4 - - Suit No^ - $ K\j CUNNY skies, singing birds and flowers are on Y sj» the way and will be here before you realize w * I that it is Spring. \ \ ffl Custom decrees that you must appear in new, X seasonable attire. Let your new suit be a Geist- A white made-to-measure suit —a suit designed and made exclusively for one man —and that man is yourself. \ ou will get satisfaction in every way —we guar antee it. Latest style, newest fabrics, high-grade linings and trimmings —everything put together with | a view to appearance and wear —not so much as a jj stitch slighted in the whole suit. You will be cor rectly dressed and you will get double the price in wear and satisfaction. • * S2O to SSO GEO. W. GEISTWHITE ryi LEADER IN FINE TAILORING X j 22 South Fourth Street | WEIL IS GRANTED HIS STAY Judge Prohibits Court Proceeding Against Accused Lawyer i Charleston, W. Va., March 11.— Judge Littlepage, in Circuit Court ves iterday, granted a writ of prohibition staying the Intermediate Court of Kanawha county from further proceed ing in the indictments against Leo Weil, a Pittsburgh, attorney, charged "with conspiracy in attempting to bribe |t«e Public Service Commissioners. Judge Little;>age also overruled the mo tion of Prosecutor Townsend to quash 'the petition and the rule granted there ion and also overruled a demurrer to the ■same petition. i Prosecutor Townsend aske."! a stay »f proceeding for thirty days, saying an Appeal would betaken to the Supreme Court. It is expected the appeai will be filed to-day. ALRICKS BODY TO MEET Men Will Hold March Business Session 1 To-morrow Night The AlrickS Association will hold i its March business meeting at 8 \ o'clock to-morrow night at St. An drew s parish home. Nineteenth and! Market streets. The association has i some important matters to consider. After the business meeting an in formal program wil be rendered. It will include talks, songs, instrumental play ing and some other attractive features. Most of the songs will be sung from lantern slides. friendship Rejoins Firemen's Union At a meeting of the Harrisburg Fire men s Union last night the Friendship Fire Company rejoined the union. The Company had withdrawn from the union last veer when a dispute arose as to i its pface in the firemen's parade. Three! lew members were enrolled last night, I Charles E. Wennel, John M. Rahm and Theodore Fehleisen. Our Advice Is: Fben you feel out of sorts from consti- let us say that if So not relieve you, see a physician, □teause no other home remedy will. IsU only by us, 10 cent*.— Qeorge A. Gorgas SENSATIONAL DOUBLE WEDDING [ Sisters Married Secretly Same Day on a Wager Seiinsgrove, Pa., March 11.—On aj • secret wager as to who would be the j i first to get married. Misses Sara Hart - 1 man and Carrie Hartman, were mar- j •, ried Tuesday night. 1 Miss Sara announced her I engagement to Adela 8. Conrad, of Sun- i ■ bury, and immediately after the cere . monv she called upon' the younger sis ter to collect her bet, when Miss Car- , i ■ rie Hartman told her sister she had an- j other guess coming and asked the Rev. | 1 Charles Leonard to support her claim, | she having been married at the parson- i age to D. B. Louser, of Lebanon, prior ! to the wedding of her sister. The announcement was a surprise to the parents and assembled guests. VOTES TO OUST JUDGE UAFDSEY Colorado House Favors Bills to Abol ish Juvenile Court j Denver. March 11.—The Colorado! i House of Representatives on final read -1 ing yesterday passed three bills to abol- 1 | ish the Juvenile Court. One effect of the bills, if passed by i the Senate and signed by the Governor ! would be to remove from office Judge I Ben B. Lindsev, of the Juvenile Court ! of Denver. Several members of the Republican j majority in the House in voting for j the bills stated that they did so be- j cause themselves bound by j the action of a party caucus. Greist Has Thaddeus Stevens' Caue 'Marietta. 11.—Congressman J W. W. Griest. of Lancaster, has in his I possession a cane which originally be- I longed to Thaddeus Stevens, the famous ■ reconstructionist who represented Lan- J caster county' in Congress during and ' after the War of the Rebellion. The cane was jAirchased from a collector and according to inscriptions upon it was presented to "T. Stevens" by E. L. Moore. Two War Veterans Die In County Huntingdon. Pa., March 11.—Two veterans of the Civil war answered '"final taps'' in this county yesterday. They were Henry Bisbin, 75, a pioneer canal boatman", of Alexandria, and Jesse Goodman, 79, of Huntingdon. HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 11, 1915. ! - MANY HEIRS TURN UP 324 Will Eventually Share in Woman's I Small Estate Bloomsburg, Pa.. March 41.—An un- t > usual partition proceeding instituted in j the orphans' court this county, because, | of the great numbers of heirs, is that | 1 in the estate of Effie Hess, late of !Mif-I flinville. Xone of the heirs desired to take j over the property, a frame dwelling '■ house, and the partition proceedings are ! | required. Of the nine brothers and I sisters of the decedent, only one is liv-. | in g and be will receive a ninth of the | j proceeds. With death occurring among, j the direct heirs of the estate, the di- j : vision will reach the point where some ! 1 of the heirs will receive l-324th of the I estate. Get Rid of Lingering Colds, Coughs and La Grippe Spring finds many afflicted with i I lingering, hacking coughs that weaken; j the system. Slush*and wet cause morot > colds than zero weather. Croup, bron-' chitis, and pneumonia are prevalent. • ■ Every family should have a safe and ' reliable cough medicine ready for use. ; j Foley's Honey and Tar Compound con-! ' tains no harmful ingredients. It eases 1 j a cough, checks a cold and relieves in j flamed and congested membranes. It i ! clears the air passages and soothes in-! j flammatiou. Geo. A. Gorgas, 16 North i Third street.—Adv. Machinery Stops as Sleuth Is Buried Scranton. Pa., March 11.—All city | business halted for fiften minutes yes- j terday in honor of the memory of ; Amasa W. Palmer, chief of the city de | tective bureau, whose funeral was held yesterday afternoon. City hall offices I ceased activities. All policemen pa | trolling beats stood for fifteen minutes and Mayor E. B. Jermyn, his cabinet and many city employes attended the funeral, which was one of the largest in the city's history. Pair Admit Murder; Sent to Pen Ebensburg, Pa„ March 11.-*-Tony Maraglio and his brother, 'Angelo, pleaded guilty to the murder at Barnes boro of James Brescia. The former was sent to the penitentiary for an inde terminate seutence of ten to fifteen years. The brother got five to seven years. TOWN HAD CBOWN TOO QUIET Fired Waynesburg Pcstfficc for Excite ment. Boy Admits ! Washington, Pa., March 11.—'As a result of his alleged statement that the i town had grown too quiet and som ! nolent of late and that he had deter mined to create some excitement and ; had fired the post office at Waynesburg, j *^ a . v iatfleld, 20 years old, of Waynes hurg. was yesterday arrested at the j instance of federal officers. He is be | ing held in jail at Waynesburg on a nominal charge of disorderly eon- I duet, pending furthy investigation of I the case. | A week ago a late-comer to the post i office found the letter box and interior ■ woodwork of the postoffice ablaze. 'He immediately spread the alarm and /he fire was extinguished, but not before a considerable quantity of mail matter, including valuable legal papers, had been destroyed. j Diabetes Fatal to Marietta Woman Marietta, March 11.— Mrs. Mary El ; len Park, wife of Harry W. Park,'died yesterday from diabetes, aged 54 years, | after suffering several months. " Her | maiden name was Clark. She was a i member of the Presbyterian church. | Her husband, one son, a brother and a sister survive. Large Sale Held on Old Duffy Farm 'Marietta. March 11.—The largest ; sale ever held in this section took place v i yesterday on the old Duffv farm, ten ; anted by Frank H. Kann, and the stock 1 and farming implements sold high. Sev- I cral hundred people from adjoining counties were present. Arfiong them was Paris Lenhardt, of Mountville, who was the tenant farmer there forty-four years ago. Low Price Paid for Farm f' iirniss. 'March 11.—Levi Hammond, of this place, yesterday sold his twenty -B'* ® l ' r e farm in Drumore township to William Shank, ef Peach Bottom, for 130 an acre, the lowest price paid for a farm in many years. It contains con siderable wooillahd. E. C. Eyde to Eeturn to Work Following several weeks of illness E. C. Eyde, chief train dispatcher of the Pennsylvania Railroad Companv, will resume his duties to-morrow morning. BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Ed wards' Olive Tablets Are a Harm leu Substitute Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—the sub stitute for calomel—are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver is almost instantaneous. They are the result of Dr. Edwards' determination not to treat liver and bowel complaint with calomel. His efforts to banish it brought out these little olive-colored tablets. These pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does but have no bad after effects. They don't injdre the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold of the trouble anil quickly correct it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the'teethf Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums. So do strong liquids. It is best not to take calomel, but to let Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets take its place. * Most headaches, "dullness" and that lazy feeling come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Ed wards' Olive Tablets when you feel "loggv" and "heavy." Note how they "clear" brain and how thev "perk up" the spirits. At 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus^O. —-Adv. " J RELIEF WORUPPRECIATED Artist at To-night's Recital Will Make Sketches for Benefit of Red Cross Fufld Appreciation'of the excellent relief work done by not only the local com mittee but the contributing citizens, was expressed in a letter received by Miss Alary Heister, of the Foreign Re lief /division of the Home and Wai Relief committee from Lindon W. Bates, vice chairman of the Commit tee for Relief in Belgium. The letter reads: The committee wishes to advise you that your donation of dry goods has been received at our loading docks. It will be placed upon ship and forwarded to Belgium immediately for distribution. "Will you kindly erpress our thanks to the members of your organization and those who co-operated with you in this humanitarian work and assure them that this contribution will be of much assistance to the unfortunate people of Belgium f" An additional performer for the Red Cross benefit recital in Falmestock hall to-night has been announced. Miss Editih Leason, artist, of Richmond, Va., has volunteered to make "lightning sketches" of all who desire same, and can pay the price, which is 25 cents. The proceeds of this work will go to the Red Cross fund. Sittings begin at 7.30 o'clock and will be held following the musical program. Each portrait or sketch will require but two minutes to complete. Marietta Adopts Curfew Law Marietta, Qfarch 11.—At a meeting last evening of Borough Council the curfew ordinance passed the body and it became a law, to go into effect on Monday, March 15. The general pub lic was in favor of the law and the Chief Burgess will be asked to enforce it. Cancer Fatal to Aged. Man Salisbury, March 11.—Jacob Wise, 75 years old, died yesterday from can cer after much suffering. ' He was a member of the Presbyterian church and in early life was a trucker and gardener. He was descended from pioneer stock in this section. A widow, twelve children, ten grandchildren and % number of brothers and sisters sur vive. Badly Injured Internally William Ford, aged 51 years, an en gineer for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, was badly hurt yesterday morning when his foot slipped while riding on the tender of an engine. He fell against the water tank, causing internal injuries. He resides at 640 •Harris street. Absurdity of Plan Pointed Out Rome, Via Paris. March 11, 1.15 A. M.—The "Gdornale D'ltalia," com menting on the reiported agreement between Italy aij|d Germany under which' the former country would be at liberty to attack Austria, provided she is not granted certain territorial conces sion, declares the mere fact that such an agreemeut ultimately would mili tate against Austria, which is fighting closely allied with Germany, proves the a'bsurdity of such a plan. BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE % Take a Glass of Salts Before Breakfast If Tour Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers You The American men and women must guard constantly asainst Kidney trou ble, because wo eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid which the kidneys strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the climinative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feci like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine 19 cloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to geek relief two or three times during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or you have rheumatism when the weather is bad, get from your .pharmacist about four ounces of '.lad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for gen erations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irri tation, thus ending bladder disorders. .Tad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jifre, makes a delightful effervescent lithia water beverage, and belongs in every home, beeause nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney 1 flushing any time.—A vessel whose passage would constitute a violation of .neutrality. Officials were reticent to discussing tlife Dolphin's mission. PLOT TO KILL CREEK KINC REPORTED FROM ATHENS Berlin, March 11.—The Overseas News Agency yesterday gave out the following: "The 'Deutsche Tages .Zeitung's' Athens correspondent reports that French and English letters and 200,- 000 francs ($40,000) were found in the possession o£ Athanes, who was arrested charged with planning the as sassination of King Constantine. There has been no recent report of an attempt or of a conspiracy formed to assassinate King Constantine of Greece. On January 28 a news dis patch from Copenhagen said a rumor had reached there that an attempt bad been made several days previously ai Patras to kill King Constantine. This report, it was asserted, originated at Constantinople, among travelers arriv ing there. The Greek Minister in Lon don stamped it as untrue. Kaiser's Soirfn-Law 111 London, March 11. —An "Evening News" dispatch from Copenhagen says that Ernst August. Duke of Brunswick and son-in-law of fcmperor William, is suffering from a nervous breakdown which probably is incurable. The duke who went to the front soon after the outbreak of the war, became ill while fighting in France. ♦ * | BUNIONS AND SORE FEET ♦: * Don't endure foot agony. Here J T Is surest and quickest remedy T | T known. "Two tablespoonfuls of Z X Calooide compound in warm foot T j ? bath." Tilts gives iii*tant relief; I X sore bunions are soon reduced; A X corns and callouses can be peeled 4, X right off; excess sweating and 4, J tenderness is overcome. It acts * through the pores and removes + the cause. box of Caloclde twenty-five cents at any drug or «8> {. general store. Prepared at Med foal Formula laboratories, Day- «j> ton, Ohio. + , •> Horrible Effects of Skin Troubles Are Quickly Bemoved by the Use of Stuart's Calcium Wafers, the Erad lcator of All Skin Eruptions •lust in n few days one may clear the skin of all manner of blemishes such as pimples, blotches, liver-spots, etc., if one will use Stuart's Calcium Wafers. Don't use pasty lotions and creams to till up the pores when they arej working constantly with the blood to throw off the impurities of your sys tem. "Beauty Depeuds Upon Clear Com plexions and Stuart's Calcium Wafers Are Famous for Skin Cleansing." It's because pimples and eruptions come from the inside—from impure blood—and you can't cure them by rubbing stuff' on the outside of the face. Purity the blood and the blem ishes will disappear. You will speedily enjoy a beautiful complexion if you use these wonderful little Wafers. Your face will become as jlear and pure as a rose. Nol'ody likes to have pimply-faced people nround. With Stuart's Calcium Wafers you don't have to wait for months be fore getting results. Even boils have been cured in n few (lavs' time with these remarkably effective blood cleans ers. Your whole system will feel bet ter in a marvelously short time, and, my, what a difference in your looks! You can get Stuart's Calcium Wafers of any druggist at 50 cents a box'. Free Trial Coupon F. A. Stuart Co., 175 Stuart Bldg., | S Marshall, Mich., send me at once 1 : by return mail, a free trial pack- ! j age of Stuart's Calcium Wafers. Name . I Street City 5tate........ j —Adv. 8 SHIPS SUNK IN 3 WEEKS BT PRINZ EITEL FRIEDRICH Newport News, Va„ March 11.— The list of vessels sunk by the Ger man auxiliary cruiser Prinz Eitel Fried rich in threo weeks, with the number ot' persons removed from each, as an nounced yesterday by Customs Collector Hamilton, follows: American sailing ship William P. Frye, H. 11. Kiehne, master; crew, 31. Owners, Arthur Sewqll & Co., of Bath, Me. Sunk January 28. Cargo ot' wheat, from Seattle, Wash., to Queens town, Ireland, for orders, declared to be contraband by German cruiser. French sailing ship Pierre Loti, Transchant, master; crew, 24. Owner, Society Nouvelle Darnioment, of Nantes, France. Sunk January 28. Russian sailing ship Isabel Browne, Axmar Ericksson, master; crew, 13. Owner, Tronberg, Finland. Sunk Jan uary 27. French sailing ship Jacdbsen, V. Le- Roux, master; crew, 23. Owner, So ciety Les Voilers, Dunkerquois, France. Sunk January 28. _ British sailing ship Invercoc, W. J. Ring, master; crew, 23. Owner, Inver Line, of Aberdeen, Scotland. Sunk February 1 2. British steamship Mary Ada Short, A. E. DoWbing, master; crev?, ss». Own er, James Westoll, of Sunderland, Eng land. Sunk February 18. French steamship Floride, Monssion, master; crew, 78; passengers, 80. Owner, Compagnio Generale Transat- * lantique. Sunk February 19. British ship Wdllerby, J. W. Edge wood, master; crew, 27. Owners, Hop ner & Co., of West Hartlepool. Sunk February 20. PANIC AT CONSTANTINOPLE AS ALLIES FIRE FIRST GUNS Geneva, Via Paris, March 11, 4 A. M.—The first guns fired by the allied fleet in the Dardanelles stopped all busi ness in Constantinople and was the signal for a panic, according to Swiss travelers who arrived here from the Turkish capital by way of Brindisi. They declare many wealthy families are leaving for abroad. Constantinople is said to be full of officers, including Germans. Compara tively few troops, most of them artil lerymen, are going to the front. There are persistent report# that the army will soon depart from Adrianople. Elephants Mobilized London, 'March 11. —A Copenhagen di-sjiafch to the "Daily Mail" says Germany has mobilized the elephants in Hagenbeck's menagerie and has sent, thciu to Valenciennes for work in heavy hauling. U. S. Asked to Safeguard Ship London, March 11.—The British government has requested the American government to investigate and safe guard the steamer Wyvisbrook, which was seized by Mexieans, and to ar range if possible for the release of the master. Australian Troops Reach England London, March 11. —An Australian contingent of troops arrived in Eng land yesterday, according to an an nouncement made last night. Von Buelow and Salandra Confer Rome, Via Paris, March 11, 1.10 A. M.—Prince Von Buelow, the German Ambassador, called at the home office yesterday and conferred for an hour with Premier Salandra. No announce- v ment was made regarding the subject discussed, but there is much comment lu the city regarding the meeting.