EVTDNIKG EDOER-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JANUARY 17 1916, & - BRITISH BOMBARD LILLE WITH HUGE LONG RANGE GUNS City Twenty Miles Inside German Lines Effectively Snelled, Berlin Admits CANNON EQUAL TO FOE'S $9,000,000 FIRE DEVASTATES NORWEGIAN PORT AMSTERDAM, Jnn. 17. Guns ,to match th mighty, long-ranga howltter ot the Germany, have at last reached tha Allies front In France. Chief Interest here today centred In tho Gor man announcement that tho British have bombarded Lille, using a gun with a range estimated at 20 inllee. - This Is the first time that Lille has been under artillery fire since It fell Into ! the hands of the Germans In September, 1914. Qrman guns, with a range of 20 miles, which were used for the bombardment of Dunkirk and Verdun, wero hitherto unmatched on the Allies' side, but the latest developments show that tho Ger mans must now face equal mciai. It Is regarded as significant that the English make no announcement of the shelling of Lille, while the French War Offlce states that the Lille highway was shelled. The' German War Oinco an nounces that projectiles fell In tho centre of the city. LUlo Ilea about 15 miles behind the German lines, and derives Its Importance not only from tho fact that It Is one of tho most Important mnnufncturlng towns. In Northern Franco, but It Is tho centro of he vast network of transporta tion lines the Germans have built up behind their trenches. Its capture by the Allies, therefore, would forco tho whole Germnn lino In Northern France to fnll back. Tho of fensive against Lens last fnll was aimed primarily at Lille, which lies to tho east ward. Had Lens been tnken, ono of tho main lateial communications of tho Ger mans would have been severed and an at'enuo opened for a direct attack on LUlo. CARRANZISTAS PLEDGED SAFETY TO AMERICANS Bergen, the greatest ship-owning centro of Norway and one of thai country's oldest and most plsctufesque towns was partly destroyed by flro last night. The flames were fanned by a fierce gale. More than 20,000 persons were made homeless and tho property loss Is estimated at nt least $9,000,000, King Haakon is directing the relief work in tho stricken city. KING HAAKON DIRECTS BERGEN RELIEF WORK EXPLOSION ON E-2 IS STILL A MYSTERY SIXTEEN KILLED IN LILLE BY BRITISH BOMBARDMENT LONDON, Jan. 17. A bombardment of Lens by Allied ar tillery was the only activity on tho west ern Jront mentioned In the official state ment of the German War omco received here today. Tho text of the olllclal statement fol lows! "West front: Thero are no events of Importance to report. At Lens 1G In habitants have been killed and wounded by enemy artillery fire. The allied bombardment of LUlo, which resulted recently In the destruction of a German ammunition deport, as told by a German omclal report, wns resumed yes terday, according to tho same authority, causing a lire which up to the present has causdd only slight material damage. Tho German official statement follows: "Tho British fired on tho Interior of the town of Lille, but up to tho present only slight damage has been caused by the fire. "Thero was local lively artillery fighting and mining activity on the western front." Tho French communique Issued Inst night says: "In Belgium our artillery In conjunction with the British artillery caused serious damage to the enemy trenches In the region of Hot-Sas and occasioned two powerful oxplosloha behind tho German tines. , '"Our battcrlos successfully bombarded the approaches to the road from Lille, fo the south of 'Thelus, and blew up a muni tion depot at Hill 119. to the northeast of Neuvllle-St, Vaast. Ono of our mines de stroyed aumall G.efmun post. "In the Argonne there was bomb and grenade fighting In the region of Vau quols. "In Lorraine wo brought under our fire an enemy'party to tho south of Bromenll, northeast of Badvonvlller." Tha following report from British head quarters, made public here, says that the arttlleryrlre on a position to the- north of Ypreo was "satisfactory": "On the whole the day was riulet. There was some hostile shelling about Glvonchy and Ypres. Our artillery lire against a strong German position to the north of Ypres was satisfactory. "There were, bombardments on both Idea In the regions of Mallncourt. 1III1 183 and Hollebeke." Norwegian Capital's $9,000,000 Fire Caused 50 Deaths Mar tial Law Prevails CHUISTIANIA. Jan. lT.-On a special train that shattered nil records for speed on Norwegian railways, King Haakon arrived at Bergen today nnd took person al charge of the relief measures In the city that was swept yesterday by a fire that caused J3.000.000 loss and mude nenr ly 3000 persons homeless. Tho King was accompanied on his Jour ney by members of his personal staff and General Itoltfodt, tho Norwegian Minister of Defense. Martial law was declared In the strick en city today, not because of nny out break of disorder, but to facilitate tho relief measures which were Inaugurated by Norwegian troops as son ns the llro was under control. Though no lives wero lost In tho fire, 33 children and 17 men nnd women wero frozen to death or died from exposure before they could be given shelter. Sup plies for tho homeless are lacking, owing to the fact that all the storehouses in Bergen were destroyed by the (Ire, which swept over the business section and the poorer residential district surrounding It. Following the train carrying King Haa kon thero was dispatched from here seven trains carrying clothing and food for tho homeless. It Is expected that within 21 hours all the sufferers will be given relief. Plot Theory Ridiculed Edison Expert Doesn't Blame Batteries LT. COM. HARRIS TO MOVE UP President Wilson Sends Name Lcnguc Island Man to Senate of Contlnned from Page One would bo safo to resume operations at Cusl." GOBE ASKS NEUTRAL ZONE. Tho establishment of a neutral sone nlong the Mexican border, to be policed by United States And Mexican troops. Is proposed In a resolution Introduced In tho Senate today by Senator Gore, of Okla homa. The resolution will direct the President to enter Into negotiations nt once with Carranza to establish tho neutral zone, and would authorize the use of tho mil itary and" naval forces to enfoflce any agreement entered Into. Tho resolution was referred to the Foreign Ilelatlons Committee. EL 1'ASO, Jan. 17. General Manuel Baca Vallcs and General Enrlquo CIs neros, with eight followers, were shot, by n firing sqi'atl at Rasas Grandes yester day. It was announced today. The men executed were followors of General Fran cisco Villa and were said to have been Implicated In the massacre of 18 Ameri cans at Hanta Ysabel last Monday. Valles was known ns Villa's oMlclal ex ecutioner, successor of the late Generat Ilodotfo Flcrra, the "butcher." Tho corpse of General Joso Rodriguez, Villa's cavalry leader, alleged to ba one of the leaders In tho Santa Ysabel mas sacre, was placed on public exhibition today In tho yard of he Juarez Customs House. Tho gruesome show win Intended to prove that tho Carranza Government was determined to punish the rriurdcura of here, was ordered by Ambassador Sal Amrtrf nnd foreigners. Rlc to der all British tnki..i.' Must Answer Larceny Charge in N. J. HAimiSBURQ. Jan. 17. Requisition wns granted today for the return to Salem County, New Jersey, of Frederick K. Snyder, arrested In, Philadelphia, chnrged with larceny. i NEW YORK, Jan. 17.-Afler two days' Investigation by experts, tho causo of the Internal explosion which killed four men and Injured 10 aboard tho submarine E-2 Is as much of a mystery as It was five minutes after It occurred. Admiral Usher, commandant, and Com mnnder Uphnm today scoffed at tho sug gestion that the explosion wns tho result of a plot. Uphnm snld naval omdals are convinced tho explosion was "purely accidental." He said the Board of In vestigation resumed hearings today with no exact knowledge of the explosion's cause. Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison, Thorns A. Edison's personal engineering representa tive, after making "ns careful an Inves tigation of tho Interior of tho E-2 as pres ent conuttlons will permit." stnted posi tively today that the explosion was not caused by tho E-boat's batteries. Machinist G. H. Clark today was be lieved to havo llttto chan co of recovery, and probably will be blind should ho sur vive. It Is believed all other Injured men will recover with the possible exception of Chief Electrician H. L. Miles, who Is In a critical condition. WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. Tl.e nomina tion of Lieutenant Commander Frederic It. Hnrrls, public works olllccr at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, for Chief of Yards nnd Docks, was sent to the Sennto today by Preslden Wilson. Commander Harris has tho support of Senator Till man, who conferred today with Secre tary Daniels on the subject. Tho President sent to the Scnntb tho nomination of Clyde A. Rosseter, of Valentine, Neb., to be Rtglstcr of tho Land Ofllco there. I asAjyi 1)1 "Spray Your Throat neural tlmi dally with a rood ssi tlneptlc" advlntti Dr. Dixon, state Health Commtufttoner. Our CJIyco Formalin (2.1a A 7fio) In admirable for this purpose during epidemics of (trip, pneumonia and other dleeaeee. Pleasant to uo, and non-toxlo, hence excellent for children as well an adults. LLEWELLYN'S Philadelphia's Standard Drug Store 1518 Chestnut Street Olyco.l'ormsletB (lozengs form) 23 AmerteahA and foreigners. A placard on tha executed bandit lead er's body announced that all enemies of tha de facto Governmer would meet a Ilka fate, Generars RlVas and Almeda, of the Villa army, wero executed by Iho same firing squad Chat ended Rodriguez's Ufa nt Ma dcra Thursday, While soldiers of the do facto Govern ment "were rounding up tho landlts, an exodus of Americans from northern Mex ico wns In progress today. Three trains are reported on routoto the border with refugees. All wera under heavy guard of Carranza soldier A report that a train from Parral, In southern Chihua hua, had been captured by bandits, proved baseless. This train was held up for tha 'nrrlv'al of refugees from neighboring dis tricts. It. C. Myles, British diplomatic agent Rica to der all BrUUhiubJtcTA"1! northern Mexico Immediately "" Ml Thd Americans who mo .mrncans wno escaped denlti .(1 the hands of Mexican bandits In i.oXi. Mexico are menaced by a- new mil iS epidemic of typhus fever which tHAn out at Mexico City and spread .Ji want One death -IrdC In M Paso and It la feared lhaf th. M eai will men unlib..i ...; "? ", border. " 'mm 0 th State and Federnl tinWh -m co-operating with the local ai.thomi&ft in cuori. io proveni en outbrpr 0f lvnfc,..a hTnia l!ft,,au'and8 of M'" WttSSl Tho OT1A death 4ltit f- . . . that of lllpolllo Martinez, who cams iT..'J from Pledrns Negras ami died at ij,.'1 nnuntv lmnltnt nn a,.A.. .... '" VHa nK rf AH ),nl,ra Tl. (..,.."'. ". IIM quicklime last night." ""' was Dur,4 hi Begflinis TODAY Waldo ML Ckflk Aminnuiffll W3 rater Riddaimce Sale of Men's, Women's, Boys' and Girl a' Seasonable Poot-.wear. Highway Hearing for Two Counties HARRISBURG, Jan. 17.-Stnte High way Commissioner Cunningham will grant a hearing tomorrow to delegations representing Delawaro and Chester counties who will come to tho cnpltal to discuss changes In State highway routes In their home districts. Skull Fractured by Mule's Kick LANCASTER, Pa., Jan. 17. Nelson Groff, 19 years 'old, a former student of Franklin and Marshall College, and a sop of Albert B. Groff, wealthy farmer, re siding at East, Petersburg, was fatally Injured yesterday, when a mule belong ing to his father kicked him on the heat). Seven Bmall bones of his skull were re moved In an attempt to save his life. mm l!"''liP)IIIHIIIIIIIIil)llllffl DREICER&C0 announce a Special Exhibition of Pearls, Pearl Necklaces and Jewels from their New York establishment RITZ-CARLTON HOTEL South West Salon PHILADELPHIA from January 17th to February 3rd Hlllllllll'llil'lllllllillllilillillllilllllll'ililll m a IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT RETIRING FROM THE RETAIL BUSINESS HALE & KILBURN COMPANY MANUFACTURERS OF DISTINCTIVE' EXCLUSIVE HIGH-GRADE FURNITURE, INTERIOR DECORATORS, IMPORTERS OF AN TIQUES, ORIENTAL RUGS, TAPESTRIES, DRAPERY FAB RIGS, WALL PAPER. UPHOLSTERY GOODS AND OBJECTS OF DECORATIVE ART. ,. WILL SELL THEIR ENTIRE STOCK " ;:, . AT PEREMPTORY PUBLIC SALE ; BEGINNING WEDNESDAY. JANUARY I9TH. And Continuing Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Following Week .; 1: - EACH AFTERNOON, 2 O'CLOCK ' AT 13 1 5 WALNUT STREET "- The sale will be conducted by , The Philadelphia Art Galleries Reed H. Walmer, C. H. Luengene, Manager Auctioneer EXHIBITION MONDAY AND TUESDAY HALE & KILBlMN COMPANY No sale shoes cred ited nor exchanged. No approvals. I 1 107 dhesfaurt j m i m Royal Preference fot THE PIANOLA f, "SHE Aeolian Company manufactures and supplies the pkyeMjanoy-nsec? I by all the leading Kulers or burope. Recognition of its supremacy in tha A player field is attested by the seven Royal Appointments which it holds. The significance of a Royal Appointment is not always understood here in America. A King naturally makes many purchases. The Royal Appoint ment is conferred upon but one manufacturer in any given line, however, and' then only when his product is ao distinctly meritorious as to distinguish hirtv from all his competitors. The career of the Pianola the player-piano made by The Aeolian' Company in Europe, has been remarkable. Every branch of the English Royal Family owns one of these instruments. While in Germany, Russia,' France, Italy, Austria and other countries, its popularity is equally as great, KA List of the Aeolian Company's patrons in Europe includes: H. M. George V, King of England H.I.M. William II, German Emperor H. I. M. Nicholas II, Tsar of Russia H. L M. Franz Joseph, Emperor of Austria-Hungary H. M. Albert, King of Belgium ft. M. AlphonseXm, King of Spain H. M. Ferdinand, Taar of Bulgaria H. M. Helena, Queen of Italy' - H. M. Alexandra, Dowager Queen of England H. M. Margherita, Dowager Queen ' of Italy H. M. Maud, Queen of Norway H. H. Gustaf Adolf, Crown Prince of Sweden. Of course the patronage of Royalty has not made the Pianola great. Its unanimous choice by the world's leading Rulers however, as well as tha preference of the foremost musical authorities, is conclusive evidence of its unequivocal superiority to all other instruments of its kind. We are the Representatives of thte Pianola At our store you can hear or, buy the genuine Pianola. Practically every music store now sells player-pianos, but these are, one and all, imitations of the Pianola with the weaknesses that the word always implies. Important : There s, but one Pianola; it is . .: made only, by The Aeolian Com- ' IJan?;,,,s so'd ,,n-w"ty by us. and is obtainable in the following models: The Steinway Pianola ' The Wheelock Pianola The 3troud Pianola The famous Weber Pianola Prices from $550 , Moderate monthly payments and liberal allowance on pianos in exchange., t The Stroud PianoU Price Sjjo. C. J. HEPPE & SON 11174119 Ckettnut Street 6th and Thompson Streets , f "41 H 1315 WALNUT STREET i' ' aw