6 STATES PREPARE FOR U.S. DEFENSE '.New England Pushes Through Plans For Arming Nation's Volunteers Boston, March 23. —New England's for preparedness pro ceeded rapidly. New Hampshire ap propriated $300,000 for defense, and Maine and Vermont through their governors, appointed committees on public safety. The Legislature of New Hampshire and the Vermont House of Representatives endorsed universal military training. Governor Graham, of Vermont, announced that ho would ask the Legislature to vote a credit for defense. Throughout the New York coast Easter Jewelry WHAT would be more ideal than something new and stylish in Jewelry to harmonize with your new Easter apparel? Styles change in Jewelry as in almost everything. This store is showing new and exclusive lines that Represent the choice of what is new and popular in fashionable society. Let Your Gift Be One That Will Last It is becoming the custom more and more each season to give Jewelry at Easter Instead of gifts of a temporary character. The assortments at Clastcr's are so large that you will have no difficulty in making pleasing selections. SPECIAL A Very Large Showing of CROSSES and ROSARIES H. C. CLASTER Gems - Jewels - Silverware 302 Market St. and No. 1 N. Third St. I IVINGSTON'fi 9 S. Market Square GREATER and BIGGER than ever —we have added 3,500 feet of floor space to our present storeroom, and in order to show our appreciation—we are going to hold this Special Saturday Sale Women's & Misses' Women's & Misses' Women's & Misses' SllltS Coats Ving Dresses 20 Different Colors Coats ..$ 3.98 50 Different Styles Coats ; ' 6 ; 98 SIO.OO Dresses. $6.98 $16.85 Suits . .$10.98 12.75 Coats . . 7.98 £52 Dresses.. 7.98 ?n nn " iVqR ls.ooCoats.. 8.98 |B.OO Dresses^ll!9B 20.00 Suits .. 13.98 20.00 Coats.. 13.98 20.00 Dresses.. l4.9B 22.50 Suits.. 16.50 25.00 Coats.. 16.50 Sizes 14 to 56. 25.00 Suits . . 17.98 ___ oi • 7 Waists Hats k^Kir"lS 1,000 Waists at Women's Misses' and 500 Skirts at Bargain Prices ilaren s Special Prices $1.50 Waists .. . 98c $2.00 Skirts ... . 98c 2.50 Waists . ..$1.49 |JO Hats ! 98c 2.50 Skirts ...$1.49 3.00 Waists ... 1.98 2.00-J-lats ....$1.49 3.00 Skirts . .. 1.98 4.00 Waists ... 2.49 3.00 Hats .... 1.98 4.00 Skirts .. . 2.49 5.00 Waists ... 2.98 4.00 Hats . .-. . 2.49 5.00 Skirts .. . 2.98 ... _ _ vi —; — r , , Boys Spring ®' ,l 'fe n n s resses Mens Clothes pi , L 6 New Spring Styles CIOUICS 5 All Colors & Styles $3.00 Suits .. . .$1.98 Dresses .. . 25c $15.00 Suits ..$ 9.98 4.00 Suits .... 2.49 $| Q Q '' 4l® 18.00 Suits ... 11.98 5.00 Suits .... 2.98 , 50 Dresses 20.00 Suits . . 13.98 Sizes 2tol tf years. 2.00 Dresses .. . 98c FRIDAY EVENING. HAFRISBUHG TELEQR7 L PE r MARCH 23, 1917. line the greatest activity was shown. So prompt lias been the response to the calls for recruits that the heads of official and civilian committees had their hands full in examining, enroll ing and assigning those who could be of service. Men, women, boy scouts and girls made up the volunteers. Several interesting developments were announced. An armed boat pat rol manned from the crews ol" the ships at the navy yard is to be estab lished to patrol Boston harbor and the water front of the navy yard from sunset to sunrise. All craft found In these waters will he subject to inspec tion. Guards at the navy yard piers were given rifles in additiou to their pistols. Another call for aviators was made and five new units of coast defense re serve men from Tufts College were added to the force already being trained. A largo group of telephone girls offered their services without pay for evenings, Saturday afternoons, Sundays and holidays. A unit of thirty experienced wireless operators, all women and girls, already had been enrolled in the coast defense reserve RUSS COURTIERS UNDER ARREST Two Hundred Adherents of Former Emperor Held Closely Guarded Tsarskoe-Selo, Kussia, March 22, via London, March 23.—Two hundred adherent and courtiers of the former emperor are under arrest here. A cor respondent of the Associated Press discoverd tlieni in the Nicholas gym nasium, a big building next to the City liall where the commission of officers and soldiers who arc now ad ministering Tsarskoe-Selo has its headquarters. In a big room on the flrst floor were seventy persons in civilian dress, for merly palace spies and provocative agents. Here also were four Russian officers with German names who had been arrested by old soldiers on sus picion of having sent communications from the former empress to Berlin by way of Stockholm. In a neighboring room sat the director of the Tsarskoe Lyceum school, who was a general in the army and a close friend of Ras putin as well as a reactionary member of the district court. On the second lloor, in a separate I room, Prince Putiatin is held prisoner. ! Prince Putiatin was one of reaction* ary Kussia's most powerful men. He ! was formerly private secretary to the i Emperor and in recent years iof the palace. Putiatin is famous for his presence during the interviews' in 1905 between reform members of the Zemstvos and the Emperor. The Zemstvos delegation warned the mon ' arch that a revolution was impending and. before rejecting their advice, j Nicholas listened to the .whispered ! council of Putiatin. Dmitri Shipoff, i president of the Zemstvos council, subsequently reported that the Emper or was under the control of the prince. Outside of Putiatin's room three members of the civil militia, armed with bayonets, are' on guard. The I prisoners are well treated and the cor j ridors are crowded with children wait i ins to see their parents. Dr. Russell Continues To Attract Crowds At Market Square Church last night an audience of large size listened with intense eagerness to the sermon by Dr. K. M. Russell, on the text, "He that is wise winneth souls." The preacher said "Salvation is as cribed both to God and man in the scriptures. God has a very important and vital part to do. He is willing and able to do it. But man has his part. And the activities of men will determine, at the last, Just how many souls are won to heaven. In making the appeal the congrega tion was lead to think of three classes ;of people. The thoughtless were urged to consider God's estimate of their own souls. Silent believers were urged to come out into the open, and shine for God. And Christians were urged to make soul-winning the great concern, and business of their lives. Allother things were to be incidental. First, and chief, man's task was to win his brother for Jesus Christ, and right living, and heaven, and God, I the speaker said. To-night's subject is "A Model Seek er; and a Model Christian." The Biblo study this afternoon will be "The Christian in the World." GUATEMALA PROTESTS ' Guatemala City, Thursday, March 22. i —The Guatemalan government hf|V : handed to the German minister a pro -1 test against the recent German note on l submarine warfare. PRICE OF PEACE NOW IS WAR President of Princeton So De clares Before Patri6tie Rally By Associated Press New York, March 23. Led by more than forty patriotic anil civic organizations and college clubs, a crowd that tilled Madison Square Gar- j den last night enthusiastically plcdg- j ed itself to the support of President j Wilson and urged that there be no! more delay on the part of the United j States in entering the European war 1 against Germany. Among the speakers were Elihu j Root, who presided; Dr. John Grier liihben, president of Princeton Uni versity; Charles S. FairchUd, who was secretary of the treasury under Presi dent Cleveland, and Mayor Mitchel. United States Senator Ollie James, of Kentucky; Joseph 11. Choate and many others of prominence were present. When Mr. Root, opening the meet ing, declared the time had come for the country to act, irrespective of par ties or partisanship, the great crowd arose,, cheering and waving small American flags. Tins demonstration was repeat ed time and again and it was with difficulty that Mr. Root and the other speakers made themselves heard. Mr. Root saiil in part: "We come not to lind fault or to criticise. We come to turn our faces toward the government of our choice, the government, the President and the Congress, on whom weigh the terrible burdens of decision and action in the issue of peace or war and in the terri ble pursuit of that freedom which can be maintained it seenw now only by war. In this government by the people it must be the people them selves who act through the President and the Congress. "We did think a few years ago that the reign of law had come into the world; we did think that the rules of law that all civilized nations had agreed to be bound by were a protec tion to the peaceful, to the weak; we did think that the faith of treaties was a protection, but we have had a sad awakening. Neither the rules of law, nor the teachings of civilisations, nor the requirements of religion, stand in the way of those powers that are now seeking in the world, with tire and sword, what they call the liberty of national evolution, the liberty to send their increasing population out and seize the territory and subjugate the inhabitants of other lands." In opening his "address Dr. Hibben! said: "I am here to-night as a pacifist. I believe in peace at any price and the price at the present time is war." Continuing, he said: "There is a time when the only peace that is worth lighting for Is that peace of conscience, the consciousness that we as a people are not cowards, the consciousness that we have raised our voice and our power against great wrongs and great injustice and that is the peace that we are called upon to light for at the present time. "Are we as Americans, degenerate? Has tho manhood of our race run out?" He was answered by cries of "No, never!" "Let us recognize our enemy. We have been a long time finding him out, but wo know him now. I hope that the day will come when the Stars and Stripes will be seen somewhere along the von Hindenburg line in France." George Wharton Pepper declared the nation should recognize the fact that even men and industrial prepar edness are of little worth "unless we can put into the hands of the men the ordinary and necessary implements of warfare—rifles, guns, ammunition and all the rest of the necesary equip ment." Berlin Estimates Losses of Entente Navies at 850,000 Tons Since War By Associated Press Berlin, March 20 —By wireless to Say ville, March 23. —Entente losses in war ships have now reached a total of 850,- 000 tons, says an Overseas News Agen cy announcement tb-day. This compu tation includes the French battleship of the Danton class recently announced to have been sunk by a German submarine in the Mediterranean. The statement says: "By the destruction of a ship of the Danton clas, the warship losses of our enemies, excluding auxiliary ships, have reached ia round numbers $50,000 tons displacement. This is equal to the combined tonnage of Russia and Japan at the beginning of the war, and is only 60,000 tons less than the tonnage of the United States navy, which was the third largest in the world at the beginning of the war." Nipping a Tantrum in the Bud The time to deal with a fit of anger, j according to Professor M. V. O'Shca j who deals with this subject in the' May number of the Mother's Maga zine, is before it gets full control of the nervous system. Often it can be btopped by a vigorous stimulus which will change the set of the nervous sys tem. A dowsing with cold water will sometimes produce a reaction which will instantly arrest a fit and put a child- in a much better frame bf mind. On the other hand, after a tantrum Is completely under way, any punish ment will only increase it. Then the child must be let entirely alone until the excited nervous system quiets down. Of course, a child who is slapped or dowsed with cold water or chastised in any other way frequently will be come immune to the punishment, and It will not divert his attention when a tantrum is coming on. A parent who is always doing some thing to his children often complains because they ignore what he says or does. Certainly; they have become Im mune to his methods. It will coute out this way in nine cases out of ten. YUItK BAKERY HIK.VS By Associated Press York, Pa., March 23.—The plant of the Edward l*ox Baking Company, on North George street, in the heart of the city, was damaged to the extent of {20,000 by a lire which at 9 o'clock j this morning partially gutted the 1 three-story brick structure. The blaze! originated in a cloak room. DIES CLUTCHING GIRL'S PICTURE Wilkes-Barre. Pa., March 23. Hold ing a picture of his sweelieart in one hand and a Bible in the other, Harold E. Holdcn, aged 22, was found dead in a bedroom of his mother's home here yesterday. He had been dead several hours when his body was found and a wide-open gas jet and a gas-filled room explained the cause. OHIO READY TO AID WILSON Washington. D. C„ March 23. Gov ernor Cox telephoned the White House yesterday that Ohio is readv to do everything in Its power to back up the national administration in the present emergency. The Legislature. Governor Cox predicted, will pass any measures deemed necessary. Ladies' Bible Class Elects New Officers The George W. Young Ladies' Bible class of Calvary Presbyterian Church, met last night, in the church building and elected tho following officers: President, George W. Young; secre tary, Mrs. George W. Young; treasur er, Mrs. Ray Kehrerer and assistant secretary, Mrs. Jessie Weaver. The treasurer's report showed that the class has contributed $125 to the We Are Headquarters ■ For Baby's Furniture • fX| Go-Carts , 1 ' == lT~~ J * We know, of course, th.it nothing is quite , Iftw good enough for his Lordship, the BABY, * *** V) Ut We s ' low le * inest an d most complete ((0? V; jif/ lines of exclusively designed Baby Furniture v ET y ■ , and Go-Carts it is possible for human hands to make. < Here one finds every article required for the Baby—the things that add to his health and comfort —and all at moderate prices. Capable lady attendant. > 11 are •— easy running and con- CribS and venient for the mother. ' . . . As an extra special value, we offer an all Cf| reed Stroller, at uuaAiiicucs J;J n|iler styles nml slzcs _ up to s|o White Iron Crib (as Illustrated) with ( high patented sliding side —close rods A 'so an all reed Pullman, Sleeper Go-Cart —full size—with . —specially Aft loose cushion upholstery—specially 41*7 priced, at ... M.UU priced at Other Go-Carts up to SSO. White Wood Bassinnettes on wheels; specially priced. * High Chairs at $8.50 to $lO French Willow Bassinnettes and Beautifully made of imported Bentwood, in Oak and Ma- ' Stand dj -jo hogany finish—the kind that will harmonize with good furni aro 1 ti.UU turc Infants Trunks and Hampers $5 to $8 I Made of French Palm in various sizes and shapes with removable trays specially i priced at Sfio to SB. Infants' Scales and Play-yards, etc. —in fact, anything that is made for the Baby is here. See our remarkable display now in our window. K Goldsmiths Sir ' Known For Fine Furniture—at Moderate Prices—Since 1881 lilMlMffl .iMilliMKillM "BETTER SHOES FO "From Maker to Wearer" Tells a Story of llow to Save Money When Buying Shoes •J The remarkable business this new DandY Line Shoe Store has enjoyed since our opening is due to the fact that people fully appreciate just what it means to buy direct from the maker and thereby ELIMINATE THE MIDDLEMAN'S PROFIT. Every pair sold bears our (the makers) absolute guarantee of service and satis faction. You'll need a new pair of shoes for Easter. Why not come in and look over our great showing of Spring styles? Note the savings on these: — S ' Ladies' White Buck Men's Cordo - Calf I 'III Shoes; Worth sl ° at ) Shoes; Worth $7.00, at LW. $7.00 Of finest quality—white heels ft and soles—B-lnch "hitop"—high ■ and low st >' es — an extra special }\ r value - ' Cordo-Calf —the most popular shoe sold to i ffi' ! Ladies' Gray Lace Kid day buy the DandY Line make and save Boots; Worth SB.OO at several dollars—also Dark and Dark Mahog- V'j d~\r\ any Calf Shoes Goodyear Welts durable P oak soles stylish English last. With Louis heels —finest qual- —— ■■■■*■ ► W an< * widths. VI. f Ladies' $4.00 Shoes; An Actual $5.50 Men's |^so ME Special at DreM Shoe ' al * Smart, trim, stylish Shoes at a big saving— Lff t J m, ,# yj English Calf Shoes and many other styles Fine dull kid vamps—Louis heels —8-inch pattern Calf vimps and durable soles black all sizes —button and lace styles—newest model —flexible . .... c soles—all sizes and widths. and widths, bee these. Boys' Dress Shoes Worth $3.50; Growing Girls' Shoes, Worth $2.50; Special at $2.50 Special at $2.00 English style—Goodyear welts and with prime Wade of Patent Colt with broad tips and low heels durable oak soles—calf vamps—all sizes to 6. —durably made for hard usage—all sizes. DandY Line Shoe Store Devine & Yungel, Shoe Manufacturers, 16th and State Sts v Owners and Proprietors. 202 Market St. Other Stores at Lebanon, Pa., and Huntingdon, West Va. Factories at 16th and State Sts., Harrisburg, Huntingdon, West Va., and Carlisle, Pa. church building fund and $5 to mis sions. Other class collections amount ed to W4.98. The total collection for the year was $144.98. Following the business meeting ad dresses were made by president of the class, the Rev. Frank T. Mckenney, pastor of the church; Judge S. J. M. McCarrell; H. W. Gough, superintend ent of the Sunday school and the former pastor, Rev. H. B. King, pastor of "the Paxtang Church. Vocal and piano selections were presented by Miss Garman, organist of the church. Refreshments were served to forty three members of the class. • IIAX OX KI.AG REACTS Fort Wayne, Intl., March 23. The American Hug was displayed In the courtroom of Judge John W. Eggemiui and all the attaches of the court wore small flags on their lapels, by order of the Court. This is in the samo court house where, earlier In the week, Wil liam C. Schwler, president of the coun ty commissioners, ordered tho county recorder to removo the American Hag from the windows of the recorder's of fice. Schwler's order caused intense feeling. The commissioner later made public apology and Hags now appear in 11 windows of the courthouse.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers