Warm Blankets, Quilts, MEAN We Have a Pleasing Line of Teddy Bear Blankets AND uddledown Sets For the Babies and Youngsters. Por the boys who are out-of door much of the time we have overcoats and suits and trousers in good looking materials and up-to-date styles.. Let us fit the lad for you. PPB BBA do I AR RL Le ene es Re FH GE: acts Versus allacies FACT is a real state of things. FA LLACY is an appar- ently genuine ut really illogical statement or argument. | ' FALLA ohibition is very sanely shown by a recent 7 T= LACY oY: En lishman’s x ence of Tem ne PROHIBITION or RT" by Cecil CHesterton. lis views are we wort FALLACY = of Saloons 5 Mr. Chesterton: “One ma common to all schools A A - Reformers’ in and is that the wiy to reduce oi is to reduce the number of facilities for drrking.' It ‘was wseless 10 meet this dogma by an appeal to human nce. a8 every educated and traveled man knew it. It was useless to polst out that in places, which, according to this theory, to be over to a continual debsuch of alcoholism in streets consist of nothing but u long row oi §l French country towns, where the inquiring ed as to Low any of the cafes can pay, mince seers (vo keep ome—+that it WES Just in suc. practically never saw a drucken man “4 EN of our Ecropean blood and civilization (from which the af civiticat on of America also derives) have always regarded ferrremied Ariz 2s a part of the notmal food of man . + We find the oid Po-itzns, for afl the ferocity of their attack on human ratire, nevss attempting to stop the consumption af fermented erints Trev forbade men to drink healths, but they never thought ef forhid=¢ hrm to drink wine or beer, presumably Decause it Fat revs peed to them that 'Sese things were even luxuries They rece: cd em aginormal to man. “AA\JHEREVER restrictive legislation approaches anywhere $ % Bae. la pour the poiat of Prohibition, witch 12 its obvious goal, it ine wronfuce ancther set of evila. It does not sap press drinking, but it makes if Trorch, jdlve and torcuzhly un ; al evivnme Jabit 4k o Glen 39 Ha Ta — wholesome. By tresting a coimal buman habit 88 3 wile resiy FTN ry PoE R23 3 1 Ler BOWE 10 i A often makes it one.” R CHESTERTON concludes his articie with a toakh OFF i= = i humor that doen pot lessen, | 2 ¢ socemtunted th ¥ BoA FALLACY of Prohibition in the Lght He says: “I passed a few days in “dry benr to notice the number, sive, promin ane of the drug stores in every rol ast that this may be held to point to Lither these institutions do not exist solely tor thie sae of g - and sal-volatile, or wlse Prohibition does not appear to improve the henlth of those on whon it is eniorced” Pennsylvania State Brewers’ Association EITC Austria-Hungary. MOTHER OF FOUR Mat 5 sf twelve by 14 Indorprirathan in the Xing dom of Jia fe Inherited, however, the itnmense fortane of the Comte de Chambord and made hin home in Vi enna, wheres he assmned the state of a foal ter files Haus Paring aad Jers Five C Big frst Por insane lis fu fla dister of HE, ’ i Gere ih 2 | duke Pr 5 her Lh sa ie 10 4 to 5 # Tog “wt 3 #1 $A Ruel f Faria Wik Gilead i JT, was married fest by Pte ~wiiles ained Eomemenaad ws Maria Antonia of Parma Drake Hlenry, tle Oresent i head of the house, ia an offspring of the first marriage. the Empoess Zita of the second, Nhe was horn at the Villa Plapore, near Viareggio on 1802, Sevoted to his wife said to Bare hewn the result of a pure Jove match The allisnce in sak! to bave been looked ou anfavorably by the oid emperos-the more particuiarly a3 Be had hoped, according to persist ent rumor, that Charles Francis Joseph would marry a daughter of the Arch Guchess Marie Valeria, his own daugh- ter, who was married in 18300 to the sent to her miartiage to the archdnie exclaimed that she would muke a see | ond Ellsateth - Walthole, near Reichenan, on Nov, J, 11912 The second, Louis, was bord In i Feb, & 1815 There is also a daughter, | Archduetosa Adeialile, who was horn Jan. 3 1914 nad a baby son, born last May The new ofuwir © is anld to be dpoot od to hin familie and while an ariilnke contd oft he Ping wr towel BR POrRAIMIIRID Deer Breathing Deep bread r. Sobel sve } § : : upen it Ftepths { breathe las niggardly in the matter of filling (their Inpes with clean, wha pofson. Twenty night amd morning will quickly im prove the looks of a girl who has be gun 8 go down with study and care lessoess, amd surely there 8 no beau tiier cleaper than deep breathing ong ! | Consort of the Youthful Ruler of Mar @ The new emperor has always heen Their union i» | | | | | Upon making the scqualntance of | the Princess Zita, however, the old em. | peror reientsd and som gave Lis cone | (It ts ever suid that she so strongly | reminded him ¢f Bis dead wife that he | The new sinjiress has three sons, the | eldest of whom, the Archduke Francts Joseph Oto, was born at the Via RTM ED ALD ERIM EIEN AE STs dT ils 4 WF § AIRE LAR LLN QUALITY Consumers in Small Towas and Rurg) Comeunitics Are Victiris of {lis crimination by Big Store Methods Which Encourage Substitution of Unidentified Goods at High Figures Mrs, Christine Frederick. househnid etency expert and consulting bhoupe told editor of the Ladiew’ Home Jour unl, the New York Evening Sun, Sup cexsful Farming, and vakious other salilies tions resently appianed before the Interstate and Foreign Coupnerey Catngittee of the Respir sentatives in Washington in sapport * House af ff the Stephens Asthurst bill, This BegEtre, gecoriling to tx title ix de ol +3 a EN ’ § ie n when % Pag 1 gate agains be atid false fire lepuiize stpndand unl pd present firice entting of trsisde married gowsds ES stores for the plrpose of falsr Lapressiio that all thelr other wri les Bre proportionately YW, Price cutting Is merely bait to igre petotters so that articles of Infortor oaerit wh be orice, substituted an high *1 appear ¥ of xo % - i Fe ‘ Rrra y Ti td Interest if this One before the cammittiee sumer,” sid Moo Predetiek. “and | lo not care about the rights or wrongs ph isi sb 1 ao eo AD AO —- no ; He gk + 3d Rain ae ¥ TINE FREDERICK. Cand’ hk MRS CHRIS bring First, it will heip the consumer estabdich a standards moall pues chasing. Second, Mt will guarantees to the consumer a continuance of those standards once they are estad lished, Third, it will give a wider dis tribution tn more kinda of prod ucts that the consumer daily buys. Fourth, it will save the consum. or's money because the fixed price will guaramtes a permanent, de pendable supply of articles. Fifth, it will be espaciaily help ful to farm women and amall town consumers whe are now victimes of discrimination, Sixth, it will make it possible for the homemaker to practice more efficient and lens wasteful buying methods. Seventh, it will guarantees to the consumer that the goods which she Duys are made under homor. able stancards of manufacture, fair pay and sanitary conditions In her arpmment for identified ar Helos Mrs Frederick sald It was ad mitted that car prices fend to delve | sgeh urticles from the market and she wasdmersly showing the interes i that the corpamner has (on having ar | totes ship Brive so mariiod pace aly brioaths | Fan teinpts I forces Wd hraad flint they ean be dein asd WERE en} oman foe the wnie of prorsivent : tlie tnd boa VEE Ne EA as almest owt the guality. What incentive cng a umnufuctarer have to keep op a high stursberd of ts frei § ogy Heist IIR y # WIKCHD Baise nanere iy thea thetpr--4 quality If the price ls constantly be | wars is past Roosevelt An Advocate of the Regulation of Streams MODERN METHODS URGED President of United States in Aucord with Plang Being Pro posed for Action by the Former State Lesisiature iH fai 8 the {aed that ia Theodore Roosevelt in his last reg Har fiepsage to Congress as shed inler ways” "Action should be begun forthwith luring the present session of Con | gress. {or the improvement of our in and waterwaves-—action which will wsult in giving us not only savigable aut navigated rivers. We have spent sundreds of millions of dollars upon hess waterways, ye! the traffic on geariy all of them Is steadily declin ng This condition is the direct re mit of the absence of any compre senxive and Tarsesineg plan of water aay improvement Obviously we can Wt continue (0 expend the revenues the Government without return 't Ia poor business to spend mone for inland gavigation unless we get it “Inquiries into the condition of the Mississippi and fts principal tributa ries ravenl very many instances of he after waste caused by the meth as which have hitherto obtained for he sticalled ‘Tmiprovement’ of navi ention, A striking ipstapce is sup sliedl hy the ‘improvement’ of the iio. which, begun in IRI4 was con intted under a single plan for half a sentury in ISTS a new plan was gaoupteed and followed for a quarter ff & century. in 1902 still a diferent plan way adopted and has since heen sarstad at a rate which only prom mew a navigable river (nn from twenty Cfo ene hundred years longer Waste of Public Money “Saeh shortsightedness, vaeillating snd futile methods are gocompiniind hy deereasing waterborne comp Pres made the following statement the heading. “Inland Water ind increasing traffie congestion on tard hy inersasing Soods, and by the wate of public oney. The remedy Hes in abandoning the methods which stenalty fatled and adopting ew nes kecping with the needs ind demands of our peanis In oB resort on 4 measure [Intro taeed at the Sirs session of the pres 3 Congress. the Secretary of War “the chiof defert in the meth hitherto puragsd les in the ab atharilty for pe soamprehensive plans cov or natural divisions & if sxeoutive pninion 1 heartily ent mathods not inland navigation id to the array as iaily a permanent of onginesrs 'o ivy impairs ae antabliah engineers ALYVe work in ; hat they are suite ansgited by thelr training traditisns to take the broad view. asd to gather and transmit to a Congress the commercial and in information and forecastia spon which water improvement must siwars so largely rest. Furthermore, they have failed to grasp the great . anderiying fact that every stream Is | a unit from its source to its mouth, and that all its uses are mmterde ent. All the Facts Wanted. “Prominent officers of the Corps have recently evea gone far as to assert In print waterways are not dependent the conservation of the forests their headwaters. This position spposed to sll the recent work of scientific bureaus of the Government and to the general experience of mankind A physician who dishes . leved in vaccination would not be P the right man (9 handle an epidemic | of smallpox. nor should we leave 3 | loctor skeptical about the transmis | «ion of yellow fever by the Stego | myis mosquito in charge of sanity tion at Havana or Panama So with ' the improvement of our rivers: it iy no longer wise or safe to leave this | great work in the hands of men whe fail to grasp the essential relations between navigation and general de velopment and to assimilate aod use Che central faites sbosl OND Sireams “Tatil the work of river fwprove (ew iw wndertaken in a modern way not ave results that will mae miiitary cient Yostrial BAL eT withont LEY. The i vad serena Under Work of : od ta the Peat nin PREIBRTYTY aes yr Wi her of civilian To conitnge the w yoke AEA I Melon: wae, ar it mig be divided Hetweaen (he reciBmAalEEl [erYices and the corps of engines. Fands should Be provides for current MYeuies it i deemed wise—otherwise from the sale of bounds The essentisgl thing is that the work should go forward the best possible pilaf, and with the lenst possible delay. We shoulq have a new type of work and a new OTERE i sation for planning and directing jy , The time for playing with cur wate The country 3 in time of results.”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers