2 FIB IS SENT TO PENITENTIARY routimird Krom Kitm I'agr. i m a set-on J unsuccessful attempt to de-, stroy :t, six hours after the'tiremeu left. S® nee IS 10 Sheetz has spent most of hi* time i'i the Reformatory in Hunt ingdon. His criminal career begun with! :ii- breaking into a railroad freight ear. V few months after his release from the Hunting-lon institution he was re tinned on a serious charge- In li'li he v.as returned to the re formatur\ on a charge of attacking several Mi.ldietown girls. He broke his parole Ir.st spring, but he finally ; iis iiarged from the Huntingdon j institution on August 31. last. s heet/ told Judge McCarrell that he set lire to the barn because the manager of Hie farm, which is owned bv the Hnrrisburg Trust i ompany, refused to pa* hi in for husking corn." . Woman Weeps in Court Judge MeCartetl took under advise ment an application for suspended sen tence in the case of a pretty Laucas ter woman, who said she forged two cheeks on \V illiam L. Lioeser, a Harris burg attorney in order to get money so that bills contracted by her and her husband could be paid. On a S2O bogus check she obtained $7 and on one for sl.~> she received So. The defendant, according to the po lice, is a member of a prominent I.an taster family, that once was considered wealthy. Through bad investments the father lost his all and the children were thrown 011 their own resources. The young woman wept bitterly when «ailed for sentence, .she is vears old. John K. Coeyman got tive months fori stealing a pair of trousers and a pair of ' shoes from his step-father. Coeytuan l said he sold the trousers to -buy wliis ' key. The Court suspended sentence in the case of Margaret Farber, accused of assaulting her husband. Edward; l-'arber. Parber said his wife scratched iiim on the face w hen he complained I about her failure to have his supper' prepared when he returned from work. Two Months for Pistol-toter A. young married woman, pleading guilty to a larceny charge, got t>ff with i suspended sentence. George Green got two months for carrying a revolver. The sentence will date from October 3, last. Edwin Cassel. arrested on a larcenv ciiurge by David Reigle. constable of Hummeistown. within twelve hours after the officer had been recommis s'oned, got off with a suspended sen . tenee. The lad said foreigners in duced him to steal chickens and poultry from his employer, Edward Allwine. REMNANTS OF PARK'S BODY Only a Few Charred Foues of Private Executed by Huerta's Troops \ era Cruz. Nov. 2.—A few .'barred and broken bones, all that remain of the bo«iy of Private Parks, the orderly of Colonel Taggart, who "as exeeut*>l last summer by General Huerta's troops, were returned to the American authorities to-day. There was nothing by which identification is ■ossible. but additional evidence of s death was secured from a Mexican V'' Tejetra, a short distance from here. Viere the Mexican soldiers killed tiie Amerieah sold er and burned his both. The Mexican claimed that he witnessed the tragedy. Au \nieriean army surgeon and two assistants enteral the Mexican lines hv ! agreement with tue Mexican govern ment and recovered the fragments ot' Parks' body. MUMMERS WILL MEET Borrd of Directors and Bules Commit tee to Plan Parade The Board of Directors and the rules committee of the Harrisburg Mummer?' As-' ation will meet this evening at the Mayor 's office. All members are j urged to be present. (, 'areu« eO. Baekenstoss. -hairnian o: the pre-s committee, has invited tie clubs 11 twenty-five neighboring towns and boroughs to parti.-ipate in the New Year's Day parade here an: kss re quested the burgess of each piaee' to make a public proclamation of the lo cal celebration. POLICE ADOPT DOCt Hound Has Been Retained at Headquarters ' here is a new police dog i:i Harris b.irg. !; > a :>.g ani:ra! an.l .-r ied a< ••just a dog.'' It «ra, wan •l'" :: g :ir..ju i without a place to go and taken to poli-e c.ea iq artes. 'where : '- owner was sought, bat cnstieces*ful!y »o !.;r. It uas been adopted. .N'o name ;.a-- been ven t«e new police dog. Why Have the Peo a Hundred Mil TPhe extraordinary merit of Laxative Bromo Quinine ex plains tiie reason why the people of all nations have used the enormous quantity of over One Hundred Million 1100,000,000) Boxes of this famous remedy. After reading the accompanying label from the box of L~- N Laxative Bromo , An excellent remedy (or Coujhs and Colds. Relieves the > n«4 ~ : 4. 11 • - v.ough and also the feverish conditions and Headache./ tClllll^ -rh.ch .re usually associated with cold. The second or \ what itdoeS HTl(\ hnw ; third dose will relieve the Congh tod Headache and will < . , u y e!> ana "o\. aore the bowels well withia 6or JO hours, when the cold ) it does It, VOU Can . relieTe,i - lB colds it is Terr important that J „ n I. it. • t ae bowels should move well every day. This preparation ? UUQerStand Wily thlS iioves tie bowels eently without jTipinit. and arouws the ; nemedv is Used «U1 il er and to action Directions - Adults ) ~ X , USeQ 50 two Übleu isj|l usrthdose a»J should be taken immed- > etfeCtlVelv b V SO • lalely-afterAcn to bed Some per-I _*lV I. , »»s. whosufficienti m any millions of to ml *«et> ;ae fcc.?ls o&Z freefy until the Cough and > Deonle WIIPTIPVPr < Cold i* relieved then take one hall the dose for a lew < Wnene\er •days Children whoare not o!denou«b to swallow pills the < yOU feel a Cold COm )tablet can be broken or cut in hall and given in proportion) .«• i •. -o age To be swallowed not chewed For headache take < ln g OU tilink Ol the if• or3hou " ÜBtil "•""«* ' j name Laxative (Facsimile ollabd on back ot Laxative Brono Quinine box) Bromo Quinine. —hut remember there /s Only One "Bromo Q To Got The GENUINE, Gall For The FuH Name Laxative Bromo Quinine UMBt THC WORLD OVER TO OUHE A BOLD IR ORE OAT «fT " >f Lmok fm, tklm MMM emtkm TW. MM 2*m. \o< /FjCrrcrirz^ STOCK YARDSOUARANTINED Drastic Measures to Stamp Out Hoof and Mouth Disease Taken By r Federal Authorities By .ijsooiflfprf Press. > Chicago. Nov. 2.—The Union Stock Yards, largest in the world, and the State of Illinois as well, were quar antined against the shipment of cattle, hogs ami sheefyon orders from Wash ington to-day, according to a statement made by Dr. S. K. Bennett, chief of the branch of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry at the yard. "This means the practical cessation of the meat packing business at the yards for the time being," said Dr. Bennett. The action was taken in ef forts to stamp out the hoof and mouth disease which is epidemic in North In diana a4!.l Southern Michigan. Washington. Nov. 2. —Dr. \V. P. El ienberger. chief of the field inspection service bureau of animai industry, said to day uo new quarantine order against the Union Stock Yards at Chicago hail been issued, but that an extension of Saturday's order might be expected ''at any moment." The Saturday order forbade ship ments of cattle except for immediate slaughter. HE KILLS SOX AXO HIMSELF Boy a Blind Cripple, the Father a i Failure in Life Denver. Col.. Nov. 2.—A failure in I life. ,t. A. McCalKster, fifty, of Mar , shall. \lo.. lured his blind and cripple 1 i son. El wood. nineteen, to a lonely spot in the Clear Creek bottoms, on the city - outskirts, an i shot the boy to death. Then he killed himself. The i bodies were discovered, side' by side, in some bushes Saturday evening. The ~ou. who had been blind and a cripple since birth, appeared to have been shot by the father as Jie lav asleep. MeCalUster and his son were last seen in Denver by Max Michaelson, the boy's guardian. According to Michael son the son was receiving money from i wealthy uncle's estate in Reading, Pa. Three purses were found in tliaii pockets, two in th e father's and one in the son s, in the latter were two cents: in the father's ouly bits of paper. 51 ORE FIRES IN HAGERKTOWX The Sirth in Less Than a Week De stroys W. H Startzman's Bare (Spec al to the Star-Independent.) Hagerstow-n. Md„ Nov. 2.—The sixth tire in less than a week, occurred here yesterday, when the frame stable o! William H. Startzman, 4S Elizabeth street, was destroyed with a quantity ot straw and hay, entailing a loss oi SSOO. The origin of this blaie is uu known. The dwelling and store room of E!n:ei Buhrman. on the Koxville road, neat the Mason and Dixon line, was burned to the grouni yesterday, causing a los of SI,OOO. A detective, line was th« cause. A monntaiu tire* of wide pro portions is now raging in the vicinitv o: Pinesburg. aiong the Western Marv , 'and railway. ' QUEER'' MONTY IN 318 A D. Counterfeiting Outfits Among Egyptian Relics Xov. 2.—The fact thai omrterfeit.ng iu coir.s existe i 160 C vears ago was croagnt to light vester when the University of Peunsylva nia ML-seam announced® that ain on. Egyptian reli.-s recently purchased were three counterfeiting outlits. The moulds are of brick. T'ae plar was to nuke impressions of each s';d< of a coin in soft lav and then burr the two sides. Ay opening was let"; a' the top, in which molten metal wa< oure 1. The rogues flourished in tht re gus of the Roman Emperors Maxi mus. L; inius and Constantius from 31T to 367 A. D. FRENCH WIN AIR BATTLE German Aeroplane Is Brought Down 'out Another Escapes Paris. Nov. 2.—lt was officiallv an nounced yesterday afternoon " tha French airmen, while returning Satur «'av from a five-hour reconnaisance. eu i ountere.t two German aero,danes ' aptain Mor:s. of the French amiv gave cha«e. assisted by another aero plane. Ritte shots were exchanged ant one German aeroplane was struck am brought down. The other escaped. IIARHIsm Rti STAR-[N'I>EPENI)K-\T, -MONDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 2. 1914. COURT BOND APPROVED BV COURT j Railway Company May Now Go Through Conewage Township Bonds filed to-day bv the Elizabeth town a«d Deodate Railway Company to cover damages jo farm lands which mave becaused through the construction of t-he proposes trolley liae hot ween j Klizabethtown and Hershey were ap proved by .Judge Mel'-arrell. H. F. ( Keinnard and S. O. Shelly, Couewago township farmers, who have refused ' offers of the company for the taking of a strip of their farm land, are guarded by the bonds—one for $5,000 and the other for 34,000—against any damages. Guardians Named The Dauphin Deposit Trust Company tiiis morning appointed guardian for the two minoi children of Warren O. Walters, who are heirs to a $3,000 estate loft bv the father. Henry Brun ner was appointed guardian for the three children of Ellen Trump, late of IVrrv township, who left an estate val ued at SIOO. Marriage Licenses Andrew Failor and Nellie G. Bressler. Steelton. Charles Brown and Rebecca Moore, Harrlsburg Roman Horisky and Agnes Szkod.t. Hajrisburg. Arthur Briuser and Bessie R. Sheaf fer. Middletown. - i lARRANZA PROTEST IGNORED Euialio Gutierres Elected Provisional President of Mexico llii Associated Press, El Paso, Tex., Nov. 2.—The erne of revolutionary chiefs at Agua scalientes, ha« disregarded General Carranza's protest and elected Euialio Hutierres provisional president of Mex ico, according to an official report reaching the border to-dav. Washington, Nov. J.— Latest official dispatches to-day t'wni Mexico City said Carranza was threatening civil war unless the convention complied with his demand to retire Villa and Za pata with hi* resignation. The Mexico City papers, bv order of Carranza. are publishing the correspondence with Washington over the conditions of evacuation of Vera Cruz. The United States has addressed a note through the Brazilian minister in Mexico City to General Carranza re iterating its willingness to withdraw American forces in Vera Cruz but in sisting on a compliance with the orig inal demands of the State Department for certain guarantees. Mexico (ltv. Nov, 2.—A dispatoh re ceived here from Aguascalientes savs that General Kulaiio Gutierrez was elected provisional President of Mex - «-o shortly after midnight last night. The election Is for a period of twentv 4ays only RIVER FRONT WORK DOVE Only the Walk Above the "Steps" Remains to Be Built in Spring The river front jteps and intercept ing sewer protective wall between I rou avenue and Maclay street are practical ly completed and work -will be stopped by Stueker Brothers Construction Com pany on Wednesday or Thursday. Work on the concrete walk abov? the river wall will not be began until next spring. It can be completed n aoour three weeks, so the contractors sav, as the between Iron avenue and Market street already has been built. The contractors and the Board Q{ Public Works to-day conferred and in spected spven sections of steps, which had been condemned early in the sum mer, for the purpose of ascertaining which, if any, shall be rebuilt. Work on the river dam was stopped for the season ou lan Saturday due to ! the approaching cold weather." It has been said that the job is being hci 1 up due to the possibility of the dam causing high water and hindering the work on the wall and steps. Th? i ompany ofticials this nioruinu said tne dam cannot interfere with Uie:r work, as the steps are about com pleted and the dam could cause only a four-foot r:-e in the river which would not affect the walk above the wall. LETTER LIST i«iusan Rr.t Mrs, R. E. Rupp. Mrs. S\V - jianle. Mrs. \ era Sears. Miss Maude eilers. Miss Genere Shanej. Mrs. X«n i'ie smith. Mrs. .Susan Snavely Mr- Gjeorge St wart. Miss Mary Kutfi Stott i Mr. J- h ? mMO "V, M!SS lda Thomp »o.„ Mr» Walaier. Mrs. Marv Washo Sirs. Morvenen Wedes, Miss Marie W*r •£'.?? C * elia Weston. Mrs, Jo frFi i vi- illia.-nson, Gladys m. Wilson 1.-Vi Arhtie Wiseman Mrs. .-cot; l°*M rd ; Mr *' Vet ter. Mi&b Hattie \oung. Gentlemen's List—flarry E. Allison ticorge K. Anderson. Charles E \n \vl KS ' o." h !i Ba ™eery. Uoss Bleasing. Heon Blonde,,. Pari Bayers. John H. Brenm Jose Brown, R. Burris. Waldo W. Claflin. B. W t_iark. Clvde l oolev, Jack Curtin <4>, B. E. Darr -larton I'engler, Paul Dupeza. Leo F Duyer "" rP : ' e - Gl 'es W. Kodke v , Dl.i Harry Kos». Edward Rose. Dic-k Kus ??_'• ' • P &cliaeflrcr (DLi. lorn Shipper. Harry smith (*,. W. l>. stay man. Harry r" r: 'iV'-. ~.. S f e ,'K» rt Wm. Thorn ton. M. 1 ieke. J. I„ Turner lie eve of the Congressional election it. became known to-day tJ»at men close to Presi dent Wilson are working on the under standing that he will be a candidate in 1916 despite his own silence on Hie WMbj©ct and thwt tfney have begini prep arations tor the campaign. Although no formal statement was issued, \\ hite House officials say Mr. Wilson is con.fitlent both fVnwte and House will he safely Democratic as the result of -to-morrow's elections. Pre dictions were made that tlhe majority in the House will be more than fifty and that the present majority in the Senate will i>e increased. On tiie outcome of to-morrow's elec tion. however, depends whether tihe President will call an extra session of Congress later this month. It. was tin tier stood that there will be no extra ses sion if the party retains control of Congress. Otherwise it Was said the President would call an extra session in order that poH.'ies he stands for m\v be carried to completion during the life of t%e present Congress. The President received preelection forecasts from different parts of the country to-day and was eucouraged by all the information reaching him. He transacted little other business. Mr. Wilson will leave at 8 o'clock to morrow morning for Princeton to vote. He will arrive there shortly after noon and will leave again at - o clock, ar riving back in Washington at 6 o'clock to morrow atftern-oon. GERMAN SUBMARINE GETS ENTANGLED IN FISHNETS London, Nov. 2. 2.20 A. M.—A dis patch to the " Daily News'' from Rot terdam savs that a Yuiuiden steam trawler reports that while the trawler's crew was- fishing in latitude 54 north and longitude 4 east a submarine boat .became entangled in the nets and sent up a rocket. The captain hailed a sub marine in English, but received no re ply, and the trawler abandoned the nets and returned hurriedly to port. The "Daily Mail's'' Amsterdam cor respondent says it was the famous Ger man submarine X' 9 which got entan gled in the trawler's fishnets. Cruiser Goeben Reported Damaged Petrograd, Nov. 2. via l«D. Ott i Son. i «jivp SB,IOO. Count* ssi oner Taylor declined to say what re.'omm(*nilation he wiH make, al i though it is believed lie will ask his ! colleagues to accept the Stucker pvo , (.osal. Should t'he contract be awarded j on Wednesday the work will be started I at once and, according to the contract or s agreement, it will be completed within forty five working days. Sleeper Swallowc False Teeth Wilmington. Del., Nov. 2. —Krnest J. Fischer, aged 50. a well-koown mu sician, swallowed his false teeth while asleoji. Awakening yesterday morning he missed tAe artificial molars and searched for them in his room. Sudden ly he felt a queer sensation in his stom ach, then went to the Polycliuic ho« piUl, Philadelphia, where the teeth were revealed in his abdomen by the X-ray. There will be an operation. Dupont Road Now Assured By Asioviattii last twenty-five years, ha.l been ailing for some time. She was a well-known mem "/ f ao fifWi Street Methodist Epis £°pal vfcnreh. George Greenatinum, her husband, who survives, was for manv years an employ,, of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company hut was retired sev eral yours ago, sitwe which time he nas served as a River pork policeman. Funeral services will bo held to-mor row evening at 7.30 o'clock at the home, tlie Rev. B. H. Hart, jmstor of bhe r irtii street Methodist Ivpiafcopai t'liupcih, officiating;. Th* bodv will bt» taken on t'he train leaving the P. and R. railway station nt T o'clock to the t'oodvear cemetery. Ueodvear. Adams county, iby Undertaker C. H. Mauk. W. H. T. SHXYDER EXPIRES Former Employe of Star-Independout and Member of B. P. 0. E After a lingering illness William H. T. Shnyder, a former employe of the !"'tar-l independent and a momtber of the Harrisburg Lodge No. 12, R. P. o. E„ d to satisfy all reasonable persons that the road problem of Penn sylvania is in the care of men entirely 1 competent and satisfactory, not only to me, but to th'e people at large. Will Brook No Dictation "We must be generous to our cliari : ties; wc must also be just to them. Hasty and unscientific appropriations 1 shall not escape niv veto. It must be understood now, not later on, thi'at, i I stand for absolutely fair, just a» -I shall be satisfied w/ith the result." | SEVEN HELD Pt)R COURT ; Youths Arrested f/6r Fourteen Robberies Oivain Hearing Bei-ause of tne great amount of cleri cal work required in order to return a case from the /police department to the District Attorney's office, seven boy* who pleaded ffluilty to fourteen rases of larceny befortj Mayor ol Saturday afternoon, wete unable to* plead guillv before the Dfauphin county court (his morning and/receive sentence. In all twenty-five separate informations had to be sworn to in the case which is the biggest the police have handled at one time in maify years. Paul Schyibauer, Joseph Osbourn and Milton Sebrefflci were held under $ 1 (100 bail; Kobert Marshall and George Dare under SSOO bail and Weston Ashenfeltc under S3OO bail. Three others under Ifi years of age were al lowed to go in the custody of their par ents, to appear iu juvenile court. Brown Recovering From Stab Wounds Allen Brown, colored. 110 South Kourtih street, who was sta'-bbed twice in tfhe right side at 516 Brown street early .Sunday morning, is said to be greatly improved at the Harrislyurg hos pital where he was taken bv the police for treatment. William .loiies was nr. rested by Policemen Parsons and Mur phv for the assault.