4 IERTA WMKTSII. S. TU WITUDRAViI CKHRGE U'IFFIIRES IT ONCE Announcement Is Made on Good Authority; Algara Wants Passports By Associated Press Washington, April, 22. —Huerta has requested the United States to with draw Nelson O'Shaughnessy, American charge D'Affaires at Mexico City. This was stated here early to-day on good authority but has not been offi cially announced. The reported action of General Huerta in asking the withdrawal of Mr. O'Shaughnessy, the American charge of embassy in Mexico City, and instructing Senor Algara, the Mexican charge of embassy here, to demand his passports, technically con stitutes a complete breach of diplo matic relations between the United States government and the defacto government of General Huerta, though whether Secretary Bryan is willing to regard It as more than the act of an individual and not of the actual government of Mexico, remains to be seen. There is no precedent for a refusal to accede to the demand for pass ports nor to fail to withdraw a diplo matic representative upon demand of an established government but the present situation, involving as it does a defacto government which the United States has not recognized nev er before has arisen. Such ft severance of diplomatic re lations. though not necessarily a pre lude to war is one of the steps that must bo taken if war is to be formally declared and it is surmised that Gen eral Huerta is now about to resort to that step regardless of any constru ction that may be placed upon the United States and Mexico by the ex ecutive of the former. If this surmise is well founded the I international relations of Mexico lie- ' cessarlly would be greatly affected and be readjusted to suit conditions of actual war, such as these arising from a blockade and the necessity of defining the rights of neutrals within Mexican territory. Piedras Negras Is Evacuated by Federals By Associated Press Eagle Pass, Texas, April 22.—Pied- Iras Negras, opposite Eajjle Pass, was evacuated by tha federal garrison early to-day after a night of wild ex citement. This morning more than two thousand refugees came to the American side of the Rio Grande for protection. General Guaardes' forces are now camped at Fuentes three miles south of Piedras Negras. waiting for trains to transport them to Satillo. All federal forces have bee nordered by general Maas to concentrate at Saltillo "to repel the American inva tion." Last night when the people of Piedras Negras learned that Ameri can marines had occupied Vera Cruz, a dozen recruiting offices were opened and arms issued to volunteer compan ies as fast as organized. Mor than 1200 volunteers, it was said, enlisted during the evening. CutßateMedicines AT KENNEDY'S 321 Market Street We Lead Others Follow Hood's Sarsaparilla 07$ Bliss Native Herbs 59$ Sal Hepatica I?s> 335, 00$ Ivodol Dyspepsia Tablets 335, 00$ DeVVitt's Kidney Pills 335, 00$ Sanitol Tooth Powder 15$ Jess Talcum 15$ Pond's Vanishing Cream 17$ Eckman's Alterative $1.50 Castoria 24$ Pinaud's Lilac 53$ Mary Garden Sachet $1.45 Mellin's Food 345, 55$ Mayr's Stomach Remedy » 07$ Scott's Emulsion 355, 00$ S. S S 07$, $1.17 Herpicide 335, 00$ Lapactic Pills, 100 27$ Red Cross Kidney Plasters 17$ Sargol 335, 00$ Nature's Remedy 17$, 335, 00$ Mary Garden Extract 90$ Mary Garden Talcum 45$ Daggett & Ramsdell's Cold Cream 17$ Pompeiian Massage Cream 03$ Pompeiian Massage Cream 48$ Pompeiian Massage Cream 33$ Spiro Powder ...: 10$ Euthymol Tooth Paste 17$ Creme Elcaya 33$ Mum I^s Remember Name and Place KENNEDY'S Cut Rate Medicine Store 321 Market Street WEDNESDAY EVENING fiARRISBURG TELEGftAffI APRIL 22,1914. TRAIN FILLED WITH AMERICANS HELD UP Belief Expressed That General Maas Has Delayed Journey of Refugees Vera Cruz, April 22. The second section of yesterday morning's train from Mexico City rilled with refugee Americans, and a special train of ref ugees have both oeen held up some- . where along the road to Vera CruE, | presumably by Generai Maas. Telegraphic communication with Mexico City was cut last night and It is assumed that the railroads are also cut. There are several hundred Ameri' cans In Mexico City, including the Charge D'Affaires, Nelson O'Shaugh nessy, his wife and child. Mexicans here protest vehemently against the suggestion that the pas -1 sengers on the stalled trains may be ! badly treated. Natural Features 0/ Vera Cruz Responsible For Death of Marines By Associated Press Washington, I>. C., April 22.—Nat ural features of the city of Vera Cruz and the character of the buildings along the water front were largely re sponsible for the loss of life of Ameri can bluejackets and marines who land ed there yesterday. This opinion was expressed to-day by government offi cials who are familiar with the cap tured city. Between the bay and the line of two-story buildings which face It is a vacant space of about 300 yards of beach, open to tiro from housetops. The. custom house, which can only be reached by crossing the open space, stands in this solid group of buildings at the end of one of the two long piers where the foreign merchant ships land. I-ike most of the structures in the I southern countries, the flat-roofed • buildings with their high coping form a veritable fortification from which riflemen may pick off those below in comparative safety, sheltered by the high wall which surrounds the edge of the. roof. As the blocks are prac tically solid, quite a formidable troop can be mustered on the top of a square of buildings. It was from this protected position that the Mexican troops opened flre on the bluejackets and marines. The scattered and disorganized re sistance on the part of the Mexicans is, in the opinion of these officials, proof of the utterly helpless condition of the Mexican troops. The Mexican people as a whole, one of these officials declared, were not unfriendly to the United States sol diers and the various demonstrations which have occurred can be traced directly to petty functionaries and police. Many of the inhabitants of Vera Cruz, unlike most Mexican cities, carry a strong taint of black blood and the negro type Is common among the citizens, though the negro himself is rare. In honor the four marines who we're killed and the twenty others In jured by the Mexicans in Vera Cruz yesterday, the Harrisburg Lodge, No. 107, Loyal Order of Moose, last even ing decorated its headquarters with American flags. HOUSE CBS IN RESOLUTION GIVING PRESIDENT POWERS On Viva Voce Vote "Ayes" Were in Pronounced Majority; Session Is Short Washington. D. C., April 22. —With- out debate and without the formality of a roll call the House to-day con curred in the administration's Mexi can resolution as adopted by the Sen ate which Justifies the President in using the armed forces of the United States in securing: amends for indigni ties suffered by the nation in Mexico. _ On the viva voce vote the "ayes" were in pronounced majority. A few negative votes were heard here and there on the Republican side when Speaker Clark put the question. After a thirty-minute session the House ad journed until noon, when Speaker Clark will sign the resolution. It will go then the Vice-President Marshall and should reach the White House late to-day. Representative Flood, chairman of the House foreign affairs committee, moved that the House concur In the Senate Justification resolution when the session opened at 10 o'clock. He urged that there be no conference. In addressing the House in support of the substitute for the House reso lution of justification Mr. Flood said that when he introduced the original resolution Monday he believed it was in the proper form to carry out the purposes outlined in the address of the President. "The original resolution made it clear that this country was not hos tile to the Mexican people," said Mr. Flood, "and did not desire to make I war on Mexico; the Senate amend ment state this in so many words. The substance of this resolution is, there fore. unchanged. In this momentous hour, and in the circumstances con fronting this country, prompt action Justifying and approving the course of the President is of the utmost im portance, and it would be childish to quibble over the words of the reso lution when the substance is the same, and this is the view of the President. I fear that an attempt has been made by gentlemen on the other side to make partisan capital of the present unfortunate situation between this country and Mexico. I hope the gen tlemen have exhausted their misguided efforts in that direction and that this House will give its approval to tha chief executive of this nation without a single dissent." "I do not believe that we ought to engage In a war with Mexico at this time for the reason suggested by the President," said Representative Mann, l who followed Mr. Flood. "Mr. Speaker, if we pass this reso lution we. have entered on war. Al ready we have tired on and killed Mexican citizens already involved in war In Mexico. I believe we ought to be patriotic enough to try to secure ' peace. "I have believed 'watchful waiting' I policy would involve us in war. I had hoped to prevent it." Tlje House recessed at 10.30 until ; noon to allow time for the engross- i ment of the Mexican resolution. It | will be signed at that time by Speaker Clark and will then go to the White House. Father of Dead Seaman Proud of Son Who Gave Life For His Country By Associated Press Philadelphia, April 22. —"It is hard, to' lose a son, but it's glorious to know that he gave lip his life for his coun-! try," was the father's comment to-day when officially notified of killing of George Poinsett, a 2 2-year-old seaman of the batleship Florida at Vera Cruz yesterday. A letter written by the young man's mother Is now in the mails addressed to him, in which she cautioned him to "be careful and don't get hurt." Eleven Foreign Ships Scattered Along Coast By Associated Press "Washington, D. C., April 22. — Eleven foreign warships, other than those of the United States, are scat tered along the Mexican coast, accord ing to an official list made public by the Navy Department to-day. They have a total of 66,156 tons and a per sonnel of 4,498 men. Four of *hese vessels are stationed ».t Vera Cruz. Plenty of Money on Hand, Says Underwood By Associated Press Washington, D. C., April 22. —Ma- jority Leader Underwood announced to-day that he did not expect the House to act on any bill appropriating money for war purposes ii> Mexico at the present time. "We have plenty of money now unless the President ex pects to march to Mexico City," said Mr. Underwood. "As far as I know, the President has no such Intention." Mexicans Know Little of Strained Relations Between Huerta and U. S. By Associated Press Mexico City, April 15, via Havana, April 22. (The following dispatch was set by mail to Havana in order to avoid the censorship established by General Huerta, which is more strict ly observed now than at any time heretofore): Every telegraph wire out of Mex ico City—commercial, railroad. or cable—ls now watched over by a cen sor, chosen from among the most re liable and intelligent men in the gov ernment telgraph service. These cen sors frankly inform would-be senders of dispatches that it is not a question of the veracity of messages nor whether they disclose military move ments, but is merely a question of sup pressing all news not favorable to the government. Code messages are absolutely pro hibited, with the exception only of bank telegrams. The bankers of Mex ico succeeded in having the embargo on these messages raised, but only after they had proved that the deten tion of the dispatches would seriously ! embarrass the financial department of the government. Warn Newspapermen Newspaper correspondents were . given to understand that if they were detected in using subterfuges to evade the censorship they would find them ' selves in jail. While Nelson O'Shaughnessy was acting as the messenger of the United States government to Provisional • President Huerta In the endeavor to ' .avert war between the two countries, [ more than 99 per cent. of the Mexican ( residents in the Federal capital went f about their affairs In total Ignorance > of the crisis. 1 General Huerta and his official fain- 7*Ais side wiU hut only j M. f) Arranging payment, w,' until these good. are CVtVIDTIT /V !» gone. You mart come t|u)UWU/j ~J2ZZ}t early to get the bert. ~WW WB WW WW W II 3:21 Market Street L______J MONROE HALL RECEIVERSHIP SALE SIO,OOO Furniture Purchase At 50 Cents o The Monroe Hall Company, of Bloomsburg, Pa., was forced out of busi ness and the Rothert Company purchased the stock. 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Sp~ -ice ..$22.50 ily cleverly concealed even from their Intimate friends all knowledge of strained relations between Mexico and the United States. The general pub lic was even more in the dark, since the newspapers published columns of glowing accounts of victories by the Federal armies in the North. Reports of Federal successes said to have occurred at places far beyond the limits of the telegraph lines were printed broadcast. One dispatch an nounced with great display that Gen eral Villa had been captured. Railroads Closed The railroads closed some time ago carrying freight to the north, as the limited supply of fuel oil on hand made It necessary to conserve It for the movement of military trains. Considerable apprehension has been aroused in the capital by the move ment of Emiliano Zapata, the rebel leader in the south, who, after gain ing undisputed possession of the State of Guerrero, with the exception of the port of Acapulce, has shown indica tions of moving northward. The southern rebels have recently gained considerably in numbers, and it is feared they may become formidable enough to venture an attack on the Federal capital. Wilson Administration Attacked in Senate Speech Made by Root Special to The Telegrafh Washington, D. C., April 22. ln the j course of the debate in the Senate dur- | ing last night, interrupted only for the j dinner recess, grave bitterness develop- j ed. A disturbing cause was furnished j by the attack upon Vera Cruz. The ; news of the killing of American sea- i men and marines in the streets of Vera Cruz served further to intlame the members of the Senate. The amendment offered by Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, gained sup porters. It expressed in a new pre amble the feeling that It was not BO much the course of the de facto Gov- ' ernment of ...exico as the deplorable general conditions in all parts of the i stricken republic, the killing and de spoiling of Americans and the state of ! aanrchy there existing, which made necessary such action on the part of j the President. At the same time it is evident that regardless of the protracted discussion of the resolution It will bo the resolu tion as prepared by the Senate commit tee on foreign relations and not. the personal attack upon Victorlano Hu ertu framed at the White House and in troduced yesterday in the House of Representatives by Chairman Flood, of the committee on foreign affairs, which eventually would pass. The delay of the Senate «as proving of grave embarrassment to the admin- i j istration. ' The most striking speech of the whole session of debating was made by Sena tor Root, of New York, who attacked ! the administration's foreign policy in harshest terms. The speech of Senator Root held the attention of the Senate for more than an hour. As he proceeded railing at ( the Democrats for conspicuous uertici- ! ency and deplorable ineptitude, .11 their ] handling the international relations of < the United States, the Democratic members of the Senate squirmed in their seats. . The speech was wormwood and gall to the men who have followed the ad ministration blindly from triumph to triumph in the course of moving through the halls of Congress the earlier administration measures of the Wilson program. Following upon the speech of Sena- , tor Lodge, in which the Wilson-Bryan ! foreign policy was warmly attacked, the Root speech came as salt In a raw woundl Mr. Hoot'a Prediction Mr. Itoot declared that when the Sen- , ate had acted on the resolution report ed yesterday by the Senate committee 1 on foreign relations the country would 1 be plunged into a war with conse quences that no man could foretell. In withering language Mr. Root de nied that the Tampico incident men- I tioned in President Wilson's address was the provocation for the adminstra tion's rushing to arms. He declared ' i with emphasis that the real cause back > : of the President's action was the de struction of American lives and prop- : erty long months that anarchy and riots prevailed in Mexico. , | The New York Senator intimated in I language that was not lost on Secre ! tary Bryan or other Democratic leaders I present that in employing the armed | forces of the Government against the i I Mexican republic the administration i was attempting to lull the American , i people into a state of forgetfulness that the policy of "watchful waiting" had j proved an utter failure. 1 | Protesting against the "war" resolu tion reported by the Senate committee : ! at the instance of the admlinstratlon, I Mr. Root declared that it was itiade- { quate in its statement of the reasons , given for turning loose the dogs of war J against Mexico. SuiiortH I.odice'a Substitute He insisted that if the resolution was to be passed it should enumerate i causes for war that would appeal to the | judgment of the civilized world. Mr. Root urged the adoption of the Lodge I substitute, which sets forth that the 1 President Is justified in using force ! against Mexico on the ground that American lives have been taken In Mexico and numerous affronts offered to the dignity of the United States Gov ernment. Senator Root reiterated time and again that if the administration resolu tion was reported Congress by giving assent could never Justify itself before ' the people of the United States or of | ' the world. ' Secretary Bryan moved uneasily in I i his seat from time to time ns the Sena j (tor from New York lashed the adminis-I tration. Pope Pius Interested in Present Situation By dissociated Press Rome, April 22. —Pope Plus Is evincing great Interest In the Mexican situation and to-day requested the Papal Secretary of State to keep him informed. I'm Sorry, Terribly Sorry, Says President Wilson By Associated Press Washington, D. C.. April 22. —"I'm sorry, terribly sorry," were President Wilson's first words when news of the loss of life in taking Vera Cruz first reached him. To-day the President was sad and disheartened. As he walked slowly to his office through the White House his head was bowed and his face a study in deep feelings and gravity. The President is trying to avert war to prevent further blood shed. I For the present the United States will content itself with holding the customs house at Vera Cruz, collect ing duties and preventing shipments of arms from reaching Huerta. Tam plco is the next objective point. It has not yet been decided whether a blockade alone would be maintained there or the custom house seized. Secretary Bryan was the President'* first visitor early to-day. He, too, howed a change in demeanor. His eyes were sleepless and his face ashen white. No disturbances In Mexico City or a demonstration against Amer icans had been reported, he said. He said he thought O'Shaugflnessy's dis patch was filed yesterday afternoon ate. Officials in Hiding! Fletcher's Note Not Presented by Mexican By Associated Press Vera Cruz, April 22.—Hear Admiral Fletcher's note sent to the local otfi cllas .calling on them to co-operate with the American officers in the re ■■ storation of order by calling off sharp- I shooters and by resuming the local iKovernment could not bo delivered. Julio Franco, the Mexican chosen I by American Consul Canada to be the i hearer of the warning, was unable to j | communicate with nny of the federal joffii-iols and only the mayor, Robert | | Diaz, vould be located, j When Franco triitd to communicate j with the mayor he was refused ad- mission by Mexican guards stationed at the door. Franco then crawled over the roof of an adjoining building into the court of the Diaz residence but he did not succeed in seeing the mayor. Senor Diaz refused to leave his bed room so Consul Canada's messenger shouted the contents o. Rear Admiral Fletcher's note to the mayor and per sonally appealed to him to yield in order to save the city from bombard ment by the American ships, remind ing him of the grave risk to the fami lies of Mexicans and otherss in tho city. Communication Severed Communication between the port of Vera Cruz and the federal capital lias been entirely sovered. All the tele graph and the cable wires are down and E. F. Hundley, superintendent of terminals, has been unable to ascertain what has become of the trains that were on their way here yesterday from Mexico when the landing of American marines and bluejackets took place. At the terminal here there are eight locomotives and several hundred cars. The unwillingness of storekeepers to keep their places open and tho almost total depletion of supplies at the restaurants where the proprie tors continued doing business made it difficult for any one except the Amer ican fighting forces to obtain anything to eat. Tobacco is another commodity of which the supply has practically become exhausted. Missionaries Ordered to Hurry to Vera Cruz By Associated Press New York, April 22. American missionaries in Mexico have been or dered to proceed with all possible speed to Vera Cruz by the Roard of Foreign Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church. A large number have already gone to the coast. i " By Associated Press Washington, April 22. —Speaker Clark signed the joint resolution justi fying the President in using armed forces in Mexico at $12.03 o'clock. As Speaker Clark at 10.30 stood with poised hand about to attach his signature to the resolution, Represen tative Mann made the point that he was acting without authority as It was necessary for the Senate to be Inform ed that the House concurs in Its sub ! stitute. j The Speaker replied that he had no doubt. Mr. Mann was technically cor rect and thereupon Representative Underwood said he would move, that I the House recess until noon when the Senate wouid convene.