2 PARIS WILD WITH JOY OVER PEACE; CELEBRATE LONG Captain Stackpolc Tells of Cheering When Armistice Was Signed Captain Edward J. Stackpolc, Jr., j now recovering from severe wounds in a Paris base hospital, in a letter j to his wife received to-day, describes the happenings in the French capital j the day the armistice was declared, j The letter dated November 11 is >n | part as follows:: "To-day was a big day w'th a cap ital IS. At 5 o'clock on (be raorniit* i f this day the armistice was signed and at the eleventh hour of the elev enth day of the eleventh month hos tilities ceased on tlie western front. ! No more killing— it's all over. "Excitement prevailed in Paris. ! you may well guess. We could hear ; the guns booming nnd the people shouting way in here. The French : maids went dancing through the j hallway singing "La guerre est I flnle" and things were very stirring. ; "For the lirst time since Septem- I ber 5 1 left the bed without a stretch- ; er (two orderlies between them car- j ried me to the street and placed me , carefully on the seat of a taxi) all bundled up in bathrobes pnd coats and in company with Lt. Halle.v, who : has a chest wound but can walk, we started forth as delighted at our : release from bondage as a kid with ; a. new toy. "It was a wonderful treat. 1 felt like a baby being carried out to tlie cab and back again, but 1 wouldn't j have' missed seeing the crowds for anything. "New York on election day couldn't begin to touch Paris when the armistice was signed, lt seemed as though the whole world had as sembled together on the streets of Paris. All the buildings were draped with the llags of the Allies and crowds of students and soldiers and : civilians thronged up and down the streets, waving (lags and kissing the girls and singing. At times our bus traveled at the rate of 10 yards per hour and several times we got jam med for long stretches. , To-night Paris will 'no doubt be drunk and they are goin§ to light up for the lirst time since the war started. "Every nation on the globe seem ed to be represented in its soldiers except the Germans and Austrians. Even Turkey had one of iter of ficers, wearing his fez and leading a girl along the street. The American ' flag was far more in evidence than the British. Y. M. t\ A. men and soldiers who had fought valiantly the battle of. Paris, were on the streets and in trucks as the-contribu tion of the United States to the gen eral hilarity, and they made plenty of noise. 1 didn't see many 'blesses.' 1 guess it was too dangerous for them. • "You'd have to see-it to appre ciate it. i expect they'll bo celebrat ing right along now, in a somewhat more orderly fashion, but what I wanted to see was the tirst spon- - -taneous burst of enthusiasm, and 1 saw it." " Wednesday. November 13, lie writes: "Saw I aris again to-day. this time in company with Captain Hahn. We tried to get an open sea-going hack but had to content ourselves with a taxicab. It smelled startling!}* like New York, but Paris is differ ent'somehow. In spite of the crowds we rode up around the Bois de Bou logne. Arch de Triomphe. Place de la Concorde and up and down all the rues and boulevards without num ber, stayed out for an hour and a half for twenty francs. Peru to Ask Indemnities For the Riots at Iquique Lima. Peru; Nov. 29.—The cabi net and senate have approved the action of ihe foreign minister in strongly protesting to Chile against the unti-Peruvian riots at Iqui que. It is announced that Peru will demand indemnities for these inci dents. • The entente ministers at Lima called separately upon the foreign minister yesterday. Santiago. Chine. Nov. 29.—-No communication has been received from Peru since the protest of the Peruvian foreign minister against anti-Peruvian riots at Iquique, Chile, and attacks on Peruvian consuls, it was said at the foreign office to day. Invite Governor-Elect to Penn-Harris Opening Governor-elect William C. Sproul, Senators Holes Penrose and Phllan • der C. Knox, and Hampton L. Car son are among the invited guests at the opening of the Penn-Harris Hotel to be held an New Year's Day. The:i invited gApsts. stockholders and officers of the company will be the only people present at the open ing, it is said. IT IS YOUR PATRIOTIC PRIVILEGE to save andconserve.Whenyoueat wheat be sure it is the whole wheat Don't waste any of it. It is all food Shredded Wheat is the whole wheat-nothing wasted or thrown away. If is a nourishing wholesome substitute for meat, eggs and other expensive foods.No sugar is required-simply milk and a dash of salt FRIDAY EVENING. Deaths and Funerals DROPPED DEAD WHILE PLANTING TRKES IX PARK I While at work planting a tree in j River Park, at State ami Front i streets, Wednesday afternoon, John, jS. Scha fmeistcr, 69 years old, of i 2331 Logan stret. who for the past years has been employed as care taker of the City Nursery, was stricken with heart fnilure and died before medical aid could be sum moned. Mr. SohnfmetsUT wits well known throughout the city and was considered by many as one of Har risburg's best florists, j Resides his wife, Mr. Schafmeister is survived by fgur daughters, Mrs. William Kain. Harrisburg: Mrs. James R. Peters,-Le wlstffwn; Miss Lillian and Miss Elizabeth, at home | and one son, Vincent, of Camp Lee, > Virginia. Funeral will be held Monday k morning at 10 o'clock in St. Law- I retice's Catholic Church, the Rev. P. I S. Huegel being in charge. Interment ! will be in Mt. Calvary Cemetery. Mr. Scliafmister had just arrang ed with the Park Department for a. ! holiday yesterday. "I would like the i day off." he told Mr. Forrer. "1 want ! to spend the time with my family." i Ten minutes later he was dead. | MOTHER OF EIGHT DIES ,\T MOTKE AVEXI'E HOME Mrs. Mary Kirk died at her home. ] 1912 Moltke avenue, this morning i after an illness extending over sev eral weeks. She was 65 years old. : Besides her husband, Lewis R. Kirk. | she is survived by the following i daughters and sons: (jllve. Bertha, 1 Harriet. Victor, Arthur, Cecil, Amor : and Joseph. Funeral services on Monday ;\/>er j noon'ht 1.30 o'clock. Burial in Pros pect Hill Cemetery. Services ♦ ill be | conducted by the Rev. Mr. Jones. | pastor of Sixth Street United Breth i ren Church, of which Mrs. Kirk had i been a member. Two sons are In the ■ army service overseas. MRS. MARGARET SIIOPE i Mrs. Margaret Oswald Shope, wife of Dr. J. W. Shope, well known phy sician of this city, died this morning at the family residence, 3 2 South . Thirteenth street, aged 76. Mrs. ! Shope came front a well-known family and was born in Lewistown. She is survived by her husband and | three children: Charles R.. editor and proprietor of the Halifax Gn : zette, Halifax, tliis county; Miss ! Minnie Shope and Mrs. Howard C. Fry. of Paxtang. The funeral will ibe held Tuesday afternoon at 2.30, with services at the home. Interment will be mad in the Paxtang Ceme tery. Mrs. Shope had been confined to bed for about four months of in tirmities duo to old age. MRS. MARY E. MAHOX Mrs. Mary K. Mahon. aged 37. died early this morning at her home, 110 Xagle street, from pneumonia. She is survived by her husband. William, a daughter, Mary, and a son, William, her father, mother, four sisters and four brothers. Fu neral services wl be held Monday morning at 8 o'clock in the Scored Heart Catholic Church. The Rev. Mr. Smythe wiU officiate. Burial will be in Mount Calvary Cemetery. ISAAC G. BREXX EM AX j Isaac G. Brenneman, aged 82 ; years, died yesterday at the home of , his daughter. Mrs. Alice Witmer, 1822 North street. The following other children survive him: Harry, Jonathan. Addison and Mrs. Leah Shepp. The body Will be taken to i Lancaster county Monday by Under ; taker Sourbier for burial. Funeral ' arrangements have not been eom j pleted.- ' FREDERICK MARTZ Funeral services for Frederick Martz. aged 12 years, son of Mr. and I Mrs. William Martz will be held at the home, 1322 Fulton street, Sat urday afternoon at 3 o'clock. The Rev. A. W. Miller, of the Penbrook IV. B. Church, will officiate. Burial will be in the East Harrisburg Cem ■ etery. • HAKKY WAHI) I RKKI.AAI) Harry Ward Freeland, Bowmans dale, a former resident of Harris i burg, died Tuesday evening at 11.30 o'clock. He was aged 32 years. Fu neral services will be held Monday morning at 9.30 o'clock. Hurial will be in the Mechanicsburg Cemetery. Soup Kitchens in Vienna Feeding 60,000 Daily London, Xov. 29. —• The population of Vienna is reported in a desperate condition from lack of food, accord ing to a message to the Daily Ex • press from its correspondence in Vl | cnna. ! The message, which is dated N'o ! vember 23, tells of the soup kitchens ' established in the city. Each of the ! ten kitchens, he says, is feeding daily 3,000 men, women and children, who have to stand in line fur hours await -1 in - admission. WOl \DEI) 11V SIIKI.I, Word was receieved here tital Paul F. Shope, of Perdix, was wounded in France. November 9. while in action along the Meuse river, a shell ex ploding and injuring his right foot. Be was removed to a base hospital ,at Bordeaux and expects to he sent home soon. He was called into serv \ ice by the second city draft board. James A. Shope, a brother and form erly engineer in the Park Depart ment, is in service also. Eisner Causes Arrest of German Courier on His Way to Austria By Associated Press Copenhagen, Nov. 29.—rKurt Eis ner, the Bavarian premier, has caused the arrest of a German eau rter on his way to Austria, accord ing to a Berlin dispatch to the Ber lihfcske Tidende. The courier's docu ments were seized. A message from Munich received .in London Thursduy said Bavaria j had broken relations with the Berlin j government. The message, which was sent Premier Eisner, declared I the action was taken "owing to the i efforts of Berlin to deceive the peo i pie by' withholding the truth about ! conditions." Paris. Nov. 29.—Bavaria probably will ask to have separate plenipoten ! tlaries at the negotiations and will 1 claim conditions of a separate peace, says the Matin in commenting" on the ! action of Bavaria in breaking off re lations with the government at ! Berlin. Lone Turkey Only on Far-Seeing Officers' Table in Army of Occupation A titer ion n Army of Occupation. Nov. j 29. Only on© turkey was served on Trankngrivlngr Day in the I American army of occupation. i his i was at the mess of fifteen far-slfchtecl I officers of the bureau of operations |at the headquarters of the third dl ! vision at Kemich. The turkey was i purchased on November 11 and wus ! fattened for the feast to-day. Other Thanksgiving dinners in the I army varied according to the re sourcefulness of the mess officers land the Ingenuity of the cooks. Owing | to transportation difficulties the quar termaster > was unable to furnish the usual luxuries-and trimmings, j While the Americans .had plentv of (Wholesome and substantial food, from | the enemy lines came further reports I of hunger among the released Allied I prisoners, food riots among the de feated troops and civilian privations. Badly Burned When He Throws Oil in Furnace i Gettysburg, Pa.. Nov. 29.—Norman Ileichle was painfully burned at his i home when he tr.ed to put some 1110- ! tor oil in the furnace. It caught tire ! and blazed over him. burning his tight arm to the and also blis tering the right side of his face badly. He succeeded in extinguish-* j ing the lire before any damage was ' done to the house. Last evening lie had put several gallons of oil in the cellar so that it would be ready for use when needed. Yesterday moan ing he found that some of it had leaked out and he tried to set tire to it where it lay, but it would not burn. Taking a shovel he threw the oil Ipto the furnace and it ignited at once, the flames bursting over him. Festival of Chanukah Is Celebrated in City A caudle was tightod last night in every Jewish home and church as part of the celebration of the Festival of Chanukah. Special services will be held each night tor eight nights in l both synagogues of this city, and the ! candles will be kept lighted for this I time. The Festival of Chanukah was ' opened last night by the placing upon the altar and lighting of a large candle in the Ohev Sholom Synagogue. ! Second and South streets. The cele ! brjliott -proper will begin to-night in the Ohev Sholom and Kesher Is rael synagogues at 7:45 o'clock. MEN CRIPPLED TO GET PLACES [Continued from l-'lrst Page.] ' subject in the country, to give a : broad insight into the necessity of ! the work, and to show the feasibility and necessity of measures for the i relief of the local wounded. Mr. Dowling, who will tell of his 1 experience in life, is one of the best j examples living of the triumph of ; mind an 3 determination over the handicaps of a maimed body. He is at present the president of the State i Bank of Olivia. Minnesota. and j speaker of the Minnesota House of ; Representatives. How One Man Won ' Thirty-five years ago Mr. Dowling ! lost both legs", his Idft arm, and the ! fingers of his right arm during a blizzard. When he recovered, it was intended that he should go into a i charitable institution as a charge on 1 the community. He begged for one \ year at college, and his request was i granted. He ended by becoming a | school teacher, and then went Into • business. His political career, which ' he began a little later, made him ! speaker of the Minnesota State House | of Representatives. He drives his own automobile, rides horseback, and takes as much pleasure in life as a boy. "From a man's neck down, he is worth a dollar and a half a day," Mr. Dowling says, "but from his neck up. he can be worth SIOO,OOO a year." He will tell how the wounded and crippled soldiers can be made suc cessful in life. \X ' HARRISBtJRG TEIJEGRAFH GAITHER KEEPS HILL GUESSING Says He Will Consult Attor- j neys; Reports of a Bill to Be Presented in January Walter 11 Oaither, ex-public ■ service commissioner, who started the preliminaries of an action to restrain payment of any money from the $2,090,000 defense fund | for the writing of any war history, for Which work the "War Board" selected Governor Brumbaugh, said to-day that he intended to have a. conference with his attorneys next week to discuss the matter. "I have not , the slightest intention of dropping this proposition and any reports that I hare are moonshine. |lf any payments are made just watch and see \. Porter, who was re-elected this month, to day filed an expense account show ing that he had spent $5,566.06, of which $2,500 went to the Repub lican state committee. $1,400 to Philadelphia committees and $750 to the Allegheny county committee. He received no sontrlbutions. Walter l-\ Kennedy, Philadelphia, was to-day promoted i.sim sergeant to second lieutenant of Company E, First Infantry, Reserve Militia, and Clarence K. P. Sclieetz, Phoe nixville, to second lieutenant of Company. K. Ist Infantry. J. Paul Kauffmati, MeVcytoxvn, was appointed a notary to-day., The iMirougii of Kittnning to-day charged that the American, Natural Gas Company had "throttled com petition" in that community and Was charging unreasonable"rates for gas. To-day marked tlir close of the state fiscal year wad it is iv.pccted that the aggregate of the receipts will go over $4 4,000,000, which will break all records. Karl Hoary, .-on of Utc adjutant general, who was his way home 'from Camp Taylor yesterday was entertained at the home of Chief Clerk B. W. Demming. He enlisted here and was sent to the officers training camp which is being closed up. Keep Children Off Streets, Parents Are „ Warned by Coroner t -Parents-are urged not to permit : tlieinchildren to play in the streets. 1 Coroner J. A. Eekinger declared two : fatal accidents within the past week , occurred because in both cases chil dren were playing in the street when I they were killed by automobiles. The second accident occurred on i Wednesday night when Fred Mart 7., i aged 10 years, son of Mr. and Mrs. | John H. Martz, 1234 Fulton street, j died as the result of injuries he suf j fer when he was struck by an auto j mobile. The car was owned by i Orpheus Page, 308 South Fifteenth street. The accident occurred at Ful -1 ton and Verbeke streets, i The driver of the car took the [ boy to the hospital wlier.e he was i pronounced dead. Mr. Page explain ■ ed the affair to police ofllcials and , was released on his own recognizance | pending an inquest to-morrow after ! noon. Bolshevik Armies Win Battles Near Petrograd I Ilclsiiigfors, Finland, Nov. 29. — | Reports from the Baltic provinces |of Esthonia Wednesday said that j Russian Bolshevik troops on Tues ) day captured Pskov, 160 miles south west of-Petrograd. The fate of the volunteer northern army was un known. It was reported also that Duna burg, 110 miles southeast of Riga, hid. been taken by the Bolshevik j forces, and that Narva, eighty-one miles southwest of Petrograd, was being bombarded. l'Ol'E WANTS VOICE IN PEACE Copenhagen, Nov. 29.—A Rome "dispatch says the Vatican has an nounced that Cardinals.Gibbons and Manciri have asked President Wil son to use his influence toward per mitting the Pope to have a repre sentative at the peihce conference with a view to obtaining an adjust ment of the Roman question. PENNSY LABOR" NEEDS ARE HEAVY [Continued from First I'agc.] than the scare that their factories will not be running in six months. In this city the Pennsylvania Rail road Company is now 'employing us many men from week to wook as it ever has in the wav period. . The I number employed by this company each week ranges from 52 lo 78, or thereabouts. The number employed last week was 73, showing that the company needs help in spite of the repeated calls for hard times. These 73 men actually employed were se lected from a possible 122 who made application, which indicates that the company is employing a large percentage of those wo make ap plication. • On the other hand, 122 applica tions is not a large number In one week for such a large concern, which clearly Indicates that lubor is not much available, and that em ployes are satisfied not to worry about the future of their positions. The employes recently taken on by the Pennsylvania company serin to lie of a better type than Is usually ,fqund, but, the available nurribei.p is Small. Then- '("in be no possible' doubt that inddftriai conditions are 'remaining solid. PALMER NAMED INSURANCE CHIEF Equitable Takes Former Act ing Commissioner bf Labor and Industry For I*llloo LEWIS H. PALMER Low K. Palmer, formerly of Pitts- j burgh, who*was dismissed by Gov ernor Martin G. Brumbaugh as act-I ing commissioner of labor and in- ' dustry, during a recent "flareup" | I over departmental matters, has been j 1 appointed, director of safety and per- j | sonneJ. and consultant on industrial | conditions in group insurance by thej J Equitable Life Assurance Society, of j New York, at a salary better than j ! the Governor of Pennsylvania re ceives. He will assume his duties December 2. _ Mr. Palmer, who was a noted foot ball player in his day at Princeton, has heen one of the Irtg men in safety matters in the country. He was with New Jersey Zinc. Lackawanna Steel, Westinghouse and Jones & Laughlin J companies before being appointed chief of factory inspection by Gov ! ernor John Tener. He helped or | ganize the National Safety Council I and served as chairman of its com j mittee on industrial preparedness land reconstruction, while he was I president of the American Assocla j tion of iron and Steel Electrical En ' gineers. When the war eaine on he was made chairman of the national committee of Industrial Safety of the National Council of Defense and served on the committee on media tion, including a period investigating the I. \Y. W. on the Pacific coast. He directed the organization of the safety system in the navy yards and arsenals for the national council and also organized the safety standard bureau for the national railroad ad ministration. Rinf'e leaving the state service he was asked to serve as consultant of the international committee of the Y. M. C. A. on re-employment, as .well as in capacities' for the na tional government. Hertzler- Miller Nuptials Are Quietly Celebrated I Mechanicsburg, Pa., Nov. 2 9. —In the presence of the immediate rela ! tives, the marriage of Miss Rhoda | Elizabeth Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Miller, South York j and Keller streets, anjJ. Ephralm M. Hertzler, both of Mechanicsburg. was solemnized a* noon yesterday at the home of the bride. The ceremony was performed by Elder S. H. Hertzler, pastor of the Church of the Brethren, Eliz.abeth town, and the young couple were at tended by Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Miller, of Washington. The bride a cream batiste gown and carried i bride roses. Following the ceremony aftd congratulations, a turkey din ner was served. * The bride who taught school at Killertown, is a graduate of the High school at Oakvllle and Eliza bethtown College. Mr. Hertzler is engaged in school teaching and is I also a graduate of Elizabethtown College, where the romance began which culminated in the marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Hertzler will reside here after a wedding trip. The guests Included: Mrs. Witters, of Myers town; Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Miller, of Washington; Mr. and Mrs. 11. K. ! Miller, Huntsdale; Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Miller, of Carlisle; Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Mohler, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Miller, Mrs. Mary J. Long, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Miller, all of Mechanicsburg. SAFE AT EXD OF WAR Mr. and Mrs. Isaac C. Mumnia, 1938 Kensington street, have received a' cablegram from their son. John S. Mumma, "somewhere in France," say ing that be is well and happy. t GIRLS! BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR AND STOP DANDRUFF Hair becomes cba: g, wavy, lustrous and uiick in few moments Every bit of dandruff disappears and hair stops coming out For a few cents you can save your hair, in lea* than ten minutes you can doublo its beauty. Your hair be comes light, wavy, tlufry, abundant and appears as soft, lustrous anu charming as a young girl s after ap plying some Dandenne. Also try thl?" moisten a cloth with a little Dan | derlne and carefully draw It through | your hair, taking one small strand at ; a time. This will cleanse the huit ! of dust- dirt or excessive oil, and in just a few moments you have dou nled the beauty of Tour hair. I. de lightful surprise awaits those whosi hair has been neglected or Is scraggj. faded, drv. brittle or thin. Beside j beautifying the hair, Danderlne di ! solves every particle of dandrutt. cleanses, purifies and Invigorates the scalp, forever stopping Itching ami falling hair, hut what will pleuse yoi. most will be after a few weeks" use (Vhcn you ace new na;r--!ine am i.owriy at first—yes—run really nei. hair growing all over the sculp, i iw '( re I I iHfittV, -•■ b ' .i., u lots cT tt. surely get a" small bouU ..i ,.:iit,i(i,i i Li-uUci'ure iro.u an. drill' store or toilet counter and jusi try It. Surrendered U-Boats in Line Over Mile Long l.or.ilou. Nov. 29. —A Correspon- \ dent who visited "U-boat avenue" j oft Harwich, where the surrendered ( submarines are lying, states that the j "avenue" is over a mile long. The ! submarines tire towed to either I side in batches of threes and fours, j Officers, when asked about their flag. ' said it was a red one. The correspondent visited a sub-1 marine of the Dcutsciilanii type and i saw a blood-stained cut-o-nlne-tails | which a British sailor had found un- ! I der the captain's bunk. M US. MAGGIE 11. Clt ITCH LEY Mccliniilcshiil'g, Pa., Nov. 29. i Mrs. Maggie Belle Critchlcy, wife of ' 11. A. Critchley died on Wednesday at her home in East Keller street, after several months' illness, duo to a complication of diseases. She was i 11> years old and was a member of the First United Brethren Church. Her husband and the following chil dren survive: Luther, Franklin, Martha, .Louise and Marie Elizabeth, and a stepson, Paul, till of Mechan icsburg. Also her mother, Mrs, Lucy Jane Cushman and these brothers I and sisters: Cora, Luther T„ Blair | and Charles, all of Adams county, i Funeral services will be held to- I morrow afternoon, at 2 o'clock, at ! her late home, conducted by the ltev. J. A. Gohn, of the First United Brethren Church. Burial will be made in the Mechanicsburg Ceme | tery. HUN TLBS SUCOESSIT I, Blaiit, Pa., Nov. 29. —Among the ; successful hunters vistting here this I season were Dr. William H. Flicking er, William T. Smith and F. Mitchell I Moyroiv, of Swissvule, Pa. They suc • ceeded in bagging about twenty gray .squirrels and two wild turkeys. Mr. I Smith and Dr. Fickinger being the 1 fortunate ones to get the turkeys. ; Tl\e weight of the turkeys were ten and fourteen pounds, respectively. Why Not Do Your Christmas Shopp ing Now. Uncle Sam Requests it. | ' j 28-30-32 N. Third Street 'I A Sweeping Disposal Women's and Misses Dresses 6 !Al Greatly Reduced Prices 130 DRESSES 200 DRESSES were $25 to $39.75 were $39.75 to $59.50 jj qg.75 S2B' 75 1, . I Materials are Crepe de Chine, Satin, Crepe Meteor, Wool Jersey, Tricolette, Georgette, Serge. _ Suitable for afternoon, dance or street wear. Taken direct from our regular stock and not to be compared with "Sale" dresses. Quantities assure complete assortment of sizes and styles. None on approval, none C. O. D. All transac tions final—at these prices. —j - Very Special Very Special . r rr - , Lace Trimmed Com- Lace 1 rimmed ... I 3 . amotions, Crepe nrassieres . de Chine ■ 49c < $1.95 ' ji 250 Men's Overcoats Special Values —embracing every desirable and fashionable ma terial. .1 —every model that would appeal to the dressy man. —hand-tailoring, which is quite above any other kind. —splendid variety *o select from. ■—separate fur collars for those who want them. i NOVEMBER 29, 1918. NEWS NOTES FROM NATION'S CAPITAL fiv Associated Press 1 Washington.'— The commutation of j t tlie sentence of Thomas J. Mooney to j life imprisonment was a disappoint - i i ment to labor leaders here, who had j hoped for a new trial. 1 Washington. — : General Pursuing j i cabled the War Department to-day j j tliut every effort is being made to re- j j port promptly the complete record of j I casualties among his forces. Reports ! of deaths are forwarded by cable to j j Washington as rapidly as received. | ! With the Army on the march there j jis increasing difficulty in checking j | casualty lists. | Washington. President Wilson i devoted n considerable part of j ; Thanksgiving Day to working on liis! forthcoming address to Congress. F.I.IZAItFTII MAItTIV IHKS | Mcclianicsbtii'g, Pa., Nov. 29.—The ; ! death ot Elizabeth Martin, daughter , i of Mr. und Mrs. Foster Mtortin, oe- I 1 ctfrred on Wednesday afternoon at 1 j the home of her parents, In West i Main street, after a short Illness of | infiuenza. She was aged IB years and attended St. Mark's Lutheran Suri ; day school and the public school. [ Surviving are her parents und sev eral brothers and sisters. Funeral • services will be held to-morrow morning, conducted by the Rev. Dr. H. N. Fegtey. Huriul will be ntade in I the Mechanicsburg Cemetery. >| MARSHALL'S TRIP IS Ol'l' i ; Washington, Nov. 29. —Vice-presl- • j dent Marshall yesiierday canceled I his speaking tour through the west • j and to the Pacific, which would have < | kept him away irom Washington .' u.itil after the holidays, in making j I this unonuncement Mr. Marshall's • j secretary said lie 1 elt that ho should II itmaln here while the President I tvai at the peace conference. Courthouse Notes Probation Conrt. Suspended sen tence cases were heard to-day by President Judge George Ivunkel, who discharged a number of defendants who have been on parole for more than a year and have proved their in tention of reforming. When Mrs. May Heck, on parole after she was con victed on a charge of being a common scold, was called, it was reported neighbors had made complaints about iter. Judge Kuiikel warned her that if similar reports are received in January sentence will be imposed. To Start Murder Trial. Hardy Dlckerson, colored, charged with murder, will probably be the lirst de fendant to be called for trial at the I special session of Criminal Court next week. • FORRY Standard Quality Mens Gloves Our glovgs, as always, have the elegance and quality de manded for every service, $2.00 to $5.00. We invite you to select your Christmas gilts from our com plete stock. Porry 42 North Third Street