Paris Is Planning to Foriify Itself Against Future Attacks fey German Aeroplanes HARRISBURG ifilsftl TELEGRAPH LXXXIII — No. 242 MACK'S ATHLETICS IDE CONFIDENT OF FIRST BOSTON GAME Boston Braves, However, Predict That They Can Make It Three Straight GREAT CROWD SEES GAME Playing Field Dry and Fast; Bet ting Was 10 to 7 on Bos ton at Opening P y Associated Press Fenwav Park. Boston. Mass., Oct. j 2.—The Athletics, champions of the American I.eague. twice vanquished bv the Boston Braves, went to grips to-dav with the National League win ners in the third battle of the world s series. Some 35,000 wildly enthusi astic spectators saw the Athletics make i desperate stand on the Bostons' ball field to stave off a third defeat, which would all but end their chances of bearing off the world's championship. The Bostons, inspired by thousands ..f the home folks that filled Fenway Park, tried for a third victory with ihe same keen pursuit of conquest iliat enabled them to twice topple over the American Leaguers on their own bailiwicks. "We've got the jump on the Ath letics and they never can get up enough speed to catch us now, said Manager Stalling*, of the Bostons. "The* have never seen Tyler in action and Rudolph is ready if we need him to-dav. Bender can't come back so ; cion. and if he does we will beat him again. There is only the Athletics' second string artillery to stop us." "We have not been hitting." said <'aplain Ira Thomas, of the Athletics, "and any team looks feeble when it is not gettinc in solid blows. Wat' h us to-day. i >ur club is not the one to take a third straight beating." Baseball Crazy Boston was plainly baseball crazed to-dav. Hundreds swarmed all night at the gates of Fenway Park. Within an hour after the unreserved stands were flung open every seat was taken and scores lined the back field fences and pressed against a guard fence erected around the rear of the outfield. Once the crowd- broke the wooden barrier and mounted police had to drive the people back into the en closure. A force of carpenters re paired the fence; All- this was three hours before game time. When the crowd was not surging it was cheer 'ng. Outside the fences, unable to r, admittance, thousands clamored vainly to get in. The gates were closed, however, and barred by the police. An Indian summer day was fur nished for the contest. The sun glowed brightly in a dear sky and the air was balmy. The playing field was flint dry and lightning fast. Retting was 10 to 7 on the Bostons to take the series. Wagers at these odds were made at noon. Bush and Tyler The Bostons were served in batting practice by the southpaw C'ottrell and Cochran, a right-hander. While this was golnc on Pitcher Rudolph and Shortstop Maranville talked over the plays In the series with Rddie Collins, the Athletics' second baseman. Ru dolph took part in batting practice alon« with the left-hander, Tyler. | Continued oil Page 8] Pine Street Congregation to Consider Plans For the Boyd Institution Reports of plans for the erection of the John Y. Boyd Institution for Boys of the Pine Street Presbyterian Church will be rend at a congrega tional meeting of the church Wed nesday evening. \ committee com posed of T. T. Wierman. 11. B. Me- C'orniick and F. J. Hall met at noon to-day. The building operations will not likely be started before next Spring. 123456789 R H E Boston □□□ncKjEiQE] mmmm Athletic OQQDQEJQIEiIE] H HI H Late News Bulletins TRADERS WILL GET SUPPORT W a-hington, Oct. 12.—President Wilson to-day gave assurances that \meriean merchants trading in Kurope would have the govern ment back of them to the limit of their rights and that he did not ex pect that tJiere would be any Interference on the part of the nations a i »ar. WILSON MADE NO PEACE MOVES Washington. Oct. 12.—Various reports about efforts of the Wash ington government to set up |>eace negotiations between the warring Kuropcan nations were set at rest to-day by President Wilson. He told cullers that he had made no direct peace representations to any of the powers since his lirst note tendering the good oflices of the United Slates. I ANOTHER AEROPLANE DROPS BOMBS Paris, Oct. 12, 11.15 A. M.—-A Ocrniau aeroplane, al a quarter past ten this morning dropped bombs between two railroad trains that were In the net of pulling out of the Northern Kallroad station. The missiles did not explode and were later found imbedded two feet In the earth. The railroad trains were crowded with passengers. RETIRED OFFICERS ORDERED OUT l«ndon, <>et. 12, i.lfl P. M.—lt is semi-oflicUUly announced to-day nt Petrograd, ni-cordlng to a dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph from the Russian capital, that owing to llie great losses sustained by the (ierman armies all oflh-ers and noncommissioned oflleers who ever have I teen In the army are ordered to rejoin the colors without regard to age. THE REV. WALTER M. WHITE ELECTED Atlanta. Ga.. Oct. 12.—The Rev. Walter M. White, Cedar Rapids la., elected president to-day of the International Convention of the Disciples of Christ. CONSUL NOMINATED Washington, Oct. 12.—The President to-da> nominated tlames C. Monoghan of Bajonne, N. J„ to be consul at Kingston, Jamaica. TEACH CHILDREN 10 STUDY BIBLE, URGES DOCTOR BRUMBAUGH Preaches Plain Gospel Message at Annual Rally Day in Fifth Street Church LONG FRIEND OF DR. HART'S McCormick Talks on "Political Is sues"; Pinchot Speaks in the Evening Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh, not as a candidate for Governor, but as a sim ple man of God. yesterday morning preached the annual rally day sermon at the Fifth Street Methodist Epis copal Church, Fifth and Granite streets Ills message was to the Sunday school teacher particularly, but the plain gospel truths which he ex pounded went straight home to every man and woman in the \ast congre gation. I He spoke at the request of the Rev. | 15. H. Hart, pastor, who for more than | a score of years has been the personal j friend of the great educator and ! churchman. Dr. Brumbaugh was on I the faculty of the college at Huntlng { don when the Rev. Mr. Hart was pas i tor of the little charge at that place, i more than a score of years ago. In i Introducing the speaker of the morn | ing Mr. Hart said: j "! am glad to Introduce the speaker of tlie morning to you, for lie will some day be President | oi die United states. Then you Mill all Ite glad to say you liavo | heard him and met him. "l>r. Brumbaugh," said Mr. Hurt, "is tlie same old-fashioned, big-hearted man lie was when lie preached in my little church at Huntingdon, and I am sure will bring you the same simple, straightforward message that he always rang In the dajs when we two were 'boys'." Teaching the children to study the Bible and more consistent church and Sunday school attendance on the part of adults. T>r. Brumbaugh said, are the things needed to make religion the chief directing force in the building of Pennsylvania citizenship. Or. Brumbaugh preached a straight forward message to an audience of two thousand men and women on the Hospel of Works. Never for an in stant was there the least utterance of a political nature, but he told a story to the generous-hearted railroad folk, who make up t'r.e congregation of the Fifth Street Church, which showed his stand on the liquor question better than anything he ever has said or could say in a political speech. "Kven before your good pastor knew [Continued on I'ogc 12] ONE KILLED. 8 BT 111 Ell WEEK-END Ml ACCIDENTS Cars Turn Turtle; York Girl Will Die, Say the Hospital Physicians I One woman was killed, another fatally injured and Ave other persons hurt in two automobile acci dents of the week-end, the one oc curring near Newport, the other a short distance below Highsplre. Mrs. Uriah Shuman was killed and [Continued on Page "] HARRTSBUR(i. PA., MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 12, 1914 M'CORMICK AND CHILD LAB OR The Ballot Can Rtmtdylhf Vance C McCormlck, through his newspaper. The Patriot. Is pretending to favor advanced child labor laws. Yet the Democratic party,of which he is the a ok„owled B e«l \ h £™Vdn.m up for McCormlck am" Pafmer." were in the «treet«'"inril o late hoi.r in the night, tottering along under their heavy loads when they ought to have been In bed because McCormick and his ' '"" ' J |j boen thrown for less wages than would havo been required to employ some of the hundreds of men who ha\e neen xn out of work by the operations of the Democratic tariff law. JACKSON REPORTS MANY IDLE MEN IN j KEYSTONE STATE; Results of Study of Only 802 Plants Show 125,000 Persons Have Lost Jobs Dr. John Price Jackson, State com missioner of labor and industry, In a statement urging Pennsylvania cities to establish employment Tmreaus. says that 1 25.000 persons have either left or lost their employment In 802 in dustrial plans of the Keystone State between the first of June last year and the same day this year. These plants were specially Investigated by the agents of the department to find opt the maximum and minimum forces [Continued on Page 7] SECOND AHAL FOOD SHOW OPENS TONIGHT WITH NEW FEMES Decorators and Carpenters Have Been Busy Since Thursday; Price Reduced This Year With an increased number of ex hibits and more elaborate displays and demonstrations than in 1913, Harris burg's second annual pure food show will be opened at the Chestnut street auditorium <to-nlght at 7.30 o'clock. The exhibition is under the direction of the Manufacturers' Pure Food Ex hibition Company of Harrisburg. At the head of this enterprise are Frank [Continued on Page 3] "CHKKK IP" IS BRUMBAUGH'S MKSSAGF. TO COX NIK MACK Dr. Martin (J. Brumbaugh on Saturday sent the following mes sage to Connie Mack: "Cheer up; our confidence un shaken. You are bound to win. •MARTIN G. BRUMBAUGH." L»r. Brurobnugh received the fol lowing message from Mack: "Your telegram expressing your confidence in our winning shows you to be n true F^nnsylvanian." "CONNIE MACK." Mr. Cupid Sits On Dauphin Bench With Judge Kuakel Pretty Prosecutrix in Deserti Settle D President Judge Kunkel and Mr. Daniel Cupid are very much in ca hoots. That long suspected state of affairs w.)s confirmed this morning in Sep tember quarter sessions desertion and nonsupport court when Carl C. Moyer was arraigned to answer a charge of failure to support his young wife, a putty prosecutrix of the present ses sions. Mrs. Moyer said her husband was awfully ugly 'round the house at times, cussed and in other ways wasn't at all nice. Not that he ever struck her or even attempted to strike her; he just swore and otherwise "made life unbearable" for her. Moyer declared that he couldn't un derstand his wife's attitude: he. wanted her to live with him; he hadn't under stood why she left him; in fact, he had no intimation of it. he said, until REV. CLUTE EXPOSES NEW SIGNAL CODE EMPLOYED BY HOOOS New System Devised Because So Many People Knew Mean ing of Old OKor the benefit of housewives har assed by hobos, who desires the elimination of the jA" ifc. nuisance, the Rev. f\y\ Horace E. Clute, pastor of the Church of the —i Holy Nativity, New i» I ■ I I York city, and a 111 brother of the 'I Misses Clute. 313 North Second V / I street, has reveal- V fsia. Ed their new code yV I I of signals. The /\ ' ■ interpretation of the signs is print ed In the current \ issue of The De % / y i liniator. \f These signs are w usually chalkod on fences or side walks In the cities and In tho country carved on posts, trees or other promi nent plsces. The symbols are crude yet serve very well the purpose the 1 Continued on Pace 71 in Court and Happy Husband [fferences one evening he returned from his trip on the railroad and discovered that his wife had departed. "Cm." mused Judge Kunkel, "why can't these young folks get together and live together?" Senator E. E. Beidleman, counsel for Moyer, and John Fox Weiss, coun sel for Mrs. Moyer, promptly agreed thit it would be an excellent thing If this wero possible. "Then suppose," suggested Judge Kunkel, "they go into another room and see if they can't make up and settle their differences." A little later they returned, along with their counsel. The lawyers were grinning; so was Mr. Moyer; Mrs. Moyer was shyly smiling. "Is it all fixed up?" the reporters asked the attorneys. "Sure," they responded. And so it was. REPUBLICANS OPEN VIGOROUS CAMPAIGN THROUGHOUT COUNTY Headquarters Opened and Mass Meetings Scheduled For Every Evening Until Election The campaign in Dauphin county will be vigorously prosecuted during the remaining three weeks by the Republican committee. The party headquarters in the Wyeth building will be open every day from now until election, in charge of William H. Ilor ner, county chairman, and Harry P. Oven, city chairman. "The outlook is very bright for a Republican victory in Dauphin this Kali," said County Chairman Horner this morning. "The registration is overwhelmingly in favor of our party, the Republicans far outstripping in numbers all of the other parties com bined. After careful investigation I find that this is largely due to a re turn of large numbers of Republicans [Continued on Page 7] QUEEN IS UN OSTEND By Associated Press London, Oct. 12, 2 p. m.—Definite | Information has been received here that the Queen of the Belgians, not withstanding the report last week that she had reached England, has not left OsLend for London. 12 FAGES. * POSTSCRIPT Desperate Fighting Is in Progress All Along Battle Line in France Heaviest Encounters Are Now Going on Between Lassigny and Lens; Official Statements Are Brief Concerning Fighting in Both East and West; Bombs Dropped on Paris; Cathedral at Antwerp Reported Only Slightly Damaged The official war news is brief hut official statements are not needed to make plain that momentous results hang on the fortunes of the desperate battles now being waged at vital points on the line tliat stretches from Switzerland through northern France to within twenty-five miles of the straits of Dover. 1 lie heaviest fighting is on the line of Lassigny and Lens. This afternoon's official report from Paris says that the allies repulsed German attacks between Arras and the Oise and that cavalry en gagements continue in the region of La Bassee, Estaires and Hase brouck Special attention is directed to Ostend. There have assembled the greater part of the Belgian army and about two thirds of the British forces that escaped from Antwerp. It is believed that Ger many is pushing forward to attack the city with tlie hope of captur ing and using the port in her operations against England. A bitter struggle to keep the Germans from the coast is in evitably. To-day's reports indicate that the German cavalry advance is less than thirty miless distant from Ostend. STRENGTH OF ALLIES NOT KNOWN The strength of the allies at Ostend is not known. It is pos sible that British reinforcements which were unable to reach Ant verp in time to help in the defense of that city arc now in Ostend. Still loss i". known of the situation in the eastern theater of war Petrograd is silent on recent developments. The Russian war office explains this silence on the grounds of strategy Vienna claims that the Russian attack on Przemysl, the strong fortress in Austrian Galicia. lias failed. Berlin asserts that the Russian advance on the East Prussian frontier has been checked while the Germans are steadily working eastward in Russian Poland. Neutral sources report that cholera is spreading in Austria. German airmen dropped two bombs in Paris this morning. The missiles struck in the yards of the Northern railway station but failed to explode. Taking of Antwerp Resulted in Loss of Thousands of Germans Rotterdam, via London, Oct. 12, 4.48 A. M.—A correspondent of the Tidj describing the scenes at Antwerp saps: "When the outer forts were si lenced, the Belgians, their beads swathed In bandages and their clothes smeared with mud withdraw to the inner line. Two commandants blew up their forts and spiked their guns. "Tho Germans succeeded in forcing a breach iu the inner girdle of forts sooner than was expected. Belgian mines of the inner and outer forts cost the Germans thousands of lives, but General VonHeseler, the German com mander, apparently had been ordered to take the city at all costs with a view of safeguarding the German army in the north of France. "The siege of Liege was as nothing in comparison to the last two nights of the bombardment of Antwerp which was the most terrible of the war. While tho bombardment was at its height the prisoners began to batter at the doors of their cells because bombs had pierced the roofs of the prison. They howled like mad men until released and then rushed through the street plundering houses." Paris Making Plans to Prevent Airship Raids Paris, Oct. 12, !».40 a. m.—The prog ress of the campaign in the North of France and the fall of Antwerp were forgotten for a moment to-da.v by tho people of Paris who spent their time discussing the throwing of bombs on the capital from German aeroplanes as a result of which three persons were killed yesterday and 14 wounded. At the same time officials adopted meas ures looking to the prevention of simi lar acts in tho future. The first thing done was the ap pointment of General ilirschauer to take charge of the aerial defense of the city. General Ilirschauer is an aeronautic expert. He organized last year the aerial branch of the army service. Later a number of deputies met at the call of the Deputy t>enys Cochin to consider various means of j rendering the city more secure from iaeroplane attacks. I The creation of aerial squadrons stationed at cardinal points to bo al ways ready to dash after the aircraft of the enemy as soon as they shall be seen approaching the city; the arming of fast monoplanes with quick firing guns and the telephoning of warnings by residents of the capital to the French Aero Club which is now under military control, were among the sug gestions discussed. AGREE TO RAM ZEPPELINS London, Oct. 12. Walter Rundman, president of the Board of Trade, at a patriotic meeting In Kingsway Hall, ! here Saturday night, said: "If Zep pelins raid London all the members of I the British flying corps have pledged j themselves to dash their machines right through the German airships, even ■if both are brought to earth. On 'one passing through London," continued l the speaker, "ean see that we expect I a visit by German aircraft." HIGHWATKK MARK PASSKI) IX PAYMENTS OF PENSIONS Special to The Telegraph Washington, Oct. 12.—1n the report | of Gaylord M. Saltzgaber, commission er of pensions, for the fiscal year end ,inK June 30, 1914, shows that the high j water mark in expenses for pensions in the United States has been passed. That year 785,239 pensioners receiv ed from the government $172,417,- 546.26 at an administrative cost of more than $2,000,000. The total of pensions paid murks a decline of about | $2,000,000 from the preceding year, |when the oils were heavily recruited j under the old agf pension account of i 1912. King's Death Likely to Remove Obstacle Which Has Menaced Russia By Associated Press Petrograd. Oct. 12, via X.ondon, 1.05 a. ni.—An official statement given out to-day expresses the belief that the death Saturday of King Charles of Rumania removes an obstacle to the turning of Rumania to the cause of the allies, to which end recent Rus sian diplomatic efforts were unavail able. It is said further that the sym pathies of the Rumanian people, who in the past have shown that they weer opposed to the championing of Prussia by the late King, will not as sert themselves. Consequently, according to Russian authorities, Rumania will cease to menace Russia by furnishing provis ions and transporting troops for Ger many. Russians Driven From Przemyal, Austrian Claim By Associated Press London, Oct. 12, 10.55 A. M.—A dis patch from Amsterdam to Reuter's Telegram Company says: "A telegram from Vienna says it is officially announced that the Austrian advance has relieved Przemysl, Gala da, of the Russians. The Austrians have entered the fortress at all points and where the Russians attempted re sistance they were beaten. The Rus sians fled iu the direction of the river San, attempting to cross at Sinlava and Lnajnk where a great number were captured." THE WEATHER For IVarrlnhnrg; nn«l violnllyj Fair to-nlKlitt TiifNilny partly cloudy| not much clihiikc In -tempera ture. For ICiiMtcrn l»cnn*yl\nnln: Fair to-niuhU Tuesday partly cloudy | Kcntlc to moderate north wlndw. Yesterday'* Weather lllfcheftt temperature, HO. l.oueNt temperature, tftf. Mean temperature, 73. !\ormal teinnerature, ofl. Temperature: S n. m.. 61!. Sun: Hlmca, 11:12 p. m.; aeta, 5:32 p. m. Moon: lllmcm, 11:11 p. n». ltlver St meet Klttht-tentbn of a foot above- low water mark. r \ HOW WE HELP THE RETAILER Every time this newspaper prints the advertising of a standard article It is helping the retailers who handle that prod uct. It in to the Interest o? re tailers that a newspaper should Increase Its general advertising —because It stimulates business at their stores. People like to see the goods they read about 'in the news papers. If price and quality suits them they will buy. Kvery sale means a customer and profit to the retailer. Retailers help their home newspaper and holp themselves when they push these goods. It Is co-opi»ratton profitable • Hllke to the dealer, the manufac turer. the newspaper, and the consu iner.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers