Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, August 10, 1916, Page 11, Image 11

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    □■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■OH
THE GLOBE THE GLOBE
A Long Friday of Opportunities
Store Open Tomorrow Till 10 P. M.
Sho/ 7^Year
Our Sale of Manhattan Shirts
Begins To-morrow, Friday Morning at 8 O'clock
$1.50 Manhattan Shirts $2.50 and $3.00 Manhat- ID t
are now M»J.• ItJ tan Shirts are now 1 • O
$2.00 Manhattan Shirts fl £* $3.50 and $4.00 Manhat-CL Q
are now W4JA«QjrtJ ta n Shir.ts are now kfFfc
$5.00 and- $6.00 Manhattan Silk Shirts are now. 85
Hundreds of Extra Value Shirts at g\
Soft cuffs—laundered cuffs—sport shirts—all kinds. Were we to adver- # ajH
tise the makers' names and the brands we would have them down upon us m m
' like a house on fire." We will add that they are the best shirts at the price H aV B
we've ever seen and represent values to $1.50. W
"Keep Your Eye on the Clock"
Our One Thousand Suit Campaign Has Kept Our Store a
Busy, Humming Spot—
Today the Clock Says 745
We sell only Clothes of Superior Grade—of Superior Style and
Superior Make. Never get GLOBE CLOTHES confused or classed
with clothing sold elsewhere.
The high standard of our output must not and dare not be lowered.
We harbor no trashy clothes here.
Every garment bears THE GLOBE GUARANTEE OF SATIS
FACTION—a guarantee that satisfies.
For $6.50 and $7.50 Palm Beach d* [- For $15.00 Suits, including 1 TP-
Suits pay Blue Serges, pay «J> I I . / 5 '
For $8.50 Palm Beach Suits 7 [-fx For $lB and S2O Suits, indud- awm r-
P a y • *o\l ing Blue Serges, pay «J) 14. /O
For $8.50 to SIO.OO "Keep Kool" <£7 Cf| For $22.50 Fashion Park Suits InT« r\
Norfolk Suits pay <J> / .OU pay { D.O(j
For SIO.OO Breezweve Suits <£ Q Cfk For $25.00 Suits, including A Tl-
P a y » MJO.OU Blue Serges, pay 3>l 17.75
For $15.00 Zefirette Suits d»1 OCA For $28.50 and S3O Suits, in- o A *7l
- V 1 «#OU eluding Blue Serges, pay .. *P^4«75
Just Enough of Those Special Boys' Suits at r*r\
To Last Over Saturday— «p jf «DU
Good \\ 00l Suits—not Cotton—well made Suits—some with 2 W
pairs of pants—some worth twice as much as we ask for them. Brine
your Boy here NOW.
ALL MEN'S STRAW HATS THAT SOLD TO $2.50, are NOW SI.OO
THE GLOBE
■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□an
BANDITS KILLED
Laredo. Texas, Aug. 10.—Nine Villa
bandits and four Constitutionalist sol
diers were killed in a skirmish last
Thursday between Cascades and Ta
masope. Mexico, according to informa
tion brought here to-day by T. D.
II What Mothers Say
111 The experience of those who
I have used "Mother's Friend"
■ should merit expectant motb
conaideratlon at this time.
■ " le "leans of bnnishirr
ill ISaS?. Itj f" 4 Ta,ue dur
-111 th! d . eliver 3 r b y the absence of
I hv h ere P al °«..occasioned
111 by »uch an event."
{^^^btEerjr
,n *?t*rnal remedy is
SC.nIJS * r *? test assistance In
preparing the system for such
a chanie." Mrs .
Your druggist sells It. Writ*
on Motherhood! tere '" n ' b °° k
111 »o r ß h l.S'^ Re s!;^,^
THURSDAY EVENING,
| Hornbeck, a rancher from San Luis'
. Potosi.
Deaths and Fauerals
I FUNERAL OP KATHKIXE TUNIS 1
, I The funeral of Kathrine Miller
J Tunjs. 19-month-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William S. Tunis, 621 Briggs
street, was held this afternoon. Ser
j vices were conducted at the home by
th« Rev. C. C. Curtis, pastor of Weet
i minster Presbyterian church. Burial
was made in the Harrisburg cemetery,
j The floral tributes were many, and
came from former Legislative col
leagues, and friends of Mr. Tunis in
j Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Lancaster,
Reading, Harrisburg and throughout
Dauphin county.
| CLOUSER FUNERAL SATURDAY ,
Funeral services for Mrs. Mary A. 1
i Clouser, aged 6;-, who died yesterday
at her home, 613 Muench street, will '
be held Saturday afternoon at the !
: home of her daughter. Mrs. John Phil
lips. 414 Ann street, Middletown. She
! is survived by three sons, Samuel, of
Middletown; William and Harry, both!
of this city; four daughters. Mrs. Harry i
Welsh. Washington. Pa.; Mrs. James
| Finnegan. Royalton; Mrs. John Phil
lips, Middletown, and Mrs. George
Rudy, of this city, and two brothers, 1
John and Samuel lerley, of Middle- i
I town. Burial will be made in the j
! Middletown Cemetery.
ROSS \V. DUGAX DIES
Funeral services for Ross W. Dugan, j
aged 64, who died yesterday at his!
home. 25 North Seventeenth street, !
will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 I
o'clock. He is survived by his wife, j
three daughters. Misses Cora E. and
Annie M. and Mrs. Frank H. Fager, !
all of this city, and one son, John G., j
I
° f ™ nt - M 'ch. Burial will be made
n.,1 m v »°» Cemetery, with the
i Rfll' es offlc 'ating and the
! F " « 00^ r ' of EUzabethtown.
assisting. Mr. Dugan was a retired
cigar manufacturer of Goldsboro and
! moved to this city about six years ago
He wm a member of the Fourth Street
Church of God. the men's Bible class
° f nat church. Independent Order of
Odd Fellows. No. 791, and the Junior
Order Lnited American Mechanics.
~ DON'T BE BALD
Here's a Good Way to Stop Loss of
Hair and Start New Hair Growth
Hair can never be made to grow
i again after the hair roots themselves
are dead. But few of us, fortunately
I grow bald in a day, and we have ample
warning that our hair is steadily
growing thinner.
Parisian Sage is probably as effec
-1 tive a hair grower as could possibly
be found, but to prevent further loss
of hair, and to actually start a new
hair growth on the bald and thin spots
| lt , l '? Uß i be rubbed right into the scalp
with finger tips, or a medium stiff
w k 8 <? the halr r <>ots can really
absorb it Try to get as much on the
S
sible. Your hair doesn't need it but
your scalp does, and a few weeks scalp
I massage with Parisian Sage (Just a
[few minutes daily) will usually check
; any further loss of hair and make the
hair grow as thickly and luxuriantly
| ever.
! Unlike many hair tonics, Parisian
Sage contains no sulphur or poisonous
wood alcohol, and will not make the
j hair greasy or stain the hair or scalp,
j It can be obtained from H. C. Kennedy
and druggists everywhere, and is not
i at all expensive.
HARRISBURG &£&&£& TELEGRAPH
WALLS OF LENNOX
IN EQUITY COURT
Tausig'sSons Bring Counter-In
j junction Proceedings Against
Samuel Fishman
Cj tlon proceedings
were begun to-day
s&zl-thJjp by Edwin F.. and
Herman Taus Ig,
well-known Market
'jßsjfs*street Jewelers, to
nffiSMSSfifr compel Samuel
WjJ wBWK| fB Fishman to move
Iwnfuftl B- thp weet wa " ot h' 3
6fl StiflUill iß> hotel, the Lennox,
at least two inches
back of its present
Uno. The Lennox wall, the plaintiffs
contend, encroaches two inches on the
Tausig property and the trespass has
caused no little damage and delay in
the construction of the new Tausig
store building adjoining. A few weeks
ago Fishman sued the Tausigs in an
injunction proceeding to require the
demoilUon if necessary of the new
building wall but it developed during
that hearing, that Fishman's own
house was trespassing. The Fishman-
Tausig suit was eventually withdrawn
at Fishman's cost. To-day's suit is
the counter action. An answer must
be made by Fishman within ten davs.
Open Bids August 21. Bidj for
the grading of Nineteenth street from
Rudy to Swatara and Swatara from
Twenty-first to Twenty-second street,
will be opened at noon Monday, Aug.
21, by City Commissioner W. H. Lynch.
Fugitive Wants Liberty. Joseph
D. Lawrence, the Dauphin county
prisoner who nearly ten years ago,
edified a Dauphin county courtroom
by coolly giving a deputy sheriff the
slip while he was being escorted to
Jail and who was later arrested, will
ask the board of pardons September
20 for discharge from the eastdtn
penitentiary by pardon. Lawrence,
who was sentenced June 1, 1909, for
a term of eight years in the peniten
tiary, was released some months ago
on parole.
Cupid Grinned Again. Among the
marriage licenses granted to-da was
the necessary permission to John
Martin Luther Wentzel, a wealthy
builder and contractor of Blain, Pa.,
to wed pretty Louise Jeanne M. Smith,
of Wormelsdorf. 'Wentzel's first wife
died August 7, 1910; the brides first
husband died November lfi. 1914. Al
though a resident of this country
practically all her life, Mrs. Wentzel
to-be was born in Brussels, the cap
tured stronghold of the Belgians.
Wentzel is fifty-eight; his bride-elect
is 21.
New Bridge Plans Here. The
plans for the new Walnut street bridge
across the Pennsy tracks at Walnut
street have been received by City Com
missioner W. H. Lynch and will be
submitted to Council Tuesday for ap
proval. Following that they will be
submitted to the Public Sen-ice Com
mission to be passed upon. J. E.
Griner and Company, Baltimore, pre
pared the plans.
LmNGSTOX'S 0 S. MARKET SQ.
Are open as usual all dav Saturday and
evening for the benefit of the public.
Also Friday all day and evening.—Adv.
THE HUB'S SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE
«§§_ "Get in on This Sale"
;jf We Challenge Vou to Find Bigger or Better
Our Original Prices were lowest to start with.
• ur Auctions genuine and generous.
■ When quality, style, workmanship and wear are considered,
|Pf g|, MEDIATEL Y to ValueS should brin g YOU HERE IM
'IW * IBSL * LOOK AT THESE PRICES, THEN LOOK AT THE GOODS
i§| \ 1 Allsls.ooSuits (FI A KA
kLJSKt I? m\ { Now slu.oU
ml fft ' Allslß.ooSuits Cl O CA
IS 1 " ' Now \pl£,dU
|fc f All $20.00 Suits 01 2 CA
l| Now . vJL<S •D U
< * 1 ; All $22.50 Suits <t"l C A A
W- A Now
All $25.00 Suits c i*/\
MB Now
H Wl $20.00
jpj|| Alls3s.ooSuits *, £25 00
S'B M All SIO.OO Coats and Pants, now $7.50
All Kool Kloth Coats & Pants, now . . $6.50
Sf r * lfi | All Palm Beach Coats & Pants, now _56.50
Ht / I, Boys' Suits 1 ' Straw^ c s e at Half "
/ jS I $5.00 Boys' Suits, $3.75 $1.50 Straw Hats, $ .75
§mi / Wm $6.50 Boys' Suits, $4.50 $2.00 Straw Hats, SI.OO
fSS § $7.50 Boys' Suits, $5.25 $2.50 Straw Hats, $1.25
sgjiff 5 ! I $8.50 Boys' Suits, $6.50 $3.00 Straw Hats, $1.50
f B&ffcßh_ $lO Boys' Suits, $7.25 $3.50 Straw Hats, $1.75
i NO GOODS CHARGED DURING THIS SALE
mTHBUftfWI
320 Market Street
DEPOSITORIES ARE
DOWN TO HUNDRED
Shortage of Extra Cash Causes
Banks to Demand Return
of Their Bonds
i hi■ iil ll ■IA few years ago
|\ \\ if //J the State of Penn
sylvania had some
banks and trust
3 companies on the
I "JfnSSSR); list of its deposit© r
-1 ' JmiltffH'Shtfv ' eß, all ' whl<:h fi'-
llls 5S e< * bonds the
gaaas)State financial au
—*7, Tl acriixj thorlties and all of
MWfcdGßMti ii null which paid interest
tor the State money. This month there
are barely one hundred banks or trust
companies on the whole list.
The decline has been due to the
ebbing of the balance in the com
monwealth's coffers due to appropria
tion of funds too close to the amount
on hand. This week the demands for
cash made at the treasury exceeded
the total amount of cash exclusive of
the money tied up in sinking, game,
school and similar funds which can
be used onlv for a specific purpose.
Many of the banks have requested
that their bonds bo returned as they
did not care to pay the premium on
bonds for deposits when they had not
had any State money in their hands
for months and did not know when
they would get any.
In a few months the State will have
a flood of money coming in as the
bulk of the State corporation taxes are
paid in the Fall. Many would be com
ing in now if settlements on big com
panies had been made at an earlier
date.
Effective Soon—The standards of
safety and sanitation for textile and
sanitary workers adopted bv the State
Industrial Board at Philadelphia this
week will take effect in September.
The codes will he printed and issued
as soon as possible and notice Riven
of official enactment. The code regu
lating explosives will be taken up la
ter in the year.
To Ruild Bridges—Notice has been
received at the Public Service com
mission to the effect that the city
councils of the Bethlehems have
agreed to pass the ordinance for con
struction of bridges to overcome grade
crossings.
Complaint of Borough—People of
Rosedale have entered complaint
against the service of the Reading
Transit company between Reading
and Temple. y
New Association—The Slovenian Co
operative Association of East Cone
maugh borough has been granted a
State charter.
To Meet Later On —The State Com
mission of Agriculture will not have
a meeting here for over a fortnight.
The usual meeting was to have been
held this week behind closed doors,
as usual, but has been deferred until
late in the month.
Big Pricre for Hay—According to re
ports from the State Department of
Agriculture hay has been sold in the
field at $2 a ton in Warren countv
The demand for hay In the southern
counties has been great and fortun
ately the crop has been immense
lee Cream Is Good.—Reports on 76
samples of ice cream taken from some
of the biggest stores in Philadelphia
AUGUST 10, 1916.
and from tome of the best known
stores show that the Quaker City has
purity in that line. No adulterations
were found.
Four Cases.—Counting the Dauphin
county cases there were four new
case& of infantile paralysis reported
to the State Department of Health yes
terday. They did not Include Phila
delphia.
Gray to Enter Business.—A. B.
Gray, who resigned as division engi
neer of the Washington district of the
State Highway Department, has de
cided to enter the engineering busi
ness. He resigned a yar ago but his
resignation was not accepted.
Northumberland Bridges. The
State Water Supply Commission last
night issued permits for bridges near
Orwin and in Glrardville, in Schuyl
kill county; near Sellnsgrove in Sny
der; in Shamokln and Dornslfe,
Northumberland; near Ephrata in
Lancaster and for several Pennsyl
vania and Reading railroad bridges.
Assets Run tow.—lnsurance Com
missioner O'Neil yesterday led a re
quest with Attorney General Brown
that he go into the Dauphin County
Court and £ysk that Receivers be ap
pointed for 'the Sterling Mutual Fire
Insurance Company and the Textile
Mutual Fire Insurance Company, both
located at Schuylkill Haven. An ex
amination Just completed shows that
they are clearly insolvent. The Ster
ling Mutual Fire Insurance Company
has assets of $1.51 and liabilities of
$7,205.00. The Textile Mutual Fire
Insurance Company has no assets, and
liabilities of $21,000.00. The above
are comparatively small companies,
but have been writing a great deal of
business in Western and Southern
States.
Big Project Approved The Pub
lice service commission has approved
the contracts between the borough of
Sewickley and Edgeworth in Alle
gheny county and the Pennsylvania
railroad whereby the old right of way
of the railroad will be used for a
boulevard. The highway will be a part
of the across-State system.
Judge Lang ham Here Judge J.
N. Langham, of Indiana county, form
er corporation clerk in the Auditor
General's Department, was here to
day.
Mr. Pattou Returns Secretary of
Agriculture Charles E. Patton has re
turned from a brief visit to his home
in Clearfield county. Mr. Patton said
that there had been no new develop
ments in the Surface matter and he
did not expect any.
Gray Leaves Frank Gray, of
this city, a clerk in the Public Ser
vice commission, retired this week.
Appointed Justice Thomas A.
Varner was to-day appointed justice
for Winslow township, Jefferson
county.
Claim Big Damage Claim for
$2,520 damages was to-day filed with
the Public Service Commission against
the Pennsylvania Railroad company
by Harriet A. Laird and Ray M. Laird,
of Huntingdon, who operate a coal
mine in Cambria county. They con
tend that because of the operation of
the railroad's rule refusing cars to
be loaded on sidings from wagons
they were damaged. This rule was
in force from December 31 to Febru
ary 22 when after «•_ conference of
the Public Service Commissioners,
railroad officials and operators the
order was withdrawn.
Tax Not Demaiulable ln an opin
ion given to-day Deputy Attorney
General Keller informs Auditor Gen
eral Powell, who forwarded an in
quiry from the prothonotary of Brad
ford county, that the fifty cent State
tax provided by the act of 18 30 is not
demandable on conditional sales filed
191 office under the act of June 7,
MAY BIRTHS BOOST
THE POPULATION
Gain of Over 9,000 Reported to
the State Department of
Health's Office
State Health department statistic
cians have figured out a. jump of ove*
9,000 in the population of the Key«
stone State during May, the record be
ing better than in some previous
months of the year. In that montb
19,092 births were reported and but
9,859 deaths.
The deaths Included 1,095 from
pneumonia, the largest known In that
month up to this year. Deaths from
tuberculosis of the lungs numbered
823 and from Bright's disease 838.
Cancer was responsible for 527 death*.
Typhoid deaths were 54, scarlet fev«
er 24, diphtheria 109, measles 258, ln«
fiuenza 8 4 and whooping cough 122.
Six hundred and ten deaths occurred
in early infancy. Ninety-eight persona
committed suicide and 6 4 were killed
in mines. One hundred and one per«
sons were killed in mines.
Big Water Case—The Pubic Service
commission has fixed September 28
as the date for hearing the Spring*
field Consolidated Water companV
case In Philadelphia.
Baby Tortured N
with Rash
Healed in Three Days by~~j
1 f3ifkcs\
/(omfort\
ypowpEßy
Here is proof and baby's picture
"I am sending a photo of baby San
ford, who suffered tortures from a rssh
.I which covered her entire
body. After using Com
r _V» fort Powder night and
morning for three days
7f Jhl the rash disappeared.
J; Comfort Powder is not
'x, o *v °*y the nurses' best
" ' .' friend, but baby's best
friend. —A. M. Lawrence, Flint, Mich.
Not a plain talcum powder, but a highly
medicated preparation which combines
healing, soothing and antiseptic qualities
unequalled to heal skin soreness of in
fants, children and sick people. Used and
endorsed for 20 years by leading physi
cians, nurses and mothers* Ask for
Sykes' Comfort Powder.
At Drag and Dep't Stores, 25 cent#,
•THE COMFOBT POWDEB CO., Boston,
11