4 I Two Weeks To Make Your Suit jl PASTER is two weeks frcm Sunday. Of course |jQJ ■L- 1 you will want to be up-to-date and appear in a !m new Spring Suit. Almost everybody who is any- j§| body will be wearing new clothes. If you are par- ffi ticular about your appearance —if you appreciate *|| stylish, attractive clothes that fit perfectly and look ; p dressy —wear a Geistwhite made to measure suit ?|| this time. j || Book your order at once, so we will have plenty |1 i of time to get it out. M Bear in mind we are busy and do not want to H | disappoint you — we will not if you do your part. M \ S2O to SSO I I ! GEO. W. GEISTWHITE j! Leader In Fine Tailoring. || S; EIGHT IS LIGHT BUTFINES HEAVY Continued Front Firnt Page. rently didn't take his case seriously, d -when the County prosecutor so in med the court, Judge Kunkel re rked: Discuss Beer's Food Properties "Oh, well, we cannot very well see j * a dairyman is expected to know j at amount of butter fat is contain- ! in the cream ho offers for sale | en, as a matter of fact, that can be j ermined only through a chemist's ilysis." Jtroup then suggested that a dairy -11 possibly is taking as much chance the hotelman who may not know fether he is selling liquor to minors. '•But cream is a food. Liquor is not," d the •Court, whereupon tStroup re red to advertisements which hold r to be a foodi 'l've heard it claimed to ibe a medi- j e >" suggested Judge Kunkel. True bills to-day were found in the : es of Harvey S. IBomtherger and John j ik, farmers, living near Hershey, who charged with conspiracy and vio-' ng the State quarantine laws. It Is rged that the defendants removed k from a district that had been j rantined because o>f the '' hoof and 11th disease" among cattle. The trial' he cases was this afternoon ordered j tinned to the June sessions, 'our Months for Chicken Thieves Villiam Johns, colored, charged with | ting another colored man in the side, i acquitted. Johns claimed self-de ic. Daniel Bankus was acquitted on harge of defrauding his boarding sekeeper, but was ordered to pay costs. hi a charge of stealing a $5 goM ie, Katie .Slesser, of Middletown, - acquitted.. C. R. Bailey was con ;ed oif stealing S2O from a burial in inte company anil got four months, tence was suspended in the case of »ko Bakic, convicted on a larceny rs;e. Alfred Jolly and Garfield Bp, two of three Middletown colored i i charged with attempting to raid a uer's hennery, were convicted and « got four months. Samuel Hutchi the third defendant, was acquitted, ohn Rajasky got three months for ■yhjg a loaded pistol. For furnish ■ minor with whiskey, Hattie Twy man and Kelson Gray*bill each got fines of SSO and twenty days. Frank Johnson got two months and ! a fine of SSO on a similar charge, while ! Christ Himmelbright, a fourth defend ant, got three months and SSO fine. Earl Banks, Christ and Jerome 'Bones and Irwin Green, Middletown colored boys, got off with suspended sentences on charges of stealing coal. Lewis F. Sower got four months on a larceny charge. LATE WAR NEWS SUMMARY Captioned From First Page. the Belgian border. Regarding rhe I ct-1 tie which has been in progress for the spur of a hill on the Loretto heights I both the French and Germans make di rect claims of having won. Germany has scored again in her i submarine warfare on British shipping, j The British Admiralty announced to- i day that the steamers Atlanta and Fin gal had been torpedoed. The irew of 1 the Atlanta was saved, but six lives j are reported to have been lost on the ; Fingak The last of news concerning the at ! tack on the Dardanelles is explained m a dispatch from Constantinople, which says that only unimportant operations have been attempted by the allied fleet during the last few days. Two attempts of cruisers to approach the outer forti-1 ftcations, in connection with mine sweeping operations, are said to have j been frustrated by the fire from shore. Increasing activity is Indicated along the western end of the Franco-Belgian battle line. A message from a corre spondent at the front to a Paris news- 1 paper says that Nieuport has been bom barded by the Germans and Westende by the allies. The Belgians are report ed to have made some headway against| the Germans, capturing positions in two localities. The British army is still on the offensive, although its advance ap parently has been checked by the Ger mans. Public Hearing On Friday, March 26, iu the rooms of the Department of Labor and In- I dustry, 1112 Morris buiklintg, Phila delphia, the industrial board will con sider the advisability of granting per mission to the cigar manufacturers of this Commonwealth the right to work minors between the ages of fourteen and sixteen years at the banding and packing of cigars. HAKRISBTTRO STAR-INDEPENDENT, WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 17, 1915. AUTOMOBILE SHOWS ARE - ATTRACTING BIG CROWDS CoatlnueU From First I'agf. "Lilac Domino," Charles Cewillier; "Rollicking Friars," Manuel Klein; "Tip, Top Tipperary Mary," Harry Carrol; "Come on Over Here," Walter Kollo; "Adele," Jean Briquet; "Biusli of Dawn," D. Borosky; ••The Doll | Girl," J. D. Kern; " A La ..art?," Abe j rioltzniau; i4 Silver Fox,' Henry Ijodge. j At the Arena I r . The vaudeville show at the Arena, Third and Delaware streets, the home ! of the sixth annual show of the liar risburg Automobile Dealers' Associa tion, will start to-night at 3 "'clock. E. C. Huhri, of the Kevstone 'Luibricat | ing Company, will start the bill, v. hich I is the best those in the "nccessorv game" can produce, and it will be well ] worth a trip to the show. If :t p at almost every session of court since June, 1913, has been continued, the most recent reason assigned by the de fense being the illness of the late W. U. Hensel, who was senior counsel. RETIRED SCHOOL TEACHER DIES Samuel Rlegel Taught for Fifty Years in Lebanon County Lebanon, Pa., March 17.—Professor Samuel lJiegel, who for fifty years, be ginning in 1862, taught in the public schools of this city and county, died yesterday from a complication of dis eases. He was 70 years old and volun tarily retired as a city teacher, 'being placed on the pension fund. Professor Riegel was also an old time singing irtaster and on the occasion of a reunion of his pupils in Lebanon, Berks, Lancaster and Dauphin counties, practically all of the 2,000 in attend ance were his one-time pupils. During the Civil war Professor Riegel as a boy made frequent overland trips into the Shenandoah Valley, Carrying to the des titute residents food and supplies from Lebanon county farmers. NEWS PLANT T«EI& MINT Toledo, March 17.—Fred Strang, alias Fred Taylor, 23 years old, and 8. F Kerr, 40, were arrested by United States authorities at Van Wert and brought heie yesterday, charged with counterfeiting nickels in the composing room of the Van Wert "Bulletin," a daily newspaper. Taylor pleaded guilty in District Court here. Kerr is said to be a native of Malta, a British possession in the Mediterran ean. His father is said to be an officer of high rank in the British army. Kerr pleaded not guilty. Both men "went to jail to await action of the Grand Jury. WANT LID ON SHAMOKIN Sbamokin, Pa., March 17. —Repre- sentatives of the Federated Protestant Religious Brotherhoods here conferred yesterday with Burgess John Drum heiser in reference to enforcing Sun day closing. A number of cigar and confectionery stores are open on Sunday. Drumheiser informed the 'brotherhood that it was not within his power to order the stores closed and that the consta'bles in the wards are the ones to act in the mat ter of law violations. Says No One Need Remain Thin Now Physician's Advice for Thin, Unde veloped Men and Women Thousands of peoplo suffer from ex cessive thinness, weak nerves and feeble stomachs who, having tried ad vertised tlesh-makers, food-fads, physi cal culture stunts and rub-on creams, resign themselves to life-long sUinni ness and think nothing will make them fat. et their case is not hopeless. A recentty discovered regenerative force makes fat grow after years of thinness, aud is also unequaled for repairing the waste of sickness or faulty digestion and for strengthening the nerves. This remarkable discovery is called SargoL* Six strength-giving, fat-producing ele ments of acknowledged merit have been combined in this peerless preparation, which is endorsed by eminent physi fians and used by prominent people everywhere. It is absolutely harmless, inexpensive and efficient. A month's systematic use of Sargoi should produce flesh and strength by correcting faults of digestion and liv supplying highly concentrated fats to tlie blood. Increased nourishment is ob tained from the food eaten, and the additional fats that thin people need are provided. G. A. Gorgas and other leading druggists supply Sargol and snv there is a large-demand for it. While this new preparation has give# splendid results as a nerve-tonic and vitalizer, it should not be used by nerv ous people unless they wish to gain at least ten pounds of flesh.—Adv. GOVERNMENT WANTS HELP Examinations for Eleven Positions to Be Held Here Soon Hie U. S. Civil Service Commission announces the following open competi tive examinations to be held in Harris burg. Persons who meet the require ments and desire any of the exaniina tions should apply to the secretary, Third Civil Service district, Philadel phia, or the local secretary: Agriculturist, male, $2,500-$3,000, March 23; lantern slide coiorist, female, $720, April 7; laboratory aid in tech nical agriculture, SOOO-S9OO, April 7; agronomist in clover investigations, male, $2,000-$2,500, April 13; st.en tifle assistant, April 14-15; technolo gist in sugar beet seed investigations, male, SI,BOO, April 20; mine surgeon, male, $2,400-$2,700, April 20; gas waste engineer, male, $2,400-$3,600, April 20; pomological artist, male or female, $1,200, April 28; assistant in plant introduction, male, $1,400- $1,620, April 28-29; surveyor-drafts man, male, $ 1,200-$1,500, April 28-29. BEA( HEY S FRIEND KILLED Fellow Aviator Said Other's Fall Made Him "Lose His Nerve" Los Angeles, Cal., March 17. Aviator Frank Stites fell 200 feet with his machine at Universal City late yes terday afternoon and was fatally in jured, dying a half hour later. Stites was a close friend of Lincoln Beachey, and was greatly depressed over Beacii ey's fatal fall at San Francisco. Mon day Stites made an unsuccessful at tempt at a flight, aud afterward re marked to a friend that he had "lost his nerve." While making the flight yesterday Stites apparently lost control of his machine, and, being so close to ground, was unable to regain control of it. Stites sustained a broken le<' and internal injuries, which caused iiils death. j * 'sAUVATES I Calomel makes you sick and you lose a day's work. Calomel is a nasty, dan gerous chemical. To liven your sluggish liver and bowels when constipated, headachy, bilious, just get a 10-cent box of harmless Cascarets. They work while you sleep, don't gripe, sicken or salivate.—Ad i. |u| Sj^ PHILADELPHIA* 13 and Fllbert Streets. 2 Minutes from PENNSYLVANIA and PHILADELPHIA £ READING TERMINALS - NEAR TO EVERYWHERE. EOOJSeauti/ul Out- Math aucltfflmvtm Jce Mate*,, cvnds up'. Popular Cafe, Gril 1 and Restaurant or Good Goal Proves Its Quality Some coal is richer in carbon than others. The thing is to find the veins that supply it. The coal that's rich in carbon is going to burn satisfactorily and throw out plenty'of lasting heat. For the intensity of heat de pends upon the- amount of carbon. Kelley's Coal proved its richness in carbon years ago. H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets