2 MORE THAN „ 5 fllVf At Six South Fourth St. GW JLIWa _ y (2 Doors From Market St.) I will open to-morrow morning at 8 o'clock,' Saturday, March the 6th, my new idea of Clothing Store, the watchword of which will be quality, with volume of business. I have a number of new ideas, which will pre vail throughout the entire store. lam showing in my South Fourth Street Store the finest quality of Spring merchandise at positively and absolutely the following prices—at SIO.OO, at $12.50 and at $15.00. The old way—a clothier advertised prices in the newspapers, had prices in his windows and on entering his store had some method whereby he showed you finer goods, better linings or some such idea in order to get you to raise your price. My new way means courteous clerks standing around to take your order—you are to be the salesman—there will be absolutely but one price in this store, and at any of the above-menttoned prices the quality of cloth will be based on prices of $25 and S3O suitings. I guarantee to every customer that the woolens in any style suit displayed in my new store will be equal to those shown by any s2s—s3o suit—absolutely all wool and worsted. I guarantee any suit of clothes you buy for the life of the garment. Positively no extra charge for full Dress Suits. SISS" S MO- 'l2= *ls - Vicinity Ten Twelve and Fifteen A pair of Shoes free to > plipk No Less Fifty No More evervbov. Mvtwentvrears' i&iHply ___ __ ~ experience as a clothing mer- WfflL | Till? SPOT chant has brought to me the if /jPJfy ,1 -*■ A Kg realization it i> the mothers | J|!|l a $3.50 pair of Extra Pants absolutely free Saturday H ISBN and Monday with each suit. 9 oamnr'vith vour".ov?Vpr" ill E Kuee Sp ™ g Suitß for Ymmg BoyS " $2.00 i sent to eaeh boy that will be Eg I °"™ UI S P r,ce E accompanied by the mother Hi I I #4.00 Knee Spring Suits for Boys. Opening U? OA A W or sister a pair of Endieott W price fc at $2.00, with each boy's S I kuee suit £3.50 or over. This W price, •Eg offu[holds irt idouun t] n you are yonr own sales- $6.50 Knee Spring Suits for Boys, extra AA B mar dav onlv. man. Samples of suits . jJ.UIf 89 cuoerfuiiy given for com- sizes, no euarge. Opening price, v U THE SPOT, ] parisoc. A full line of 3X Easter Suits for young fel- _ , , c . rA , A( , H James H. Brenner, Prop. lows. BOVS \ i astl SllltS, oUC to Jpo.Olr H " To-morrow morning, March the sixth, I make my bow to you, Mr. Harrisburg, for the second time B with as fine a line of Men's and Young Men's Clothing as any clothier in our city can show for prices from SIO.OO to $15.00, more with the understanding that the price is to be positively $lO, $12.50 || and sls.oo—no more—no less. P| ImLM £3.00 Trousers: other stores" price 50c Silk Hose, all colors. Opeuiug price, eK Our opening price. $2.50 25c Silk Men's Hose. Opening price, 19c E w $5.00. Our opening price, $3.50 )( s Lisle Hose. •Opening pi ice B Pants from my own factor}* di- 10c Men's Black, Tan or Fancy Hose. Opening I reet to you at wholesale prices. price, 3V 2 £ ■ | r Note a few prices on our MEN'S SHOES, FURNISHINGS, HATS, CAPS, ETC., ETC. I ra„s. 50c to SI.OO Endlcott Johnson Shoes for Men %—>. For Men and Boys One thousand pairs of Shoes, values up to $3.50, factory £ ' damaged, to be sold Saturday and Monday AQ Men's Work Shirts, at 39c to SI.OO .$2.25 Endieott Johnson Slioes. Special open- (£1 L in* sale price. ipl.OO Auto Dusters Thousands of pairs of Endieott Johnson & Co. Shoes at Fancv Vests I'cal sale price. Come and you will always come back. Full Dress Vests CLOTHES SHOP Night Shirts. In the Dumps Th-.'re was onee an Egyptian king, so H >s sai l, who built a pyramid an 1 died of melanrholy. His name was Du taops. yet ther? arc probably few per foas who know that they are perpet aating the memory of his tragic history when tbey remark that they are "in| 1 the dump*.'' Sydney Smith on War | Sydney Smith found humor in most thing*, but none in war. In the Edin burgh ••Review" of a-century ago he r * wrote: "If three nien were to have HARRTSBTTBG STAR-INDEPENDENT. FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 5, 1913 their legs and arms broken and were, to remain all night exposed to the in- ] clemency of the weather the whole ( i country would be in a state of the, most dreadful agitation! I-ook at the wholesale death of a battlefield—ten ; acres covered with dead anil dying, and the shrieks and agonies of many thou-1 sand human beings! There is more misery inflicted upon mankind by one year of war than by all the civil pecu lations and oppressions of a century." And he added that it was the business of wise and good men to set themselves against the spirit that produced irars— "this passion for military glory." NON-MAQNETIC YACHT STARTS ON 7 WO YEARS' VOYAGE | j r ''**■%£■. "JH^i ' THE CARNEGIE UNDER. FULL SAIL One of the longest voyages ever undertaken was begun when the nou-magnetic yacht Carnegie weighed anchor and passed out of the Narrows, In New York Bay. on a cruise which is expected to take her to both the northern and southern extremities of the globe. A southerly course will be laid to the Panama Canal, thence in a northerly direction to the Arctic Circle, where several months will be spent. The next leg of the voyage will lake the vessel to the Antarctic. The vessel will be gone about two years. The Carnegie Is operated by the Carnegie Institute, of Washington, and is being used to determine the origin and the varied distribution of the earth's magnetic currents. The yacht is an auxiliary brisantine and was placed in commission in April, 1900. She is commanded by Captalu Aalt EUROPE'S GIRLS LACK CANDY Sweet Exports From U. S. Cut Down 1 —Bean Retaliation? New York, March s.—The girls they 'left behind them when the Brit ish Tommy, his French colleague and his German eneniv went off to the war have suffered a good deal more than has been supposed up to this time. The candy export figures from this country prove it. Europe curtailed the bean supply of the United States wh«u Austria's exports were stopped. Now America has retaliated by reducing the quantity of c-audy sent to tho Old World. The first five months of the war caused a decrease of $103,823 in the value of candy exports from the Unit ed States, as compared with the same period of the year before. The value of the total exports of candy for the calendar year was $1.155,594. FIFTY-FIRST TIME IN PRISON Vagrant's Sentences to Penny pack' Farm Exceed Twelve Years Philadelphia. March s.—For the fiftv-tirst time Thomas Dillon, a decrep it old mau, giving an.address at Third and De Lancey (streets, took a ride yesterday to the House of Correction. He was sent there for vagrancy by Magistrate Renshaw in the City Hall I police court and will not depart for two years. Magistrate Renshaw figured that, as suming that Dillion had served three months each time he was sentenced, lie must have passed twelve and one-half years at the Pennypack farm. STAR-INDEPENDENT WANT ADS. BRING RESULTS. SCENE FROM "TWIN BEDS," FARCE WHICH RETURNS TO THE MAJESTIC Home-loving husbands who, after a I hard day's work at the office, lean toward slippers and a cheerful fire grate, a lounging robe, the evening! paper, a pipe and an easy chair, will j understand the mental attitude of Ilarrv Hawkins, the yotrtrg husband in Helwyn! & Co.'s production of that uproariously funny farce, "Twin Beds." Wives who; ASK FOR-* Lancaster's Favorite Brew RIEKER'S BEER JNO. G. WALL, Agt. Harrisburg, Pa. Frank J. Rieker, Mgr. GRAIN CAES TIE UP TAEDS Shipowners Unwilling to Take Risk of Carrying Wheat Abroad Jersey City, X. J., March 3.—A tie up at the West Shore railroad yards at of about 3,000 oars, most ly loaded with wheat, is attributed by railroad and marine interests here to the unwillingness of ship owners to risk their craft because of war zone condi tions that have prevailed during the last two weeks. Two grain elevators holding a total of about 400,000 bus hels are filled. Only one shipment has been made during the last fortnight, a Norwegian steamer having sailed with ISO,OOO bushels of wheat and other grain. Before the German war zone notifi cation was issued grains reaching the ! yards from western points were for warded quickly. Of late, however, ship owners have hesitated in attempting deliveries. Eight BaptizKl in Icy Waters Lebanon, March 5. —Yesterday aft ernoon eight persons were baptized by the Church of the Brethren in a pond on the farm of Samuel Wengert, near Schaefferstown. One by one the appli j cants for admittance to the church were submerged in the cold waters. More than 300 saw the ceremony. • Forest Fire Sweeps Irish Hills Reading, March 5.—A dangerous forest fire burned over 25 acres of tim ber on the north side of the Irish Hills, located midway between Temple and i Blanton, yesterday. A spark from a j passing engine on the Heading railway is believed to have started the blaze. Artistic Printing at Star-Independent. are left alone all