2 HEALTH OF THE SKIN Little Talks on Health and Hygiene by Samuel O. Dixon. M. D.. LL. D.. Commissioner of Health «■ f Few people pay sufficient attention to the care of the skin. A certain num ber of both sexes devote no little time to the care of that portion which ap pears above the»r collars but few un derstand the real importance of v the functions of the skin. We breathe through the skin. A considerable volume of oxygen is ab sorbed by the body in this way. Cer tain poisonous substance* arc disposed of through the pores of the skin. These |>oisons are eliminate"! through the glands in the skin passiug off in per spiration. The skin is one of the body's ther mostats that automatically regulate its temperature. If the heat grows exces sive the blood vessels in the skin di late and permit the circulation of an extraordinary amount of biood near the surface. This permits the radiation of the heat from the blood and the cor responding cooling of the body and stimulates a more active combustion. When the bok.lv is exposed to cold if the skin is properly performing it-> functions it will contract and drive the blood away from the skiu to concen trate its warmth uear the vital organs. The ends of the nerves which give us our sense of touch are located in the skin. This sensitiveness is for the continual protection of the body. In order that these various functions may be properly carried out it is essential that the skin be well cared for at all times. If the pores are not kept thor oughly elean, the poisonous excretions instead of being expelled are reab sorbed by the blood. Such a con lit ion also prevents- the skin from absorbing oxygen as it should do when properly performing its functions. Then too, there is the question of beauty. A clean, healthy, well groomed skin is genuinely attractive. Soap and water should be vigorously applied but no soap left on the skin alter bathing. Sleep and exercise in fresu ;:ir combined with good tood and plenty of water are better than all the skiu focAie and beautitiers and their consistent and regular use will add ma terially to the general bodily health and well being. GIRL RISKS LIFE TO SAVE BOY ' Crawls 100 Feet to Drag Drowning Skater From Hole lie I Bank, X. J.. .lan. 11. —Risking her life by crawling over thin ice for a distance of one hundred feet. Miss Jo sephine Hower, of Locust, captain of the Navesink girls' hockey teim. rescu ed Ueorge Labarre. 14-year-old son of Charles Labarre, a Xew York broker living iu Locust. The boy had broken through the ice vhile skating on Clay Pit creek, near here yesterday. Mi»s Hower. who was also skatiivg. saw the accident. Crawl ing across the ice to the edge of the hole she seized the boy when he came to the surface for the second time. "MAD BOY" JUST JOINING FRAT Police Seize Student Going Through Agonies of Initiation Orange. X. J.. Jan. 11. —Wearing summer garb, straw hat included, Rus sell Barker, a High school student, car ried a loaf of bread up and down a railroad embankment until taken in charge by a policeman. Fellow pupiis explained that the youth was merely suffering initiation into a fraternity and he was released. The police had been told that an in sane boy was at large. Charles S. Price Dies Johnstown, Jan. 11.—Charles S. Price, president of the Cambria Steel Company, died yesterday at his home in Westmont of heart trouble. He had been ailing for some time, but it was only within the last few days that he was obliged to take to his bed. Mr. Price was born in West Chester, Pa., in LSS2. Aged Woman Probably Fatally Injured Hellam, Jan. 11. —'Mrs. Martha | Freed, au aged resident of this place, fell Saturday evening on the icy side walk and was perhaps fatally injured. She fractured a number of ribs and is hur> internally. Explosive Coughs Fairly Rack You lo Pieces Foley's Honey and Tar is Just Like Oil on Troubled Waters for those Violent Racking Coughs. They rasp sod strain »onr threat, tear at fonr cheat and lun*s, congest the blood in year neck and head, almost strangle TOO, teat# jon weak and fairly exhausted. Often they are a svmptom of snch gr are disease! aa bronchitis, pleurisy, i.naumonia—eren tuber culosis. "Oh. for a bottle of FOLEY'S HONEY and TAR to stop this awful cooghaag." TOLET'S HOSBT AXD TVBCOKFOCKD spreads • healing:, soothing coating as it (lidcg down the raw inflamed throat. It loosens ths cough, brings the phlegm np easily. Tak»s •way that tight fealing across the chest, and eases stuffy, wheezy breathing and hoarseness. A dealer of Toledo, Ohio, (name furnished) who has MID FOLEY'S HO>TET AND TA* for years, writes: ''One of my customers came into store tonae longdistance telephone. He was conghing so Tinlantly that he could not talk. I sat him down and gare him a bottle of Foul's Ho SET AND TAB, and ia 10 minutes be had recorered. He had been unable to work for three months, doe to this cough. He says FOLEY'S HOSET ADO TAB relieved him entirely of this trouble." 8. MARTIN, Bassett, Nebr., writes: "Ihad a serere cough and cold and was almost past going. I got a bottle of FOLEY'S HOSET ASDTAB and nsedlt frequently, when ha»ing violent conghing spalls, and am glad >o say it rared ray cough entirely and my cold soon disappeared." Contains DO OPIATES. Absolutely a pare •eaicina. Befose substitutes. *** EVEHY USER IS A FRIEND. George A. Gorgas. 16 North Third street, and P. R. R. Stations. adv. HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY EVENING. JANUARY 11. 1915. the extreme weakness often results in irrpaired hearing, weakened eyesight, bronchitis and other troubles, but If Scoff's Emulsion is given promptly, it carries strength to the organs and creates rich blood to build JRML up the depleted forces. YHT Children thrive on Scott's Emulsion. ft 111 CVJVEWS WOMAN WHO COT ONE DRESS IN 4 YEARS JS DIVORCED Effie B. Brown Charged That She Had Been HI Treated by Her Husband—■ Forced to Work in Fields—Case Was Settled Friday Gettysburg, Jan. 11. —Upou the al legations that her husband had choked and kicket.i her, that ho forced her to work in the fields, and that during thei." four years, of married life he had bought her only one dress. Mrs. Elbe B. Brown was granted a divorce from Charles K. Brown, of Cumberland town ship. in Adams county court on Friday afternoon. HEIRESS IDENTIFIED BY SCAR Woman Absent Twenty Years Will Re ceive Inheritance Waynes-boro. Pa., Jau. 11. —When an effort was made recently to settle the estate of Mrs. Barbara Hess, of this section, proceedings were begun in the Orphans' Court to declare Mrs. Alice Kohler Hooper, formerly of Highfield, and a legatee, dead. Mrs. Hooper, who left Highfield 20 years ago and ha I not returned, and who, some years ago, was married to a Mr. Ham. noticed, a few weeks ago, an advertisement of the proceeding and immediately wrote to the clerk of the courts, proclaiming herself and stating her readiness to prove that she was the person wanted. She did so Saturday. The only means of identification was a scar on her wrist, which an uncle with whom she had lived as a girl recalled. The Judges were satisfied with the ideu tification and she will corny iuto her in heritanee. WILL SEE AMERICA FIRST Famous McComb Tours Will Take in Panama-Pacific Exposition Chambersburg, Jan. 11. —Miss Vir ginia M. McComb, of the Wilson Col lege faculty who has made the McComb tour* famous on both sides of the At lantic. will take advantage of the slack ening of foreign travel because of the destructive war of nations and help her patron* the coming travel season to see America. The important feature of her pro po«ci tours for the coming summer is the trip through the West, leaving Chi cago June -W via the Urand Canyon. Los Angeles. San Diego, Santa Bar bara. to the Exposition at San Fran cisco. Here the party divides. Some are going to spend one month in Japan, others are going north via the Shasta route and to Vancouver for the Alaska cruise, and home via the Canadian Rockies. 3ti Seek Liquor License Chambersburg, Jan. 11.—All of the thirty-six wholesale and retail liquor license applications, whether granted or refused last year, were filed in the oflice of the Clerk of the Courts John B. Diehl by late Saturday. That was the last, day for the filing of applications. It is understood that many remon strances will be tiled and that several bitter contests are contemplated by j the Xo-License Ijcague. The last day J for tiling remonstrances is Wednesday, January 27. Revival at Carlisle Carlisle, Pa., Jan. 11.—Carlisle min isters are putting on a series of revival services without the aid of imported evangelists. Under the auspices of the Carlisle Ministerial Association, each lo cal minister has tendered his services in arousing the people here to a sense of religious obligations. The campaign will last three weeks. The following Carlisle pastors are di viding the work among themselves: The Revs. A. R. Steek, Harry B. Stock. Joseph E. Price, F. Bern- Plummer. ti! H. Bernhard. A. P. Stover, A. V Ha * erty, E. U Coblentz, E. H. Kellogg ami M. A. Kennelly. Boy Scouts to Celebrate Carlisle, Jan. 11.—A gala dav will mark the reception of the First'lndian troop of Boy Scouts into National mem bership, according to plans just laid by representatives of all of the Boy Scout troops in this district. It was tenta tively decided to extend invitations to the troops of Shippensburg, Chambers burg, Gettysburg and Harrisburg, to at tend the exercises which are set for January 22. Waynesboro Had Heavy Fire Loss Waynesboro, Jan. 11.—There were seventeen fires in Waynesboro in 1914. with a total fire loss of $15,500. This is the largest fire loss since 1911 when a loss of $19,475 was sustained. The large fires in the latter year (it will be of some interest to recall them) were: March 6, 1911, Collins building on public square, loss $10,000; Mav 12, dwelling houses on West North street loss $5,000; Mav 16, B. Frankel'a store, loss SI,OOO. MAY REOPEN COAL MINE Lehigh Company Said to Be Preparing to Work Big Deposits Hazleton, Pa., Jan. 11.—Silver Brook mines, covering an area of 7% square miles and containing manv veins of coal 22 feet thick, which have never been touched, may be reopened bv the Lehigh Valley Coal Companv, according to statements made at Hazleton vester day. The property, which was "leased to the J. S. A\ entz Coal Companv, of Philadelphia, was abandoned and filled with water in 1906, when the Lehigh Valley Coal Company declined to renew the leases and preferred to hold the fuel until it needed it. Mining experts say that the Went? interests merely nibbled at the immense coal deposits, and the resumption of operations means the employment of 1.500 men and a big boom to Hazleton and McAdoo. TO RESCUE THE WAYWARD | Interests of Otty Mission Discussed at Westing Saturday-' Afternoon— Mut Meetings Next Month The interests of the city Rescue Mis i sion, which is located at 6 North Fifth I street, were discussed at a meeting held : in the office of James W. Barker in the • Masonic Temple on Saturday afternoon. Arrangements were made for mass meetings to be held in the Chestaut street hall on Tuesday, February 2. The afternoon sessiou will be held for women only, which will be followed with a board meeting. In the evening a mass meeting for men only will be held. Among the special features of the program will be an address by Melvin K. Trotter, superintendent of the Grand Rapids, Mich., mission and founder of the chain of 50 missions scattered throughout the United States. He is the famous convert of the Chicago Pacific Harden Mission and the best known city mission worker in America to-day. During the short period of the estab lishiug of the local mission station in this city much good has been accom plished. Twelve persons have pro fessed conversion. Griffeth Jones, of Scranton, has been elected superintendent aud he will perform the duties under the direction of a board of directors. The city Rescue Missions and their work, under the direction of Mr. Trot ter, have been endorsed by Evangelist "Billy"' Sunday and Dr. H. W. Stougii. 1 The following officers were elected: President, James W. Barker; vice presi d#ut, Luther Minter; secretary, W. G. Hean; treasurer, Fred Kelker;.directors, Philip Reed, Harvey Buck, E. S. Schil ling, E. F. Weaver and R. F. Webster. ( LEAHY CASE REVIVED Perjury Charges May Follow Govern or's Inqtftry New York, Jan. 11. —-William Hay nar.l. counsel to the Governor, went back to Albany yesterday to report to j Governor Whitman the results of his inquiry into the trial of William V. Cleary, ex-To»n Clerk of Haverstraw, who was r.,'quitted for the killing of his son-in-law, Eugene Newman. Mr. Hay ward saw Justice Marschauser for an 'lour at Poughkeeysic Saturday about i the tMeary case, and afterward he questioned Frederic E. Newman, father j gf tii«- tn'irdered man. Mr. ilayward obtained a copy of the minutes of the trial. It was said that Governor Whitman may advise District Attorney Thomas (lagan. of Rockland county, who prosecuted Cleary; to be- i gin criminal action against one or more of the witnesses on charges of per- 1 jury. BACK RICH AFTER 40 YEARS Man Mourned as Dead Startles Rela tives by Reappearance Pana. II!., Jan. 11.— W. G. Cannon, 1 60. member t.f OUP of Wie most prom- 1 inent families of Hilly'ooro and Mont- j gomerv county, returned to his former home after he had been given up for ' dead for more than forty years. Cannon had several hundred eo&sius, nieces, nephews and more distant rela tives in this section. For many long' years they kept'ilp a search for him, j but without success, and they had loug ago decided that he had died in the I West. Cannon when 18 years old left home! to seek his fortune in the western coun- | try. Since that January day in 1873' he had never been heard from by any 1 one of his large number of relatives in this section ct the Stat*, tfotwithstand-! ing that diligent searches were kept up ! for years of nil ranching and mining settlements of the West. He returned a , wealthy rancher and stock owner of Dos i Balezos, Ariz. $4,000 FIRE LOSS IN CHESTER Residence Destroyed and Fruit Store Damaged Chester, Pa.. Jan. 11. —During a fire i which totally destroyed his home iu ! Chester township early yesterday morn ing. Richard Burk jumped from a sec-1 ond-storv window, receiving severe in juries. Only a few of the household goods were saved. The loss is $2,500. Fire also damaged Benjamin Kel-i man's fruit store at Third and Flower streets yesterday morning. Firemen prevented the llames from spreading to i the dwelling part of the building, occu pied by Martin J. Dwyer and family, who were trapped by the stairway be-' ing in llames. They were rescued from 1 a second-story wijidow by firemen. The i loss is J1,500. Found Dead in Office Kane. Pa.. Jan. II. —When Dr. W. A. Davenport, a chiropodist, did not re'- turn home Saturday night his wife 1 started a search for him and found him | dead in his office. Coroner Sherman > will hold an investigation. LOOK YOUR VERY BEST CUTICURA Soap and Ointment, both j fragrant, super-creamy ! emollients, are the first requisites in preserving skirt J beauty and purity. Samples Free by Mail <~uU«ui* Hasp Ud outwot ml* mrrwkaH. Utwral (unite of auk B*lM ttm with »%p. book. I AMm pern "Cwtaun." ixrt. sr. Sum Omega sSdiSS Inflammation Rob Omega Oil gently oyer the place that hurts. Then soak a piece of flan nelwith the Oil, lay it on the painful E* V"LF over with • P»«e of dry flannel. This aitnple treatment usually pvea quick relief. Trial bottle 10c. "TWIN OF FUN Two Big Audiences See Farce Oomedy That Affords Genuine Humor In the Majestic Theatre Salisbury Field and Margaret IMayo gave Harrieburg a very delightful bit of farce comedy in "Twin Beds" which appeared at the Majestic Satur day afternoon and eveniug. There is plenty of clean fun from beginning to end, but the first art undoubtedly con tains more of pure humor than even the third, for the last depends for its laughter-producing elements upou _the drunken antics of the tenor and the absurd situations arising from the sim ilarity in arrangements and furnish ings of TWO New York flats. The tirst act. however, is pure, spon taneous humor. There are only seven characters in the little play but each one is almost perfect in its way, Mar garet Boland. as "'Blanche Hawkins." and Howlan,! B. Lee as her husband, di vide honors with the Italian tenor, his militant wife and with (Jeorgie Brew ilendum, who is inimitable as ' 1 Xorah," tie maid. The mistake of the teuor who enters tibe wrong flat while drunk and even tually hides in a clothes basket, sup plies the motif of the comedy. Marion Lord as ''Signora Monti," holds the center of the stage whenever she if visible, and keeps the audience in one continuous gale of laughter. I'here is nothing deep or pretentious about the play, but it has real human interest, and certainly it has a better mission in the world'than the " prob lem " play which, it is to lie hoped, will soon disappear forever. "Twin Beds affords an evening of genuine laughter, with 110 after regrets. The size of the audiences on Satur day »'howei that Harris>burg appreci ates a really good thing and will pa tronize it when given the opportunity. OPTICIANS TO RENEW FIGHT Demand for Board of Examiners to Be Made on Legislature Reading. Pa.. Jon. 11,—The fight for the enactment of a bill authorizing t'he appointment of a spe.'ial State Board of Kxaminifg Optometrists, .along the lines of the nitdical board, will be renewed at t'.:o comi' g session of the Legisla ture as tne result of action taken by the legis'ative committee of the Penn sylvania Optical Society at a meeting at the American house here last night. The committee consists of Otto G. Haussman, Vl Rothschild, J. K. F. Can aga;> an i J. Martsch, of Philadelphia; L \Y N.igle. of Lebanon couutv and D. M. Jackson, of Tamaqua. It wis decided to introduce a bill directing that a board be appointed and compelling all practicing optometrists to undergo examinations. Plans were also laid to battie vigorously against the alleged :;ttont:on of toe Medical Bureau ■to have the law governing the prac tice of medicine amended so as to com pel optometrists to take out a medical license. FINDS 11.500 PENDANT Conductor Pawns Gem, Feels Sorry, Makes Good and Is Forgiven Xew \ork, Jan. 11.—Thomas S'heehy, conductor of a Fifth avenue bus. who liv©3 at j v 26 East Ninety-first street, found a four carat diamoud pendant on the floor of his vehicle on January 5. and failing to see any ad vertisement of its loss, decided after many twinges of conscience that legally it belonged to him. He pledged the gem in a Third avenue pawnshop for SIOO on Saturday night. Later, however, he concluded that he was all wrong as to ownership, returned to the pawnshop, gave back the money and got the dia mond. I Lieutenant Ticho, of the Second | branch detective bureau, who chanced • to be in the shop, witnessed the trans action and recognized the diamond as | a $1,500 stone described by Mrs. Mary I Jones, of Cold Spring Hurbor, L. 1., mother of UencraJ Itosalie Jones, the suffragist, as one she had lost. Mrs. Jones had notified the police through F.dward Finch, her counsel, and also I bad advertised. i Ticho arrested Sjicehy and had him ! arraigned before Magistrate Marsh in the Yorkville police court yesterday. | There the story of the conductor's men tal oscillations was told and the fact that he had always been honest and faithful came out. Mrs. Jones said she wouldn't make any complaint under the circumstances and at her request the conductor was j permitted to go. COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS Will Be Held Here by U. S. Civil Serv ice Commission The U. S. Civil Service Commission j announces the following op&ii competi tive examinations to be held in Harris-1 •burg. Pereons who meet the require-j ments and desaro any of the examina- 1 tions should apply to the secretary, Third Civil Service District, Philadel phia, or the local secretary: Assistant in game preservation, male, $2,250, January 20; engineer of mine safety investigations, male. $3,000- $3,600, February 2; specialist in cot ton testing, male, sl,Boo-$2,400, Feb ruary 2; civil engineer student, male, $720 per annum, February 3; 'dairy bacteriologist, male, $1,200-1,440, Feb ruary 3; typographic aid. temporary, male, S4O-s7o a month. February 3; j cheese maker, male, $1,200-1,440*. Feb ruary 3; microanalyst, $1,200-$1,440,1 February 3; junior topographer, male,! $720-$1,200, February 4-5. ] 5.10.000 MEN ARE STILL AVAILABLE. SAY GERMANS Berlin, Jan. 11.—The Official Press Bureau has issued the following: "An examination srfhowß that of tho entrained Landsturm troops iu the 9th army corps districts of Mamburg and 'Holsteiu thore are 200,000 fit for serv ice. As Germany has twenty-four army corps districts the Land sturm would yield (taking these figures as a basis) about 5,000,000 more men fit for field service.'' " Tho results of tho fighting during the first week of the year are consid ered by tho newspapers as fairly satis factory. The Germans took about 5,- 700 prisoners and some twenty-five ma chine guns." London, Jan. 11.—The Potrograd correspondent of tUie "LVlorning Post" says: .''An imperial ukase has just been issued regarding the recruits due for service iu t'he pTesent year. Kussia an nually passes in normal years into her army something over 700,000 recruits. This number represents only a portiou of those actually liaible for service; t'he rest are registered in reserve. For the present year tho ukase orders that there i>e summoned to the colors 555.000 re cruits. It is significant of .Russia's confidence in the conditions of her forces in this great war that, after six months of such fighting as t'he world has never seen before, she dOcms it am ply sufficient to call up loss fhau half the number of young men who are liable to t>e summoned to the colors." German Fleet Out of Kiel Paris, Jan. 1 I.—A dispatch from Copenhagen to the "Temps" says that of the German high sea licet ouly the old boats Barbarossa, Wnortteuiberg, Koenigin Luise, Kronprinz, Kaiser Wil heltn, some instruction ships and sis submersifbles are now at Kiel. The first line fleet with the dread noughts are at Wilhelmshavon and Cu*haven. Joffre Taboos Newspapers Paris, Jan, 11.—An officer Who is at tached to the staff of General Joffre states tlhat the French commander has not read a single newspaper sinco the beginning of the w'ar, that he does not smoke or drink and writes no letters except brief notes to his wife and his sister. Mme. Deliia Was Not Killed Paris, Jan. 11.—.A story priuted in "Ii Independence 'Beige" to the effect that Mario IV In a of the Opera Comique had been killed while nursing under tire is disproved bv the presence of Delna in Paris. Mine. Delua. it will be recalled, went to New York in 1!» 10 and appeared at the Metropolitan opera house. MARSHALL K WILDER DIES Widely Known Humorist and Author Who Had Entertained European Royalty Expires at St. Paul anderine at any drug store, pour a little in your band and rub well into the scalp. After a few applications all dandruff disappears and the hair stops comiug out. adv. BREAKS A COLD. OPENS CLOGGED HEAD AND NOSE i "Pape's Cold Com pound" Ends Severe Colds or Grippe in Few Hours Relief comes instantly. A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end gripi>o misery ami break up a severe eold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nos trils and air passages in the head, stops { nasty discharge or uoso running, Re lieves sick headache, dullness, feverish ness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness nnd stiffness. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Kaso your throbbing head! Nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold Compound," which costs only 25 cents ' at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no in- j convenience. Be sure you g"et the i genuine.—Adv. BLEW HIMSELF INTO OFFICE Oklahoman in Campaign Used Biggest Saxaphone H e Could Find Nowata, Okla., .lan. 11. —When everybody told him there was "no use, - ' that he was too young and shouUl wait awhile, and that no Demo crat could defeat the incumbent of the j offii'o of Prosecuting Attorney of No wata county, Charles Walter Mason 1 donned his uniform as leader of the noted Saxaphone Band, and strapped his big saxaphone over his shoulder. He made music and speeches during ! an exciting campaign ami won the elec tion by 3-17 votes. • PERILOUS TRIP OVER ICE | Ohio Motorists Make Exciting Winter Ride Across Lake Erie Sandusky, 0., Jan. 11.—Dr. .T. B.! Robinson and ex-Mayor T. B. Alexan der, in an automobile owned by Mr. Al exander. and Kmil Kuh, Captain U E. j Bickford and William Haas, in a ma-} chine owned by Mr. Bull, narrowly es- { caped drowning several times yester day while motoring over the frozen sur , face of Lake Erie from the mainland near Port Clinton to Put in-Bay, where 1 they reside. Several times the ice gave way un der the machines and but for the' fact i that they were driving fast, all would have gone to the bottom, the men say. LIVERY STABLE BURNS Business Center of Lebanon Menaced by Midnight Fire Lebanon, Pa., Jan. 11.—The entire I city fire department was called out just I before midnight Saturday to fight' an I incendiary fire in the Laudermilch liv ery stable, situated in the heart of the ' business section of the city. The structure, a big frame building, ! is surrounded on all sides by the Court j House, Odd Fellows' building, Ziou Lu- \ theran church, Mann building and j many other business places, all of which were threatened until the flames) were under control. SUICIDE'S BODY IDENTIFIED Man Found in Barn in Chester County Was Resident of Reading Reading, Pa., .Jan. 11.—Relatives j yesterday identified the body of a man ! who committed suicide by hanging in a ! barn near Oxford, Chester county, Sat- j urday, as that of Horace Diehm, of j this city. Diehm left Reading Thursday in search of employment, and despondency attributable to the failure of his mis sion is believed to be responsible for his self-destruction. A widow and three children survive. DIES AT FRIEND'S FUNERAL John H. Dury Expires Suddenly of Heart Disease Pittsburgh, Pa., .Tan. 11.—-Becoming suddenly ill as he was about to enter the home of the late S. B. Liggett, sec retary of the Pennsylvania Lines West of Pittsburgh, to attend the funeral services yesterday. John H. Dury, cash ier of the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chica go and St.'Louis railroad, was carried into a neighboring residence and died within 15 minutes from heart failure. Mr. Dury, who was 0 7 years old. was a close friend of Mr. Liggett, who died suddenly last Friday. The Liggett funeral was uninterrupted and few of those in attendance knew of Mr. Dnry's death. At 26, Takes Fifth Husband Stockton, Kan., Jan. 11.—Mrs. Daft ney Murtey. wflio was divorced from James Mtortnev last November, was married recently in Chicago to a news •'butcher" with whom sfhe became ac quainted wfhile living here. This makes her fifth husband, and she is only 26 years old. Two Hurt in Collision Williainsport, Pa., Jan. 11.—Wil liam 11. Thompson, manager of a taxi cab company, and James Mensch were badly injured when run down in an au tomobile by the Buffalo flyer on the Pennsylvania Railroad at the Elm street grade crossing early yesterday. The train hit the rear of the five-pas senger machine, throwing the men 20 feet and completely wrecking the car. _____ ... mmmmmmmm — mmm Sterling Silver Initial Glassware COUPON Combination Set, Six (6) Tumblers and One (1) Large Pitcher to match. All for 98c This Offer May Be Withdrawn Any Day. Come Early—Don't Be Disappointed. Star-Independent Office 18-20-122 S. Third Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Twenty-five cents Extra l/y Mail or Express. ———— j QUIT A GLASS-BREAKING HOME Husband Gets Divorce From Wife u a Smasher Suubury, Pa., Jan. 11.—Claude E. Wilson, of a prominent Shamokin fam ily, has been granted a divorce by Judge Moser in the Northumberland coi:nty court, here. The Tnaster recom mended a decree on grounds of "cruel ty and barbarous treatment." According to the master's report, the wife started her discourtesy shortly aft er their marriago, iu 1911, and nagged and used harsh language. The climax was reached, the husband swore, when ! she came home on an afternoon in Au gust, 1913, nnd, without apparent cause, went into an ungovernable rage, and beforo she was through demolished all the cut glass and fancy dishes in tho house. That was the straw that broke his patience. LIGHTS CUT OFF FOR A KICK Storekeepers, With Tripled Bills, Now Throalen Suit Sun'bury, Pa., Jan. 11. —After Vur nakis & Co., candy dealers here, had j refused to pay a light bill, which, they assert, tripled iu a single month, tho Northumberland County Was and Klec tric Company, which has a monopoly on lighting here, cut off the current, and I tho firm is using kerosene lamps in its store. Vurnakis declares that it is his inten j tion to sue for loss of business oeca ; sioned by the use of poor light and ' to appeal to the public Hervice Coniniis | sion, as ho asserts that the company should have adjusted the matter. Hun dreds of light-users here complained very seriously of high hills this month. WIFE DESERTER CAPTURED | Man Who Fled With Stenographer Caught After 5,000-mile Chase Washington, Prt., Jan. 11. —After a 3.000-mile chase Albert Anderson, who IS months ago disappeared from Wash ington with his stenographer, Delia | Algeo, leaving behind him a society j wife and child, has been captured in I Dayton, 0., according to word received here yesterday. Yesterday afternoon Chief of Police | John D. Bumgardner, of Washington, ! who personally comlurted tile pursuit I of Anderson, ieft for the Ohio city to ! bring Ander.-wn bneli hero to face { charges of desertion, on which he was | indicted months ago. Anderson, at the I time of his disappearance from Wash ington, was a prosperous business man. FIRE DAMAGES CLUBHOUSE Ballroom of Building in Warren Swept by Flames * Kane, Pa., Jan. 11.—Fire, which was discovered at 5 o'clock vesterdnv | afternoon in the ballroom of tho Cone w;ingo Club, at Warren, destroyed tHe third floor of tho handsome building, which was one of the finest in north j western Pennsylvania. The fire burned rapidly, and heroin I work by the firemen saved the buildiflg I from being totally destroyed. How the tiro originated is a mystery. Nearly all the costly furnishings in the build ing were damaged by water, causing a loss estimated at $20,000. MAN HAS CATTLE PLAGUE Baltimore Medical Student Suffers From Hoof and Mouth Disease | Baltimore, Jan. 11. —One of the first | cases on record in this city of a human : being with the hoof and mouth disease I is that of Carlisle S. Lent/., a student i in a leading malic al school here. i Lentz, whoee home is iu Omaha, con- I traeted tho disease two weeks ago, pre- I suinablv through drinking milk from an infected cow. He is said to be on the ) road to recovery. PRINCETON HOTEL BURNS Peacock Inn, Once Home of President Wilsont Destroyed by Fire Princeton, N. J., Jan. 11.—Peacock jinn, one of Princeton's quaintest and i most fashionable hostelries, was ruined j by file yesterday. Tho loss is estimated jat SIO,OOO. .Several invalid guests were brought down by ladder from tho upper floorß. Tho inn was at ono time tho resi dence of President Wilson. fWARffS KEEP BOWELS REGULAR AND CURE COLDS No Headache, Sour Stomach, Bad Cold or Constipation by Morning Get, a 10-ccnt box. Colds —whether iu the head or any part of the body—are quickly overcome by urging the liver to action and keep ! ing the bowels free of poison. Take Cas caretw to-night and you will wake up with a clear head and no doubt you will wonder what became of your cold. < as carets work while you sleep; they cleanse and regulate the stomach,removo the sour, undigested food and foul gases; take tho excess bile from the liver and carry ofl' the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels. Remember the quickest way to get rid of colds is one or two Cascaretw at night to cleanse the system, (let a 10- cent box at any drug store. Don't for get the children. Thev relish this Caudy Cathartic, and it is often all that is needed to drive a cold from their little systems.—Adv.