rlags of Allies Are Now Flying Over Foris at Entrance 1o Dardanelles HARRISBURG- TELEGRAPH LXXXIV— No. 47 STEELER S WIFE ID EiW MORNING ROW Husband Held Today on Conspir acy Charge, in Fraudulent Passport Case MAGISTRATE FREES WOMAN German Newspaperman Reported Accused of Attempting to Dis robe Mrs. Stegler By Associated Press New York, March 1. —Mrs. Richard] P. Stegler, arrested to-day at the Gren- i ob'e Hotel on a charge of felonious us- j sauit made by Arthur Matelket, re-1 -porter for a German newspaper, was j discharged later in police court. Had I c ertain evidence been more definite, j the magistrate said, he would havej been inclined to send her accuser to the workhouse. Almost at the moment of Mrs. Steg- ; ler's discharge in police court, the fed eral grand jury returned an indict-1 ment charging her husband with con spiracy against the United States In obtaining an American passport falsi!-1 ly. Stegler is a German naval reser\ -j Ist. Two others were indicted with j him, Richard Madden, in whose name! the passport was issued and Gustavel Cook, of Hoboken, who it is charged, I participated in obtaining the passport. The. three men were to be arraigned! later in the afternoon. Mrs. Stegler spent the night in a I cell in the police station. Matelket, j who appeared against her, told the! court that she had attacked htm in a bedroom with a seltzer bottle and had liit him over the head with a cane. He | showed no marks of an encounter, | however. The testimony brought out the fact that Matelket and another man had accompanied' two women to the hotel, one of them Mrs. Stegler, that the party had remained In the ho tel parlor for some time and after wards had obtained adjoining rooms where they remained until 1.30 o'clock. Party Remained Together Mrs. Stealer testified that the party remained together during' the entire period they were at the hotel and that the two men had tried to disrobe her. At no time, she testified, were she and Mateiket alone. She characterized the charge against her as a "frame up." In dismissing the complaint the jnagistrate announced that he would ke inclined to send Mateiket and his r vicin ity may expect fair weather with about normal temperature to night and Tueaday. Temperature: s a. m„ aa. Milli KINCM, 0:114 a. m.- aela, p. in, Moon: Full moon, to-day, 5:4 M li. in. River Since: 8.7 feet above low water mark. Ve«teriln>'« Weather Hlwlieat temperature, ail, l.owcat temperature. Mean tempcriitu-e. an. Annual temperature, ;!J. BRITAIN ID FRICE TO STOP ALL SHIPS BOUND FOR GERMANY Announcement Is Made to State Department and Referred to President U. S. GOVERNMENT SILENT Authorities Not Prepared to Make Comment on New Situation at Present By Associated Press W ashington, March I. —France and [ Great Britain served notice tin the i United States to-day that they would j hold themselves at liberty to stop all! shipping hereafter to and from Ger-' many. A communication, outlining incus- j ures of reprisals on the part of the j allies for the submarine warfare on I merchant ships conducted by Ger-1 many was delivered to Secretary j Bryan by the French and British am- i hassadors, here, who called personally I at the State Department together fori that purpose. Secretary Bryan promptly apprised , President Wilson of the new move but declined to make any statement. What the nature of the step is, was not dis closed by the ambassadors, who inti mated that the State Department j [Continued on Page 10.] MAJOR EVANS TO BE BURIED Ml UNIFORM Long Time State Employe Had Interesting and Varied Military Career Major fiarton Darlington Evans, age 70, a former superintendent of public printing, and later connected with the State Department of Fisher ies, died at his home, at the Slgler Apartments, 30 North Second street, late yesterday afternoon. Death was due to a general breakdown. Major Evans has been confined to his homo I for eight weeks. One. daughter, Miss Elizabeth Evans, [Continued on l'age 7.] MATRIMONY VIES TO PROTECTRIVER BANK Hardy Plants Will Weave Roots Through Clay, Preventing It From Washing Plans for the planting of the newly made fill along the River Bank be tween Calaer and Maclay streets as outlined by Warren H. Manning, the city's landscape architect, are intended to protect the bank from high water like that of the past week, which has carried away earth from some por tions. It was to be expected that some of the loose earth would be washed away, but when Mr. Manning's plans have been carried out the new fill will present the same sort of resisting power to lloods mat characterizes the River Bank below Herr street. ! For the present Mr. Manning will I recommend the planting of hundreds of thousands of little matrimony vines 'along the slope, and nothing else, ut i least until this has attained a sturdy I growth. The matrimony vine is free | of all disease. It is hardy and tills and (■overs the ground with an intricate mass of roots and p'ems, all of which [prevent the surface from washing. It [is rather a pretty thing, flowering freely in the Spring. although not showy, but Its fruit is brilliant and beautiful in Fall and winter. The tree planting along the walk that is proposed to extend beyond the western curb line of Front street along the fill is to be similar to that farther down the river. The width of the bank from the curb line to the point where it starts to slope toward the wall will be made as uniform as conditions will permit, it was said to-day. Until the water recedes Commis sioner M. Harvey Taylor, superinten dent of parks and public property, said there is absolutely no way of deter mining what damage has been dope to the new "fill" on North Front street. He believes it will be very slight, how ever. The park commissioner's treatment of the slopes above "Hardscrabble" had been urged by the property owners in the upper end of the city and they are endorsing his method of filling in the banks. Scores or people who strolled along the bank to-day smilingly flout ed the stories of extensive damages to the new "fill" by the recent high water. , WARSHIP OFF GOLDEN GATE By Associated I'ress San Francisco. Ca!„ March I.—An unidentified warship with four fun- I neis was reported off the Golden Gate early to-day, accompanying northward u British tramp steamer. The war vessel, the first of any of the bellig erents to be sighted off this port in ntuny months, was believed to be British. HARRISBURG. PA., MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 1, 1915. STUCK LATE.SMTH I r ' IT NOW -\F I, bONT" \ / "TWH \ MADAM CLARA PILL \T OOT IGO \ / m\> TWt SAN A V/UVAMT TD 3"A\L_-BOT I NEED I FRANCISCO FfMR — \ HELP TO FIGURE \T / SOT WHEN \T COMES TO J FORTUNE OOT-OCCULTA\D VS / \ WORKING TFlieo ®) 19/4'- 1 HTi_- 4VHO —6A-. Geo rue W. Klehl untl Un.-cn May, city. /) IJ * POSTSCRIPT. were engaged and that they were re pulsed after fierce lighting at close quarters. In the Argonne, Berlin reports, tho French made five efforts to break through tho German positions, bein-f thrust back in each instance. The French statement asserts that the al lies made slight progress in the Yos ges. In the House of Commons, Premier Asquith announced that at no time previously had the British government been more confident that the allies would achieve victory. UNIDENTIFIED STtvV.MDII AFLOAT By Associated Press New York. March I.—An uniden tified steamship with oil propeller blades shorn off was adrift last week near the middle of the Atlantic, ac cording to the log of the American. Bine steamer New York, which reached here to-day from Liverpool. KNKMY DRIVEN BACK By Associated Press Petrograd, Feb. 118.—The following statement was issued to-night by tho general staff of the Army of the Cau casus: "Our advance forces, driving the enemy before them, have reached the river Kliopatchai. There is no change in the situation on the other fronts." PIANO IIDCKNTLY INSTALLED IN KOKOMO CHURCH SILENT « By Associated Press Kokomo, Ind„ March I.—Services were held yesterday in the Walnut Grove Christian Church, when James McKillip, who procured a shotgun and took possession of the. building two weeks ago, allowed the congregation to worship without molestation. McKil lip took possession because a piano was installed in the church. McKll llp's father gave the property to tho congregation twenty years ago, but stipulated in the deed that no musical instruments were to be used in the building. The piano was silent yes terday.