6 9tar-3nikrp*n&*ttt ( Ettablxshed in 1876) Published b • THK STAR PRINTING COMPANY. * Star-lnd«p*id«nt Building, v M-*O-I2 South Third Street, Harrlaburg. Pa. KvnlHd K»o«pt Sunday Officer* t VirtctT* : BWAMT* F. MCTIRS, - J# „ L L KCHN. President. WM. W. WA&IOWILT, _ _ „ Vfr« President. W *' *• M«T«M < WM. K MITERS, Secretary and Treatarar. WJI. W. WALLOWS*. WM. H WHSIR. V. HUMMEL DCKOHAUS. JR., Business Manager. Editor. Alt communications should be addressed to STAR INDEPENDENT, Business, Editorial, Job Printing or Circulation Department according to tba subject matter Cntered at the Post Office In Harrisburg as lecond clasi matter, Benjamin A Kentnor Company, New fork and Chicago Representative*. Mew York OSee, Brunswick Building. 225 Fifth Avonue. Chicago Office, People's Oas Building. Michigan Arena*. Delivered by carriers at 6 centa a week. Mailed to subscriber; tor Three Dollars a year in advance. THE STARINDEPENDENT The paper with the largest Home Circulation in Harrisborg ana •earby towns. Circulation Examinee by THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN ADVERTISERS, ~~ TELEPHONES BELu" Private Sranoti No. 3280 CUMBERLAND VALLEY Privete Branoh Exchange, .... No. B4S-24C ■*" Wednesday, February 17, 1015. FEBRUARY Bnn. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Frl. 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 MOON'S PHASES— Last Quarter, 7th; New Moon, 13tb; First Quarter, 31st. 3"=ra< WEATHER FORECASTS '/TOI Harrisburg and vicinity: Fair to- Jjs . | night and Thursday. Not much change T in temperature. Lowest temperature to-night about 30 degrees. Eastern Pennsylvania: Fair to-night a,l( ' Thursday, not much change in tern- V— perature. Moderate north winds. YESTERDAY'S TEMPERATURE IN HARRISBURG Highest, 41; lowest, 36; 8 a. m., 38; 8 p. m., 38. GETTING OUT AMONG THE BUYERS Through an arrangement made by the Chamber ot' Commerce about one hundred Harrisburg busi ness men are "swinging around the loop" of Cen tral Pennsylvania cities to-day and to-morrow, let ting those cities know what Harrisburg is good for in a commercial and business way. The scheduled stops include Sunbury, Bloomsburg, Wilkes-Barre, Hazleton and Reading and many intermediate towns and cities. At each stopping place the Har risburg delegation is being met by a committee of local business men and in this way spreading infor mation about the Capital City and acquiring infor mation about the cities visited. Business men more tlytn ever are recognizing the advantages of coming into personal contact with other business men. This well-planned trip of the Chamber of Commerce is designed to make per sonal contact easier. This "trade excursion" will help not only Harrisburg but the cities that the Harrisburg party visits. It will not only give the Harrisburg business men a better idea of how and where they can sell their goods but it will give the cities visited a better idea of how they can buy more advantageously. Harrisburg's future as a distributing center for wholesale houses is very bright. Mr. William B. MeCaleb, superintendent of the Philadelphia divis ion of the Pennsylvania Railroad, in a widely-read interview recently published in the Star-Independ ent, laid particular stress gn4his important phase of the future development of Ilarrisburg, his opin ions being based on the fact that the railroad com pany is providing exceptional facilities for distri bution through the erection of the big freight re ceiving station in South Harrisburg. The Chamber of Commerce even before that had recognized the possibilities of this city as the "Heart of Distribu tion," and it has omitted no opportunity to encour age the bringing of warehouses here. But Harrisburg might have facilities for distribu tion equal to those of the leading commercial cities of the world without benefiting thereby unless it educated the people of the territory near Harris burg to the fact that Harrisburg has things to sell. In other words the city's business men must create the market, and there is no better way to do this than by doing just what the members of the Cham ber of Commerce are doing in their present trip,— getting right out among the buyers and telling them what we have to sell and how we can get the goods to them. ! WAR CANNOT BE IGNORED IN SCHOOLS As the war assumes larger and larger proportions educators in this country are becoming more and more worried by tlte question whether facts about the conflict should be taught in the public schools. While arguments are being put forward in educa tional journals and in various other ways, it seems not at all unlikely that the war is a topic of fre quent and enlivening discussion in classes in grade schools and in high schools throughout the country. With a war as huge as this one in progress, and with the latest news from the fighting zone under discussion wherever newspapers are read, it would be impossible to keep mention of the passing events from being made in school rooms, even should such restriction be deemed necessary by authorities. Facts about the war may not be taught by the in structors as part of the courses, but those facts ' / I. " ' ' I - v HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 17, 1915. cannot easily be ignored during recitations in his tory and geography and English literature. The proposal of Dr. Eliot that pupils be taught about the horrors of welfare has met with much opposition, and perhaps deservedly. Teachers might not impart much information of value by confining themselves to discussions of hardships, sufferings and atrocities connected with war, and it is not impossible that they would in some instances be partial in their treatment of such subjects. The idea about giving children a horror of war is well enough, but the possibility that tactless handling of the facts would bring on strife in school looms where there are children of different sympathies, is not a welcome oue. The best suggestion perhaps that has as yet been made with regard to the teaching of war facts is that instructors in history arrange their as to teach their subject backward, tracing the events whifli are now occurring in Europe back to the original causes toward the dawn of history. He must be considered a successful teacher who can at this time show his pupils current happenings in the light of previous events, who can combine comprehensive review of the history of the present with careful instruction in that of the past, making each subject of interest to the pupils because of their knowledge of the other. CONTEST OF COUSIN TONGUES That the conflict in Europe is in part the strug gle of the English and the German languages for supremacy, is ffie contention of a university pro fessor who pretends to know about such things. According to the most recent estimates, English is spoken by 1U0,000,000 and German by 130,000,000. The other leading languages, in order, are Russian, French, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese. The professor is of the opinion that in the present conflict the continent of Africa is one of the prizes for which the English and German dictionaries are striving. He tells, in this connection, how the lan guage of North America was determined in colonial days by trifling skirmishes between the colonizers, the importance of which was not then fully recog nized. If the populating ofiNorth America had been managed by people from the continent of Europe, the English language certainly would not now number among its speakers millions of Amer icans and would not be the dominant language here. At the opening of the nineteenth century, the dominant language was French, followed by Rus sian, German, Spanish and then English, with only 20,520,000. It will be remembered that in earlier times English was little more than a dialect of bar barians while French was the languagjrof the courts of the civilized world. The English language in recent years, however, has been dominant because of extensive colonization by England, and because of large increases in population in the English speaking nations, including this country, and its use among foreigners is said to have spread more rapidly than that of any other tongue. Victory for the Allies might have much to do i with increasing the influence of the English lan- ■■ guage, just as success for Germany would probably j 1 give the German language a decided lift. When it comes to languages, we Americans must, of course, evidence, partiality, yet it would be no breach of ] neutrality if we were to express compassion for any < African barbarians who may have to struggle with 1 the endings of German nouns and the weak and ' 1 strong forms of German verbs. English is largely a Teutonic language in origin,! | and its race with German for supremacy promises I to be an interesting one since the contestants arc ' cousin tongues, so to speak. j There are some buried skeletons that will never come to light. ' L At this writing Taft appears to be looming a bit larger i ! than Teddv. We haven't heard of a new president for Mexico in the > present week. . —. The Chamber of Commerce believes in seeing America ' first and in seeing Pennsylvania first of all. Perhaps the soaring price of wlmnt has something to do i j with the prosperous appearance of the men attending the ' j Threshermen's convention. y TOLD IN LIGHTER VEIN IT SURELY DOES Monte Carlo is suffering as a result of conditions in | Europe. War makes the ordinary game of chance seem very j trifling.—Washington Star. EFFECT OF FLATTERY If you succeed in convincing a girl that she has beautiful I hands, her mother will have to do the dishwashing there- j afterward.—Houston Post. WELL MATED "They seem to be so well suited for each other." "Yes, jieithcr of them has brains enough to realize what j a frost the other one is."—Buffalo Express. HIS JOB "Sam, I'm afraid that you are an idle fellow." "Idle? Not me, sah! Why, I gits my wife mo' work dan she kin do, sah." —Boston Transcript. DAILY ARGUMENTS Every time a cargo of American goods is piled up at an i American port, another argument for the Ship-Purchase | Bill is presented.—Richmond Times-Dispatch. MAYBE ALL THREE According to a Pittsburgh paper, Billy Sunday diverts rather than converts. Still, it is believed Billy does some good among the perverts.—Kansas City Journal. INSPIRING WORDS "Have Another!" "Inclosed Find Check." "Here's That Five I Borrowed." "This Is on Me." "We Have Decided to Increase Your Salary." "That's Good." "I Love You." • "You Win."—Cincinnati Enquirer. DUDLEY 2V* incfiot NORMAN 2yi inohe. ZlwMcfa. QwW. U**, h Qfc. |,hn [Tongue-End Top ics| Sea Captain Dies at 108 Captain David Jackson, 10S years old, who just -died of heart disease at his home in Tooting, near London, was I for nearly fifty years a master mariner on ships between England and America. He made his first trip as a caibin hoy in 1817. Captain Jackson received a letter of congratulation from the King on his 100 th birthday, and a similar letter each year since. One of the old man's boasts was that only once had he been aboard a steamship, all his other voyages having been made in the days of sailing vessels. * * * German Army Xiinnels Mountain Tiie "Frankfurter Zeitung" reports that the Germans have pierced the hills from Jeuf, in French territory, to Moyeuvre-la-Grand in Lorraine to facili tate communications. The tunnel has been completed in two months' work and cost $1i,000,000. This tunnel was long ago proposed by miners and man ufacturers in the iron mining district of the valley of Briey, but opposed by the government for strategical reasons, Tho execution of the work by the Ger mans is taken as indicating a determi nation on their part to hold this rich mining country at all hazards. Many Germans in Italy According to official statistics there are 72,000 Germans of both sexes en gaged in trade in Italy, 40,000 in the north chiefly at Milan and Turin. These Germans havo received notice to leave the country as soon as they can arrange their business matters through the Ger man consulates. The express trains ar riving at Chiasso for Basel, on the St. Got'hard lines and at Brieg via the Sim; lon tun-iel are crowded with Ger mans and Au/itrians returning to their countries. Certain portions of the Swiss frontier have been reinforced. Dies in "Cyclone Cellar" The list of one week's ooroner's cases in London includes the nSme of Mrs. James Cubitt, wife of a bank man ager, who was killed by the* caving in of a "cyclone cellar"' which she was having dug under her kitchen window, as a bomb-proof shelter from Zeppelin raiders. Life in Brussels Normal Advices from Brussels say life there has become almost normal and Sundays find tily) usual crowds in the cafes and on the boulevards. Only a few Ger man troops remain in the city. German postage stamps are now sold in the postoflkes, and the names of the rail road stations and public buildings have f~ A. WISEMAN. M. D. |J; m &CCC&- S2 or 3 Q/1J1461-&' (?£TT?X CORGAS DHUG STOEBf, 1« N. Third St. and Peuna. 3tation. j AMUSEMENTS I AMUSEMENTB ORPHEUM MARX BROTHERS « ««, » CO. Prraentlns nod a company of 10. In the Mualrnl THE hew LEADER HOME AGAIN *-* X'::"'At; For Everybody Van and Schenck mlle. rial™ Monarcbn of Sour "THE ARTIST'S DREAM" DIG SIPPOIITIXG BILL Country Store To-night PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW THK PKRPKIT WOMAN, ANNETTE KELI.ERHAN, In NEPTUNE'S DAUGHTER A ivlid, weird, Spectacular Production. SPECIAL ADMISSION BOTH DAYS From 9 i. in. p. m.: Children, sei Adult*, 10c. From op. m. to 11 p. M.i Children, lOej Adult*, 20c. Patron* are urgently requented to attend performance* before 6 p. m. ——————————i———————— J YICTOIH* The European War Flrjt and Only Authentic PICTURES A AS recently run at Majestic Theatre, 25c ■ ■ ■■ to See them here -UAI To-day for... 10c been Germanized. Some classes of mu nicipal officials havo been compelled to sign contracts which make them Ger man subjects forVi period of six months. Most of the dheps are open, "but money is scarce. The troops pay cash for everything they buy. German commer cial travelers are busy offering their wares to the shopkeepers. * « * Wants to Make Peace Plain The demand that tho terms of peace, when made, shall be in plain language which the common people of the various countries can understand, is voiced by Herr con Heydebran-d, leader of the Conservative party in Germany, in an address which has just reached Germans in Copenhagen. Von 'Heydebrand is quoted as saying: "It; is a matter of wonder to many how it has become possible for Ger many to be so alone in the world, and there a feeling that German diplo matic ability could have been more pranounced. When tho terms of peace come to be considered, •we shall not allow these terms to become involved in a sort of complicated diplomatic art, but thev should be put into languago which the common people can under stand and are agreed upon. A Matter of Taste The Woman —I'd rather live on bread and water than on charity. Tho Tramp—Yes, mum; there's no ac countin' fer taste.—Philadelphia Led ger. Luck counts once in awhile; brains count all the time.—W. H. Lough. "Tir-A JOY TO SORE, TIRED FEET "Tiz" For Aching, Burn-1 ing, Puffed«Up Feet j and Corns or Cal louses Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, smelling feet, tired feet. j Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions! and raw spots. No more shoo,tightness, no more limping with pain or drawing ' up you# face in agoriv. "TlZ"«is mag- j ical, acts right off. "TIZ" draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet. Use "TIZ" and wear smaller shoes. Use "TIZ" and forget j your foot misery. Ah! how comfortable your feet feel. --w | Get a 25-cent box of "TIZ' now at j any druggist or department store. Don't j suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet j that never swell, never hurt, never get j tired. A year's foot comfort guaran-i teed or money refunded. —Adv. PEOPLE'SCOLUMN The Star-Independent doea not make itself responsible for opinions expressed in this column. Approves Forester's Appointment Editor the Star-Independent: Dear Sir—'Please tell the citizens of Harrisburg that I am pleased to know that a Mian of some experience has been appointed Forester of our city. 1 told Mr. Taylor, from the day of my application: "If you can find a man more competent tlian I appoint 'him." 1 am not after the salary, but I feared some incompetent would get the ap pointment. I would enjoy an hour's con ference with tliia young man and hope 1 will not be disappointed. I am also pleased to find at the arm of this man, in the photo, a boy who, if he passes our schools creditably and' accepts every opportunity of learning forestry from his father, may be what i have" hoped we'would soon have— self-made, practical foresters. 1 smile upon a group of youngs;ers nestled so close tp their parents. I was grown up in a similar group. -Mr. Taylor should endeavor to pre vent the maple trees being pruned un til buds swell or leaves appear. I would advise Mr. Taylor to take up forestry especially, if he seeks a second election. Then he could confer pro-fitably with the Forester. Further, our editors should have some knowledge of forestry. This young ljian —the new Forester -—has more on his hands than he imagines. He needs persuasive powers more than dominant, yet "may need both. I cite one instance. Forty years ago I planted a row of Norway maple trees In. this city. Presumaljfo' some one ruined thorn by pouring refuse from ice cream cans—salt water. If he had | lfurned down a stable or woodshed it could have been rebuilt in a we>k. It will take money to remove the dead trees and also cost money to replace them and twenty years to bring thcm to the beauty and usefulness of the ones destroyed. I remonstrated with the party but to no avail. That is one out of hundreds of almost similar cases in our city. Every place where there are soda fountains and salt water runs in the gutters, damage is done. „ . T. A. WOODS. Harnsburg, Pa., Feb. 16. CAMELS IN WAE Tanierlano Made a Curious Use of Them at Delhi The camel has for centuries figured in the warfare of the east. History contains no more interesting example of the use of camels than that devised by the conqueror Tamerlane. This warrior, born in the sur.imer of 133G, son of a humble Asiatic chieftain, rose bv the sharpness of wit and strength of arm to be master of twenty-seven kingdoms extending from what is now the region of Moscow clear through In dia. Tamerlane wa3 a terrible figure and a mighty warrior. In those davs meji fought with brute force rather than with engines of war. The sword was the chief weapon of offense. • After a mighty struggle Tamerlane made himself potentate over the im- HARRISBURO 32 NORTH SECOND STREET is showing a large line of new Spring patterns in Rugs at reduced prices: 9x12 five-frame Body Brussels Rugs reduced from $27.50 to ' :. $25,00 9x12 Axminster Kugs reduced from $25.00 to $22.50 9x12 Axminster Hugs reduced from $22.50 to SIB.OO 9x12 Tapestry Rugs reduced from $16.00 to $13.00 9x12 Wool Fiber Rugs reduced from $9.00 to SB.OO 9x12 Wool Fibre Rugs reduced from SB.OO to $6.50 All Carpets reduced. We are showing a new Rug suitable for offices and public places, the Klearflax Linen Rug, Vi inch thick, in all colors., Vacuum Cleaners with brush, $5.00. HARRISBURO CARPET CO., I 32 North Second Street \uMMIU. Mill 1111111111 —III 111 laMMBBHBWWMWaMMtd j fMUSEMENTS | AMUSEMENTS MAJESTIC^ 1 . 5 :/"' 1 REGENT ntMiw p_ Jinnarn, OwnM anil Manaeer EtfftS. K. CHAMPLIN VSStAS»MUiS- N»M< IIT TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW m REFORMER His Last Dollar A p„ wer f„| Dramatic Feature—s TO-MORROW Reel* >l„t Manter of the House »* v, » 1 L , .°? 1 5 1 S the ™ le R .°'* Eve The llenrt of Marvlaud Alao two Claaa Comedlea to-day r ol T OF THE SXOHM IHIDAY SUPERFLUOUS Thl r FRIDAY—THE DEEP PURPLE PRICESI Mat*.. 10c anil »tc| M K hta, Cl " r " Y ® un * ■■■•■ ted by lOe, ZOc, 30c, 50cI Sat. Mat , 10c. XOc Milton Sell* and a notable eaat ond 30c. * A din INK ion, 10c Children, 5c ——/ I ——— MAJESTIC -TUESDAY, ° ne oZ'? ht FEB. 23 SEAT SALE OPENS SATURDAY, » A. M. PRICES! Lower Floor, »2.00, »1.50 i halcoay, $1.50, »1.00, 75c| Gallery, SOc. KfW conXX a haskn rnmwxr (COMPANY OF 100 l grealest RAYMOND SPECIAL ftjfl ■COMEDIAN Mlftl Wllilllf | ORCHESTRA ] W'MB HiTCHco£rU IN nm OMUT 810 KCIRAL COMXDY WCCXH, H "THE BEAUTY SHOP" If Br tbaaatac PaUoek. laintM #®lf aad Cba». J. Ocbeat. Direct II front itulf ywr at tha Ait*r Ttraatrr. N. ¥.. with the Satire Bro»dw*jr JBJRj CMt aad Production. JrfcW ■) Greatest Singing.Dancing.Looking Chorus on Earth. MISS LOLITA HOBERTSOX The Exploits of Elaine The Hoosier ""ZZT Schoolmaster Saturday, Ftbruary 20 la Five Parti! to continue every Saturday See this great drama To-morrow Head the Story in the Phlla, Inquirer* What to Do for a Sore, Ten der Skin After Shaving A prominent phyalcian of this city says he obtained complete relief from a sore, tender skin after shaving by the use of the following* formula, which was given to him by a friend from Paris at the beginning of the war. The writer ha« also used It with remark able results—so much so that even though he no longer has a tender skin, lie still must have the preparation for his daily shave on account of its most delightfully refreshing and soothing qualities—Just the thing to refreshen and stimulate the skin when you are tired of the morning after a night out. The following Is the original French formula: Japora Concentrate. 2 ozs.; Alcohol, ..V4 ozs.; Rose Water, 1 oz.; Witch Hazel, 'a oz. 11l bad cases apply night and morn- Si. ot ''erwise morning only. The preparation when made up should be of a peculiarly beautiful red color with a most refreshing odor. The above formula was shown to several drujr- K'stf. among them being Croll Keller, or Harrisburg, all of whom stated that they can till It Just as well us a Paris pharmacien. NOTE—The original preparation made from tliis formula was put up by Virgil, of Paris, under the name of r, Isau tie Japora," and under this name it is widely used throughout France. "Kau de Japora' is ulso sold in this country by Croll Keller, of Harrisburg.-—Adv. mediate nations of Asia and gave to the ctiy of Samarkand a brilliant place in history. One by one the Asiatic na tions came under his swav India was the rich prize, and aga'iist it Tamer lane determined to move. This was in 139 N. With 'nis host he crossed the Indus, marched to Delhi and stood in arms before the gates. The Indian sultan, at the head of 50,000 soldier and a herd of elephants, whose tusks bore poisoned swords, rushed upon the invaders. Tamerlane was sore pressed, and the battle might have gone against him had he not fallen back on his cam els. Hastily gathering a troop of the beasts, he had then: loaded with hay. Then, setting the hav on fire, Tamer lane's soldiers stampeded the camels toward the ranks ot' the Indians. The elephants, at the sight of the blazing hay, wheeled round and lied in terror, scattering the Indian sultan's army and insuring the success of Tamerlane.— Strand Magazine. The Pyrophore A living light, called the pyrophore, makes illumination cheap and conven ient in Brazil The pyrophore is a monster firefty an inch and a half long. With one it is possible io read fine print, and three will light a room. The Brazilian peasant, when he traverses by night the perilous forest paths of his country, fastens to each shoe a pyrophore. Thus illuminated, he has no difficulty in avoiding poisonous snakes, pitfalls and wild beasts. The Brazilian coquette fastens in her hair or her cor sage a pyrophore incased in white tulle. The effect is as of a great luminous pearl or opal. When a pyrophore's light goes out it is not necessary to fill him up with oil, to drop a coin in him or to throw him away, but a mo ment's ducking in cold water suffices. Thereafter his three little lanterns, one on the breast and two on the back, emit again as bright a radiance as ever. Artistic Printing at Star-Independent