OirNew Year's Wisti For ¥§ll 12 Long Months of Prosperity 52 Weeks of Health 366 Real Happy Bays | HE GLOBE Wit^▼▲▼ATAVATATATATATAtttfATATi POLICY IS VOID; WIFE PART OWNER Judge McCarrell Fixes Status of Joint Ownership in In surance Opinion In refusing new J/jl )( Hi trials and overrul ing motions for —-S—judgment despite the verdict in the action brought by ' ■■"jUJI John H. Pal m •I lld HKIsI against the Hen 'a P RPiSrFirlls Franklin Fire In- B rrrrH mt iff surauee Company, Additional Law Judge S. J. M. McCarrell to-day definitely settled the status of a beneficiary's claim on a fire insurance policy when the claimant's wife is part owner of the property in sured. If the beneficiary states in the insurance agreement that he is sole owner of the property and it Is sub sequently discovered that his wife Is joint owner, the whole policy, accord ing to Judge McCarrell, becomes void. Paint had begun an action to recover SI,OOO insurance on his house and contents which were burned. Final County Inspection of Weights. —Harry A. Boyer, county inspector of weights and measures, to-day tiled his final report for the year with the County ('omniissioners. During De cember Mr. Boyer tested 685 scales sealed 612, adjusted 32 and con demned 43. Daily City Balances Earn 58,887.18. Daily city bank balances earned the city treasury $6,887.18 in interest, ac cording to the report compiled late yesterday afternoon by City Treasurer Commission of Agriculture is sched ' uled to meet In this city next month. ' Its members will attend the meetings of the State Board of Agriculture. Hush For Oleo Licenses.—The rush for 1916 licenses for the ,sale of oleomargarine is greater than ever known at this time of the year. Probably 1.600 will be Issued by mid -1 night to-night. The 1915 list shows not far from 2,900. Must Kliow New Tags. State Highway Department officials to-day reiterated their warning that 1915 automobile license tags would not be legal to-morrow and the whole force of the department was engaged to day in rushing tags to owners who have applied late or whose applica tions were held up by the delay in 1 shipment of a car of tags. It is ex pected that all who have filed to-day will receive their tags by to-morrow or Monday. The income from auto mobile license applications has been between $40,000 and $50,000 a day lately. Holiday To-morrow. To-morrow will be a holiday at the Capitol and there was a rush to clear up busi ness to-day. Most of the departments closed soon after noon to-day. Movie Act Upheld. The Phila delphia courts yesterday upheld the right of the State Board of Censors to order changes in pictures. This settles an important question as the suit was a test. Public Service Hearing.—The Ohio Valley Water case is being concluded at Pittsburgh by Commissioner Rill ing to-day. . Tlie commission will re sume sessions here on Monday. Uncle Sam Joins In. The United t States authorities have joined with the State in prosecuting people who "fntten" oysters. Federal and State agents w ill co-operate. Can Iluild Bridge. The State Water Supply Commission last night approved the application of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway for the right to reconstruct its bridge at Sunbury. KING BOOZE WILL BE KNOCKED OUT [Continued From First Page.] closing to-night. Under the Mulct law repeal, statutory prohibition Is re stored. pending the action of the next legislature and the people on the pro posed amendment for prohibition, which is to be disposed of within the next two years. In Oregon the manufacture or, sale of any kind of intoxicating liquor is absolutely prohibited. L rug stores are not permitted to sell liquor for any purpose with or without a doctor's prescription. Each family may import for personal use' a maximum either of two quarts of spirituous or vinous liquors or twenty-four quarts of malt liquor In any period of four successive weeks. In the state of Washington the initiative prohibition law permits resi dents to purchase from dealers outside the state two quarts of spirituous liquor or twelve quarts of beer each twenty days. Idalio 'Has Drastic I/aw Idaho will go dry to-night by virtue of statutory prohibition. Most of the state has been dry under local option and only about 150 saloons will be forced out of business. Idaho's pro hlbtion law Is said to be the most dras tic in the Union. It not only pro hibits the manufacture and sale of liquor, but makes poasesslon of any kind of malt or spirituous liquor a crime, excepting wine for sacramental purposes and pure alcohol for medi cal. scientific and mechanical uses, which is procurable only on an order from the probate court. CI.OSF AT SUNDOWN Columbia. S. C., Dec. 31. The South Carolina dispensary system un der which 15 out of 44 counties oper ated liquor dispensaries will cease to exist at sundown to-day. Individuals may obtain through shipment one gal lon of liquor a month for personal use. Certain spirits are permitted\for the church, arts and sciences. ROY 41. TO CLEAR DOCKET ' Mayor John K. Royal wll turn over to Ills successor on Monday a clean po lice docket. In order to do this he has ordered a police court session for Mon day morning, at 9 o'clock. All arrets mnils between Saturday afternoon, st 4 o'clock, and Monday morning, will be taken cßre of by Mayor Royal. PjgAggogfeg/ READING PROFITS TAKE BIG JUMP November Surplus of Railway Company Shows Surpris ing Increase | I Gross receipts of the Philadelphia iand Reading Railway Company for November showed a. remarkable In crease, equal to something more than |3O per cent. Both net and surplus | likewise far outran corresponding ; earnings for the same period a year ago. Gross receipts amounted to $5,083,- 490, compared with $3,984,042. Net showed $2,127,652, a gain of $893,908. Surplus for the month reached $1,357,- 402. compared with $464,077 last year, a jump of $893,325, or virtually 200 per cent, increase. Receipts from July 1 aggregated $23,088,941, against $20,479,647. Net for the five months amounted to $8,848,948, against $6,- 487,586 and surplus $4,997,698, com pared with $2,639,252, close to 100 per cent, ahead. Coal Company Short The Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company showed up less creditably. November earnings show a gross business of $3,616,595, com pared with $2,954,468, a gain of $662,- 127. Sine July I the reeclpts of the company have been $13,131,853, a gain jof $127,825 over last year: net aggre j gated $380,353, or a loss of $79,940, and surplus of $340,353, likewise suf | fered a deficit of $79,940. Earnings of the Reading company, both for November and since July 1, ran on a par with the 19J 4 statement. I Total November receipts were $573,- [513, compared with $572,687. Net showed $558,136. a deficit of $8,015 i compared with November, 1914, and surplus amounted to $100,470, deficit jof $2,683. Since July 1 the com i pany's total receipts were $2,851,037. iagainst $2,817,715. Net during this | period reached $2,816,068. a gain of ■ $34,003, and surplus $527,735, coin ' pared with $467,065. Reductions in Coal Rates Again Postponed By Associated Press Washington. Dec. 31. Reductions in rates on anthracite from the Penrt sylvanla fields to the Atlantic seaboard were again postponed to-day by the Interstate Commerce Commission, j They will become effective April 1 in -1 stead of January 1. They were orig inally ordered for October 1 and have been twice extended. The commission wants to give the coal roads time to work out the new rate schedules they have been ordered to make. Heavy Rails For Lehigh; Will First Make Tests The Lehigh Valley railroad has pur chased 2,500 tons of 136-pound rails. Ti» is the heaviest rail ever rolled for a steam railroad and the mainten ance of way department plans to ex periment with It with a view to Its adoption as standard by that line. The 136-pound rail means that every running yard of it weighs 136 pounds. Growth of heavy traffic and a desire to attain that best possible efficiency for its rails Is responsible for the experi ment. The new rails will be seven inches high and 6 inches wide a the base. When it is remembered that a 110- pound rail is only six inches high and inches wide at the base, the dif ference is readily apparent. The in i creased height and width means a much better rail in every way, ac cording to Lehigh Valley officials. The design for this rail permitf the rolling of the best quality of steel, and the height and other dimensions are such as to make this rail less liable to break than other rails. The weak est point In the track is at the joints between the rails, and the height of the 186-pound rail insures , greater strength than is possible, with a light er one. New York Central Changes Affect Passenger Agents New York Central announces the following changes, to take place Janu ary 1: W. R. Barnet, assistant general passenger agent, having resigned to engage in other business, the following appointments are made effective Janu ary 1, 1916: C. C. Howard, assistant general passenger agent, with office at Grand Central Terminal, New York; W. V. Lifsey, assistant general passen ger agent, with office at 1216 Broad way. New York: Harry Parry, assist ant general passenger agent, with office at 377 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. Interstate Ruling May Improve R. R. Conditions By Associated Press Washington, Dec. 31.—The Inter state Commerce Commission to-day declined to suspend schedules of the Pennsylvania, New York Central and other trunk line railroads which pro vide for a reduction from 30 to 15 days in the allowance of free time on export freight. This means that the commission has approved the free time allowance re 'duction beginning January 1. It may I improve congested freight conditions at the port of New York. The reduc tions apply also to freight shipped to Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Nor folk and Newport News. Scientists Hear Talk on Railway Disease Uncertainty Special to the Telegraph Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 31. lvy L. .Lee, who Is a member of the staff of the Rockefeller Foundation and who was formerly executive assistant to the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, yesterday delivered an address on "Un certainty—The. Railroad Disease." be fore tlu American Association for the Advancement of Science in session in this city. He said, in part: -At the end of nearly ten years of regulation we now find the railroads subject to the Interstate Commerce Commission, and to the separate and unrelated commissions of 'forty-six States, all with very wide powers over railroad rates and practices. Further than that, the four years 1912 to 1915, inclusive, saw the Introduction in forty three State Legislatures of 3,020 bills relating to railroads, of which 442 be came law. "The distinguishing .'act about the svstem of railroad regulation which has so far been developed in this conn- I try is that it is Indefinite, inconsistent, and not yet established on recognised principles —in ottvr words, that there Is in It "nothing certain by uncertainty.' The rsllroads have no standards as to what the various regulating bodies will consider reasonable rates." 1 \ very liberal patronage dun 1 1 and wish them all 1 1 A-HAPPY'N EW ' YEAR 1 1 -LSfn Frank J. Consylman. 1 1 WithDoatrtch&Co. ' Standing of the Crews HARHISBURG SIDE I'hllndrlpliln Dlvlaloa—l32 crew first to go after 2 p. m.: 119, 114, 103, 105. Engineer for 105. Flagman for 114. Brakemen for 114 (two). Engineers up: Weiker, Yeater, Max well, W. C. Albright. Binkley, Eefever, Kltch, Brubaker. MoOowan, Supplee. Firemen u»*: Morris, Deltrlch, Slump. Hepner, Coble, Smith, Johnson, Fisher, Glllums. Minnlch. Flagmen up: Miller, Hartman, Mar tin. Brakemen up: Felker, Dengler, Wright, Buck. Ml crew first to go after 2:45 p. m.: 23, 244, 234, 243, 241, 252. 218. 248. Firemen for 5, 23. Conductor for 23. Flagman for 23. Engineer up: Snyder. Fireman up: Elebau. I'nril » Tew*— Engineers for second 8, 12, 14, IS. sec ond 22, third 22, third 24, 62. 64. Three extras. Firemen for 6, second 8, fourth 8, 10, 20, first 22. second 22, first 24, 26, 28, 48, 62. 62. 64. Three extras. Engineers up: Blosser, Malaby. Bodg ers. ,f. R. Snyder. lx»y. keiby. Fulton, Fells, McMorris, Runkle, Wise, Watts. Firemen up: Snyder. Pensyl, Waltz, Brady, Graham, Fry. Dougherty. B. F. Eyde, Glassmyer, McKllllps, Ewlng, Keiser, Heeler, Berrier, Pieffer, Snell. Fleisher. KNOI.A SIDE Plillndelphln Division—249 crew first to go after 12:45 o'clock: 250, 234, 203, 229. 209, 226, 257, 239, 221, 255. 230, 244. 236. 227. Engineers for 226, 242, 245, 250, 258. Firemen for 203, 230, 234, 242, 245, 250. 257. Conductors for 227. 244, 255. Flasmen for 230, 239. 244. 255. Brakemen for 2u3. 209, 221 (two), 227, 229, 234, 236. 255 (two), 257. Conductors up: Eibliart, Murlatt. Brakeman up: Smith. Middle IHvlxlnn—232 crew first to go after 1 p. m.: 227, 246 229, 221, 23C-, 215. 249. 452. 237. ur«l Crew*—To go after 4 p. m.: Engineers for second 124, third 126, 104. second 102. Firemen for 112, 122, 130, 104, first 102. second 102. Engineers up: Kling, Smith, Miller, Turner, Reese. Kepford. Firemen up: Waller, Gelling. Fleck. Cumbler, E. C. Hall, C. H. Hall, Bick hart, Handiboe, Sellers. THE READING HnrrlNliurji Division—ll crew first to go after 8 a. in.: 10. 1. 4, 5, 9. 6, 8, 7, 3. East-bound 69, 58, 62, 52. Engineers for 52, 6..2, 69, 1, 8, 9, 10. Firemen for 62. 5, 6, S, 10, 14. Brakemen for 62, 69, 1, 6, 8. 9, 10. Engineers up: Wyre, Fraunfelder, Merkle. Ferner, Morrison. Griffith, k auffman. Firemen up: Woland, Geib, Grim, Dowliower, Keefer. Brakemen up: Hinkle. Taylor. Smith, Miller, Connel, Emeriek. Holbert, Kline, Boltz, Stephens, Gray, Miller. Carnival Dance on Stage at Majestic Tonight A carnival dance, which Manager Hopkins says is the same as any other dance except that the stylish steppers appear in grotesque costumes, lias been arranged to add the grand finale of the I New Year celebration at the Majestic Theater to-nigln. At the close of the vaudeville per formance with its injections oC extra celebrations, the affair is to conclude with a danct. on the stage to which all masqueraders will b» invited. While the applause of the audience will guide the judges in making their decisions in the various contests, never theless experienced Judges will reserve the light to make the final decision. The judges will be. Robert Hoy, William Orr and Robert Bux. VICE CHANCELLOR EMORY RESIGNS Bv Associated Press Trenton, X. J., Dec. 31. Chancellor Walker to-day accepted the resignation of Vice Chancellor John It. Emory, of Morristown, as a member of the Court of Chancery. Mr. Emory is 73 years old and has served three terms of seven vears each as a member of the court, ill health is the cause of the resigna tion. Chancellor Walker will announce his selection of a successor to Mr. Em ory next week. Harrisburg Retail Druggists SOOE to Receive New Medicine An "External" Vapor Treatment That Relieves Colds Over Night, Croup in Fifteen Minutes. Coupon Below Good at Your Druggist for a*2sc. Package Free. Nothing to Swallow. Comes In the Form of a Salve, and is Vaporized by the Body Heat When Applied Over the Throat and Chest. I • Harrisburg people, especially mothers with small children, will be glad to know that the "out side" treatment for cold troubles —Vick's Vap-O-Rub Salve that has made such a success in the South, will shortly be intro duced here. Arrangements are being made for a number of the leading druggists to give away packages free. If your druggist is one of these the coupon below will entitle you to a 25c size jar free. This treatment is entirely dif ferent from the usual "Internal" medicines, which disturb the di gestion and are especially in jurious to the delicate stomachs of children. It comes in salve form and has a twofold action. F.or cold troubles you just rub it well over the throat and chest and cqver with a warm flannel cloth. The body heat releases vapors of Menthol and Camphor, Eucalyptol, Thyme, Cubebs and 7 FEAR OUTBREAKS AFTER KILLINGS Trouble May Follow Deaths of Seven Negroes Shot in Pitched Fights By Associated T Blakely, Ga., Deo. 31.—Excitement caused throughout this section by clashes between white possemeu anil negroes near liore yesterday in which seven negroes were killed and two whites seriously hurt had not entirely died down to-day. Influential while citizens who were busy until late last night in efforts to prevent further possible outbreaks expressed the be lief. however, that there would be no more trouble. Five of the negroes were shot and killed and two others were burned lo death, according to reports here, as a result of three pitched battles between the negroes and various bands of whites seeking to capture Grandisou Goolsby, negro farmer, and his two sons, Mike and Ulysses, accused of assassinating Henry J. Villlpigue, an overseer who had thrashed one of the younger Goolsbys. Villipigue was shot in the neck Wednesday night, his wife narrowly escaping death from several other bullets lired after he fell. Burned in Cabin The negroes reported dead as a re sult of an all day hunt which started Thursday morning when news of Villipigue's death spread through the county, and culminated in pitched battles in the afternoon were Gnndi son Goolsby, his two sons, both of whom were burned in a cabin in which they sought refuge: Hosli Jewell, Harry Holmes, James Burton and Early Hightower. Jewell and Holmes were killed in aiding the Goolsbys to stand off a posse led by Sheriff Howell of Early county. Burton and Hightower met death resisting another posse which sought to search theii mcabin. It was estimated that there were several hundred whites in the various posses, and it was said that probably half a dozen were wounded. The killings occurred in the west ern part of this (Early) county about ten miles west of here, and near tho Alabama boundary. TWO S. 1\ C. A. PRO.SECCTIOXS Two prosecutions Wfere reported during the last month, according to officers of i he' Harrisburg S. P. C. A., i who held their monthly meeting yester j day. The annual meeting of the so- I ciety will be held next Thursday after noon at 4 o'clock in the offices of the president, John T. Olmsted, 5 North Third street. EARTHQUAKE RECORDED By Associated Press Buffalo. N. Y„ Dec. 31. An earth quake shock, preceded by pronounced tremors for forty-eight hours, was re coHied on the seismograph at Canlsius College to-day. The quake, which be gan at 7:30 a. m. and lasted five min ute, was estimated to be about 2,500 miles southwest. PREPARATORY SERVICES Services preparatory to holy com munion will be held this evening at 7:45 o'clock in Redeemer Lutheran I church, conducted by the pastor, the Rev. E. Victor "Roland. Holy com munion will be administered Sunday at both morning and night services. FEEI) ON PHEASANT West End Republican Club mem bers last night enjoyed a South African pheasant feast. Through a friend, forty-five plump birds, were sent to the club and last night served as part of a big dinner. Forty enjoyed the feast. Juniper. These vapors are inhaled all night long, with each breath, loosening the phlegm and open ing the air passages. Externally, Vap-O-Rub is absorbed through and stimulates the skin, aiding tha vapors inhaled to relieve the con-i gestion. Vap-O-Rub will be found re markably effective for head colds, asthmatic and catarrhal troubles, as well as for deep chest colds, sore throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis or incipient pneumonia. Its use is particularly recommended to mothers with small children, as it is entirely external, and can be used, with perfect safety, on tho youngest member of the family. None of the druggists have as yet received their shipments, but as the free supply is limited, it ia advisable to present your coupon at once. COUPON NO. 2—A Good for one 26c package of Vlck'a Van-O-Rub Salve free. Present this coupon now and your druggist will reserve your package. Name Address Note to Druggist— Ho!d coupon until o«ir salesmen call.