THE GLOBE Think—have you finished your Christmas Shopping—Your friends have. THE GLOBE The Gold in the Air Hpl!* Suggests an Overcoat From The Globe Whether you buy for yourself or whether ""she" buys for you an Overcoat coining from THE GLOBE will sjl prove a sensible, practical useful article. 'i£gt\ I Our tremendous assortment of styles and ( luahty-suregi % fabrics makes it easy for anybody to select an Overcoat that will give several seasons' satisfactory service. , Form-fitting Overcoats Far-collar Overcoats I T Loose-boxy Overcoats Smart Ulsterettes I I Storm Ulsters - Montagnac Overcoats fc b Far-Lined Overcoats Chinchilla Ulsters r If- Military Style Overcoats Chauffeurs Overcoats L ' *25 *25 *3O *35 *4O to *lOO Jg^k Our Sale of Silk Shirts at $t),45 Adds Another Notch to Our "ffi ~ Envious Record of Value-Giving It's a timely sale, too —hundreds of dozens of SILK and_ $5.00 FIBRE SILK SHIRTS right in time for Christmas buying. y V WK" " It's a sale that will make men who wear them and women who buy VdiU€S \Y\VwC \ / shirts for men wonder how such remarkable values are possible up der present conditions. 1 On account of the extremely low price None charged None sent C. O. D. None on approval. Gift Things Sure to Please "Him M We're splendidly ready to serve you with the greatest assortments of sensible, practi cal, wearable gift things for men we've ever shown. Among them are— Bath Robes— House Coats— — You can just bet THE GLOBE A House Coat brings your ZtoflTx |wl Bath Robe will please "him." Beau- thoughtfulness to "his" mind every /j Pjy l/V pattern blanket robes corded t ' me he . we , ars jt ; Handsome House ■ lum~ /awl „.;.i ... i • it Coats in duo-tone effects shawl / edges - with buttons and girdles - col , ar and peaked , , mo( , cls _ gIT r£/ V- wonderful colorings including the braided or silk cprd edged. $6.50 * fIT H new army shade khaki. $5.00 to to $2O. Exceptional vahics at 1/Jk Vj p 'jjPj" $12.50. Extra Special values at $8.50. . liXft ? " 50 * Of*. tu tn Mackinaws— Mufflers— THE GLOBE is the Harrisburg Beautiful Silk and Silk Knitted home for the famous bigger-than- W%k\ 0- Mufflers and Reefers in a wonderful the-weather Patrick Mackinaws. A fflgg|HS| \ vj\ range of attractive designs and col- Mackinaw will surely make a hit /\1 y ors. $1.75 to $7.50. ' with the outdoors fellow. Plain and I it Khaki knit Mufflers with infantry KgSP&Sr Lj\ and cavalry borders are very special- Patrick Mackinaws, $2O. 1. w* ly priced at $3.50. Other Mackinaws, $12.50 up. Fancy V ests— Sweaters A-y t~\ c T— .... Every man has use for a Sweater One of our Fancv \ ests will be a „•' c . u j . -r —wßyv. J —get it at Sweater Headquarters if \ v. e!come change for him makes y OU want to satisfy "Jiim."' Slip / v a m an feel as though he dons a whole overs Y-necks military button- f KafatSaji new outfit. Many attractive styles in to-neck and coat styles all weaves str 'pes atu l plain effects—also Even- a " college, khaki and plain colors. , . ,n £ Dress \'csts in white silk and Men's Sweaters, $5.00 to $lB.OO. W otlier fabrics. Splendid values at Boys' Sweaters, $3.50 to $lO.OO. |Ym $3.50 to $7.50. jt/ffr. Ni{*ht Shirts and Hosiery—. Pajamas- /ft nk L Where is the man who cannot ap- Warm, comfy Night Shirts and LI ljfv\llj imV ! ■ preciate an attractive holiday box of Pajamas are always acceptable gifts ' ff ' ft] socks - lisle - silk or woolen- for men ~ one -piccc Pajamas are the W J 'HOLEPROOF and other famous OuUngTbnnel makes, including MON I TO, to $2.00. Pajamas, $2.00 to to $1.50 per pair. $5.00. v The Globe is the Store to Buy Xmas Gifts That W ill Make Your Boy Happy Ask Ls About Our Thrift Stamp Plan A Mackinaw— A New Suit— Make it a J'atrick Mackinaw From THE GLOBE will be a O r Any of These they're best made of the famous gift that will make this Christmas Sensible Bovs' Gifts • tli 1 ' \ all-wool Patrick cloth plain and one long to be remembered □nw 4 ~0 p'aid effects. matchless suits for style and serv- Bath Robes Patrick Mackinaws, $lB.OO. ict. $lO to $3O Neckwear Other Mackinaws, $7.50 up. . g-~y - Pajamas 'IV\ \ l'\ A f\ 4. A Gorduroy Suit— * Blouse Waists GGJLL- J An LlVCrCOat""" No boy is "easy" on his clothes Stockings M" A good, warm, military style —for school or knock-about THE Hats If HI Overcoat will make any boy happy GLOBE CORDUROY SUITS arc Belts * —all sizes. $lO to $3O without equal. s7.£o to $15.00 J * THE GLOBE "FRIDAY EVENING, 1 iLAHJRISBURG TELEGRSPfI TWENTY MILES OF SNOW FENCES Highway Department Plans Call For an Elaborate AlllO ut of Work 1 The state of \.\* t /'J J' om,B - vlvani:l will InSNNa A miles of snow t fences along its . mnin highways I when the pro- I * ram outlined by ( "j ] eorfre 1!ilc8 ' f 1 "h' ® B ' ° ll 0 r 'h - tenance and snow removal, i conpleted> Several miles of these fences have been tin -1 ished and plans have been made for j others. Sonic of the stretches along tho Lincoln Highway which gave trouble last winter have been lined ith the fences and the others are ' being locatod in sections along other > roads where the snowstorms have j blocked traffic. The bulk of the , fence® will be erected where it has been tound that the outlay for con struction is cheaper than the cost 1 ol labor and horses in moving snow in winter to keep roads bpcrt. Tractors wiit be tried out for snow removal for the first time. Last winter tho Lincoln Highway as kept open by trucks which drag ged tho big plows. The State Coun cil ol National Defense will turn over several of the state's biggest tractors for the use or the State Highway Department. To Discuss Plans Governor Brumbaugh will preside at the meeting ot the State Armory Board when it meets here Tuesday to dis cusk plans and specifications for the four new armory buildings. A building program for tlie next two years will be discussed and recoin mendattons made for the Legislature ! early in the new year. Pardon Itonrd Several first degree murder cases will probably lie listed tor the December meeting ol ihe State Hoard or Pardons io be ■ held just a week before Christmas. A large list is being prepared for the meeting which will be the final , session of tlie board us at present | constituted. Big Conferences—A series of im- I poriant conferences in regard to I street railway and other cases pend- I ln r kciore the Public Service Com • mmsion will begin in Pittsburgh to i day. No hearings are being held confern?. XCePt al Pitt - sbul 'fi-h and the conferences on procedure will prob ; ably last until to-morrow night, i „ J' 1 ® Problems— Chief Sew of the Department of i Mines, and Deputy Frank Hall are i iiT burgh this week meeting I *'A , n h n he '-numinous inspectors and attending the sessions of the Amer ican Mining Institute. Mr. Button | made an address at the supper : g " en by the institute, Wednesday Split Allies at Peace Table Germany's Last Hope Germany's well-known cleverness lias worked out a grand plan that causes her to look for ward to the future with confidence. She hopes to achieve at the Peace Conference what four years of the sword have not been able to get for her. Secrecy being essential, the whole scheme with typical Teuton finesse is loudly trumpeted through the German press and proclaimed from the rostrum, so that if we are not warned at least it is not their fault. It seems as usual that Germany is staking her all 011 one throw of the dice and this time the little game is to cause dissension among the Allies at the Peace Table and particularly between America and Britain. In THE LITERARY DIGEST this week —December 7th—there is a very striking article consisting of translations from the German press showing how Germany hopes to gam big advan tages when America and the Entente "start-to squabble among themselves." Among other articles of timely interest in this number of "The Digest" are: Remobilizing Industry For Peace Conditions When the Army Will Return and How Our Soldiers Will Be Absorbed Into Industrial Life Why Mr. McAdoo Resigns The End of the German Navy Breakers Ahead For the League of Nations How Canada Handles Her Disabled Soldiers " A Bridge That Works Like a Kite Nature's Primal War Germany's Aerial Prophet The Greeks in America (Prepared by U. S. Bureau of Education) Seeing the "Mote" and Forgetting the "Beam" The War's Cost in Human Lives Many Fine Illustrations, Including Humorous Cartoons and Half-tone Portraits Your Best Way to Follow the Work of the Peace Conference The eyes and hopes of the entire world are to-day centered upon Paris, whither the delegates of the vari ous nations are journeying to the Peace Conference which is to remold Europe and decide, perhaps for centuries to come, the destinies of our planet. The news that comes forth to the waiting millions from the historic halls of Versailles will be in many ways the most important evej published in its far-reaching December 7th N mber on Sale To-day—All News-dealers—lo Cents. T The TF\e - j ifc^ , is*lT v V 8 /ffißi jJL | "" Vr H * \ j JfUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publisher! of the Famou NEW Standard Dictionary). NEW YORK evening, at the Fort Pitt Hotel. The sudden return to peace conditions has to some degree disturbed the mining industry, as the operators realize that they will soon be called upon to meet the old-time compe tition in disposing of their output. This requires quick and decisive ad justment of the methods that have prevailed under the war program. The situation is further complicat ed by the labor supply. The release of thousands of miners from the service and the cessation of opera! tlons by tho many small wagon mines scattered over the bitumi nous region, will, perhaps, make labor plentiful and may precipitate trouble regarding -the wage ques tion. To Start Early —The papers are now being prepared for the test suit to be launched by Walter 11. Gaither to test the legality of the creation or the .War Service Bureau by the State Council of National Defense and it inuy be started within a week, al though it is also possible that it may wait until January. The State Coun cil of National Defense does not in tend to close up all of its activities on January 1 by any means notwith standing. statements to the contrary. Governor to Spcnk Governor Brumbaugh is on his way to New York to attend the meeting of the committee of fifteen arranged by the United States authorities to dtscuss Immigration and educational matters. To-morrow he will attend n dinner tobe given to him in Philadelphia by his staff and on Monday will speak in the Second Presbyterian Church, of Newark, N. J., under auspices of the Presbyterian Union. BupitiueNkmcn—The Public Ledger to-day says that Governor-elect Sproul plans big businessmen for the Insurance and Banking Departments. The identity of the men to fill these toles which has been much predicted all over the state, is not disclosed. Tuxtiit Boomed —Ex-Senator Ernest U Tustin, well-known here, is being strongly boomed for mayor of Phila delphia. Tenehers Meeting Some of the most prominent men in the state, in cluding Stuart, E. T. Stotesbury and others active in af fairs will speak at the mass meeting in behalf of the teachers' salary in crease bill to-night in Philadelphia. Other meetings will be held in other places. Draft History —Final reports and histories of the operation of the draft in each of the 282 districts of Penn sylvania as compiled by the members of local draft boards will be perma nently filed in the State Library, ac cording to an announcement made here to-day by Major W. G. .Murdoch, the chief draft otticcr. It has been suggested that the members of local boards in assembling their data in clude newspaper extracts and photo graphs and that J;very line of activity connected with the draft, legal and medical advisory, board of instruc t'on and organizations and commit tees which cared for welfare of draft ed men be given notice. "Too great modesty may result in an injustice being done to the board's community" said Major Murdock in discussing the r DECEMBER 6,1918, ** idea of having the history of the draft in each district made up by the men in charge of the operation of thc.se-l loctlve service law. To Shorn Vegetables Vegetable growers of the state have named a committee to arrange for a state wide vegetable show at the time (he state farm products exhibition is held here in January under state auspices. The committee in charge consists of S. Herbert Starkey, Bustleton; J. R. Bechtel, State College, and L. H. Hart man, Etters. Tngs Away Ahead Shipments of "Brother Feels Sick! He * •< . j ■ % ' VI"• I Wants a Candy Cascaret n To Mothers! > You will avoid worry and troubla by giving your children Cascarets instead of nasty Castor Oil, Calomel and Pills. Children look upon Cascarets as Candy and never refuse them even when sick, bilious, feverish, constipated. Besides Cascarets cost only 10 cents . box. Jhb - Nothing else works the bile, sojir fermentations and poisons from a child's tender stomach, liver and bowetrjpke good old harmless Cascarets. They never gripe, never injure, never disappoint '/he worried mother. Give Cascarets to children aged one year and upwards. Directions on each 10 cent boxt Htf WE CAN ijif ENGRAVE YOUR ™ Holiday Greetings Name Cards or your Stationery jsp Tlie Telegraph Printing Co., KJJSSfIJJS ggg Bolsheviki Mutterings Heard Belgium's Troubles Not Yet Over N Saving Coal With Heat Is Influenza a Chinese Plague? Maeterlinck's New Plan For Picking a Wife Lore of the Chanteya Changing Heads of the Mormon Church Wilhelm's Sacrilege Avenged News of Industry and Finance The Best of the Current Poetry effect upon humanity at large. This news will be re ported fully and impartially from week to week bv THE LITERARY DIGEST, with the views of noted authorities of all shades of opinion, so that the readers of the world's greatest news-weekly may have the best possible opportunity of forming accurate judgments as to the decisions handed down. If you wish to keep in intimate touch with these great events read "The Digest." 1019 automobile lloenee tare bare I gone ahead of the shipments In the ■ first week of the shipping period of last year according to figures at the State Highway Department. At the close of business on December ♦ last year 12,870 pneumatic tired tags had been sent out and on the: same day this year 14,549. Almost I 100 more solid tired tags have also been issued. The receipts from ap plications for new year tags have j thus far amounted to $216,000 or $B7,- j 500 more thun for the same date lastf year. 17
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers