4 The SHE Likes Best I'hcir distinctive flavor, their freshness w^°'esomc P urit y captivate all W J&* In an attractive double «ealed package /» ■ \\ yjElWi \ that will pltase the molt faitidioui. IK \ s. | I 10c Cigarsjf. p ijome smokers imagine they | need "black" cigars to satisfy j g I Well, a cigar may be as black as a piece of coal —and just as tasteless. " ¥" Smoke more MOJAS and get S more satisfaction. Made by John C. Herman & Co. /\ 1 2~\. is thouAhly screened 21 nd Protected From ■— . th® weather. It poys to buy such cool. H.M. KELLEY & CO Office, 1 N. Third Street. 80me_of. ours Yard, 10th and State Streets ? C. V. NE WS FREEDOM MAY BE REWARD Harvey Snooks to B e Repaid for Pre venting Alleged Murderer's Escape Hagerstown, Oct. 13.—Harvey Snooks, now in the Hagerstown jail upon a charge which involves a prison sentence of one year, will probably be given his freedom. The sheriff and others have joined in an application for a pardon to be submitted to Governor Goldsborough and the State Board of Pardons, and it is expected that his case will receive early and favorable consideration. Snooks is the young man, it is claimed, who informed Sheriff King of a plot to break jail, and which re sulted in John 11. Wingert, wanted for murder, and Charles Slick, wanted on the charge of stealing an automobile, •, nearly gaining the freedom of the out er corridor. Sanitarium Nearly Completed ; | Makes Stubborn Coughs | | Vanish in a Hurry | I S Snrprlslnitly (iood Tongh Syrup @ Easily and Cheaply '*! Made at Home y ; If some one in your family has an ob ■ St in ate cough or a bad throat or chest i cold that has been hanging on and refuses J to yield to treatment, get from an\- drug .store 'J'j; ounces of I'incx and make it . into a pint of cough syrup, and watch that tough vanish. Four the -}/•> ounces of Pinex (50 . cents worth I into a pint bottle and rill . tbo bottle with plain granulated sugar < avrup. The total cost is about 54 cents, and gives you a full pint—a family 'supply—of a most effective remedy, at a ' saving of $2. A day's use will usually i overcome a hard cough. Kasilv prepared i in 5 minutes —full directions with I'inex. t Keeps perfectly und has a pleasant taste. J Children like it. I ■ It s really remarkable how promptly and easily it lonseus the dry. hoarse or J tight cough and heals the intlamed mcm- | branes in a painful cough. It also stops , the formation of phlegm in the throat i und bronchial tubes, thus ending the per • sistent loose cough. A splendid remedv ' for bronchitis, winter coughs, bronchial [asthma and whooping cough. i Pinex is a special and highly concen • tratcd compound of genuine Norway pine J extract, rich in guaiacol, which 'is so healing to the membranes. Avoid disappointment bv asking your • druggist for "(fij ounces of Pinex,"'and do not accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction goes with this preparation or money promptly refunded, i'he Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, lnd. an eminence at the southwestern edge ! of Hunterstown that commands a view ! . | of the entire locality, the Goldsborough j j Sanitarium is now rapidly nearing eohi-! ! pletion. It was thought that the three Goldsborough sisters, all trained nurses, . | who have undertaken the remarkable task of establishing this institution, _ | will have a number of patients there | H under their care before the end of the ' j autumn season. P : Horse Choked on Oats 1, Waynesboro, Oct. 13.—Drayman H. i r C. Potts lost a valuable horse at uoon > r yesterday. The animal choked on oats j f j that had been fed to it. Mr. Potts fed • 3 all of the horses in the stable at ten i 5 minutes before twelve and when he; finished his dinner at 12.15 o'clock and ! s went to change the harness on a horse. ! he noticed one was very sick. He j tried to get a veterinarian but by the j '' time one arrived, the horse was dead. ' • To Address Students Carlisle, Oct. 13.—This week Car-' lisle and Dickinson College will be fa- j ; vored with a visit from Samuel Higgin i | bottom, head of the Department of i ' Agriculture in the Ewing Christian' j College. Allehabad, India. I Mr. Higginbottom will speak in , Methodist Episcopal church this evening 'at 8 o'clock and will address the stu | dents of the college at a college as | sembly to-morrow morning at St.2o J o'clock. To both these meetings the , | public is very cordially invited. j Hagerstown Fair Opens Hagerstown, Md., Oct. 13.—While i | its formal opening took place to-day, J ! the 1914 Hagerstown Interstate Fair' j began last night with a fireworks dis-i plav and several thousand persons at-' ! tended. Festoons of electric lights add . to the down-town illumination on prin cipal streets and traffic problems are ' | already perplexing owing to th e muiti-f | plieity of-cabs and use of stands foi l j cabs. The biggest poultry show i u the! | world has about 8,000 entries. House- i hold exhibits exceed 10,000 and the! | fruit display is a record-breaker. ' To Dedicate Monument 1 i Gettysburg, Oct. 13.-—The members! 1 of the Knoch Brown Association and i :of the Pennsylvania Historical Com | ' mission have ereetPd a monument at U ' the site of Fort MeCord on the farm! lot' John \V. Bossart, eight miles west! i j of < hambersburg, which they will dedi-p j cate October 29. The des'ign of the | i I monument is in the form of a Celtic j 1 [Cross with a Scotch Thistle at the j' {junction of the transverse beam. i The monument is located at the i junction of the mountain road through 1 • 'Yankee Gap with the St. Thomas and ' .Strassburg road, six miles from the for | Imer and seven from the latter village. ! I HAHRISBURG STAR-INDEPKNITENT, TUESDAY 15VEX \N(i, OrTOBER 13, 1914. | The Daily Fashion Hint. •' Many of the new styles in house j gowns are designed so that they but- ' I ton down the front, n very convenient j detail in a ,;o\Vn that is donned rap i'dl.v. This graceful model is of lav ! i-'iider crepe meteor. Tile foundation is ' j tit Umpire; tha lace jacket is sleeve- ; ess and ties in a loose knot behind. GETS REAL SHOT TOE MOVIE ! "Blank" Cartridge Not Quito So Harmless as Intended | Williamsport, f'a„ Oct. 13. — Fred j Fullerton, aged 25, was shot in die I back while working as an actor in a j production for :t moving-picture film, j A picture in which local historical in 1 cidcuts were woven into a story was i being made, and Fullerton was an In liian. a member of a party attacking' j H stockade, which was defended by I "Colonial troops." In the engagement lie was struck in j the back by a wad from a gun in which a blank cartridge had been dts-j charged to make smoke fcr the action, i Increase Reward for Slayer Doylestown, Pa., Oct. 13. The! County Commissioners vesterdav in creased the reward for tne arrest of j John Cope, the fugitive murderer of ■ (Florence \ . (,'opp. his niece, near ißuck inglia'.u Valley, September 2S. to SjUO. i ! Cope is fhought to 'be hiding in Phila 1 j delphia. Steak Alarms Neighbors Pct'tstown, Pa., CM. 13. —-A big round steak that 'Mrs. Mary Has'ovftz left ■ frying on a kitchen stove while she was ' J away was res-j-onsi'ble for'the rushing of i over 500 persons to her house. The j ; burning meat tilled the house and neigh- : | borhood with smoke, but no other dam age was done. Shoots Himself, Not Teacher ; Altoona, .Pa., Ocit. 13.—Telling his ! I playmates lie intended to shoot his j pnbl:. l school teaeher if trtiere was any ; | trouble on account of his truancy, i j Michael CampKiieUo, aged 12, accident- 1 | ally shot himself in the right foot When ! he flourished the weapon vesterdav. Bullet Near Heart, Lives a Week Pottstown, Pa.. Oct. 13. —As the re-!, suit of a bullet wound near the heart, ! i 1 inflicted a week ago. Joseph Oominio, > i !of Pittston, died yesterday at the ho - ( | pital here. Samuel Sanderdolce, ac-1, l cused of the shooting, has disappeared \ in the mountains. Appendicitis on Left Side iSiinbur.v, Pa., Oct. 13. —Stephen 0. j I Griffith. 4S years old, died here follow-j ' ing an operation for appendicitis. The |. organ was found on the left instead of j the right side. Surgeons s a,v this condi tion does not exist once in 10,000 j HAKRISBURG VVOMAM fINDS QUICK 1 RELIEF FROM STOMACH AILMENTS : Mary Wheeler Gains In Weight After Taking Mayr's Wonderful Remedy Mary Wiieeler of 70K Green street. Harrisburg. I't'uii., for a Ion}; time was a victim of stomacli disorders. •She tried mativ treatments and fojnd nothing that, could help her. At last she came upon May's Won derful Stomach Remedy and quickly found herself on the way to health. She wrote: "1 received your wonderful stomach! remedy. 1 took it and it acted .just as you said it would. 1 had suffered with) my stomach for nearly a year and doc-; tored all the time. The first dose of! your treatment relief. I feell like new. 1 had awful distress after eat-' ing and suffered from bloating and gas, but now I feel fine, am gaining in weight and can eat anything." This is a typical letter from the! thousands received from- those whoj COLUMBUS CONVENTION > 1,500 Delegates at Sixth Annual' Gathering In Wilkes-Barre Wilkes Barre. Out. 13.—Delegates to tbe sixth cunual convention of the National Columbus Association of America opened their sessions here yea- I terdav. Yesterday afternoon tho 1,500 delegates and local members of the as , 1 soeiacion took parr in the annual pa ' rade, which was followed by an open air mass meeting, l.ast night the an ■ nii.il banquet was held in Concordia | Hall. The first session opened with ad ! dresses of welcome by John V. Kosek,l i of this city, and J. P. Binz, vice chair-1 J man of the local branch. TRIED FOR ATTACKING GIRLS Second Time Dunmoro Fire Chief Has Been Before a Jury Scran ton, Oct. 13. —After a full! | day's effort a jury was obtained just j before court closed yesterday in the j case against J. L. Decker, chief of the j Dunmore tirp department, who is I charged with attacking two girls, both ! under 15 years. | This is Decker's second trial, the , jury in the (first trial disagreeing, .Jud.ie! I Evans, of Berwick., is presiding. Deck I or is accused of inveigling the girls to ! i the fire houses. iHe is married and has j children. [ MANY AT CHURCH DEDICATION ' I Ten Thousand Catholics March in Shamokin Demonstration i Shamokin. I'a., Oct. 13.—St. .!o , jseph's Catholic church was dedicated] | here yesterday by Bishop Bhanahan, of J I Harrisburg, in the presence of a large j number of people -from Columbia, j Schuylkill and Northumberland coun ties. Monsignor M. M./Hassett, of Har | risburg, delivered tin/ dedicatory ad- I dress. Previous to the services an extensive stieet parade w«s viewed by 10,0001 I spectators, and the Rev. .1. C. Brock ' | oris addressed a large number of peo ' pie in front of tha church. SITS NEXT TO GIRL'S SLAYER Hastens for a Policeman, and Fugitive Again Escapes i Allfi'town, Pa.. Oct. 13.—Allen | town's police are on a desperate chase ! after John Cope, slayer of his niece. A man who know* him well saw (.'ope sit ' ting down beside him in the Hotel Al ! len restaurant shortly alter S o'clock, i He left abruptly to get an officer, where j upon Cope bolted out of the place. A few minutes later a message from Lansdale said the slayer had left there 1 uti the car arriving here at 8. , TRAIN DEALS DEATH TO COWS ; Kills Five Thoroughbreds and Badly i Injures Throe Chester. Pa.. Oct. 13.—Five Hoi ! | stein-Friesian cows were killed andj three more of a herd of eij»ht belong ing to .1 oh:i I*. < rozor, the Uplimi tex tile manufacturer, were badly injured' when a train plowed into them a« they I were grazing; «lou>> tho Baltimore trai Division of the Pennsylvania rail I road, near Bridgewater. Traffic was held up for nearly two! 1 hours as a result of the accident, aud it i i was necessary for the wracking crew to I jack up.the engine to remove the car-; ; '-asses. The cows had strayed from | Mr. Cror.erV dairy farm. Death of Young Married Woman * Washingtonboro, Oct. 13. —Mrs. i ; Mary Manning, 23 years oid, died yes-1 j terdav from a complication of diseases J i after a short illness. She was a teach-1 ter and member of the Methodist Epis- j copal church and Sunday school, and is! ! survived by her husband, one child,'! j father and mother. Operator Found Dead in Bed I Elizabeth town, Oct. 13. —JosiahH l Banev, 64 years old, was found dead in . I bed this morning at his home here. He J 1 was a telegraph operator for the I'cnn- j' sylvania railroad company and was em ; ployed in different parts of the State. He was a member of tho Reformed . church. Two daughters survive. Martin D. Kendig Dies Lancaster, Oct. 13.—Martin D. Ken 1 dig, of Manor township, one of the lead- J 1 ing tobacco-growers of Lancaster coun-! 1 ty, died Sunday night. 'He was 81 i years old. For many years he was sec- j , rotary and treasurer of the Lancaster Comity Agricultural Society and- for! some years was president of the Lan- j | (aster* County Tobacco Growers' Asso- j j ciatiou. \ Colliery 3trike Is Ended Tamaqua, Pa., Oct. 13. When the Coal and Navigation Company! agreed to reinstate four men discharged; at the No. 11 colliery, pending a set | tlement of the grievances. 500 employ-j es, who went on a strike last Thursday,! returned to work yesterday. Negro Population Data Washington, D. €., o."t. 13. —The i < number of negroes iu the United States j i proper in 1910 was 9,827,763, com-' pared with 8,833,994 in 1900, an in crease of 993,769, as shown by a pre liminary report of the Census Bureau ! yesterday. In 1910, negroes formed! 10.7 ;«'t cent, of the total population,! against 11.6 per cent, in 1900. 1 • J have taken Mayr s Wouderful Stom ach Remedy. The first dose of this' remarkable remedy convinces—no long treatment. i. It clears the digestive tract of mu-! I'oii accretions and removes poisonous! matter, it brings swift relief to suft ferers from ailments of the stomach, I liver and bowels. Many declare it hasj saved them from dangerons-operations and many are sure it has saved their; lives. We want all people who have!* chronic stomach trouble or constipa- " tion, no matter of how long standing,;!' to try one dose of Mayr's Wonderful' Stomach Kemedy—one dose will con vince you. This is the medicine sol" many of our people have been taking! with surprising results. The most thorough system cleauser ever sold.!" Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Kemedy is 1 4 now sold here by George A. Gor gas, 16 I v X. Third street, and Pennsylvania Rail-1 1 road station and druggists everywhere. Adv. I ,|B9 VISITORSJfERE PRESENT , Interesting Program Rendered at Rally Day Services of Newly-organ ized Lutheran Church The Lutheran church at Riverside, which was but recently organized, held ! its Kallv Day services last Sunday, at ; which time the following interesting i program was rendered: Hymns 32 and 15; prayer, the Rev. ;,E. E. Snyder, of St. Matthew's Lu thersn church, Harrisburg; reading of j the lesson; address, the Rev. S. D. Dougherty, synodical superintendent of | the Lutheran Church, Philadelphia; 'j roll call and collection; music, St. Mat thew's girl choir; recitation, "Rally! I Oh, Comrade. Rally!" Margaret Nagle; address, the Rev. Mr. Stamets, of Augs ' burg Lutheran church; recitation, "The Little Acorn,'' by Catherine Stro'hm i and Annetta Lotz; hymn 30; recitation, "the Toilers," .lames Roberts, Robert Hv.ab and Carl Lotz; vocal solo, "Hear 1 I s,' < atherine Xeiter, accompanied by 1 j girl chorus; recitation, Catherine Trout- J man, Helen Crone. Margaret Albright i and Annetta l.otz; music, St. Mat thew's gi r | choir; recitation, " (), Ral jly Day," by Ruth Swab; recitation, "The Liittle Squirrels," Edgar Dapp, I aul Swab, Carl Lotz and Norman Eu- Igle; secretary's report—l4B present, j 09 being scholars and 89 visitors, col j lection, $13.11; address, the Rev. E. E. Snyder, of St. Matthew's Lutheran church; benediction, the Rev. Mr. i Stamets. FOOTBALL TUMBLE KILLS Player, Tackled Low, Strikes Head and Dies in Half-hour Emmitsburg, Md„ Oct. 13.—Falling on his head when tackled and thrown in a football game, William English, Jr., | of Troy, N. V.. received injuries which ! caused his death half an hour later, at Mount St. Mary's College, yesteniav uioriiiug. Lnglish, a Senior, was playing on a picked class team against the Juniors. Receiving the ball, he dashed down the field for a gain and was tackled low, the back of his head striking the ground. He got up, walked a few yards and fell over unconscious. Thirty min utes later he died from concussion of the brain. Stop Those Early ironchial Coughs They hang on all winter if not chocked, and pavo the way for serious throat and lung diseases. Get a bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, and take it freely. Sfops coughs and colds, heals raw inflamed throat, loos j ens the phlegan and is mildly laxative, j < harles T. Miller, Ed. Enquirer, Can- I nelton, Ind., had bronchial trouble] got very hoarse, coughed constantly from ' a tickling throat. He used only Foley's i Honey and Tar Compound. Was en j ti rely relieved. Wants others to know 'of Foley'B Honey and Tar. George A. (iorgas. 16 North Third street and P. j R. li. Station. adv. Third Crop of Raspberries i Marietta, Oct. I 3.- B. li. Hippie dis covered in his garden yesterday that ! I'is black raspberry vines were full of j fruit which will ripen in a day or so. the third time the vines bore ihis soa |son. It is an unusual thing for rasp berries to be ripe in the middle of Oe ! I tober. Several rose bushes in the yur l j i of George W. Kame are in full bioom land present a beautiful sight. Directory of Leading Hotels of Harrisburg j - - - - i - ■ - j- THE BOLTON Market Square Large and convenient Sample Rooms. Passenger and Baggage Elevator. Elec tric Cars to and from depot. Electric Light and Steam Heat; Rooms en suito j or single with Baths. Rates, J2.50 per 1 day and up. J. H. Os M. S. Butterwortli, Props THE PLAZA | 423-425 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa. i At the Entiance to the P. R. R. Station EUROPEAN PLAN F. B. ALDINGER, Proprietor Hotel Columbus Absolutely Fireproof DO Rooms and Batha European Plan Maurice E. Russ, Proprietor Third and Walnut Sts.. Federal Square i The Lochiel Corner Market and Third Streets Entiance on Third Street ' ZTJROPEAN PLAN Rooms provided with Heat, Hot and Cold Water. Baths free to guests W. H. BYERLY. Prop. HOTEL DAUPHIN 30» MARKET STREET European Plan. Kates JI.OO per dav and up. Room." single or en suite, with 1 private baths. Luncheon, 11.30 to 2 p. m.. 3»c i Dinner dally, j to 8 p. m. nor Special Sunday Dinner. 12 noon to S p. in., 75c A la carte service. t> a. m. to 12 n m HOK'mu * MINGLE, Proprietor* ' The Metropolitan Strictly European For something good to eat. Every thing in season. Service the best. ■ Prices the lowest. HOTEL VICTOR ii No. 25 3outh Fourth Street j ! Directly opponlte Union Stntloa, equipped v,«rith nil Modern Improve- ' •iciitMf running wnter In cverv rnoaai *'><• bat 111 perfectly rcinltnry; nicely! lucnlnhcil thrnifehoat. Rates moderate, I l£ur i with Telephone with Free Local Service I Llevator —Lvery Modern Convenience. , I Shower Baths Free to Guests. I J. W. Rodenhaver, Proprietor i ' Women Look Well When they escape the sallow skin, the pimples, black heads, facial blemishes due to indigestion or bilious ness. At times, all women need help to rid the system of poisons, and the safest, surest, most convenient and most economical help they find in This famous familyremedy has an excellent tonic effect upon the entire system. It quickly relieves the ailments caused by defective or irregular action of the organs of digestion, headache, backache, low spirits, extreme nervousness. Purifying the blood, Beecham's Pills improve and Clear The Complexion Direction* of Special Value to Women with Every Box. Sold every wh«r«. In Boxes, 10c.• 25c. AMUSEMENT*. | AMUSEMENTS. MAJESTIC THEATRE WILM "' •™ *»• ■ * —l—' The Rent Rill So For Thin Scanon _ IN a *.IIIR Ftatlval Back to Nature Brl*Ul SouKa and Bright Nmtlea >„ More Tlre.ome Picture.. THE MYSTIC BIRO BISON GIIY FOUR THK KIM» OF SHOW vol! I,IKE NELSON WAHLEN TROUPE ,lo \\fd KS " I THI ns v, KRI " MR. and MRS. COPPELAN NOVELTY CLINTONS * Mb " I » PAULI and BOYNE 1 A ft | r loc ' ,r - 2s< - 1" OL IDC SEE THE i WORLD'S SERIES GAMES AT BOARS OF TRADE I Game Called at 2 V. M. Including Herself Arthur Askem—How did you like] I Europe? Bertha Binthare—Not verv woll.' ! Why, actually every place we visited! was overrun with foreigners.—Chicago' News. * I RESENTS TAUNTB AND FIRES i Old German Opens War in Defense of Fatherland Pottsville, Pa., Oct. 13.—Anthony! | Boiinski is a patieut at the Miners' hos- | j pital ns a result of an argument over | the European war with an old German, j I William Bartlett, watchman at the j i Reading railway station at Mincrsville. ! Bartlett is a warm German partisan | and has vigorously upheld his father- I land throughout the present strife, and j was much toasei. by Boiinski. Yester-j day. when the latter began his taunts, ■ Bartlett fired at him through a win- , dow, the flying glass severely cutting Boiinski in the face and eyes. INDIANA SCHOOL EXHIBIT ; Hoosiers to Make Wonderful Showing at Panama Fair San Francisco, Oct. 13. —Indiana [ will make a wonderful educational ex- j hibit at the Pauama-tPdcific Intel-nation- j al Exposition. Special attention will be ; j devoted to the consolidation of rural schools, agricultural, vocational work, domestic science and playground activi ties. The remarkable vocational work along the lines laid down toy Tolstoy in Russia and by Farrera in Spain, done i in the all day anil all-purpose schools of Gary, lnd., will be extensively fea-! tured with demonstration classes. This; system does away in large measure with books and recitations. Fed Peaches to the Hogs Marietta. Oct. 13.—The peach cropj in Lancaster county is about over. 111 was the largest crop in many years, thei peaches being good size and selling at j very low prices. Many farmers had so | many that they fed them to their hogs.! The last of the crop was sold yester-1 day at 25 cents per bushel. .Many were | shipped to western parts to friends. A number of trees were seen to have bios soma the past week. Paralysis Fatal to Aged Artist Strasburg, Oct. 13.—Siles N. War-1 gel, one of the most prominent resi dents of this section of the county,! died shortly after midnight from the' effects of a stroke, aged 76 years. He 1 was a graduate of the Millersville | j State Normal School and was an expert ! in drawing. He was a breeder of do mestic fowls and a collector of novel- j ties. He was a member of the Masons, j belonging more than fifty years. One ! brother in it his only sur vivor. I PHOTBPLAY TO-DAY ; THK H KICIHT Of * ( HO« \—l.uhln 3-urt drnmn fcnltirinu Hnrrj \l,rrm 1 TUB MI: V 1(1' OK SONM JIM y|_ j llisrnph Drnmn. THE KX-hel McfCarrell, readerr 'Miss i Alice Myers. soprano soloist: Miss Pant j ine Davvsaon and William Yates, j pianiwts: j Piano solo. "Pireal«," llnuniels, Miss Mvers; piano solo, " RHgoletto," Liszt, Miss Davis son; reading, selection from "Prettv Sister of Jose," Miss M.Carrell; solo, , '' Mon IJesir," Xevin; (b) |"Ec4tasy," Hummel, Miss Myers. I Columbia Iron Mills Resume Operations I Marietta, Oct. 13. —The Janson Iron I Company mills at Columbia, which had | been,closed for some time, resumed op erations yesterday morning. It was a I great boon to the men of this borough. Bequeaths Money to Church j Elizabetlltown, Oct. I".—The will of lleury Baker, of this place, who died | a few days ago, was probated vostpr j da.v. Me bequeathed to the St. Paul V " nited Brethren church, Elizabethtowu, I the sum of SSOO. He was a member . of the congregation many years. There | are a number of smaller bequests. Epringville Citizen Dies Syringviljg, Oct. 13.—George San ; doe, 6 7 years old, died from a complica- I tion of diseases, lie is survived by his j wife, several children and grandchil dren. He was a member of the M.