4 CASCARETS FOR ! COSTIVE BOWELS, HEADACHE. COLDS 1 To-night! Clean Your Bowels and Stop Headache, Colds, Sour Stomach Get a 10-cent box now. ■ Tu* the ras als out —the headache, biliousness. indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and bad colds—turn them out to night and keep them out with Cas carets. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never know god bowels or HU upset stomach, gedwr bowels or an upset stomach. Don t put in another day of distress. Lot Cascarets cleanse your stomach: re move the sour, fermenting food: take the excess bile from your liver and •arrv out all the constipated waste matter and poison in the bowels. Then you will feel great. A Cascaret to-night straightens you i out by morning. They work while yon i seep. A 10-eent box from any drug store means a ..lear head, sweet stom ' sch and clean healthy liver and bowel[ action for months. Children love Cas ■arets because they never gripe or AIRMEN SHEILED (ROWS' PRIM'E'S HEADQI'ARTERS Puvis. Oct. 26. —The "Ex elsior's" correspondent at Vitry-le-Francois. l>e partmcnt of Mame. lias sent the fol- 1 lowing dispatch to his Paper: "The town of Revignv. 12 piile* from this place, Crown Prince Frederick William of Germany hail h ? headqua'tcr? several weeks :'g.> re teivrd a visit at that tme fro:n a French-aeroplane. Th f operators of the Airship dropped a bomb, whi-h killed 15 per?ons an.l injured 2 2 others. but the Crown Prince was uninjured." AMHII.W J. DREXELTO JOIN FREM H VR>n \S IH AI FFEIR Ijo: iop. Oct. 26. —Anthony ,1. Drcx cl left Loudon a tew days ago for Paris. His intention is to ioin his son, J. Armstrong Drexel. at the front as a chauffeur, but his friends :n London c.o not knew whether he has as yet suc ceeded in doing this. John R. Drexel - a: pr.sen: stop ping at the Kit . awaiting fhe avrival of his daughter, Alice, from Munich, where she has been with friends since the outbreak of the war. ,1. Armstrong Drefel is one of General French s' chauffeurs. Anthony J. Prexel has .i\ed e.iir.ai most oi the time for tne iast 20 yeurs. He was born in Philadelphia. His fath er was head of the banking linns that bea- tjie fan- ly name. Forbid Giving Troops Liquor London. Oct. 28. — The Russian Gov ernor of lia:.' a iias announced that any [>ersons offering spirituous liquor to the Russian troops will be tried by court martia.. This statement is ccntained in a dispatch to the "Time " fro::: 't< IVtrogra.i correspondent. Von Moitke Much Better Amsterdam, Via London, Oct. 26. — An official dispatch from Berliu says tnat the condition of General von Moltkc, chief of the German General 5-taff. who is suffering from an affection wf the liver, is greatly improved. Cholera Spreading m Austria Loudon, Oct. 26. 2 A. M.—A d ? patch from Bucharest to the "Daily Telegraph" says that cholera is spread ng rapi !Iv in Austria.-Yesterday forty cases wire reported iu Moravia. 120 iii Galicia an 1 three in Vienna. \ Turks and Germans Come to Blows Londcu. Oct. 26. 1.55 A. M.—A dis patch to the "Daily Telegraph" from Athens says: "There is considerable friction between the German military men in Turkey and'the Turkish soi • iiers. At Adrianople Turkish troops • ame to blow* with their German of ticers. A protracted fight ensued. Sev eral cars tiiled with wounded were sent to Constantinople: . I ~ "* U ONWIE^ ** ! {J _-> C 7 \. u ku^Kr^h^^C V f (. SOIXLLY lI^EN, COURT I \ \JO\ £ + SoL, ♦* 'Orny^\ A I) t tonc^! 4? t >**Mi •*3lV JY)I ' v,» / f ,Ign - u1 •* Sn' —'• / i WAUBC 5\ / J#,-.-. W , / )r( ; .»* \>C 1) \V\ >~ #M'€ u !2£-** '•>,—^^-"^Av-v * _ , »M««wr V| \t I) ••• ALLIES SHbUermams ' 0 5 10 Mm l -' FRENCH MAKE GAINS AT VERDUN, DEFEATING GERMANS SOUTH OF THIAUCOURT French official reports announce gains south of Thlaucourt. where the Germans were defeated. Other despatches state that the Germans requested an armistice, which was refused. The French commander im mediately renewed the attack and obtained the advance which the Germans designed to gain. A French force is said to have arrived at Brabant-sur-Meuse. near Consenvoye, at the heights of Montfaacon. where the Crows Prince is entrenched. Another French force, it is officially stated, commands the roads leading from Varennes to the valley of the Aisne. rain 111 ! RU WARFARE I Every Other Factor Now Dominated by This Unique Means of Transport SCENES IN AND ABOUT DIXMUDE Belgian Correspondent Gives Vivid De scription of the Horrors of War in the Defense of City Against Gar man Guns London. Oct. 26. 2.-10 A. M.—Tiie "Daily Telegraph's" correspondent in Belgium who, accompanied by-a son of ; the Beigiau War Minister. M. De j Broqueville. made a tour of the battle ground in the Dixntude district last ; Wednesday, says: , "As far as t:»e eve can roach nothiug • could 'be seen but >u>-n tig villages and bursting shells. 1 realized for the first . time how completely the motor car hail ; revolution.»W warfare and how every | other fa.tor was now dominated by the Absence or presence of this unique means of transt>ort. "Every road to the front was sun ply packed with cars. They seemed an ever-rolling, endless stream, and returning to the front, while in many villages hundreds of pr vate cars were 1 parked tinder the control of the medi al ofli.er. waiting in readiness to carry | the wounded. • Terrible Scene Presents Itself "Arriving at the tiring line a ter •■.i'le scene presented itself. Tne s»iiell tire from tiie German batteries was so territi • that Belgian soldiers anil French marines were continually being blown out of their dugouts and sent scattering to cover. Elsewhere also little groups of peasants were forced to flee because , their cellars began to fall in. These un 'ortunates -ha.l to make their wav as ■est they vould on foot to the rear. They were frightened to death by the ' bursting shells an 1 the sight of crying hiidren among them was most . thet.c. "Dixmude was the objective of the German attack and shells were bursting aii over it. From a distance of three miles we could hear them crash down but tiie town itself was invisible ex , 'ept for the dames and smoke and | clouds rising above it. The Belgians had only a few field batteries so thai the enemy's howitzers simply domi nate i the field and the infantry trenches arouud the town had to rely upon their own unaided efforts. A Most Horrible Sight '' Our progress along the road was s-iJdenly stopped by oue of fhe most horrible sights I have ever seen. A heavy howitzer "heil ha i fallen and Ti.'st right -n the m l»: of a Belgian oattery making its way to the front. , uusins; terrible destruction. The man ned orses and men among tfce debris [•resented a siio king spectacle. "Eventually we got into Dixmude >ei:' and every time a shell came crash ug among tae roofs we thought our end iia ' -onie. The hotel De Villa (town iialF was .*> sa l sight. The roof was completely riddled by shell fire, inside was a scene of chaos. It was piled with loaves of bread, 'bicycles and dead sol dier* "The battle redoubled in fury and ly 7 o'clock n the evening Dixmude was a red furnace, presenting a scene of te-'.ole grandeur. The horizon was red with burning'homes. Our return journey was a melancholy one. owing to the con stant trains of wounded that were pass- Reservists to Sow Crops Paris. Oct. 26.—M. Milleraud. the M.uister of War. has given permission for the territorial reservists now mobilized at interior depots to work fifteen days sowing crops, either for themselves or for others. The Montenegrins Fall Back N;sh. Servia, Oct. 26.—A battle was fought on October 21 along the en tire Bosnian front, according to an offi cial statement issued here yesterday. The Servian", and Montenegrins re pulsed all attacks, but the severe as ! saults of the Aust.ians compelled the Montenegrins to fall back behind their l positions. I HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY EVENING. (XTOBER 26. 1914. iPAPE'S DIAPEPSIN ! FOR INDIGESTION OR BADSTOMAGH Relieves Sourness. Gas, j Heartburn, Dyspepsia in Five Minutes i Sour, gassy, upset stomach, indigos -1 tiou, heartburu, dyspepsia; wheu the food you eat ferments into gases and : 1 stubborn lumps: your head aches and j 1 you feel sick and miserable, that's when i you realize the magic iu Pape's Dia pepsin. It makes ail stomach misery .' vanish in five minutes. If your stomach is in a continuous 1 revolt—if you can't get it regulated. 1 • please, for your sake, try Pape's Dia pepsin It 's so needless to have a bad stomalh—make your next meal a fa vorite food meal, then take a little; lliapepsin. There will not be any dis ! tress—eat without fear. It's because; i Papcig Diapepsin "really does" regu late weak, out-of-order stomachs that >' gives it its millions of sales annually. Get a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. It is the quickest, surest stomach relief and ! cure known. It acts almost like magic I —it is a scientific, harmless and pleas ant stomach pwparation which truly belongs in every home. adv. GEN. IMU tiI.AS. BRITAIN'S CHIEF OF STAFF. IS DEAD ; London, Oct. 26 General Si~ ' Charles Douglas, chief of staff of the British army and fir.-t military mem-' ber of the army council, died yester ' day. General Sir Charles Whittingham llorsley Douglas, cnief of the imperial I general sta.fi' and first military member ' of the armv council, was appointed i chief of staff of the British army on i April 1, last, following the resignation of Sir John French, the present com mander of the British expeditionary forces ou the continent. Born in ISSO, he had served in ali Great Britain's wars since tiie Af ghan campaign in 1879. He had been inspector general of the home forces since IS 12. when he was made chief of the general staff. EX-PRESIDENTS' SONS IX THE ARMIES OF FRANCE Paris, Oct. 26.—Among the sons of ' ex-Presidents of France who are now with the. French, armies are the Mar quis de MacMahon. Duke of Magenta, who is a brigadier geuerai at Kelfort, while his brother. Count MacMahon, is an infantry colonel: Major Sadi Car not. who is doing duty in a fort near 'Montmorency; Claude Casimir-Perier, husband of Mme. Simone, the actress, . who is an infantry lieutenant aud was recently wounded: Paul Loubet. who is a lieutenant of infantry and is serving ' at Verdun, and Andre Fallieres. who is . attached to the Ministry of V. ar. Austrian Emperor Weaker Vienna i,bv way of Home), Oct. 26. [' —Emperor Francis Joseph is severelv i troubled with asthma. His sleeplessness i and increasing weakness, coupled with • depression, are causing apprehension. Canadian Killed in Action Ottawa, Oct. 26.—That the Canadian ' t troops are already in action is shown )| by a cable message received at (K>V ernment House. This message states that Major T. Rivers Bulkelcy. comp troller of the household of the Duke of Connaught, Governor General of Can a :a. has been killed in the fighting at the front. 1.4 t>ti Britishers Interned London. Oct 26.—The official Ad -1! mira.ty- report issued yesterday after noon publishes a list of English pris oners interned. Four officers are in temed in Germany and one officer and 1.4?1 men at Groningen. Holland. Lancaster Sunday School Convention : Lititz, Oct. 26.—The twenty-third anmal -onvention of the Lancaster County Sunday School Association, com . i prising nearly a hundred schools, -will - meet in the Lutheran < hnrch ia this place on Thursday of this week. A very s etaborate program is being arranged. It ■ is expected that t!herc will 'be present about a thousand delegates acvl scholars. GERMANS DETERMINED TO FORCE FIGHT TO AN ISSUE Paris. Oct. 26. 6.sß.—The incessant alternatives of advance and withdrawal ou {lie part of the allies anil the Ger mans, particularly in the north, fur nished early to-day no ba-is for a sum ming up as to a general result. The Germans, judging from their frightful sacrifice of men, seem determined to force the battle to an issue. Neverthe less, the French public after analyzing the situation as indicated in the latest war office statements continued op timistic. While awaitiug further news from the t'roit thero is considerable interest in ihe action the Institute of France will take regarding its German cor respondents and associates. The In stitute is expected to meet today. There has been a considerable differ ence of views auioug the members as well as The academics forming the In stitute. while the press has taken a large part in the discussion. Because of statutory dispositions and decrees there has been some difficulty in reach nig a decision. Incidentally one of the academicians has expressed himself iu favor of returning all of the diplomats orders and titles received from Ger many. MORE JOIN STOUGH CHORUS Enrollment Expected to Reach I,TOO Before the Tabernacle Meetings Are Commenced The big Stough tabernacle chorus held its rehearsal at Technical Higu school auditorium last' Saturday even ing when many additional names were added to the list. It is suid that the enrollment will reach 1,700 before the tabernacle meetings open.^ Following are the additional names enrolled and another enrollment list will be published during the week. Soprano Mrs. J. C. Kinter, 140 D State Mrs. C. C. Dubbs. SOO North Third Miss Mary Reiuoehl. SOI Green Miss Willougtiby, 203T North Filth Mrs. Oyler. 1725 Carnuation Mrs. Oyler. 1725 Carnation Mrs. W. W. Pease. 40 North Market Miss Hester Sponsler, Steelteu Mrs. Miller, Pteelton. Miss Anna Marks, Steelton Miss Dora Green, Steelton Miss Sadie Story, Steelton Miss Delia Hortz, Steelton Miss Emma Lyne, Steelton Miss Carrie Gassner, 414 Spruce Mrs. Mary W. May. 124 Lincoln Mrs. Klmer King. 17 25 North Sixth Miss Bertha Bowers. 1725 North Sijitii Miss Maude Harvev, 236 Muench Miss Vlfrctta Horting. 506 Reily Mrs. Osoar Kines. 1606 Market Mrs. Charles Spangler, 102 South litii Miss Edna Handshaw. 89 Disbrow Mrs. W. E. Fuller. 822 North Third Miss Elizabeth Thompson. 1600 N. sth Miss Loua Shaw, 626 Kelker Miss Helen Sellers. 620 Muench Miss Ruth Gosnell, Logan Miss Sadie Gordon. 523 Woodbine Mrs. H. E. Davis, 262 Forstcr Miss Davis, 262 Forster Miss Davis. Forster Miss Ruth Lack. 632 Muench Mrs. Wm. Deihl. Wormlejsburg Mrs. J. W. German, 223 South 13th Mrs. Lizzie Stover, 23 Bradv Miss Grace Long, 1722 Carnation Miss Cecelia Fasick, 139 Sassafras Miss Helen Vollmer, 1306 North Front "Miss Anna Sourbeer, 1304 N. Cameron Mrs. Ida Guise, 1720 North Sixth Mrs. Anna Golsher, 220 North Mrs. Marv Shaeffer, 1515 N. Fifth Mrs. Charles S. RaLston, 609 Woodbine Miss Bessie Miller. 1116 North Third Pearl Anderson, 1316 Susquehanna Miss Blanche Sebold. 1316 N. Third Miss Helen Seabold, 1316 N. Third Miss Helen Beshore, 352 Harris Miss Daisy Criswell, 432 Pefftr Miss Josephine Jackson, West Fairview , Mrs. S. B. Bidlack, West Fairview . Mrs. E. O. Shaffner. 107 Boss Miss Francis Ramsey, 12 Evergreen Mrs. H. Jones, 358 *B. Thirteenth Miss Aluicta Burkey, 603 Maelav Miss Jennie Donelly, 1923 Penn : Miss Alma Blough, 305 Dauphin Miss Agnes Evans. 1934 Penn Miss Matilda Evans, 1934 Penn Miss Florence Miller. 527 Emerald Mrs. F. J. Stenson, 224 North loth | Miss F. L. Donahav, Steelton i Miss Emma Wolfe. Harrisburg Alto Miss Florence Phillips. West Fairview Miss Marv Srvder, West Fairview Mrs. C. M. MeFarUnd, 1417 Zarker Miss Kthel Henrv, 1918 State Mrs. Frank Armstrong, Steelton (Miss Martha Armstrong, Steelton Miss Anna Hoch, Steelton Miss Blanch Bowers, 118 South Miss Anna Boyer,-27 South Seventeenth Miss Virginia J. Psyje, 1709 Market Tenor Irvan Daiighertv. 1000 North Sixth Prank Holmes. Kniiaut George Beard, Kn.'haut Harold Miller, Steelton Mr. Miller, Steelton Frank Armstrong, Steelton I>r. Donmoyer, 1113 Plum W. R. Donmoyer. 1113 'Plum James 0. Graham, 328 Chestnut C. A. Bainbridge. Harrisburg Bw James J. Hamaker. 441 Herr Harvey Gross. 23 North Front Garnet S. Wall. 224 Woodbine Paul I). Fray, 1153 Bailey Warren Steekley, 1915 Penn William Steekley. 2021 Green Frank S. Eaton. 1735 Market E. O. Shaffner, 107 Boas B. E. Commirrger. 14 North Fourth Max Rider, Steelton Oliver Marrock, Steelton Elmer King, 1725 North Sixth H. B. Hammond, 802 North Eighteenth •John Finlev, 715 North Seventeenth When ijßimlenjomevS^p vim jom tin easily Bcrrca an excitable, yon »ed nedieinal food—aot iT\y* drags me stimulants. >. 1/ SCOTT'S EMULSION is rich is 4jk food nine; it supplies the CM ▼cry elements to entire* VJlf the blood, restore strength ' Iff and the eonrs*e of hsaith. •4JL A~UAlnkmKtS*Mtmi^ nine i 1. liMli L Call on Advocates of! Local Option to Sup port Republican Can-1 didate for Governor PALMER REBUKES GIFFORD PINCHOT Congressman Resents Bull Mooser'a Be-j cent Attacks—Oliver Declares He i Will Not Again Seek Office—Pen j rose Is Optimistic I (Special to the Star-Independent.) Pittsburgh, Oct. "6.—Predicting an overwhelming .Republican victory iu 1 Pennsylvania at next week * election,! the leading Republican State candi-1 nates addressed ten meetings in Alle gheny county Saturday ending the day j with a great rally in the Fourteenth j Regiment Armory." Senator Boies Penrose discussed the tariff and declared that the industries of the State have been paralyzed by the operation of the tariff for revenue-only policy of the Wilson administration. I>r. .Martin G. Brumbaugh, candidate for the Governorship, iu his speeches indicated the line of his activities in the event of his election and outlined the sort of legislation he would advo cate in the General Assembly and the sort he would sign and veto. He de clared strongly for a workman's com i pensation act, county 10-al option, strict enforcement of the law for honest | weights and measures, adequate child ! and woman's labor laws anj other liu-! | manitarian legislation. Oliver Out of Politics At 2 o'clock the candidates hustled: i over to the Northside Carnegie hall, | where they discussed the campaign is-1 i sues with the Republican county com mittee. after which thcv held a recep-1 : tion and got into personal touch with) ; the party workers. A feature of this meeting was the promise of Senator : George T. Oliver that he will never again be a candidate for anv political office. Philadelphia, Oct. 26.—Churchmen, both of the clergy and laity, leaders in religious work and social movements 1 have issued a call for sincere believers j in local option to rally around Dr. Mar- j tin G. Bvumhaugh for Governor. Coincident with the issuance of this j call came the announcement from Dr.! Brumbaugh that he was investigating the Personal Liberty party, and if he j ! found the party v.a's the agent of the j liquor traffic, would at once issue a j formal statement repudiating its en dorsement of him. Equally significant with the call of' the local option advocates and Dr. ] Brumbaugh's statement on the Personal Liberty party was the publishing of a j list of candidates to be supported by j the liquor interests. And this list does ! not contain the name of Dr. Brum i baugh. Churchmen for Brumbaugh Men whe signed the statement in I every case volunteered. All signers are i known for achievements in the cause of temperance. As churchmen, they are endorsing a fellow-churchman, for Dr. Brumbaugh is not only one of the na tion's foremost educators, but he is also i a minister of the Gospel. As a Sunday i school worker he represented the Unit ; ed States at the world conference held ! in Geneva last year. In the public statement issued by j churchmen attention is drawn to the fact that Dr. Brumbaugh's personal ! pledge to support local option legisla ! tion carries even more weight than I "any political platform which could ibe framed.'' and his record, as public I man and private citizen, is cited to • show that, as Governor he will be a tower of strength, not only to local op tion. but to every moral reform*. The concluding paragraph of the statement ealls attention to the fact that the really vital problem before tho i friends of local option in Pennsylva nia this year is the election of State Senators aud Representatives who wiTi pass a local option bill, and declares i that this important point has apparent ly been overlooked in a great measure. Palmei Attacks Plnchot Resenting the belligerent methods employed by the Bull Moose organiza tion to cripple his candidacy, Congress man A. Mitchell Palmer, who has for 1 several weeks been passive under criti | cisms from Roosevelt sources, issued a I statement last night, severely rebuk ! ing Gifford Pinchot for his recent at tacks. The action of Congressman Pal mcr in taking Pinchot to task on the very eve of the actual >entrv of Colo-1 nel Roosevelt into the State campaign I is regarded as significant. For several weeks the relations be tween the Democrats and the Washing ton party, formerly most friendly, have been considered on the verge of a break. Mr Maimer's candidacy has oeen belittled by the Bull Moose men ever since Le declined to withdraw iu ' favor of Pinchot and a continuous fire has been waged against him from this direction. Week's Democratic Itinerary Congressman Palmer and Vance C. McCormick have arranged an unusually strenuous itinerary for the windup week of the campaign. Their schedule of engagements follows: To-day—Noon, Bromley's Mill, Le high avenue and B street; 12.30, Stead k Miller mill, Fourth and Cambria streets; 5, Stetson's factory, Fourth street and Montgomery avenue; 8, .Morris town. Tuesday Evening—Mr. McCormick at Mt. Carmel, Mr. Palmer at Shamo kin. Wednesday—'Mr. McCormick to tour Philadelphia under auspices of Wash ington party, Mr. Palmer to visit Le high county, with meeting at Allentown at night. Thursday—Candidates to tour Cum berland Valley, 12.30 p. m., Mechan iedburg; 1.30. Carlisle, 3.15, Newvillo, 4. Shippensburg; 5.45, Green<-astlc; night, meetings at Waynesboro and Chambersbuig Friday—Tour of Adams and ¥ork r WESTERN UNION [ DAY AND NIGHT I LETTERS | impress | the man 1 you want 1 to reach 1 THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. 8 Full information gladly given at any office. | vammrnmrnmaammnmrnm counties, with meetings at Oashtown, Kast Berlin, Davidstiurg, Mover, Wei glestown, Spring Grove, Hanover and Vork. Saturday—Twenty three meetings, to | be held at York, New Salem, Jacobus, l«oganville, Seven Valleys, IHanover Junction, Glen Rock, Seitzland, Kail road, New Freedom, Shrewsbury, Stew artstown, Fawn Grove, Delta. Sunny-1 •burn, Brogueville, Ked Lion, Windsor ville, Dallastown, Yoe, Yorkana, Wrightsville, Hallam and Harrisburg. ARGONAUT SENT TO ASYLUM ' U»er Denies He Has Wealth Hidden and Is Taken to Institution Hazleton, Pa., Oct. 26.—T0 win a; fortune in the California gold fields in i the rush of 1819 across the emigrant! trail and to he taken to the Ijaurytowni almshouse to end his days is the fate j of Peter McUillian, 93 years old, of! who hafl lived as a hermit in the woods for 35 years near the spot j where he was reported to have hidden! his wealth. Recently he grew too feeble to l>e left alone, and as ho obstinately clings toj his denials that he has secreted hisi money, he had to be takeu to the insti tution. Hand Lacerated in Saw Marietta, Oct. 26.—When about i ready to finish the day's work Saturday, William Kibler, employed at Hiestand's! lumber mills, had 'his hand caught and i badly lacerated in tihe saw he was using.! It is fenred that the joints of several | fingers of the right hand will be lost. I He was unconscious from Hie loss of blood for a time. Lebanon Lighting System Transformed Lebanon. Oct. 26.—The Edison Elec | trie Compauv now has its street light ing system entirely transformed and embiaees not only this city but also In dependent borough. The cost of re- THE LAW provides! for the descent and distribution of property— but the law may not meet your individual wishes or desires. The wise plan is to make a Will devising just how your property is to be and whom it shall benefit, and appointing an Executor who has both the inclina tion and ability to carry out your wishes. Complete equipment, experience, permanent exist ence—these are some of the features of this COMPANY which make it an ideal Executor. The full aroma of all Havana tobacco —rich, ff fragrant and satisfying —is what makes I MOJA 10c CIGARS I worth the price. J Made by John C. Herman & Co. 1 placing the old style direct, eurront street lamps with the new metallic arc, lamps, the most modern constructed, aggregates $16,000. MANY POLITICAL MEETINGS Washington Party Will Hold Three To night; the Doinocrats Ttoo A \\ ashington party meeting was held in Market square on Saturday even ing, when addresses were made bv John Reed", .lames \V. Marker, Wilatt •r Crow, Homer Burlingnnie and 1-:. S. McFar laud. At the Bull .Moose rally in Millers burg on Saturday night the speakers were ,1. B. Martin, \V. \Y. Loukcr, Coun ty Chairman Mosey and J. H. Rover. Three meetings in the interest of Hid Bull Moose candidates will lie held to night at Third and Yerbekc streets, 'Harrisburg; Deodatc and Bachinans ville. The PalmerMeCormick Club of the Thirteenth ward will meet to-night it. 1931 Perry street and be addressed In well-known orators. The Third Ward Club will meet in the Palmer-Md'or mick League headquarters in the ••Pa triot" building. In his first expense account filed in Washington Senator Penrose says lie contributed SIOO to the West End Har risburg Republican Club and SIOO ij the State Firemen's Association. "Do you think Smythe loves Ins wife?'' "I'm anre he does. Wliy, he broke all his brand new teeth trying to eat her biscuits.'"—■ Baltimore American. A Hard Knock j "I understand Mamie told Jim she l wouldn't marry him if he were the last I man on earth.'' "She made it even stronger than that. She said she wouldn't marry him if he were worth a million dollars."— | Detroit Free Press.