CAPITOL HILL NEW M. C. P. DIRECTORY OUT Prepared at Adjutant General's Head quarters and Contains Names of All Officers The new directory of the National Guard of Pennsylvania and roster ot' the commissioned officers, as prepared up to date at the Adjutant General's headquarters, was distributed to-day. It contains the names ot' all of the of ficers in the National Guard to-day, from the Governor as commander-in chief down to the subalterns. The names of the supernumerary of ficers and those ou the retired list are also given with their addresses. It is one of the most useful publications is sued by General Stewart 's department. War on Heroin Senator Snyder, of Blair, will have charge of the bill placing restrictions around the Mile of heroin, the narcotic that is now beiug used in plaice of cocaine, and will act in accordance with the wishes of the State Pharma ceutical Association, of which he is a member. Senator Snyder says that Pennsylvania has the best anti-cocaine bill of any State in the Union, and that other States are adopting it. Heroin, however, has but few restric tions on it, but it is proposed to pre vent its sale under just as rigid in structions as surround the sale of co caine. The increase in the use of heroin is ascribed to the great restrictions placed on the sale of cocaine, which lat ter drug is said to form the basis of heroin. Capitol Park Commission The Capitol Park Commission is pre paring to purchase early in the spring a number of the larger properties in the proposed park territory that as yet have not been negotiated for. Thus tar out of the 537 properties on the park extension all but 110 have been bought by the State. * Secretary Woods Home Secretary of the Commonwealth Woods left last night for his home in Greensburg. When he returns on Mon day he will bring his family with him and take up his residence in the Cham •berlin mansion on J'ront street near South, where he will make his home for the winter. Secretary Woods will be accompanied by Mrs'. Woods and his mother-in-law. Increase of Capital The Co-operative Loan and Invest ment Company, of Harrisburg, his filed notice at the Department of an increase of capital stock from $17,105 to $25,000. The York Corrugating Companv has increased its capital from $25,000 to $50,000. Attorney General Busy Attorney General Brown is very busily engaged in preparing a number of opinions on matters that have been submitted to him by department heads and is also engageil in preparing bills to cover the legislation endorsed by Governor Brumbaugh in his personal platform. These include workmen's compensation, child labor and employ er s liability bills. I-iocal option will bft. taken up later. Secretary of Agriculture The commission of Secretary- of Agriculture Critchfield will expire on February 27, but it is expected that be fore that time Governor Brumbaugh will announce a succ-essot-. The prin cipal aspirants for the place are the present deputy secretary, Algeron S Martin; Dr. H. A. Surface, State Economic Zoologist, and George S Hutchison, of the Dairy a-'ood Inspec tion (Division, who is from Huntingdon county and an intimate friend of Gov ernor Brumbaugh in his home county. LECTURE ON THE HORSE Illustrated Talk Will Be Given at Tech nical High School To-morrow Night An illustrated lecture on "The Mod ern Horse and Its Forebears" will be given by Dr. R. C. Sliiedt, of Franklin and Marshall Academy, Lanacster, at the Technical High school to-morrow evening at 8 o clock. The lecture will be illustrated with lantern views show ing the horse and other vertebrate ani mals of the early tertiary period. Ad mission will be free and all persons in terested are invited to be present. The lecture is given under the aus pices of the Harrisburg Natural His tory Society. IT Olttl STOPS STOMACH MISERY AND INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepsin" Makes Sick, Sour, Gassy Stomachs Feel Fine Do some foods you eat hit back— taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your atom \ ach so you can eat your favorite foods | without' fear. Most remedies give you relief some- j times—they are slow, but not sure, j "Pape's Diapepsin" is quick, positive l and puts your stomach in a healthy ] condition so the misery won't come back. You feel different as soon as "Pape's j Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach—distress just vanishes—your } stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch- j ihg, no eructations of undigested food,! Kour head clears and you feel fine. Go now, make the best investment k'ou ever made, by getting a largo fiftv ■ent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any Irug stor« You realize in five minutes low needless it is to suffer from indi icstion, dyspepsia or any stomach dis irder.—Adv. IMMIGRATION BILL VETOED BY WILSON CMttnurd From Klrat Pave. sion and spirit of the nation in re spect of its relations to the peoples of the world outside their borders. It seeks to all but close entirely the gates of asylum which have always been open to those who could find nowhere else the right and opportunity of con stitutional avitation for what they con ceived to be the natural and inalienable rights ot men, and it excludes those to whom the opportunities of element ary education have been denied without regard to their character, their pur poses of their natural capacity." DEATH OF MRS. SIMONETTI Funeral Services Will Be Held at Her Home Saturday Afternoon Mrs. Mary May Simonetti, wife of Harry Simonetti, died last night at her home, 1315 Wallace street, aged 45 years; On Tuesday evening Mrs. Simonetti sustained a stroke from which she never regained consciousness. Mrs. Simonetti was a member of the Ridge Avenue Methodist church. She is survived by her husband, one son, Ray, and one "daughter, Edna, her aged mother, who has been at the point of death for more than a week, Mrs. Anna Clouser, and the following sisters: Mrs. Jennie Prey, Mrs. 'Maud Pryne, IMrs. Sadie Reynolds. Mrs. Tessie lluss and Mrs. Elsie Martin. The funeral serv ices will 'be held at her late home on Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock and will be conducted by the Rev. .1. 'II. Daugherty. Interment will be in the Harrisburg cemetery. Charles Warfield Charles Warfield, son of Mrs. Flor ence Warfield, died at the Harrisburg hospital last night of pneumonia, aged S months. Undertakers T. H. Mauk & Son will take the body from 1422 North Fourth street to Middletown to morrow afternoon where the services will be held at 2 o'clock. Interment will' be in the Middletown cemetery. E. S. Martin The funeral of Edmund Smith Mar tin, who died early yesterday morning, | will be held from the home, 1731 Green j street, Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock, the Rev. E. E. Curtis, pastor of West minster Presbyterian church, officiating. Burial will be in the East 'Harrisburg cemetery. Mrs. Louisa Rumpf The funeral of Mrs. Louisa Rumpf, 1526 North Sixth street, will be held to-mon*ow T morning in St, Lawrence German Roman Catholic church. She is survived by her husband, Charles C. Rumpf; a son. Charles, and two daugh-. ters, Mrs. A. Taylor and Mary Rumpf. Emanuel Sanders The funeral of Emanuel Sanders, a Civil war veteran, who died yesterday at his home, Enola, will be. Held to morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Enola United Brethren church. Burial will be in Zion Lutheran ceme tery, "Enola, SHEESLEY LICENSE RENEWED Application of New Cumberland Hotel Approved by the Court (Special to the Star-Independent.) Carlisle, Jan. 28.—The application of Edward J. Sheesley for the renewal of the New Cumberland hotel liquor li cense was granted by Judge Wilbur F. Sadler here this morning. The court has now passed upon all but one of the ! thirty-two license applications. The | court yet is considering the applica tion of John E. Unger, proprietor of the Central hotel, Newville. Two licenses yesterday were refus ed, one beiug the application for the Pennsylvania house, Carlisle, of which Lewis S. Gulp is proprietor, and the other, the Big Spring hotel, Newville, S. D. Mowery, proprietor. Four applica tions thus far have been denied and ] one was withdrawn. The Mechanicsburg hotels all were | relieensed, the court holding that the claims of the remonstrants that the hotels are not necessities, had not been sustained. That also was the court's opinion in the New Cumberland ease. PEN. FOR CHICKEN THIEVES Judge Sadler Says He Will Send Every Mother's Son of Them There (Special to the Star-Independent.) Carlisle, Jan. 28.—Determined to break up the practice of chicken steal ing, Judge Wilbur F. Sadler, in court here this morning announced that he ; will not consider leniency pleas in such ! cases and will send chicken coop rob : 'bers —'' every mother's son of you''— ! to the penitentiary. The remark was made by the judge ! after he had imposed a one-year peni : tentiary sentence on Lewis Sulzberg er, of Mechanicsburg, a confessed j chicken thief. The defendant robbed the hennery of George Seiferd while the Seiferd family was attending church services a week ago. The authorities here believe Sultza berger was one of a .gang of thieves that had worked systematically, but the defendant refused to say anything except that he is guilty of the crime of which he was charged. ELECTRIC SIGN'S FOR STREETS They Will Be Substituted For Boards In Business District Electric street signs are to be sub stituted in the city's main business section for the old stylo index boards which for years have been in use, ac cording to a plan announced to-day by Willliam H. Lynch, Commissioner of Highways. Mr. Lynch's idea is to paint the street names on the light shades of the single light standards which now are in service in the busi ness section. A test is being made on the stand-' aids at Third and Market streets and ! if this proves satisfactory all the single i light standards will be inscribed with j the street names in a like manner. The names are to be painted in black, &ud with the white background, i will show both at day and at night., The cost will be trifling. Chamber of Commerce Meeting A meeting of the membership of j tie Harristourg Chaml T of Commerce will be held this evening in the Board of Trade auditorium. A. I). Mac Mil land, who will install the new credit \ rating bureau of the chamber, will dis-1 cuss his project. Frank Jewel Ray-j niond, industrial manager of the Na tional Retail Drvgoods Association, of New York City, will speaJc. ' HARRISBTTRO STAR-INDEPENDENT, THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 28, 1915. . We Recommend That You Use "93" Hair Tonic George A. Gorges. IRWIN COBB TELLS TALES OF WAR TOBUSINESSMEN Well-known Humorist Who Lectures Here To-in£ht Asserts at Chamber of Comrfterce Luncheon That Europe Has Returned to Barbarism Irwin Cobb, well-known humorist and war correspondent, who is in this city to give his lecture on the war at the Chestnut street auditorium to night, was present at a luncheon of the Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce held at the Harrisburg Club at 1 o'clock this afternoon and gave a snort talk. Prior to the luncheon he was introduced to the business men present and had a number of anecdotes to tell concerning his recent experiences in the war zoue. "I have been asked whether civilized warfare is a return to barbarism," he said in his talk, "and 1 \vould say that the more civilized the world has become the more barbarous it has become. What can we say for a civilization that has produced, for instance, a gun that wilt kill six men in a row at one shot ?'' Truces Out of Fashion (Hie told how thousands of dead bod ies lay between parallel trenches after a battle, creating a stench which the soldiers at the front could overcome only by constant smoking, and how when a commander was asked why a truce was not called for to bury the corpses the reply was, "Truces have gone out of fashion." Mr. Cobb told several jokes to main tain his reputation as a humorist, but refrained from speaking at length abcut the war because, he said, lie had leained never to give away anything he could sell. He expressed apprecia tion for the hospitality shown him by the Chamber of Commerce, and said he was glad to be in Pennsylvania. "Although 1 am a Southerner by birth and, therefore, a rebel," he said, giving his sentences much the same sort of turn in his speech as be does in his writing, "I have succeeded iu re constructing everything except niv ac cent. '' ZERR IS CHOSEN HEAD OF MOTION PICTURE LEAGUE Continued From First I'ngf. tional charter offered by President Pearce. Before the convention adjourns this evening reports from several commit tees will be received, the place ror the next convention selected and it is likely a grievance and advisory committee will be chosen. The committee on districting the State for locals of the newly formed league reported, recommending the es tablishment of locals as follows: No. 1, Philadelphia; No. 2, Wilkes-Barre; No. 3. Reading; No. 4. Harrisburg; No. 5, Williamsport; No. 6, Altoona; No. 7, Pittsburgh; No. 8, Erie; No. 9, Dubois. Among the additional delegates who registered to-day are Robert Robinson and George Krupa, of Lancaster, and F. M. Shadel, of Williamsport. Last evening the feature of .the con vention was an address by J. W. Bind er, of New York, who is affiliated with the National Board of Censors, an or ganization whose censorship is volun tary and not enforced by law. He ex plained the system of voluntary cen sorship and said he is opposed to legal ized censorship. An eloquent talk against legalized censorship was given by Mr. Bush, of the "Motion Picture World." Late yesterday afternoon a joint meeting of exhibitors and exchange and supplies company men was held at which it was decided to elect a joint legislative committee to work for the repeal of the Pennsylvania censorship law and for other legislation beneficial to the business. The following committee was elect eil: For tlie exhibitors, Peter Megaro, Ilarrisburg; Fred J. Herrington, Pitts burgh; Charles Segall, Philadelphia; Francis K. Devlin, Wilkcs-Barre, and Ben H. Zerr, Reading. For the exchange men, Hunt Miller, Pittsburgh; George W. Bennethuni, Philadelphia; Harry S-chwaJbe, Phila delphia; J. H. Butner, Philadelphia, and L. F. Levinson, Pittsbutyh. istate Representative A. C. Stine, of Pitts burgh, was chosen an honorary mem ber of the committee. At the close of last night V session of the convention the visiting delegates were guests of the management of the Palace theatre at a performance. COURTHOUSE TREASURERS Til MEET HERE County Officials Prom All Over the State Plan to Have Dlnnor The law committee of the Pennsyl vania Association of County Treasurers has arranged for a meeting to be held in the office <*f County Treasurer A. H. Bailey, in the court house on Tuesday morning, February 2, at 10 o'clock, at which time plans will be laid for enter taining all county treasurers of the state at a dinner. The question of pointing out to the Legislature the need for legislation regulating county treasuries also will be discussed. Suit Filed To-day The Youngstown Sheet & Tube Com pany, of Youngstown, 0., to-day brought suit against the Harrfsburg Pipe and I'ipe Bending Company to re cover $2,692.58, which amount is al leged to be dliie on a contract for a bill of goolts furnished the defendant com pany by the plaintiff. Marriage Licenses David B. Patrick, Hanoverdale, and Catherine S. Yingst, Hummelstown. Charles E. Kissinger and Sallie D. Wolf, Lykens. Albert Seneca and Jennie Toverna, edty. John B. .Swope, Uerrv Church, and Orpha N. Kuihns, Union Deposit. Frances L. Paganelli The funeral of Frances L. Paganelli, 6-month old daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Paganelli, 1629 Market street, who died at her home yesterday, was held this afternoon at 2 o'clock. 'Burial in Mt. Calvary cemetery. FRENCH CLAIM VICTORIES ON THE KAISER'S BIRTHDAY Continued From Flrat Pave. losses suffered .by the Germans on the 25th and the 26th of January undoubt edly reached the equal of one brigade (a brigade in the German army totals 6,000 men). Tli- German prisoners in our hands all are under the impression that they have been strongly checked. Our losses in dead, wounded aud niisS ing for these two days are about 800 men and they can be explained by two things, first, the severity of the fight ing, and second, by a partial landslide In an old qnarrv in which two com panies of Krenvh soldiers had taken ; chelter during the bomwirument. As i was reported yesterday these men were shut up in the quarry and they doubt less were taken prisoners by the enemy. During the first part nf this attack our counter attacks resulted in bringing again into our possession all of the ter ritory in dispute.'' : W ARK EN TO LECTURE! HERE Man Pardoned by Taft for Attacks on Judiciary Will Talk To-morrow Fred I). Warren, elitor of the "Ap peal to Reason," who was sent to pris on for his attacgs on the Federal ;ju : dietary, and who win par loned by President Taft without request for such procedure, will lecture to-morrow even ! ing' in Chestnut street hall. Warren h:v< done as much reil fight ! ing with the State ami Federal Gov ernments a.s any man in the count y, ■ say the Socialists, aud will give some of the details during, his lecture. MISS TERRY, ARTISTj AT 77 English Actress Delightfully Interprets Shakospearean Characters Ellen Terry, famous English actress, 7 7 years old, but still possessed of the strength of mind and much of the ,-ireuglh of body which, coupled with her artistry, has helped her all her life to portray with wonderful force the famous feminine roles o(| Shakes peare. entertained a good-sized audience in the Majestic theatre lasl evening with a reading frotr the famous play wright's works, interspersed with in terpretations of various characters through her rare acting. Miss Terry's voice trembled occa sionally as she very evidently taxed her strength to do justice to the char acters of the author whose works she has interpreted since childhood. At times she had difficulty in following the manuscript from which she read, but when, without reading the lines, she undertook to act the parts of some of Shakespeare's heroines, she recalled the days when she worked by the side of Si- Henry Irving on the stage. SAYS HARDEST WAS NEGLIGENT Coroner's Jury Returns Verdict in Auto Inquiry A Coroner's jury last evening in quired into the accident at Front and Walnut streets on New Year's night, when an automobile owned by M. H. Gettys and driven by John J. Hargest, Jr., proprietor of the Rex garage, crashed into'a Valley railways car, in juring Miss Grace Mangan, 310 l'orstcr street, so seriously that she died a few hours Inter in the Harrisburg hospital. The jury returned a verdict that Hargest was negligent in not having his automobile under control as it ap proached the street intersection. The case now rests with District Attorney •Stroup, who was present and heard the witnesses. He has not yet determined on a prosecution, he said this after noon. rAKE SALTS TO PLUSH KIDNEYS Eat Less Meat If Vou Feel Backachy or Bladder Troubles You—Salts Is Fine for Kidneys Meat forms uric acid whioh excites and overworks the kidneys in their ef forts to filter it from the system. Regu lar eaters of meat must (lush the kid neys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; re moving all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kid ney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get irri tated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids aud flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of .lad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoon ful in a glass of water before break fast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, aud has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder ir ritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive; harmless and makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-water drink which mil lions of men and women take now and then, thus avoiding serious kidney and bladder diseases.—Adv. DISTRESS IS RELIEVED AT HOME AS WELL AS ADROAD Volunteer Canvasser For Local Commit tee Find Families In Need In This City While Getting Funds For War Sufferers . Through the medium of the volunteer canvassers of the Home and War Relief committee, four families in which sick ness and hunger were causing distress were relieved yesterday. Work was found for one widow with a four month-old child, wjiile additional sew ing was yiven to two families in which there was urgent need for some form of relief. Those were some of the details re ported to the Ways and Means commit tee of the Home and War Relief com mittee since the canvass for funds to carry on the work began. The amount of money required to carry on the relief work in this city is shown by the report of the Home Re lief division, which is furnishing sew ing work to 321 families. Of these but 113 are known to the local chari ties. which proves that th'e relief work is most emphatically of the emergency kind. There are more than 100 cheese cloth dusters at headquarters, 7 South Front street, which are to be sold at cost prices. Households in need of them should call or use the telephone and they will be delivered C. O. D. The foreign division is sending four big iboxes to Poland to-day, others will be seut by the Red Cross division to Poland and France on Saturday. TRACK FOREMEN SHIFTED Several Transfers Take Place as Re sult of Death of W. W. Snyder Through the d >ath in Marietta sev eral days ago of W. W. Snyder, a sub division track foreman of the Pennsyl vania railroad. C. Z. Moore, a Pennsy supervisor, stationed in Middletown, has made several "hanges. Peter Ens minger, foreman of a section adjoining the Snyder division on the Columbia branch in Marietta, has been named Snyder's successor, and C. J. Geffort, a foreman on the Pennsy's main line in Dillerville, becomes foreman of the Ensminger section. Chester S. Hoffman, an assistant foreman, in Highspire, was promoted to the position of regular foreman and was named to succeed Geffert in Diller ville. These changes, the supervisor said, will becoma effective on Febru ary 1. HARRISBURG PEOPLE PRAISE SIMPLE MIXKIRE Many in Harrisburg praise the simple mixture of buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., known as Adler-i-ka. This remedy is the most THOROUGH'boweI cleanser ever sold being even used successfully in appendicitis. ONE SPOONFUL re lieves almost ANY CASE of constipa tion, sour or gassy stomach. ONE MINUTE after you take it the gasses rumble and pass out. Adler i-ka cannot gripe and the INSTANT action is surprising. G. A. Gorgas, druggist, IB North Third street ami Pennsylvania Railroad Station.—Adv. AMUSEMENTS MAJESTIC rKS' TO-NIGHT—LAST TIME Regular Annual llnKOKoiiirnt of DENMAN THOMPSON'S Play Everlasting The Old Homestead Same Vpwtepdn.v— r»«ili»,v -I'tirevrr Nlglit Price*. 2Tm\ r»Oc, 7,~c. #I.OO To-morrow and Sal., MII(N. Dally 31 \TI.\EG PRICES: Adult*. 85c; Children, IRe :uinr-u N. Second St. PRICES, 25c to $1.50 X ■ J PHOTO PL A Y TO-DA Y FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN Featured in DEAR OLD GIRL The Famoua Draiun Taken at Cornell I nlvemltv >ll rill 111 N enhltt Featured In LR.\ A—2-aet EdUon CHIEFLY CO.MCKHMMti M \ LES—-Vltaicrapli Comedy Featuring lloliliv Connelly SPECIAL TO-MORROW—Broadway Star Feature, "Tfce Sa*o Jtvuah Girl," II Acta VICTOR^ SE: Carl Blackwell "iin m h i , Sp u eclal . To " day "Key to Yesterday" To-morrow,'"Double Haul,"a Masterpiece,! Parts , x ,' IVI , lll( . __ EPILEPSY OB™ I The Koslpr Trout- Wa HJL mcnl relieves all fear KH ■ Wrm of the dreadful al tacks which are so M§ a I frequent to the suf- K IB 'frers of lilpilfiiay. Kosine has been used with remarkable suc cess for fifteen years, liuy a bottle of Kosine for $1.30. If. after iistnK. you arc not entirely satisfied, your money will be refunded. Ask IIH for booklet. Geo. A. GorKas, lfi N. Third street, and Penna. Railroad Station. so are defendants, the charges against them being larceny and felonious en try. This case was called at the regular session of criminal court a fortnight ago. but it was continued until this juvenile term owimg to the fact that Young Grader did not become sixteen years old until some days after the al leged offense. Both now are in jail. De tainers have been lodged against them in arson cases, it being alleged that they applied a torch to a haystack own ed by Robert, J. Walton, Waltonville, which was destroyed by fire several mouths ago. , EIGHTH VICTIM OF EXPLOSION Death Claims Another in San Diego Boiler Tube Blowout 11 fl Aaxoriated PITHS. On board U. S. S. !San Diego. I,a Pa/., Mexico, Jan. -7, by Wireless to Sail Diego, Jan -B.—Charles Peterson, of Racine, Wisconsin, died to-day of injuries suffered in a boiler ttube ex plosion ou board the cruiser San Diego, Jan. 21. lie was a fireman. His death makes the eighth fatality. The five other men injured are said to be improving. The San Diego sailed to-day for San Diego, California. IT PAYS TO USE STAR INDEPENDENT WANT ADS. ARTHUR CHATTERDON i morrow at 9 a. in. During the we«k there will lie special features. On Tuesday afternoon (luring the perfoqjn |ance of "The Girl in the Taxi" Mr. I Chatterdon and Miss Adelvn Bushel! will introduce some new dance step-, iand following the performance on Fri day afternoon there will be a tango | tea on the Majestic stage to which all persons in the audience will be in vited. —Adv. AMUSEMENTS 9