Governor's Troop Quartered at lAfestiaghouse Plant in Strike Zone HARRISBURG fj§l§B|> TELEGRAPH LXXXV— No. 100 GOVERNOR'S TROOP IS FIRST OF MILITIA TO REACH PITTSBURGH TROUBLE ZONE; STRIKERS MAKE MOVE TOWARD PEACE Crack Harrisburg Organization Reaches City in Van of National Guard Commands Ordered by Brum baugh to District Where Rioting Strikers Damage Property and Cause Deaths of Two Persons and In jury of Two Score; Will Be Quartered at Westing house Plant RIDE THROUGH BRADDOCK BUT ARE NOT MOLESTED BY CROWD Troops From Near Pittsburgh Experience Trouble in Mo bilizing; Eighteenth Infantry Gathered in Its Armory and Tenth Infantry Is Assembling at Greensburg; Coal and Iron Police Apparently Have Situation in Hand; No Disorders Today; 1,000 Pressed Steel Car Workmen Close Plant Pittsburgh, Pa., May 3.—The Governor's troop arrived on a spe cial train in East Pittsburgh soon after 10 o'clock this morning and quickly detrained for duty in the Turtle Creek and Monogahela valleys where strike riots occurred yesterday. The troop, com manded by Captain George C. Jack, of Harrisburg, was the first of the National Guard commands ordered last night by Governor Brumbaugh to the disturbed district. The men were taken to a new building of the Westinghouse plant where it is said they will be quartered during their stay in the strike zone. The first move toward a settlement of the Westinghouse strike was made to-day when 800 strikers, in secret meeting, appointed a committee to confer with Patrick Gilday, chief of the Pennsylvania Bureau of Mediation and Arbitration, with a view to having him intervene with the company as mediator. Clifton Reeves, of the Federal Department of Labor, addressed the meeting, which was so quietly called it was over before East Pittsburgh knew it had been called. The Governor's troop, on guard in East Pittsburgh rode down into Braddock this afternoon but met with no opposition from the crowds which filled the streets near the Edgar Thomson mills. R. B. Rahrn and Joseph Xysecic were arrested by deputies to day after a search which included houses in Braddock. Rahrn had been shot in the head and Xysecic in the thigh during yesterday's riot, and hidden by their friends. All the other wounded rioters were arrested at noon, and guards placed at their bedsides. Troop Establishes Quarters It was almost 1J o'clock this morn- Ing before there was any display of life on the streets of East Pittsburgh. Then the residents began appearing In the streets expecting to see the ar rival of the troops but the Governor's troop had arrived and was in its quar ters before the strikers were aware of its presence. A crowd of boys numbering: about 100 manned a brick pile near the machine company's otflce but no missies were thrown. At the strikers' headquarters there was no activity, the strikers being without 3 leader since the arrests of last night. Cannot Got Mounts Troop H. Captain Charles C. Mc- Govern, was held in its armory here, and will march to Braddock later in the day. The Sheridan troop of Tyyrone. experienced much difficulty In securing mounts, and was not ex pected to reach East Pittsburgh be fore night fall. Meantime the Eigh teenth infantry had been mobilized at its armory here, and the Tenth infantry was assembling at Greens lurg, fifty miles from the strike sec tion. l.arge forces of coal and iron police were still on guard in the plants of the I'nited States Steel Corporation in the Monongahela Valley but experienced no trouble. Another Plant Closes Interest in the strike situation shifted during the morning to Mc- Kees Rocks where large forces of the THE WEATHER H arrlsbn rg nnil vicinity! Prob ably NhouerN this afternoon or to night. Thursday partly cloudy. Somewhat cooler, lowest tempera ture to-nlcbt about 30 ilenree*. lOantern Pennsylvania: Hain to night followed by partly A-loudy weather Thumday. Somewhat cool er. Moderate Month to weal winds. Hlver The SuNqnehanna river and Its principal trlbutarleM will probably fall slowly or remain nearly sta tlonary. A stage of about fi.H feet IM Indicated for llarrlshurg Thurs day mornlnK. facneral Condition* A weak disturbance from the Southwest cover* the greater part of the eastern liulf of the country. A new storm lias appeared In the \orthwenl, central over Western Canada, moving; southeastward. The pressure Is highest over the southern Rocky .Mountain region. Showers have occurred generally from the plains States eastward except In the Atlautlc and Kast f*tilf States. It Is warmer In Montana, Wash ington and the Western Canadian provinces: elsewhere terapertnre changes have been somewhat Irreg ular. Frosts occurred this morning In Colorado. Kansas, \ehaakn, I'tali. Wyoming. South Ilakota and Min nesota with temperatures at or be low freealng at several station*. Temperature S a. m.. 55. Sun: Rises, ft.o3 a. m.: sets, 7.01 p. m. Moon i Flrat quarter. May 10, 3.47 a. m. River at aire t 0.1 feet above low water mark. Venterday*s Weather Highest temperature. 72. Coyest temperature. 01, Mean tempernture. Oft. formal temperature, ST« nv CARRIER « CENTS A. WEEK. SINMI.H: COPIES 2 CENTS. Pressed Steel Cat- Company's men struck yesterday. Three hundred riveters returned to work at 7 o'clock, but by 10 o'clock mey had induced the workmen in six departments of the plant 1o walk out. The shops were immediately closed and it was said tlie entile plant with its 1,000 work men would be closed this afternoon. First Time in Fourteen Years This is the first time in fourteen years that the Pennsylvania National Guard has been called out for strike duty. In 1902 troops were sent into the anthracite coal regions, but since that time the State constabulary has been able to preserve order. The en tire force has been on duty at Barre owing to a strike of street car men for several months and could not bo called away from that city. Quiet prevailed throughout the night in Braddock. Fearing another out break. citizens sworn in as deputy sheriffs patrolled the streets, while ...<>re than 300 guards and deputies armed with riot guns guarded the Edgar Thomson works of the Carnegie Steel Company where yesterday's riot ing occurred. Other arrests were expected to-day in connection with the commitments I issued by Coroner Samuel C. Jamison jas a result of the riot. Seven labor I leaders, among whom were Fred Mer- I rick, a former Socialist newspaper I man, and J. 11. Hall, were arrested , last night and are being held on a charge of being an accessory before | and after the fact to murder. Three (Continued on Page 5.) "Keep on Kissing, Girls" Boston Doctor Advises Special to the Telegraph Boston, May 3.—"Keep on kissing, j girls; don't be afraid of the germs." I This is the advice given by Dr. i Charles E. Page, head of the Health School in Tremont street, after criti ; cizing the remarks of Dr. Chapin, the ; Providence health official, who, in his talk before the Harvard Medical S School, put the ban on all kissing. ! "We're getting germ crazy," said j Dr. Page. "Now we have put the bug Into kissing. Do you suppose all this tommyrot about kissing will be heed |ed? Why should we frighten court i Ing couples? I've been a physician a number of years, and I've spent much i time in rebutting testimony from physicians which is mere speculation and does more harm than good, and I can prove it." AT'TOISTS HIT POLE ! Unfamiliar with the road over which they were - traveling at a high rate of speed, according to witnesses, ; it. Tt. Barber, of Rutherford, and .lack Smith, Smlthville street, Balti more, were hurled from their auto j mobile when it skidded and crashed j into a telegraph pole. Barber's scalp | was split and 12 stitches were neces sary to close the* jash when he was brought to the Itlrrlsburg hospital for treatment. Smith sustained bruises of the facA and body. The i front wheel of tlje machine was rlp jped off in the smashup HARRISBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 3, 1916. WHERE TWO MEN WERE KILLED IN STRIKE RIOT mmcwmfrt _jfclßißM aKiH* 3BMP«»^BfiB^BhB^liBBBE^BI '"•' i J 111 I JPQHHrV iMn&SflHflifediiflHmH I TROOP ENTRAINS | IN RECORD TIME FOR PITTSBURGH Nearly Every Man Responds to Call and Several Left Behind Leave Today HOW THEY "GOT WORD" i Strike District Not Without Its Memories For Some of the Guardsmen In the "strike" district of Pitts burgh's smoky environs the Governor's Troop, Harrisburg's crack cavalry command, is on guard. The story of the sudden, unexpected call in the night, the answer by fifty ! odd eager troopers in person, the i quiet, grim activity about the old J State street armory during the waning ; hours of the night and the earlier ! hours of the morning, the clatter of ! horses' hoofs over the hushed streets, i more bustle at the Maclay street sid ing of the Pennsylvania railroad, then the speeding troop and camp trains, westward bound—these are little de ! tails that are not without their sig nificance in these days of the ever i rolling war clouds on distant horizons. The Yellow Sheaf And a dispatch from Pittsburgh this morning announced that the train J bearing the Governor's Troop steamed j into East Pittsburgh at 9:50 o'clock. A little sheaf of yellow typewritten [Continued on Page 3] Wilson Is Critisized For Serving Wine to Guests at White House Banquets Saratoga Springs, N. Y., May 3. Criticism of President Wilson for pro i viding wine for guests at banquets at I the White House was expressed in \ resolutions submitted to the Methodist General Conference to-day by the Rev. James W. Anderson, of Oregon, Mo. The resolution was referred to the committee on temperance. Although the resolution was offered by Dr. An ! derson as an individual, the entire Missouri delegation supported the ac | tion. 1 li<>\ MANTKR RKTIRES .Special to the Telegraph Lebanon, Pa.. May S.—B. Dawson 1 Coleman, leading iron manufacturer in this part of the State yesterday re tired from active business. For many years he has served as the Pennsyl vania Steel Company's resident direc tor in charge of the Lebanon furnaces and the company's Cornwall ore bank interests, which are about to pass into the control of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation. Prior to the time that the Pennsylvania Steel Company pur chased the G. Dawson Coleman estate holdings in the Lebanon furnaces and |Cornwall ore banks, Mr. Coleman was associated with his brother, Kdward R. Coleman. In the management of i these interests. SPANISH BOAT SUNK By .isscciated I'ress London, May 3.—The sinking by a submarine of another neutral steam ship, the Spanish vessel Vinifreda, is reported in a Lloyd's dispatch from Corunna, Spain. One member of the | crew was lost. The Vlnifreda was 1,441 tons gross i and 250 feet long. BIG GUNS POUND ENEMY POSITIONS BEFORE VERDUN Artillery of Both Sides Activ; Germans Shell Trenches With Gas Projectiles | The activity of the opposing armies in the Verdun region has been con- I 'fined to their artillery, but the big gun fire has assumed considerable in tensity in the vicinity of Dead Man's i Hill, west of the Meuse, and of Doua | mount, northeast of the fortress, in dicating a probable resumption of in fantry operations in th«se sectors In | the near future. i Paris reports a sharp conflict in the [Argonne region, just west of Verdun, the. Germans gaining, a foothold in I advanced French positions after lib | erally shelling them with gas carry ing projectiles. The French subse quently drove out the German troops j inflicting heavy losses upon them. I Semi-official advices from Sofia deny reports that Bulgaria is at tempting to arrange a separate peace. TWO MORE BLOCKS BEING ORGANIZED IN BOX CAMPAIGN Second Street Pi-operty Owners Will Be Asked to Join Move ment For City Beautiful Announcement oaipe to-day that efforts will be made to organize two I more blocks on Second street for the ! display of window and porch boxes, i Second street just north of Market j Square will be generously decorated, ; and Second street in the vicinity of Maclay and above will also receive the attention of flower enthusiasts. Now | comes the news that the same tlior-; ouKhfare in the vicinity of Herr street 1 is not to be neglected. Miss Ada Wills, of 1121 North Sec-! ond street, will launch a movement for j concerted action among the residents j of the street between Herr and Ver beke streets, and Miss Cora Lee Sny der, of 1008 North Second street, will devote her attention to that section of the thoroughfare between Boas and Herr. Ofhers who have loined the Tele /Contluued ou J'uge 9) SHOOT SIGNERS OF REPUBLICAN I PROCLAMATION ; "Provisional President of Ire land" With Two Others Die After Court Martial s j By Associated rress London, May 3. Three signatories to the republican proclamation in ? Ireland have been tried by court . j martial and shot this morning. Patrick H. Pearse, "provisional president of s Ireland" was among those shot. ! Three other signer,? ..f the pro " I clamatlon were sente\ ; id to three . years imprisonment. Premier Asquith reported this in . the House this afternoon. Another of the rebels found guilty 1 and shot this morning was James i Connolly, styled "commandant general j of the Irish Republican army." A London dispatch on April 30 e jgave the text of the proclamation is . | sued by the insurgents at Dublin at 1 ; the outbreak of the revolt, with the - signatures of Thomas J. Clark, S. Mac - Dlarmad, Thomas MacDonagh, P. 11. - Pearse, E. Ceannt, James Connolly « and Joseph Plunkett. Of the other signatories of the re i publican proclamation found guilty - and shot were Thomas J. Clark and 1.1 Thomas MacDonagh. HARDSCRABBLE' ANXIOUSLY WAIT SOME DECISION Owners Have Arranged to Pur ' chase Properties Elsewhere; Must Have Their Money "Our situation is much more ser ious than officials or even the court can probably said one of the residents of "Hardscrabble" this morning who is willing to accept the award of viewers for his property. "Quite a number of us have not made any appeal from the award and hav ing assumed from assurances given us months ago that the properties would be taken over this Spring, we entered into negotiations for other dwellings. In my own cane, a house was offered which came within my means and I had looked forward con fidently to purchasing this property with the money to be paid to me by the city. Now 1 am likely to lose this opportunity and cannot look forward with any certainty to protecting mv self Hgainst removal later In the year." (Continued on l'age S.) AGREEMENT IS UNDERSTOOD TO HAVE BEEN MADE AT CONFERENCE Generals Scott and Obregon Awaiting Seal of Approval From Their Respective Governments Upon Provi sional Pact Reached Early This Morning in El Paso FINAL SETTLEMENT MAY BE LEFT TO DIPLOMATS i ~T Another Meeting Unneces sary ; Reported Agreement Said to Be Based on Gen eral Proposition That Troops Will Retire Further to Operate in Fixed Area Py .Associated Press El I'aso, May 3.—Advices from I Mexico City and Washington are | awaited to-day to set the seal of ap- I proval upon a provisional agreement that is understood to have been reached at the informal conference between Gen. Alvaro Obregon, min ister of war of the de facto govern j ment, and Major General Hugh I*. Scott, chief of stpff of the United I States army. I The conference ended after mid- I night and the two conferees emerged in good humor. Neither Gen. Scott nor Obre gon would talk of the deliberations; j in fact, they agreed to maintain strict j silence pending the next step. It has been suggested that another j formal conference here may now be j regarded as unnecessary and that (Continued on Vi»'?e 7) SWIFT'S FACE HEAVY FINE 1 Chicago, May 3.—The packing firm of Swift and Com- A pany to-day was found guilty by a jury in the Federal Court I of violation of the inter-State commerce laws. The maxi- I mum penalty is $525,000. < JITNEURS TO FIGHT 4 Harrisburg.—All of the jitney drivers who were fined f ', $5 and costs, Friday, by Alderman Hoverter for violating * ' the city jitney regulations this afternoon appealed the cases I $ I to the Dauphin county court. J ; Jl * \6 j AMBLER FILES SUITS AGAINST PORTER 4 t Philadelphia, May 3.—Two criminal suits were insti , tuted to-day by Charles A. Ambler, the administration can j i didate for Auditor General against George D. Porter, former Director of Public Safety. One of these suits alleges * criminal libel and the other that Mr. Porter furnished false ® ' statements to the newspapers. The hearing will take place ' 1 I N to-morrow afternoon before a magistrate. ! 1 i> EXCHANGE HAITI RATIFICATIONS , , Washington, May 3.—Ratifications of the new treaty between the United States and Haiti today were exchanged Iby Secretary Lansing Minister Menos. It is expected the treaty immediately will be proclaimed by President Wil son. ORGANIZING U. S. STEEL WORKMEN 1 Cleveland, 0., May 3.—Six organizers of the American gS Federation of Labor have arrived here to open a whirlwind campaign to organize 8,000 employes of the United States Steel Corporation here. The object of the movement is to ' demand an eight-hour day. i AUGUSTINE BIRRELL RESIGNS , London, May 3. —Augustine Birrell, chief secretary for * * Ireland has resigned. MARRIAGE < 1 ♦ Robert C. Bronmhrad. Jr., and Kilna June l.rnU. CHr. John \V. Swurli, l.owrr Paston, and Kmma Irfiu chnpman, Tampa, Fla. 5 H Miff CITY EDITIOfi 16 PAGES GERMANY WILL GIVE ATTITUDE IN CLEAR AND PRECISE TERMS Draft of Reply to Note Is Fin ished; Will Leave No Room For Doubt Concern ing Exact Position Assum ed by Kaiser in U-Boat Warfare TO ALLOW WASHINGTON TO JUDGE SITUATION Definite Nature of Instruc tions That Will Be Given to Submarine Commanders and Other Important Data Will Be Embodied in Forth coming Communication Rv Associated Press Berlin, May 3. (By wireless to the j. ssociated Press, via Sayville).—The ; draft of the German reply to the American note has been finished. The reply is subject to minor alter nations which may result from inter changes of views between Berlin and ! general headquarters. ! The attitude of Germany will be istated in clear and precise terms. The note will leave no room for doubt, concerning the exact position assumed by Germany, which will communi cate the definite nature of instruc tions that will be given to subma jrine commanders and other data on which Washington itself can judge the situation. I The Associated Press is permitted Ito make these statements, although the censorship on dispatches tend jing to reveal the tenor of the Ger -1 man reply is still effective. Tho (Continued on Pa 7)