Dublin Street Fighting Continues With Long List of Casualties HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH T VVY\r V rt 07 BY 4MUtll.lt CENTS % WEEK. LAAA V — V HIGGLE COPIES '2 CENTS, SINN FEINERS DESPERATELY FOR LIVES;CITYONFIRE Regulars Now Command All Rebel Positions, the Fall of Which Is Matter of Time; Field Cans Bark, Machine Guns Rattle and Rifle Fire Patters All Over City Ap parently at Same Time; Casualty List Exceeds 100 SACKVILLE AND GRAFTON STREETS IN FLAMES; ARTILLERY BEING USED ON VACANT HOUSES Snipirs on Housetops Take Potshot at All Civilians; Firm ly Believed in Popular Mind That German Submarines Have Been Landing A rms For Several Months; j Countess in Uniform Shoots Guard; Looting Is Now Widespread London. April 2''.—Parts of the city of Dublin arc in flames, an' Evening News dispatch filed at Belfast last night says. Street fight- j ing continues and there is much looting. One dispatch received from Ireland this afternoon says that Sackville and Grafton streets in Dublin arc in flames and that artil lery i- being used on the houses, the inhabitants having been removed. J Dublin. April 27. —Fifteen hundred or so armed men of the Sinn Fein had a hold on Ireland's capital to-day. After four days of fight-! ing their rebel flag still flew from a number of central points. Since Monday some of the chief positions in the city have been in the hands of the rebels. In defending these strongholds against regular troops and Irish nationalist volunteers the rebels are fighting with desperation for their lives which they know may be forfeited on account of treason. Regulars now command all the rebel positions, the tall of which ir merely a question of time. The streets of Dublin were deserted to-day. except for sentries and military guards. Husines> was at a standstill. Civilians peeped anxiously from behind curtained windows. Field guns were bark ing, machine guns rattling and rifle tire was pattering, apparently from every quarter at the same time. Wh?n the Associated Press corre- 1 spondent landed early this morning at the quay near the customs house the pinging of bullet from rifles of snipers in the vicinity was frequent. Augustine Birrell.the secretary for Ire land. had made tlie passage from Eng land with the newspapermen. As he stepped ashore he shouted cheerily: "I wish you luck gentlemen. 1 don't know what will happen to you. now that you are here." Naval Ciuiis \iu Soldiers and rebels tired at ea> h other from street corners, wharves, roofs and windows. Sentries with fixed bayonets on loaded rifles, sta tioned every few yards shouted their commands to halt. Naval guns join ed in and added to the deafening gun fire. From the quay the respective posi tions could be seen. The rebels were holding a square section of territory, from the point where Liberty llall stood before a gunboat destroyed it as fnr as Sackville street, to St. Stephens Green and the Four Courts district, and along the southern side of the river to the Butt and OVonnell bridges. They also held isolated posi tions in a flour mill and a disused dis tillery opposite the Northwall station. Rebel Flag Waves Over all this section there was con siderable fighting the whole day. The distiller)' was the scene of one of the •sharpest little battles of the uprising. The rebels were forced out*of the flour mill by bombardment and many of them were seen, covered with flour, making their way to the distillery. Once there they hoisted the rebel flag, which floated from the corner of a square tower. Soon a naval gun opened fire. The fust shot hit the tower, and then half a dozen in succession struck the roof around it. The flag still flew and the rebels replied with rifles and a ma chine gun. The bombardment ceased after a dozen shots, but was renewed later. Hit after hit was scored, but the Hag remained hanging from its pole. One shot hit a water lank just below it and for a time there was a miniature cas cade down the walls of the distillery. When night fell and all firing ex cept with rifles ceased the flag was [Continued on Page I] THE WEATHER For HnrrNhuru nn«l vlelnlty: Fair 10-iiiitht and Sunday; warmer to ulultf. with lowent temperature nitont is (leftrreit. For Kflntfrn IVmiw> l\an in s Fair to nluht nnil SiiDiln)': warmer to nlicht; ilßtit, \ nrialile ulndn. Ilivrr The Slinquelianun river nml nil It* liranchcN will fall nlowly for nev eral dayn. or uotll nuhntiintial rnlnn oeeur. \ ntaiie «f about 7.7 feet I* Indicated for If iirriMlni r» Sunday nmrnlnit. t.enernl t onditloiiM The KOantern dlnturhnnee lin* final ly panned neanaril off tlie Middle Atlantic MMt it mmmmm4 mtral rnlnn with nome niiow In \ewr CoKlnnd and local nhowern In \ew York and Kantern Pennsyl vania In the lant twenty-four hoam. A general rlne of 2 to 14 ilegreen in temperature hnn oeeurred from the Plnlnn . .Normal temperature, stl. OVERTHROW OF CARRANZA NEAR ENVOYS ARETOLD Coll ap s e of Government Threatens, Foreign Em bassies Hear ON VEROE OF REVOLT f irst Chief in Danger From Starving Peons For Letting Troops In Foreign embassies in Washington have received reports from Mexico that the downfall of Carranza "s gov . eminent is near. With starvation and pestifence all • lover the country, financial chaos and • 'business stagnation in the principal cities, particularly Mexico City, the people are ready to oust Venustiano Cat-ranaa, it is said. . The report declares that all of Mex ico is on the verge of revolt, the last , cause of unrest being resentment • against Carranza for letting the Ameri • can troops cross the border after Villa. Villa is again a national hero. 'I be Intrigue is said to extend to Carranza's household, and he is in danger of assassination, the embassies hear. Hostility is said to be shown in Mexico t'itv to Americans in particular and to all foreigners in general. General Ohregon. minister of war. at Juarez denies that there is anv feel- I ine against Carranza. Generals Scott and Funston are in El Paso and General Obregon is at Juarez. The first step in the eonfer [Continucd oh Page I] MAV I'M'KH MONEY fly Associated P'ess Mexico City, April 28. A decree ! issued by General Carranza announces | that Mexico's new issue of paper money will be worth twenty cents in Mexican gold for each paper dollar. This will tnake the new peso equiva lent to to len cents in American gold. Kaiser Wants to Convey Through Gerard Plea For U. S. to Stay Friendly Special la the Telegraph Washington. April 29. The true significance of Ambassador Gerard's visit to the German grand armv head quarters, for an audience with the ! German Emperor, was explained in ofllci.il advices from Berlin. The visit has been made at the Emperor's request in order to per mit him to convey through Ambassa dor Gerard an earnest plea to Presi dent Wilson to maintain friendly re lationl with Germany. COI.IX M'l-K.W DIKS Ry Associated Press Baltimore. Md.. April 29. Colin i McLean, one of the largest and best ! known contractors on the Atlantic sea board. died at his home herjß to-dav of pneumonia. He was born in Nova Scotia seventy-two yenrs ago. Among his undertakings were the construction of the foundations for the Statue of ' Liberty and Brooklyn Bridge. He also built the longest timber bridge in the t world, that over Albemarle sound. HARRISBURG, PA., SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 29, 1916. I STATE FIRST AID CORPS AT WORK | V J ■Br y - * ■L_# SBf m- MtM, v* W • m ¥ \M A kflMf **■ A -aS^^H " : ' "" ' - .-i ' f _. : __ ._ _ ', : I - - ! - m mi* f^mm %•■ djfcg BBpll:;r * % PRETTY TWINS KEEP MARRIAGE CLERK GUESSING 'thought Ho Saw Double When Two Visions in Pink and Gray Confront Him Xol often does the tiny traditional dean or the marriage bureau tease License Clerk Jake Alvord as he did to-day. He was fussed, lie says. 'Twas a mighty day in that branch of the recorder's office and Jake was turning out licenses pretty nearly as last as he could pen the certificates. Consequently when Mrs. Elder B. Hustler sank into a chair at the bureau desk and said she was there to obtain a license for her daughter the clerk glanced tip only lons enough to note ' that the dnuehter was mighty pretty, (Continued on I'ago 9) COL T.M. JONES TO SELL NEWSPAPERS He and Other Ex-newsboys Will Assist in Kaising Sick Fund Colonel Thomas M. Jones, the well known Harrisburg newspaper man who has lived, breathed and well nigh eaten newspapers most of his life, will some line day in the near future doff hat and coat, step into the (Continued on Page 10.) State Expert to Talk on Flower Life at Paxtang Special to the Telegraph ~ ( Paxtang Pa., April 2a. —Sheldon W. Funk, of Boyerstown, one of the farm advisers of the State Department of Agriculture, who talked during the planting day exercises at the school house yesterday afternoon, made such a deep impression on the adults who heard him that he was immediately Invited to return to the borough for an evening meeting to talk on plants and flowers. Mr. Funk Is an expert in his line and his talk yesterday on the origin and formation of flowers was listened'to with much interest. The Rev. H. B. King, pastor of the Paxton ' Presbyterian Church. offered his church as a place for the planned meeting. Planting "Day here was a liig site cess and the addresses and the pro gram carried out li.v the children were well received. Professor Shamhaugh, superintendent of schools of Dauphin county, and Professor Zimmerman, the assistant superintendent, were present and following sjjort talks they assisted in the planting Other speakers included William 11. Ifetrlck, who originated the planting idea here, , Ralph I. Diehl, a school director, and William Kitchen. The Rev. Mr. King i offered the opening prayer, APRIL BUILDING FIGURES TOPPLE ALL OLD RECORDS Permits Aggregating Stupen dous Sum of $373,4-15 Issued This Month April. 1!»16. will so down in the his tory of Harrisburg's building operations as tile biggest Spring month on record since 1909. Permits aggregating an expenditure of just $373,445 were issued during the ; month that closed to-day: in July. 1914, the total was $109,055. This month in cidentally totaled nearly a iiundred thousand dollars more than the entire first quarter of 1916 for in January, February and March combined oniy SL'76.SS:; was expended. That April, 1916. was bound to be ' [Continued u n Page 16.] NEW DORMITORY I FOR THE ACADEMY i Rapid Growth of Harrisburg's Preparatory School Demands New Building Immediately It was learned to-day that another 1 big step forward will be taken at the J Harrisburg Academy in the very near future. Coincident with the house , warming next Thursday afternoon from 4 to 6 of tlie new Seiicr dormi tory and the Lyman D. Gilbert library in the main Academy building, plan's will be made for the erection of a second new dormitory within the year The growth of the Academy under the ' new regime, with the board of trus tees co-operating heartily and con structively with Headmaster Arthur (Continued on Page 9) All Bethlehem Corporation Employes Get Raise; More Money for C. I. & S. Men Simultaneously with the announce ment that 7,000 employes of the Penn -1 s.vlvania Steel rotnpany would receive a voluntary raise of 10 per cent, in wages came the announcement from the offices of the Bethlehem Steel Company that the 24,000 employes of 1 that company would receive a similar raise, both effective May 1. The increase which the Bethlehem officials announce will mean An addi tional J 170,000 on the total of the month's payroll. President E. U Grace lujving returned from Atlantic City, where he went to recuperate from an illness, made the announcement, according to .i special dispatch, that he was pleased to announce the raise. Announcement was made last night b> Robert H. Irons, superintendent of the Central Iron and Steel Companv. that the employes at that plant would receive substantial increases in sala ries, effective Jday J, < WOMEN'S FIRST AID CORPS AT STATE CAPITOL Class of Girls on Ground Be fore Men Woke Up to Their Opportunity An active first aid corps of over a hundred members has been organized among the employes of the State De partment of llealth in the Capitol. Several months ago Commissioner of Health Samuel G. Dixon, arranged that the employes of his department should : receive a series of iertures and be | drilled under a practical instructor in i rendering first aid In its various 'brandies. A member of the depart ment's medical taff who had tauglit 1 first aid in the t'nlted States army ! was chosen for the work and classes ! | for both men and women were or- i i ganized. A keen rivalry has grown up between them as to which will turn 1 | out the most efficient teams. ] In two Instances within the past ' week when accidents and sudden 111- I ness occurred in the Capitol, members j j of the Department of Health's women's j I first aid team have been on the ground I before anyone else and rendered as sistance. This has greatly chagrined ' | t|ie men who are drilling regularly and i waiting for an opportunity to demon trate their skill. This organization will probably form the nucleus of the safety organiza tions in the Capitol which Governor Brumbaugh suggests in a letter which ! lie sent this week to the various de partment heads requesting them to act as an advisory committee to outline plans for safety work throughout the State institutions and organizations. J | Orders have been issued by Dr. Dixon for the instruction in first aid of the nursing staffs of the 115 State ; tuberculosis dispensaries. Classes have also been organized at the State sana • toria at Mont Alto, Cresson and Ham- I i " urK - . Labor Party Considering Merging With Socialists New York. April 29. —A proposal to | ujergc with the Socialist party is one \ .of the important questions before the i national convention of the Socialist-' ; Labor party here to-day. When the Socialist party recently | i nominated Allan L. Bensen for the presidency by referendum it ifclso de- 1 T tided to authorize its executive com mitte to name a committee to confer with the Socialist-Labor party's repre sentatives regarding a union, it is: expected that to-day's convention will appoint a committee for such a con > furence. It is said that members of Ihe Socialist party have been discuss ing such a merger ever since the i death, about two years ago, of Daniel I Dc Leon, leader of the party in this t state. The consummation of such a . i union would heal a breach in Socialist i ranks dating back twenty years. Wildcat Jumps on Man's Shoulder in Dark Waynesboro, Pa., April 29.—Wild ( cats are still in the mountains around Pen-Mar. Last Wednesday night Archibald Fox, a motorman of that j place, had an exciting experience. | Hearing a noise in the smokehouse, ! he seized his rifle and ran out. As he came to the door a wildcat sprang at , him, glanced off bis shoulder and dis- ; appeared in the darkness. Fox put liis dog on the trail and about a mile out from town he treed the animal. Aim ing at the flashing eyes, he ilred, and a wildcat, weighing 28 pounds and measuring 2 feet long, dropped to I lie ground. , Youthful Astor Heir Can Not Live on $20,000 Yearly ' i New York. April 29. John Jacob 5 ■ j Astor. 4 years old. finds that it costs . him $75 a day to live and during the . i last year liis expenses have been $27,-i 593.20. Mrs. Madeline Talmage Force I Astor. his mother and guardian of his I . property, filed her second annual ac-1 . ! counting in the Surrogates' Court. Mrs. Astor shows that although the '. court has allowed her to spend $20,000 , a year in support of her son from his income, it has been impossible to keep all liis wants supplied with I hat i amount. Every hour the youngest heir to the • Astor fortune spends $3.15 and not a , week goes by that lie does not average [ $630.63 expended for his food, lodg ing clothing, education- and recre Ration, DOPE FIEND GOT 1 HIS OPIUM IN N. Y. HE SAYS Paid $2.30 an Ounce William Byrd Tells City Police 1 j WOMEN ARE WITNESSES One Testifies Accused Gave Her "Pipe" lo Smoke Several Times William Byrd anil Albert Wise, col- j ' ored, charged with violating the Har- ( | rison antidrug law, were held under | SI,OOO bail for United States court | i by l.ero.v J. Wolfe, United States Com- j | misslomws for the Middle Pennsylva nia district, after a hearing this morn ! ing. Byrd was arrested on Wednesday 1 | evening by Detectives Shuler and' Speese, on suspicion, and gave the J officers information which resulted in a raid on a raider street house Thurs day morning, when Wise was appre hended. Margaret Byrd. wife of Wil liam Byrd. and Ruth Poindexter, who j said she lived with Wise, were thej I principal witnesses this morning with the exception of the two detectives. I Detective Shuler testified that Byrd j admitted buying the opium found in the suit case taken by the police, \ and said that he paid $2.50 an ounce i for it in New York city. More than 21 oinces were found in the outfit taken by the officers. ! Ruth Poindexter testified that Byrd 1 had given he>- an opium pipe to smoke I several times, and the woman also | identified the part of the kit which ! i belonged to Wise. Further investigations will be made i by the detectives in ,an effort lo get ' more evidence on the use of "dope" in l the city, and other arrests may ft»l --| low. CUPID BUSY vr BARX VRD New York, April 29.—Marriage as a life pursuit i>- becoming; attractive again among college women, accord ing to statistics which appeared in the ; Mortarboard, the yearbook of Barnard \ College. Sev en members of the class , o' ISIS have plunged into matrimony since their graduation, putting it iifth j 1 among the list of occupations taken ! ■< up by the 111 graduates. Teaching. i however, still holds a strong lead. 47 i 1 having decided to follow the orthodox ! ■ path of college graduates. £ REPORTS OF BANDITS IN TEXAS UNVERIFIED San Antonio, April 29.—Headquarters of the southern i department of the army had not been advised to-day of the ' reported crossing into Texas of a band of Villa bandits at Terlingua was said by officers to be strong enough to handle 1 the situation if bandits have crossed. . * ] ! GERMANS TAKE 5,000 RUSS PRISONERS 4 » Berlin, April 29, via London.—The capture of Russian i positions south of Lake Narocz between Stanarocze and j I Stachowce, by German troops, together with more than ( 5,000 prisoners was announced by the War Office to-day. i BERLIN'S REPLY IS COMPLETED 1 London, April 29.—The Berliner Tageblatt says that 1 | Germany's reply to the latest American note has been com pleted and will be delivered at the beginning of next week, i according to a dispatch from Copenhagen to the Exchange < Company. TECH HIGH WINS RELAY 1 Franklin Field. April 29.—One mile relay high school— < won by Harrisburg Technical; second, Williamsport; third, ! Steelton; fourth, Reading; fifth, Harrisburg; sixth, Altoona. 1 9 Time, 3.40. < » POPE SENDS NOTE TO DUBLIN , Paris, April 29. A Rome dispatch to the Matin, says < i that Pope Benedict granted an interview of an hour to Car dinal Gasquet, an English prelate, aftler which the Pope , sent a long telegram to the archbishop of Dublin. 1 * 1 DO HURDLES 16 Franklin Field, April 29.—120 yards hurdle, heats on ( < ■ grass, first heat won by Packer, Iowa; second, Watt, Cor ! Nell; third, Coolidge, Harvard. Time, 16 seconds. '■> MARRIAGE I l)r. .lonrpli l.lulit Diihklici-i j n nil llelrn Katliryn liutli.Miirrninniitom n ; ■lnmrn ICilnln l)«r»ln, < iirfUlr, nuil Sue Kathry n llt-Hmnii. «lt> ; tarun Dll- Inril, Uriidinu. mill ll«ry Stewart, ••Ityi -1 (loyd Uillrtiy Kndcrx anil Mary J line Hustler. \ronrr» nml t'linrlottr Hcbrrcn lluntlrr. \r« « nm-i brrlaadt « barlrn Benjamin Krall and Mary Brandt Mrtxgrr, Mlddletonn; (iulaeiip* Intrrri and Hoaa Artlmano, XtMllon, IS PACKS CITY EDITION BRITISH FORCE IN MESOPOTAMIA SURRENDERS TO TURKISH ARMY Major General Townshend in Command of 50,000 Men Besieged at Kut-el-Amara Since Last December Gives Up After Destroying All Guns and Munitions BELIEVED STARVATION FORCED THIS MOVE Grounding of Supply Ship in Tigris Dashed Last Hope of Garrison; Relief Army Held in Check Short Dis tance Away flv Associated Press Unidon. April :!». I:ir» P. M.— Major-ticncral Clmrles Town- • shend, commander <>•' 1 lie* liritlsli forces besieged at Kul-el-.\mara. 'Mesopotamia, by Turkish forces since last lJccember,' has surren dered. This information was contained in a British official statement issued this afternoon. The official statement added that j General Townshend destroyed all his (Continued 011 Page 16.) Thugs Beat and Rob Reading Brakeman Morris, a brakeman in the TJi therford yards, was attacked about 2 o'clock this morning by two negroes. Morris was at work when his assail ants rushed 011 him and kicked him itill he was unconscious. They took s.;o which he had just received on his salary, and a gold watch valued at 1 $35. Morris is twenty-one years old and resides at 430 South Seventeenth ! street. He was taken to the Harris i burg Hospital and treated for con ! fusions of the abdomen. His assail. ' ants have not yet been captured.