14 FORRY'S MEN'S SHOP Duofold Health Underwear— Shirts and drawers, $1.75 and $2 Union Suits. . . ,SH.SO and SI.OO f THE PERFECT UNION SUIT^^ Union Suits —Cotton, Lisle, Wool and Silk and Wool, SI.OO to SO.OO We can fit you. fOWNES and Updegraff Dress and Street Gloves at before tlie war prices, $1.50 to s:i.ot> Fur lined $-1.00 to $7.50 Sitmum&i Hosiery Guaranteed to outwear all other socks, 25c, itsc, 50c, SI.OO and $1.50. The SI.OO and $1.50 quality are puro silk hand em broidered. FORRY'S - 3d and Walnut Sts. w f $15,000,000 IX GOI.D New York, Oct. 27. —Gold amount ing to $15,000,000 from Canada was deposited at the assay office to-day by J. P. Morgan and Company as fiscal and commercial agents of the Rritish Government. This makes a total of $450,000,000 received thus far thts year, practically all for account of British and allied interests. HALLOWE'EN joj\ Costumes sSf For the Night of Witchery The assortment is Complete and of the Better Quality 4, BOGAR'S 1M On the Square TTIWGAN'S "Reliable" Hams Is good for all children; it makes and keeps them wL \ healthy and strong. Feed your children often on this delicious ham. It has an appetizing taste t that they all like. Purity and Quality Sold by All Good Guaranteed. Grocers. KINGAN PROVISION CO. 421-425 South Second Street Harrisburg, Pa. All Kinsiin*ii I'roilnet* Are Government Innpeeted. WE SELL Forest Mills Underwear - advertised on this page. H. J. FORMALT, 1807 N. Third St. FRIDAY EVENING, BARRISBURG gfigftg TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 27, 1916. COLORED CLUBS IN BIG UNION RALLY Courthouse Too Small For Event; Colored Vote Against Wilson The colored Republican clubs of I Harrisburg held a largely attended and enthusiastic Hughes meeting at the courthouse last evening. It. was the first time in the history of the city that these elui>a have got to gether for a joint rally and the show | lng made was most encouraging to the | leaders of the colored race here who j have been predicting that the colored I voters will so to the polls as a unit [ to register their protest against an ad ministration at Washington that has ousted many trusted men of their race from the federal service and filled the J place of Civil war veterans with cheap [politicians from Southern States. | The rally was preceded by a walk | around in which many of the leading j colored men of town took part. Frank Stewart, a well-known colored attor | ney of Allegheny county, an orator of j ability and a veteran of the Spanish war and the Philippine campaigns, I was the principal speaker, and Dr. I Charles Crampton, A. Dents;' Ulbb and I W. Justin Carter, member of the na ! tional Republican advisory committee, also delivered addresses. Marshall , Klcklin was chairman of the meeting. The courthouse was so overcrowded ; that about 200 of the marchers could not gain admittance. The First Cor | net band of Steelton and the Perse verance band furnished music. Longest Name Owner Goes on Visit; Finds Longer One I Clarksburg, N. J., Oct. 27.- —Wil- 'liam Thomas Benjamin Rittenfiouse 'Roberson, who owns the longest name !in Rising Sun, Md„ found he was out distanced when visiting relatives at | Clarksburg this week, where he was ! introduced to a Renjamin Kelly Franklin Pierce Walton Archer Clay- I ton. _ j Roberson said he didn't know whether to extend congratulations or ! sympathies, but each man agreed he was proud of his cognomen. Clayton says friends who want him to run for office suggest he divide his name into sections on the ballot and be sure of winning at least a collective majority. HEXRY P. SNYDER DIKS Connellsville, Pa., Oct. 2f.—Henry Provance Snyder, publisher of the Connellsville Courier, and widely known throughout the country as the statistician of the coke industry, died here to-day. He was 50 years old. BHMHHHriIHHBHIHHBMHHHHHHHI The New of Wm. Strouse i ' % Judge Our Clothes by the Wearers jgfjllk —You'll Find Them to Be Men of Discernment and Judgment ira Wide-a- Wake Fellows Who Are "Putting the Big Things Over" YOUNG MAN! T ===== r := Get into a Wm. Strouse Overcoat; Pinch-Backs or semi-full In OuT Boys back Coats are both popular this Fall and the New Store is sup plyiug the demand. Yours is ready for you to slip into—and UepQ. TttUC Ut V \ m you'll say it's the snappiest, best tailored garment you've ever /' 'jWk • ad the |°.°£ ck to^buy— they come in handsome mixtures and Boys , Don , t lose the oppor . - II Wesco Fifteens sls Trailer I? ollar u Suit f w f e t made P,°P ular in by Wm. Strouse along to '"* e p^syl —The New Store has already become known as THE place to buy sls , , , Hi 1 clothes—handsome garments that have the appearance of much higher-priced 13 s rnos progressive oys | ; clothes—which any man would be proud to wear even though sls store. ! * f MHBik EMERY SHIRTS I -J, Are sold exclusively by The New Store. They're as fine as any Eveready flashlight with each *' • shirts in the land, and our name gives double assurance that they must give on e. ;■?■. y ; perfect satisfaction. Handsome designs have just arrived and you can be SI.OO - $1.50 52.00 tTp THE NEW STOR STROUSE AINEY TALKS TO COUNTY LAWYERS Chairman of Public Service Commission Guest of Bar Association JLI I. Jjj barristers last evening heard an interesting talk on the Public Service Pennsylvania to fnrasii**! thc p e °p ,e ° f th ° ,I I J pSpß|Hi ffi Commonwealth by * ifi Silifliyifir w Chairman William October meeting of the Dauphin County Bar Associa tion. Congressman Ainey was the_ guest of the bar organization and was the only speaker. Nearly forty lawyers attended the meeting which was held in No. 2 courtroom. Luncheon was served at the close of the business! meeting. Chairman Ainey explained how the Commission is endeavoring to bring about better relations between the people and the public utilities by serv ing as a medium through which the former may take their grievances for adjustment. Nine to Plead Guilty Nine de fendants some of them old paroled offenders will plead guilty and throw themselves on the court's mercy Mon day morning,. Among these is Nan Woodward who must tell why she whacked Mattie Taylor over the head with an earthenware crock; Philip Fleck, charged with stealing a couple of thousands of dollars' worth of gowns from a local woman's clothing establishment and these others: Rob ert Franklin, William Ilankin, Earn est Lavender and Leonard llunyer, larceny; Walter Walker, felonious entry and larceny! Charles T. Mason, felonious assault, and Edward Orslng er, larceny as bailee. <>'ougli at liaston County Con troller H. W. Gough is in Easton at tending the State session of the Pres bytery. Issued Letters on Estate Letters were issued to-day on the estates of Abram L. Kramer and Israel B. Tyson to Alice S. Kramer and Bertha Tyson, respectively. Dauphin Dianas a-Plenty Of the 7502 licenses to hunt issued to date by County Treasurer Jlumrau, 211 | were taken out by women followers of the chase. Add -<M to Voting Books 209 additional voters have been added to the county registration books by the county commissioners. The ap plicants were all unavoidably absent from the city during the last registra tion day. Decries "Battering Down of God's Holy Day of Rest" Easton, Pa.. Oct. 27.—The Rev. W. P. Fulton, D. D„ in his report, on Sabbath observance before the session to-day of the Presbyterian Synod of Pennsylvania, declared that "baseball, automobiles, social functions, moving pictures, golf, Ashing, are breaking through and battering down God's holy day of rest," and asserted that things (ire tolejated on our Sabbath now which never would have been tolerated ycjjrs ago. He referred to efforts made recently to change the present Sunday laws, and urged church tnembers to refrain from golf, Sunday newspapers, social events and sports of all nature on Sun day, and that a campaign for the pur pose be conducted in all the churches of the synod. He introduced a reso lution calling on the minsters and churches to awaken to the danger of losing tho Sabbath, and to do all pos sible to maintain the pfesent laws on the subject, and that the observance of the Lord's Day the week after Eas- Uer be adopted in all the churches. 'The resolution was adopted. TO lIIKE TO MOUNTAIN The Harrlsburg Natural History so ciety will take a walk to to-morrow to the section near Heckton. H. H Koons will lead the party. The trolley will leave Market Square at 1 o'clocl ' for ItockviUe. Everybody welcome. 1 Sleepy Sleuths Get Auto ! to Chase Bold Burglarman J I . !. Now. Mr. Burglarman, you ve "pulled off" just 116 successful little robberies, and you're still at large, but i ' to-day Harrisburg's sleepy sleuths I 1 were presented with an automobile to j j be used to catch you. | Recently Mayor Meals, all wrought I up over the many burglaries, declared j j that the city needed thirty more pa- | i trolmen, a new police patrol, and an | j ambulance for the detective bureau. | To-day representatives of the Over- j ; land-Harrisburg Company, 212 North I Second street, offered the detective de | partment the use of a five-passenger ! Willys-Knight automobile. The ma chine was given to the department for : its use only, and all of the detectives j will take turns learning to operate the auto. A State license was obtained Follows the Lines and Curves of Your BodyM as Faithfully as Your Mirror Reflects Them ll m tyP e °f figure can be fitted "without a wrinkle. * H * H V rj This finest of underwear, exquisite in weave and ■ ?1 Hfe,J| texture, is perfectly tailored; yet gives with every ■ U movemen .' : body without a bind or draw, K ■ H placing of the flat-lock seams to allow the right H . //. ' The flat-lock^ js _an in knit I ■H the rest of the garment, and insuring that '-• ..... rt beautiful smoothness so necessary to comfort an d to the fit of outer-garments. IS f° rest Mills Underwear may be had in every H f pjJT- * . 'HH desirable style and weight, at prices to suit every £i purse. The band top finish —as used on the finest French undergarments, is a new feature on K the low neck and no sleeve models. Ask at your favorite store for the daintiest, most-delightful-to-wear undergarments tKey carry—then look for the FOREST MILLS label; better still, ask or write your store for Fabric 3180 if you prefer medium-weight cotton, Fabric 3398 for soft merino, and Fabric 3287 for lustrous siljtateen and IS merino. Fabric 2030 will bring you misses' heavy-weight merino. These are only a few of the most wanted styles in Forest Mills undergarments. You may choose from filmiest gauze to heavy || wool, as individual needs and fancy dictate, and in models specially designed for evening, as well H as those for general wear. (T fll I evrown Durrell \g. B this afternoon for the department through Chief of Police Wetzel, and the auto was used this afternoon for the flrst time. Woman, Aged JOO, Will Vote For First Time j Berkeley, Cal., Oct. 27. —After ; rounding out nearly a century of life, I Mrs. Harriet R. Seeber, of 2035 Haste i street, will cast her flrst ballot. Mrs. ! Seeber registered the other morning ' and she declares that she will vote for Hughes and prohibition. She will be 100 years old on the 26th day of this month. She. has spent the last twenty years of her life in Berk eley at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Philo Mills. She Is an enthusias tic gardener and spends much of her time among the flowers with which her daughter's home is surrounded. Rach year her birthday is made tho occasion of a celebration, but this year all others will be outdone In the mark ing of the centennial of her life. Uncle Sam Has Scrapbook Worth $16,000 in Safe Washington, D. C., Oct. 27.—The most valuable scrapbook in Washing ton is in possession of Uncle Sam. It is worth $16,000. ! It was complied by and is in the custody of Major Alfred R. Quaiffe and is kept in a safe at the Treasury Department, where hangs probably the most valuable picture in the Capitol. The scrapbook is made up of speci mens of Uncle Sam's paper money, ranging from the flat currency of Civil War days down to the present, and contains every sort of paper rur rency issued since the sixties. Carefully Treat Children's Colds Neglect of children's colds often lays th( foundation of serious lung trouble. Oi the other hand, it is harmful to continn ally dose delicate little stomachs with in. ternal medicines or to keep the childrei always indoors. Plenty of fresh air in the bedroom and a good application of Vick's "Vap-O-Kub" Halve over the throat and chest at tho firsl sign of trouble, will keep the little chap free from colds without injuring their di gestions. 25c, 60c, or SI.OO. YICKSwrSAIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers