Germany Will Not Be Allowed to Dictate U. S. Negotiations With England HARRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH LXXXV— No. 104 SECOND EXPEDITION MA IN PURSUIT OF MEXICAN SLAY AND BURN IN Outlaws Are Fleeing Through Wild Mesas of Northern Coahuila After Killing Three United States Cav alrymen and Three Civil ians, Including a Boy NINE TROOPERS HOLD OFF BAND OF 200 Fight Until Most of Them Are Killed or Wounded; Two Reported Kidnaped; De predation Rivals Attack on Columbus; Greatly Com plic at e s International Situation, Nearing Settle ment Columbus, N. M.. May B.—Details of :he raid upon Glenn Springs, Texas, transmitted to American detachments along General John J. Pershing's line of communication, stirred them to a new activity, according to reports here to-day. In Columbus military officers mani fested much uncertainty as to the re sults of the foray and pointed out that It materially complicates the border situation. It seems generally under stood that should it lie deemed neces sary In pursuit of tli" raiders to dis patch a second expeditionary column, some of the 1,000 nivn on station here and troops encamped along the upper end of the line of communication -vil 1 be called upon. Townspeople in Columbus and in neighboring towns alone the bonier were aroused by the reports and mani fested a greater unrest than at any lime since the raid here two months igo to-morrow. By Associ<Ued Prrss Alphine. Texas, May 8. Fleeing through the wild mesas of Northern • 'oahuila, the seventy or more ban dits that raided the American settle ment of Glenn Springs and Roquillas last Friday, killing three cavalrymen and a 9-year-old hoy, are believed to be heading into the interior to-day, many miles from the scene of their depredation. Many Bandits al l.argc V A posse from Marathon and a de tachment of 23 troopers of the Four teenth cavalry are said to have fol lowed the trail of the Mexicans into Coahuila, while other reports have it that The ATiieitranH are awaiting at the Rio Grande for reinforcements. Captain Caspar Cole is hurrying to Roquillas to take command. Two com panies of the Fourteenth cavalry and a machine gun company are expected here or at Marathon this afternoon. It is ahout a three days' march front either Marathon or Alpine to the Rio Grande and as the Ivtndits already have a three days' start, only a re lentless pursuit will bring the Amer icans into contact with their quarry. Private Still Missing Nothing has been heard of Private Roscoe Tyree, who was last seen as he ran from the adobe house, where he and his eight companions for three hours fought the Mexicans and then fled because the roof of the house was set aflame by fire balls. Private Croskem things Tyree was wounded and wandered off in the hills where lie died. Others believe that Tyree was captured. Cut Throat of Captive Unconfirmed information says that J. Deemer, the storekeeper at Roquil las, has been found dead on the Mex ican side, with his throat cut. His clerk, named Compton, is known to have been a captive of the bandits. The Americans fled to the hills when the shooting began. The bodies of the three soldiers killed in the Glenn Springs raid, "Wil liam Cohen. Stephen J. Coloe and Hudson Rogers, will he sent to their homes to-day. Mrs. W. K. Ellis and her husband, whose wax factory was destroyed by the Mexicans, had nar row escapes. Starting in at the little farming com munity at Glenn Springs, nine miles north of the Rio Grande, the rpiders [Continued on Page 10] SHIPPING Bllili IN By Associated Press Washington, May B.—With the Introduction In the House to-day by Chairman Alexander of the Merchant Marino Committee, of the revised ad ministration shipping bill, Democratic leaders were prepared to' expedite consideration of the measure. THE WEATHER linrrlnhurtr find vicinity: Partly cloudy to-nluht and Tuesday prob ably ocrnnloiinl sliourn. Cooler Tuesday. Kimtern I'ennsyl vanla: Partly cloudy to-night and Tuesday prob ably local nhowrrn. Cooler Tues day. Moderate wind*, mostly wemt erly. Itlvcr The Susquehanna river and all ItN tributaries will fall slowly or re main nearly stationary. \ *taue of about 5.1 feet IN Indicated for Harrlnburs Tuenday mornliifs. General Condition* The dlnturhnnce that nnw central over the far north went Saturday morning liaw mined ranldly nouth eastward and IN now central o*cr Ontario. It ban canned showers In the laHt 24 hour* generally atonic the northern border from the lake region westward. Freer.lns temperature Is reported In Montana. Temperature R a. m., AO. Sunt Risen, 4.56 a. m.t Sets, 7.07 p. m. Moon i First quarter. May 10, 8t47 p. m. River Stige—R.2 feet above low water mark. Yesterday** Weather Highest temperature, 76. I,owest temperature, 50. Mean temperature, 68. Normal temperature, 50 nv CARRIRR « CENTS A WEEK. SlNfil.l". COPIES 2 CEXTS. I MAP SHOWING LATEST MEXICAN RAID INTO THE UNITED STATES ' V. J n * it n U * yj »» n I Jl <*, \ w ; mmfcA */X_ K,NN£VSPRI^ o >vv i Ylr «I sO*s« ! Xq VI V STORE V _ f f jSANAWTONIO S/OST CHIHUAHUA /S-s>y/ m "^WTC«WT»«ai M) NW 6 C. £ COAHIJUA The Mexicans crossed into T<»xns south of Terlingua. and then struck northeast over the road to Glenn Springs, where they surprised the detachment of the Fourteenth Cavalry. They then went around the mountains to the wax plant, which they attacked and destroyed. Going south, passing near McKinley Springs, they made a daFh on Koquillas and then struck eastward two and one-half miles to Deemer's store, where they burned the store. They th*>n recrossed the Hio Grande near San Vineente, nearly opposite Deemer's. United States troops are concentrating at Marathon, Tex., where they will take train for the-raided district. EFFORTS TO OPEN PITTSBURGH SHOPS PARTLY SUCCEED 4,(MX) Air Plant Workers Go to Work While Militia Uuards Entrances TO PAY OFF THE STRIKERS Officials of Electric Company Will Terminate Rewards and Ronuses By Associated Press Pittsburgh, May B.—Efforts of the Westlnghouse companies to reopen their plants in the Turtle Creek Valley, where a strike for the eight-hour day has been in progress for several weeks, were only partly successful to-day. Four thousand of the 4,.100 employed during the day by the Westlnghouse Airbrake Company at Wilinerding en tered the shops while two companies of infantry guarded all entrances. No strike was declared against the com pany, hut the plant was closed by the management when marching strikers attempted to bring out the force. The gates of the electric company in East Pittsburgh also were thrown open under military guard and some men went to work, hut the number was not large. All employes of ihls company will be paid to-day and as each man is handed his envelope he will be compelled to surrender his check. This, officials say, means that when be appears for work he will be employed as a new applicant, and all bonuses and rewards paid for continu ous service will then terminate. The county authorities arranged to inaugurate a sweeping crusade against agitators. All persons known to have been Implicated in any way in the Braddock riot last Tuesday will be ar rested and those who In future seek to incite riot by inflammatory utterances will be taken into custody. Governor's Troop May Stay West Rest of Week; Three Members Are 111 Special to the Telegraph Pittsburgh. Pa.. May 8. —Troopers Georr'e W. Seward, Paul J. Dorw'art and Samuel R. Werner, of the Gov ernor's Troop, under the comm'and or <'apt. George C. Jack, were sent to their homes this morning because of illness which incapacitated them for service in the strike regiiUh. They are suffering from bad colds. All of the other members of the troop are in excellent health. At n o'clock this morning the troop patrolled the streets of Rraddock while the workmen were on their way to work at the Edgar Thompson steel works and returned to their barracks at 7 o'clock. No disorder confront ed the troop. After breakfast Lieut. Edwin A. Nlcodemus conducted squad schools for an hour and the troopers the remainder of the day sat around the large yard In the barracks play ing cards and talking to the mem [Contlnued on Page 2] COLLIDES WTTH LIGHTSHIP New York, May B.—The steamship Philadelphlan of the Layland Line re ported by wireless to-day that she col lided with the Fire Island lightship early this morning and la bringing the lightship to New York. HARRISBURG, PA., MONDAY EVENING, MAY 8, 1916 GIVES NEW FACES TO WOUNDED MEN Sculptor, Son of Former Har risburger, Docs Re markable Work In the New York Sun yesterday a story was printed from London re garding the remarkable work of Lieu tenant Derwent "Wood, a sculptor well known in the United States. Before the outbreak of the Euro pean war Wood was commissioned liy Lady Paget and the Duchess of Marl borough on behalf of the American women in England to execute the statue of William Pitt which, as soon as circumstances make the thing more suitable, will be presented by them to their native land in com memoration of the hundred years of peace between England and America. Lieut. Wood has discovered how to give new faces to men who have lost theirs in the war. He can make new eyes, cheeks, foreheads, chins, in fact, he is making thpm daily. The restoration of the disfigured faces is little short of marvelous. His "masks," as he calls them, consist of plates of thin copper, slH'ered and then painted to match the hue of the patient's skin. They are light to wear, they fit like gloves and the men declare that they give no discomfort whatever. Yes, they are intended to be removed at night exactly like a set of false teeth, and they are easily cleaned with a little potato juice. Most of them can be kept in place by means of "ether'gum" such as actors use. Father a Harrlsbuifspr Lieutenant Wood enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps at the be ginning of the war. He was not available for active service. His fath er, Alpheus Baylies Wood, who died in England in 1907, where he had lived for many years, was born in Harrisburg an(i was a descendant of two distinguished officers of the American Revolution. Col. H. Baylies, aide-de-camp on General Washing ton's staff, and Capt.' William Rice, of the Continental line. His nieces residing here are Mrs. William C. Pfouts, Mrs. John A. Westbrook and Mrs. George W. Mindel. Lieut. Wood declared that the American-made artificial limbs were by far the best in the world and spoke admiringly of the work that is being done at Roehampton by Americans in the way of equipping armless and legless soldiers. Aged Woman Attacked by Three Colored Men Hearing a woman's screams shortly after 10 o'clock last night residents near Boas and Grand streets rushed to the street and found an aged lady who said that she had just been attacked by three colored men who robbed her of her pocketbook. The woman was extremely nervous, and said that she lived in North Fifth street. She forgot to give her name and city police officials say they knew nothing of the holdup. Washington Delegation Will Go Uninstructed North Yakima. Wash., May B. | The Republican State convention Sat- , urda.v elected delegates to the national convention and chose S. A. Perkins, of 1 Tacoma, for national committeeman ■ and adopted a platform that contained ! no reference to any presidential can- | dldate. The delegation was not in-, structed. j FOREIGN WARS VETERANS HERE FOR 4TH CAMP Lose Part of Territory Won at Pennsylvania Will At tend Sessions BRING BATTLE TROPHIES Chinese Dragon Captured in i Storming of Pekin Flvs Over Headquarters Veterans of foreign wars from all ! over the State are In Harrisburg for | the fourth annual encampment of the department of Pennsylvania, which opened at 11 o'clock this morning; in Board of Trade Hall. The meetings will be presided over by Ernest J. Poole ,of Reading, department com mander. It is expected 600 veterans will attend. The morning session was taken up with the reception and enrollment of (Continued oil I'age 7) Transforming Coliseum Into Monster Hall For Republican Convention By Associated rress Chicago, 111., May 8. —Active prepa rations for the opening of the Repub j lican national convention here on ] June 7 were started to-day when car | penters began the transformation of the Coliseum into a convention hall. I According to present plans, the full ! national committee will meet June 2 to i make up the temporary roll of the j convention. Dominican President Resigns I After Threats of Intervention ! Santo Domingo, Dominican Repub- I lie, May B.—General Juan Jimenes, President of Santo Domingo, has re signed. He took this action in order to prevent armed intervention by the United States. Quiet has been restored. Congress will appoint a provisional President. ARCTIC CRUISE HONEYMOON San Francisco, Cal., May 8.-—Mrs. Peter McK. Bayne, a bride of less j than a month, will accompany her I husband, Captain Peter Bayne, a well -1 known skipper, in far northern wa | ters. on a cruiser in the Arctic, their goal being the tomb of Sir John Franklin, who died there in 1847 after six years spent in exploration as the head of a party of scientists. KCHOF.S OF CI PI ITS sons Several Divorce Problems Presented lo the Dniipbln Court Echoes of the sobs of small D. Cupid were heard In a legnl way by the Dau phin county courts this morning when two divorce actions were begun and an other was discontinued. Annie Louisa Kantnor wants legal separation from her husband, Wayne, because he is now a convict, undergoing imprisonment in the eastern peniten tiary on a charge of arson. John Hess whose wife obtained an order against him for support, asked the court to re lieve him of the charge because he says the libellant isn't his wife at all. It was Edward L. Riley, however, who asked that his suit against his wife, I Mary M., be discontinued. Marital Infi delity had been the ohargf FURIOUS DRIVE OF GERMANS IS HELD BY FRENCH Lost' Part of Terrritory Won at Outset of Renewed At tack at Verdun OTHER FRONTS QUIET Situations Unchanged in East and Along Austro- Italian Lines The Germans are continuing the ! furious offensive at Verdun which grained them important ground both east and west of the Meuse yesterday. They made no further advances dur ing their attacks of last night, how ever, Paris declares, and in fact lost i part of the territory won at the outset : of their renewed drive in force on the \ defenses of the fortress. The principal German gain Sunday was northeast of Verdun, where a foot ing was gained In the French first line on a front of SOO meters between Hau dromont wood and Fort Douaumont. During Sunday night French attacks drove the crown prince's forces from one of the occupied trenches south of Haudromont. Near Hill 304, north west of the fortress, the Germans were ousted from a communication trench occupied during yesterday's drive. There is a lull in the fighting on the eastern front, according to Vienna, which announces the situation is un changed there. Likewise there is a comparative quiet on the Austro- Italian front, with no advances by either of the opposing armies re ported. 600 Russians Reported Lost on Way to France Berlin, May B.—The sinking of an Allied transport in the Mediterranean 1 late in April with the loss of nearly all the 60(i Russian troops who were on board is reported in advices from Corfu, says the Overseas News Agency. The transport was sunk by strikinnj a mine about the same time the Brit™ Ish battleship Russell met a similar fate, the advices jtate. The bodies recovered were buried by the British at Malta. The Russians have recently been sending troops through the Mediter ranean to Marseilles for service on the western front. Flee in Nightchthes | When House Catches Fire From Blazing Warehouse I Fire, started either by spontaneous i combustion, according to Fire Chief John Kindler, or by tramps loafing in the vicinity, destroyed the rag factory of Jacob Cooper Son, in the rear of 43 North Cameron street, early yes -1 terday morning, causing about $2,000 | loss, partly insured. Mr. and Mrs. Harry O. Ryrem and | Mrs. Matilda Moore, who live In the i house next door, 84 Wagner road. | were forced to leave their home ! scantily attired. An alarm was sent in j from Box 134, Cameron and Market streets. Philippine Delegation Abandons All Hope of Early Independence Washington, D. C., May ft.—Manuel Quezon, Philippine commissioner, who has been urging Philippine independ ence. told President Wilson to-day that he and his followers had aban doned the idea of freedom in the near future and hoped Congress would pass the House bill giving a greater share of self-government to the island, but setting no date for independence. William Penn Highway to Branch on Two Arms at Altoona, Is Plan Altoona. Pa.. May B.—lf the recom mendation of the committee of arbi trators from the hoard of governors lof the William Penn Highway Asso ciation is accepted by the association, Altoona will be the pivotal point on two William Penn highways, it hav ing been decided, following a confer ence Saturday, that the route of the proposed highway should split at Al toona, one arm passing out the Logan Valley to Hollldaysburg, thence over the Cresson road to Kbenshurg, and the other over the Buckhorn road to i Cresson. Rifle Ball Passes Through Young Man's Body and Leg Maytown, Pa.. May 8. John H. t Gingrich, aged 1 fi, was shooting spar rows with a rifle this morning when | the weapon was discharged while he i was loading it. He was badly wounded, | the bullet entering (be right side and j coming out through the foot. GET JOHN MAONETLIi ,*jsoctalcd Press Dublin, Sunday. May 7 via Lon don. May 8. John MacNeill, presi dent of the Sinn Fein Volunteers, who disappeared on the day the Irish dis turbances began, has been arrested. U-BOAT REPORT DKXIKD By Associate Press New York, May 8 The report that the Fabrc line steamship Venezia was attacked and chased by two German commerce raiders and submarines in mid-sea on May 1, was denied to-day \ by Captain Bonifacio, the shipmaster, in making his report to the Fabre line office and to Captain Gaunt, British naval attache. FRENCH BARK SUNK London, May B.—The French oark 1 Marie Mollnos was sunk by a sub marine on May 8. All the eighteen members of her crew have been landed. The Marie Mallnas was last reported i on her arrival at Nantes, France, on | March 24, i RING CEREMONY TO BE CHANGED IN NEW RITUAL Methodists Will Eliminate "With All My Worldly Goods, I Thee Endow" iTO THROW "DEVIL" OUT "Sin" Will Be Substituted in Certain Passages; Modify Burial Service Saratoga Springs, N. Y„ May 8, —A service for the burial of children and their reception into the church is pro posed in a revised ritual of the Meth odist Episcopal Church which was sub mitted to-day for action by the Gen eral Conference, in session here. Pre i viously only a ceremony for adults has i existed. The report was offered by a special i committee appointed in 1912 and is the third proposal recently made for a change In the form of service pro vided by John Wesley when ha insti tuted the church in 1739. The argu ment was advanced during discussion to-day that a modification of the word ins is necessary to consistency of usage and greater clearness and brevity. Op position was heard on the ground that, the language; of the present ritual had been made sacred by continued use. "Sin" for '-Devil" The new form suggested provides that the service for the baptism of in fants and for ordination shall be greatly shortened. The burial service would be modified by the insertion of additional scriptural selections giving fuller expressions of the Christian hope as found in the New Testament. In the marriage ceremony It Is pro vided that when the ring is used the words "and with all my worldly goods I thee endow" shall be omitted, for the reason, the committee reported, that the ceremony itself implies com mon ownership of property. It is also proposed that the word "devil" shall be stri'-kon from passages where it occurs and thai the word "sin" shall be substituted. The phrase "the trumpet shall sound and the dead be raised" would be eliminated, on the ground that it means the resur rection of the spirit and not of the body. The same reason is advanced for substituting in the burial service the Twenty-third Psalm for the Thirty ninth Psalm. The committee reported that desire not to lengthen the ritual led to the rejection of proposals for. services for special purposes. i' I According to International news dispatches from Lon don late this afternoon Lloyd's reports that the White Star ' » liner "Cymric" has met with an accident in midocean and is ! rapidly sinking. The report coincides with dispatches re- IJ ceived about the same time by the Associated Press from I London. The Cymric sailed on April 29 from New York for | » Liverpool. The Cymric haTs been in the service of the Brit- ' [ ish government for some time. She had on board no passen- L gers on her last trip. 1 NEGRO HELD WOMAN CAPTIVE . ■ liarrisburg. Eugene Carr, colored, was arrested yes- ® ► terday afternoon by city police in a South street house. It is alleged that Carr held a woman named Alice Martin, cap- 1 > tive in his room for several days. ' «! Washington, May 8. Secretary Baker stated to-day 1 f that the. War Department considers the agreement under if ( which the army began pursuit of Villa bandits still in oper- • ► * I *tion and that under its terms General Funston will take any 1 i' < steps necessary to pursue the band which yesterday raided | | the Big Bend country, without further instructions, j WILL MEET STRIKE COMMITTEE ' ' ? Pittsburgh, Pa., May 8. —E. M. Herr, president of the I Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, to-day ' * 9 agreed to meet a committee of five strikers with a view to ? a settlement of the differences that have closed the 1 * plant for about two weeks and kept approximately 15,000 g > workmen with a wage loss of $1,397,500. ' ; I Washington, May 8. A standing army of 250,000 men, 1 • •' m- provided for in the Senate amendment to the army bill was ' , I rejected by the House to-day, 221 to 142. The House bill 1 I * £ provided for 140,000 men. The Senate' plan to provide for a 1 * I volunteer army of 261,000 was rejected to-day by the House I by a vote of 251 to 109. • Camd n, N. J., May 8. Four directors of the Pennsyl f vania Steel Company of New Jersey were re-elected for three,) | ? years at the annual rpeeting here to-day.. They are W. H. i Donner, George Wood, E. T. Stotesbury and William D. | > * Winson. ' MARRIAGE • > ■ Charlcn F. Rice and Treiile M. ("line, RendeMvlllt, . I !' - 12 PAGES CITY EDITION DEMAND ATTACKS STOP REGARDLESS OF NEGOTIATIONS WITH ENGLAND Brief Reply to Germany Note Completed; Informs Kaiser That United States Cannot Allow Berlin to Dictate Its Dealings With Great Bri tain Over Food Blockade U-BOAT COMMANDERS . MUST OBEY NEW ORDER Diplomatic Relations Will Be Maintained as Long as They Are Carried Out; President Not Altogether Satisfied With Apparent Conditions Attached to Previous Communication fly Associated Press Washing-ton, May B.—A note to Ger many has practically been completed and probably will be forwarded to Berlin to-iVay. It will be made public soon afterward. It Is understood it will be brief, informing: Germany that as long as the new Instructions to sub marine commanders are observed dip lomatic relations will be continued, but that the United states cannot allow Germany to dictate its negotiations with Great Britain. The President worked on the pro posed communication early to-day foi [Continued (in I'age 12] 1.313 CIVILIANS KILLED By Associated Press : Rerlin, llay 8 (by wireless).—"Eight ] men, to women and 9 children, all ! civilians, were killed in April in the. occupied portions of Belgium and France by artillery and aeroplanes of the enemy," the Overseas News Agency says. "Twenty-three men, 29 women and 25 children were wounded. Tho I total number of victims stnee Septem- I her, 1915, Is 1.313."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers