 a Suits and Overcoats from which you p A I may choose at i 1. «DU I No restrictions —all garments, including blues and blacks I are entered in the event. Permanently located at 14 N. Third Street—next door to I Gorgas* Drug Store. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRIBBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 4, to be set aside for their dependents. Will Act Soon. Members of the State Workmen's Compensation Board are receiving numerous letters and suggestions on the subject of the daily wage determination which was argued at the conference on Wednes day and it is likely that the question will be disposed of very shortly. Many of the letters urge lhat the board stick to the letter of the law and that the act be given a trial, pointing out that the ne.\*t Legislature will afford opportunity far making changes. The board is scheduled to meet Tuesday. Retail Olco licenses. Forty-nine retail licenses to sell oleomargarine in Harrisburg were issued by the Dairy & Food division of the Depart ment of Agriculture during 1915. There was one wholesale license and one boardinghouse license issued in the city during the year. In Dauphin county the total number of licenses was 70. Twelve Arrested Here. Twelve Harrisburg grocers were recently prosecuted by the Dairy and Food De partment of the Department of Agri culture for selling dried peaches con : taining sulphur dioxide. Nine paid fines of S6O each and three others paid the costs of the suits. Two coffee and chicory cases were recently ter minated with fines of $25 being paid. One was a case of selling a mixture containing cereal and the other for selling a coffee compound misbranded. Will Save Mueli. Decision by the State Compensation Board that jurors and witnesses for the Commonwealth are not considered as persons who must be insured by the public will save the counties of Pennsylvania hundreds of dollars. In several counties steps had been taken to get rates for insur ing jurors and plans were under con sideration to take care of witnesses when the revised ruling was issued. . The removal of elective officers from | the class under the liability act will affect thousands of men. After the Crooks. Game Protec tor Kinter B. Rodgers has returned 1 from Crawford county where he and other game wardens investigated the ! bounty frauds that have brought that I ! county into prominence. Evidence shows they say, that bounty claims for about SIO,OOO, being held up by the; State, are not legal and that they, were secured by a series of connivan ces between hunters and justices of the peace. Most of the men involved in the fraud made clean breasts of the affair, Mr. Rogers says and gave the game wardens all the information In their possession. It now rests with the officials of Crawford county to decide whether the violations of the law shall be followed by prosecu tions. State Agents Busy. Thirty-four' of the eighty-five prosecutions ordered by the dairy and food division of the State Department of Agriculture dur ing January were for violations of the cold storage law provisions relative to eggs. In most cases stored eggs were sold as fresh and the require ment that a placard must be used to I announce wholesome cold storage i food was Ignored. In some cases eggs unfit to eat were found. Nine teen other violations of cold storage laws were prosecuted, including the arrest of nine persons for selling cold storage smelts which were not pla -1 carded. In one case a man was sued for storing beef beyond the legal limit and then trying to sell it. Agents of the department also brought prose cutions against three milk dealers for selling milk below the standard of fats and in a numfeer of cases it was discovered that 'ruits, dried figs, candles and other foods were not up to the State requirements. In Warren county a man was arrested for selling sausage which contained no pork at all, only raw potato Hour and water. Constables Out. The city police- i i man who is appointed to the "force" , must be taken care of under the em ployers liability law if he gets hurt j while on duty, but the rural constable, famous as the wearer of the tin star, is not within the meaning of the | compensation law. The constable is an elective officer, the policeman is appointive. This is the result of the new ruljng of the State Board and is being announced to municipalities. To Receive Briefs. The Public - ~ > — Dandruff Soon Ruins the Hair Girls—if you want plenty of thick, i beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all i means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin It If you don't. • It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash It out. The only sure vay to get rid of dandruff is to dis solve it. then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of 1 ordinary liquid arvon; apply It at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it In gently with the finger tips. By morning most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need, r.. matter ho w much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never fails. . [ —Advertisement. Service Commission will receive ] briefs from attorneys for the trunk i line railroads which are contesting | the administrative ruling making one- I way tickets good both ways. In addi- j 1 tion the commission has been gather- | ilng data as to the way the law has S operated. ! Now an Examiner.—Although no j announcement has been made Fred j T. Mac Donald, of Kennett Square.! i Chester county, has been appointed a bank examiner. Tic goes on duty at j once. McCall Testifies. —The testimony in ~ the Philadelphia Electric Company case at Philadelphia, which has been ' dragging along for many weeks, was!, : brought closer to a finish yesterday 1 when President McCall described its growth. Argument will be started soon. Capitol Visitors. —Among visitors to I the Hiii were W. F. Penn, head of the ■ ' Morganza and Ex-Judge W. D. Wallace, of New Castle. j. Claim to Be All Right.—Officers of 1 the Union Casualty Insurance Co.. of I 1 i! Philadelphia, ordered to make good an j inpairment of capital by Conimis '< sioner Johnson declared in Philadel- : phia that they had the funds in hand. 1 They have not yet notified the depart -1 ment. i' General Sisson Here. —Ex-Auditor; General A. E. Sisson, of Erie, was i ! here yesterday and, to-day on state tax '; matters. He was warmly greeted by 1 friends on the Hill. Palmer Presided. —Lew R. Palmer, ' | chief factory inspector, presided yes- ! : 1 terday at the fire prevention con- j ; i ference in Philadelphia. This is the j conference which was started through® ) interest of Bryn Mawr alumnae. Spoke at York. —Paul N. Furman, ' spoke last evening at York on com • pensation as representative of thfe | Department of Labor and Industry. . . Utility Inaugurates Cash Premium System For "the Best Ideas" i I Bv establishing a "'suggestion box" , for "the benefit of its employes, the Harrisburg Light and Power Com- | panjf has arranged to place a cash j premium on "good ideas." For the j best suggestion applicable to the sys- j , tem or any part of it, the company ! will award a prize of $5; for the next two $2.50 each will be the prizes. An- ; nouncement of this departure was made last evening at the February "booster" meeting of the company. More than a hundred employes at- ! tended and P. H. Bailey, trie new ! : commercial manager, acted as a sort of master of ceremonies. The talks j j were all informal and the speakers I included H. N. McConnell, general I commercial manager of the United Gas and Electric Engineering corpora- | tions; C. M. Kaltwasser, general man ager; John Ostertag, H. W. Stone and iL. L. Ferree. The discussions were I all upon matters pertaining to the j operation of the big system. Vlctrola selections helped feature , i the program although the big item was the electrically prepared luncheon of roast beef, coffee and other good : things. Demonstrators from the i Westinghouse Electric Company cooked and prepared the meal on an electric range. Kaiser and Crown Prince Assassins Said Verdict j London, Feb. 4.—An inquest was i ' held yesterday in the cases of thirteen ! • : Zeppelin victims in Staffordshire, and 1 , a verdict was returned of "wilful i murder against the.Kaiser and Crown . Prince of Germany as being accessor , ies to and after the fact of the deaths." j WILL DISCUSS PREPAREDNESS Patriotic Association Plans Big Meeting at Tech on Feb. 24 "Pr«r»*r»dTiPss," iriil probably be one of the important subjects to ue discuss ed at a big mass meeting of patriotic organizations of the city to be held in the Technical High School Auditorium, February 24. Plans for the meeting were started last night by the Patriotic Observance Association in the Grand Army of the Republic Hall, 26 North Third street. The following organizations have joined the association: Post 58, Grand Army of the Republic; Post No. 31, Vet erans of Foreign Wars; Camp No. 8, United Spanish War Veterans; Camp No. 15, Sons of Veterans; Camp No. 8, Patriotic Order Sons of America, and Council No. 35, Order United American Mechanics. Many other organizations in the city have been invited to Join, in cluding the other camps of the Patriotic Order Sons of America. Arrangements are being made by the committee to have prominent men in State and national affairs here to make addresses. Instrumental music and stereopticon views will probably be in cluded in the program. The next meet ing to make further plans will probably be held Monday night in the Grand Army of the Republic Hall. Officers of the Observance Association, who have been elected, are as follows: H. L. McLaughlin, Jonas K. Reist, secretary; H. R. Newcomer, treasurer; D. D. Hammelbaugh, F. H. Eckelman and W. H. Hess, members of joint com mittee. CRISIS RAISED BY TERM "ILLEGAL" [Continued From First Page.] situation and was most explicit In his statements that Germany had reached the extreme limit of concessions and under no circumstances would con- Reg certainly does heal eczema In our file of reports, covering a period of twenty years, literally thousands pi physicians tell how successful the Res inol treatment is for eczema and similar skin troubles. The first tise of Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soapusually stops tlie- itching- and burning, and they soon clear away all trace of the eruptioa No other treatment for the skin now before the public can show such a record of professional approval. Sold by all dni(nn*ts. For trial in*, write to , Dept. KcaicwJ, UAiUnora. MdL cede the illegality of her submarine | campaign in the war area. "The government is willing to do! everything in its power, and has done ! everything in its power, to meet \ American wishes," he said, "but there are limits beyond which even friend-! ship snaps. "X do not understand America's 1 course. We had thought the subma- i rine issue settled and the Lusitania I question oil the way to arrangement j —had agreed to pay indemnity and all I that—when the United States sud- i denly made its new demands, which it is impossible for us to accept. Must Not Humiliate Germany iou must not push your demands! too far. You must not attempt to hu- | mil late Germany." Dr. Zimmerman declined to discuss these new demands or the instructions to Count Von Bernstorff more pre cisely, but he left no doubt that the whole crisis centered on Secretary | Lansing's demand that Germany dis avow the sinking of the I-msitania as 1 an action contrary to international law. The under secretary declared | repeatedly that Germany could not 1 possibly admit this procedure was il- I legal or make concessions which vir- | If F NOW FOR A REAL CLEAN-UP Unrestricted Choice of Over 100 Women's and Misses' Newest Winter Coats Sold All Season at $lO, sl2 and SMBT" C $15 —Choice for Saturday smTig) The season's Ix'st .styles in fine all-wool materials, inelud- Ini; Mixtures, Boucles and Zibelines. Coats for dress, street or utility wear. Choose from many styles and ir you need JSB a eoat a splendid opportunity awaits you; all sizes for Women und Misses. Despite These Drastic Reductions Alterations FREE The new Spring Waists and Women's and Misses' Blouses are here in every new CLOTH DRKSS SKIRTS dJO QQ shade Imaginable. fljl QQ Actual $4.00 values.. «0A»OO Actual »"<)8 Waists 1,1,00 New Spring styles, in a variety of Actual waists.. all-wool materials. Mannish stripes, Pussy Willow Taf- of course—we don't charge for fetas and Crepe de Chine. alterations. The Only Cut Rate Floral Shop in the City A Large Variety of Selected Cut Flowers at Reduced Prices SATURDAY SPECIAL#—Fancy Carnations, 75c and SI.OO docen Hoses of all kinds, SI.OO per dozen. Violets and Sweetpeas, 25c bunch. 325 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. Next Door to Davenport I.uncli tually would take the submarine weapon out of her hands. He as serted again and again that if the United States desired to drive matters to a breach Germany could go no further to avoid It and that the breach, with all its lamentable consequences, must come. Reg-rets Stand The most regrettable phase of the situation, he asserted, was that there existed no really important reason fin a breach, no conflicts or Interest be. tween Germany and the United States, Germany, he said, was counting on re ciprocal development of trade will] America after the war. These hopes would be dashed, or at any rate their development would be hampered greatly, if a breach were to come now; but Germany would do no more. Dr. Zimmerman evidently believes German now has in the submarine u highly effective weapon for use against England. When reminded that sever experts had disagreed previously oil this point, he replied: "Yes, I used to think that way, bul now I have changed my mind." There's a message of Interest tc every housekeeper in Harrisburg 01: page 13 of this issue.—Adv. 17