See the W HITT ALL Anglo Persian Rug In Our Window See theWmiTALLRUG This R "S Was on the Side on the Sidewalk ' walk For 7 Days M< // \ | Jf> / ■ f I i eturne d to the Manvfacturers WMfi ■ _j'\l will take an expert to tell that it evcn went through such a hard test. All v ' R«gs will stand all the hard VifrtmSSmr // wear ou can ve them. We want you la / to examine this rug closely, as it will be \:Mj \1 j SO ' ( ' t0 t ' lC bidder. Bids will P"ce. It will be to your advantage to v/ //j ' secure the rugs you need at this time ifr Mi, FP lnl . there is to be another advance in //r== price. We have prepared for this, in The Sidewalk Test /Proves order to take care of our many valuable Fads which you See and Believe customers. I .et us show you the largest —— stock we ever displayed. FACKLER'S "IMU MOLLY PITCHER MONU MENT TO BE UNVEILED [Continued Prom l iisl l'as<*.] Pitcher Monument Commission, was named by the stair and iimmediately plans for the marker were gotten 1111- rler way. TVie commission as named is made up of Roy 1.. Soluiyler, Ixn'k I I axon: Herman A. Miller, Kaston; XV. S. WacUer, Philadelphia, and W. A. Hupp, Carlisle. The monument plan, selected by Hie commission, is a life size figure of Moll*' Pitcher as she appeared when preparing to fire the i-annon. The contract was Riven to a Host on firm and already the model has been made in clay. Within the next f«-w weeks the figure will be cast in bronze and by June 1 it will lie shipped to Carlisle. Plan i;iaborate Ceremonies Elaborate plans have hpen made for [iiiiiiiiiHiiJiiHiiiiiiiijiunmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii Get Most For Your Money! I When you buy Fisk you get a good tire \ 11®^ plus good treatment, and free service, in fl more than 100 Fisk Branches —service that \ brings the uttermost to your tire investment. \ Fisk Non-Skid Prices are still lower than the A plain treads of many other standard makes. Compare These Fisk Prices Grey Non-Skid Casings and Tubes 4Jx 35 . . 31.20 ! ! 5.55 4Jx36 . . 31.55 . . 5.70 /Wwl i/\ 5x 37 . . 37.30 . . 6.90 JTjtf Fisk Tires For Sale By All Dealers HCj( THE FISK RUBBER COMPANY I General Offices: Chicopee Fall*, Maaa. Harriaburg Branch, 19 So. Third St. I I Bet. Market and Chestnut [ 1 Branches in More Than 100 Cities ■ I \ i Pretty fi Teeth Add to the Natural p ,1." le ! tt * r .' ""■« •' ■"> attention, call and k»« " * «« m 'nfd. rrhlrh la FRKK or CliAfUiK. H "" . "ork to be of tke bnt. both In ma- P w f ' Mt in "«rk»...Hp, nhlrh it In pun.ihit, to alvr mr »atlente. f/jj% 4 Slthh.Jltl «nd every dentlat matt have la order to & JiT »*K« hare had a vaat amount of exferl- KJ »5r M, therefore are able t» reader the very brat of aervlree. R do vmtmlln "PP'»«»ce. I. order to jjjj IKTIO.V TTIETH "*'« ■"* & J, TWey at perfectly. f Eg I * IM UP ">OC and up || E fes r Honra, 8:10 A. M. to tf P. M. Cloned on ftundaya L: < Open Moa, Wed, and *mt. Kven'.naa t alll U P. M. B i DR. PHILLIPS, Painless Dentist 1 a tz 5423 " (ITER HI B. Bell Phone. Braach Offleen aai R#m<llbb. G«rnaß 9pakea |B LADY ASSIST/ \T. TUESDAY EVENING, ' i the unveiling ceremoneis and in con nection one of the biprgest parades ever witnessed in the Cumberland Valley ' will be held. The affair will be far from local. It will lie a State-wide 1 celebration, and thousands of persons will be here from all parts of Penn i ! sylvania. Committees have been named ! to arrange the details for the day and | they have been busy since January. J Military organizations, patriotic so i cieties from all parts of the State and j tire companies rrom all over Cumber j land county will take part in the I pageant, which will be held in the j afternoon and which will immediately precede the unveiling ceremonies. Executive Committee The executive committee, of which | K. S. Manning, of Xewville, is presi dent, is composed of the following: O. H. I.ipps. J. M. Rudy. W. X. Gem mill. Abram Hosier, Harry llertzler, | David Mel'ride. William kronenbcrgl j Peter Morris, H. A. Kwing, J. Kelso I Green, W. A. Rupp, William Moudy, I Stuart Meals, Frank Hertzler, E. L. Coblentz, M. G. Filler. E. E. Barnitz, William Ogilby. William Mullln, F. 11. Kimmel, Daniel Fought, S. M. Goodyear, D. B. Brindle, R. W. Irving and W. K. Jones. Committee Chairmen The chairmen of the other commit tees are: Finance, Harry Hertzler: publicity, E. K. Barnitz: concessions, W. H. Mullln; badges, 11. A. Ewing; railroads and transportation, W. K. Jones; entertainment, Frank Kimmel: decoration, Daniel Fought: auditing. J. Kelso Green: accommodations. Wil liam Kronenberg; fire companies, D. K. Brindle. E. E. Barnitz, W. 11. Mul lln, William Ogilby and E. 1„. Cob -1 lentz; secret societies, D. E. Brindle: | v oting contest, Stuart Meals; military, John M. Rudy: speaker, M. G. Filler; | reception, It. W. Irving: Grand Ariuv, ; William Moudy; public schools. .1. | Kelso Green; Spanish-American Vol unteers, David Mcßride; parade, Peter I Morris. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ROOT IS WALL STREET CHOICE iFinaciers, However, Sny Theyj Will Support Roosevtlt Rather Than Wilson Special to the Telegraph I New York, April XI. —A man of! stanch and conservative Republican ism, who has an office in Wall street and is prominent in the financial dis- | trict, was sitting in the Republican Club. "Who is your candidate for Presi- j dent?" asked a friend sitting near him. ' "Elihu- Root," was the reply, in a voice that left no room for doubt. "But suppose Root isn't nomi-j nated?" said the friend. "Suppose the | Republican delegates nominate Roose- j velt and you have to choose between him and Wilson—whom will you vote for?" "For Roosevelt, him," he re plied. This man summed up the sentiment j of many Republicans of Wall street.' i A reporter who questioned several of ; the leaders in the financial district who ' have always been standpat Repub licans learned beyond doubt that a very large number of them will vote for Roosevelt if he is their party's can- i didate against President Wilson. They don't like. Colonel Roosevelt; theyj would like to see him smothered in the Republican national convention; j they generally say something violent I when they mention his name, but they j will vote for him if he is nominated as j the Republican candidate. Next to Root, many of them, accord ing to reports, would choose Justice Hughes. But these Republicans of Wall street i admit privately and regretfully thai Colonel Roosevelt has created a sit- I nation, or that his friends have ere- i ated one for him, which makes his the j dominent—perhaps the domineering— J figure in Republican politics and which will probably result in his nomination, j These Republicans of Wall street, j therefore, realize that they may have J to choose between Roosevelt and Wil- ' son, and though they have not forgiven i the Colonel for bolting the party in j 1912 and for his other political sins, their opposition to President Wilson because of his domestic policies befdre I the war, because of his Mexican and j international policies, is the factor that, first to last, determines their sentiments. When the question, "If not Hoot, who?" was put to Henry P. Dawson, of J. P. Morgan & Co., Mr. Davson re plied: "I'm for Root and I haven't any sec ond choice, ido not see the necessity i now for making any second choice. I i want to see Mr. Root nominated at Chicago and I shall vote for him if i lie is. If someone else is nominated. I there will be time enough to decide I the queslion of voting." j,Our Library Table*! A MINUTtS W»TH.TH^#C3Pi \IARITI BOOKS «. MAGAZINESY^\TCZU Antwerp to Gallipolli. by Arthur! Ruhl. (Scribnec'a, New York, $1.50). How little do we Americans, wrap ped up In our own affairs and obsess- ( ed with the pursuit of wealth which ! the war-given prosperity of this coun- i try has made possible—how little do we really know of the actual conditions j in Europe and how little do we really i appreciate and sympathize with the | cheerful sacrifices which hundreds of j thousands of human beings, flesh and! blood like ourselves, are enduring day j after day, month in and month out. j in the cause of country. This record of events and of the! actual witnessing of scenes of horror | and bloodshed, while perhaps exag- j gerated to the degree that all writers ; who are interested in their subject must necessarily exaggerate, still gives I us one of the clearest and most realis- ! tic pictures of the countries at war of any literature that the war has in- J spired. Simple, frunk In the matter of details, and conversational in style, this bird's-eye view of the war map and the intimate associations which it gives with peoples of foreign habits and customs is the next best thing to visiting the trenches ourselves. A trip through Belgium just ahead j of the galloping troops and onrushing i hordes of German invaders, a halt at j Antwerp while shells shatter houses next to us and we shiver in our beds lest the next strike the house wherein we are lodged: a visit to Paris, where all is expectancy and uncertainty: thence to Bordeaux, the temporary capital of France, and a hasty glance at London, from which a heavy fog drives us ere we can learn much of anything: on to the German prison camps, in which French and English, Algerian and Serbian, all mingle to gether in the little walled-ln city that is all their own. and where they take it as a matter of course and pro duce Bernard Shaw's "Androcles and the Lion" under the watchful but twinkling eye of the German com mandant; an armored motor takes us whizzing to the front, whore we step gingerly through the trenches and watch the English, less than a hun dred yards away but invisible in their own trenches, hurling bombs and standing as watch-dogs within a few seconds' walk of their enemies: next we cross over the pass and enter the capital of Rumania, that little nation smaller in size than Pennsylvania, yet a factor in the world war. A careful reading of Mr. Ruhl's book will; per haps dispel the hazy impression which the average American holds of the Balkans. Finally we visit the Turks and Austria-Hungary through which we pass to the Gaiician front. One feels, after having taken this trip of one year with the author to the principal scenes of the war, more equal to solving in one's own mind just what is the correct attitude one is to take with respect to the countries that are lighting for their very lives. It is very hard to be on the outside looking in and still form a definite and un shakable conviction on a matter that has so many phases. "Antwerp to Gallipolll" will do much to crystallize the unformed sentiment of the reader toward this country or that, without violating the well-established neutral ity that has been ours since the war started. Instead of tlie Thorn, by Clara HOW HE QUIT TOBACCO "* 1 This veteran. S. B. Lamphere, wan addicted to the ex cessive use of to bacco for many years. 11«- wanted ■1- to quit but needed something to help him. He learned of a free book that tells J about tobacco habit and how to con- , quer it quickly, easily and safely, in a recent letter he writes: - I have no desire for tobacco any more. I feel I like a new man." Any one desiring a copy of this book on tobacco habit, smoking and chew ing. can get it fre«. postpaid, bv writ ing to Edward J Woods, 92 G, Station K, New York City. You will be sur- j prised and pleased. Look for quieter nerves, stronger heart, better diges- ' tlon. Improved eyesight, increased vig-I [or, longer life and other advantages if' ' v "u uuit uuutouluic yourself. , 1 | Tomorrow, Wednesday, a Day of Wonderful Value Giving' KAUFMANS % : I dx# PKE'EASTEU ) NflTl P p ay * ssue °' Delineator, Butterick Fashions and 1 n " I I vL"' Free Butterick Fashion Sheets now ready for distribution i 1 at our Butterick Pattern Department, First Floor, Center. j Individuality—Style—Practicability—Economy i | The Foundation Stones of this Colossal Underselling ( I mr OUTERGARMENT 1 | Where Else Can You Find Such a Range of Sizes, j J Such a Dazzling Array of Styles, So Much Individu- ( ( ality and Such Tremendous Values. I | Nowhere Else in Harrishurg Except at KAUFMAN'S. ( I Amazing Pre-Easter Underselling Opportunities Tomorrow of the | j. Newest Women's & Misses' Easter Suits, Coats, Skirts & Dresses f 5 I®/SY, EASTER SUITS For EASTER SUITS For EASTER SUITS For 1 f jSwd ' Women and Misses, at Women and Misses, at Women and Misses, at \ 1 $12.75 $15.00 SIB.OO I ( RAip Can't !>«» duplicated for Icmm Vale* to 9*jr».oo. 1 J Actual 9ltt.no \ alar*. than *ls.o« to 4&UM. Rich, new poplins, men's ( f JWf wmW&k Sn, * rt ' snnppy shepherd quk'Wv prove' Made W of Wl '? r , s V r « c % K«l>ardlnei» 1 % checks men's wear screen S. . ,"\r , and checks. Newest flare m # I a lid all - wool o, lis i ultra-stylish soft all-woo nlo dels and belt, half belt L K IYi jsjSMif®attafi .. . 1 pom ma. nil poplin, mannish seises and an ,i i„, v V # thp season's most stunning; checks Ble ranee of styles st> les>. hmai t, new m I new models and all sizes - " tyies, collars, many braid or em- ■ £ I f iAresw|Bj MiHfM and colors —— broidery trimmed: all sixes 1 ' Latest Serge, Poplin f° r slender, medium and m m large women. All colors. Popular Shepherd and Gabardine Coats ——y # p|l Check Coats For Wo- E° r Women and New Spring Coats For € M liwMiMßia men and Misses; Pre- Misses; Pre-Easter Women and Misses, at # C Easter Event, Event, CD O/f 7 C ■ I $5.95 SIO.OO „,z£ f™.. I W Alter- 'I K Values up to .liJ.VOO serge and poplin coats with % % iitioiiK M\ \HIIICH UP to FH..->O. Wonderful variety; all medium and full capes # M , I'IIKE Aif new; nil latest colors; un- or with ruffle collars: lin- m 6 »ml \ Flared and belted effects; lined, lined and half lined ed with contrasting colors; M M tiuiir- bJ small, medium and large models; all sizes; other a host of new novel effects; M 9 nnteed. w checks; all sizes. styles as low as «.'>.».*>. all sizes. % % \ <t ' "v I'l iiim I ( If,, „ r , „ BARGAIN BASEMENT ij hmm Beautiful New Easter Hats Jo»s i^S!rr ,h r.!^..«3.39ji §•* .« ii r* i it 1 n» n , .• foranitc Art Square Rugs, good,; # C: : the Pre-Easter Underselling Event £ 5 '■ each $1.59 C % %.• xt .1 t i_ • nftf % 55a.00 value; sizes 9x9 ft.; special, 5 # M'/ Now, then, if ever a big Mil.li- j s each $2,595% % •' n re 1 5 555.00 value; size 9x10.6 ft.; f 1 ?nery Opportunity was ever ottered ,* 5 -ciai, each 5a.98.; t C % ~ • • *. | A ii .• i i 58.50 value; size 9x12 ft.; special,? ■ \ iyou, this is it! A new collection „ < J each s:s.;s9j f I Jof this season's choicest new !■ |lj Process Linoleums, in |J» t Mi i • i , ... t .9. fonr good patterns. 2 yarda / %>have just arrived and will go 011 M .• ? wide, ■worth 500 kmmrembi-Ts g f ■: ( Special Underselling on. ' t % C (sale to-morrow, at V, |! i Price, aq. yd \ 1) I }52.90, $;(.!»<). $4.90 and ss.9tNTA^i_/J - } f i ) Mif \ \j c .square yard. OS/ C * ■ c Clever ultra-fashionable new models in a 5 season's latest straw braids, shapes and S 5 lengths'; enough of each pattern S# I iA host, of smart and attractive new effects, the 'J / J J for any room. ? ■ m i newest Fifth Avenue ideas and modified copiesv j\ ' / i 1 5 Extra Heavy Quality Printed •' K 9 Jof the Parisian creations. Every hat a won- kj *■>--. ,• J LISOLEI'MS; A Q \ % ?derful value at Kaufman's Famous Undersell- n\ 1" ? T „,.,| H*7C ■. 9 J ting Prices. J q " yards «9csq yd. value. f% % j Buy your Easter Hat at Kaufman's to-mor- fj in five splendid kitchen and m m ?row and save yourself some money. jf bathroom designs. ? C 1 • VAW-WAVVWAV. 1 SF.CON I) l''I.O(»ll '.-.-.%V.V.-.V.V.WA".» • J"--.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.• f ( KAUFMAN'S Sell the Best Boys' Clothing' j Mticie at Lower Than Elsewhere Prices J That's a fact, it will pay all parents to remember because it means money' 1 saved; for no matter how good the quality or how low the price quoted fori # I boys' clothing anywhere else, you are sure of always getting it at Kaufman's 1 j jTUmpO for less. Remember that and save. See these splendid values to-morrow: j ' I r s / s 1 j"*? *il New Norfolk Suits l'"or New Norfolk 4jO AH New -Sun-Proof Navy , {J JJ Hoys, «to §2 49 S,, " s , ' or Bo >' s llliic Serge oq I yJj || 17 Years * That another store can Suits I-'or Hoys * I Can't be bought for not begin to match at Other stores would MT B ~,„u than 7f, pise- t,IP price. Many are two charge you $6.00 for a i I W V , u,a " * .. pairs of pa"ts suits, ti Suit to match these. 1 M where; these are well to 17 year sizes. Every Probably will cost more I C A made of sturdy new fab- suit a great big, unbeat- later on; 5 to 17 year j H rics; all colors. able value. sizes. A wonderful value. , •\ t \ r v Smart New Norfolk QQ Newest Norfolk Suits jtC QQ Easter Top Coats <l*O A a | Suits For Hoys * For Hoys, at * I"'or Hoys, at * 1 I A wide range of patterns, col ors and materials. This season's Ihese are the styles and fab- These are unusually good j I newest models, in all wool rics that are ordinarily sold at values, made of shepherd plaids worsteds, cassimeres and blue $7.50 elsewhere, so don't decide and new mixtures, double | 1 serges; every suit exceptionally on your Boy's Easter Suit till breasted, belted back models t 1 . well tailored, pants lined and you see these; all sizes, all the that can't be matched anywhere 1 , coat sewed .with silk; 7to 18 latest cut and fabrics for boys else for less than $3.50; all sizes ' ; year sizes. 8 to 18 years. 2M> to 8 years. '■ ———— I ' ' * I'MMMt, "i Louise Burnham. (Houghton-Mifflin,) $1.25). ; A most appealing love story, one of the best Mrs. Burnham has written, j dealing with the patient love of a, strong man, a young man of mighty j intellect and power, and a somewhat wilful but no less strong-intnded Chi cago girl who has been reared in | luxury and left In the world with a! father and sensibly-married sister. Much havoc has been wrought in the j hearts of many an adoring young | man. but all are treated with the same unstirred friendly feeling. The lead ing figure in the story, next to herself, is the young man who chances to be the confidential secretary to her father, who looks with favor upon the match. Unfortunately the girl must needs be awakened 10 her senses by some sort of a shock. The death of, her father due to financial troubles and the affixing by the girl upon the young man of the moral blame for his death brings about an acute situation which causes much mental and physi cal suffering until all is happily ad justed through the loyal activity of an adored music-teacher, a hard-shelled APRTL 11, 1916. but soft-hearted old aunt, an optlmls- • tically red-headed little serving maid | and a broad-shouldered young athlete j "and they lived happily ever' after." It is the reader's privilege in thisj. absorbing story of love and business to watch the development of theme and see in advance the in evitable capitulation of the fair-mind ed but impulsive girl 1o the over powering, sacrificial and tender love of the man: and to share likewise in the man's unspoken victory over the! girl's mistaken antagonism. It af-1 fords a series of thrills toward the eAd \ that refreshes and restores whatever belief may have been lost in the ultl- ' mate advantageous working out of; God's law of love, which finds expres-' sion ip the constant and unchanging faith and trust of the girl's adored ; music-teacher in ultimate happiness, j O. HENRY—MURDERER Professor Pattee, of Pennsylvania! State College thinks that O. Henry i killed the American short story. What ' De Qnlncey would call "Murder as; one of the fine arts." we suppose. Will i some more executioners like O. Henry I please step lively?— Colliers, j James Whitcomb Riley, who has spnnt the winter months in Miami. Florida, will return to his Indianapolis home about the middle of April. Ho is in excellent health and has en joyed not only the warm Miami breezes but, as he says, the picturesque and stimulating society of the Honorable Henry Watterson, of Kentucky andl other salubrious states. ERANDRETH "°a!r PILLS, An Effective Laxadft | Purely V«g*tabl« ionstipation, "digestion, Biliousness, | © Oft O'© •t N%ht 9 ttntU nSnW 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers