"The Big Friendly Store" OPEN SATURDAYS TILL 10 p. M Man—Today Is Keenly Alive y rti To the Importance of Dress f J° dress without ostentation, yet in a manner becom "V his dignity and his position. To keep himmself well B roome d, so that when he goes walking with a lady, he does V discounted by her smart appearance. For Fashion Park Clothes —Clothes featured by the most exclusive fabrics loomed—real artistic clothes designed and tailored in faultlessly approved styles—styles that are all their own. We could write volumes about, t,' >! Jjf|I j these, the best clothes in the land. The prices will appeal to vou. *2O 525 5 25 s 3O *33 / r ' an an * s * 0 Spend sls For a Suit I 1 J You'll make a profitable investment in a "GLOBE FAMOUS IliillsllL FIFTEEN." Conservative and smart stylings in extra quality i- \ fabrics —\\ orsteds Cheviots Cassimeres Flannels —^Serges—in fact jlji A every kind, and you 11 also find the same assortment of sizes here that vou'll U find in the better grades. We can fit any man. The goodness of make and fabrics means a sacrifice of profits for us. Belt-on Norfolk Suits—Exclusive With Us—sls "'TW/'--&jßgjpill dignified lot of the new Belt-On Norfolk Suits have just come in—late arrivals Nt * iat W B' ve tone an< * zest t° the superb variety which they now mingle with. Have •|| } j * at .jj^ se sna PP> r su ' ts at $15 —then compare the suits that other stores ask S2O ffjßll mPIIII $ A | S ® le ,°V.r, m i ery S r'.^ a ' 00 \ Straw Hat Time If ¥'iwWmß :• »(«S.nduiS«- r„S* Ji cutis as \ou nia\ desire. Hundreds «J straw hats that do not become S MH| arC ' ICrC '° r - vonr c^loos ' n S —"all sizes. tious exi*"' °" ly v a f conscien - M BHI '' Manhattan Shirts in the grandest variety %' !f" l °f an. inch i f * -; a « J -I*l • we've ever shown— sl.so lo Si 00 % ! exact stjle jou ought to M 9 VHP ;■ Silk Shirts— S2.RO and 53..-.0 % }lHve ' ° ur 541 ial ? understands B BB 9 Hn ;! Manhattan Silk Shirts— ss.oo. htm n°t.h oosin'g 'from ?*' i? |lj|jjjgj| " wm "" jw ** m^*AWWWVL i UUVIS J-«th the perforated sweat I I'■ ■! Here For Unil»rwpar fnm(nrt i or from our >«rge assortment of f § . \:.Mm ' '• unaerwear lOIMOII { plain and fancy braids in all ; | 4 fvfi iJ-*» ;■ Select your Summer Underwear from our i the newest shapes $2.0(1 11 | .<£*#< jPPiaSBW % ®J'. the. good make# such as Ir An elegant showing of Ladies' i f I ■, " Ifh .1 5 C^ al f — o —Lew is •, and Men's Panamas $5.00 if f «# I | • nainsook with the knit leg. See the athletic £ ~, ! ; aygJggsHM % union suit with hose supporters attached—all 'i A " GLOBE STRAWS j.re StsTwjgm '• styles are here to fit every build % guaranteed Crowns will not Ww -fi-oo to $2..-,o \ s?; ."Jss ; b — if feii £s?s Hundreds of Boys Are Now E,, , ilii l We Also Give a WATCH FREE With Boys' Suits at $5 and Up |w§ The Globe "Dtibbel- (JC I Right-Posture CA (PIC I Wash B Hedder" 2 Pants Suits | Health Suits at «pv«tJv j Suits THE GLOBE jl \ J Just One At One Just I I || 1\ f Price \r\ ,u, s2 Price 1 B | U) LAB fv s ls J |AJ/ "THAT'S ALL" § IV/ Clothing For Young A/li |'l n Men and Men \| B \ \ Compare Them With Others ,> \ I gjjf ' Marked $lB and S2O iy B ■ A CUSTOM MADE SUITS ,\ A 8 |; / ' sls to S3O g ll UA. W. HOLMAN V•§ Plione Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads" FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURO TELEGRAPH MAY 12, 1916 BLACK OR PATTON AS HIGHWAY HEAD Governor Said to Have Somer set and Clearfield Men Under Consideration i I Mention of names 1 V\\ \// J of men considered S\\\ ** within range of appointment as j highway commis sioner to succeed the late R °bert J. 1^ jfIQQQc3K Cunningham seem:> II PNflllTvWO to have simmered ilalß jSuIHJML down to Frank S. Black, of Garrett, Somerset county, a member of the ; Stale Commission of Agriculture and Charles E. Patton, of Curwensville, (Clearfield county, present secretary of I agriculture. A week ago J. Denny 1 O'Neil, of Allegheny county; Chief En- I I gineer W. D. IJhler and First Deputy! [Commissioner Joseph W. Hunter were ! much talked of. j i Mr. Black is a close personal friend, of the Governor, a well-to-do farmer and much interested in roads and their j | improvement. Mr. Patton has been i connected with some road building i enterprises. ; It is understood that the Governor intends to allow Good Roads Day on May 25 to pass before naming any, I commissioner. Mr. Cunningham es- I tablished the first good roads day last year. I School Payments. —With exception | of two or three districts whose papers ! are not in from the State school au thorities for 1918 has been paid, the last checks having gone out yester day. This is the latest known In years. The payment of the $226,000 to the borough and township high I schools was started to-day. This is also much later than usual. The i-ea-it ; son assigned for the lateness is that there has been very heavy drain upon the treasury because of the appropria -1 tion. Protlionotary Resigns. Prothono tary S. B. Drake, of Montgomery county, lias resigned. There was a row over some fees and yesterday he placed his resignation in the hands of the Governor. CronJn on Wurpath. John C. Cronin, the Philadelphia labor leader who resigned as a member of the State Industrial Board at request of the Governor, is showing a disposition to go on .the warpath. Cronin intimates that he will combat any statements made about him. Governor to Speak. G overnor Brumbaugh will be the commence ment speaker at Pennsylvania College at Gettysburg on June 4. Will Return Monday. Governor Brumbaugh is expected to return to this elty some time on Monday to clear his desk. He will vote in Phila delphia on Tuesday. Hazlcton Organizes. The Hazle ton Motor Club has organized for proper observance of Good Roads Day this month. The club will do work on the roads and lend automobiles. To Meet Monday. The Public! Service Commission will meet Monday ! for hearings and will hold an executive session on Wednesday. Name Judge Next Week. it is understood that Governor Brumbaugh will name a judge for Philadelphia next week. Public Service Commis sioner John Monaghan is the man most generally mentioned. Prepare For Meeting. Prepara tions are being made at the Depart- 1 ment of Labor and Industry for a big meeting on industrial hygiene here next Thursday. Noted medical men will attend. Watching Contest. Capitol Hill people are closely watching the con test between Senator A. P. Daiz and Representative Patrick Connor for the i Republican Senatorial nomination in I their home district In Philadelphia.! Both men are well known here No Camp For Artillery. An- i nouncernent was made last' night by ! Adjutant General Thomas J. Stewart j that the proposed camp of instruction , for artillery officers and enlisted men it Tobyhanna has been abandoned. i THOSE WIN WHO PAY FULL PRICE Too Many Want to Dance Without Paying Fiddler, Dorothy Dix Says Dorothy Dix Says Too Many Want to ' I Dance Without Setting With the Fid-' ; dler—Persons Dependent in Old Age I Generally Have Only Their Own Ex-! travaganees to Blame. < i The great trouble with the world is | that all of us want to dance without paying the fiddler. ; We want success without having to j work for it. We want to get rich with out having to save. We want to eat and drink without getting dyspepsia. : We want love without the burden of J responsibility. I And because for everything we get, | good or bad, there is a fixed price, for j which we have to pay cash'down, we fill the air with our whines and lamen tations. I There isn't one of us who Is a failure, j or an invalid, or a pauper, or friend [ less and unloved, who isn't in that con- j | dition because he or she tried to cheat | ! in the game of life, and to get some- j j thing for nothing. Why does a man succeed? Because , | he is willing to pay the price of suc cess. it is work, work, work, endless! ; toil. It is plodding patience that never j I wearies. It is the concentration of j every thought, every desire, every as-1 piration to some one particular end. j It is self-denial and self-sacrifice. That is the price of success, and any man and any woman who is willing to pay it can have it. But you can't buy it with a little Ineffectual spasmodic effort now and then. You can't buy it by loafing on your job, or working with one eye on the clock, or taking more real heart interest in your amusements than you do in your career. j Price of a Comfortable and Respectable Old Age Is Self-Sacrifice. We are all called on to help a great ! many old people who have "seen better days." Nothing on earth is more piti ful than poor and dependent age. but j these people have only themselves to blame. They are poor and dependent ! because they were not willing to pay j the price for safeguarding the latter years of their lives. The price of a comfortable and re spectable old age is Belf-denial and thrift in one's youth. It Is systematic saving. It Is laying aside a definite sum every year for the rainy day that is sure to come to every one, for the old age that is inevitable. But these peo ple defaulted on the price. They wanted fine clothes; they wanted to take trips; they wanted to go to the theatre; they wanted to in dulge themselves in a thousand foolish extravagances, so they spent every cent as they went along, with the result that in their hour of need they had to endure the humiliation of asking for charity, and in their old age they were dependent on those who gave them grudging food and shelter. We all want to be well and strong, but we are not willing to pay the price |of health. That ia abstemiousness in i eating and drinking. Yet because it tastes good we gorge ourselves on rich ! food that we know will give us indi gestion; we drink alcohol that we know is a poison to our systems; we sit around in stuffy rooms and grow fat and heavy because we hate to ex ; ercise. Nine-tenths of the sickness from which we suffer we bring upon j ourselves just because we are not wil ling to pay the price of keeping well. The whole of the divorce evil is caused by people trying to evade pay ing the just debts of family life, A man and woman get married because they want domestic affection, because they want a home, because they want children. They get these, but they begrudge the price. The man wants the faithful love of a wife who will stick to him through thick and thin, who will work by his side when he Is poor, who will nurse him when he is sick, who is as unchanging as the North star, ( but at the same time he wants to be free to carry on flirtations with younger and gayer women. He wants a home that he can come to when he is tired or down and out, but he doesn't want to have to come to it if some lively amusement offers. He wants the arms of little children about his neck, but he wants to spend the money it costs to support them on his own dissipations. Price of Happy Domesticity Is Immola tion of Self on Altar of Home. A woman wants a husband to support her and stand between her and the world, but she doesn't want to have to consider his pleasure nor desire. She wants a home, but she doesn't want to have to work in it to make it com fortable and thrifty. She wants chil dren, but she doesn't want to have to stay at home from bridge parties and dances to take care of them, and keep them from running wild on the streets. Now the price of domesticity is self sacrifice and devotion; it is mutual consideration and forbearance; it is the putting of the good of others be fore your own pleasures; it is the im molation of self on the altar of family and home, and It is because so few men and women are willing to pay this price that there Is so much do mestic misery in the world. This one thing is certain—there are no bargains in life. Everything that is worth having is costly, and the price tag was written at the beginning, and it has never changed. Success, fame, riches, friendship, family ties —we SLIDE-BACK ' UNION ry suits Jf by Manliat « tan Shirt Co. | sl. to $6 Knee Drawers 650 to $1.50 Also B. V. !>., Rockincha'lr. Ask to see them. Forry's 3d St. Near Walnut ■■iwjtoiißimiHirYi [cipioimiHirEifswi Be the Judge Yourself Come in and inspect our wide assortment of / Worthy Clethes For Men and Young Men yY*\ and you'll agree with us in I f /\J y I our assertion that thipy are j/ jmk J a fit standard by which to \'\ vm judge all other men's cloth- mil f7ff ing, at 111! If// sls S2O $25 Jl cr, And the impression of su- iMk | I periority that comes with 1 ilil the first glance, material- Ij! // jf / ' izes with each day of wear. |'; / / Jl til , That's why we guarantee jj / /| / 'j\ | • them to give satisfaction j j /I that is absolute. jf u, . Ai / JJ I Extreme or conservative ||| j ||||| Pronounced or subdued Ijj iPI I patterns A\ 1 l^V Stripes, checks or plain jj shades, including such well "I '-•' ' - known makes as \ w Atterbury and Fitform 14 North Third Street iorgas' Drug Store must pay for them In blood and sweat if we get them. Something for some thing, and nothing for nothing—that is the inexorable law of life. INTRODUCES BILI, FOR NEW $2,000,000 PHIIiA. POST OFFICE Washington, I). C., May 12. With a view to effecting- a large annual sav ing to the government in rentals for buildings occupied by the Philadelphia IHBMHRI'TIK MONEY-BACK JEWELRY STOHKSMBMHBMH Graduatio^^^^^^^" Graduation Day is one of the PROUD days in the life of every girl and boy. You can do much to perpetuate the memory thereof in the mind of the graduate, by making your gift one of lasting pleasure. And nothing accomplishes this so effectively as jew elry—especially when it possesses the refinement and exclusiveness characteristic of the jewelry to be found here. r N Choose For Choose For HIM HER Gold filled W aide mar Solid gold LaVallieres, Watch chains with pencil or diamond and pearl mounted, . . f . . pendant and chain complete, knife a gift he 11 appreciate— Q ' °cafe $2.50 Special $5.00 Others with various mount- Others at SI.OO to $7.50. ingSj $1.50 to $150.00. Other Suggestions Other Suggestions Scarf Pins, Brooches, Cuff Links, Lockets, Rings, Bracelets, Full Dress Button Sets, Rings, Silver Buckle Belts, Earrings, _ Fountain Pens, Lingerie Pins. *I.OO to $7.50 50<' to $7.50 FOR EITHER OF THEM A Watch makes a handsome gift—they're here In young men's and misses' sizes; silver, gold-filled and solid gold; all movements, in- 0 0"" $50.00 Or a Diamond Ring—the lifelong gift—here in ladies' ami gentle men's styles in an unusually to (Cnn nfl large assortment: Price OO.UU «OUU.UU * Jacob Sons DIAMOND MERCHANTS AND JEWELERS 420 Market Street MKMBICHS JEWELERS' CO-OPEHATIVE SYKDICATK 15 poßt office, Representative George S Graham, of Philadelphia, Introduced in the House a bill appropriating $2,- 000,000 for the construction of a new post olfioe. Congressman Graham lias estimated that $120,000 may be saved to the government each year if the en tire postal force should occupy a building of Its own, thus obviating tha necessity of paying heavy yearly rent als.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers