8 ( JBttabluhed in 1876) Published b' THB STAR PRINTING COMPANY, " Star-lndepa-ident Building, IMO-M South Third Stract, Harrlaburf. E»>ry Evening Except Sunday Officer•.- Director*. BUMAMIK F. MITIRS. J OHH L L KCHH. President. WM, W. WALLOWIR, _ Vfee President. w * K WM. K. METERS, Secretary and Treasurer. WM. W WALLOWCB. WM. Fl WARNER, V. HI MMEL BEROHAUS. JR., Business Manager. Editor. All communications should be addressed to STAR INDEPENDENT, Business, Editorial, Job Printing or Circulation Department according to tbe subject matter Entered at tbe Post Office in Harrisburg as second class 'matter. Benjamin & Kentnor Company. New York and Chicago Representatives NewTork Offlee, Brunswick Building. 225 Fifth Avenue. Chicago Office, People's Gas Building. Michigan Avenue. Delivered by carriers at 6 cents a week. Mailed to subscriber; tor Three Dollars • year in advance. THE STAR-INDEPENDENT The paper witli the largest Home Circulation in Harrisburg and nearby towns. Circulation Examinee by THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN ADVERTISERS. TELEPHONES SELL Private Branch Enchango No. 3250 CUMBERLAND VALLEY Prlvato Branch Encnanga, . _ No. 345-246 __ Friday, December 18, 101-1. DECEMBER Sua. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri. Sat. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 MOON'S PHASES— Full Moon, 2nd; Last Quarter, 10th; New Moon, 16th; First Quarter, 24th. WEATHER FORECASTS ■j«L^'' s Zljg i Harrisburg and vicinity: Increasing cloudiness, probably snow or rain to night or Saturday. Warmer. Lowest temperature to-night about 20 degrees. Kastern Pennsylvania: Fair to-night followed by increasing cloudiness Sat . A/ urday. Rising temperature. Moderate variable winds bccojning south. YESTERDAY'S TEMPERATURE IN HARRISBURG Highest, 25; lowest, 11; 8 a. m., 11; S p. in., 19. FATE OF THE BANDIT, HOHL There never was a successful bandit. That is (bat is taught by the career oi' Frank G. Hohl, the former Harrisburg youth, who was shot to death by the police of Cincinnati yesterday alter lie had looted two banks in the most daring way recorded in the police annals of this country. Hohl had attempted similar exploits of equal dar 'nSf»—notably the lotting of a bank in Altoona, — and had succeeded. But his success as a bandit was destined to be only temporary,—like that of every other bandit who ever lived. It was inevitable that Ho Ill's daring criminality would ultimately result in his capture and punishment or in his death. As it turned out in his case it led to death. Ihere have, perhaps, been eases in which bold and reckless robbers have seized great amounts of loot and never been arrested. Such cases have been very rare and if punishment has not been meted out. to them by the authorities it has come to them in other ways. No man ever attempted to prey upon the public as Hohl has done without meeting terri ble retribution in one form or another. If it has nol been through arrest and imprisonment or sud den death it has been through some other form of misfortune. Often in this age, when a certain class of motion picture shows glorifies the exploits of men like Hohl, the impression is apt to be left on the mind of the young that such criminals often live to escape the punishment for their crimes and to enjoy the fruits of their criminal acts. The fate of Hohl, how ever, proves most forcefully the fallacy of such an idea. GOOD BOOKS FOR BAD ONES- Circulating among boys and girls in this city to day are large numbers of books, paper-covered and cloth-covered, which are doing the children untold harm. They are the kind of books that are read in secret by boys and girls whose parents use careful discrimination in the choice of reading matter, and in the open by those in whose homes there are no such restrictions. They arc the books which their youthful readers delight in passing on to school mates under the noses of teachers, and which teach ers seldom return if they once capture them. Some of these books are not inherently harmful, yet the grammar is bad and the rhetoric horrible, setting the readers awful examples. Others are distinctly injurious because I hey depict life wronglv and excite their readers unduly by means of cheap sensations. All of them steal time from the chil dren, giving no benefits in return. Parents and teachers need to condemn vicious books, and they need to do more than that. They must recommend to the children good books, em bodying wholesome entertainment and written in the best English. Bad books cannot be kept from ardent juvenile readers with success, unless good books are put in their place, because the passion for reading when once started in children has to be satisfied. 1 lie trend ol a child s thought for a lifetime may 30 determined largely by the nature of the books which give him his introduction to literature. These vital books need to be carefully selected, and the selection must be guided by elders. Parents could do nothing better for their children in this respect than to give them on Christmas morning wholesome,! absorbing, well-written books, unless it be to take I HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 18, 1914. them, one of these days, to the city library aud pro- | eure for them a card that will give the(n access to practically all the gems of juvenile literature. SPANISH FOR HIGH SCHOOLS Suggestions ar£ being made in many cities, with i chances that they will be favorably acte<| upon, | that the Spanish language be taught in the high j schools. These recommendations are being made, I no doubt, because of the growing interest of this ; country in the Latin-American republics which con- j stitute the greater/part of the world's Spanish-! speaking area. Commerce between the United States and Spanish i America is now making a demand for young men who know the Spanish language, and increased trade will make increased demands. Not only that, j but Porto Rico and the Philippines need business j men and educators who are familiar with the lan-1 guage spoken by so many natives, —the language of the former mother country of the islands. Aside from advantages in a commercial way, the ; Spanish language has much of pure enjoyment to offer those who conquer it. The conquest is not i difficult and is worth the effort. The literature of I Spain and even of the Spanish republics comprises | many gems which only a student of the language! has the privilege of enjoying. Those who would have Spanish form a part of i the high school curriculum do not want it to re- j place entirely either French or German, for that ! would be too great a sacrifice. All that is desired I for Spanish is that it be offered as an alternative to ! high school pupils in the-larger cities, where many | of the students will enter business life in which I knowledge of the language is a great asset. Spanish has been left largely to the colleges to \ teach, but all who need it cannot get it there. It [ needs a prominent place in the public schools. As j an optional subject it would strengthen any high j school curriculum. Holil tried it once too often/ - Buy your Red Cross Christmas seals while the supply j lasts! The nation's unpreparedness for war is nothing com- | pared with the late shopper's unpreparedness for Christinas. ! Help the Belgians by going to the Orpheum this week! You will get your money's' worth and at the same time help a good cause. It is too bad that the daring of a man like Hohl could j not have been gut to some better use. For instance, with his mechanical skill and his fearlessness, one could well imagine him accomplishing an exploit similar to that of the British naval officer who, in a submarine, dived benqath five rows of mines and sank a Turkish warship. TOLD IN LIGHTERVEIN ! HIS VERSION The small boy came home from Sunday school looking so disheveled and dusty that the mother had grave suspicions concerning his having been at Sunday school at all. He explained his disarray by the fact it!* ' he hiirl stopped at a neighbor's house to see some young puppies aud had climbed into a stable in order to be able to find them. ' "What was the Golden Text?" inquired the parent. "Don't worry. You'll get the blanket," was the answer. ' "There's nothing like that in the Bible,' declared the j mother. "Yes there is. I guess 1 know the Golden Text. Our { class said it over and over." To settle her doubts the mother telephone to the boy's teacher. "Harry tells me that the Golden Text to-day was, 'Don't ! worry. You'll get the blanket.' What does lie mean*" With a peal of laughter the teacher explained the boy's statement, giving the text correctly: I "Foar not, the Comforter shall come unto.yon."—Na- tional Monthly. A BASHFUL CLERK A pretty young woman stepped into a music store the other day. She tripped up to the counter where a new clerk was assorting music, and in her sweetest tones asked: j "Have you 'Kissed Me in the Moonlight"."' "It must have been the man at the other counter; I've only been here a week."—National Monthly. FOR WEEK-END PARTIES The old-fashioned razor is a recognized weapon of of fense and defense in the South; in fact to such an extent that many states (including Arkansas) have seen fit to embrace it in laws prohibiting the carrying of weapons, A few days ago a negro entered a hardware store and asked to see some razors. The clerk showed him some safety razors, which he looked at with rather a critical glance, finally saying: "Boss, dis am not the kind of razor 1 wants; I desire one strickly for social purposes."—National Monthly. WASN'T REAL GRANITE "When we were married," sobbed the young wife, "he said he loved me with a love more enduring than the ever lasting granite." "And it didn't Inst?" queried the sympathetic friend. "Last!" echoed the young wife, drying her tears, "it didn't last as long as a wood pavement."—Kansas City Times. CHEERFUL NEWS The specialists had been called in consultation and had retired to another room to discuss the patient's condition. In the closet of that room a small boy had been concealed by the patient's directions to listen to what the doctors decided on and to tell the patient, who desired genuine information. "Well, Jimmy," said the patient when the boy came to report, "what did they say 1" "I couldn't tell you that," said the boy. "I listened as hard as I tfould, but they used such big words I couldn't remember much of it. All I could catch was when one doctor said: " 'Well, we'll find that out at the autopsy.' " —Exchange. KIND TO THIS ANIMAL The class was discussing cruelty to animals and the hu mane sficiety. , "Now children, who can think of one thing the society has done to make the life of dumb brutes easier?" the teacher asked. "I know," spoke out a ten-year-old girt. "I heard papa say people couldn't run blind tigers any more."—National Monthly. MR. HERRIOK'S PREFERENCE Mr. Herrick doubtless thinkß it is better to curb a Presi dential boom now than take it out of cold storage in 1016. —Washington Post. Open Evenings | THE GLOBE j Shop Early A Suit and Overcoat For Every Man §1 | M Whether You Are Buying For Your- M u \ '■.},Jb j® THE SUITS — THE OVERCOATS— Originally sold at S2O, $22.50 and $25. ii New, up-to-the-minute models of our very For this special selling at || best overcoat makers—s2o, $22.50 and $25 values, at s l6*= $15.00 The smartest variety of style effects ever assembled Balmacaan Overcoats in the new dark rough effects— for such an incomparable sale. Such celebrated makes Chinchilla—Elysian Beavers and beautiful Meltons, as "FASHION-CLOTHES"—ATTERBURY SYS- Chesterfield Overcoats—with just a dash of snap that TEM and ADLER-ROCHESTER CLOTHES are in-, takes them out of the conservative class—in Black and eluded. What else need be said? Suits to fit ever man Dark Oxford Meltons—some are satin lined. The new —every purse—every build—YOU. They'll be snapped form-fitting double-breasted overcoats in Oxford Gray up quickly by men who appreciate REAL savings. jj Angora Cloths—all sizes NOW. • S£.OQ Will Bu Y Him a House Coat A Sale of Boys' Suits and Over- 85* O— or Bath Robe Worth $6.50 coats, Regularly $7.50 and $8.50 0= Many of these are the celebrated RIGHT-POSTURE SUITS, lie II SUl'C'ly appreciate one of these House Coats All are of excellent durable fabrics—stylish mixed cloths or a Bath Robe for a gift—it adds to llis comforts. ,l ! at are almost non-soilable. The overcoats are of the unusual GLOBE House Coats are made to fit —have corded n< ? s " a ppy yodels —of every style —of every wannth-pro edges aild two silk frogs. Bath Robes ill a variety • tltl( ' in " labric—Hl Balinacaan. Pony Coat and Ulsterette styles. of decidedly new and attractive patterns well made WARM CHINCHILLA OVER-J BOYS- COLLEGE MACK and liandsomely nmslied. ( COATS, for the "little fellows;" CNAWS— greatest outdoor coat : I 2 to 10 years; worth $6.50, at over made, $6.50 value, at Bath Robe Sets—robes and slippers to match in | * SOO *"»•<><> beautiful gift boxes. Special at $5.00. „„„„ 37; . , ~ ~ ~~ 1 1 CDTC With every hoys suit or overcoat purchased here we Higher Grades at $7.50 and §IO.OO Mitt ke B y iv 8 e tic y k° ur boy FRm ' : ' a puir •°* Dumb Be,u " r "j THE GLOBE /" \ | Tongue-End Top ics | Wants "MStock Exchange. An injunction is asked to restrain r Ihe defendants from doing any act dis , eliminating against the plaintiff. Ac cording to the bill, there is an agree • ment between the New Yiwk Stock Kx > change and the Western Union Tele graph Company whereby the latter is . not permitted to furnish New York quo tations to any individual or firm which is not sanctioned by the Exchange. .Somo *|ayß ago a suit, was filed in I FOR SALE J 1 City of Harrisburg Bonds J ] Denominations SIOO and SSOO | T Free of All Taxes in Pennsylvania FIRST NATIONAL BANK ■ 224 Market jHarrisburg, Pa. ■' •| mas tree and will have the stage all ■ fixed up for Santa Clans. Anil the little boys and girls who buy tickets 'I are not the only ones who will sen '| Santa at the Orpheuni. Through Mrs. I Middleton, of the Children's Aid So . ciety, and Mrs. Pierce, of the Sunshine Society, scores of little Orphans and ' crippled children have been incited to ' attend Wednesday afternoon and Santa " Claus will have a present for each one of them. 1 There are nine little girls in one ) act at the Orphcum next week, ami also an act in which dogs run a village of • their own. common ploas court in which the Con solidated Stock Exch.nge asked for a mandamus to coinpil the Western Un | ion Telegraph to f.irnislt New York | stock market quotations, out the New York Stock Exchange was not named j in the proceedings. According to the bill, Moore had been receiving the New York stock market quotations up until the market closed after the outbreak of the Euro pean war through ticker service fur nished by the Western Union Telegraph Company. When the market closed the ticker in Moore's office was removed. Since then the telegraph company has refused to reinstall the service. On Time "Is this train running on time}" " [ should say so,'' answered,tile con ductor. "It can't run any other way. The company has had to get so many extensions of credit that the whole road is now running 011 time."—Wash ington Star.