6 THE STAR-INDEPENDENT ( EtiMwhtd in JS76) Published by THK STAR PRINTING COMPANY. Star-lndepandant Bulldlnf, 15.20-22 South Third Straat. Harrlsburf, Pa.. Kvary Evenln* Except Sunday. Officer.•; Uirtdort ; BSNJAMIN F. MITKHS, J OHN L KDHN, President. WM. W. WALLOWJR, METERS Vice President. * - >IEVIBB ' WM. K. MITERS, Secretary and Treasurer. WH W. WALLOWER. WM. H. WARNER, V. HUMMEL BEROHAUS, JR . Business Manager. Editor. communications should be addressed to STAR INDEPENDENT, Business, Editorial. Job Printing or Circulation Department, according to the subject matter. Entered at the Post Office in Harrisburg as second class matter. Benjamin & Kentnor Cempany. New York and Chicago Representatives. New York Office, Brunswick Building. 225 Fifth Avenue. Chicago Office, People's Has Building, Michigan Avenue. Delivered by carriers at 6 cents a week. Mailed to subscribers far Three Dollars a year in advance * DEPENDENT The paper with the largest Home Circulation in Harrisburg and nearby towns. Circulation Examined by THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN^ ADVERTISERS. TELEPHONES: BELL Privat. Branch Exohan«o. - • CUMBERLAND VALLEY Prtvala Branch Exchange. No. E4B-141 Thursday, May 13, 1915. MAY Sun. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri. 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 29 30 31 .MOON'S PHASES— Last Quarter, fltb; New Moon, 13th; First Quarter, 21st; Full Moon, 28th. .« ' ' WEATHER FORECASTS /" Harrisburg and vicinity: Fair to- 1 M* night and Friday. Moderate tem- Eastern -Pennsylvania: Generally JT fair to-night nnd Friday. Gentle to moderate northwest to north winds. YESTERDAY'S TEMPERATURE IN HARRISBURG Highest, 63; lowest, 61; 8 a. m., 56; 8 p. m., 60. BOME U. S. PAPERS COURTING CENSORSHIP? Some of the metropolitan newspapers, while openly committed to the policy of standing by the President in the present crisis, are consciously or sub-consciously inflaming the public mind witli columns and columns of printed matter, which, all too plainly, between the lines, encourages the idea of our going to war. Cartoons and written matter are to a large extent keeping alive the resentment naturally felt in the minds and hearts of Americans on receipt of the first news of the sinking of the Lusitania with more than one hundred Americans aboard. This plan of at least some of the metro politan dailies hardly dovetails with their professed intention to uphold the hands of or at least to do nothing to embarrass the Washington administra tion in the present very delicate situation. Dispatches from Washington made it very clear that it is the desire of the President and his advis ors that the Government, —that is the people of this nation, —take no steps with relation to Ger many save after the most mature and dispassionate judgment. It. will be recalled that for several days after the sinking of the Lusitania the President him self and other responsible Washington officials wisely refrained from making any statements what soever bearing on the sinking of the liner, on the ground that it was not an occasion for hasty con clusion. This determination on Washington's part to weigh well every phase of the situation and to per mit public sentiment to crystallize before deter mining on a course of procedure, was practically unanimously endorsed by the press of the country, yet we now see some of the newspapers of the great cities printing matter that can only serve to preju dice the public mind and to direct sentiment into channels not calculated to encourage sane and un biased judgment. Certainly a matter of such vital importance as the question whether we shall be drawn into the worldwide war is worthy of the most dispassionate consideration, and yet that kind of consideration will soon become impossible if some of the news papers continue to print inflammatory matter as they are doing now. The President's announced intention to hold Germany to a "strict accounta bility" carries with it the injunction to the Amer ican public to suspend judgment at least until Ger many makes an accounting or until Germany lets it be known that she will refuse to account for her alleged actions. Much has been said in this country in criticism of censorship of the newspapers in the countries now at war, but some of our big city dailies now are printing the sort of matter which proves that censorship may ultimately be necessary in our own United States. MEN AND BEASTS CONVERSING A noted philologist who has spent years in the Congo studying chimpanzees and gorillas especially with respect to their methods of communicating thoughts, says he is sure that "some day a man will talk to his dog and his dog will talk to him," adding that "it will be then that all animal life will become articulate and a widening of our cos mic horizon, now undreamed of, will result." Human beings are, of course, in sympathy with any movement that might bring them into com munication with the lower animals, although they might with propriety inquire whether they are supposed to learn the languages of the beasts of the fi«ld and the birds of the air. or whether the HAKKIiSBUHU STAK-JL-NDiiiPEJSDEMT, THURSDAY MAY 13, 191&. latter are expected to acquire, parrot fashion, the tongues of mankind. From his study of gorillas the noted philologist has drawn the conclusion that it will be with these animals that man will first converse, and thus get the keys for learning other languages of the lower animals, lie expresses much respect for the goril las, and points out that the males of the species never abandon their wives. Presumably when spoken intercourse is established between man and his supposed relatives, the gorillas, the latter will have much of benefit to say to the former on ques tions of ethics. Man is perhaps so sinful because he has not been able to profit by verbal intercourse with the better behaved representatives of lower orders of animal life. , A satisfactory way of getting into communication with other living things might be thought to be for man to learn their languages, if, as is insisted by investigators, human beings are not the only animals who can communicate thoughts among themselves. Yet it appears from various accounts about dogs that some of these animals have already been learning the English language like talking birds. A dog by the name of Cutey was taught in three months by its owner to say "1 want ray rights." It was doubtless able to make itself un derstood by human beings more easily than the latter would be able to make Cutey understand them if they were to endeavor to bark intelligibly., AUTHORS JUDGING OTHER AUTHORS Plagiarism seems to have become rather common among men of letters, for the suggestion has been made that a committee of authors be appointed to pass judgment on members of their profession who make free use of the ideas and the words of their predecessors. There are in fact ten or twelve cases of alleged plagiarism in the courts of the country at the present time. Conscientious novelists and dramatists apparently are of the opinion that it is time they take some action to prevent further pilfering by their more reckless fellows. The proposed committee would have as its object the careful examination of all writers accused by other writers of appropriating the latters' literary work and passing it off as their own. It seems, however, that comparatively few of the plagiarists could thus be brought to justice, since a good many of the authors whose ideas are plagiarized by pres ent day magazine contributors and book producers have long been in their graves, and do not care in the least what is done with their works. Living authorities on literary matters would have to pre fer the charges against the thieves, in behalf of the deceased victims of the thefts, and little joy could be had from such tattling. Should the committee on plagiarism ever be established the defendants brought before it, would surely be deserving of compassion. Men of letters are as a rule merciless to their contemporaries, espe cially when they are in positions superior to thos§ contemporaries, and even though those positions are superior ones merely in their own estimations. Poets have had their severest critics in other poets It was from the fellows of his profession that Walt Whitman won most contempt, and contemporary poets were among Poe's least appreciative and most severely critical readers. An author who is a pla giarist might be able to go through a trial in a court of law without much discomfiture, but h* 1 could not pass through an examination by contem porary men of letters so easily. Once Italy goes to war she will be heard from. Getting into war is far easier than getting out. Doubtless those who are urging war will be among the first to enlist. The Legislature will adjourn May 20 unless the Legisla ture changes its mind. It is hoped that Uncle Sam's.people will celebrate a safe and sane Fourth of July both at home and abroad. TOLD IN LIGHTER VEIN POVERTY Olivia-—"Poor, is she?" Hattie—"Well I guess! She'll have to go round all this summer in a straw hat nnd 110 furs."—Life. HOW TO TELL A HAS-BEEN You can always know a has-been by the way he keeps on talking when nobody pays attention to him any more.— Albany Journal. PA'S EXPLANATION L'enfant—"Father, what is a 'sepulchral' tone of voice?" La Pere—"That means to speak gravely."—Dartmouth's Jack o' Lantern. EVIDENCE OF THIS WISDOM "How do we know that King Solomon was the wisest of men?" "Because," replied Mr. Growcher, "he allowed his many wives to conduct their own arguments and entertainments, while he went away by himself and thought up proverbs." —Washington Star. WHY HE GROWLED "The Browns have a new automobile." "That so?" "Yes, aren't you glad?" "I can't say that I am particularly." "You should rejoice in the success of others. I don't see why men act so gloomy when other people are get ting on." "You don't. Well, I'm Brown's tailor and he still owes me for two suits."—Detroit Free Press. TOLD EASILY A witty political candidate, running in an agricultural district, after making a speech announced that he would be glad to answer any questions that might be put to him. A voice came from the audience. "You seem to know a lot, sir, about a farmer's diffi culties, May I ask a question about a momentous one?" "Certainly," replied the candidate, nervously. "How can you tell a bad egg?" went, on the merciless voice. The candidate waited until the laughter died away. Th")n he replied: "If I had anything to tell a bad egg I think I should break it gently." He won the ylace.—National Monthly* AVOID SPRING ILLS Purify and Build Up the Blood With Hood's SarsaparlUa In the spring your blood needs cleansing and enriching. You feel poorly, and there i« more or less erup tion on your face and body. Your ap petite is not good, your sleep is broken, and you are tired all the time. You need Flood's Sarsaparilla. It is the one safe and effective tonic that has stood the test of forty years. It makes the pure red blood that will make you feel better, look better, eat and sleep better. It is the old stand ard tried and true all-the-.vear-round medicine for the blood and the whole system. Ask any druggist for Hood's Sar saparilla, and insist 011 having it. Nothing else acts like it, for nothing else has the same formula or ingre dients, and so there is no real substi tute. Get it today.—Adv. f • 1 1 1 11 1 1 ' " " "\ [Tongue-EnJ Top ics| A Valiant Prussian Band The war for months had been little I more than a rumor for the inhabitants iof the little city of Memel, tucked away in northernmost East Prussia ou the Baltic. Beyond the mobilization of 600 of the "landsturm" to take the place of the regular troops things had gone on much the same as usual. Then, suddenly, 011 the 17th of March, there came the report that the Cossacks were coming from the North and the East, and Memel began to get its first direct impression Of the gigantic conflict. In the days that followed it was to get other and more terrible impressions. While officials frantically appealed for help from the military authorities, the little band of Landsturm slowly fell back from one defensive position to another before the oncoming Russians, made one final but ineffective stand at the outlying village of Althof, and on Thursday night, March 18, were forced to let the Russians enter. * • • Terror In a Village Burning and pillaging as they went, the Russian troops swept into Memel. As terrified villagers gazed from their windows, the soldiers marched through Memel's main street smashing in the store windows, stopping only long enough to help themselves to tobacco, liquor ami food. Memel, however, had had 2 4 hours notice, and had utilized the time for partial flight. Terrified I villagers from the outlying districts had come panting into town with stories of dwellings looted and burned, relatives j and friends seized and borne off to Kus- I sia by Russian civilians following the ! wake of the soldiers, and of atrocities | too terrible to mention. Eight thou i sand of the town's population, thanks ' to one final stand of the Landsturm at I the Karlsbrueche with a machine gun, j succeeded in getting out Memel, j with a few belongings, and onto the j long strip of sand dune known as the "Kurische Nehrung" that runs in a curving direction southward toward Koenigsberg. • * * Waiting for Reinforcements Few of the fugitives had had time to bring any food, and 011 the narrow strip of sand there was nothing on which they could subsist. The bitter winter weather that had made the flight so terrible, however, proved to be their salvation, for it froze the shel tered water between the sand and the mainland so that supplies could be sledged across in sufficient quantity to keep soul and body together. Ig norant of the fate that might have be fallen those they had left behind, suf fering terribly in the bitter weather, the fugitives waited, hoping desperate ly that the reinforcements for which they had appealed so earnestly had ar rived to drive the Russians out. There they remained a week, or for four days after the invaders had been expelled with great losses. * ♦ * Looted Delicatessen Stores For three days the Russian troops camped about the town. Their swoop on Memel seemed to have been inspired by no tactical reasons, for they did not sink ships in the land-locked harbor, nor fortify themselves. Germany's threat that Russian towns would be destroyed if they 'continued to burn down Ger man villages is believed to have re strained them from destroying Memel. Instead they cleaned out virtually every delicatessen store, every provis ion market and every wine and liquor establishment in Memel. Individual sol diers, prowling about, entered the homes of inhabitants and added to their fear by their depredations and their threats. • * • German Aid Comes On Sunday the German reinforce ments began to arrive, and the Rus sians began to leave. A few hours later a trail of dead bodies from the center of the little city to Althof—or its remnants—told the story of the de parture. When the last Russian had gone and the inhabitants ventured out of their homes, 171 corpses were picked up and piled together prepara tory to burial in a common grave. This gruesome work was still in progress when an Associated Press correspon dent reached Memel. One of the first to reach the scene was Ober-President von Batocki, of the province of East Prussia, and he began at once to sift out the truth from the mass of rumor and hearsay regarding the invasion. Shortly he determined that between 500 and 600 persons in the Memel part of the province bad been carried off to Russia. Wreck Johannesburg Shops London, May 13. —A Router dispatch from Johannesburg says a mob wrecked a number of Austrian and German es tablishments in that city yesterday. RUSSIAPREPAREDIO EXACT REVENGE FOR HER DEFEAT Lmndon, May 13. —A ReuteT dis patch from Pctrograd gives the follow ing official statement regarding Rus sian military operations: "In the Righting between the Vis tula and the Carpathians May 8 and 9, the Germane planned to break our front by the lightning rapidity of the blow directed at the neighborhood of Krosno by seven divisions of the flow er of the German army after a heavy artillery preparation. "On a general front of forty miles the enemy gathered three-quarters of the Austrian army, one-ninth of (he German army, the first reserve half the contingents of the second reserve—be sides eight divisions from the Serbian front, several new Austrian divisions and twenty infantry divisions as well as eight new divisions and nine cav alry divisions from the western front. Only one of our armies participated in the first attack. "The Germans gained no tactical success. Our reserves, by a flank blow, enabled our army to rearrange a lino of advantagious positions eliminating all fear of final retreat. Our army has received strong reinforcements and is ready to exact hearty revenge. Our falling back was carried out methodic ally. The enemy's loss was heavy. "When our troops occupied the mountainous sections which the enemy hold to-day the enemy's official com munications declared these positions were of no importance." GERMAN CAPITAL IN AFRICA TAKEN BY BOTHA'S FORCES 'London, May 13, 10.45 A. M.—An official statement made public at Cape town and received by the Renter Tele gram Company says that Windhoek, capital of German Southwest Africa, was captured yesterday without resist ance by Union of South Africa forces under General Botha. The population of the town consists of 3,000 Euro peans and 12,000 natives. General 'Botha's troops took a considerable quantity of railway rolling stock. Mar tial law has bqen proclaimed throughout the conquered territory. An announcement was made on April 20 that the forces of the Union of South Africa had occupied Keetnian skop, the most important town in Ger man Southwest Africa next to the cap ital, thus obtaining command of the railroad leading to Windhoek. A statement was issued at Cape town on May 6 telling of the occupation of General Botha of Karibi'b after a forced march of thirty-five miles over a waterless waste. It was stated then that the early capture of Windhoek was cjf t ected. Swiss Troops Protect Germans Basel, I May 13. —The Swiss govern ment is sending more troops to, points on the southern frontier of the Re public, especially to Lugano, because of recent anti-German demonstrations. It is estimated that 10,000 Germans from Italy are in and near Lugano. Lo cal agitators have marched in proces sion in front of the Lugano hotels, par ticularly those occupied by Germuns, calling out lo them insulting phrases. Americans on Canadian Casualty List Ottawa, May 13.—Names contained in the casualty list for the Canadian contingent issued here includes two Americans, Privates Edwin Johnson Da vis, of Covington, Va., reported as killed in action, and G. Campbell Papil lion, Neb., as wounded. THE GLOBE THE GLOBE A Surprise Sale And Final Clean-Up jg|* Of Ladies' and Misses' Coats Y J Values are more surprising than ever. We intend to sell every coat between A AV now and June Ist—and at these prices the y w i'l fairlv "walk out." TSp j\ One Lot of 57 Ladies' Coats, /f['\ "n Values to sls, at m. $5.00 This lot contains Golfine, Eponge, Cor duroy, Serges and many other Spring fab , r i cs very choice models —all colors. One Lot of 32 Ladies' Coats —Values to $lB At $9.75 This range includes white Chinchillas, Scotch Tweeds. Covert cloths and Shepherd Checks. Very smart styles—all sizes. The Very Finest Grades of Ladies' Coats Are All Reduced At $11.75 Ladies 1 Coats, values to $20.00 At $13.75 Ladies' Coats, values to $25.00 At $15.00 Ladies' Coats, values to $28.50 / White Chinchillas of the Worumho variety—lmported Pop lins—Gabardines—Army Coverts—Velour Plaids and Man nish Serges. THE GLOBE 5 .? 0 " THIS "LIVE" LEATHER BELT jKJJ . S-T-R-E-T-C-H-E-S '*' s a ' ac *— 8 K enu ' np Leather Belt " lat stretches. It, yields with very / / ii R 1/ !j) contraction or expansion of the muscles, » iN k Itt - ve * holds the trousers perfectly secure V rau s»\ *t a " times. Handsome ami artistic in aflto U"*\ IPs. IfU /l»5i a ' , P ftarancc ' am ' ver y durable. MOST COMFORTABLE BELT EVER KNOWN Ijjl/i j|||l|rl Mail Orders Promptly Filled f if/ CADDYS Wrt St, Near Walnut *' I Vl\ IVI J, Open Evenings Just the thing to fortify your system against the sudden changes of Spring. FINKS BEERS, ALES and PORTER made from the very best of materials —■ all pure and transformed into a tonic property, fresh and perfectly hygienic, with the stimulating basis of solid food. FINK BREWING CO. HARRISBURG, U. S. A. (Sold in Bottles and Delivered on 'Phone Message to the Home)