□ ■ □ ■ □ ■DTwrnß Open All Day Saturday Store Closes This Till 10 P. M. Evening at 5:30 P. M. To-morrow Ends Our SIO.OO Week tFor Suits Worth To $lB • THIS IS A CLOTHING CLEARANCE—NOT A A week of lively activity in our Men's Clothing Department to make room for the huge Fall stocks now being assembled. For those discreet buyers who wait for a tail-end of-season purchase and in some instances prepare for almost a year ahead, this is a timely opportunity. Monday last we started with 257 Suits at this popular price. Heavy inroads have already been made, but a goodly assortment still remains for your selection —providing, of course, that you don't tarry. I* Your Boy Ready .T Ol* l3Cllool • Your last chance for this year to buy Man- TT ~, . . , , . . . . .. _ , „ hattan Shirts at these reductions. The regular He li want to look his best then. We have ices prevail after Saturday, assembled two groups of special Boys Suits and priced them so low that Mothers can send $1.50 Manhattans are -•.... 91.15 effect ft saving 001 lo ° kin ® " d ** $2.00 Manhattans are _ $1.55 = $3.00 Manhattans are $1.95 Group No. I—Suits at $2.79 $4.00 Manhattan Silks $2.85 This lot consists of Suits that sold up to $5.00 Manhattan Silks $3.85 $5.00 —all well made of sturdy fabrics—nearly all sises. Group No. 2—Suits at $4.65 For the Man Who Cares- Many of these Suits have two pairs of Pants PeGrlcSS LlllOll Suits —some Right Posture Suits in this assortment - ' years, prob -7 PI TI ably not since the [ early seventies. feS— , The statement is sued was exactly what was expected and demonstrated the condition of the funds as the Fe sult of the appropriation and tax col lection systems now in vogue. It is likely that payment of school and other appropriations will be held back for many weeks as it will be Q Cheap Faints Si Cost Too Much! _U When you paint, use good paint. Cheap paints nM don't cost enough to be good. The materials that make good I paint are as standard in value as gold. You can't buy gold ■ dollars at 69c. You can't buy good paint at low prices. There is so much misrepresentation in paints —so much I chance to mix materials of inferior quality into so- I called ' 'good paint"—that there is just one safe way I to buy paint: See that the name of a responsible y•; y manufacturer is on the can. & The Maker and We, Too, Guarantee lli/v ( You Complete Satisfaction in l|©i They're made as good as paints can be made jwiillthilli The materials used are proved net only pure, but 1 up to the standard, by most rigid tests. Sixty-four I years' experience goes into every Lucas product— I made in the largest, best equipped paint factory in the m country, under the eyes of men who have been 25 to I 40 years in the business. Before being put into cans, 1 each batch of Lucas Paint is proved standard by I I chemists, practical painters and color experts. Lucas Paints never vary in quality or color. They H always make good—always outlast any other paint you I can buy—always are the most economical in the end. When You Need Paint*, Vamtthet, Enamel or Anything EH Hj of the Kind, Let UM FIX YOU UP With Laca* CooA HENRY GILBERT & SON f § 219 Market Street, Harrisburg, Pa. jl g FRIDAY EVENING, I thirty or forty days before the Treas ■ ury will commence to receive the State | taxes upon which the Auditor General's J department has been working. The August receipts were $1,517,- i 599.70 with $15,510 transfers and the | disbursements and transfers were $2,- ! 399,485.01, leaving a balance of $2,- ! 123,260.90 in all funds. Of this sum ' $973,4*6.86 is in the general fund and | about half a million of this .is tied up. ; The demands for cash total'sl,soo,ooo I so that the State is straightened for ready cash. | The regular semimonthly payroll i was met by Treasurer Young who had ! worked to get the cash together to ; meet it Rushing Settlements. Auditor ! General Powell has taken up the task i of getting settlements on corporation taxes made up as rapidly as possible so as to ease the conditions in the State Treasury. The Auditor General's department plans to work at high speed for the next ten days and to have the settlements worked out be fore the present month is very far ad vanced. It is likely that the Pennsyl vania, Reading and other big railroad systems will be taken up next week. Meets in Philadelphia. The State Industrial Board will meet next Tues day in Philadelphia when it will take up some of the codes. Police Hold Examination. An ex amination of recruits for fourteen va cancies in the State Police force was held to-day at the State Capitol. There were numerous applicants. Home From Tour. L. R. Palmer, chief of the bureau of factory inspec tion, is home from a tour of the State during which he held conferences with district inspectors. Attending Convention- Secretary A. B. Millar, of the Public Service Commission, left to-day for Eagles mere where he will attend sessions of the State Electric Association. Com missioner James Alcorn is also at Eaglesmere. Senator Here. Senator W. W. Hindman, of Clarion, was in Harris burg for a short time to-day. Ex-member Here. Dr. C. F. Swift, former legislator from Beaver coun ty, was at the State Capitol. Home From Tour. W. R. Douglas of the Department of Agriculture, and W. R. D. Hall, of the State Highway department, returned last night from the tour of the second farm region tour route. They reported great inter est heing taken by the farmers in the northeastern section in the proposed tour. Exhibit at Grove.—The State High way department has received numer ous compliments for its highway ex hibit at the Grangers picnic. It at tracted attention from county officials and township supervisors who have written for further information on the subject. Von Kluck, Recovered, Will Take Command in East Suill»«l OEN ALEXANDER VON KUKK An interesting report current in Germany and brought over to America by a young American doctor who has been serving in the German Army hospitals, is that Gen. von Kluck is soon to take the field again, this time on the east front, in command of a new army. According to the story, von Kluck, now entirely recovered from the wounds he received in the early days of the war on the west front, was to be placed between Gen. Count von Bothmer in east Gallcia and Gen. von Linslngen in Volhyma. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Store" "Always Reliable" I Doutrichs" I teration Sale I Means an Opportunity I | Save on Standard 1 | Tomorrow —THE LAST DAY I Our workroom has been Just now we're making I a curiosity shop in Harrisburg— room and we've put low prices on here as nowhere else can you find High standard merchandise that our tailors always busy—all day will appeal to your careful and bet long—turning out the vast quan- ter judgment. You'll be more than tities of good clothes sold at this repaid for the slight inconvenience "Live Store." during our Alteration Sale. 1 But as we said before, you're helping us to build the I FINEST men's clothing store in Pennsylvania and we want to make it worth 1 your while to come here and see the values offered by this "Live Store" where square-dealing and honest representation always prevail. A 11515.00 fl»1A 7ET AUSIB.OO wr | Suits «PAV. i D Suits ~... |lot/0 A 11520.00 CI/I AU525.00 ®ID Suits ........... ,«Pl 1• * O Suits ............ ,«P 10. i 5 i | SWEATERS I || They are selling every day at Doutrichs. So many I styles to choose from it's a bit confusing—but rather a good time to make your purchase at these prices: All $5.00 Sweaters w . $4.25 All $8.50 Sweaters .... >: .... . . $7.25 All $6.50 Sweaters ....... $5.25 All SIO.OO Sweaters »-. .$8.50 1 I All $7.50 Sweaters $6.25 All $12.50 Sweaters .. . .$10.50 I ALL SILK FIBRE, SHETLAND AND WOOL SWEATERS INCLUDED I I BOYS' SUITS SHIRTS I All $3.50 Suits $2.89 .79c I Allss.ooSuits $3.89 g-f®SK* *Sm I AH $6.50 Suits $4.95 1 S3SOShK *** ** * *- * All (FT CA C • (PC AC *Vll utllTlS ••••••• All s7.soSuitsss.9s A jj ss.oo Shirts .............,.$3.89 ALL BOYS' AND MEN'S 50c SHIRTS 39c 1 Another Big Day For the Bathing Suits I All $3.50 Wool Bathing Suits. Navy Blue with red or white stripes ..... $2.89 $1.50 plain white Bathing Jerseys $1.19 I WORX/D MUST ALSO PREPARE Ella Wheeler Wilcox Says FOR COMIN T G OF GREAT PEACE Return of Master Should Not Be Overlooked by People of Earth in Their Struggles for National Honor and Wealth—Simple Formulas of Love Powerful in Results. By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX Copyright, 1916. Star Company. URING Christmas season the following telegram was re ceived from the daughter of a famous general: "Is not spiritual and mental preparedness more important to Che country than any plan of mil itary preparedness, and is it not the duty of the American press to consider this question?" H. E. M. That is what is the matter with the world at the present time its lack of spiritual preparedness. Over in Europe for forty years there has been but one thought in the minds of some of the countries, and that has been preparation for war. America is now preparing for pos sible war. From a letter written by a seafaring man, familiar with all the ports of the world, is taken the fol lowing: "I was in Australia when the war broke out. At that time I said that all the world was suffering from a terrible disease, which I called arrn amentitis, and that war was the only remedy. That the clsease was viru lent and a medicine would have to be taken in large doses. We are hav ing rather more of the medicine than I bargained for, but if we are not cured, I hope we will, at least, be the better for it. "But when Kaiserlsm is dead, we still have another heartless giant to face; I mean Commercialism. Kais erlsm says that the highest ideal for a nation should be power, dominion, territorial aggrandizement. The aims of Commercialism are markets; their capture and retention and wealth in the aggregate, never mind about its distribution. "A sorry spectacle, but worrying about it does not alter it. We can only try to 'tune pur souls to sym phonies above and sound the note of love.' We have a Junker class in this country. They oppose every means of social advancement; they held up their hands in horror and said the country would be ruined when the old age pension bill was passed, providing about $1.25 a week for the deserving over seventy years of age. They said we could not pos sibly find the money. Now we are spending more on war in a week than the pensions cost in a year. "Where will it end? But still I suppose whatever is, is best." Preparation of Different Kind Made By Faithful Servants of Great Master Meantime from a little Theosophlcal SEPTEMBER 1- 1916. leaflet there comes this comforting statement: Ages ago there came to the world a gToup of souls whose main mission in God's great plan was to work wherever workers were most needed. Through incarnation after incarnation they have been pioneers in many great movements by which humanity has benefited. Choosing not always the greatest glory or brilliant achievement where the world's ap plause might be won, they have in stead been willing when needed to take a share in the lesser work which is often the greater in the Master's eyes. Hay The Server link more closely together "the Servers" wherever In America some of those souls be born, so that all may again work together in the pioneer movement of prepar ing for the coming of the Great Teacher. May The Server be worthy to be His servant. In an hour and a moment that we know not of The Great Teacher comes. It is well for us to think of spiritual preparedness. It would be well for us all in the dark and troubled times to realize that we are surrounded by "clouds of wit nesses." It would be well for us to read and ponder on the words of that great man. Sir Oliver Lodge, wherein he states: "I tell you with all the strength and conviction I can utter that we do persist after death; that people over there still take an interest in what la going on here; that they atlll help us, and know far more about things than we do, and are able from time to time to communlcato with us." Annie Besant's Great Formula lotf Spiritual Preparedness Based on Love And here Is what another great soul, Annie Besant, says of the need of spiritual preparedness; .this is her formula to repeat often: I "I am a Link in the Golden Chain: of Love that stretches round the world, and must keep my Link bright and strong. "So I will try to be kind and gentle to every living thing I meet, and to protect and help all who are weaker, than myself. "And I will try to think pure and beautiful thoughts, to speak pure and beautiful words, and to do pure and beautiful actions. The "New Civilization," dream all the world's Idealists, based on peace and co-operation, with Broth-j erhood the Informing spirit. Is seen by Mrs. Besant to be already appear-, ing on the horizon. Like a mlghtyj priestess of old, she cries to a bleed-l ing and suffering world, "Endure, en-M dure, for your salvation draweth nighji It is even at the doors! Nothing toj regret and nothing to fear," she tells us; for we are only witnessing the passing of the Old in order that th* New may arise out of its ashes. 11