To Pays $35 to SSO For Custom Five years ago you were right. It was necessary then for some men to pay these fancy prices for the fit—style—materials and work manship which their tastes de mand in clothes. To-day—conditions are different—Fashion Park clothes solve the problem. Come to The Globe—get into a Fashion Park Suit— note the style—the grace—the snap—the unusual drape—the oh, so different look! Then you'll say to yourself, "What an improvement." And all this style—these extraordinary fabrics— faultless fit—can be had in Fashion Park Clothes. At from S2O to S4O Minimum Price With Maximum Satisfaction THE GLOBE "The Big Friendly Store" — 4 JGJJJR '■ J|||M -An THE PULLMAN COMPANY If Coast to Coast £■& reach iifg service of the Pullman Company it is often possible to arrange a railroad journey so that the night may be spent on the train, thus effecting a saving in hotel accommodations and the hours unnecessarily used for day time travel. The Pullman car includes in its construction not only the asset of increased safety, but every convenience afforded by the most modern hotel that can possibly be adapted to the limitations of car construction. And the service further includes the personal attention of employes trained to anticipate the individual requirements of the traveling public. In the deserts of the SdUthwest: in the western mountains; in rural communities throughout the country, everywhere, regardless of local conditions, the traveler today can obtain, wherever he may board a Pullman, the same high standard of service that he would find in a Pullman car leaving the terminal of the great metropolis. Standardized and extended to serve in equal measure travelers in practically every community, the facilities which the Pullman Company affords for convenience, safety and comfort are equalled by no other similar organization in the world. THURSDAY EVENING, TROUT PLANTED IN NEARBY WATERS Later on Dauphin and Adjoin ing Counties Will Be Given Their Share, Too Commissioner of I VVI | /yl Fisheries Kuller has I being dispatched JW7fIpQc3QWI from Bellcfonte and II nEfflramliwl '" ° r r V hatcheries AIaIMIMIIBWI for the streams In BjagCileJ&JtyiMlfcj Cumberland county. MUJUlklkfiaMaStfiial send thousands of young trout for the streams in Cum berland, York, Perry, Franklin nnd other counties in this region where sportsmen and associations have agreed to look after the young tlsh and to make reports on the conditions. Later on some surveys will be made of streams in Dauphin, Lebanon nnd Lancaster counties and young fish will be sent out by the State. Clinnges In Chiefs.—W. Nlal Rook, county road superintendent of Brad ford county, was to-day appointed county road superintendent of Indiana county to succeed R. M. Sutton, who resigned us road superintendent of that county. Mr. Rook has been connected with the department for several years and will be succeeded by W. W. Brainc, general foreman in Bradford county. 'Holding Hearing.—Assistant Engi neer Ehlers, of the Public Service Commission, is holding a hearing at Scranton to-day In the matter of grade crossings at Duryea. * Petition Dismissed.—The Compen sation Board, in an opinion by Chair man Mackey to-day, dismissed the pe tition of the Baldwin Locomotive Works for a review of the compen sation claim of Earl Adams, of Phila delphia. The defendant company al leged fraud in that it charged that the claimant wanted compensation for an eye alleged to have been destroyed in another accident. The opinion says that the good faith of the claimant was attacked by a brother-in-law with "a very apparent enmity" toward him. The opinion says that the board de-. elines to attach more importance to this testimony because of hostility and improbability of his story. The testi mony of the claimant, is declared to have been "clear, straightforward nnd convincing." It is further held that the accident mentioned was trivial and left no serious consequences. Conference On Rules.—Representa tives of electric, water t>nd other utility companies will have a confer ence at the Public Service Commission offices to-morrow with Chairman Alney relative to adoption of uniform regu lations for deposits required of con sumers and also for interest on such deposits. The object is to secure an agreement which can be made state wide. | The Easiest Way To End Dandruff There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it. This de stroys it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no mat ter how much dandruff you may have. You will And, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop In stantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four ounces is all you will need. This simple remedy has never been known to fall. HARRI&BUKQ TELEGRAPH MEMBERS ALLOW THEIR FAMILIES IN Amend Rules Permitting Them to Occupy Chairs oh Floor of House Members of families of legislators won their light for admission to the floor of the House of Reprecsntativeß to-day when the lower branch of the Legislature specifying who shall be granted the privilege. Monday Speaker Baldwin closed the floor to persons not authorized, which meant that members of families of legislators were barred as were cas ual visitors and lobbyists at whom the order was aimed. Members of fam ilies will now be admitted. Mr. Fltzglbbon, McKcan, offered tho amendment and asked immediate con sideration! which was granted amid laughter and blocked an effort by Mr. Reitzel, Lancaster, to change tho amendment. A motion to send the matter to the rules committee was voted down. Mr. Fowler, Lackawanna, wanted to know what effect it would have on visitors a member might bring in, and was told they had to obtain permis sion. The rule was then amended. Since the new order went into ef fect families of members have been sitting in the gallery, the wife of the speaker among them. The change in rules will mean the restoration of chairs to the "side lines" in the House. Swartz Bill Would Limit Bank Charters to Actual Necessity Under terms of a bill presented by Mr. Swartz, Dauphin, in the House to day the Governor would be empow ered to refuse to approve the charter of any bank or trust company if he should deem the institution not need ed. The act requires the Commissioner of Banking to investigate when char ter is asked, whether greater conven iences will be afforded to the public by opening a new bank in the locality and whether the bank "is the promo tion of any individual, individuals, company or corporation for which charges are made fo rthe organization thereof." The commissioner is to re port to the Governor. Railways Want Increase in Coal Freight Rates By Associated Press Washington, D. C., March 22.—The increased cost of coal was cited to-day as a prime reason why freight rates should be advanced from 5 to 15-cents per ton on bituminous coal from east ern fields to Atlantic and Great Lakes ports. Samuel Roa, president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, speaking for virtually all the coal carrying roads concerned, told the Interstate Com merce Commission that the advance in coal had cost the roads $37,000,000 during the year, of which $9,000,000 was borne by the Pennsylvania lines. LAST DAY TO PRESENT BILLS A resolution to fix April 10 as the last day on which bills may be intro duced in the House was presented by Mr. Campbell, Butler. It went over for a day under the rules. Half a dozen resolutions to.stop presentation of bills during April have been intro duced, but none has t been adopted. STOCKHOLDERS MEET The annual meeting of the stock holders of the Ilarrisburg Foundry and Machine Works was held in the office of the company, Seventh and Curtln streets, this morning. The old board of directors was re-elected. L. B. C. A. MEETING Branch No. 1202, L. B. C. A., will hold its regular meeting to-night at 7.45 o'clock in the St. Francis' parish house. Electrically Operated Oiler Promotes Safety An electrically operated oiler has been patented which makes unneces sary the often dangerous practice of oiling nmcl.inery by hand while it is running. Where this invention is used oil is fed from a central tank into as many cups as are needed. Each cup is connected with an electric circuit and has a valve that is closed by a switch within easy reach of tho per son in charge of the machine. By closing the switch a small magnet Just above each cup is energized. This instantly draws up the plunger and so the oil is allowed to flow down again and the oil stops flowing when the current is turned ofT, the plunger drops down again. If desired, the switch can be operated by clockwork. —Popular Mechanics Magazine. MUST TALK SPANISH Mexico City, March 16.—Conces sions now being given by the Govern ment in many instances make it J obligatory to employ Mexican labor j and prohibit the uso of any language other than Spanish in the conducting) of the public affairs of the company granted tho concession. The conces sion recently granted the Compania Ferrocariiera del Vale, Pampico, Panuco Limttada to construct a rail road from El Higo to Tampico, pro vides Mexican labor must be em ployed, Spanish must be used on all the lines to the exclusion of any other language and the stations named by the company shall bear names of pure Mexican origin. GIGANTIC BRITISH SHELL FACTORIES There are to-day in Great Britain, says Sydney Brooks in an article In the March issue of National Service magazine, more than 4,500 firms that before the war knew nothing of mu nitions and never dreamed of mak ing them and that are now doing nothing else. About 100 colossal Government plants have been built. One-third of these factories are na tional shell factories for the produc tion of light and medium shell, or ganized and managed by local boards of directors. Of the remainder, twelve are national projectile fac tories manufacturing heavy shell, sixteen are national filling factories and stations for loading gun and trench mortar ammunition and gronades, two are special fuse fac tories, twenty-two are explosives fac tories, and others arc engaged in the production of cartridge cases, small Arms ammunition, gauges and tools. I have called them colossal. The twelve heavy shell factories cover an area of more than 200 acres; the six teen filling factories and stations, with more than 2,000 buildings, cover 2,400 acres; the twenty-two explos ives factories cover more than 8,600 acres, one giant among them cover ing by itself more than 3,000 acres; and in addition forty warehouses have been built for filled shells, etc., i with a storage area of more than two I million square feet, Offers $1,000,000 to Aid Je>vs Suffering From War Privations By Associated Press New York, March 22.—Julius Rosen wald, president of Sears, Roebuck and Company, of Chicago, wires the Amer ican Jewish Relief Committee to-day a conditional offer of $1,000,000 to feed and clothe Jewish war sufTerers. The relief committee has announced $lO,- 000,000 as the amount that must be raised immediately if 3,000,00 Jews in | fvc> FRIDAY, Tomorrow—The Great Bargain Day The Day When Nickels and Dimes Work Like Dollars /\ t i X SPECIAL FRIDAY— X SPECIAL FRIDAY—Lot of Dress fnmmings, Laces, John Clark's sewing Q Embroideries, etc. Worth tip to 25c. O thread; spool £* C Sale price, yard OV* ao yards -,wut r bim-k. X SPECIAL FRIDAY Swiss Headings, Convent Em- | broideries, Swiss Embroideries, etc. Worth up to 19c. EXTRA Sale price, yard • C O. N. T. Crochet Cot- Q X SPECIAL FRIDAY Lot Real German Linen, Cluny ton —large balls OC Laces, assorted patterns and widths. Bmt Grade Mercerlxed. All nixes. Sale price, yard V V v A " x SPECiAL FRIDAY Many styles of Fine Laces, In <- 1 sertions, bands and all-over Laces. Worth up to 50c. 1 Famous loc / R. &G. Friday Sale of Gloves m Heavy two-clasp Silk Gloves; double- CQ OR tipped finger ends 01/ C /y /If Plain white or black on white with black embroidered \f t . . backs; black with white embroidered backs; sizes S I A I/. J A TTI I to 8%. WHY PAY MORE? \Q H ADY \Uln OR . BLACK .. LISLE .39c Mfj -lA.CED FRONT CORSETS Real Milanese Slk Lisle Gloves black, pray V/ j. J NEW MODELS FOR or tan ' ( Gcrman All sizes > P air •• 1 11/1 Women's White Chamoisette Gloves—self em- \ f/y J THE NEW EASTER broidered backs. All sizes, pair 69$ Extra Fine White Chamoisette Gloves; black stitched backs; GOWN new Easter styles; pair #I.OO Hft I*7 £ Cn KID GLOVE SPECIAL— ij) I.UUj f I.tJj