Tokio Celebraies Fall of Tsing Tau After Siege of Mote Than Three Weeks HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH LXXXIII— Xo. 264 TOKIO CELEBIIG „ FULL OF TSING TAU German Fortress Taken After Ac tual Siege of More Than Three Weeks FINAL ATTACK OPENED FRIDAY White Flag Hoisted on Coast Forts at Mouth of Haipo at 7:30 O'clock By Associated Press Tokio, Nov. 7, 9.15 p. m. After desperate assaults, in which the Japa nese in the face of heroic resistance rivaled the bravery of their forces at Port Arthur, Tsing Tau surrendered at 9.20 o'clock this morning. At that hour Governor Meyer-Waldeck, fol lowing the hoisting of white Hags on the forts, sent an officer with a tlag of truce to the Anglo-Japanese lines. Toklo is celebrating to-day the fall of the German fortress after an actual siege of a few days more than three weeks. It was in the middle of September that the real attack began, although preparations for the taking of the German stronghold in Asia were be gun immediately after war was de clared by Japan on August 15. The linal and successful attack on Tsing Tau began shortly after mid night Friday morning and the tirst inroad by the allied forces, which was largely instrumental in the fall of the place, was the taking of the middle fort of the first line of defense. This was accomplished by a brilliant charge of Infantry and engineer led by Gen eral Yoshlml Yamada. Simultaneously with the charge of General Yamada others were made, the troops dashing forward with cries, of Bazai. Taltungchen, the fortifica tion on the east, fell at 5.35 In the 1 morning. Chungchiawa was captured j soon thereafter with its two heavy j cannon. Detachment Occupies Ports j A detachment of the first line occu- j pied the litis, Bismarck and Moltkej forts at 7 in the morning and then the enemy hoisted the white tlag on l the weather astronomical station ad- Joining the governor's office. Another white flag was hoisted on the coast forts at the mouth of the Haipo at 7.30 o'clock. In the last two days of the fighting, it is stated, the warships continued a terrific rain of shells on the fortress and the city from the east and south, inflicting great damage and havoc. Taisachen fort, the official accounts Bay, seemed to explode. JUDGE KIKEL GOT 21.453 VOTES HERE Official Count Completed by the Clerks; Frazer Unoffi cially Ahead Members of the committee that managed. Judge Kunkel's campaign In the race against Judge Robert Frazer for the Supreme Court to-day busied themselves with comparing official re turns, sent in from a few of the sixty seven counties with the unofficial fig ures printed earlier in the week. The official count was completed in Dau phin county at 11 o'clock this morn ing, although only the vote on the Su preme Court candidates was compared and totaled. Judge Kunkel received 21,459 votes as against 1,271 received by his oppo nent. Judge Frazer. The unofficial figures compiled on Wednesday, fol lowing the election gave Judge Kun- 1 kel 21,433 and Judge Frazer 1,266, a' majority of 20,167 for the local candi-1 date. Philadelphia newspapers this morn- | ing carried stories to the effect that with two counties yet missing, the un official figures give Judge Frazer a lead of 10,150 over Judge Kunkel. Members of Judge Kunkel's campaign committee yet believe the official count will show Judge Kunkel a win-j ner. Frank E. Zeigler and Benjamin F. j Umberger, the tally clerks who re- i corded the official vote, began making comparisons this afternoon although they will not begin computing the vote until Monday. THE WEATHER] | For Ilarrlahursr and vicinity: Gen- ; ernlly fair anil Sunday) »»rmrr to-nl|tht, colder Sunday afternoon or night. For Haatern Pennaylvanlai Fair and warmer to-nl|cht| Sunday fair, colder in north portion< moderate aoutheaat wlmla becoming aouth weat. River The main river nil I remain nearly atntlonary to-night and Sunday. A atage of about I.SS feet la Indi cated for Harrlaburg, Sunday morning. General Condltlona The disturbance that han peralated for aevernl daya over the north eaatern part of the country han paaaed olt aeanard and the de preaaton from the Xorthweat haa moved eaatward and la now cen tral over the I,ake Superior re ft! on. It la anmewhat cooler In the Middle Atlantic and England - tatea and a general fall of 2 to 32 rie- ITen In temperature haa occurred over the weartern portion of the I'lalna Ntatea and In the Rocky Mountalna. Temperaturei H a. m„ 4T. flnnt Rlaea, 1 lit hot temperature, H'J. Low eat temperature. 41'. Mean laniperatnro, 47. Komal Tomyonitur*, 40, TABERNACLE WILL IT HOLD CROWDS ; Thousands Turned Away by Po lice; Stough Preaches on the Home FAVORS THE HICKORY STICK Attacks Divorce, Sunda> Paper, Lack of Parental Author ity and Example j "Responsibility of parents in brlng -1 ins up their children and the necessity | of Christian surroundings in the homo j was Impressed by Dr. Stough last night on an audience that jammed the taber ! nacle a half hour before the service 1 began, requiring the closing of the I doors and the turning away of between j three and four thousand people, many lof whom had traveled from distant I parts of the city and suburbs to hear | the evangelist. | Dr. Stough's subject was "Home i Makers and Home Breakers," a lec | ture in which he reviewed the sol | enmity of marriage, the rights of the | child to be well born, the importance j of parental authority, the value of the ! hickory stick, the inefficiency of some of the modern psychological methods of education, with scathing attacks on the divorce evil and the lax methods carried on In many American homes j of to-day. Courtship Is Xo Joke He impressed the importance of proper selection in marriage and said that courtship is not the joke it is made to be in the comic papers, but is the primary step in the formation of I the home, the foundation of civ ilization. He emphasized especially , the Scripture's command. "Be ye :#jt unequally yoked with an unbeliever," as meaning that a girl should not marry an un-Christian man. "Don't ever marry a man to reform him. because what a man won't do before marriage he will not do after," saiti Dr. Stough. He spoke of the more than one million divorce cases in the last two decades in the United States and the two and a half million of children made "orphans" thereby and declared that ministers have no right to marry some couples without making investi gations. Children Should Be Well Born "There should be a new conception of the responsibility of parenthood, that the child has the right to be born well and not by accident." shouted the evangelist. "The child that came into the world with the brand 'not wanted' has the greatest handicap conceivable, [Continued on Page 14] Brumbaugh's Friend Is Now Being Boomed For Mayor of Quaker City LOUIS J. KOLB Next September the Philadelphia !voters will nominate candidates (or rrayor of the metropolis. Among- the names mentioned is that of Louis J. Kolb, who is a neighbor of Governor elect Martin G. Brumbaugh at Ger mantown and was his principal back jer in the recent campaign. Mr. Kolb is a prominent business man. PLAN' JUNIOR ROTARY CLUB Sons of Rotary Members Will Meet j Tonight For Organization I Plans for the organization of a Junior Rotary Club of Harrisburg will I be discussed at a meeting to be held (this evening at the home of Harold Nordby McCord, 2208 Chestnut street, »Bellevue Park. I Sons of members of the Rotary Club of Harrisburg have been invited to at itend this meeting. Junior Rotarians j are organizing all over the United (States. Harrisburg is one of the first I cities in the to take up the junior branch. VISITOR LEAVES 4 CHILDREN* Host Now Looking For Blacksmith Thought to Be Near Here Mrs. George Rupp, 937 Court street, Reading, Is anxious find David But ler, a blacksmith, who has been miss ing for months. Mrs. Rupp writes Colonel Joseph B. Hutchison that But ler came to her home six months ago with his four children to visit. Several days after his arrival Butler disap peared. Four children need some one to look after them. Three weeks ago It was learned that Butler had been working near Harrisburg. MUTINY WAS NOT SERIOUS By Associated Press Havana, Nov. 7.—The mutiny, last night of Cuban soldiers at the Cuban fortress proves to have been less than was at first supposed. Only twenty three soldiers Instead of 100 as re ported last night, armed with rifles succeeded in leaving the fortress af ter roll call. They Intended to go to Havana and attack the Havana police, one of whom was killed In a fight with the police Wednesday night. HARRISBURG, PA., SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 7, 1914. IN THE DEMOCRATIC HOVSE Courtesy The New York Sun. "MBRELT PBYC«OI.OGICAI/» Horse-thief Steals Stough Usher's Mare and Jesny Lind But Railways Company Dispatcher Saw the Theft and Drove the Stolen Property Back to Owner Interest in Dr. Henry W. Stough, the evangelist, was diverted in the rear of the big tabernacle last night when J. Fred Hummel, burgess of Wormleysburg and an usher on one of the main entrance doors, let out a cry of— "My horse! My horse! He's stolen! He's stolen!" City Detectives Ibach and White, with the burgess, ran out of the taber nacle to look for the horse-thief. When they had panted up to State and Cow den they met Llnneaus M. Davis, dis patcher for the Harrisburg Railways Company, placidly driving Mr. Hum mel's team toward the tabernacle. HURT IX AUTO COLLISION Accident at Seventeenth and North Said to lie Result of Speeding Samuel C. Morrow, 35 years old, 1951 Briggs street, is in the Harris burg Hospital suffering from Injuries | received In an automobile collision with a machine owned by Earl Miller, 10 North Nineteenth street, at Seven teenth and North streets, late yester day afternoon. The accident was a result of speeding, it is alleged. Both machines are badly damaged. Morrow's condition is reported im proved at the hospital this morning. Miller was only slightly hurt. OSTRICH FARM GETS 20 BIRDS j More Birds to Be Shipped to Pax tang In Spring of 1915 I The African Ostrich and Feather Farm at Paxtang, has received twenty | ostriches. The birds were sent here I from Cleveland, Ohio. The cost of erecting the shelter and I the the other equipment of the farm/ at Paxtang will be about {50,000. The' range covers fifty acres of land. More ostriches will be shipped here in the Spring. TO DISCUSS CELEBRATION Commerce Chamber Directors May Appoint Committee in Charge j of Affair i Discussion of the big 1915 improve-! . raent celebration will come up before a meeting of the directors of the Har ] risburg Chamber of Commerce Mon day evening. A committee will likely be appointed at this time and tentative plans for the big event will be talked over. BLOWN OFF ROOF Wind Carries Man and Big Sheet of Tin From Top of Ilarn Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., Nov. 7.—David To bias. a tinsmith and roofing contractor of this city, narrowly escaped with his life in an accident in East Hanover township, where he was engaged with a force of men roofing a barn on the farm of Isaac Hower. Mr. Tobias hnd a lnrge sheet of tin in his hand when a gust of wind came along and blew the tin and the contractor oft the i roof. "There's the thief!" shouted the burgess before he saw who was driv ing. "Cut your wailin'," growled Mr. Davis. "That's sympathy for you, isn't it?" Mr. Davis explained that had seen a tall overcoated man get into Mr. Huin mel's team. The stranger started driv ing the mare rapidly toward the State Street bridge. Davis after the team and when the horse-thief saws he was being pursued he jumped from the buggy, and ran down Cameron street. So Mr. Davis drove the stolen prop erty back to its owner. FATE IX JUDGE'S HANDS Mai Morgonthaii. Who Killed Farmer Hupp, Waives Jury Higlit Special to The Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Nov. 7. The odd spectacle of the final scenes in a first degree murder trial, staged in an empty courtroom and with no jurv present, was presented here. Max Morganthau has pleaded guilty to kill ing J. M. Rupp, and a Pennsylvania act allows the Judge presiding to fix the degree as first "r second without a jury if the defendant prefers. The defense concentrated attention on the fact that the time allowed bv the witnesses for the killing did not permit Morganthau to "lay in wait." Briefs were submitted and a verdict will probably be rendered by Judge Sadler within two weeks. YOrTH ACCIDENTALLY SENDS BULLET INTO MOTHER'S BODY By Associated Press \ Reading, Pa., Nov. 7.—Raymond .Heisler, the 17-year-old son of Jona than Heisler, of Topton, this county, late last night acidentally shot and in stantly killed his mother. The mother Wind son were in the living room of j their home, the former seated on a .chair treating a corn, and the latter! cleaning a revolver. The revolver was accidentaly discharged, the bullet en- j |tering the mother's body at the heart. I [The husband and father, sleeping on an upper floor, heard the shot. Dep uty Coroner Millew decided an in uest would be unnecessary. BURY GEORGE V. CORL Odd Fellow Lodge Attends Funeral of Former Fire Chief In Body The funeral of Georne V. Corl, aged 76. former fire chief, who died Wednes day at the Harrlsburg Hospital, was held this afternoon from his home 11 South Evergreen street. Many friends and relatives, with memliers of lodges of which Mr. Corl was a member, attended the services. Harrisburg Lodge. No. RB, In''r>. pendent Order of Odd Fellows, : n ' the Friendship Fire Company puid u last tribute by attending the funeral in a body. The Rev. Lewis 8. Mudge pastor of the Pine Street Presbyterian Church, officiated. Burial was made at the Shoop Church Cemetery. , Girl Caddy Plays Rings 'Round Many of the Boys in Country Club Tourney More than twenty caddies entered the caddies' handicap golf tournament on the links of the Harrlsburg Coun try Club, this morning. Ruth Corl, a girl, who often caddies at the club, was in the tourney. Ruth averaged a better score than most of the boy cad dies, making a score of 88 for the 18 s holes. The tourney ended in a tie between Norman Garman and Clyde Fetterhoff at the end of the eighteenth hole. Each • had a score of 77, the nineteenth hole ■ was played and Garman eventually won by one point. 1 The winners were: Norman Gar ' man, first prize; Clyde Fetterhoff, sec | ond prize; Milton Sturtevant, third ! prize; Paul Parker, fourth prize, and ' Ruth Corl, fifth prize. The caddies had [ better scores than many of the grown ' ups often chalk up. BALDWIN WORKS BUSIER Philadelphia, Nov. 7. —Another ray to-day brightened the outlook for im proving business when Alba B. John . son, president of the Baldwin Loco motive Works, announced that the big plant at Eddystone, Pa., until further orders, would increase the working [ time to a five-day shift a week. The new order goes into effect at once and i! applies to 1,239 men, or 289 more than j were on the payrolls three weeks ago. | WILLIAM ORDERS ONE MORE ATTACK ON" BRITISH ARMY London, Nov. 7, 2:55 a. m.—"lt Is (announced from Berlin that the Ger man Emperor has ordered one more [attempt to vanquish the British army land force a way to Calais before the I great battle is fought near the Silesian •frontier," says a dispatch to the Daily Mail from Copenhagen. RETAIL MERCHANTS ELECT A. W. Moul, of Rothert Company, Chosen Chairman of Body At a meeting of the retail mer i chants' section of the Harrlsburg Chamber of Commerce held this morn ! ing at Chamber of Commerce rooms j In the Kunlcel building these officers | were elected: A. W. Moul, the Rothert Company, j chairman; Henry C. Claster, jeweler! i vice-chairman; George E. Zellers, ' Grand Union Tea Company, treasurer; j E. L. McColgin, secretary. Plans for work will be discussed at I a meeting to be held next week. I KLINE THANKS VOTERS Emphatic thanks are going out to Republican voters in Cumberland I county from Joshua W. Kline, Repub- ! llcan county chairman. The voters In j Cumberland county played a big part I In rolling up the large pluralities for the Republican ticket. Chairman , Kline more than appreciates the good ! work done by his fellow workers. Two ! members of the Legislature, a Senator I and a large vote for all candidates. ! brought glory to Chairman Kline, and he Is of the opinion that It should be ' shared by the men who helped in the good work. PICKS STRAWBERRIES TODAY Frank Oenslager, of Riverside, says this morning that despite the killing frost last night he gathered strawber- j Iries from hia garden this moraine. J 14 PAGES GERMANS' ATTEMPT TO REACH STRAITS OF DOVER IS HALTED TEMPORARILY Paris Reports Situation Along Yser as Far as Dixmude as "Comparatively Quiet"; Fighting Is Now Turning Southward; Fall of Mighty German Fortress at Tsing Tau Occupies Attention of Military Authorities in Europe Today The German attempt to reach the straits of Dover, prosecuted with such reckless abandon and courage as to wring praise from even the foe, ap peared to-day to have relaxed tempo rarily. Along the now famous Yser, from the sands of the North Sea coast to the ruined town of Dlxmude, the situation to-day, in the unemotional language of the French war office, was "relatively quiet." The fighting there has all but ceased and the tide of battle has rolled south ward, leaving behind it the countless dead whose torn bodies are stretched thickly over many a field. South of Ypres, on the line extending down over the French border to Arras, the Ger mans are preparing another furious onslaught, spurred on by their em peror. The main battle there, upon which depends so much for the Ger mans and allies alike, has not yet begun. Pending decisive development on any of the European fields of battle, the fall of Tsing-Tau held first place in the attention of military men to day. Official reports from Tokio show that It was not without desperate re sistance that the German garrison, vastly outnumbered by British and Japanese, gave up the fight. For days the German forces had been subjected to a withering fire from land and sea. At last the central fort fell before the impetuous attack of the Japanese, whose bravery, says Tokio, rivaled that displayed in the historic charges on Port Arthur. "Suddenly." says the official report from Tokio, "the flag of surrender ran up in the morning breeze on the weather bureau mount, towering above the sea and land." May Run Down Warships With the fighting at Tsing Tau at an end, the question Is raised as to what JUSTICE TREXLER-S MOTHER DEAD J Allcnto An, Pa., Nov. 7.—Mrs. Matilda, widow of Edwin W. TitxL'r, died at her home in this city this morning, aged 87 yean,. She was the mother of Colonel Harry C. Trexler, quartermaster general of the National Guard, of Pennsyl- , vania; Frank M. Trexler, justice of the Superior Court, and 1 Edwin D. Trexler. EUROPEAN WIRELESS ON U. S. SOIL? Washington, Nov. 7.—Secretary Daniels of the Navy Department and Acting Secretary Lansing of the State De- i partment, in conference to day with Assistant Chief Moran of the Secret Service, decided to begin a search for secret wireless apparatus alleged to be in use by European belli gerents on American territory. New York, Nov. 7.—Federal Judge Mayer signed an or der to-day permitting the sale at nine cents a pound of 80,000 bales of cotton owned by the suspended firm of S. H. P. Pell & Company to a cotton corporation syndicate. This de- ! cision left the New York Cotton Exchange free to decide upon a nearly date of reopening. FOOTBALL SCORES OF DAY Central . 0 0 0 Steelton 0 0 6 i Penn 3 * Michigan 0 Cornell 13 Franklin and Marshall 3 Tech 6 28 AUcntown 0 0 Finals—Harvard, 20; Princeton, 0; Yale, 14; Brown, 6. VERBEKE TO REMAIN Announcement was made late to-day by Jury Commis sioner Dapp that Marion Verbeke would continue to serve as clerk to the jury board. Verbeke announced recently that he would resign. Audrey Maple, leading woman in "The Last Tanjo" shov.n this week at the Orpheum, late this afternoon filed i suit against the company which hr,s the show on the road for nonpayment of $162.50 wages. The sheriff made a levy this afternoon. MARRIAGE LICENSES ~~ Harry P. Matter and Florence V. Fenlcal, llarrlabur^. Wltinrr W. Shenk, Herahey, and Mary A. Ilnchman, Mt. Pleaaant forra ahlp, l.ohiiDoii county. Mike Hoojou* and Mary Horvath, Stcrlton. William S. Howlcy and Katkerlne DIHm, Harrlaburg. Monroe Bear, Steelton, and Emma llramti. Mlddlrtoirn. ♦ POSTSCRIPT Japan will do next. It Is suggested that she will now Inaugurate an of fensive naval campaign on the Pa cific, employing the lleet released from the bombardment of Tsing Tau in an attempt to run down the German war ships which wrought such havoc to British shipping interests and defeated the British lleet of Chile. Notwithstanding the Russian clainia to an overwhelming success in the East, there is nothing to show that the German and Austrian forces have met great disaster, and although they were compelled to retreat, they apparently were able to fall back upon strongly fortified positions selected in advance. Russia, in an official statement, makes the claim that the resistance of the enemy has been broken after lighting of several weeks along a front of 350 miles. This campaign has now been closed, in the opinion of the Russian military authorities, who say that a new period of the war will be Inaugurated. Of the fighting on land and sea brought about by Turkey's entrance into the wnr little was learned to-day. Turkish officials at Smyrna are said to have bade further seizures of ves sels of hostile countries and the Rus sian general staff in Caucasia reports that the Turkish forces which attempt ed an offensive movement have been (driven back with heavy losses. Paris suggests that the Germans aro making an important change in their military tactics. Mass formation is said to have been abandoned in tho lighting in Flanders, infantrymen at tacking in open order and seeking all available cover. CATCH EIGHT IX CRAP RAID Set of Dice and One Lincoln Penny Confiscated by Police Patrolman George W. Grear broke up a crap game in the upper end of Slbletown last night. Eight players and a set of dice were captured and one Lincoln penny was confiscated. Those arrested appeared before Mayor John K. Royal this afternoon. They were George Michael, Joseph Whisler, William Whisler, I, W. Fetterhoff, Harry Weaver, Joshua Beatty, Herbert Rammer and Harry Straining.