WEST SHORE NEWS RECEPTION FOR MEMBERS Enola, Pa., Feb. I.—At the weekly meeting of Chapter No. 7 of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Women's Di vision For War Relief, a report of the committee which had charge of the benefit concert given in the Sum mit street school auditorium on Tuesday evening was made. More than S9O was cleared by the concert. This money will be used to purchase material for sewing articles for the soldiers. A reception for the new members secured in the drive last month will be held in the Y. M. C. A. on Febru ary 22. During the campaign for •nembers the chapter secured almost 150 new members. Plans for hold ing a box social in March were also discussed at yesterday's meeting. Your Best Asset A Clear Skin Cared for By CuticuraSoap ■i^————aw^—B wBTOh-aroum'M mmm THE GLOBE THE GLOBE I Many Men Have Heeded My Advice The earlier part of the week, in a personal message to men, I admonished you to supply your clothing needs NOW—not only for present use. but also to take care of your future requirements. Our One Thousand Suit and Overcoat Campaign offers the opportunity. Clothing next Fall will be at least 35 per cent, higher. Naturally you are asking why do we REDUCE prices in the face of these abnormal conditions? Our answer is, that, while we realize that it would pay us to carry the goods over, it is decidedly against our business policy, and we feel that we would not be playing fair with you. We prefer at this time to clean up our stocks and give our customers the benefit of RE DUCED PRICES, and I know that it will pay in the end. Very sincerely yours, • 1 THE WEATHER: Jr H l^\rZor r ,0 - ,, ay: sat,m,a> To-day the Clock Says 702 Getting More For Their Money Is What Hundreds of Men Are Doing In JHSOft THE GLOBE'S One Thousand Suit and Overcoat Campaign Getting more by a big margin in quality~in style -in service. These prices tell why we we are 'jf9 constantly busy. ' J | . $15.00 Suits and. Overcoats Are - $11.75 ■ ■! J! SIB.OO Suits and Overcoats Aye -$13.75 if #3 . S2O & $22.50 Suits Sc Overcoats Are $16.75 171' i $25.00 Suits and Overcoats Are -$19.75 /IS | $30.00 Suits and Overcoats Are -$24.75 - '/ I f '• I $35.00 Suits and Overcoats Are -$28.50 / fei • $40.00 Suits and Overcoats Are -$32.50 o** I rn inr==nnf=jini im-t mi===ini _ini inr mr==ini ;nrj Ell im-^=inr==-nr== n !A Sale of Boys' Suits, Overcoats and I f i n Mu p - Go I j Macktaaws a, 6.951 |-60 $8.50 and SIO.OO I J For $2.00 Values Values □ 0 jj \ THE SUITS Smart styles in Nobby „ - J T I pf \ Mixtures-and Blue Serges—nearly all sizes. I I! 53.00 lTats.#2.4."> ,i ] THE OVERCOATS Snappy belted! | $4.00 Hats, #1.13 JWW l\> J models of rough shaggy and soft finish fab- |54.50 Hats,s3.6s ' I 3 s) b h V — r ' cs —sizes to 16. M 0 T1 ... . _ e & W THE MACKINAWS—Rich plaid fabrics I j ats ' * fl U V W in shawl and convertible collar styles. -'lll 10 All KedUCed Boys'sl.so Corduroy Knee Pants. nj I')!! f!'-n apS r °j UC? l !° i/nn I I 2 Speci.i to-morrow at... ijti.H) | |A;; gjgg £ ::::::: M f - □ 3DEE ... 1 □ El.: .I□ I - ff, ■.,JO\ - E3□ i.-rr-SEl□ CScrr-r-iHErr**--'ißu:ir■ i□ \■arrr-3□ (f ■ ■ -I3□ GS=s=jP nr- rinr=rinr==nnr-———l ni I Shirts, Shirts, Values to $1.50 ! I die S For So '" 1 D A special lot of shirts—odds and ends or | || Buy a Smileage Book forffl li broken lots of beautitul percale and madras W ■ | 1 "Him' : —sl.oo and $5.00. | —stripes arid plain patterns —every shirt a m | -= j bargain. | | And Thrift Stamps Too—2sc | ru==im '■■'l'M—innr==3Jniif=nnr=a=jrini-. .inuwani mi——ini ...... innß □ iL. i.. imasanrarasaßirirsgcsriin THE GLOBE FRIDAY EVENING, ENOI.A BOY IN FRANCE Enola, Pa., Feb. I.—Word reached here yesterday of the safe arrival of another Enola boy in France. He is Arthur C. Wright, formerly employ ed as an extra yard brakeman in the : local yards. Wright enlisted in the railroad engineer regiment last fall and after training at Rockford, 111., sailed for France. With the arrival] of young Wright in France thisj makes the sixth local boy to land on foreign soil. One of them has been! fighting in the Canadian army for, more than a year. WOMAN IIAS SCARLET FEVER New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. I. Mrs. Marzorf and little on. who live near the clubhouse along the Yellow Breeches creek, are ill with scarlet fever. Mrs. Marzorr is the mother of four children. ♦ SCHOOIj TEACHER ILJj New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. 1. — Miss Elizabeth Kunkle, teacher of the primary school of Bellavista, is ill at her home in Twelfth street. The school is closed until Miss Kun kle recovers. LEUOYNE RED CROSS SOCIAL Lemojue, Feb. 1. lmmediate need of funds to conduct the work of the Lemoyne Red Cross Auxiliary has prompted officers to hold a so cial evening- of games. Every mem ber is needed to make the affair a success. Residents having small ta bles and games are requested to send them to the auditorium of the West Shore Bakery not later than Tuesday morning. BIRIAIi OF ROBERT M'IVOR New Cumberland, Pa.. Feb. 1. —On Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock fu neral services will be held for Rob ert Mclvor at his late home in Bridge street. The Rev. T. §. Wilcox, pastor of Baugjjman Memorial Methodist Church, will officiate. Burial at Mt. Olivet cemetery. STABLE ROOF COIiIiAPSES New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. I. On account of the heavy snow and ice, part of the roof of Cohen's livery stable was broken. None of the I horses was injured. QUARTERLY CONFERENCE New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. 1. — i Quarterly conference was held in Baughman Memorial Methodist j Church on Tuesday evening. Dr. M. | E. Swartz. superintendent of Central j Pennsylvania Conference, had charge. He and Mrs. Swartz were 'guests of the Rev. and Mrs. T. S. Wilcox at the parsonage. HAHHI9BURG TELEGRAPH! YARD FIREMAN SCALDED Enola, Pa., Feb. I.—George Holmes, of West Falrvlew, a fireman in the local yards, was painfully scalded about the face and eyes while at work last evening. Holmes was eating his lunch on the engine and had a cofTee pot on the locomotive getting hot. The coffee pot explod ed, throwing the hot liquid over him. WEST SHORE PERSONALS Mr. and Airs. H. S. Reigle, who have been visiting relatives at Day ton, Ohio, have returned to their home at New Cumberland. S. W. Wilcox, of Baltimore, who was here attending a meeting of the various railroad companies for the transfer of the next draft, as a rep l resentative of the Baltimore and I Ohio railroad, was a guest of his brother, the Kev. Dr.- T. S. Wilcox, at ! the Methodist parsonage this week. . MEN S BIBLE CLASS SOCIAI, Enola, Pa.. Feb. 1. —Plans for i holding a social in the church on February 22 were made at a meeting | of the Men's Adult Bible class of the St. Matthew's Reformed Sunday school held last night. The proceed-- will go toward-the Easter offering of the class. Another meeting will be held next Wednesday evening at the home of G. A. Yeager, president. BROOM PRICES MUCH TOO HIGH; SELLERS BLAMED Housewives Are Paying Too Much Profit, Snvs Philadelphia, Pa. The "high cost of cleanliness" is laid directly t.t the door of the retailer by Super intendent Frederick Mills, of the Pennsylvania Working Home for Blind Men, at 3518 Lancaster ave nue, who declared that housewives paying ninety cents and a dollar for I rooms are paying too much to the dealer. ' • Mr. Mills is presiding over a con vention of Superintendents of Work ing Homes for Blind Men, which has for its object the standardizing of broom production throughout the United States. Once Upon a Time i There was a time—before the war , —when the housewife's common weapon of health and defense could ' be purchased for twenty-five and I thirty-five cents. These same classes 1 of brooms are being sold at ninety cents and one dollar, respectively, which has caused many complaints. 1 When asked the cause for the air plnmng prices, Mr. Mills said: , "We used to buy broomroin for 589 and S9O per ton. The drought 1 j ear before last, however, cut the t prediction in half, and the quality ( wr.s interior. Then the price went . up to SIOO. It has since gone to 5250. the price we paid last year. ' "Handles, because of the great demand for lumber, have jumped . from S2O to s3s' per 1,000; wire, from 3% to 6V4 cents per pound; 1 linen twine, from 28 to 65 and 70 i cents per pound, and laboj- has in- , creased forty per cent. The cost in , production, therefore, has increased , from 100 to 150 per cent. ( 75 Cents a Fair Price "We now actually sell brooms at ( $7.25 per dozen, or about 60 cents ( each to the retailer. When the con- . sumer pays 90 cents she is paying , an exorbitant price. Seventy-flvo - cents is a fair price to pay. , "A good broom gives more value . than any other household commod- ! ity, compared with its cost. One . broom properly cared for, will last six months; two brooms, used o.'.- , t< mutely, will last a year and a hair. The housewife must learn to con serve her brooms by standing them on the handles or hanging them on the wall." The Pennsylvania home is the fourth largest broom shop in tne world and employs 116 blind men, whose earnings last year aggregated s.*!.r,TaS. .-Sixty-six per cent, of the men me more than 50 years of age and twenty-five per cent, are mote than GO. Last year the plant used 500 tons of broom corn and manu factured 10,000 dozen brooms. Elev en thousand dozen brooms have been furnished to the Government .since April. Nature Fixes No Age „ Limit For Those Who Lire a Careful Life "Three score years and ten," tradition says, is the span of a hu man life. This must be divided into three periods to include prepara ftor, efficiency and decay, eacn pe riod lasting nearly twenty-five years. With the athlete, it is still more se- ! vere. Few men at thirty-five, it is I said, have the reserve vitality and endurarlce that they had at twenty - I five. Therefore the edict has Rotw | forth that at thirty-five the athlete: | must iet up in violent competitive work and gradually back out of the front ranks. But there is no scientific evidence to show that this is necessary, says Popular Science Monthly. The hu n'an Icdy is simply an assemblies cr cells, which must be kept active, without being overstrained and nourished without being overfed, in order that they may be able to re sist the attacks of microscopic ene mies which cause disease and decay. Under favorable conditions thes< colls will live indefinitely without showing signs of rtge or loss of vital ity. Therefore the conclusion is reached that the "three score years and ten" are not fixed by any* nat ural law, but rather by th? con ditions under which men live and by their personal habits. The ath letic champion, theh, who lives un- I Jer the best hygienic conditions and I observes the law of temperance In all things and at all times, should I be able to "sit tight" on his pedestal ! so long as ho desires. Miss Dorothy Dillon Shook ' Bride of Frederick Hinds Greencastel, Pa., Feb. I.—Mr. and i Mrs. D. E. Shook of East Baltimore | street, announce the marriage of | their daughter. Miss Dorothy Dil-' ] lon, to Frederick Hinds, of Philadel- j j phia. The wedding took place in j the Falling Spring Prenbytariim ! Parsonage at hamberbnrg on ; Thursday ond the ceremony was ! performed by the Rev. William L. !Mudge in the presence of the imme diate families of the bride and bride groom. After the ceremoiw Mr. and Mrs. Hinds left for Qormantcwn, ■ wher they will spend 'he winter. I Mrs. Hinds is one of CroencasUe's ; most talented musicians, and her services as a soprano soloist have been in great demand. For two year.-? she was the leading soloist in the Presbyterian Church of Hagers town, which position she resigned to accept a similar one in tho Falling Spring Presbyterian Church, Clu.in bersburg. Shorange and other citrus perfectlysuitedtorequire- white bread, meat and ' fruits an abundant supply ments of the patient's con- potatoes, is decidedly defi k, (P of rnostdelicateand whole- dition. Another class of cient invitnmines. Orange f i some of all food acids. The cases in which orange juice juice is needed to supple '• III' sugar of the orange, like is almost indispensable it ment these defective-diet- ■" itsacid, has the advantage found in those most un- ariea and might, with the ~" "*^= ? " that it is prepared for im- fortunate and suffering of greatest advantage, find a ORANGE SALAD mediate assimilation and mortals, the bottle-fed place on every table at requires no digestion. babies. least once a day." Send Today for this ■ Ask Your Dealer for Free Booklet Tree-ripened Seatd- Sealdsweet Fruit ( Booklet of 36 pages, sweet orates require The Florida Citnls Ex . ,g MAlfft i njFrr handsomely illustrated, but little if any change, a non-profit, co- If 1 ill, gives many other opinions nor need much be used operative organization of . <| —— | of famous health authori- with Sealdsweet growers, selects fine trrnts S;f - Hil tie# on citrus fruits and grapefruit-many per- . from carefully cultivated rIV-—. Tj| '2 contains numerous sons prefer them with groves. Your dealer has W~TF" I f ' recipes. Write for copy salt instead of sugar. Sealdsweet fruit, or will IjJl-ljw-*- . today—free on request. |_ J get it if you insist. ORAMGE MARMALADE . Florida Citrus Exchange Tampa, Ftacida FEBRUARY 1,1918. were made to-day by Westmoreland county commissioners for construc tion of ten miles of road in conjunc tion with the State Highway Depart ment, the sections to be on extensive ly traveled highways. Commissioner O'Nell announces to-day that he had also arranged for construction of roads on a "tlfty-llfty" basis with Youngwood and Ligonier. To Mt Tuesday —The Public Serv- Ico Commission will meet Tuesday to hear arguments and to act on mat ters in executive session. State People Held —Men connected with the state government are giv ing their help to the movement to have t.he national government revive the Schuylkill canal. State engineers havo made surveys and will tender their assistance, j Must Stand Trial Olovanbatista I Ferraro alias Rosso, who shot and I killed William Dunbar, a Pennsyl ! vanla supervisor, and former llar- I llsburger, will be sent to Cattaraugus j county, N. Y., for trial. Qovernor i Brumbaugh yesterday granted a re quisition for the sending of the man Troni Philadelphia where he ha'd pleaded guilty to manslaughter in another case. That will not prevent him from being tried in New \ork. Hruwn Investigate* —Attorney Gen eral Brown is in Philadelphia investi ; gating the charges made against ! District Appeal Board No. 2, by the Overbrook local draft board. The Governor's office has decided to take charge of the matter instead of send, ing the letter t.o Washington. fCtnn Complains—The borough of Etna has made complaint against the service and rates of the Pittsburgh Railways Company. SniuU'a In Demand —Small's legis lative handbook, which is now being sent out by the printing department, is In greater demand than ever. The supply on hand is being rapidly taken up by requisitions from legislators. Hubler Visits—lX. C. llubler, pres ident of the Scranton Chamber of Commerce, was a visitor to the Gov ernor's office yesterday. Mr. Hubler Is said to have been interested in the way the wind is blowing politically. O'Nell Speaker— Highway Commis sioner O'Nell will be the. speaker at the February luncheon of the State Society, next Wednesday. Ilr. Iloyer Speaks Chief Medical Inspector B. F. Royer, was the speak er at the lecture of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia last night, discussing menaces to health in Army Camps. Dr. Royer exam ! February Specials Rubbers Are Scarce—But We Are Here With the Goods !> Men's Best Grade Qfi r Ladies' Best Grade CQ. Men's One-Buckle djl QQ Rubbers Arctics, beat grade . . " ][ Boys' size CQ- Men's 4-Buckle 0O ACk !> > Arctics, best quality • • \U . . Misses' Rubbers, AQ - <| Men's and Boys' Storm Kins ! 11 to 2 "•'*- ;> <| Boots, black Ladies' High Heel Rubbers, ! X.adies* Cloth Rubbers, warm ; . '! sizes 2Vi to ACk~ I lined; high or low dj| 1Q 1 ijj *rJ7C , 1 heels w* • U ], |'l Men's Shoes —Best values to be had; 0 1 QQ