6 ©lf* &»tar-3nbrp?tt&*nt ( Establwhed in 1876) Pubhrhad b' TH« STAR PWINTtNO COMPANY. * Star-lndep»-ident Building, M-SO-22 South Third Stre«t, MarrwburC. Pm* Every Kvnint K«c«pt Sunday Officer*! Dincttrt^ fimiAMl* F. MBTKM, Jouji u l Kcbk> President. Wm. W. WaiJlowik, Vtee President W * * M«T«M W*. It Minus, Secretary and Treasurer. Wm W Wallower. Wm 11 Warner, V. Hummel Bekohaus. Jr., Buiintu Manager. Editor. All comnHinlcarious should be addressed to Star Indsprndeht, fiusinesr. Editorial, Job Printing or Circulation Department ♦ccording to the subject matter. Entered at the Post Office in Harrisburg as second class matter. Benjamin & Kentnor Company, New York and Chicago Representatives New York OSee. Rninawick Building. 2'J.i Fifth Avenue. Chicago Office, People's (ias Building. Michigan Avenue, Delivered by carriers at 8 cents a week. Mailed to subscriber; tor Three Dollars a year in advance. THE STAR INDEPENDENT The paper wita the largeav Home Circulation in Harrisbnrg anu Marby towns. Circulation Examinee b- TME ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN ADVERTISERS. TELEPHONES BELL~* Private Branch Exchange. No. 3280 A _ _ CUMBEtU ANC VALLEV private Branch Eiohanse, No. 845-246 1-' * - Monday, January 25, 1915. JANUARY Sun. 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, Ist, 30th; Last Quarter, Bth; New Moon, 15th; First Quarter, U3d. WEATHER FORECASTS f " '■ ] j Harrisburg and vicinity: Fair and _ llfejafSi ■■older to-night with lowest temperature JB®-®'— about 20 degrees. Tuesday fair and Eastern Pennsylvania: Local snows . vjllj/'ll and colder to-night. Tuesday partly cloudy and colder. Moderate shifting winds becoming northwest. YESTERDAY'S TEMPERATURE IN HARRISBURG Highest,/29; lowest, 23; 8 a. m., 24; 8 p. m., 26. SAVING IN MOTOR-DRIVEN FIRE ENGINES The announcement of the plan of Fire Commis sioner Taylor to recommend to the City Commis sion the purchase of a motor tractor for the Friend ship steam lire engine which was sent to the repair shop by the unfortunate accident of last Saturday, is a step in the direction of economy. While the original outlay in cash will be a large one, never theless there undoubtedly will be an ultimate sav ing to the City. As pointed out by the Commissioner it would require au outlay of about SI,OOO to put tlie engine in the same condition it was in before it crashed against a support of the Cumberland Valley Rail road bridge. Part of t his expense for actual repairs would be avoided if a tractor were purchased, as the tractor would take the place of some of the parts of the apparatus that were smashed and would otherwise have to be bought. • It had been planned to equip the engine with a tractor at an early date anyhow, and it would be the wiser course to do it now rather than to wait for a few months as this latter plan would make necessary the pur chase of all the broken parts, for some of which there would be no need after the ultimate purchase of the tractor. Moreover to repair the engine as a horse-drawn vehicle would involve the buying of a new horse to take the place of the one killed in the crash, where-* as it a tractor were purchased at once the two remaining engine horses could be sold and the money thus received could he applied to meet part ot the cost of the motor equipment. While the original outlay for the tractor, of course, would be considerably larger than the cost of putting the engine in the condition it was in before the accident, there is money available for such purposes in the special fund obtained for the Fire Department in the recent $25,000 bond issue. There would be little risk involved in the experi ment of trying out a motor tractor on a steam fire ,a ngine in this city. It has been done in other cities with marked success and it has been shown that the saving effected by doing away with the cost of caring for and feeding the horses is so great in a \ oar as to make it possible to offset in a compara tively short time the initial expense of puchasing tractors. Once the original outlay for a tractor is naved there is a constant saving in the year-to-year operation of motor-driven fire apparatus as com pared with the expense of maintaining horses to draw an engine. ECONOMICAL OLD UNCLE SAM A\ hen it comes to economy business men -might well learn a thing or two from their old Uncle •Samuel. I here is a notice in the current number of the "United States Official Postal Guide" headed "Conservation of Twine" which might be a joke, but it isn t. It is a lesson on the impor tance of avoiding small extravagances. Men in almost every line of business might profit by it. The Department instructs its employes as follows: In tyiug small packages of letters, one wrap of twine inly each way should be made. If the package is so bulky as to necessitate the use of more twine, or in tying out long letters, the least number of wraps should lie made each wav tbat will insure the safety of the package in transit. * * * All concerned will be expected to put forth every effort looking to possible retrenchment along this line. It would also be lo the purpose, wtj might surest, HARRISBTTBG STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY ETENTNf?, -TANTARY 25, 1915. if the Apartment were to instruct to re move the twine carefulfy from all packages when distribution of the mail is mad,e and preserve it for further use. Thrifty housekeepers are accus tomed to save twin#-for future service £]iat comes to them, often in liberal allotments, on packages from the stores. Employes of the Postoffice De partment might get (he same habit, if they do not already have it, and they could thus make one ball of twine do service for a long time. The story about the postmaster who saved the government several cents' worth of ink by refrain ing from dotting his i's and crossing his t's was possibly the invention of some malicious individual who wanted to cast reflections on Uncle Sam's eco nomical practices. Yet the reducing of parcel post rates, the lowering of the registry fee and even the ultimate establishing of one cent postage, must depend largely on the economy in little things, as well as in big ones, wtyieh the Department is able to exercise. ON CAPTURING A KING Some of the most interesting stories eomieetcd with the war, we may assume, do not reach this country. Many of them share the fate of the pa thetic account headed Sad Story" which was represented by two blank columns the other day in a Paris newspaper after the censor got through with it, —only the headline surviving to tell the tale. Other stories certainly never reach journal ists. for there must be a much greater abundance of them than ever get into print. One interesting story has appeared, however, which, if not late news still is news, and even if not authentic is nevertheless interesting. It is the story coming from London about almost capturing the Kaiser, in which an officer of the 'tenth Hussars tells how part of his regiment made off Christmas morning toward a certain fork in a road on the way to General von Manben's headquarters where they understood the Kaiser was going to pass, and how they just missed an automobile in which they could recognize the Kaiser with their glasses, but succeeded in cutting off two cars which followed and in capturing the royal luggage. It is difficult to conceive of the Kaiser, or of any of the other warring sovereigns, for that matter, in captivity. There is certainly a question as to what the consequences of a capture would be. Without drawing close comparisons between the game of chess and the game of war, we might call attention to the fact that, in the former, the king cannot be taken and therefore has an advantage. Yet when he is checkmated the game is over. IS BASEBALL WORK? In discussing the squabble between the orgauized baseball leagues and the Federal League, now being threshed out in the Chicago courts, the question often asked is: "Is baseball work?" It reminds one of the days when baseball first started in this country,—that is. when it got its first actual start as the national game,—just after the Civil War. In those days the game was re garded as sport, pure and simple, entirely divorced from professionalism, and there wasn't a town of any size in the East that did not possess one or more baseball clubs, many of them with fancy names, the players on which played for the pure love of it. So quickly did the popularity of the game spread in Pennsylvania that the clubs of the state formed a state association, and in 18ti8 there met in Ilar risburg representatives of mofe than two hundred Pennsylvania clubs, the object being to further the interests of the gape and make closer relations amongf clubs. The convention met. in the hall of the House of Representatives and at the close of a two-dav session the entire convention attended a game between the Harrisburg Tyroleans and a Coatesville team. The Harrisburg team, with Wil liam Murray as pitcher and Thoinus Montgomery as catcher, won the contest. The state association did not last long, however, dying at the end of a couple of years, but nobody in those days ever looked upon baseball as work. On the contrary it was played mostly in the early summer evenings after the day's work was done, ami was regarded purely as a recreation. If any body had suggested that players should be paid, he would have been regarded as a mild luuatie, and hooted. It was not until 1874 that paid baseball got into Harrisburg. There was great rivalry between the home teams known as the High Boys aud Experts, and in a series of games it was thought necessary to have better pitchers and catchers. The Experts engaged a brawny mill-worker from Philadelphia, who was a crackerjack catcher, and the High Boys sent to Philadelphia and engaged a battery known as the Snyder Brothers and a shortstop named Harry Riffert. That was the entering wedge. Thereafter paid players were employed here regularly and instead of baseball being a recreation it became a profes sion. It has been that in Harrisburg ever since, and now it is regarded as work, after all. The Towanda man reported to have got drunk from sweet cider must have had a psychological jag. Remember, gentlemen of the Legislature, that whether or not you are watching your stop your constituents are! Mr. Harry Kendall Thaw, as the society editor would say, has returned to the Tomba after a vacation pleasantly spent in Canada and various parts of New England. The Chamber of Commerce apparently is meeting with a good deal of success in its work of demonstrating to whole salers the great advantages of Harrisburg as a distributing center. is the practical kind of work that brings business to the city. Perhaps the experts can tell us whether the losses of 43 ships by the German Navy and 28 by the British Navy, as reported since the start of the war, have had the auto matic effect of raising United States front its position of fourth as a Naval power, which it held July 1, 191*. BREAKS A COLD IN A FEW HOURS WITHOUT QUININE First Dose of "Papes Cold Compound" Re lieves All Grippe Misery Don't stay stuffed-up! Vuit blowing and snuffling! A dose of "Pape's (.'old Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe miserv and break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens dogged-lip nos trils and air passages; stops nasty discharges or nose running; relieves sick headache, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. "Pape's Cold Compound" is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only 25 cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, aud causes no inconvenience. Don't accept a substitute.—Adv. | Tongue-End Top ics | Activity of Underwater Craft The steady extension of the sphere' of activity of German submarines is the subject of a recent article by the Ger man naval expert, Count Reventlow. The sinking of the British battleship Formidable in the Channel, preceded as it was by the sinking of a patrol boat off Dover and later by the de struction of two commercial steamers off the French coast, gives evidence, says the writer, that German under water craft are able to operate almost anywhere even in the most frequented waters. Heavy Tax on Brussels Street Cars The German military authorities in Belgium have forbidden the sale of photographs or picture postcards ol' King Albert aud M. Max, Mayor ot Brussels, now imprisoned in Germany. In Brussels, the street railway still is •being operated by the Belgian company, which is required to turn over thirty per cent, of its receipts to the German tax collector. Jailed For Trading With Germans Judgment has jiyst been decreed in the courts of Calcutta in the first case of "trading with the enemy," which was made a severe misdemeanor at the beginning of the war. The accused, an employe of a Calcutta exporting firm, was sentenced to eighteen months im prisonment anil to pay a fine of JoOO. He was convicted of endeavoring to arrange for the sale of a shipment ot mica to a German firm. War Hits 212 German Newspapers "Owing to decreased advertising revenue arising out of the war, 212 German newspapers are already said to have disappeared. At least half that number have probably died in Great Britain," savs the London "Globe." "These facts supply the strongest imaginable comment on the common fajlncy that this war is profitable to the European newspaper owner. As a matter of fact, the reverse is the case. A modern newsjmper is an exceedingly complex organization, and the purchas er obtains for a penny or half-penny a publication which costs more than that sum to produce. The explanation is to be found in the profits derived from ad vertising revenues, with the result when that decreases below a certain point, a paper is run at a loss on pro duction, which increases with the in crease of circulation. So far from the British press having found the war a gold mine, there is not one newspaper that has not felt the pinch somewhere, and many are making the greatest financial sacrifices in order to continue in their role of purveyors of news, and thus to perform a real public service." Complains About American Writers The "Hamburger Nachrichten" com plains that Americans in Germany are acting as the representatives of Lon don newspapers, this being viewed by the "Nachrichten" as hardly in ac cord with strict ideas of neutrality. The "Nachrichten" says: "Every war between civilized na tions is initiated by the rupture of dip lomatic relations. Newspaper represen tatives in many respects resemble dip lomatists, for their task is to oibtain information and to give their own country a true insight into the existing state of affairs. Can we take it as in the slightest degree possible that those L in by Fri- Ola Beautiful Upright so °. l ' us 2 ® ... - possible. «? (lav even- p |aM £ p ar | sr Organ Don't, | © mg, 6 p.m. Seetlloin in our window. Delay $ 4 Ist Prize 2nd Prize f i U —a sss ! ® To party send- [3 " "' '- -, T JXJfI To party send- «*» g inp in the most »'K in the ® from the words , |S S? words formed ® "LesterPiano." jag: """" J" jjq from "Lester ® All worild must |w f §j Piano." All H >» 1 1 rUIH rSb-j'.Jd 0 H and on one side „„ one s j,j e 0 f of paper. .paper. d wrLESTER PIANO I Y lu the event of a tie judges will award prizes to most correct and neatest answers.' Fifty factory @ bonds good for SBO.OO eredit 011 any new piano in if ® our salesroom. One bond allowed on the purchase ® ® of each piano. Every person answering this ad s, vertisement will receive a Lester March and Two ® step written especially for us by Will Hardy by © ® calling at the store. Piano dealers and piano ® H agents barred from contest, only one answer from |j, a family considered. Winners will be notified Sat © urday, January 30,1915. Judges of contest will be © © P. K. Kitzmiller, druggist; C. (I. Miller, Citizen's ® ® Bank; E. S. Hess, cigar merchant, Thirteenth and ® ® Derry streets. ® *8? ' @ % Address all answers to ® H. G. DAY || Factory Representative Lester Piano ® 1319 Derry Street ® 6 © Out of High Rent District ALL Mothers Are lnvited== Miss Una Clayton, who is presenting "Milk," a eomedy drama, at the Orpheum theatre this week, will give two free lectures during the earl.v hall.' of the week on "Bab.v Hygiene." —a plea for the prevention of the sale of impure milk. I Tuesday afternoon, at 4.30, Miss Clayton will talk to mothers in the Infants' Goods Department of Dives, Ponieroy & Stew art's store. She will give many facts of value regarding the care of infants, especially the matter of baby foods and the dangers thatWurk in impure milk. Wednesday morning at 11 Miss Clayton will lecture at the Orpheum on the subject of impure milk, illustrating her talk with moving pictures. To this talk special invitations have been extended to members of state and city health departments, Harrisburg physicians and ladies interested in the purification of the milk supply. Others are also invited to attend. Don't Fail to see Miss Clayton's act at the Orpheum this week. f; It. is an act with a purpose. First Thanksgiving The first Thanksgiving was conduct ed by an English minister named Wot fall in 1578, on the shores of New foundland. The first celebration in tlio present territory of the United States was held in the I'opham colony at Sagadahoc, on the coast of Maine, in 1607. The first regular appointment of a Thanks'giving day was by Governor Bradford, fhe first Governor of Massa chusetts bay. WOMEN in all stations of life are able to derive a great deal of actual benefit from the maintaining of connections with the MECHANICS TRUST COMPANY. We invite small as well as large household accounts subject to check, provide special facilities for the convenience of lady depositors, and extend the most prompt and efficient service at all times regardless of whether the account maintained is large or small. Our officers are pleased to be consulted on any business, financial or Investment matters. Receives Damages for Lost Horse Lebanon, Jan. 2^.—A verdict for $102.80 was returned by the jury in the case of David Swanger against the supervisors of East Hanover township in civil court Saturday afternoon. The verdict covers the jury's valuation of Mr. Swanger's loss of a horse which had to be killed after its leg had been injured and the tendons cut by strik ing a terra cotta pipe which was ex posed along the side of the road.