SPROUL IS NOT * A FACTIONALIST Delaware Senator Says That He Wants to See the Re publican Party United Senator William G. Sproul declared last night in the course of some in terviews given at Philadelphia that he wonld not seek the governorship of Pennsylvania aa & factionalist and that his hope was to see the Repub licans present a united front next fall and elect a Republican Legisla ture and send a big Republican dele gation to Congress from the Key stone state. The Senator hit the nail on the head when he said that the Repub licans of the state want to see their party In harmony, especially this year. The Senator has evidently seen the signs of an approaching row of real dimensions in the Democratic Party in Pennsylvania, and noted the manner in which Democratic newspa-, pers have been helping along Repub lican quarrels. "1 am the candidate of no single faction," he said. "I am asking the nomination from the entire Repub lican Party. Just as Senator Vare said he .was friendly with me. so have I been friendly with him for many years. And, furthermore, I believe the masses of the Republicans of the state desire to see their party in per- | feet harmony throughout the Com- i monwealth. "Therefore, It is a worthy ambition j to seek the nomination of a united j Rub Face With Amonized Cocoa And Watch Wrinkles Go i Beauty Doctor Say* Any \\ onuin Slay llitve Clear, Smooth *kin. Free i From I.INCH and Wrinkles. If you have wrinkles or crows feet tnd want to remove them don't stick plasters on your face or apply dan gerous lotions or creams which may injure your skin, nor resign yourself to the idea that you must continually be embarrassed by these marks of time, but go to any good druggist and get a little ordinary amonized cocoa and apply this over the wrinkles for a few nights and you will be surprised to see how quickly they dlsapear and how nicely it brightens up the old i dead skin and contracts the enlarged pores. Winifred Grace Forrest, who is an authority on Beauty culture, recently stated in the New York World that any woman who has wrinkles, enlarg ed pores or llabby, loose skin could Positively and quickly overcome these destroyers of beauty by the use of this simple yet delightful and natural j beautifier. Furthermore, the cost is so little that it is within the reach of The above, coming as it does from uch a Connoisseur of Beauty, should ippeal strongly to every lady who ap preciates what a fair face means to lie gentle sex.—Advertisement. The Weather : Fair and colder To-day the Clock Says 378 t Dependable- The Globe's One Thousand Suit and |ph Overcoat Campaign The high standard specifications for any clothes per mitted to enter THE GLOBE are such that each garment must be thoroughly DEPENDABLE in every detaiUof workmanship, fabric and wearing qualities. This is not merely a matter of policy with us; BUT every garment IS given the closest scrutiny before it can "pass muster" here. ffWMWM/W All of which means BIGGER VALUES for our cus- ((. tomers. Every Suit and Overcoat now REDUCED— ll /[\ Note the low prices.. $15.00 SUITS & OVERCOATS, Now . $11.75 gg SIB.OO SUITS & OVERCOATS. Now . $13*75 ff It S2O & $22.50 SUITS & OVERCOATS, Now T7 $16.75 i'-jjII $25.00 SUITS & OVERCOATS, Now . $1975 _J§f $ $30.00 SUITS & OVERCOATS, Now T $24.75 $35.00 SUITS & OVERCOATS, Now . S2B 50 Manhattan Shirts Reduced—Stock Up Now Extra—Extra—Extra Eor Today and Tomorrow Only Boys' 5 1.50 Corduroy | Knee Pants At . PJ With Every 1 JgC Purcha,e of ALL SIZES TO 17 YEARS Wf You must, however, present this section of our adver- mm tisement and sales checks representing $2.00 worth of pur- IP' chases made in any departm6qt of our store, the same day. JW This offer is for Thursday and Friday, only. THE GLOBE 'V' • -l EVENING, Party and not of any faction. Most assuredly, 1 am not a factional can didate, and in a statement which I will genu out from my home town 1 will make this plain. I have had the opportunity to visit many parts of the state and Republicans everywhere are anxious to see Philadelphia fall Into line with other counties and be able to present a united and unani mous front for the ticket to be named in the Maj> primaries. This end is being sought by Repub licans not only for the gubernatorial campaign but also to insure the next state Legislature and the next Con gressional delegation from Pennsyl vania being overwhelmingly Repub lican. "Perhaps never before have the people of Pennsylvania been so thor oughly alive to and in touch with bcth state and national Issues, and it is of the utmost importance, in the light of these facts, that Republicans should see a reunion realized. As for j the gubernatorial situation. I am sure it will gradually develop to the satis faction of all before the May pri maries." Discussing the suffrage and prohibition amendments, the Senator said: "Of course, the Governor has noth ing to do with either the passage or rejection of these proposals. Those are questions for the Legislature. But 1 may add to that, however, that 1 voted to submit the question to the people in 1913. As a matter of fact, the tlnal vote was deferred until I could return to the Senate and cast a favorable vote. "For some time illness had kept me from Harrisburg. 1 am confident that the next Legislature will accu rately reflect the desires and senti ments of the people. The people are in closej touch with public affairs than ever before and I expect that the men who go to the next Legisla ture will be of that class of public men who are close to the people." Los Angeles Realizes SIOO a Day From the Sale of City Garbage According to an Internting division made by C. O. Bartlett, a Cleveland engineer, our American cities are as the wise and unwise Virgins, for eonie of them recover value from their garbage by modern reclama tion methods, while others dispose of garbage by burning or dumping. In a letter to the Manufacturers' Record, Mr. Barlett states that Los Angeles, under a contract v.-ith a corporation, receives 51 cents a ton for all its garbage, averaging about SIOO a day for the last three years. Fertilizer worth sl2 to sls a ton, and valuable for Its potash, ammon ia, and lime phosphate, is used on I the orange groves around the Mty while the grease recovered is sold to a Los Angeles soap maker and made up into a special soap that fir>ds ready sale In Mexico. Garbage grease Is one of the chief sources of glycerine, containing 12 per cent, and the war demand for glycerine has caused the price of garbage grease to increase from 4 to 12 cents a pound. San Francisco burns its garbige, and in doing so destroys SSOO a day in precious values, and many othrr American cities and towns are the same. NO PARDONS FOR COMMUTED MEN Board Declines to Go Into Arguments of Reading Law yer; Decisions Given— The State Board of Pardons last night announced that It had refused to grant pardons to William Web ber, Berks, and James Salerno, Ly coming, who had been granted com mutation from death sentences some years ago and refused pardons be fore. The Webber case attracted milch attention as the argument was made that because the Board had commuted the man It had therefore made the case second degree mur der and the prisoner having been In jail since 1894 was entitled to be freed under a second degree sen tence. Louis di Berardino, Philadelphia, who shot Judge Monaghan, was held under advisement as the judge has not been heard from. Recommended Roy Kirkwood, arson. Armstrong; Joseph Catalano, et al, throwing explosives, York; Archie Clay, larceny, Adams; Dom iniclc Regina, manslaughter, Lu zerne. Refused Anthony Stefankaicz, manslaughter, Schuylkill: David W. Rotlienseis, conspiracy, Berks; Tony Siangan!, robbery, Philadel phia; Fioravante Trignano, second degree murder, Delaware; William Webber, murder, commuted, Berks; James Salerno, murder, commuted, Lycoming; John Potash, adultery, Cambria; Frank Scott and William Zane, burglary, Y'ork; Joseph Lower, felonious entry, Montgomery; John Pearson, entering. Berks; Charles Wettcrs, et al, felonious entry, Leb anon.- Rehearing refused Calogero Strazzerl, second degree murder, Berks; August Stoquart, entering, Wayne. Continued or held under advise ment —Louis di Berardino, assault with intent to kill, Philadelphia; Adolph Blau, embezzlement, Lacka wanna; Louis Wagner, manslaughter, Cambria; Charles Smith, larceny, Montgomery; Sam DeGioio, Antonio Guarduano, second degree murder, Huntingdon: Pasquale Marotto, manslaughter, Bedford. PI.AX SEItVICE TAI.KS "Service Talks," to increase the ef ficiency of the street car service in the city, will appear in small frames in the street cars shortly. The plan was originated by men in the employ of the company, who felt they had suggestions to erlTe* jo the public re garding the service. MORE WANT NAVAI, PI.ACE More boys have given their names as candidates for the Uiiited States Junior Naval Reserve, to be trained at Camp Daniels, West Palm Beach, Fla. The boys are; Arthur Fogle, Lester 'ShuKz. Harry Conner, Samuel E. Arch. Fred Murray. Forrest Ilownev and Robert N. Freeburn. HXRRISBURG TELEGRAPH MESS KITS FOR NEW COMPANIES ) Adjutant General Buys Them For the Reserve Militia Organizations Promptly t ) Contracts havo V\\\ Adjutant General KV\\\o (s Beary nnd deliv. eries will begin ? equipping the new Pennsylvania Re- I! II servo Militia with • aluminum mess 1 SrJ— ——__J utensils and • to ' Provide canteens - o{ the . same meta | , on ihe Lnited States Army model. 5 In addition to furnishing individual • mess tequipment the state is buying company mess outfits for camp ser j \ice which will be packed in sult s able wooden boxes. In years gone by each company provided its own | company mess utensils but the state ; purchases will provide uniform type, j Deliveries of the overcoats for the Militia men have started by the con . t ra ctors and they are being assem bled for Issue to the new organiza tions and the manufacture of haver , sacks Is under way at the state ar i senal, the state having its own ma : terlals and experienced force of • workers. t Governor to Follow Up—Governor , Brumbaugh is planning to follow up liis letter to Pennsylvania represen . tatives in Congress urging that some provision should be made for pro -1 tecting the state against loss of such a large part of its revenue as is rep resented by the taxation on railroads. • £ Koin & into the subject and shall keep in close touch. I can scarcely believe that the railroads will be taken over absolutely by the Federal Government without some ; Provision being made to care for the ( states," said the Governor. , Taps Want to Know —Details of Pennsylvania factory inspection, c f? sa fety and other activities or the State Department of Labor and Industry havo been asked of the Department by the Bureau of Inspec tion of the Japanese Department of Agriculture and Commerce. Some reports reached Tokio and further publications are now asked. More Policemen—Governor Brum baugh has named 150 more volun teer policemen for Allegheny coun ty and seventy-five for Blair. Rati Was Away—Jacob H. Rau, who has complained against refusal of the Luzerne Gas and Electric Co., to build a line to his summer cot tage at Shavertown, failed to appear at the time set for his hearing yes terday before Commissioner Rilling. At Pottsville—Members of the state Compensation Board are sit ting at Pottsville to-day to clear the dockets of appeals from that section. Case to lie Nettled. The Public service Commission 10-day continued hearings scheduled in complaints against alleged overcrowded trains be tween Bethiehem'and adjoining places, and it was stated that there was a possibility that the interested parties would reach a settlement. Other rail road complaints are being studied with a view to facilitating adjust ments. Police Named. Governor Brum baugh has named members of the vol unteer state police force for several counties the last few days. The com missions are being sent out and su perintendents requested to complete details of the system for summoning men in event of necessity arising. Appeal Dismissed. The State Compensation Commission has dis missed the appeal in the case of Shoenfeldt vs. Hatch, Altoona, because the defendant failed to make any ap pearance at the hearing fixed. Uriels Filed.—The briefs were filed to-day in behalf of the Brotherhood of Kailroad Trainmen in the full crew cases pending before the Public Ser vice Commission. A date for argu ment will be fixed shortly. Farmer Places Snake In Field; Ask Public Not to Disturb Him James H. Collins says in a bulle tin just issued by the public Infor mation bureau of the United States Food Administration: "A Kansas farmer recently print ed the following advertisement in a newspaper: " 'Notice —I have put a bull snake In my alfalfa field north of town to catch the gophers. Please do not bother him or shoot at him, as he is a good, well-behaved snake*and harmless except to gophers and mice.' "Whereupon eastern newspapers clipped it as a piece of humor. "But there is a very definite food saving idea here. All over the country we have harmless snakes, capable of rendering the utmost service, provided they are left alone. But even country people find it dif ficult to let harmless snakes follow unmolested, a snake's legitimate business. "There is a certain big black snake throughout the East common in fields and around farmhouses. Ho Is not only harmless, but whenever one sees him about the premises he is diligently at work catching mice or cleaning up refuse. But he looks deadly enough to the inexperienced eye, and, moreover, has an unfortu nate curiosity. When he hears a horse coming down a field row hitched to a cultivator, guided by a boy, his natural desire to know what is coming leads him to raise a quarter of his length from the ground and take a look, and nine times in ten the boy stops the horse and virtuously slaughters Mr. Snake, thus killing a mouser capable of catching far more rodents th*n any tabby cat. "It is the same with hawks and owls. The owner of a flock of nens sees an enormous hawk sailing over ti-.e Kunyuid and brin it dov.'i with a rifle, believing that he has destroyed an enemy. "Likewise with owls, which are most persistent destroyers of small animals harmful to crops and food stuffs. There was a campaign of owl and hawk killing through the East some years ago, which went far f-ncugh to upset the balance of na ture locally and bring on a perfect plague of mice. When disease re iduced the number of coyotes in the Northwest, some years ai,o, the farmers' joy at what they considered relief from a pest was soon turned Into alarm, as a plague of jackrab -1 its and gophers followed, the chief food of the coyote. "If the snakes, owls and hawks were able to write and vote they would probably undertake a 'cam paign of education' on their own be half for bette- public understanding or seek prote-Mve laws in Congress' As man is the only writing and vot ing animal, it is clearly his duty to understand the snake 9, owls "and hawks. With understanding will come intelligent protection." Trafalgar Square Heart v of British Empire Trafalgar Square has been called the heart of the British empire, the most truly English spot in London. It is not of Leicester Square or of Piccadilly that the London Tommy dreams, but of Trafalgar Square with the statue of Nelson in the center. The statue on the slender column is England's best loved hero. The fig ure of Nelson, three times the natural size, is reared 145 feet in the air with | " The Lm Store " "Always I Do you keep Manhattan shirts? No—We sell them I for this is the "Live Store" where we sell great quantities of "Manhattans" | I if you want to enjoy wearing perfect i fitting shirts come here and choose from our immense stock of high grade where every shirt in our entire stock is reduced dur ing this semi-annual - ■ . "Shirt Sale" j I "Manchester" "Bates-Street" "Manhattans" § I All SI.OO "Shirts" ... 79c 1 All $1.50 "Shirts" . . . $1.19 I All $1.85 "Shirts" . . . $1.59 All $2.50 "Shirts" . . . $1.89 All $3.50 "Shirts" . . . $2.89 All $5.00 "Shirts" . . . $3.89 All $5.85 "Shirts" . . . $4.89 All $6.85 "Shirts" . . . $5.89 All $7.85 "Shirts" ... $6.89 I All $8.85 "Shirts" . . . $7.89 1 rg I January Clothing Reductions I f§ All $15:22 Suits and Overcoats All $20:2? Suits and Overcoats B I $13.50 $17.50 I 1 All $25:2? Suits and Overcoats All $30:22 Suits and Overcoats | $22.50 $26.50 ■ 304 SmL PA> Landseer's four lions of bronze at the base. Many of the most important build ings of the city are grouped around the Square. The National Gallery, with its art collection faces the Nel son column. The collection was be gun in 1824 and is one of the finest in the world. In the upper part ot the Square is the Church of Saint Marins-in-the-Field, where Nell Qwyn lies burled. This last bit of informa tion is apt to interest the visitor more than the fact that Bacon was christened at the church's altar. The Column stands at the crossing of some of the most famous streets in London. "Charles the First marched down Whitehall to his execution. The Strand, branching from the Square, Is January' 17, i9is. the main artery of the city a* well as the favorite meeting place of the people. Bustling, /noisy, crowded, fondly believed by Londoners to be broad, it Is the busiest street In the empire. All of the principal shops and many oft the hotels are on this street. Before the war Trafalgar Square was the favorite meetingplace of the sufTragets. The lions at the column's foot were frequently the platform from which Mrs. Pankhurst and hor daughters addressed the crowds of London. The shops along the Strand were frequently given the attention of militant workers, with the result that for a long while most of their windows were boarded and barred. 11 GOOD BLOOD' "Blood will tell" Blotches and blemishes, like murder, will out, unless the blood is kept pure. Its purity is restored and protected by the faithful use of BEECHAM'S PILLS t\ tsrsul Sale eI Air Medldna In the World. Sold narwbttc, la boiai, 10c., 25c.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers