YOU CAN PLAY THE the sk il led m ian.^ The Melodant accents the melody. The Phrasing Lever gives correct con trol of tempo. The Diaphragm pneumatics duplicate the human touch. The Sustaining Pedal introduces the loud effects at just the right points. These and other patented devices enable you to play the Angelus artistically the first time you try. Come in and investigate for yourself. A genuine Angelus costs only S7OO on partial payments; others up to $1,050. Choose Your Easter Victrola or Edison Diamond Disc Now Don't buy' either until you have heard both demonstrated If'lI 1 , .1 Ifify side-by-side, tor in no other i lMiiH can ou certa * n |Pj& e tting the one which pleases world's best music at your jIJJH command, but you must decide, for they are entirely * different. Come in to-day or any time it's convenient. This is the only store in the city displaying all styles of Victrolas and Edison Discs, sls to $275. Demon strations any time it's convenient for you to stop in. COMPLETE STOCK OF RECORDS The J. H. Troup Music House Troup Building, 15 S. Market Sq. SUBURBAN DAUPHIN • Moving Day Sees Seven Changes in Dauphin and Vicinity fs ■ ri - ntlence. Dauplrfn. April -.—Yesterday was the aunuai moving day and several c'.iangcs were made by residents of Dauphin and vicinity. William Haw thorne, n" Harrisburg. moved to the Kennedy property on North Erie street, wi... h he recently purchase !. M s. - ;.;i Kennedy, to the Tallev ropertv on High street; Mrs. J. E. Williams, to the Clark property ou Juniata street: William Nye and Wil liam I'. Garman to the Hoffman farm, Clark's Valley, and Daniel Peters, of mod: Creek. moved to Perry county. Mr>. Sarah McArdle, of Harrisburg. was the guest of Mrs. W. S. Fisiier 011 Monday. J. C. Dougias. of Harrisburg. was in town on Sunday. James Lewis Gross, a student at Lehijh University, is spending the Easter vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Gross. George Denison, Jr., aud Chambers Denison returned to West Chester State Normal school on Monday aft er spending their vacation with their father, George Denison. Mrs. D. F. Seiier and Miss Jessie Speece were the guests of Mrs. How ard Speece, Speeceville. Sunday. Mrs. Isaa. Bogner aud daughters, Mary and Elizabeth, of Speecevllle, «pent We ir.esday at Harrisburg. Isaac Lyter. who was arrested tinder suspicion for chicken stealing 011 Mon day, was given a hearing on Thursday evening at 5 o'clock at the oftice of R. M. Steckley. He is hell under bail for his appearance in court. Special music will be given by the j choir and children of the Methodist Episcopal church at the regular preaching service on Sunday evening. The Rev. F. J. S. Morrow, the pastor in- charge, will have charge of»the service. Miss Mae Williams spent the week end with her cousin, Miss Julia Miller, at Enola. Roy Welker returned on Wednes day from a visit to his uncle. Parker Coirode, at Jonstown. Miss Emma Reel, of Harrisburg. wis the guest of Miss Margaret I Brooks on Wednesday. WEST FAIRVIEW Mr. and Mrs. Grant Beck Were Visited By the Stork ( ->r Wert Fairview. April 2.—Mr. and > Mrs. Grant Beck, Clay street, announce the birth of a son. Grant Andrew ■ Beck, on Wednesday, March 24. Mrs. Beck was Miss Bertha Smith, of Wormleysburg. prior to her marriage. Washington Camp, No. 713, P. O. S. of A., will render a musical and en tertainment in Hatfield's hall, Thurs day evening, April 8. Johu Seirer, Third street, received a severe gash on his forehead by a falling b-i k while at work on the : Kauffni 11 store building. Harrisburg. Mrs. H. A. Forrest, of Harrisburg, visited her parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. I'. Weaver. 011 Tuesday. 1 Edward Stiles visited his brother. Amos s- : o s. Harrisburg. Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Esheuauer vis- ited at his home at Elizabethtown. Mrs. John Beck visited her sister. Mrs. William Mann, at Penbrook. Mrs. Israel Muckel. Third street, entertained the Woman's Missionary | Society, last night. The Embroidery Club met at the home o. Miss Violet Rowland last night, took in a few new members and ' passed their April fool .iokes. The Otterbein Guild will meet at the U. B. parsonage this evening. IJ The Mite Society of Grace l". B. . church, will meet at the home of Mrw. ! F. D. Luse on Saturday afternoon. Hoy \\ eaver, of Annville, was a 1 caller at the l". B. parsonage Thurs day. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Neidig have re turned from their trip of ten davs to Winchester, 111. Miss Jeannctte Sunday, of Harris burg. was the guest of her brother, Edward Kutz. LEI7OYNE Preparatory Services in Trinity Lu theran Church This Evening Specia' Correspondence. Lemoyne, April 2. —tMrs. Daniel 'Mus-er, of near Siate Hill, visited her sister, Mrs. Harry Greenawalt. Fred Myers, of York, was a business visitor in town. Mr. and IMrs. Roy Hoffman have taken up their residence on West Her i man avenue. Miss Ella Huntzberger. of Bowmans dale, visited Mrs. Ward Miller and fam -1 ily. East Bosier avenue. Mrs. \V. A. Davidson is convalescing from an attack of grip. Services preparatory to Communion will be held in Trinity Lutheran church this evening at 7.30 o'clock. Calvin St raver was a recent visitor in York. 'Mr. and Mrs. clarence Thrush have moved to West Hummel avenue, beyond Lome street. MECHANIC3BURG Lieutenant Jacob Heffelfinger Dies At Hampton, Virginia Specia l Correspondence Meehanicsburg. April 2.—Notwith ! standing the cold weather there is a ' profusion of Easter flowers in our j windows and several stores are dis playing potted plants and cut flowers j for sale. The banks are closed to-day but there is no other cessation of business in the borough. Services preparatory to cdmmunion j were held at 10 o'clock this morning in St. Mark's Lutheran church. Com munion will be held on Easter Sin*- dav. Communion services were held last evening in Trinity Lutheran church. * t ' V; ' V ■ ' ' \ '' V HAKKTSBmRG STAR-INDEPENDENT, FRTDAY EVENING, APRIL 2. 1915. Bover.il members were added to the i church. j The public schools closed at uoon to day for a half holiday. They will have uo other Easter vacation. The Women's Missionary Society ;of the First I. B. church, held a very interesting meeting this afternoon in j the church. The Bev. F. A. Ruplev, Jr., of York, was here yesterday assisting in the fu neral services of Miss Annie Titzel. The funeral of Mrs. John T. Stans tiel 1 was held this afternoon from her late home on North Walnut street. Services were conducted bv her pas tor, the Bev. Charles Raaeh, of the Church of God. He was assisted bv the Bev. E. C. B. castle, of the Firs't j I . B. church. Interment was made in | the Meehanicsburg cemetery. J There was quite an attraction at : the Trimmer store yesterday. Miss ■ Luden, of Lebanon, was decorating Easter eggs. Very many of them be" I nig painted to order. Word has been received here of the death of Lieutenant Jacob Heffelfinger which.took place at his home in Hamp i ton, \a. Lieutenant Heft'elfinger is a native of this county, he spent his | boyhood days in Upper Allen town | snip, moving to this place with his parents in his earlv manhood, lie was j educated in the district schools of the j county and the Cumberland Valiev j Institute. He taught several years in I the district schools of Monroe and j I ppe r Allen township. He entered the i Union armv at the beginning of the Civil war and served till the elose of the war. Soon afterward he located lat Hampton, a. and engaged in busi ness. He is a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Heffelfinger. He is sur vived by a sister, Miss Julia Heffel finger. of this place and bv three brothers, Harry, of Philadelphia; El | !ner - of Shamokin, and Charles, of i Hampton, Va. I ndertaker E. G. Lentz was a busi ness visitor to Carlisle yesterdav. Mrs. W. L. Singiser and Miss Mat ; tie Eberlv spent yesterday with rela | tives in Carlisle. Mrs. John Smith and Miss Kate Deitz are in Shiremanstown where j they were called by the serious illness | of their sister. Mrs. S. S. Bupp. who j was stricken with paralysis on Wed- I nesday. Mrs. B. F. Senseman, of Harrisburg, is visiting her mother, Mrs. John Sheaffer, East Main street. Mrs. Marv Trostle is visiting rela tives in Shiremanstown. David Biddle, of Philadelphia, is here to spent Easter with his grand mother, Mrs. D. N. Biddle, East Main street. C. W. Sheaffer, of Shiremanstown, was a business visitor here yesterday. The relatives and the many friends here, of J. Mumper Bailey were shock ed to hear of his sudden death which took plaee at his homo' in Dillsburg, on Wednesday evening. Miss Ellen Meiley spent vesterdav in Carlisle. LAWYERS' PAPER BOOKS Printed at this office in best style, at lowest prices and on short notice. BEYER'S EIGHT BILLS ARE SATIRES'6II LEGISLATURE Philadelphia Representative Has Fun With Fellow i-aw makers in Meas ures That He Draws Up Governing Liquor, Chewing Gum and Things The tendency of tho present Legisla ture to censor everything and every body by the establishment of county 'boards. ami to have everything of im portance submittal to the people for t'heir referemtnui vote, has led Repre tentative Bever, of Philadelphia, tx> ■have prepared eight bills sutirixing the practice, whiWh he says he will present, to the House on IMmnday night. Before leaving for 'Philadelphia last night I.MIr. Beyer announced tihat the titles of his bills, which egress the general text, are as follows: "An act to regulate the liv-ensure fo moving picture shows in this Conimon weaHh and providing for an election every three years by the qualified doct ors of any county to determine t'he question by a special election, whether or not t'he" exhibition of such pictures shall be permitted within the jurisdic tion of any count}*. "An act to regulate the licensure of trading standi companies, and mer chants using the same, as premiums in their business, atul providing for an election every three years by the quali fied electors pf any county to Motor mine the question of license or no li cense in any county of this Common wealth." "An act to establish and regulate the licensure of all persons engaged in the manufacture and sale of tobacco iu any form, and providing for an election every threo years by the qualified electors of any county to determine whether or not such manufacture or sale should be allowed in any county." "An act to establish a Board of Licensure and regulating the license of all public garages, defining the powers and duties of such board in the grant ing of said licenses, and providing for au election every three years by the qualified electors of any county to de termine by a special election 'whether or not such licenses should be granted in anv eoutitv." As to Chewing Gum and Things "An act to establish a .Bonrd of Li censure to regulate the furnishing of intoxicating liquors in nnv chartered or unchartered organizations or social cltfbs in this Commonwealth, and pro viding for an election everv three years by the qualified electors of any county in this Commonwealth to determine whether any license should be granted in any county to such organizations, and providing fines and penalties to bo im posed upon all persons who may be members of such organizations in which intoxicating liquors are furnished with out license to members." ' • An act to establish a State Board of Licensure to regulate the manufac ture and sale of chewing gum in auv form in any of the counties of this Commonwealth, regulating the granting of such licenses, imposing fines and pen alties and providing for an election ev ery three years by the qualified electors in any county to determine by a special election whether or not any suck li censes should be granted iu 'said coun tv." "An act to regulate the sale of coffee and tea in tiiis Commonwealth, creating a sS'tate Board of Licensure, regulating the granting of such licenses and pro viding for an election every three years by the qualified electors in any county to determine by a special' election whether or not any licenses to sell coffee and tea should" be grantod in any count v,'' "An act to regulate the public health, providing for an election every three years by t!he qualities electors "in any county to determine whether or not the inhabitants thereof should be ]>ermitted to eat pork or meats of any description on Friday, the sixth day of the week, and providing fines and penalties for any violations thereof." HALIFAX^ Mothers' Society to Hold Bake Sale in Methodist Church Saturday Special Correspondence. Halifax, April 2. J. H. Pike, of | Middletown. is visiting his mother, I Mrs. £arah Pike. Mrs. Harriet Lantz spent Monday in Harrisburg. Claude Keiter is visiting his mother, Mrs. Daniel Herb, at Williamstown. The Mothers' Association will hold a bake sale in the basement of the M. E. church to morrow afternoon for the benefit of the piano fund of the Hali fax High school. Mrs. Hannah Rutter is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Daniel Ludlow, at Har risburg. AViliiam Renvberger is spending the week with relatives at Harrisburg. Elmer F. Biever has moved his family from the B. Pottiger house to the house vacated by George Koch on Armstrong street. Bed Flag For Harvard Again Bostoti. April 2. — Harvard students j will soon be allowed legally to carry j their red flag again. By a voice vote the House passed the bill to amend the present "red flag act," which pro hibited the use of the crimson banner as well as other red flags, although the ! prohibition of Harvard's colors was ' not so intended. i French Remedy Aids Stomach Sufferers France has been called the nation without stomach troubles. The French have for generations used a simple mix ture of vegetable oils that relieve stom ach and intestinal, ailments and keep the bowels free from foul, poisonous ! matter. The stomach is left to perform ! its functions normally. Indigestion and gastritis vanish. Mr. Geo. H. Mayr, a leading druggist of Chicago, cured himself with this remedy in a short time. The demand is so great that he imports these oils from France and compounds them under the name of Mayr's Wonderful Rem edy. People everywhere write and tes tify to the marvelous relief they have received using this remedy—one dose will rid the body of poisonous accretions thatjrtiave accumulated for years and convince the most chronic sufferer from stomach, liver or intestinal troubles. Mayr's Wonderful Remedy is sold by leading druggists everywhere with the positive understanding that your money will be refunded without question 'or quibble if ONE bottle fails to give you absolute satisfaction. if'' | Coats and Dresses X/T Y° ur s u ' f Will Be L Mf £Sk YonrChsict 150 in a New Lot rA Jta HjrjßßiEt-ffW of6o Ladles' Spring Sample Coats R KirCCTQ inManyShades& Fabrics. ÜBl LOOLO Your Choice——>> fm A New Lot of tfs* 53 *? Sample Suits 4j| Z For Ladies & Misses I! ||| M vanity Jhfjfy 75 Men's Suits '|« In Blue Serges and Fancy Your Choice at s9l GOLD CHAINS FREE] CASH if fou Have It CREDIT If You Want It LIVINGSTON'S, 9 ~3?"™,. j ' EQUATORIAL ECUADOR. f Land of Earthquakes Nearly All a Mil* Above Sea Level. | The traveler arrives lu Guayaquil ; ladeu with quinine pills. but be learns | that in a journey of a day lie can reach I the temperate zone lie brings suai | mer clothing for a country crossed by J the equator and nearly perishes on the frozen slopes of high mountains. I He finds a government as unstable as j the volcano shaken soil. He notes im | portant industries that thrive upon i these turbulent shores. Ecuador is a i laud of contradictions. ' It is the land where the Incas ruled after they came into Peru. It was the birthplace of Atahualpa. who fell be fore Ptzarro. It was from his capital I at Quiueto along the mountains that Gonzalo Pizarro rode out with Orel lana to discover the Amazon. The laud which bears the name of the equator rivals her sister republics In variety of scenery and climate. Her feet rest on the dazzling chrome green shore of a tropic river; her head wears the fleecy crown of eternal snows. With one hand she points to the wide Pacific; with the other, to the matted jangle of the Amazonian valley. Colum bia. Brazil and Peru are her neigh bors, but who can say where the ter ritory of the one actually begins and the other ends? Two-thirds of the peo ple of Ecuador are Indians, pure and simple. Nine-tenths of the population live a mile above the sea. Her territory Is three times as large as Pennsylvania, Her domain is practically unexplored, but commercially she is forging ahead. —National Magazine. The Caspian Sea. The Caspian sea is as Herodotus said 2,000 years ago. "a sea by itself, having no connection with any other." Every | schoolboy knows that now, but it Is ; rema.-kable to find Herudotus saying ; so. 'because centuries after his time I such authorities as Straba and Pliny < believed that It was connected with i the northern ocean by a long and nar- | row gulf. Geography seems to have had a setback in the Interval through false information received at the time ! of Alexander's conquests. Herodotus | says that the Caspian's length was ( fifteen days' voyage with a rowboat, J its breadth eight days'. Since the i actual figures are 730 miles and 400, j this shows that a rowboat of the time j did fifty miles a day.—London Graphic. A Big Birdcage. A very peculiar institution in the New York zoo Is what is known asj "the flying birdcage." This magnifl cent aviary is the largest of its kind in the world, being 55 feet high, 72 feet wide and 150 feet long. Largq oak and other trees grow in this cage, and the birds live within its wire net-! ting bounds in the utmost freedom.! The frame of the cage is built of iron j pipes, which are covered over with i thin meshed netting. 1 DOMINICANS AKE PUNISHED United States Cuts Off Republic's Al lowance of $2,000 a Day 1 | Washington, D. C.. April 2.—Dif ficulties over financial affairs of the I Dominica,it Republic were brought to a i hea.l vesterdnv when the I'nited States ' cut oft" the allowance of sii'.ooo a day i which the Dominican' government has ! been permitted recently to draw from 1 its customs reserve fund to meet a de . licit in current expenditures. I Notice from the sstate Department I of this stop brought prompt action by j . officials of the island republic. They cabled they would dispatch to Wash- | ington immediately a special commis- I eion to confer with Secretary Bryan , ! in an effort to readjust the situation. 1 Marietta Pastor Critically 111 • i Marietta. April 2.—The Rev. W. H. 1 West. |>fliUir of the Bethel church, is' : critically ill and his death momentarily j expected. I M\\\\\\lllll fill ill/// //////// V\V OTTBffINXS THEM AH IN h TOXESCMENISS c PMY Patronize the Milk Man Who Really / \\\\\ Serves Pure Milk and Cream //// t Unsurpassed in Quality—Tested '//// by the City's Chemist in fat —spe- f f cific gravity and freedom from // - |\\\\ Bacteria. ' / f |\v\ Hoak s "Special ' for infants is /// ' AV\\ served to more families for children ' //// A\V\ than any other milk. //// \N\\ \ Hoak's milk—cream—and eele- //// V\\V bra ted buttermilk delivered in all '//// '■ ! . V\\\ parts of the city. '//// \\ Early Delivery Assured //// V'- Both Phones—Phone Us Your Order ////, \\ \'f -.-'-.j <1 Milk, 7c per qt. Cream, pt., «c '//// sNM ;5| 51 = V// * P(I \\ CHAS. fl. HOAK. # >/&' !: -i A PENBROOK, PA. I « iisi II PURE j ■Lsw* .Xj 1 \ i STARVING MAN DIES Had Walked Streets With Wife for 3 Days After Being Evicted | New York, April 2.—William Holth, a rigger, suffered an attack of rheuma tism some time ago and lost his job. llis savings gone, he and his wife were evicted from their home on Monday. For three days, Holth, who was. fifty-eight years old, and Ms wife, Bridget, walked the streets without food or shelter. They were starvidg on Wednesday night when they ap plied for help at the Charities * Build , ing, Twenty-second street and Fourth j avenue, and were sent to the Munirf ! pal Lodging House. Dr. Blunisohn examined them and i said they needed food, and needed it | badly. They wero placed on a diet 1 and put to bed. Holth was found dea.l ; in bed yesterday. STAR-INDEPENDENT WANT i ADS. BRING RESULTS. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers