■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□■□HE "The Big Friendly Store" Open Saturday Till 10 P. M. in une Times— A "Dress Up" This is "Dress Up" Time. nature is now donning its finest. So \Kf (U?\l s h° ll ld you. / 13 \ \ No matter how you may feel yourself, to others you ! / H are only as '"alive" as you 100k —as "wide awake" as ' / \ I 1 I your clothes say you are. So "Dress Up" now. 3 \ \ \ / Being well-dressed inspires confidence in yourself ! J \ J I and begets tlie confidence of those with whom you as -5 / sociate in either a business or a social way. Every man who ivears GLOBE CLOTHES knows that he is in the front ranks of well-dressed men. This season's styles were never more beautiful —the models tve show are exclusive—and the fabrics are the best S>- -te* money can buy, at V*" sl3 to $33 Top Goats That Spell Real Dressiness->- This evening we call attention to two special styles— THE RIDER A Norfolk back model—pleated and belted—one of the season's smartest creations—can be had in a variety of Scotch fabrics of mixed colorings—s2o.oo and $25.00. THE CARLTON— A conservative Top Coat with snap—loose boxy effect—in Oxford and Cambridge Grays—s2o.oo. t "DRESS UP'* "Dress Up" In a New Hat * Oflt I Olingster Whatever is new—whether for young: men For school or play, "Dress Up" your or older men, is sure to be found in our vast lad in % stocks of the world s best makes—and with the The Globe d> Cf AA ot our French conformer, fit is a certainty Hedder" 2-Pants Suits, OD.OO "' „ They're made to withstand the hardest " * knocks that any boy can put them through. They ouflire two ordinary ———^ _______ Riglit-Posture sc.so to si 9.00 "Dress Up" Shirts Hpalth >' this store Is Teaspoons, dozen $4.00 iff A * Dessert Spoons, dozen $7.50 Ijj 'hC/VtiEKIC/V Tablespoons, 'A dozen ... $4.00 f 41 ,„ , tffit r-- .. . _ , , | the new and popular Sets °' dozen Forks and 1 1 design, made by K. Knives; 12 pieces $5.00 H Wallace & Sons Co., [ Odd pieces to match, Soo up (j ( '[J r which , we have /> 7] i|r [j K ivt> you a wide prioo Community Ware M 2ZZ In the popular Sheraton and /w'* dozen Patrician patterns (guaranteed fe % Teaspoons Knives,' dozen $8.75 l||j jj Tablespoons Teaspoons, dozen $5.00 W 1 Dessert Spoons Tablespoons, y, dozen ... $5.00 / $# to $12.50 % doz. Dessert Spoons, * dozen, $4.50 0d " P,eCCB Odd pieces to match, 75c to $8.50 SILVER CHESTS u , , . p 7 N Hotel and Restaurant Trade a Specialty With Us OF r°fTr)° r Weddin & Our extensive stocks enable us to render prompt service -Purposes at minimum cost to hotels and restaurants. Especially design in wide variety of sizes and pat- cd for service and economy are a number of patterns in Ro^erc In™"' the Bt best n mak n ei War6 ' WarC> senaibl y P"ced. Plated Ware Knives $2.00 to $4.00 dozen. $0 OO tn OH ~ 0 to $4.00 dozen ifro.UU to ifJ-'.OO Teaspoons SI.(KI to #2.00 do< Sterling Ware 9 e ®? ert S P oon ß $1.50 to $3.00 dozen S4O to SSOO Tablespoons S2.QQ to $4.00 dozen JACOB TAUSIG'S SONS Diamond Merchants and Jewelers 420 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa FRIDAY EVENING, the result of a conference held here. The meeting was arranged by the World Alliance for Promoting Inter national Friendship through the Churches and by the Federal Council of Churches. It was voted also, ac cording to an announcement to-day, to ask the United States government to invite the governments of China and Japan to appoint similar commissions to confer with the proposed American i commissioners. 8,000 AT PEXX Philadelphia, Sept. 29. The Uni versity of Pennsylvania to-day began its 176 th year with an enrollment which will be considerably more than 8,000. The graduate school sessions will begin next Tuesday and the extension schools in Harrisburg, Reading, Scranton and Wilkes-Barre next Wednesday night. HARRL3BURG TELEGRAPH LETTERS FOLLOW THE'FARM TOURS' Agricultural Department Offi cials Are Thanked For the Interest Shown Officials of the \\\ State Department of w\V(6bO> Agriculture got to f gether to-day at the department to dls cuss the results of tlle three tours of I Jnfalltltfov tlle f arm 'ng regions - salw fflOlU'ill; ot the State and i Secretary of Agrl culture Charles E. Patton declared that he believed excellent ground had been made for working closer with the farmers. Mr. Patton says that the people in the regions visited were wait ing to hear from the State officials and that they showed a disposition to co operate with the department officials in the various lines of activity which nave been undertaken or extended under this administration. As an evidence of the Interest aroused by the tours by the invi tation to farmers to ask for advice from the State's farm counselors when they want help numerous letters have been received at the department and the schedules of the farm counselors will be changed so that persons bringing their problems to the attention of the State will be given attention. It is also expected that the farmers' Insti tute meetings will be productive of many Questions for the State's men. The department was represented on the tour of over 1,400 miles by Secre tary Patton. Deputy Secretary Caroth ors, Chief Clerk Lichlelter, Dairy and Food Commissioner Foust, State Vet erinarian Marshall, Chief Chemist Kellogg, the new State Zoologist, Pro fessor J. G. Sanders. Statistician Wible, E. C. First, W. R. Douglas, George G. Hutchison, Harry E. Klugh, Franklin Mengee and others connected with the various divisions. Members of the State Commission of Agriculture also accompanied the tour. Mr. Douglas liad charge of the ar rangements for the tour. Mr. Black Returns.—Highway Com missioner Black was nt f \ Capitol to-day after the tour > te with the Governor, on wl | ii. *.id Chief Engineer Uhler took a ..antage of opportunity to make some inspect!'*"■ of roads and to look over toll r 4 propositions. Considerable is being given to the latter matter by the Commissioner. Patterson Selected. Dr. F. D. Patterson, chief of the division of in dustrial hygiene of the Department of Labor and Industry, has been selected as one of the judges for the Bethle hem Steel Company's safety and first aid contest. Awarded $21.71. Referee Say'.or yesterday awarded $21.71 compensa tion to Hugh McLaughlin, formerly with the Harrisburg Railways and now leader of the strikers, for com pensation for a fender striking him. It represents loss of time in July. To Appeal Case. The Pittsburgh Railways Company last night gave notice that it would immediately ap peal from the decision of the Public Service Commission in the Pittsburgh night car fare case. Chancellor Hero. Chancellor S. B. McCormick, of the University of Pittsburgh was here last night. He accompanied the Governor on the agricultural tour. Big List Ahead. The Public Serv ice Commission has a big list ahead and Monday the applications to be heard will be numerous. Many of them call for improvements in cities. May Object.—The workmen's com pensation law and the new wage agreement between operators and miners were criticised at Scranton yesterday by Captain W. A. May, president of the Pennsylvania Coal and the Hillside Coal and Iron com panies, when he appeared before the State commission investigating the increased price of anthracite. Cap tain May declared that the compensa tion law, which was designed as a Samaritan piece of legislation, has been detrimental to the safety of the workers and that the new wage scale had resulted in a decrease in efficiency in the employes of the Hillside and Pennsylvania companies. "We have had 928 accidents and eighteen fatalities in our collieries in the last six months," asserted Captain May. "We never had so many before in the same period." I'p to 1522.—Reports made to the State Department of Health up to last night showed 1522 cases of infantile paralysis since July 1. Philadelphia reported only eight cases. To Take Appeal. The three men arrested in Philadelphia on charges of having exceeded the legal rate of interest have decided to appeal. Their cases will involve a test of the act. Fuss Over Blackbirds. A general war against blackbirds which are pro tected by the State except when tear ing up vegetables or ripping nests to pieces has been declared at Ardmore. The local authorities want to get rid of tbem, but the bird lovers, backed by the State laws, proceeded to have the destroying angel of the local ad ministration, fined SBO. Dr. Joseph Kalbfus will be asked to settle the trouble. Extraordinary Demand For Securities of Nearly All Iron and Steel Co.'s New York, Sept. 29. The feature of to-day's early stock market was the extraordinary derimnd for se curities of practically all the iron and steel manufacturing companies. Except for United States Steel and several other prominent stocks of that class, these issues as a whole have improved only to a minor extent in the remarkable activity of the last month. . To-day's operations, how ever, were so wide and extensive as to place that group as a whole In the foreground with a new record for Republic Iron and Steel, while others rose to highest prices of recent years. Gains of the forenoon ranged from 1 to almost 5 points in United States Steel, which approached its recent high record, Lackawanna, Crucible, Sloss-Sheffleld and Gulf States Steels, Colorado Fuel. Great Northern Ore, Railways, Steel Springs and American and Baldwin Locomotives. Exten sive profit taking shaded gains before the end of the active morning session. W. Harry Baker Club Is Addressed by Well Known Republicans Congressman Aaron S. Kreider, Senator E. E. Beidleman and the Rev. W. A. Ray were speakers last night at a rally of the W. Harry Baker club at Schaeffer's hall, Marion and Calder streets. Previous to the rally the club had a parade with more than 100 men in line, headed by the Perse verance band. Marshall Ficklin presided at the meeting', which was one of the larg est gatherings of colored voters in years. Urges Preparation For Heavy Exportation of Gold From U. S. After War Ends Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 29.—"Heavy exports of gold from this country to Europe may follow the close of the European war," said Paul M. War burg, vice-governor of the Federal Re serve Board, In hi saddress before the American Bankers' Association here to-day. "Foielgn loans In the old and new world may attract our capital at in terest rates far in excess of our own," he said. "Our exports will have to meet the keen competition of other nations, while the purchasing power of many a nation will be found ma terially reduced, even though in the beginning there will be a strong de mand for certain of our raw materials. "These conditions, in the long run, may be the cause of heavy gold ex ports from the United States, and, if we remain unprepared, may prove a serious check. If, on the other hand, we forearm, we will be given the op portunity of taking our place as the strongest of the world's bankers and furnish the basis of a solid expansion of our business." Mr. Warburg appealed to the bank ers to "forearm" by increasing their balances with the Federal reserve banks and releasing some of the gold in their vaults. "Keep all the gold in your vaults, where it Is useless fpr yourselves, and deprive It of the additional force that It may gain in the hands of the Fed eral reserve banks, keep every cash till in hotels, railroad stations, dry goods stores and what not filled with gold certificates, and you will rob the coun try of its legitimate opportunities of growth, of helping the world." Funston Names Guards to Be Relieved on Border San Antonio, Texas, Sept. 29. An nouncement of all National Guard regiments and organizations, to be re lieved from border duty by new State troops, under Tuesday's order by the War Department, was made last night by General Funston. The total Is ap proximately 10,000 men. Movements will not begin, it was an nounced, until the incoming troops have arrived. Among the troops or dered home are the first Pennsylvania field artillery, first battalion New Jer sey field nrtillery nnd the first squad ron New Jersey cavalry. Fire is everyone's enemy; Fire last year destroyed nearly $250,000,000 worth of property in the United States. Fire last yea* killed 3,000 persons. Somewhere a fire breaks out every two minutes and some home, some factory, some school, some theatre, some hospital, some store is doomed. Yours may be next —who knows? Your wife, your children, your parents, may be in peril. There is danger ahead. Heed it. Are you pre pared? If fire comes tonight, what would you do? • / The first five minutes in any fire are the vital ones. There is a fire extinguisher called Pyrene. We make it. It bears our name. It is fourteen inches long. Weighs 6 pounds* Works by hand like a pump. A boy of ten can use it. You can hang it anywhere. It never deteriorates. And it kills quickly all kinds of fire. A few pumps smothers out any kind of fire before it gets big. Sold by leading hardware, auto supply and elec trical dealers. _ mmmm * i Former agency relations having ex pired, we, the makers of the Pyrene In Fjre Extinguisher, have opened in A Philadelphia a direct factory branch jfgjk to render better service to the public. , Pyrene Manufacturing Company Makers of a Complete Lute of Fire Appliance* C* LACY FULLER, Division Manager 823 Widener Bid*. PHILADELPHIA. PA. BOTH PHONES PSffl!Bflpß BELl.—Walnut 5364 KEYSTONE—Race 864 B SEPTEMBER 29, 1916. (^^ 432 Market St. DON'T FORGET WE HANDLE NOTHING BUT GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEATS No. 1 Honey Cured Hams 21c Sugar Cured California Hams 15c Frankfurters . . 15c Minced Ham 18c Hindquarter Spring Lamb 22c Rib or Loin Lamb Chops 28c SPECIALS IN VEAL Rib or Loin Veal Roast . 22c Shoulder Veal Roast 18c Shoulder Veal Chops 20c Stewing Veal ( 16c Fancy Pork Chops 22c Pin Bone Steak 20c Round Steak 20c Fancy Chuck Roast 16c Boneless Rib Roast, rolled, 22c Markets in Principal Cities of 13 States Main Office Chicago, 111. Packing House Peoria, 111. 15