10 The Educator Shoe for Men and Boys Is Built to Conform to the Shape of the Natural Foot * U. S. >\rmy tests prove that 20 per cent, or more of bodily efficiency is lost through narrow, pointed shoes. Such shoes bend and crumple the bones, causing corns, callouses, ingrowing nails and falling arch—and in a short time the whole system is affected: A shoe, on the other hand, that is built to. conform to the shape of a natural foot without extra loo&eness, will permit the foot to grow as it should and it will correct bent bone troubles that have not gone too far. Such a shoe will restore energy. That shoe is the good-looking, roomy-toed Educator. Made for men, Women and boys. In tan, willow falf, gun metal, calf and black vici kid, blucher lace style, with wear-resisting oak leather soles. Your money back for the asking if a pair of Educator fails to give satisfaction. Price, $4.50 *5" Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor. Men's and Boys' Mackinaws at Clearaway Prices The mackinaw is a popular style of topcoat in fancy plaid patterns, and because Spring is fast Approaching we have reduced prices to hurry out the balance of our Winter stock. Men's mackinaws that were $6.50 ajid $7.50, Children's SI.OO sweaters in plain and fancy reduced to $5.00 weaves in white and colors; sizes 2 to 12 years, Boys' $3.98 mackinaws, reduced to .$1.98 Boys' $5.00 and $6.00 mackinaws, reduced to $3.98 Men's and women's SI.OO white coat, sweat r Knit Hoods and Skating ers - 50 * CTaOS Women's $2.98 and $3.98 white coat sweat- SI OS Tan, pink and green, with white stripes— ' ' * 50c caps reduced to 39£ Women's and children's white knit mufflers, 95c caps reduced to t-f Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Men's Store, Street Floor. Combination Serge and Satin Dresses Reduced The final clearance of winter dresses for women and misses occurs to-morrow, on the second floor. Exceptional values will be offered in combination satin and serge poplin and velvet. 918.50 velvet dresses in taupe and navy with trim- $18.50 navy poplin dresses, with satin waist and mlng of satin. Reduced to SIO.OO skirt; sizes 30, -II! and 44. Seduced to slo. oo $18.50 navy and black serge dresses, hound with $10.50 black serge Peter Thompson dresses; sizes black silk braid- sizes IX -M tu + 14 alld la - Eeduc ed to $(!.50 and $8.50 mack silk braid, sizes 18, .J4 and .18. Eeduced to $18.50 navy serge dresses with white braid trim s I 0.00 raing; size 14. Reduced to SIO.OO ifl' Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor. 8,000 OPEN BIG REVIVAL icaster Delegations March as Pre lude to Stough Campaign janeaster, Pa., March 1. —Lancaster nessed a remarkable religious de>m-; Bratiop petftenlay afternoon, the! test in its history, which occurred ;he tabernaclo built for the six-week ugh evangelistic campaign, which; ns next Sunday. The auditorium, h a seating capacity for 8,000, was raged. !reat delegations marched from ry co-operating church, hundreds of dren carrying small American flags, sne. A chorus of 1,500 voices led j singing. 'he meeting, preliminary to the cam- j ?n, was addressed by Billy Shannon I Miss I>ora Cain, of the Stough I ty, anl the Rev. R. A. Bawden and i ■ K. S. Snj'der, of Lancaster. j, UNITED STATES COAST GUARD CUTTER MCtiA WK MINES A WRECKED SCHOONER The wrecked five masted schooner ixabetb 'aimer wan mined off the nwick Island Shoals, at the en tice to Delaware Bay. by the (lted States coast guard cutter »bawk rhe work of mining the Palmer was Tied In a moderate easterly swell, ilch made the placing of the mines •Mdlngly difficult. Standard United ites Nary forty-nine pound guncotton nes were employed, singly and In n The' destruction of the spars I to be undertaken piecemeal. In ler to clear a way Into the submerged 1. Bliaabetb Palmer sank after she a In collision wltb the steamship ■hlngtonlan, of the Hawalian-Amer n line, on Japuary 26 As a result of «olllsion the schooner was very Uy damaged, and on the night ot JUDGES ANGER SALOON FOES Anti-Liquor Forces Threaten to Begin Impeachment Proceedings Middleburg, Pa., March I.—Alleg ing that Associate Judges J. Frank Keller and Joseph Hendricks, of Belins grove, exceeded their authority in granting four liquor licenses last Sat urday and overruling President Judge Albert W. Johnson, of Snyder county, the anti-saloon forces declare that im peachment proceedings will be insti tuted to oust the Judges from their office. After deliberating since February 12 on license applications from Beaver town, Beaver Springs, Shamokin Dam and Port Troverton, which were held up because of alleged violations of the liquor laws, the Associate Judges Satur day granted all four of the licenses over Judge Johnson's head. January 27 she went down, t News of the collision was receired by ' Captain G. L. Carden, of the Coast : t Guard cutter Mohawk, when he wad i -*" "- V- .. ' j *' 'v • - HARRISEURG MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 1, 1915. DOCTOR'S HOME BURNS Residence Valued at $20,000 Destroyed by Fire William sport, Pa., March I.—The large home of Dr. S. S. Koser, on Grampian boulevard, was totally de stroyed by fire of unknown origin early yesterday morning. Six persons, including the surgeon's family and servants, escaped from the burning structure in tiheir night clothes. The loss is albout $20,000. i.scape for two women down the stairway was cut off and they climbed to the porch roofs and gained the ground by means of ropes made of bed clothes. The lire was discovered by Dr. Koser when he arose early, and at that time had spread through the house. Jewels valued at $2,500 were lost. three hundred miles off the cost. When the Mohawk arrived where the :ollislon occurred. Captain Carden could 1 see no aigu of tile WaablesteohuL The I U. S. FOREST COMMISSION DOES MUCH WORK 11914 Annual Report Shows Many Improve ments Were Made for Farmers, Grazers and Timber Growers in All Sections of Country Washington, D. C., March 1. —Selling some' billion and a half board feet of timber and supervising the cutting on several thousand different areas, over seeing the grazing of more than 1,500,- 000 cattle and 7,500,000 sheep, and building more than 600 miles of road, 2,000 miles of trail, 3,000 miles of telephone line, and 700 miles of lire line are some of the things whieihi the government forest service did last year, as disclosed in the report by the chief forester for 1914. These activi ties were all on the national forests, which at present total about 1.85,000,- 000 acres. There is need, says the chief for ester, to increase the cut of timber from the national forests wherect a Pail or > Package and leed it all the time. / CONKET'S STARTING FOOD 4^Jj|y Ej is a wonderful aid in getting* v f » the chicks started. Feed it to every brood you t[r _ t^ch ♦ Harrisourg ana fivery^Heru waa lashing the masts of the wrecked schooner A boat crew from the Mohawk WM sent aboard the wreck and worked for honra trying to do something to save the schooner. As night approached the wares broke with greater fury over the wreck, and It was finally decided that the only thing to do was to destroy the schooner The wreck sank deeper In the water, and on the night of January 27 was tompletely submerged Captain Carden then aaked for authority to mine the wreck He proceeded to that work last Tuesday. The Mohawk, like other vessels of the Coast Guard Service. Is constantly engaged In patrolling th* United States coast to aid vessels In distress She was one of the first ships to respond to the call for help seat out by the steam- HUD Titanic A NEW CHEAP INSECTICIDE THAI WILL BANISH PESTS Para-dichlorobenzene, Non-inflammable and Inexpensive, Will Kill Moths, Flits, Roaches and Ants and In sects Attacking Stored drain Washington. D. C., March I. "Para-di-ehlorobenzene" is the for midable name of a chemical compound which has only recently been used as an insecticide, but which, in being non inflammable and- comparatively inex pensive, possesses advantages over oth er fumigants. The U. S. Department of Agriculture's new bulletin (No. 167) is entitled, " Para-diehlorotoen zene as an Insect Fumigant" and points out that the compound, although deadly to insects, is harmless to human beings under ordinary conditions and does not have an odor which clings to fabrics, as do many insecticides. Para-diefolorobenzcne is applied in most instances in the same manner as cam.phor and naphthalene. It is not, however, necessary to sprinkle it around in corners or over rugs and other material, as is often the case with camphor and naphthalene, but merely to expose a sufficient quantity in one or two open or partially closed receptacles, placed over, or higher, than the infested cases, goods and ma terial which require fumigation. Para-dichlorobenzene at the present time is sold in 5, 10, 25, 50 and 100- pound and barrel lots, the prices for which are as follows: 23 cents per pound, in 5, 10 and 25-pound lots; 18 cents per pound in 50-pound lots; 17 cents per pound, in 100-pound lots; 15 cents per pound, in barrel lots. If any considerable quantity is to be used, it is much bettor to purcitoase of somo wholesale druggist or direct from the manufacturers. Para-diehlorobenzene is applicable to many insect pests living under vari ous conditions and environment and, therefore, requires specilic methods of application, and, unlike carbon bisul pliid, it is at the present time used only indoors and in other places where its vapors can be closely confined. As there is a great variation in the tenac ity of life among, insects, the existing conditions Should be carefully noted before para-diehlorobenzene is applied. Beetles, such as the rice weevil, granary weevil, the confused flour beetle, the cadelle, the yellow meal worm and a few others less common, are particularly hard to kill when in the adult stage. The larvae of certain other mealworms are likewise found by experiment to possess great tenacity of life. It is, therefore, recommended that a proportionately larger amount of para-diehlorobenzene be used when combating these species. Moths, flies, roaches, ants and aphides are reaidily killed by para-diehlorobenzene when used in the ordinary strangeth, as pre viously recommended. The ae'tion of para-diehlorobenzene on insects is primarily upon their nerv ous systems This property is readily manifested when a motth is exposed to the vapors for a few seconds. It first diplays great excitement and uneasi ness, followed closely by spasmodic convulsions, and finally turns over on its hack. While in this position violent nervous and muscular reflex action is noticed until life is extinct. Para-diclilorobenzene is a colorless, crystalline substance, which evaporates very quickly as a vapor, if exposed. It is not advisable for sensitive -persons to remain for a long time in a closed room where para-dichlorobenzene is freely exposed, as the odor may cause annoyance. OH the other hand, para dichlonybenzeue can be used in closed or occasionally opened cupboards and even in sitting rooms without causiug any inconvenience whatsoever. BOY SCOUT CRUSHED TO DEATH Lumber Pile Falls On Him While Searching for Hickory Story Ashland, Pa., March 1. —Harold, the 14-year-old son of Charles Goyne, a wealthy foundry owner of this town, with a number of scout boy companions made a trip on the mountain late Sat urday afternoon, and on the way home IMaster Goyne left his companions, tell ing them he was going to look for a piece of hickory. As he failed to return to his home for his evening meal his parents became alarmed. The police were notified and a posse organized. Yesterday morning his mangled t>ody was found crushed to death under a pile of lumber in Wald ner's lumber yarn on the outskirts, where the boy evidently went in search of the piece of hickory when the lum ber fell upon him. ARREST FAKE EVANGELIST Boy of 10 Says He Had Easy Time Traveling Over Country Reading, Pa., March I —After travel ing through many States during the last, six months, earning a living by singing in moving picture blouses during the week and denouncing them and card playing and dancing when he played evangelist on Sun'Jiays, .lames Miller, 16 years old, of this city, was lodged in jail here yesterday following his ar rast at Xaiuireth, Pa., at the instance of hi«i sister, Mrs. Phoebe Pot lit, who charge's him with larcencv of SIOO worth of furniture and money from her home. Miller's one regret was that he could not go to church yesterday and use the well-worn Bible which ho exhifbited. lie said ho had traveled all over the coun try a.nd had an easy time of it playing evangelitrt. JUDGE GEORGE GRAY ILL Has an Attack of Grip, but Condition Is Not Seriouß Wilmington, Del., March 1. —Formor Federal Judge George Gray is confined to his home at 1317 Markett street with an attack of grip. His condition is not serious, and his jilhysician feels that he will be out in a few days. The Judge was unaible, however, to attend the funeral of his niece, Mrs. Henry L. Fulenweider, in New Castle Saturday. GIRL WISHES MAN'S NAME Granddaughter of Founder of Terre Haute Wants Father's Cognomen Terre Haute, Ind., March I.—Miss Edith laabelle Teel, by her attorney, filed a petition in the Circuit Court ask ing permission to change her name to William Ross Teel, Jr. Miss Teol is to inherit her father's considerable estate, and the exp ana tion. is made that, as her father has no male heir, he wanted bis heiress at least to have a masculine name. | HAIR COMING OUT? Dandruff causes a feverish irritation of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loos en and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once and rid tho scalp of every particle of "dandruff, get a 25-cent bottle of Danderine at any Irug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it into the scalp. After a few applications the hair stops coming out and you can't find any dandruff.—Adv. STUDYING THE MISSOURI Water Resources of Entire River Basin Being Investigated by United States Geological Survey Washington, D. C., March I.—A sys tematic study of Missouri River and its tributaries is being carried on by the United States Geological Survey. Con sidering the varied character of the streams of the Missouri River basin and their great economic value for irriga tion, power, and other purposes, the in vestigation is one of the highest im portance. The water supply of this great drain age area is the subject of a publica tion recently issued by the Geological Survey, entitled "Surface Water Sup ply of the Missouri River Basin, 1912" (Water-Supply Paper 326), by W. A. barnb, Robert iFollanSbee, and 11. D. Padgett. This report contains the rec ords of flow at 130 permanent stations of the Survey during the year 1912, data which are necessary to every form of water development, whether it lie water power, navigation, irrigation, or domestic water supply. Some of tho tributary streams are exceedingly var iable in flow; others, like the Niobrara in Nebraska, are remarkably uniform. The Missouri proper is formed in southwestern M'ontana by the junction of three streams which were discov ered by Lewis and Clark in 1806 and were named by them Jefferson, Madison and Oallatin rivers. Of these three Jefferson River drains tlio largest area and is considered the continuation of the main stream. This part of Mon tana is mountainous and affords many excellent water-power sites. Among the principal tributaries of the Missouri are the Marias, Musselshell, Yellow stone, Cheyenne, Platte and Kansas. The western part of the basin is in tho arid belt and the eastern part is in tho lemiarid and humid regions. Ten States of the Union are drained in part by Missouri River. Rising at the Red Rock Lakes, at an elevation of 6,700 feet above sea level, this stream descends through the Rocky Mountains and emerges on the broad prairie land a few miles below the city of Great Palls, M'ont. From that point it is ac counted a navigable stream with an easy grade, and in passing through the Dalcotas and along the borders of Ne braska, Kansas and lowa it receives tho flow of great tributaries, so that as it crosses the State of Missouri and joins the Mississippi a short distance above St. Louis it becomes one of the large rivers of the world. Its total drainage area is about 492,000 square miles in extent and comprises, in addition to tho States above mentioned, large areas in Wyoming and Colorado and a smaller area in the southwestern part of Minne sota. TROOPERS KILL RIOT LEADER Battle Opened by Foreigner Beating Woman With Poker Washington, Pa., March 1. —A negro desperado suprposed to be Charles Smith, 33 years of age, is dead; State Trooper Charles Nicholson is dying in a Pitts burgh 'Hospital and several citizens are suffering from minor wounds, as a re sult of a pitched battle, following a riot on the outskirts of t'he new man ufacturing town of 'Langeloth, near here, the model town to which the late Jaeo'b Langeloth, of New York, left SIOO,OOO. The trouble which resulted in the tragedy had its beginning in the beat ing of a woman by a drunken foreign er. Smith, the man later killed, was not concerned in the initial trouble, but later 'became the leader of a mob which battled the State police, who had been called. Early yesterday morning State troop ers were called to a foreign settlement near Langeloth by report of a riot. On arriving they found that a general fight had been started by a drunken alien attacking a foreign woman with a pok er andl beating her almost to deatli. The arrival of the State troopers seem ed the signal for a still further out break. 'Holding the maddened foreigners in check as best they might, Corporal Mauk and Troopers Nicholson and Me ('ormick started on a search for tho man who had wielded the poker. They were succeeding in their effort to quiet the foreigners when suddenly Smith, a giant of a man, appeared on the scene. Smith was armed with two heavy re volvers and, running out into tho front of the mob of foreigners, he yelled at t'hem to charge the three troopers. The lines of the foreigners came together with some system and a disastrous charge seemed imminent. Oldest Member of Church Dies Churc'htown, March 1. — M rs. Anna J. Boyd, 89 yoars old, died Saturday, from the infirmities of age. She was the oklest member of the Methodist Episcopal church. Two daughters sur vive. f > How Much Lumber do you need? What sort of lum ber is required? Is it for inside finish or where it will be ex posed to the weather? Tell us your require ments and W£ will be glad to advise you the right kind to buy. United Ice & Coal Co. Forater and Cowden Street!