All Northern Mexico Is Seething Wilh HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH • YYYV -NT,, f-.t nv CARRIEU O CENTS A WEEK. LAAA V i\ O. D."> NIXGLK COPIES a CENTS. 'RUMORS OF MORE REVOLTS GIVE SINISTER TURN TO U. S. TROOP SITU A TION IN MEXICO Torreon Garrison Is Reported to Have Gone Over to Chi huahua Force in Sympathy With Villa; All Northern Mexico Is Seething With Open Rebellion Against the de Facto Government FEARED STATE OF SONORA, NEVER STRONG FOR CARRANZA WILL ALSO TURN TO BANDIT Troops Along Border Under Arms All Night; Machine Gun Detachments Held in Readiness For Instant Use Should Outbreaks Occur on This Side of Line; El Paso Fears Uprising K1 Paso, Tex., March 23.—Francisco Villa has established a base to the westward of Xamiquipa to reorganize his command and recruit new men for his army, it was reported here to-day. At this new base, it was said Villa woidd lay plans to operate with the force of General Luis lierrera who is understood to have renounced the de facto government. The American army base at Columbus has had no news of Villa for over two days. General Luis Herrera, until recently in command of the Car ranza garrison at Chihuahua City is said to be moving northwest ward to effect a juncture with Villa and this, in connection with the report that the Carranza garrison at Torreon had revolted, has occasioned grave concern among the American armv officers in El Paso. V illa men. augmented by the com mand of General llerrera said to num ber 2,000, might be in a position to harrass General Pershing's army and seriously interrupt the line of com munication between the advanced base of American forces at Casas Grandes unit the base at Columbus. Would Transfer 15asc An early agreement with the Car ranza government for the permission m to use Mexican railway lines is greatly T " desired by army officers. The main base would then be transferred from Columbus to Kl Paso and the Mexico Northwestern railway could be used to ship men and xupplies to Casas Grandes. The railroad could be easily main-1 talncd against interruption while the present line southward out of Colum bus over a desert might be readily i-ul. should Villa recruit a formidable body of men. Villa is said to have sent agents among the populace in the mountain districts urging them to support him against the Americans and is equipping his men with arms itnd ammunition which be had stored. There is no confirmation of a re port that Colonel t'ano of Carranza's jriny has joined forces with Villa. All was quiet in Juarez early to lay and street car service, which was suspended last night for fear of trou ble in that Mexican city, was resumed. The railroad bridges however, are slill under guard. So grave was the situ.ition regarded here that the military authorities planned to-day drastic steps to relieve all Mexicans in Kl Paso of any arms they might have concealed in their homes ami enforce what would be practically martial law in "little Chi huahua," the heart of El Paso's Mexi can section. NoUlicrs Voder Arms All night long K. Paso waited for the warning whistles which would tell that the expected outbreak had oc curred. Three hundred soldiers with machine gun detachments waited un der arms for any emergency and the police reserves, equipped with rilles, were also held ready. It is understood that government officials here have sent to Washington a recommendation, couched in the strongest terms, urging that steps be taken to disarm all Mexicans along the border, taking the right of forcible entry and search if necessary. Up to the present, it is said, the Washington authorities opposed such a step on the ground that, it would be misinter preted by the Mexicans as diserimi naiion against them and in violation of their rights. It is now insisted by the local authorities that the time has passed for any delicacy in handling THE WEATHER] For Ifi»rrlsl»iir>j: nn«l vicinity: Fair, continued cold to-night, witli loupMt temperature about -5 de grees: Friday fair and warmer. For Hastem Pennsylvania: Fair to night: Friday fair and warmers nortlnvcHt winds beeomtaff: vari able. River Tlio severe storm, which WAS OPll llranrli will remain nearly sta tionary. The Juniata will fall. The West llraaeli will rl*c, ex cept the upper portion, which will fall somewhat. \o material chances are likely to occur In Ice conditions, except In the Upper West Ilranch. The Ice broke at 1 Icarfleld about 1) a. m. to-day and moved off on 4.5 feet stave. A staKc of about 1.11 feet Is Indi cated for llnrrishurK Friday mo ml Oft. fienernl Condition* These severe storm, which was cen tral over the Ohio Valley Tues day inoruliiK;. has moved rapldly northeastward to the North \t lantle coast. It caused rain, sleet and snow generally over thi« north half of the country east of the .Mls- MISMI ppI river In the last twcut>- four hours. The hitch pressure area from Manitoba, attended by a fall of 2 to 36 decree* la tem perature, has overspread the east ern half of the country, except New Hiifiland. Temperature: 8 a. n»„ 28* Sun: Itlscs, <1:0*- a. m.t sets, <1:21 P. ni. Moon: Rises. 11:1-1 p. in. River Stage: 4.tt feet above low water mark. Yesterday's Weather Highest temperature. .'PI. I.owest temperature, il«. Mean temperature* 34. Annual temperature, 40. , the situation. It is pointed out that no Amerioun is permitted to enter Mexico i armed and that there has been a far ! greater laxity on this side of the bor : der than was desirable. The situation in Juarez remains mostly a subject, of conjecture with i such information as is obtainable bear ing a decidely sinister aspect. Outbreaks Feared Whatever may happen in Juarez, there is no supposition here that any attack would be made on El Paso from [Continued on Pftge 12.] EXPERT POINTS OUT CITY NEEDS TO BUSINESSMEN Urges New Housing Code, High School, and Manual Train ing in Grades ! "1 can say with evidence to prove j my statement, that no city in Penn ! sylvanla has done so much for the en richment of the lives of its people as has Harrisburg." This was one of the outstanding sen tences'in the address of Allen D. Al -1 bert, municipal expert and president of the International Association of Pvo [Continued on Page 7] Only Two Sections of Hay Army Increase Bill.. Are Awaiting Disposition Washington, March ?3.—Considera tion of the Hay army Increase bill I was continued in the House to-day with only two important sections of j the measure still awaiting disposition. „ One was the military pay provision j under which the bill is expected to i produce a force of 425,000 National ! Guardsmen within five years as a sub stitute for the administration's con- I tinental army proposal and the other ] was that providing for the constrnc j tion of nitrate plants, j When the House resumed work to iday Representative Gardner's amend ment proposing to substitute for the | militia pay provision the volunteer provisions of the Chamberlain Senate j bill, was pending. j An agreement had been reached for an hour's debate on the amendment. It was not expected that the amend | ment would be adopted. Washington, March 23.—The na tional defense program was advanced ! another stage, yesterday when the Senate passed Senator Chamberlain's bill to double the number of cadets at the West Point Military Academy by raising the authorized attendance! from 770 to 1332. If the measure passes the House it will open the way to West Point to I the enlisted man, both of the army' and of the National Guard. It pro-1 vides for the appointment of not more than 200 enlisted men by the Presi j dent, two cadets by each Congress ! men, two from each Territory, four trom the District of Columbia, two j from natives of Porto Uieo, four from each State at large, and sixty from thei United States at large. DENOUNCE ABUSE Ol FRANKING PRIVILEGE By .Issociatci Press Washington, March 23.—Abuse of' itlie. Congressional franking privilege ;is denounced in a report of the House! Printing Committee, which has in-1 eluded a provision in the pending re- 1 I vision of the printing laws designed | I to stop the vpractiee. The report' [charges that members of Congress furnish franked envelopes to in- j dividuals, committees and organiza- j i tions interested in promoting propa-l jgunda at the public expense, t HARRISBURG, PA., THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 23, 1916, Adopts Rival's Baby and Takes Mother Into Own Home j . _____ j 7 c.vh rrocKwrLi\ BSI&Y J \W'A*/ sav*r&/ Chicago, March 23. Mrs. C. W . Stockwell, who decided to adopt her husband's child months before It was born of another woman, has also taken Into her home the mother of t lie baby, for Ihe girl has been driven from lier own liome by her father, a uttered by her moral lapse. "It was my husband's confession that, brought TO rac the first news of the existence oi' the girl and the coming baby." said Mrs. Stockwell. "That fact had great weight in influencing me and fixing my attitude toward him, the mother of his child and the child itself. "Of course, there are many husbands who are unfaithful to their wives, but we'always believe our husbands arc the exception, and there are many wives who never learn the truth. If J had learned of his un faithfulness from another I hardly believe I could hare forgiven him. "Suppose I had left him? Our' church does not sanction divorce. I would have faced long years alone; our little home here would have been broken up and none of us would have found peace or happiness. "My heart is still sore for the girl whose loving mistake brought her such bitter experience. She says tjie entire happening is still a mystery to her. My one request to her is that from now on she must be a good woman, so that when the time comes for our little son to know that I am not his real mother, he may find pride in the woman he is to, know as his real mother." BIG BULL MOOSE LEADERS HERE FOR CONFERENCE Signs Point to Continuance ol' Progressive Party Organiza tion For Coming Campaign Between thirty and forty Washing;- : ton party men are attending the State conference at the Bolton and the question of what reference should be made to Governor Brumbaugh's cam paign in behalf of a reunited Republi can party was the big business of tlie first hour. Almost all of the men in attendance were favorable to the party putting up its own State ticket this year. A committee on resolutions was named with William Flinn, Gilford Pinchot, George IJ. Holmes and others as members. These resolutions will i reaffirm allegiance to Colonel Koose- , velt and his policies and cull for a straight party ticket to be nominated in May. Among those present were William Flinn, E. A. Van Valkenburg, Rob ert K. Young. Clifford Pinchot. and 1 William Draper Lewis. indications early this afternoon [Continued on Page 7] Reduction Company Given More Time by Health Dept. Officials of the Pennsylvania Kedue- ] tion company, contractors for remov ing ashes anij garbage in the. city, were given an opportunity by I he City Health bureau after a conference yes terday, to obtain men and resume i regular collections. Owing to the strike of ash and gar bage collectors in the city, no Collec tions were made on Monday and Tues day, and only a few wagons were out yesterday and to-day. "The city health bureau decided to give the Re duction company officials more time to get men for the wagons, and it is believed that regular collections will be resumed within a few days. An other meeting of the health board will probably bo held next week to dis cuss the situation. Samuel Gardner. |j president of the Reduction company ! ■ said yesterday that he will pay motl , 20 cents an hour to make collections.!. NI:\YSBOVS_TO BOOST Further plans for Roosting the I lar-< risburg Newsboys' Association will be j i discussed to-morrow evening at aj i iigeUng ot the carriers' organization, jj ELECTION JUDGE GUILTY OF FRAUD, JURY'S VERDICT William M. Jones Convicted of Conspiracy; Will Sentence 1 Board Members Together By a sealed verdict returned this morning at the convening of March quarter sessions, William M. Jones, judge of the election board of the second precinct, Sixth ward, was con victed of conspiracy at the Septem ber, 1915, primaries. The judge of the board is the only member who stood trial, the others, Delano Jones, J. 11. need and George 13. Aloore . having entered pleas yes terday of "nolle contendere"—no de | fense. . . . . The four will-be called for sentence i together. ' •One'member of the board who had been Indicted with the others didn't answer to his paine when called yes terday. This was W. 11. Young. His death occurred several weeks ago. The Sixth ward board was charged 1 with having falsified the returns of the primaries in such a way as to al low Benjamin Smith, a majority of one vote in the whole ward over Bertron A. Weills, in the contest for the Republican nomination of con stable. A recount was made by the county commissioners and the dis crepancy was shown when the ballot box was opened. Won Acquittal by Own Pleading; in Jail Again Edward Welsh, who pleaded his own case before a jury in the Dauphin county criminal court this week, and was acquitted on a charge of larceny, was given another chance to-day to act as attorney for himself when he was brought before Mayor E. S. Meals charged with drunken disorderliness. He was arrested last, evening by De tective Speese. OUST BUSS WAR HEAD By Associated Press Petrograd. March 23. General Spukhomlinoff, former minister of war, has been removed by imperial ukase from the council of the empire,, saye a-semiofficial news agency. General Soukhomlinoff was charged with being responsible for the short age In munitions which had seriously! interfered with the operations of the j Russian army. j DISCUSS MEANS OF REDUCING PA. ACCIDENTS Great Industrial Leaders and J Corporation Heads Confer at the Capitol GOVERNOR PRESIDES Gompers Says "Overwork" Is , as Much Cause as Care lessness Great labor and industrial leaders, j railroad presidents and officials of the < | big corporations in all parts of Penn- , sylvania, numbering nearly 200, met j, In the hall of the House of Hepre- , sentatives to-day to discuss ways and means of reducing the industrial ac- , cidents in the Keystone State. The conference was called at the , invitation of Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh, and he presided and de livered an address. John Price Jack-1 : son, Commissioner of Labor and In-j dustry, Samuel Gompers, president ofj the American Federation of Labor, j James T. McCleary, secretary of the American Iron and Steel Institute, William C. Wilson, claims attorney of the Delaware, Lackawanna and West ern Railroad Company, and Van Manning, chief of the United States Bureau of Mines, were among the slated speakers. At the conclusion of I each address there were discussions on the points brought out in the ad dresses and in this some of the coun- I try's great labor and industrial lead-1 ers participated. Governor Brumbaugh, when he heard of the great number of acci dents during January and February, j [Continued 011 Page 7.] H. P. Fletcher on Way to Washington For Orders) By Associated Press Panama, March 23. Henry P. Fletcher, new American ambassador | to Mexico, sailed from here to-day on j the steamer f'orrillo for New York on his way to Washington from his for mer post at Santiago, Chile- Mr. Fletcher said he was not pre- : pared to discuss the problems con-1 fronting him in Mexico. He was going' to Washington, he said, to receive in structions and familiarize himself with ! conditions. FIND POISONER OF RICH COUPLE IN DEEP STUPOR New York Doctor Charged With Killing Millionaire Is Near Death By Associated Press 1 New York, March 23.—Detectives | sent to-day to arrest Dr. Arthur War j ren Waite in connection with the death of John E. Peclc, millionaire druggist of Grand Kapids, Mich., found him in a stupor as a result of an opiate, self i administered. Physicians at noon to- I day were working on him to save his I life. District Attorney Swann soon after that hour arrived at Dr. Waite's apart ■ ment and went in, accompanied by a j stenographer. It was given out that | Dr. Waite had taken the opiate to in duce sleep and it was believed that lie would recover. The order for Dr. Waite's apprehen sion was decided upon by the district attorney following the receipt of in formation from Grand Kapids indi cating that Peck may have been poi soned. This information was received [Continued on Pago 11.] Is Bungalow Apron Sufficient Clothing For Lady in Yard ? j Up until to-day Additional Law 1 Judge S. J. M. MeCarrell never ad mitted, in open court, at least, his lack ' of definite knowledge as to what con -1 stitutes a "bungalow" apron. During the trial this morning of Mrs, Mary 'Shaffer, charged with maintaining a disorderly house and furnishing liquor ! to minors, the court found out. Question and answer were recorded when Mrs. Shaffer, in her own defense, denied the allegation of a witness that several yountf girls of the neighbor hood had been seen in her yard clad in—well, really, nothing to speak of. "Why," said the witness, "she had l on only an apron- a bungalow apron." "Was she properly clad?" asked her counsel. ' "Why, certainly." "You said," commented Judge MeCarrell, "that she wore 'only an apron'." "Surely, a 'bungalow apron'." Whereupon Judge MeCarrell asked and learned that a bungalow apron, according to Mrs. Shaffer, is a iong sleeved effect in gingham with a mod estly low neck. Ali-s. Shaffer and her witnesses dc- ' nied that girls and men congregated ; at her house for any questionable pur poses. One witness said,the only songs she'ever heard sung were hymns. The prosecutor was Harry Campbell fatlier of "Mooney" Campbell, who was convicted Monday of having crimi nally attacked a daughter of Mrs. Shaffer. The latter intimated that the charges against her were reprisals be- | cause young Campbell had been con- j vlcted, i PERSISTENT FIRE OF GERMAN GUNS INDICATES DRIVE French Cling to Post of Ilau- ' court Hill; Russ Are Active PUSH TEUTONS BACK 1 Advance Along Dvina and in Galicia; Two Steamers Sunk The French are still clinging to a part of the little hill of Haucourt. southwest of Malancourt, on which the Germans gained a footing last evening In an attack along the front between Avoeourt wood and Mulan- | court, northwest of Verduil. Paris announces to-day that the j German infantry attacks in this sec tor were not resumed during the night i and even the heavy artillery dimin j ished in violence. I The bombardment east of the Meuse was continued with undiminished in tensity. The persistence with which the Germans are pounding the French positions near Vaux and Damloup, in j this region indicates that they prob-. ! ably are preparing for new attemps to break through in the sector where' their lines have been pushed nearest jto the heart of the stronghold. Besides striving hard against German ; positions along the Dvina and below j Dvinsk on the northern end of the | Russian line, where Pctrograd tie-1 i clares some successes have been scored, the Russians are displaying! | notable activity in Galicia. The Aus jtrians report lively artillery fire along i their front there, with infantry ad- ] | vances at some points. These are de- i i clared to have been repulsed. | Sinking of the Norwegian bark j Mndtield, of 2,270 tons, bound from I Portland, Oregon, for United Kingdom I ports, is announced from London. Thirty members of the crew were res- 1 : cued. Another vessel sunk was the j French bark Bougainville, of 2.24S [Continued on Page 12.] CONDEMNED As PRIZES By Associated I'rcss London, March 28.—The Hamburg-j I American liners Prinz Adalbert and i Kron Prinzessin C'ecilie, which were seized at Falmouth at the outbreak of the war were condemned in prize' j court to-day as prizes. T i 1 Jc 1 # 1 illy represent, it is said, more than-three billions JL a f I Prevention Conference was opened. C. L. Close, represent- I i $ Rree! Corporal 1 )n had already expended thousands of dollars for safety I S devices and that efforts are now being made to the T men to do all they can to prevent acidents. Vice-President f f idvale Steel Corporation, was another « T speaker, and he told of the safety measures at his plants, f « 'leary, secretary of the American Iron and |9 f ite, talked on "Hazzards of the Steel Industry 1 I and Their Prevention." B. F. Laßue, of the Lehigh Valley L 9 I & W., and Van Manning, chief of the United States Bureau I J of Vines, were the other speakers. \ IGNORE CONSPIRACY CHARGE | | ;burg.—March quarter sessions grand jury late V ? s afternoon ignored the bill of indictment preferred by • I the District Attorney's office against arshall Finklin, charg- A 9 td with conspirac./. Ficklin, according to a member of the 1 ! Second Precinct, Sixth Ward election board had replaced 1 one of tht board at the September primaries. L GERMANS SINK FOUR SHIPS J London, March tS. —The Norwegian and British steaiv. I ships, Kannik and Sea Serpent and the Norwegian and | French barks Lindfield and Bougainville have been sunk | by the Germans. There is no loss of life reported. \ ► ASSERTS HERRERA IS LOYAL L El Paso, Tex., March 23.—Ignacio Enrigue*, civil gc I K 1 . ernor of the state of Chihuahua, sent a telegram to Consul Garcia at Al, Paso to-day declaring that General Luis t t * Herrera, commanding the garrison at Chihuahua City still was loyal to the first chief and not to credit report*, of his ► defection to Villa. . . MARRIAGE LICENSES ■! 1 L>r. Harry Wnlmer. MillrrMhurit, and >II*M Clin Minnie Ihi her, I.ORMII. | (irorKf Arthur WntkliiM, Xcw < IIIIIIhtIIIIHI, nml Minnie M* rutin « aihf- I rluc Hfur., \«>rthuiiilierlini«l. 16 PAGES CITY EDITION AUGUSTA SWEPT BY FIVE MILLION CONFLAGRATION Thirty Blocks of Georgia Me tropolis Destroyed in Largest of Southern Fires HEART OF CITY BURNED Nashville, Tenn., Suffers sl,- 500,000 Loss; 5,000 Persons Made Homeless • - By Associated Press Augusta, Ga., March 23. One of a series of tires which have caused millions of dollars' worth of damage in the past few days in the South and southwest swept through ten busi ness blocks of Augusta and twenty adjoining residence blocks last niglit and early to-day, and before being gotten under control had caused dam age conservatively estimated at not less than $5,000,000. No lives were reported lost in the Augusta tire, al though there were scores of narrow tContinued 011 Paso B.] Small Breweries Desire to Fight Indictments; Big Concerns Ready to Pay Special to the Telegraph j Erie, Pa., March 23.—The news that ! brewery counsel were here to arrange a conference with Federal Judge I Thompson and get. a line 011 probablt ! fines if the 72 brewing companies pleaded no defense to the indictments for conspiracy to violate the federal corrupt practices act brought tele grains from manv of the indicted companies vigorously protesting against such a move. It developed heads of the indicted breweries are divided tin the course to j lie followed. The larger Philadelphia and Pittsburgh breweries favor plead ing guilty if they can obtain reason able assurance tho, fines will not. be I heavy. The innximiim penalty is $15,- j 000 for each indicted brewery. The I big city brewers consider this would i lie n good political move, tending mort quickly to end the whole inquiry, j Heads ol' the smaller breweries saj they want to come into court, opei their books and light the indictments.