§The Man t Gar ment For Now It's a snappy Spring Top Coat in flannel and home spun, in plain and mixed browns, blues and greens. Rain-proofed to protect against Spring showers. Form-fitting, box back and pleated back models quarter silk lined. A gar ment that typifies Marks st y 1 e-and-quality excel lence, and modestly priced $15.00 New Spring Suits— To be sure, they're here in snappy models for the young fellow, as well as con- Truly Warner servative styles for the man of more mature taste. New Spring Hats Prices range in easy steps i They come in the stiff from •model, black only, and in soft shapes, in a wide range of /+» -f colors and models; the big- I i. _ -\| I mark J U at I ?. t . h " . $2.00 AJ t O O U H. Marks & Son Harrisburg Home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx, Society Brand and Clothcraft Clothes for Men and Young Men 4th and Market Streets Deaths and Funerals BITTLE GIRL DIES Mary Kathrine Runkle, 6-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Runkle, 1511 Derry street., died this morning. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 1.30 o'clock, Hie Rev. l)r. J. A. L.vter, pastor of the Derry Street United Brethren Church, officiating'. Burial will be made at the Fast Harrisburg Cemetery. MRS. CATHERINE BROBST Mrs. Catherine Brobst, aged 66, died yesterday at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. L. F. Derr. 2514 Jefferson street. Brief funeral services will be • held at the home early Monday morn * ing, the Rev. A. M. Stamets, pastor of Augsburg Lutheran Church, officiating. The body will be takeh to Nuremberg i'.v Hoover & Son, undertakers, where further services will l>e held in the Lutheran Church, followed by burial in the Mount Zion Cemetery. She is survived by four daughters, Mrs. A. R. Schtaucli. of Berwick; Mrs. M. C. Oolio, Philadelphia: Mrs. L. F. Derr and Miss Fayetta Brobst, of Nurem berg. GEORGE W. THOMPSON Funeral services for George W. Thompson, aged 73. a veteran of the Civil War, were held this afternoon at Saturday's Special Prices That Spell Rea! Economy Hundreds of other articles selling at Special Bargain Prices. Come to Smith's Saturday where you get De pendable Merchandise al ways at lowest prices. WOMEN'S Xew Slicplicnl Cheek £ 1 Urcwtt Skirts; lute M models; uiirlli M |^l 92.00. SHturday ■ limj only, cncli ® — s I X.fi anil *2.00 HH \ M.l K, t» hlte ly embroidered Shirt- M nal«t| full blouse M aBI rffrctH. Suturduy ■ ill M only ™ ,r;.T tA 40 IJii-ms Sklrt«i tj) W* ■** vnlueM u|» to W *4.50. Kegiilar Z_|=: mill extra ■■ SntiirUay ....' WITH PUR- A riIASBS of *I.OO ■1 ltd over, Siit 11 r- C llflo ilny only, 10 bur* .■■■■ %% x,,ptUa If V V/ SPECIAL A m a,v SATURDAY— /4 All nine Men'a ®r H _ J ' 1 t'orilnroy ■ - I'unt.i; f2.00 I vnlue ■■§ Standard Apron H (JlnKhain, 27 Inrlien wlile; value up to oc. Saturday only, yard.... EXTRA SPECIAL— H Folding Fiber Lunch llo*c*. Soturdy only SMITH'S 412 Market St. FRIDAY EVENING. KARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 17, 1916. the home, 116 Linden street. Burial | was made at Carlisle. Until a year i ago he li,ved in Carlisle and was a 11 member of the Captain Caldwell Post, !G. A. R., of that place. He served in , the war in Company A. Second Regi ' ; ment, Pennsylvania Volunteers. Mr. 5 i Thompson is survived by four sons, • Edward, George and Charles, this city, 5 and William E„ of Baltimore. •T. P. BRASKKLMAN j .1. P. Brasselmann, 442 South Four ; teenth street, proofreader at the Mount Pleasant Press and a prominent mem- I ber of the Protestant Episcopal j Church, died last night in Philadelphia i from heart disease after an illness of I several months. He is survived by his I wife, one son, Heath, and ono daugh j ter. Miss Florence Ruth Brasselmann. ! Mr. Brasselmann was an active church : member, taking part in several inter ; denominational movements in the city. He was instrumental in the organ i ination of the St. Andrew's Protestant ! Episcopal Mission and has also taken i much interest in the work of the I St. Augustine's Church. Funeral serv ' | ices will be held in Philadelphia and ' burial will be made there. | LOCAL MEN FIGHTING IN MEXICO Two Harrisburg men. cousins, whose parents now reside in Enola, are now - believed to be beyond the Mexican bor -1 | der with General Pershing in pursuit . of the bandit Villa. The men are | William Shuey, 212 South Thirteenth street, and William Shuc.v, formerly of I 1614 North Fifth street. Both are pri vates in the Eighteenth Infantry and j have been in the army for several i years. j BONBON STANDARD SUSPENDS J.ondon, March 17.—The Standard, i which has been established as a morn ing newspaper since J857, suspended ; publication to-day. B was recently j offered for sale, without finding a pur i chaser. DARING AVIATOR HURT By Associated Press Paris, March 1". —Sergeant Pilot i George Guynemer, of the French fly ! ing corps, has been wounded. I Gu.vnemer's exploits have won I him a reputation as one of the most | daring French aviator. FILES $750,000 MORTGAGE The Cumberland Valley Telephone Company to-day tiled a $750,000 mort i gage with the Mechanics Trust Com. I pany, in accordance with the recent i reorganization plan . RED HMPLESir ABOUT FACE, NECK And Body, Large and Hard. Skin Very Sore and Face Was [ . Very Disfigured. HEALED BYCUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT "My trouble started with pimples m&l.im. their appearanco all about my face, aeck j and body. The pimples were large and §liard and were red and festered, also appearing with yellow heads. The/ were scattered and the 3kin was very sore and oftentimes my face was very d'.?figured. "This la* MM'. for about two months and ' found my face getting wo.se. and I was j treated and when tills failed I gave up hope i of being cured. I saw an advertisement for j Cuticura Soap and Ointment so 1 tried them and now I have not oven a mark left |on my face. I am healed." (Signed) 1 Charles C. Davis, 134:2 8. ChadwicU St., I Philadelphia, Pa.. July 21. 1916. j Sample Each Free by Mail With :i2-p. Skin Rook 00 request. Ad : dress post-card "Cuticura. l>ept. I", Boa ton." Sold throughout Uie world. Try Telegraph Want Ads END OF TIME, IN 1916, IN RAISED SCRIPT ON EGG Whole Town Is Arguing Over Genuineness of Mysteri ous Symbol Pittsburgh, March 17.—An egg—a white Leghorn egg may be the means of making McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, U. S. A., the most fa mous historical spot in the universe for centuries to come. There are those who believe so. There are those who do not. Both sides have plausible arguments In support of their contentions. If those who argue In support of the veracity of the egg are correct, McKees Hocks will become known as the place where the dawn of the mil lenium was foretold to the world in 1916 and as sueh will quite supplant the Garden of Eden as the most fa mous of places in the world's history. On the egg in raised scrip runs this legend: The End of Time, 1916 This remarkable egg was found by Miss Harriett Francis in a nest In the' hennery owned by Mr. and Mrs. James Francis, 627 Frederick street, McKees Rocks. At first the inscription was not noticed but the egg was laid aside because its surface was rough and only smooth surfaced eggs are of fered their patrons by Mr. and Mrs. Francis. It was on Tuesday that the inscription was deciphered by Mrs. Francis. She told her husband the secret of the egg when he came home from work that night. Egg Taken to Museum On Friday, Mr. Francis took the egg to the Carnegie museum and display ed it to Rouglas Stewart. Meanwhile the story of the egg and its wondrous inscription spread from one end to the other of McKees Hocks. Yesterday the authenticity of the Inscription was | debated, pro and con, in the nickel odeons, in the stores, in the shops and on the street corners, in fact every where where people gathered. Minister Takes Issue I There were those who insisted that | the egg actually bore to the world • the news of the millennium. There were those who argued that the In scription was the work of some wag employed in the chemical department of the Pressed Steel Car Company. The Rev. F. A. Wight, pastor of the Mc- Kees Rocks Christian Church, who went to Carnegie museum to see the egg yesterday at the earnest solicita tion of the advocates of the forme? theory, said last night that he was "not prepared to question the veracity of the inscription by any means." He| showed from Scripture that the year | 1916 might well mark "tbc end of an! age, a dispensation," as he put it, : "which might be mistaken for the' end of the world." "Of course," said Mr. Wight, "the end of the world is a much-misused expression. What the Bible actually means by the end of the world is the end of this dispensation. Christ will come back to the world, I believe and He will come within r short time now. He will come in spirit after this ter rible war, which will be the last of all wars, bnt not until after four years of socialism have followed immedi ately upon the close of the war. With the fall of that system, which cannot last long, Christianity will rule com-; pletely. Meantime Christ will have | lifted His church from the world, as the Bible tells, and will appear with His church supreme at the conclusion of the utter failure of men to govern themselves without God." Takes Scientific Stand Mr. Wight took a scientific as well , as a religious stand In defense of that attitude. "At the museum to-day someone I was inclined to make light of this," said he. "I at once stated that the 'true scientific attitude was not one of ridicule and that it forbade a stand I against the accuracy of the inscrip tion 011 the egg until a thorough in vestigation had been made. Further .niore, as the egg is the source of life, what better means could the Lord employ to convey the news of the sec ond coming? "This inscription was not engraved I on the egg shell. It was embossed | thereon. The letters were raised. That is what has puzzled folks so.! Now, Mr. Stewart said fliat lie could I duplicate the inscription. If he does! so, and shows that the hand of man I can accomplish this, then I shall tell! iill inquirers so and T shall be inclined lo the theory that the inscription was j done artificially." Stewart Embosses Inscription Mr. Stewart was asked last night about his assertion that he could ac- , coniplish the same thing with an egg.! "I did it to-day," said he. "There i is nothing wonderful about it. I took an egg, wrote with paraflne on the shell, gave the egg a muriatic acid bath and then put it in water. T took off the palatine and there I had the inscription embossed." "The End of Fakes, 19Id" "What was the inscription that you wrote on the egg shell?" Mr. Stewart was asked. "The end of fakes, 1916," he replied smilingly. "Where is that egg?" he was asked. "On its way by parcel post to the Rev. Mr. Wight," he replied. "Ho will get it to-morrow." Mr. Wight announced that the egg would be responsible for a sermon that he would preach this Sunday night in j his church on "The End of the World." The egg rested unostentatiously in a niche on a shelf in the Carnegie mu seum yesterday. And so, whereas, an apple gave the Garden of Eden un dying fame, it may be that an egg 1 will bring renown to McKees Rocks. I FIX ELECTRIC HEARING April 10 was fixed by the Dauphin ' county court this afternoon for hear ing qup warranto proceedings insti tuted by the Stato against the Pitts on Electric, the Pittston Heat, Power and Light, the Piedmont Electric and ' the Garden City Electric Companies j requiring them to show why they should not be formally ousted of their j charter privileges for failure to or- j ganize and operate within two years, in accordance with their franchise re quirement. | FIX APPEAL DATES The Dauphin county court this aft- ' ernoon fixed March 28 for hearing any appeals that may be made to the payment of the bills of G. A. Flink and David A. Keefe, engineers, re- | sptctively, on the Sliamokin Creek and Wyalusing Creek bridges at Sun bury and Camptown, Bradford coun ty, respectively. Flink's bill is for S6BB and Keefe's is for $l,OlO. NAME TIPSTAVES Tipstaves for March quarter ses sions beginning next week were ap pointed by the court this afternoon as follows: John Pottorff, Robert Green, John Edward, M. F. Graham, Harry Fulchner, B. M. Shank, John ' Cash. Andrew Knoble, J. IT. Yontzer, I Samuel Johnson, George Gibson, John Uarr, Jacob Boyd, David Washington l and Joseph Washington. ' Anticipation I Satisfaction I ■ I \ wort ky iadividual and step 9 I \ KXHIP* I r ° u now ow new I ■ \ orn °* bein s re3se d; I \ / new c othes are cashable as ■ / sets ou cant a^° r<^to eave i I satisfaction giving is nerer I measured by the s ze of the sale slip. Service is more to us than merely an exchange of so much 1 It makes no difference in this "Live Store" how 1 your taste may run—every known style is here—attractive, snappy models and plain conservative suits. Each selection showing a size range that covers every possible measurement. Good clothes for the wide awake fellow at this I I 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. I ALDINE HOTEL UNDER HAMMER | Bar, Beer and Grill Room Tables to Be Sold by Sheriff March 22 I fMMwaßaj Bar, fixtures //*/ J, Hi bottles and kegs o. liquors and beer J Jgr the cnairs and —tables of the gri) ' Erffli rooms—all the fur nishlngs that help ' Tjfl Aldine hotel "fa ili three hotels which the Dauphin coun jty courts a few weeks ago refused t' relicense following a vigorous paign of the city churches, the law and order and the -i" , of Dauphin county, was posted to-day by Sheriff W. W. Caldwell. Failure of the proprietor, Edwin S. Miller, to obtain the privilege to dis pose of liquor at his establishment ( caused the business to drop off to sucl an extent, as to make It necessary foi i the owner to quit business. Change Polling Place. - The poll ing place of the seventh precinct of the Ninth ward has been changed from the garage at 1600 Market street to Wiest's garage in Ethel street be tween Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets. Paint Warden's Quarters. —All the rooms and halls in the section of the ! Daupjiin county prison occupied by Warden William A. Mcllhenny have been repainted. Painters among the prisoners applied several coats of white paint. Criminal List Augmented. Eight additional cases have been added to the March criminal court trial list and the supplemental calendar runs the total number to seventy-seven, j The new cases included: Sava Dum- ; bovie, larceny; William Webster felonious assault; James Forro, per- : I jury; Roy T. Clouser, malicious ints- j [chief; Ollie Hoots, assuuu uuu tery; George Robinson, indecent as-1 sault; llarry VanHoff, fraudulent secretion and conversion of partner ship property; Fred Gilmore, larceny. I Wills Probated. ln probating yesterday the wills of David Horn, I Jr., and Cheston Roth, both of this | city, Registrar R. C. Danner issued | letters on the estates to the Dauphin I Deposit Trust Company and Harvey j H. Frank, respectively. Auditors Sit April 7. Attorneys C. C. Stroh and Job J. Conklin, re cently appointed auditors to examine 'he fifth and partial account of Chas. V. Kirschler, receiver of the Traders' md Mechanics' Dank, Pittsburgh, will tit for the purpose on Friday, April j 7, in the law offices of Burleigh and hallener, Pittsburgh. Commissioner Stinc Honored. —! 'ounty Commissioner Henry M. Stine; his city, has been cjiosen secretary >f the southern-eastern section of the 'ennsylvania branch of the National 'lectric Association. C. M. Kalt •asser, general manager of the Har- TIRED ALL THE TIME It ia good to feel tired sometimes, when you have exercised sufficiently to cause a healthful feeling of fatigue. But, you should be refreshed by rest. j A tired feeling that docs not disappcj < ; even after a night's sleep is abnormal. ! It means that you are anemic or debili- ; tated, that you need a tonic to build yo up ami fortify your system against BUCL I a condition. If you do not you are in viting disease because thin blood meanr that the body's defense against the in roads of disease is lowered. Thin blood is largely the sufferer's o\m j fault. It results from neglect, because! the blood can be built up. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills supply the elements that the blood needs to make it rich and red and to enable it to carry more oxygen. Build ! ing up the red portion of the blood is simple but because thin blood does not call attention to itself is often neglected. Have you seriously considered taking a course of treatment with these blood making pills? If you are in doubt write for information. Your own druggist sells Dr. Williams' Pills or they will be Bent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price 50 cents per l>ox; si* boxes $2.50 by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Write now for the free booklet "Building Up the Blood" i I rlsburg Light and Power Company has been selected as president of the | section. Appointed Election Judge. Allan I Brubaker was appointed to-day as I.iudge of election for Conewago town | ship, vice Jacob G. Martin, resigned, j Approved Tax Collector's Bond. The court to-day approved the bond of S. Li. Sheetz as tax collector for Halifax township. Note !SIMO Short. Charles S. Grubb, James D. Helt, John P. Johns and George A. Bonawitz will be re quired to show in court why a judg ment note which had been entered as > "satisfied" by the First National Bank lof IClizabethville, should not be stricken off, according to a rule grant ed to-day by the court. The four men, it is by the bank, paid $655 on a $1595 judgment note which inadvertently had been marked "satis fled." Probate Brubaker Will Seth Bru Men's Furnishings at Sacrifice Prices Our lease expires April Ist—We MUST get out. ■ This means sacrifice of all profits and in most cases an actual loss for much of our stock will be sold far below cost. Men's $2.00 Hats 40c Men's $2.50 Huts 60c $1.50 Shirts 50c $3.98 Sweaters SI.OB $1.25 Trousers 08c $3.50 Trousers $1.70 $1.50 Wool Undergarments 73c S2.OO\'YII Wool Undergarments $1.19 Some goods slightly damaged by smoke in the re cent fire will be sold at your own price. Everything must go before April Ist. Fixtures and all store furniture for sale. CAPIN & CAPIN 430 Market Street i - baker's will was probated to-day and letters on the estate were granted to his widow, Annie E. Brubaker. New Board to Act. Lykens' bor ough school board is all wrought up over the problem as to whether the | old or the newly-elected election board shall conduct the proposed special election on the question of floating a $20,000 loan for the extension of the school district, March 21. The bor ough officially put the matter up to the county commissioners to-day and upon the advice of Phil 8. Moyer, the solicitor, the commissioners notified the board that the new election offi cers will conduct the balloting. TECH ORCHESTRA CONCERT Before a large audience last even ing in the Technical high school audi torium the Technical high school or chestra gave its fourth annual concert. George W. Updegrove directed. 15