American Consul and Other Noncombafanfs HARRISBTJRG tSSsii TELEGRAPH LXXXIII— No. 244 80MBS DAMAGE NEW I YORK CATHEDRAL A 1 RECTORYjPRIESTHURI Police Believe Work Was Done by Same Person or Persons; Motive a Mystery AUTHORITIES INVESTIGATING Boy Praying in Church, Thirty Feet Away From Bomb, Sustained Injuries By Associated Press New York, Oct. 14.—From bits of iron picked up in both St. Patrick's Cathedral and in the yard of St. Al- ' phonsus rectory in V est Broadway, | the police believe that the bombs ox- j ploded yesterday alternoon and early : to-day at the two edifices were tlie ■work of the same person or persons. The the bomb la the cathedra, was placed there by a demented person was the opinion expressed by Moii slgnor La\elle, who left the scene of the explosion a few minutes before it occurred. The explosion rendered a boy kneeling in prayer, tliirtv feet away, unconscious and tore a hole in \ the noor several fe>it wide, splintered nearby pew doors and chopped the marble ceiling. The lomb in the | area way at St. Alphonsus Church ex ploded seven hours after the one at the cathedral and slightly injured a priest. It is believed to have con-1 tained a higher charge of exp'os:ves from the fact that windows in the rectory and in nearby buildings were shattered or loosejed so that they fell from their frames. The shock of both explosions was felt tor several blocks from the two edilices. At both the cathedral fad the rectory the down ward force of the explosions added! weight to tl>j opinion of the police | that bo'h bombs contained dynamite. The exp.oston it the cathedral Willi not cause any cessation in the usual services. An hour after it occurr.-d the doors of the editioe were open. Before the explosions of the two bombs a man who said he was Olaf Olsen stationed himself at tho en trance of the Holy Trinity Church in West Secoi. d street, to deliver an anticlerical speech ana to shout ob jectionable remarks at persons enter ing and commg out of the church. la common with itvmi otiur| churches last Spring, St. Alphonsus on March 3 was visited by an iriny of unemployed under the leadership of Frank Tannenbaum. The men iorced their way Into the chur< h and almost all of them were arrested. Tannen- I baum was found gulf of partidpat- , ing in an unlawtul assemblage and sentencer to nerve a year in th • Black well Island Penitentiary and to pay a Sue of SSOO. He has served a little more than half of his term. Four Men Injured When Rope Breaks in Colliery By Associtted Press Hazletcn, Pa., Oct. 14.—The rope attached to the tirs*. loaded car hjist ed up an Inside slope at the Hazleton shalt colliery of the Lehigh Valley Ccal Compar y broke this mornini, and dashing tack to the bottom, caught, four men standing near a switch, in juring two of then, so badly that they tnay die. They are Manus O'Donneli. compound fracture of skull and in ternal injuries, recovery doubtful; An drew McKelvey, miner, fractured l skull, fracture oC right les above and below knee and Internal injuries, cor- 1 dixion critical; Adam Douglass, com pound fracture- of left leg; John Hani seek, fractures of both legs. All the ' victims of the accident are residents of this city. NEW KING TAKES OATH London, Oct. 14.—King Ferdinand ©f Rumania, in the presence of the members the royal family, the dip lomatic corps and other notables, to ,k the oath of office yesterday in succes sion to his uncle. King Charles, ac cording to a dispatch from Bucharest. King Charles died at his country sea*, in Slnala on Saturday. FOl"XI> WITH SKI LL CRI'SHKI) Tariaqua, Pa., Oct. 14.—Found ly ing lr the street at Lansford early this morning with hi skull crushed, Mike Ball* war taken to the Coaldals Hos- i pltal where he died this afternoon without regaining consciousness. i -1 .1 . ■ . .... _ Late News Bulletins SCHUCHS WAS WELL KNOWN Washington. (>ot. 11.—One of the most picturesque and inllucntial characters in the Philippines and a dominating force for good »»s Charlie Schuchs. whose death at tl e hums of a Moro, Is reported. General Hugh Scotl, assistant chief of The arin> sUiIT. spoke feelingly to-day of this num. vho hail x-rved (icnerpl Scott when lie was gover nor of Jolo province, and General I.< onard Wood, in the capacity of in terpreter and general advisor during the lieriod of American occupa tion. EARTHQUAKE IN JAMAICA Kingston. Jamaica, Oct. II.—A rather severe earth shock was felt at 2.15 o'clock this morning. It lasted ten s.-oonds. Two lesser move ments followed. No damage was reported. LADY VICTORIA MARRIED »w York, Oct, 14.—Joincs Cot Brady. son of the late Anthony X. Brady and Lady Victoria May Pery, daughter of the Karl and Coun tess of Limerhk, of Dromore cattle IJmerick. Ireland, were married to-d.iy at Monmonth lieacn, X. J. .Ymhony V. Brady left a fortune es timated at seo.eoo.ooo. ENTER PLEAS OF GUILTY Xew York, Oct. 14.—Romeo W. Nathan and Edward J. Ma.rr, two of the defendants charged with defrauding wealthy hook lovers out of nearly 310.000,000 to-day ertered pleas of cullty'in the t'nlted States District court. TRAMWAYS LINES SEIZED Mexico City, Oct. 12. (by Courier to Vera Crus, Oct. H>. —The selxure of the Mexico Tramways Company lines by the Carranza gov ernment to-day was mado at the point of the Nijonet. TO Ull BIDS FOR HTHER MILE AND A HALF Of PAVING Cotnmi: sioner Lynch Will Receive Proposals For 31,000 Yards on October 24 COMPLETES 1914 PROGRAM Effort to Finish Derry St. Before F..11; Money From Inter est Balances U'.ds for more than a mile and a I i hi. If .'f paving—the last of the street in prowment planned for the 1914 1 pr.^gran —will be opened at noon Sat ! urdav, October -4. by City Commis sioner .Vllllam H Lynch, superlntend ; ent of streets and public improve -1 m«nU. The sections of streets to be paved in' lud« unit..prove 1 portions of Era ler Id. Apricot. Wengert. Whlsler, Pr mri -e. 15 ruber, Sw ib. Nineteenth, Wiart ui, Howard. Ethel. Market. Nlnetc nth nr.d Horry streets. All told ab .ut 31,000 square yards are to be ' pu' down and this will require ap jpn ximat.lv 1 feet of curbing. I Th > c irblng will be ..f granite of the •fix-inch \\idth. t 'on nilsstoner Lynch said to-day that 1 e hopes to get much or all of the | .oposed paving jobs under way befor. cold weather sits in, but he dot bt. whether this can be accom- I pll; hed. The sections that will likely tie gl'en attention tirst will be Derrv sir-11 from Twenty-third to the city lini. .vlilch will mean the completion [Continued on Pago 12] MAY PH<>l,ON<; SKSSIOX By Associated Press V. nshlnzton. D. «'•, Oct. 14.—I'pon the . ite of a proposal to-day to attend the 'v.ir revenue bill to provide for the government purchase of f>,000,000 I bale* of COttOB to relieve Southern • ott >n growers may hinge tho ques tion !' time of adjournment of Con t-re- \ The proposed amendment, final detf-t:* "f which had been decided upoc it a conference of Southern Sen atot- wis to be introduced In the Sen: te to-day. MANUFACTURERS OF ! DM com FOB SPUBLICAI TICKET Protection of American Industries One Vital Issue of Present Campaign Manufacturers of this county who I comprise the Dauphin county branch of tho Pennsylvania Protective Union, organ zed prior to the primaries in the interest of protective tariff policies and -he re-tdectlon of protectionist 1 candidates of both branches of Con gress. met to-dav in the office of the IC. Day Rudy company. Third and Mora h streets, for the llrst time since | tho primaries ind renewed their alle giance to th-- cause and candidates they '• ive espoused. S. I . Dunkle, of the Harrlsburg . Manula Hiring and Boiler Company, [chsirm in of the branch, made a speech lln which he ridiculed the attempt of [th-? present administration to evade "the < nlv issue that exists" and to :r-?ate all sorts of ficticious issues. I "Ti: re haj recently fallen into my [font lined oil Pa««* 3] KILLED B1 MORO By As- dated Press I Manila. <'ct. 14.—Charley Schuck 1 wis ki led ami his wife wounded to dny b. a Moro n>-.ir Jolo. The man's h'-ad was severed from his body. No ir -.n for the murder is assigned. Shuck h Id lived among the Moroa for thirty : ears and was held in the high eft esteem. HARRISBTJRG, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 14, 1914 HIS DREAM OF POWER > • J / rHE a wster\s^ j "r^-- THOUSINDS GET TIPS ON MANIIFHOTIIRE OF PURE FOODS fiT SHOW Demonstrators Point Out Value of Buying Advertised Goods at Big Exhibit In the large crowd at the Pure Food Exhibit at Chestnut Street Auditorium last night were many out-of-town vis itors. The attendance was almost double that of the opening night, run ning close to 5,000. To-night many new features are promised. The Brelsford Packing and Storage Company will hand out delicious ham and bologna sandwiches and will tjjll about their sausages, frankfurters and meats of all kinds. The Bernard Schmidt exhibit is proving a big attraction. The three [Continued on Page 7] Lebanon County Republicans Rally Special to The Telegraph I Annville, Pa., Oct. 14. A rousing Republican masa meeting was held last evening at Beit grove, three miles to the north of this town, when the Re publican candidates told the voters why they should mark a straight Republi can ticket. William J. Noll, chairman of the Lebanon county committee, pre sided. and introduced as the first speaker of the evening Dr. I. K. Urlch, candidate for the Legislature. Dr. Urlch spoke on the benefits received from the Republican party, and by his witty remarks soon had his hearers in full sympathy with the Republican cause Alfred A. Mills, Deputy Pro th<>notary of Lebanon county, made a short address for the Republican can dates in the State as well as the local candidates. Betweun the speeches the quartet, composed of Lebanon Valley College students, rendered selections. THE WEATHER For Harrishura and vicinity: In hfttlni weather, prolMkly ruin to night or Thursdays not much ibanKf In temperature. For Kiutern I'ennsylvnnia: I'nset 'tleil to-night, probably rain In ■outheaNt portion; Thursdny part ly cloudy t moderate nort beaut nlnda. Hlver The main river will remain nearly ntatlonary to-night and probably Thursday. A stage of about .8 of a foot In Indicated for llurrls burK Thursday morning. (General Conditions Pressure continues high over the Kooky Mountain* and the !*laln*i State*, but it baa diminished In the Northwestern States. It has Increased east of the Mississippi river and continues relatively low over (he southern part of the I'nlted States. Temperature! 8 a. m., S3. Sunt KJaea, oil 4 a. m.| acta, R:29 p. m. Moont New moon, October 10, 1i33 a. m. River Stair*: C.lght-tent hs of a foot above low water mark. Yesterday's Weather Highest temperature, (M. Lowest temperature, 55. Mean temperature, fiO. Normal temperature, 35. MAURI AGS LICENSES Andrew Yaros. Middletown, and Julia B. Pisalski, Danville. George B. Herncane, Huntingdon, and Blanche W. Fog el, Philadelphia, ' ITOIIIIO OFFICIALS STUDY THIS CITY'S I DIM SYSTEM Books of All Departments Thrown Open and Explained to Canadians l Mayor H. C. Hocken, of Toronto, 1 and other officials of the Canadian [ I city came to Harrisburg to-day in Mayor Hocken says Toronto wants ! municipal utilitv plants but the war > j search of a new accounting; system. • in Europe makes it impossible for the t j city to borrow at reasonable interest i! the sum required to purchase the , j plants desired. He hopes to find, dur . I ing his trip, some system which will i! help Toronto out of its difficulties. <: Mayor Hocken and his party have al [Continued on I'age 7] West End Republican J Club Presents Flags to School and Club ' j The West End Republican Club has : ! presented a large flag to the Riverside ' j school and it will be raised at a cele- I , bration to be held next Saturday after . , noon at 2.30 o'clock, at which Con gressman Aaron S. Kreider will make j the principal address. H. A. Douglas, t; president, will represent the club. • ! The West End Republican Club has , j also presented a flag to the Keystone , | Motorcycle-Club and it will be raised | over the club's quarters at Thirteenth , ! and Walnut streets this evening with • ; speeches by Augustus Wildman and • j Joshua W. Swartz, candidates for the I | Legislature. NO TAX OX "POOR MAX'S MEDICI XE" J Washington, D. C., Oct. 14. Pro • posed taxation of proprietary medicines " i in the war revenue bill was ordered stricken out to-day by the Democrats of the Senate finance committee. Re ! ports had come of general opposition | throughout the country and Majority ' Leader t'nderwood and other members of the House ways and means commit tee, had given notice that the House would not agree to a ta\ on the "poor man's medicine." Cl'RB MARKET RESUMES New York. Oct. 14. The curb, or outside market, resumed business in a tentative way to-day, trading being re stricted to stocks selling under $lO a share. In most instances quotations were on a lever, or above July 30 prices, but dealings, which had the sanction of the Stock Exchange, were very light. Don't Rock the Boat Row! Row! Row! Just sitting tight in squally weather won't do—a firm pair of hands at the oars is much better. When the ground swell from Europe hit our industries, the wise men did not merely sit still. They glimsed fair water ahead, and saw still further on the harbor of prosperity. They began to row and they are getting there. One of the best pair of oars e business man can use when things begin to slacken up is definite, constructive, business b illdlng advertising in the daily newspapers. Can we tell you how? I REPUBLICANS RALLY IN TOWNS IN All PARTS OF COUNTY i Well-known Speakers to Attend West End Republican Meeting Tomorrow Evening Republican rallies are being held i all over the county, with uniformly L good attendance at all of them despite i I the unfavorable weather. Last night there was a meeting at Dauphin and , to-night the speakers will be at Gratz ; and Loyalton. What promises to be ! the biggest meeting of the week will | be held at the West End Republican Club to-morrow evening, with speeches ' by Congressman Kreider, Senator Beidleman, Augustus Wildman and Joshua W. Swartz, candidates for the Legislature in the city, and a speaker from Washington. The labor records of Dr. Brumbaugh and Vance C. McCormlck will be analyzed and a large turnout of West End members of the club is expected. I Last evening's meeting at Dauphin I was disturbed by a quartet of McCor j mick roisterers, who tried to break up ' the gathering, acting in a manner that ' | would have landed them in the police | station had it occurred In Harrisburg. | Dr. W. P. Clark presided and made an | ; address largely along national lines, ' ' the other speakers being John C. Niss -1 ! ley, candidate for the Legislature, and Senator E. E. Beidleman. i Get Your Overcoat Out of the Chest, Warns Weather Forecaster ' j Overcoats and mackinaws will feel [ comfy in a few days, for the tempera | i ture is expected to take a decided ' j drop. A high pressure area centrally : located over the Rocky mountains and 1 plains is moving eastwardly, carrying with it low temperature. This cold weather may not reach here until the last of the week. It will likely bring , j killing frosts, j A difference of 40 degrees in Ari ! zona is shown on to-day's weather I map. A law temperature of 30 is shown at Spring City, Ariz., while at Phoenix, Ariz., a 70-degree tempera ' j turo is recorded. Kindler Appoints Men to Take Charge of Fire Autos Men to take charge of Harrisburg's I new auto fire apparatus were appoint ed by Fire Chief John C. Kindler to day. George Irwin will run the Friend ship hose and chemical truck; Samuel H. Lehman will be in charge of the Good Will combination. Both ap pointments have been approved by Commissioner M. Harvey Taylor. New $20,000 Building Operation on the Hill Building permits for the erection of j four three-story houses to cost $20,- 1000 were issued this morning to ; George A. Shreiner. The houses will be added to a row of dwellings on the south side of Forster street near Seventeenth. The dwellings will have a handsome stucco finish, with mansard roofs. Construction work will bo started soon. 12 FAGES. * POSTSCRIPT Germans Attempting to Make Another Sweeping Movement on Capital Forces Are Preparing to Repeat Charge Which Carried Them Close to Paris Five Weeks Ago; Ostend May Be Occupied by Invading Army Indefinitely; French Make Denial of German Victories London, Oct. 14, 1.21 P. M.—A Central News dispatch from Madrid says it is reported from Lisbon that Portugal has declared war against Germany. The message, which lacks confirma tion, is published in Madrid with all reserve. Out of the mass of wholly irreconcilable assertions regarding the war in Europe, emerges the seemingly established fact that the Germans arc attempting to repeat the rapid sweeping movement which five weeks ago took them almost to the gates of Paris. With most of Belgium already occupied there is nothing that can stop the invaders reaching the coast and remaining there at least temporarily unless the British naval guns are able to render tenure impossible. The length of their stay at the popular seaside resort should they seize Ostend, will, of course, depend upon the outcome of the great battle now understood to be opening near the frontiers separating the provinces of West Flanders and Ilainaut from the French department of the north. Beyond an unconfirmed report of fighting in the direction of Zeebrugge, a coast town of fifteen miles northeast of Ostend, there is no further news of the German advance in this vicinity. Farther south there is reason to believe that the loft wing of the allies has been strongly reinforced and confirmation of this is found in the statement in the last report from General Joffree, the French com mander in chief, that the offensive against the Germans has been resumed in that part of the line of battle.. VON KLUCK STRENGTHENS ARMY In order to strengthen his forces in this vicinity General Von Kluck has thrown an entire army corps into Lille. This manufac turing city has once before been in German hands and it has been within the German lines since an early stage of the hostilities. Its occupation to-day does not seem to have been seriously opposed, in fact it is explained here that it could not have been without dis arranging the allies' line. According to observers in London the Germans have been par ticularly anxious to reach Amiens and thus secure control of the rail roads to the north and to the south. But, according to a French official announcement the allies have checked their movement in this direction and have made a "marked advance between Arras and Albert," where the principal German effort centered. The intermixing of the armies along a front of hundreds of miles appears to-day to be as chaotic as the news concerning the oper ations furnished by the Intelligence Departments of the different headquarters. The French armies are declared to be gaining ground at Berry-au-Bac, northwest of Rheims, and at Souain, on the east side of the cathedral city, while at the next a portion of the German army under Duke Wuerttemburg is still stoutly holding its position between them on the plains of the Marne. Again, further to the cast the French occupy Apremont in the forest of the Argonne, well to the north west of Verdun, and Verdun is the position which the army under the German Crown Prince has for so long been trying to reduce. To the east of the position of the Crown Prince the French are said to be pushing toward Metz. It is reported that in order to improve the Crown Prince's chances of reducing Verdun, some of the siege guns released from Antwerp are now on the way to join him. WAR BULLETINS London, Oct. 14, 3.25 A. M.—"The captain of an American schooner which was permitted to pass Antwerp to-day," says the Daily Express' Rot terdam correspondent In a dispatch tiled Monday, "states tliat the German ramps extend in a semicircle four miles wide and twenty miles in extent between the inner ana outer forti fications." London, Oct. 14, 3.21 A. M.—A Bel gian <-orrespondent of the Daily Mail says he heard that civil authorities of ' Ghent were told that if the soldiers in that city did not surrender Instantly the place would he bombarded. London, Oct. 11, 2.550 A. M.—A Petrograd dispatch to the Post says: "The affair which cost the life of the first Romanoff in the war was a cav alry charge gallantly led by Prince Oleg. fourth son of Grand Duke Con stantine. Prince Oleg was seriously wounded and lias since died." London, Oct. 14, 3.45 A. >l.—A dis patch to the Bail- News from Ostend dated Monday midnight says: "The Germans are approaching Ostend by three roads—from Ypres by way of Dixinude, from Coutrai through Thou rout aiul from Eeeloo through Bruglies." London, Oct. 14. 4.20 A. M.—Dis patches received here from Sofia. Bui- I garia. ami other points report the ap pearance in the Black Sea of the for mer German cruisers Breslau and Goo ben, which fly the Turkish Hag. London, Oct. 11, 0.08 A. >l.—Hostile aeroplanes ap|>eared over Karlsruhe, Germany, yesterday and escaped un damaged, acordlng to the Central News corresjjondent at Copenhagen. Rome, via London, Oct. 13, 11.50 P. M.—A report received from Con stantinople says that the commander of the former German cruiser Gocben will become the head of the Turkish fleet and aims to attack the Russian fleet for mastery of the sea and threaten the Russian coast. The Goe ben now flies the Turkish colors. Petrograd, Oct. 13.—The following official communication was Issued by the ministry of marine to-night: "Ac cording to complete reports reeved from the chief commander of the Bal tic fleet, our cruisers attacked by Ger man submarine boats on October 10 and 11 sank two of the submarines." Londqp. Oct. 14, 4.57 A. M.—A dis patch to the Times r rom Petrograd says: "Of a conservative estimate the German for<-cs known to IK- on the eastern frontier number about a mil lion and a half effective men. not counting tlie Austrian troops, of whom - there are about 270,000 on the Silesian front." XOther War News Pago 91 li IZH GOVERNOR ■IS ID SEND HIS MILITIA TO BORDER Garrison, However, Notifies Him Not to Take Such Action and Promises Regulars By Associated Press Washington, D. C., Oct. 14. —Secre- tary Garrison to-day telegraphed Gov ernor Hunt, of Arizona, that the dis patch of state militia, to Naco or to Douglas, as proposed by the Gov ernor, would greatly complicate the situation at those places and that the United States forces there are now do [ Continued on Page 7] Penrose Opens War on Proposed Democratic Tax and Tariff Failure By Associated Press Washington, D. C.. Oct. 14.—The Republican attack on the war revenue hill was continued In the Senate to day by Senator Penrose. He declared that the measure was "war legislation in time of peace" and said that the necessity for additional revenue arose (Tom the "total failure of the Demo cratic fiscal policy of tariff for revenue only." American Consul Will Leave City Tomorrow By Associated Press Toklo, Oct. 14, 3.40 A. M.—lt was declared officially in Tokio to-day that the American consul at Tsing-Tau, W. R. Peck, and a number of German women and children are to leave Tsing-Tau to-morrow. This move is in fulfillment of the arrangement re cently concluded for the removal of all. remaining nonconihutants from the German position in Kiao-Chow. An engagement between a German and a Japanese aeroplane occurred over Tsing-Tau yesterday. Neither aviator was hurt. The German ma chine rose to a height of 9,000 feet and disappeared In the clouds.
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