22 I I W sls I Jffj\ ClotheS § II y4lf!B§ Ajk\V For Men and Men I / \ V s Point for point materials, linings, cut, K m / \ ( \m\ N/ v ] \ findings, tailoring EMPIRE sls m jjj r V \jj I\ \ CLOTHES are the equal, if not the su- / \ XI / \ perior of $25 clothing elsewhere. 3 s / I \ ] / V ur ow u P" sta^rs rental, coupled $ j j I J J with the fact that our store is a :■'} I Ijk \ A. branch of a chain of over 100 / lyfi / stores, with UNLIMITED mer- Is / I M jE> chandising facilities and a Vj / / \l ]/.; v a-o£\ vast outlet, enables us to P \ ° ffer theSC INCOMPAR ' I | j or OVERCOAT looks like I || ML 11 and HONEST l "IP* 1 \aJ \j SPECIAL I n I For Saturday Only 1 jlj < Men's $2, $2.50 and $3 Hats § n IJj I | We defy any store to duplicate n \ i f I '1 these hats at our price, sl. They I ! ■ 1 are worth from $2 to $3, accord- I ■? I -1 ing to style; we sacrifice to in- I J jL .• . j troduce to you the New Store. j I Here's a bargain you'll sel do m ■ § I / 1 Walk Up Stairs and Save $lO I I I I It will take you but a few minutes to walk j I I up stairs, and when you do, you'll be well re- J J I paid. If $lO SAVED means anything to you— * jjf U Empire I Jrw Clothes Shop I I Market Sq. Up Stairs Fed His Stepchildren; Balked at Their Wives San Francisco. Cal., Oct. 2 7.—Fred erick R. Andrews, an engineer for the American Steel & Wire Company, tea- ; tilled.that it was the seven children iiSTTy On thiC Job .•# Copyright, 1916, International News Service jHlobciTi M LeSes!? l [ k£H?) |! ,J M I / 7 MOu2EMEC>o^9^ r SsY■ - S'foSE M'VMRAP'BR. / f^S] f v ANOIFOf ATOVSK i B -AD < /v '/ liPGOCfc Avrt> LOCVL'EIZ. iKiTHE* J I v MET UP-. 4 —__j— FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TEUEGRAPH OCTOBER 27, 1916. of his wife, Annie Andrew s, by her'' former husbands, that broke up their' home. j Andrews said he did not mind sup- | I porting the seven children, but when i j one of them married and brought his i : wife to live at his home he drew the J line. He admitted an occasional drink | and game of shuffleboard. MOTORCYCLE AMBILAXCK CARRIES TWO .STRETCHERS ' Two wounded soldiers can be car- j ' ried at high speed by a new motor- j [cycle ambulance that has recently' ! been developed by an eastern manu- I i facturer. The apparatus is of the dou ble-decked type with regulation ! stretcl ers held one above the other j in a steel frame on the sidecar clias- j sis. The tread of the machine is ad ' Justable and thus may be regulated ito suit different road conditions. At tached to the chassis below the lower stretcher is a small cabinet in which ; first-aid supplies are stored. The ; Kt*etcherß con be fitted in place or removed quickly without disturbing ; their occupants.—From the Novcm- I ber Popular Mechanics Magazine. BUT THIS IS HOW HE DID IT ,YOUR PHAP WHY, I MARRIEP YOU 'CAUSE YOO TfrLP I ME YC>UR PA was PAVING THE - WAY j _ I BUT THIS IS IW HE EW> r I' / i ipi „ 83 \ M MONKEY MARVEL ON TYPE MACHINE Union Printers Face Stiff Com petition From This Open Shop Chimpanzee Linotype operators employed In printing establishments will have to fare competition that will work four teen hours a day, know no union rules and live on cocoanuts, seaweed and chocolate candy. Authority for this statement is the Honolulu correspon dent of the Typographical Journal, the official magazine of the International Typographical Union of North Ameri ca. In the August number of that magazine is published an article and a pitcuro of a chimpanzee linotype op erator at work on the Star-Bulletin, of Honolulu. "Biz Fox, one of tlie few chimpan zee linotype operators in the world, is an expert operators of a Mergenthaler, having set 101,000 ems solid brevier in eight hours and forty-five minutes, mostly reprint from typewritten copv," the article says. "Biz has been "at work for nineteen months and shows signs of becoming swift in time. "Biz was born in Ashairia, Africa, nineeteen years ago. lie possesses great strength and changes the maga zines of a No. 1 linotype unassisted. Another feat of his was carrying eight cases of job typo balanced on his head. Ho also carried a Gordon jobber three blocks and a half. He climbs up the front of the distributor, placing one foot on the sort tray and locking the shifter with his hand. He then as cends over the magazine and starts the distributing mechanism in record time. "Biz is a bicycle rider, having won a race around the Island of Oahu (nine ty odd miles) in seven and a half hours, finishing on flat tires. He has had several run-ins with traffic police men, who testified that he made as high as twenty miles an hour, which is some speed on Honolulu's streets. "There is a company being formed to raise chimpanzees on the Island of Kahoolawe. The object of the com pany is to supply chimpanzee opera tors to the mainland. One of the drawbacks to be overcome is that the chimpanzees have taken to the drink habit. However, it is proposed to cross the chimpanzees with the white faced monkeys of China and make them temperance advocates." Judge Weeps When He Passes Death Sentence Chicago, Oct. 27. Judge Joseph B. Sabbath, of the Criminal Court, after passing death sentence on Lloyd Bopp. 23 years old, covered his iface and wept several minutes. "I always prayed that if ever I be came a judge I should never be called upon to go through an ordeal like this," he said. Counsel for Bopp and others in court gave way to tears. Bopp mur dered a motorcycle policeman. SEATTLE GARAGE Ill\ o\ SELF-SEHVICE PLAN | The self-service idea has invaded the realm of the garage. Just as one can enter certain restaurants or gro ceries and help himself and be charged for what he gets, so now a car owner can take his automobile ■ into one of the separate compart ments provided in a Seattle garage, ; procure tools at the garage office, and do his own repairing. When he has finished, he returns the tools to the office ami is charged according to the time he has occupied the room and for the tools he has used. These private repair spaces can be locked so that one can safely leave his work and return and finish it later. If a helper is desired, one can be procured at a specified rate.—From the No vember Popular Mechanics Magazine. BULL FIGHTING IS WIPED OUT Carranza Decrees Halt on Custom as Cruel and Op posed to Culture Mexico City, Oct. 27. General Car ranza lias signed a decree, prohibiting bull fighting throughout Mexico. The decree Is the outcome of a campaign waged by the newspaper El Universal, which attracted wide attention throughout the republic. In the decree General Carranza says that the Government is under obliga tions to stamp out customs which are opposed to culture and to aid civiliza tion by elevating the moral level of the citizen. Bull fighting is denounced as need lessly endangering the lives of men. torturing beasts, provoking sanguinary sentiments and disgracing the country. The First Chief adds that bull fighting causes misery to the poor who, for a moment's enjoyment, go without the necessaries of life. The penalty for infringement of the decree is a line of SI,OOO to $5,000, im prisonment of two to six months, or both. Another decree provides the death penalty for train robbery, highway robbery, cutting telephone or telegraph wires or any robbery by violence. Failure to report robberies; failure of the authorities to use their efforts to arrest, failure to prosecute or failure to give testimony will be punished by im prisonmcnt for from one to rive years. The penalty for robbery without violence is set at five to ten years. Persons aiding the escape of robbers will be subject to the same penalty, oTcHfpAIN! RUB OUT RHEUMATISM Stop suffering! Relief comes the moment you apply "St. Jacobs Oil." Rheumatism is "pain only." Not one case in fifty' requires inter nal treatment. Stop drugging! flub th