isns Preparing to Hurl Every Availab Lift Mfeg of Mb* HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH LXXXIII— No. 253 ' STOUGH'S ATTACK ON DR. BRUMBAUGH IS WIDELVHNTED Evangelist Declares Great Edu cator Is Man of Exem plary Character FAMOUS LAWYER RETAINED Editor of Clearfield Paper Insists That Stough Was Cor rectly Reported •"My Information was that Dr. Brumbaugh is an exemplary man in his private character," says Evangelist Henry W. Stough, who is now conduct ing a series of meetings at Dußols. But notwithstanding this statement the evangelist, in a signed explanation of gome remarks at Clearfield, couples the name of Dr. Brumbaugh with two offi cials of the organized liquor traffic in Pennsylvana, as many people believe In an evident attempt to besmirch tho reputation of the Republican candi date for Governor. Stough's statement, which was received by the Telegraph this morning, is as follows: Certain members of the Brum baugh party were drunk when they were in Dußois. My information is that one of the candidates in the party was "lousey drunk" while another candidate was only "plastered." At the Acorn Club in the pres ence of about fifty people, Joe Bensinger. former State treas urer of Hotel Men's Association, a saloon keeper and hotel man went up to Dr. Brumbaugh, put his hand on the doctor's shoulder and said, "I have orders to put you to bed at 10 o'clock. While you are in the city, you are under my care." At which Doctor Brum baugh turned and left the room with him. I added, "I judge from this that when the doctor is in Pittsburgh he is in charge of Jim Mulvihill and while in Philadelphia in charge or Neil Bonner. There was no coupling up of Dr. Brumbaugh's name with the [Continued on Page 9] HI WORK IF BIG STOUGH TIBEICLE IS TO BE READY Three Times as Many Men Re quired as Are Now at Work on the Building It was reported to-day that night and day work will be necessary if the Stough tabernacle is to be finished in time for the opening meeting on Sun day, November 1. W. W. Shannon, preliminary organ lber, said to-day that three times as many men as are now working would be required, and it would mean work night and day all next week. Mr. Roebuck made an earnest plea through the newspapers to-day for more men. Because of an argument over the [Continued on Page 9] THE WEATHER For Harrlahurst and rirlnltyi Un- Mtlfd weather, probably light rain tu-nlglit or Sunday; aome uhat cooler Sunday. For Kaatern Pennsylvaniai Unaet tlfd to-nlßht and Sunday, prob ably local ralna; mimeubnl cooler Sunday f icentle to moderate aouthweat to nortbaevt wind*. River The main rfver will continue to fall alowly to-nlKht and probably Sunday. \ of about l.t feet la Indicated for Harrlaburff Sunday morula*. General (ondltlona The depreaalon that uaa central over Northern Mlnneaota, Friday morning, hna moved rapidly east ward along; the northern border and la now central over Northern New England. It la 2 to 12 degreea warmer In New Enjgland and In Pennsylva nia and the Interior of New York. Temperature i R a. m., 51. Sun; lUaea, «i2B a. M.i aeta, 8116 p. m. Moon 1 Fall moon, November 2, 0i49 p. m. River Staaet l.t feet above low water mark. Yeaterday'a Weather Highest temperature, 62. I.oweat temperature, 46. Mtan temperature, T>4. Normal temperature, 51. • t -v Get Busy! ■When men Bit around and twiddle their thumbs and tell each other business Is "going to be bad." their predictions are apt to come true—for them. Times are as good as we make them and no better. The "llYe wires" are not com plaining. They are hustling. They are not waiting for op portunities. They are making them. Turn to the advertising col umns of the live dally newspa pers and you see the men who are going after business now. They are getting it, too. CARMAN MURDER CASE WILL BE GIVEN JURY LITE ISIFTERNOON Accused Woman Is Confident She Will Be Acquitted Within ' Few Hours FACE WREATHED IN SMILES Witness Testified Today That He Saw Man Running From House After Shot Was Fired By Associated Press Mineola. N. Y„ Oct. 2 4.—The de fense of Mrs. Florence Cortklin Car man. on trial for the murder of Mrs. Louise Bailey, rested shortly before noon to-day. Counsel prepared to sum up and indications were that the case would go to the jury late this after noon. After testifying on cross-examination and after listening to the testimony of her little daughter, Elizabeth, her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Conklin; her sister, Mrs. Ida Powell f her niece. Mrs. Helen Powell Codby, and her husband. Dr. Edwin Carman, the accused woman returned to her cell last night predict ing that the jury would return a ver dict of acquittal. She sent her parents, her daughter and husband home happy with Jier assurance that within a few hours she would be free and would spend Sunday with them. Mrs. Carman's confldence in the out come may be attributed to the mass of evidence, mostly from members of her immediate family, to disprove the story told by Celia Coleman, the negro maid In the Carman home, that im plicated her mistress with the murder. The defense also offered a witness, a negro man, who testified that after the shot was tired he saw a man run across the Carman lawn, jump a fence and disappear. Wreathed In Smiles Mrs. Carman's face was wreathed in smiles when she entered the court room. She bowed to several friends, kfssed her daughter Elizabeth, greeted her husband with a nod and smile, and, taking the seat at the counsel | (able, chatted with him and her law [Continued on Page »] DR. BRIBER IS STRONG FMITE 111 UPPER Ei TOWNS I Record-breaking Crowds Turn Out at Lykens and Wiconisco Special to The Telegraph Lykens, Pa., Oct. 24.—Lykens and Wiconisco were the scenes last even ing of two of the largest Republican meetings ever held in the upper end of the county. Old residents say that they never saw anything like the way the Brumbaugh campaign is going in this locality. Senator E. E. Beidle man spoke on the record of Vance C. McCormick and compared the lives of the Democratic and Republican candi dates for Governor. James E. Lents, vice-county chair man, presided at the "Wiconisco meet ing and made an address dwelling upon the necessity of electing a Re publican Congress this year. He called attention to the fact that the shirt factories at Fishervllle and Uniontown are closed. that shoe factories throughout the upper end are running on only part time, and that the dis trict is feeling very seriously the ef fects of the depression. The speakers at Wiconisco were Congressman Aaron S. Kreider and John C. Nissley, candidate for the Leg islature. Dr. J. H. Lehr. a well known Republican of the upper end, presided at the Lykens meeting, and the speakers were Senator Beidleman, Mr. Nissley, Congressman Kreider and Phil S. Mover. Boy Resents Hazing; Stabbed by Schoolmate Garrettford. Pa., Oct. 2 4. —Because Samuel Delp, aged 10 years, a pupil of the Garrettford public sdhool, told his teacher that he had been hazed by other pupils, Louis Deering, aged 9 years, one of the accused, took revenge yesterday by stabbing the Delp boy In the leg. Fortunately, the wound is not a serious one, though it required five stitches to close the cut. The stabbing took place In Oakview, and it appears that the Delp boy re cently came from Philadelphia to live at Drexel Hill. When Delp went to school on Monday he was guyed by other pupils during recess and at the close of school hours was seized and hazed by a number of boys. It is alleged that Delp was taken to a tree, where he was tied and sub jected to thn treatment accorded to a captured horse thief. Delp did not take to the hazing and registered a complaint with his teacher the next day, when the boys were identified and punished. Deering threatened to get ven geance. and succeeded, lie was ar rested and taken before Magistrate Valenti/ie, in Fernwood police station After reprimanding the lad he paroled him In the custody of hla uncle, Joseph Shuttz. NEW FRATERNITY HOUSE Special tn The Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., Oct. 24. Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, of Gettysburg College, will erect on the site of the 'old building, in North Washington I street, one of the most pretentious | houses of the Institution. The old fra -1 ttfrnity house was destroyed by Are on I the night of February 22 last. The new ono will be far more beautiful land artistic both in exterior and in- Iterior finish. HARRISBURG, PA., SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 24, 1914 KEEPING HIS RIGHT HAND IGNORANT OF WHAT HIS LEFT HAND DOES /rW STKONb run \ ( THAT LOCAL OPTJON ) HOW THE PEOPLE REASON [From the Altoona Tribune.] OUR impression at this moine.it is that I>r. Brumbaugh will lead his strongest rival in the State by not less than two hundred thousand votes. He Is likely to carry Blair count)' by live thou sand votes, perhaps more. The attacks upon the head of the Repub lican ticket have been so vicious and sonic of them so preposterous that they art* Irritating the liberal friends of l)r. Brumbaugh up to the point of supporting the whole Republican ticket. Even the most inde- IM-ndent Republicans and thousands of Democrats are already saying to themselves that a combination which seek to win votes for Its candi dates by such outrageous methods deserves crushing defeat and they are intending to do what is possible for the ticket. The Republican campaign has I>ecn conducted on a very high plane. No Republican can didate has said anything against the character of the candidates ol' (lie enemy: all have argued from principle and demonstrated by a signifi cant reference to conditions the truth of their charges against the l'ceble and the Inefficient Democracy. Republican Rallies in Middletown and Highspire Tonight Republican rallies will be held in Highspire and Middletown this even ing. At Middletown the speakers will be Senator E. E. Beidleman, Congressman Aaron S. Kreider, John C. Nissley and Earl Renn, a well-known young law yer, son of the late Rev. U. S. G. Renn, who spent a part of Ills boy hood days in Middletown. Mr. Renn is well known in that borough and his friends will turn out in large numbers to hear his llrst public speech there. In Highspire the addresses will be made by Senator E. E. Beidleman, Congressman Aaron S. Kreider and William H. Hargest, deputy attorney general. . Typhoid at Lehigh Due to Kitchen Help South Bethlehem, Pa., Oct. 24. President Henry S. Drinker has at last ] made public the decision of the State Health Commissioner, Dr. Samuel G. | Dixon, that Lehigh University's mys- j terlous epidemic of typhoid fever was caused, not by milk supply or any other j preventable cause. It originated from Infection transmitted by touch In pre paring food by a kitchen employe, free from sickness, who was a typhoid "car rier," and who was, of course, at once excluded from any further contact, and has been sent away. The conclusion derivable from this experience Is that to guard against such Infection every employe handling food supplies must be subjected to the blood test, and It is the Intention of the University authorities to exact this test from such employes In the future. Commissioner Dixon's inspector found that the typhoid organisms had lived In the man servant's system ajid propa gated long after he was over the at tack of typhoid fever. President Addresses Pittsburgh Gathering Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 24.—President Woodrow Wilson Is in Pittsburgh to day. to address a philanthropic-relig ious mass meeting of men. called to gether in celebration of a double an niversary of the Young Men's Chris tian Association—that of the founda tion of the Pittsburgh branch sixty years ago, and of the organization movement Itself in L/ondon in 1844. The President had let it be known that his visit would be of a non-polltt cal character, therefore no visitors were scheduled to call upon him dur ing his short stay here .and no public receptions had been arranged. SLUMP IN COAL BUSINKSS Reading, Pa., Oct. 24.—Reports re ceived here to-day from different points in the Jiard coal region unite in saying that the mild weather Is caus ing a slump In the anthracite trade. Hundreds of cars are standing on sld. ings with coal for which there is no demand. Dr. Brumbaugh Will Tour Lower End of County on Thursday Dr. Martin G. Brumbaugh will make a tour of the lower end of Dauphin county next Thursday. He will visit Hummelstown, Hcrshey, Hlghspire. Middletown. Steelton and other places and will make address at several j points. Ever since Dr. Brumbaugh was re ceived with so much enthusiasm In the upper end of the county the peo j pie of the lower end have been re- Iquesting his presence there. He is [wonderfully popular throughout the district and has been promised a warm I welcome on the occasion of his visit. Three "Telegraph" Bags Carried Thousand Miles Harry K. Zorger, tester Smith and I Hoy Neblnger, the three Harrisburg I boys who are walking from this city , to the Pacific coast, have passed a point fifty miles beyond St. Louis, Mo., | according to a letter received by Daniel H. Zorger, 409 Kelker street, father of the Zorger boy. The three boys have carried part of their kit in Harrisburg Telegraph cir culation department bags every step of the thousand-mile journey. Cats For Bridegroom as Joker Had Planned Special to Ti... Telegraph Pittsburgh, Oct. 14. Hundreds of cats of all uges, colors, shapes ami vocal accomplishments have been singing their lay in the offices of the Burltng ton Route the past three days, having come to P. 8.. Welsh, traveling passen ger agent of the line, as wedding pres ents. Clerks stood disconsolately look ing at the boxes and baskets, while moro boxes and improvised hampers were being unloaded from express wagons standing along the street curb ing. Welsh was married last Tuesday evening to Miss Pauline Walker, of the Fast Knd, and the happy couple left on their honeymoon trip for the West the same night. It now develops that several days be fore tire wedding some wag Inserted an ; advertisement In several newspapers, Informing cat owners that all pedi greed cats would be purchased, If sent to Welsh's office. Tuesday morning the cats began arriving, and they have been "on the way" ever since. Pedigrees that would make Darwin and Mendel green with envy came along In envel opes, rolls and tacked to the boxes and hampers. Cats from Wichita, Kan.; Alexandria, Pa.: Chilllcothe, Ohio; Ijafayette, Ind.; Green Bay, Wis., and other far points, too numerous to mention, were chris tened with suali highbrow names as "Socrates," "Horace," "Sir ductus O'Trigger," "Filar Tuck," "Florizel" and "Lalla Rookh." A representative called to see Mr. Welsh and announced that she was the president of the Animal Rescue league at Verona, which had 1,000 cats, surely all pedigreed, that he could have. She was told "he had enough." THOUSAND MEMBERS I GOAL IN y. W. C. I ! WEEK'S CAMPAIGN Rainbow Team Members Meet This Afternoon at 4 to Report First Day's Work One thousand new members. This is the goal of a week's whirl wind membership campaign begun to day by the Young Women's Christian Association. I The association, just having moved into its new quarters, has facilities to handle at least a thousand new members, and every plan has been carefully laid to get this number dur ing the next seven days' "Rainbow Campaign." There is a team for every color of the rainbow. The members of these teams began active work this morning in shop, mill, store and home to interest the young women of the city in the association work. • Flags representing each team are flying from the windows of the new Y. W. C. A. Building and every even ing following 4 o'clock tea the team! which has won the- honors of the day: will be placet^at the top of the line of banners. The result of the day's campaign I will lie announced some time between 5 and 6 o'clock each evening during the campaign. At a preliminary tea given yester day afternoon at the Y. W. C. A., Mrs. [Continued on Page 9] Violinist to Play at Market Square Church At Market Square Presbyterian Church to-morrow morning Mrs. Von Steckow, who is the guest of Mrs. ■ I Wilbur F. Harris, will play the fol [ lowing violin numbers: "Meditiation" from "Thais" by Massenett, and "Adante Quasi Adaigo," by Lohr. She will also play the obligato to 1 j Mrs. Harris's solo, "O Lord Most | Holy," by Franck. New York Police to Be Pals of Children i New York. Oct. 24. A way by ■ which policemen may be able to con r vlnce children that they are not their s natural enemies, but their friends, was I outlined at a conference to-day be t tween school and police authorities. Police officers in full uniform will be • sent to school houses next Monday 1 I morning to tell the children In a con • j vlnoing way how much money they [ might save the city by preventing the , destruction of asphalt by bonfires, par , I ticularly around election time, and I how, If the children will save the city I thiH money, It will be spent for play grounds. I There will be other talks on the danger of careless play in the streets. ; CLAIM SUCCESS OX RIVER YBFR II London, Oct. 24, 2.05 A. M.—"The j | Germans are leaving the coast and working around Dlxmude towards Lille," says a Rotterdam dispatch to ■ I the Daily Mail. "They claim success Jon the river Yser. Their right wing . | was rolled back Friday leaving their i - position open to a flanking movement, ' and the allies' way to Ostend clear. 14 PAGES * POSTSCRIPT Germans' Fighting Line Reinforced by Soldiers From Belgian Cities \ 600,000 German Soldiers Are Being Rushed to Strengthen Right Wing of Kaiser's Army; English Papers Agree Greatest Struggle of War Is Now in Progress; Allies Continue to Gain at Various Points Along Battle Line Two months ago to-day the British army began its retreat from Mons. To-day the battered forces of Sir John French are fifty miles to the northwest of Mons. In the intervening period the impetuous German advance penetrated almost to the gates of Paris, only to be hurled back again in the crucial battle of the Marne and now the hostile forces are deadlocked on a line which extends from Switzer land to the North Sea. To-day's reports throw little new light 011 the course of the battle now raging most intensely 011 the Franco-Belgian frontier. Upon the fighting on the plains of Flanders, in the opinion alike of German, French and British observers, depends in large measure the outcome of the whole campaign and perhaps the future of German operations in France. The official French statement states with what intensity the opposing forces are contesting the issue. It is admitted that the Germans have advanced to the North of Dixmude and in the neighborhood of La Bassee, but as a counter stroke, it is said, the French have pushed forward of Nieuport, in the region of Langewarck and between Armentieres and Lille. These in the lan guage of the French war office, are "inevitable fluctuations of a con test waged so fiercely. The war office contents itself with the general statement that the line of combat as a whole has been maintained. Over the remainder of the long battle front the deadlock con tinues. Slight progress is claimed by the French at various points in the Woevre district, but the general positions of the opposing forces is changed in no important particular. Regarding the situation in the cast there is as heretofore a con flict of arms. The French war office asserts that the Germans are falling back to the south of Warsaw as well as to the west of Ivan gorod. Advices from Russia and Austrian sources agree that one of the bitterest battles of the war is in progress along the river San. An official Austrian statement reports the repulse of the Rus sians who had been permitted to cross the river and were then at tacked. Dispatches from Petrograd, however, state that the Aus trian assault was repulsed by vigorous counter attacks of the Rus sians Germans in great numbers are evacuating Brussels, Antwerp and other Belgian cities for the purpose of reinforcing the German right wing, which it is believed will very shortly be hurled with great force against the allies Soldiers Mast Bay What They Need in Antwerp By Associated Press The Hague, via London, Oct. 24, 10.10 A.M. —Major General Von Boden hausen, military commander of Ant werp has issued a proclamation coun tersigned by the Burgomaster De vosof, Antwerp, warning the German troops that they are not permitted to commandeer anything whatsoever and that this privilege is. only allowed to officers in accordance with the neces sities of military occupation. Anything the soldiers need they must buy, the geenral's proclamation recites and he strictly forbids the sol diers from breaking into shops or mis using their might. Antwerp, he says, was only surrendered on the under standing that the troops would not misuse their power. Newspaper advices from Halle, Ger many, state that the eGrman authori ties have opened an inquiry to discover whether General Leman, the defender of Liege, who is now a prisoner at Magdaburg, is not identified with Heinrich Ijehmann, a soldier of the German army who deserted during the war of 1870. There appears to lie an extraordinary likeness the ad vices say between the men. SOX BORN TO QUEEX Madrid', Oct. 24, via Paris, 11 A. M. —A son was bom this morning to Queen Victoria of Spain. The queen is a granddaughter of the late Queen Victoria of England. The son horn to-day is hpr-sixth child, the others being three sons and two daughters. asm fmcMAMB w A*-ro*p Lon***', •«* p.rr A. M—A t» iuTuaea from 71 us'tcian, F'-Vmjr, n*f: "A WtogMHL tiemm B«ti>, fltfttw that only ! a few ku* received here from Lloyd's Signal Sta tion at Cowes, Isle of Wight. S. O. S. signals from her have been received at the wireless station at Niton, Isle i of Wight. A Prench ship is stand ing by the Marie Henriette.