Men and Boys Pelt Cars With Eggs HARRISBURG SfiSlib TELEGRAPH LXXXVi— No. 165 RUSSIANS CROSS CARPATHIANS; NOW THREATEN AUSTRIAN REAR After Drive Through Buko wina, Forces Under Gen eral Letchitzky Are Now Reported a Day's March Into Hungary GERMANS RECAPTURE LINES ON WEST FRONT Heavy Counter Attacks Win Portion of Delville Wood and Ground North of Longueval; French Front Quiet; Italians Make Gains N'ews dispatches from Petrograd re port the crossing of the Carpathian mountains by the Russians under Gen era! Letchitzky who after their drive through Bukowina, are now said to be a day's march into Hungary and threatening the Austrian rear. On the front of the British offensive in Northern France the Germans have been heavily counter-attacking At two points their assault carried them into the new British lines. Lon dcn_ to-day admits the recapture by the Germans of a portion of Delville Wood and the loss of ground tn the northern outskirts of Longueval. Quiet apparently prevailed along the French lines south of the British front. The afternoon bulletin from Paris reports calm in the greater part of the Franco-Belgian war theater. In the Trentine the Italians have captured positions from the Austrians on the heights of Corno Del Coston in the Upper Posina Valley and re [Continued on Pago 12] Jolted From Motor Truck; Elizabethtown Man Killed Special to Ike Ttlegrafh Middletown. Pa., July 19. Jacob Brubaker. aged 32. of Elizabethtown. fell from the rear of a motor trucK, when it bumped in the road, and his neck was broken. The truck was owned by Hoffer Brothers. contractors. of Elizabethtown. The driver of the ma chine never discovered his absence until he had gone about a mile further. When Brubaker's absence was learned the driver immediately turned back. The lifeless body was found in the middle of the road. Brubaker is survived by his wife and three small children. Coro ner Eckinger decided the «death was accidental. Newport Objects to Stopping Railroad The Newport and Sherman's Valley Kailroad Company may have trouble abandoning the narrow gauge road from Newport to New Bloomfield as it proposes to do on July 22. 'jftie company announced some time ago what it planned and was notified that it must first submit the proposition to the Public Service Commission, which It has failed to do. To-day the borough of Newport, the Rice Produce Co.. the Oak Extract Co., and A. B. Wright, H. A. Moore, J. S. Butz, F. XI. Snyder. C. E. Delancey, J, E. Fleisher. C. W. Lehr entered a pretest against abandonment or the line and it is likely that the company will be ordered to operate its line until a hearing can be held. THE WEATHER For Harrlsburg and vicinity: Gen erally cloudy to-night and Thurs day, probably thontrt; not much change In temperature. For Ea.otern Penn»> 1 vanla: Cloudy to-nlKbt and Thursday, prohably >bower«| fresh, probably utrung northeast to north winds. River The Susquehanna river and Its principal branches will probablyfl continue to rail ttlonly or remain nearly stationary. A stage of about 3.0 feet la indicated for Harrlsburg, Thursday morning. General Condition* 4 atorm from the South Atlantic ocean In central oft' the Carolina const apparently moving north ward. It nun raining at Hat terns, at S o'clock thin morning with a northeast wind of thirty two mile* an hour. Showers have occurred in the last twenty-four hour* over most of the territory south of the Ohio river except Florida. Temperature* continue high and uniform from the Plain* States eastward to the Atlantic roast, the entire range over this terri tory being but eighteen degrees, from sixty-six at Wythevllle. to eighty-four at Tampa and Key Went. Temperatures 8 a. m., 74. Sun: Rise*, 4:53 a. m.: net*. 7:29 p. m. Moon: Rises, 10:23 p. m. River Stage: Four feet above low water mark Yesterday's Weather Highest temperature, 83. Lowest temperature, 72. Mean temperature. 78. Normal temperature. 75. Getting used to strange newspapers is like breaking in t p*lr of new shoos—mighty uncomfortable. Order the Harrisburg Telegraph mailed to your vacation address if you would enjoy real comfort. Six cents a week will bring the Telegraph to you no mat ter where you are BV CARRIERS fl CENTS A WEEK. SINT.I E COPIES 2 CE.VTS. { GEE, BUT IT'S GREAT CAMPING AT McCORMICK'S ISLAND ! ' v ; Don't these pictures make you yearn for the distant yesteryear when you could boat, swim, practice archery, plav tennis, eat a lot and sleep some under the stars? The views were snapped at the girls' summer camp at McCormick's Island and they only suggest in a very, very modest wav what an enjoyable life the camp out o'doors has been made. Incidentally it only costs each small camper $2 per week. In one picture you'll notice a man genially standing on his head. That's James H. Sourbier, the instructor, in charge, who obligingly posed thus for the camera man. He has had fourteen years of Y. M C A camp work, has a life-saving medal and has passed wonderful tests for National Re d Cross life-saving work. Miss Katherine Staple's, a sister of Playground Supervisor Stapes is the chaperon. HOW HARRISBURG TROOPERS LIVE ON THE BORDER Governor's Troop Must Haul Water Four Miles in Tank Wagon (By Special Correspondence) Camp Stewart, Fort Bliss, Tex., July 14. Troop C. the Governor's Troop of Harrisburg. has learned how to get water for cooking and for drinking in this God-forsaken country. Captain George C. Jack's men are now using all the water they want, for they know how to get more. Last night, First Lieutenant Edwin j A. Nicodemus of Troop C originated [Continued on Page 4] CAPTURE BRITISH VESSEL Stockholm, via London, July 19. j It is reported here that the British steamship Adams, 2223 tons gross has been captured by a German destroyer . off Ahus. Sweden, while on a voyage I from Finland. BURIED MIXERS RESCUED Joplin. Mo., July 19. The four men who have been imprisoned in the Babr ock mine near here since 2 o'clock Monday afternoon were rescued alive at 7:15 a. m. to-day. j CHAFIN MAY LEAD PROHIBITIONISTS Mentioned as Compromise Can didate to Head Ticket; Sul zer-Hanley Fight Close I By Associated Press 1 St. Paul. Minn., July 19. The convention of the national Prohibition party was called to order at the uudi ; torium to-day with delegates from ; nearly every State in attendance. Meetings ot' rival bodies of dele j gates favoring the nomination of J. Prank Hanly and William Sulzer, pre ceded the convention se.ssion and un der surface talk of E. W. Chafin as a , compromise candidate grew as the ttnsenes? of the Hanly-Sulzer contest increased. The arrival of John P. St. John, of . Kansas, the party's candidate for president in 1884 evoked the first out burst of applause by delegates. ; Temporary Chairman Daniel A. Pol ing. of Boston, delivered the keynote ; address. He attacked the militarism I and the preparedness programs of the ! Democratic and Republican parties. ; The delegates cheered his remarks. Two Italian and Greek Steamships Sunk by U-Boats By Associated Press London. July 19. A Lloyd dis patch from Algeris says the Italian steamship Angelo has been sunk by a i submarine. The crew was landed, j The Greek steamship Evangelistria | is believed to have been sunk. The Angelo sailed from Wilmington. Del.. June 4. for Spezia, Italy, reaching that port on June 25. ane was 35S feet long, of 3 609 tons gross. I The Evangelistria. 2212 tons gross and 284 feet long was owned in Syra. Sh» was last reported on her arrival June 8 at Savona, Italy, from Barre. MACHINISTS' STftIKF SPREADS By Associated Press Milwaukee, Wis., July 18.—The ma chinists strike spread to-dav, 200 workmen at the N'ordberg Manufac turing Company being called out to Join the 1,700 inen who yesterday left the Allis-Chalmers Company and the Pawling and Harnischfeger plants. HARRISBURG, PA., WANT TO SEND SOME LITTLE CITIZEN TO Costs but $2 Per Week Per Carr\per on McCormick's How Youngsters Enjoy Themselves Don't you know of some little man t or woman in this broad town of yours ; whom you wish could enjoy the sum mer camp life on McCormick's Island 1 I and whom you know can't afford the ! j comparatively small boarding fee? Ever felt as if you'd like the oppor- ; tunity to "stake" some youngster your self to a week's outing? Now's your chance. Announcement was made for the City Park Depart- j ment to-day through V..Grant Forrer, i j the assistant superintendent, that any j body who feels so disposed may Insure | • one youngster, or ten or twenty-five or ] fifty small folks, a week's outing by contributing $2, $2O, $0 or $lOO, as the i case may be. It is only $2 a week for j ; each youngster. Get in touch with the j Park Department if you and your purse feel that way. The Camp Is On McCormick's Island camp, by the I i way, is on in earnest and if you'd like ! to get some idea of how the small' folks are enjoying themselves you j should pay a little visit to the camp on j "visitors' day." Boating, swimming—if your small \ son or daughter can't swim or row a j I boat when he or she goes into camp, : it's a safe bet that the lesson will be I well learned by the time the heir or j heiress of your house returns home — | are features of the outdoor program; j rhen there is tetherball, races, base- ! ball throwing, tennis, quoits, archery 1 I —pretty nearly everything you can 1 Thirty-four Dead and Loss of Property Many Millions in Heavy Southern Floods Asheville, X. C., July 19. Flood waters in the Carolinas and portions of adjacent States were rapidly reced ing to-day, leaving in their wake a property loss variously estimated at from $12,000,000 to $15,000,000 and a list of deaths from drowning that ha% steadily increased since the waters rose Sunday. The toll of human life stood at 34 to-day with prospects that it might be increased still further. Two small villages in Rutherford county, X. C., known as Chimney Rock and Bat Cave, suffered severe damage from the volume of water that swept down the narrow valley of the Rocky Broad river, according to meager re ports reaching hero. The towns, each of which has a hundred of more inhab itants. -re more than 2£ miles from a railroad, and without wire communi cation. From Spartanburg. S. C., came a re port that persons arriving: there said, almost all of Chimney Rock was wash ed away and that there was no sign of its inhabitants. It was pointed out, however, that they might have reach ed high ground in time to save them selves. Eight persons were said to have been drowned at Bat Cave. Loss to railroads, industrial plants and agricultural interests in North and South Carolina has mounted Into the millions and it may be weeks before the transportation system is restored. High Cost of Print Paper Investigation Is Urged Special to the Telegraph Washington. July 19. —'A congres sional investigation into the cost of print paper was asked yesterday in a resolution introduced by Minority Leader Mann. • The Republican leader seeks to learn th»? reason of the high post of paper and would have a committee of five members of the House inquire into the supply and production of pulp wood, wood pulp and print paper to determine the existence of a monopoly. The Mann resolution was referred to the Rules Committee. An investigation is being made by the Federal Trade Commission and a report is expected in September. In vestigntors of the commission now are working in various parts of the coun try and in Canada, studying conditions in the field. f WEDNESDAY EVENING. JULY 19, 1916. I think of in the way of athletic stunts. The junior tetherball championship j tournament was decided yesterday, Helen Coonrs winning out. The senior ! tetherball championship has reached the final rounds, the surviving players ; in which are Florence Matchett. Gladvs i Simonton, Bernke Mills and Mary El lenberger. By this evening the camp- I ers will have finished the final rounds | in the quoit tournament, running and I boat races and the bas«ball throw. The "Big: Night" | Last night was the "big night" of j the first week in camp, when Park j Commissioner E. Z. Gross and Assist- . ant Superintendent V. Grant Forrer : were hosts at a watermelon feast, j | Some 200 Japanese and Chinese lan- i items strung through the grounds! helped to add to the effectiveess of the scene. ! Then, too, there was a vlctrola con- ! cert: as a nice finishing touch to the' ' evening's program the camf> girls : sang. If some impressario, say Mr. Ham- : I merstein, for instance, had been drift , ins by the island in a canoe it's ten to j one he would have drawn in his paddle I j at least: the chances are that he'd j have turned in to bend a nearer ear j to the island chorus. Paddle up 'round the island vourself : j some evening, or better still, let vour 1 ! car drift, instead of speed, up River , side Drive—and you'll readily get an I impressario's viewpoint. ' West Indian Storm May Sweep Atlantic Seaboard to Maine By Associated Press j Washington. July 19. Another > West Indian storm like that which recently struck the guir coast at Mobile and Pensacola. to-day is mov in* northward over the Atlantic 350 j miles east of Charleston, s. c. It may j sweep the coa:st from Virginia to I Maine, should it continue in its path j with the present intensity. Weather Bureau reports by radio ; from vessels at sea indicate a wind ! velocity of sixty-four miles an hour to the southward of the assumed lo cation of the storm center. Strong | northeast winds blowing on the North , Carolina are another indication of the storm. From all reports at hand the Weather Bureau to-day said the storm ; appeared to be of pronounced form. Storm warnings to-day were ordered all along the coast from Wtimington, N. C.. to Boston. POSTMASTER DISMISSED By Associated Press Washington. July 19. Post Office Department officials admitted to-day that Dr. George W. McNeil, post master at Pittsburgh, Pa., had heen dismissed from the service for "failure to co-operate with the department." They said Dr. McNeil refused to carry ' out instructions given tn connection I with a reorganization designed to in j crease the efficiency of the office. I THEATRICAL INTERESTS SOLD Announcement was made to-day that the theatrical partnership of Wil nier & Vincent Theater Company. Wil mer and Vincent Inc., and Nathan C. : Appell, has been dissolved and their Harrisburg interests sold to Walter Vincent and Eugene L. Koneke. The Orpheum, Majestic and Colonial theaters have been held by the Wil mer, Vincent and Appell partnership for several years. LATROBE GUARDSMAN DROWNS Sfecial to the Telegraph Latrobe, Pa., July 19.—Thomas Haag, I aged 19. a Latrobe member of the Com- I pany M, Tenth Infantry, Pennsylvania i National Guard, was drowned In the , Rio Orande river at Boqulllas, Tex Monday night. BRITISH BAR COMMERCE WITH 83 U. S. FIRMS Three Blacklisted Under Trad ing With the Enemy Act Are in Pennsylvania A new and serious issue between the United States and Great Britain is be lieved to have been raised by the ac tion of the British government in issu ing last night a blacklist of 83 firms and individuals in the United States. British subjects, in virtue of the Trad ing-with-the-Enemy act, are forbid den to transact any business with any j of the firms or individuals named. Just how many of the individuals in ; the blacklist are United States citizens, jand how many of the firms named in j elude United States citizens has not yet | been learned, but dispatches from London. Monday, indicated that some | American citizens were to be named, ! and it is already declared in Washing ton that a formal protest will be sent to London at an early date by the United States government. Three Pennsylvania firms are nam : ed. They are Carl Grubnau & Son. 1144 Arch street, and the International j Import and Export Company, 136 South Fourth street, Philadelphia, j Another firm listed is that of "Oren [Continued on Page 7] DEUTSCHLAND ! READY TO SAIL i All Return Cargo of Crude Rubber and Nickel Now in Hold By Associated Press 1 Baltimore. July 19. Shut oft en ) I tirely from the view of the public at j ; her pier at the foot of Andre street, , Spring Gardens, the German merchant . submarine Deutschland is believed to ; be ready to sail a* any moment her , commander, Captain Paul Koenig, is f; ordered by his American agents to dei art. There was little activity about the rrontlnupfl on Pnjse 7.1 Hold Conference Here on Farm Loan Bank According to a dispatch from Wash ■ j ington, D. C.. a conference will be held r in Harrisburg in the very near future . to discuss plans for locating Federal i ; farm banks. The dispatch says: "Hearings will he held shortly by 5 Secretary ~f tho Treasury McAdoo and . : the Farm Loan Board at Harrisburg - Pa„ to determine whether one of the •' new farm loan hanks should he located in Pennsylvania. 1 "Four members of the Farm Loan ..Board are to be appointed by the j President in Ihc next few days. The , four members of the hoard, acting with Secretary McAdoo. will then hold hear ings at various State capitals to deter | mine how the country should he di " vided into twelve districts. ■ j " 'Farmer' Creasy, of Pennsylvania • has !>een mentioned as a possible ap .! pointee in connection with the organ ization of the new board." > I . I PRESIDENT W K.SOK MEETS McCORMICK TOMORROW By Associated Press Washington, D. C.. July 19. Cam paign plans and organization of the ! campaign committee wfll be discussed i by President Wilson with Vance C Mc- Cormick, chairman of the Democratic ! national committee. The President is I preparing to enter actively upon tni fight for re-election as soon as Congress j adjourns, . 22 CARS RUNNING; PELT CREWS WITH EGGS; BR Ft Crowds of Men and Boys Harl Vegetables at Trolleymen at Verbeke Street Markethouse; Police Rushed to tke Scene and With the Aid of Sheriff's Deputies Order Is Soon Restored; Windows Smashed at Sixth and Cum berland Streets Today STRIKERS PLANNING PARADE OF ALL UNION MEN AND SYMPATHIZERS Line Will Be Formed at Amalgamated Employes' Head quarters; Suburban Service Indefinitely Suspended; Rocks Piled on Tracks at Many Places; Carmen Will ing to Arbitrate They Declare; Gilday Meets Offi cials; No Results After almos't twenty-four hours of inactivity, the Harrisburg Railways Company officials sent out twenty-two cars on the lines this morning l shortly after ? o'clock and maintained service in the city and to Steelton. All other suburban lines remained closed. The cars, according to Superintendent of Transportation Felix M. Davis, are being manned to-day by crews of men who have re mained loyal to the company, and will be operated as long as no serious damage is done by strike sympathizers. John J. Thorpe, vice-president of the Amalgamated Association, of Street and Electric Railways Employes, and leader of the strik ing carmen in this city, announced at noon to-day that plans have been started for a big labor organization and strike sympathizer parade to be held over the city streets to-morrow evening. The line will be formed at 26 North Third street, in front of the strike headquarters. Xo serious disorders occurred in the city, with the exception of disturbances at the Ycrbeke street markethouse, where small boy.'/ and some men hurled tomatoes, eggs, fruit and vegetables at the j crews on the cars as the passed. Police were rushed to the scene | and with sheriff's deputies soon had the crowd cleared away. Patrick Gilday. chief of the State Bureau of Mediation and ! Asbitration, met President Frank B. Musser and officers of the' Traction Company to-day, following a meeting with the strikers. [Continued on Page 5] 2 BALYSIS KILLS THIRTY MORE CHILDREN fl Bw York, July 19.—Both deaths and new cases in the 6 He paralysis epidemic took another jump to-day. 1 ■ the twenty-four hours ending at' lo a. m., to-day-JH Hfasc killed thirty children and attacked 142 others in f Hroughs of New York City. This is an increase of pi. ™. £ V AT WOOD IS COMMITTED I I Boston, July 19.—Dr. E. A. Atwood was arraigned m m. (• shooting Dr. W. E. * j> Ha Is of $15,01. mmitted * j I 28. Dr. Harris' 1 very low and it is feared he will not survive many hours. n I BOY DROWNED l| 1 T Marysvilk. "Honey" McCann, aged 7, son of Jere j j nn, of thin place, was drowned while swimming in the fll Susquehanna river this afternoon. He was on a Sunday j N 9 School picnic. The body was recovered. J® !CAR HITS AUTO; CROWD ANGRY <-* ' v ( by two men fro Brooklyn, J: New York, who told the police that they came here as i strike-breakers, a trolley car crashed into an automobile at Sixth and Boyd : treetr., : hortly after 2 o'clock to-day. E i"* J. I- of W 1 HI ion Height;:. , s driving the 5! auto mob ■ which 1 on slightly damaged. It was said f. by those in the crowd that the carmen deliberately ran the auto which had stopped in the middle of the track tosj take on passengers. A crowd collected and ran after the<9 car. eeti police re .v< ' • Oliver®'" V» , ~a a .irij., as a pilot, and William I Wc d George Lewis, the crew. The police escorted! f th .. . < ety pi e- ■. •" I • , DEPUTIES UNDER STATE FUND * ' Harrisburg. Agreement by the State authorities latJ] I I this afternoon to insure Dauphin county's special trolley | • "strike State fund will probably mean ' '; I that all the coui es will be included under this j y ! permission. 1 |j MARRIAGE UCENSES , > Goy Stephen Hovrr and Anna I,*aeh Strrbljc, Philadelphia. Janie* Williams Palmer and Dora Loouiia, Tyrone, ' ' CITY EDITION 12 PAGES