Come To-morrow Men!— Make the Most of* This Big 2-DAY "ROUND-UP" of Good ! t $ll.OO to $15.00 | Men's and Young Men's Smart y* CA 1 Winter OVERCOATS & h / .jU WINTER SUITS Y £ For OnlyP®T" . | Two More Big Lots of Our Own $1 1.00, $12.00 and $13.50 Suits and $12.00, $13.50 and $15.00 Winter Overcoats Have Been Selected From Regular Stock for This Big Round-up Sale To-Morrow. Don't Delay and Don't Hesitate if You Want a Genuine Out of the Ordinary Winter Clothing Bargain. Men's and Young Men's $12.00 to Men's and Young Men's $ll.OO, $15.00 WINTER OVERCOATS; $12.00 and $13.50 Winter SUITS; Xf lforTwo ... $7.50 %y?' ,or . Two ... $7.50 l Handsome, well-tailored WINTER „.Vj£Vi^ h ?. b . k ™ vuU,e9: K° o <l- well-made OVERCOATS; made of good wool lab- WINTER bLITS of fine worsteds and rlcs Velours Mixtures and some casslmeres. C hoice of u variety of this lies, \ eiours, .Mixtures ana some seasons smartest and conservative Kersey Cloth. Newest Pinch Backs, models. All extra well tailored and Full Box, Form-Fitting and Conserva- Venetian lined. All sizes for men and live styles, In Blacks, Blues, Grays, etc. GOOD CLOTHES All sizes for men and young men. FOR A SMAI.I, PRICE—COME. 3 Big| Special Pants Items on Sale Saturday Men's PANTS. *■ Men's PANTS. d -1 A Q Men's PANTS. r\ r* Special at 1 UU Worth $2.50, for 1 eTT*/ Worth to $3.50, *J) JL . . _, . . . , . For work or dress wear; made of Made of good, serviceable fabrics, fancy worsteds and cassifneres. All l'.xcellent qualities, fine worsteds In all sizes. sizes. and cassimcres. All sizes for men. JOHN McCLBNAGHAN John McClenaghan, 12-year-old son i of Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair McClenaghan, j died yesterday at the home, 921 North • .Eighteenth street. Funeral services will be held to-morrow afternoon, at 2 l o'clock, in the State Street United j Brethren Church. The Rev. E. A. G. j Bossier and the Rev. John M. Warden will officiate. Burial will be made in j the East Harrisburg Cemetery. QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry of thousands 1 since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tab- j lets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician ! for 17 years and calomel's old-time en- i emy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, sooth ing vegetable laxative. No griping is the "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tablets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth" j now and then—a bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—sick headache torpid liver and are constipated, you'll find quick, sure and only pleasant results from one or two little Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take one or two every night just to keep right. Try them. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. Claims Economy In Taking Casca Royal Pills. Thinks People Spend Dollars Where Dimes Would Do. A big city physician, with no ax to grind, makes the statement that "too many peo ple spend dollars for medicine and doctors where dimes would readily answer. I mean that nine-tenths of the ills of the hu man famny are due to faulty elimination. Inactive kidneys and constipated bowels bring on a train of Ills that would require n page to enumerate. Ueadache, neuralgia, rheumatism, biliousness, backache, Indiges tion, nervousness, insomnia, etc., unless in a chronic stage, can be corrected by taking Casca Royal Pills, instead of high-priced stomach medicines, liver tonics, blood puri fiers, etc." Just try a 10c or 25c package and youH save many dollars and keep your health good too. Any druggists can supply you with tins very pleasant phy'. tonic and purifier. Bold by druggists everywhere. Little Coal Reserve We've had the kind of weather that drains the coal bin. And how fortunate you were to have enough fuel on hand to keep you comfort able. Few persons really appre ' ciate the seriousness of the coal situation, and no im provement is looked for in the near future. A long continued cold spell is likely to dispose of the little coal in reserve a sup ply that is far less than the usual reserve in the yards at this period of winter. H. M. KELLEY & CO. Office, 1 .North Third Yards, Tenth and State FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 23, 191/. BUCKMAN FAVORS MORE REVENUES Senator Says That Common wealth Must Increase Its Income at Once Senator Clarence Buckman, clialr | man of the Appropriations Commit- I tee of the Senate, said at Doylestown i last night, that new measures would | be introduced into the present State legislature to create additional reve j nues for this Commonwealth. Accord i ing to Senator Buckman, the revenues j of the State must be increased, from $70,000,000 every two years to SIOO,- ! 000,000 or more if the Commonwealth i is to keep pace with proper approprla j tions for its institutions. "Every institution in Pennsylvania | receiving State aid," said Senator | Buckman, "is for increased ap propriations from the present Legisla- I turo over 1915. In some cases the amount asked for is double; in other instances more than double. The in creaser appropriations sought are on account of the high cost of living, and increased expense of maintenance and the excexptionally higher cost of labor. "For a number of years the revenues of the State of Pennsylvania have re mained the same. They have not been advanced. But now it is necessary to raise more money in order to keep our i institutions in operation. Requests for | appropriations this year total more than $140,000,000, or double the pres j ent revenue of the Commonwealth. ( State College alone, the one big farm j school supported by the State, has ask : ed for appropriations totaling approxi- I mately $3,500,000. On account of lim ' ited revenues this apropriation cannot j be granted." WILL SIXG CANTATA The choir of Fifth Street M. K. Church ) will sing the cantata, "The Daughter of Jairus," by Sir John Stainer, on Sun day evening. March •). The singing will be preceded by a short talk on the sub -1 ject of tile cantata by the Rev. Dr. E. A. Pyles. The choir of thirty voices will be assisted by Charles Cassell, bass. Other soloists for the occasion are: Mrs. Frank Sniiely, soprano: Miss Fleanor Shoaff, soprano; Miss Hazel Fraim, soprano: Harvey VVfner, tenor; ; Thompson Martin, tenor and director, with Miss Violet Cassel at the organ. i MOST EXPENSIVE RAILROAD IN THE WORLD The most expensive railroad in the world, we are told in the March American Magazine, is the Garfield and Bingham Railroad that carries ore to tlie gigantic copper mine of D. C. Jackling at Bingham, Utah. It cost three hundred thousand dollars a mile and is all tunnels and trestles. It was built for the sole purpose of ensuring an adequate supply of ore for the mill. ' —— Your dealer has a supply of fresh Sunkist Oranges every day. These are the uniformly good oranges. Order O dozen today* Sunkist Uniformly Good 4 Oranges California Frail GrawanEschaoce Usi BZ£T Book Binding jThe Telegraph Printing Co. HIMSELF IF jus PUPILS ' AKE failures In the American Magazine is nn in teresting article by Merle Crowlli about the School of Engineering of the University of Cincinnati, where he students have to work with their hands in foundry and railroad vnrd ate Tbl' H a ', d j< ? bs in order to gradu- V/V''? 1 aim of the University ha tirnh n ' n;islits and the school has probably a higher percentage or successful graduates than any other in the country, it is the idea of Dean Herman Schneider who said regarding hr JL an enr " est student with average brains is not a success we feel it is laigely our fault. We have not by a. long shot mastered the science of eliminating misfits. Sometimes it takes us many months, many shifts of occu v^„M n to determine just what work a >outh is best htted to do. But when a co-operative student (one who alter nates in classroom and shop work) re mains with us two years we are able to guarantee that he will be a success in the job to which we assign him ' Schneider's system works. I found abundant paper proof of this fact in the records of the university; but the practical affirmation came from the lips of Cincinnati's manufacturers, contractors, operators, from the direc tors of eighty industries which are co operating with Schneiders school in the problem of making men efficient. I talked with more than twenty of ihese employers of labor. Their testimony was enthusiastic and unanimous." HOW TO KEEP A GOOD COMPLEXION THROUGH LIFE In the American Magazine Dr. Ar thur K. Reynolds says: -To maintain a good complexion through life, or to regain a lost com plexion, it is necessary to eliminate all wastes of the body promptly, if daily elimination of waste is equal to the production of waste in the body good complexion will be the rule and bad complexion the exception. The reason why all wastes are not promptly elim inated is because the right foods are not eaten. Elimination cannot go on thoroughly unless the intestines are kept in a lilled-up condition by eating food that leaves residue in the intestinal tube after digestion has done its part. Concentrated food leaves little or no residue. Everv farmer knows that his live stock, in winter, needs to be fed what he calls roughage, that is, straw. It fills up the stomach and the intestinal tube. The filling up is necessary for stock; It is equally necessary for human beings." SNEEZING FATAL TO AVIATORS. In the American Magazine is an ac count of Katherine Stinson, the girl flyer, from whose school in San An tonio, Texas, more than a hundred of Great Britain's army birdnien were graduated. Miss Stinson herself has performed the most difficult feats. "When asked if she was afraid she might fall, she replied that sneezing was the only thing she feared. She declared that nine-tenths of the acci dents in the air are caused by aviators losing control of their machines while sneezing. " 'The aviator,' says Miss Stinson, " 'passes through nunferous strata of air of different temperatures. He often catches cold and sneezes violently. When you sneeze, for the moment you lose all control of yourself. If you do that while in the air your friends are going to gather up your remains.' " BELGIAN CHILDREN CONTINUE TO STARVE In the American Magazine we read that the ration which the American Relief Commission in Belgium is able to give out is not sufficient for the children. Scientists have found that an extra meal of a biscuit made of flour, lard and a little sweetening, and a cup of cocoa with milk and sugar would keep the children almost nor mal. Such a ration would cost six cents a day, and the Belgians them selves, though greatly impoverished, will scrape together enough to pay half the cost of this single meal, but where the additional money will come from nobody seems to know. Appar ently not from this country, for Americans have practically stopped giving to war charities. ALMOST EVERY ARMOUR EXECUTIVE HAS RISEN FROM THE RANKS J. O. Armour has an article on busi ness success in the American Magazine in which he says: "Almost every executive in our com pany has risen from the ranks. M. D. ' Saturday A Day of Big Money-Saving Opportunities In All Depts. C CONTINUING THE GREAT 2-DAY SALE OF cy I NEW SPRING SUITSfgi |AT PRICES THAT MEAN BIG SAVINGS TO YOU <p| || 11 Handsome New Spring Poplin Suits * Stunning New Spring Serge Suits APIw jj ? All the season's newest and latest models embodying all the smartest new style /!j £ !| touches that will be popular this spring. BE WISE. ANTICIPATE YOUR FUTURE / \ 0 jj £ 11 NEEDS. BUY TO-MORROW (SATURDAY) AND PAY LESS THAN YOU'LL / J ) ;j \ j! SURELY HAVE TO PAY LATER. Remember—these Suits in these qualities can't be V / /\ t J | L \; duplicated anywhere else at these prices. All sizes for women and misses, and all the jj 9 ! most charming new spring shades. '' % ljj STUNNING NEW HANDSOME NEW BEAUTIFUL NEW '<d- 1\ \ |! I I! SPRING SQ.SO Spring $1 0.50 Springsl C.OO I \\ 111 ( SUITS SUITS IL— SUITS 1 M ill C xhnl Will Cost You dl2.r>o l.nter. Tlmt You'll Pity 113.00 to SIO.OO That Will Coat You >IB.OO anil 1 / / \ < 1 1 { AH • , ' . For l.nter. SlS.ftO l.nter. 1 /.I \ !> I ■,i All sizes for women and misses; Choice of Navy, Beige. Gold, Made of fine Men's Wear Serges I / I I I \ '! I b], made of line Wool Poplin, In fas- Apple Green. Black, etc. Attrac- and All-Wool Poplins, in the very 1 / / I \ '' J'| clnating new spring models; all "vely trimmed of Double Warp newest of all the pretty new 1 / \ >• \ 'I 1 K _ . i_i i . „ , ~ . Serge and All-Wool Poplins. spring shades. Popular coat tail / / \/ m / I i p new sliades; latest length coats l.atest style coats and all sizes lengths, beautifully lined; all tluL / / / \ )i I Mll and newest collars. for women and misses. sizes for women and misses. Ami / i ?! \ i TheßigSpringDressSaleOffers Additional Attractions (Iml [Jii! 1 ! i More now shipments liavo nrrivcil which increases your opportunity to purchase at a remark- \ 1 1 \ < 1 | J] j able low price the most attractive new Serge Dress ever offered. Come to-morrow. \I 1 -s j! | %JI Double Warp <t C*7 C Attractive New Serge Charming New Serge Handsome New Serge \\l [~l\ in ■ll Serge Dresses *# • O Dresses, $7.75 Dresses, $9.75 Dresses, $12.75 IH_ / #!' Worth to 58...0 Worth to *ll.OO Worth to sls 00 Worth to 818.00 El !> 1 i K | Attractive new spring Made of Men's Wear ' Made of the finest Ty. ■•y'yi-'.'<[ i 1!> models, in all the new <"><! French Serge; Pretty new models of Men's Wear Serge. All |>< . H '! mi oi „w fnr choice of all the new Men's Wear and French new styles and colors. :\V.VAvY.• '! 1 Ek , > ..olois. ah sizes foi co j orH an( ] ~]] Bines for Serge. All sizes for and all sizes for women ■. -V.\ |! i ■ll women and misses. women and misses. and misses. ■ ij j ; Over 250 New Spring Skirts PLUSH COATS III 1 t!j In a Special Saturday Sale IN A FINAL SATURDAY CLEAN-UP jj 1 fj: Q" a . ut ; styles that win please the rißggT i iig $35.00, $29.50 and $24.75 PLUSII COATS ji I 1 -2 11 most lastidious woman and all marked to sell at |BWf' T '| v lii unlay.' ~10,,c ' V * saviM * l"*'ces to-morrow, Sat- CHOICE TO-MORROW gj I AA ill Cj; Strictly A ll- Wool New Spring DRESS *jr}T~T p SATURDAY I<OR .... ||J f\\ Double Warp Serge SKIRTS; Special at $7/ / \ Two $33 Plush Coats, sizes 16 and 36 for $13.00 ii# s|! DRESS SKIRTS, _ / \ . ; ;| f I <! Worth to $3 50 for I \ Collar and cuffs and band on skirt of Moufflon fur. < M l!| $2.49 For o'n e? ana / 0o $33.00 Plush Coat, size 20. for $13.00 11 li| J i Kood e^fast an black ißß ana sg K modeii. %]!'•' ' L.I J Collar and cuffs trimmed with natural raccoon fur. ]|C l\\ K Women's and Misses' New lEL ""TTTT Four fine $29.30 Plush Coats, size 16, $13.00 ill I Spring Skirts. Special Saturday, 1 / \ ~~ ~ CI T , . - , , All H- 1 I Chase Plusli or opossum fur-trimmed collars and cuffs or plain. ' 9 \ , A splendid assortment of new models. ool / / f • i . tjj • &ct a*• ~ ri i / _' _ „ ' * 9,1 Poplin Press Skirts; Striped Silk Skirts: Black LI Ljlgtlt rlaiU $>24./5 Pllish Coats foi' Only sl3 00 '• % Kll Navy Silk Poplin Skirts; In all sizes and new spring jB ' J ,i g J|| shades. , f agrand Finer Sizes 1, 18, 38 and 38. wonderful big values for the price. <!% ■ 11 —Second Floor. \\ t I Hundreds of New!" j/ a Gir,s ' New Spring Dresses I \ Wnlote I j Wo r and at Exceptional Low Prices 5 | bpring W BIStS 1 lsses GIRLS' NEW GIRLS' NEW ( Just Arrived For Saturday y/V 1 white Pro-Buck SP^ vJoJSh ?So, ES * SP^ I mSh l^?:mh ES ' i ' C Choice representatives of the new season's latest Hi t ci, n ,. r rtr (t| 1 >f C i' 1 models by the hundreds. Fine Crepe do Chines, |TW A " Lace &noes tor D 1 '.h I .Hrl 1 m 3eorKette Crepes and lovely Striped Silks, in such 3, \ \4| * jv V % 3hudes as Gold, Apple Green, Chartreuse, delicate \ (P A C H madtTof nrettl? trinihßmi r,i^H de i&£v a r£ 80m [L n ?i W I ■ finks. Blues, etc. y® u an^_ t . he newest effect 3, and piques; sizes 6to 14 trimmed, in a variety* of 6 visit Kaufman s Waist Department years. colors; sizes 6to 14 years, i S Handsome New Spring WAISTS; AQ 1 I 1 Worth.osl.so for 5C Girls' New Spring d0 AC ' F ATTRACTIVE NEW SPRING D I Fl c lary or 1/51113 xv Ueels - These Presses, Worth to p4 m .m.toto . I rill shoes cannot be duplicated for less T W ■ WAISTS at V * •*/1/ . 50 . h stores , Scores of attractive new models. Made of ding- % C New models of Crepe de Chine and Striped Silks * . ... , , widths n'? 18 ! V S? 1 IT a "5 Q^ te ? s; all cri8 P new patterns jf 1 trimmed with lace. All sizes and colors. In this city. All sizes and idths. and daintily trimmed ah sizes. J j KAl'F>IA\'S Flr.t Floor. KAUF.MAWS—Mnia Floor. m | BARGAIN BASEMENT —These Wonderful Economies On Sale Saturday ? C —-—__ Remarkable Sale of Rugs and Linoleum j 1 Bowls Enamel- 19c White sl.oo $17.30 Tapestry Brussels, 9x12 Rugs, $13.93 I K For flowers, in Vnilt> Spreads K J blue and B rp en IVUiv r Ull>V r Iu e i K |,t pretty floral and Oriental patterns. . m C and quality. ty A of ar I v n r.'. aln 00^V 8P '??" I $20.00 Tapestry Brussels 9x12 Rugs $14.95 |{ K utensils in many w |d ft; extra good mmlifv ——————————————_ M wk sizes. extra quality M *' Good worsteds, in neat patterns for bed or dinlngroom. i ( ]Sc f I j- . Handsome blue Japanese patterns,included. , J Muslins Blankets S7Q() WQOL FIBER 9x12 RUGS for $4.95 | Cambrics and MllieS whltel IMlll | a nainsooks, all stewing ket- wool blankets, Dress irinirhain Excellent variety of pretty patterns for bedrooms. | S sswrwa VOW WOOL FIBER 8.\10. Runs lor $8.95 C lAA b' z o and qual- soiled. patterns, assort- ~~ ' " " ~ ity. y> ed colorings Four beautiful new spring patterns to select from. 1 I C i othes . 250 ioi/ 2< . $12.50 WOOL FIBER 9x12 RUGS for $9.95 f /. !,. 15c Crepe ~ ir "T :' A least a dozen handsome patterns and new colors. I W i Line pusse crepe Checks 50c Netv Process Linoleum, square yard, 39c \ Brood, strong. u . n „i' nH n' lilank 0 for underwear. Pajama cheeks. : I hand laid lino; tnade for 27-lnehes wide; 36-inclies wide. Two yards wide and twenty attractive new patterns. * I r-ft. e length"/ ; v,ee mth and Ber " "ngf"ya?d. ' ro "" - Printed Linoleums, square yard, only 49c C , 24<* $2.69 1 10 $ 12 y a f B rlap back, two yards wide, good variety of patterns. I t Harding, general manager of our Chi- I cago plant, started in as a of j eleven—the youngest of a dozen chil dren —as an office ,boy in our Kansas, City plant. C. H. Macj>owel!, president of the Armour Fertilizer Works, was my father's stenographer; Wflliam E. Pierce, who-built our plftn* in I.a Plata, Argentina, began as a time keeper. And so it goes all along tho line." WORLD'S COPPEH OUTPUT HAS lIKKX DUVni.KI) BY OWE MAX In the American Magazine Is an in teresting account of one of the most remarkable figures of the present in dustrial age, l>nnlel C. Jackllng, who has evolved a scheme for the utiliza tion of low-grade ore at a greater profit than IB gained by the owners of the famous Michigan mines. It la need | less to say that already Mr. Jackllng Is , | a multimillionaire. j "We can handle, at a profit, ore that : contains only fourteen pounds of metal I to the ton;" he has stated of his mine at Bingham. Utah, "arid we have sev eral hundred millions tons of a far bet , ter grade fully developed and In re serve,". i "This means that ;he available sup ply of copper—next to iron the world's most useful metal—has almost' been doubled. Which, in turn, means that copper without -ttfe quantities made available through Jackllng's work, would now be selling at a dollar In stead of twenty-six cents a pound, would command a price, regardless of war conditions, that would seriously cramp the growth and expansion of 1 1 the electrical Industry. "For Jackllng', once he had dem onstrated the value if low-grade cop- | per ore, did not confine himself to the i development of the Bingham mountain. He went Into Nevada, Arizona and j New Mexico, obtained similar deposits i and proceeded to develop them, This [ year the quartet of new copper mines I under. his control Is producing nearly | flve hurtdred million pounds of the red I metal, one third of all the copper mined In the United State*, procuring the copper for less tlian nine cents a pound and selling It for more than twenty flVe cents, thus leaving a surplus above cost of production of more than sixty I million dollars In twelve months,' iIIIISIQIIV SEPAII ATED EHOM STARVING IN IIEI.GIIM To-day, according to a member of the Belgian Belief Commission who writes of conditions in Belgium in the Ameri- can Magazine, they ara separating the hungry from the starving in the breaa llnes. Children of normal weight are being removed, screaming from the bread lines to make room for the ema ciated. In Belgium and the part of northern France held by the Teutons are ten million people of whom mora than a third are totally destitute. taps the Teeth White and Health] 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers