' . ———n Drih-sft Armies Roll Up' German lines For Kg Gains of Land and Boot HARRISBURG iSIS™ TELEGRAPH I,XXX Vl No. 90 18 PAGES 'BETHLEHEM STEEL EMPLOYES ARE GIVEN TEN PER CENT. RAISE Majority of 10,000 Employes at Steelton Plant Among More Than 50,000 Workmen of Big Corporation Affected; Increase Effective May 1; Announcement Made By President Grace and Manager Quincy Bent. Salaried Employes Not Affected A majority of the 10,000 employes of the Bethlehem Steel Com pany's plants at Steelton and Lebanon are granted a ten per cent, increase in an announcement made simultaneously to-day by Presi dent E. G. Grace of the Bethlehem Steel Company and Quincy Bent, manager of the Steelton plant. "Effective May 1, an increase approximating 10 per cent will be granted hour, day and turn rate employes of the company. Adjustments will also be made of certain tonnage and piece work rates." Clerks, stenographers and other salaried employes are nftt affected. From South Bethlehem President Grace announced a ten per cent, increase in the wages of the more than 50,000 employes of the company at its plants located at South Bethlehem, Steelton, Balti more and Lebanon. The increase becomes effective May 1. Third Increase 1 his is the third increase since the Bethlehem Steel Company took over the Steelton Plant. The first increase came November 1, and the second December 16. All three increases were approximately ten per cent. A majority of the 8,000 employes at the Steelton plant are effected by the increase. There arc about 2,000 employes at the Lebanon plant, a majority of which are effected. The local steel officials have jurisdiction over the Lebanon plant. Solicitor to File Bonds in Hardscrapple Appeals City Solicitor John E. Kox will pre sent bonds in jourt next week as the city's surety until the pending ap peals from the awards of viewers in the Hardscrabble proceedings are set tled finally. On .Monday when the court was asked for issues, counsel for the property holders who have appealed, declared the city should file bonds in each -ase before further ac tion is taken. Solicitor Fox consent ed to do this, and unless objections are raised the city will furnish bonds itself without furnishing surety through a private company. In case of dispute the court will be asked to decide. The Telegraph Will Respond to the Call RESPONDING to the can ot Cnpt. Henry M. Stlnc, chair man of the "Everybody's Patriotic Demonstration" commit tee, that all places of business in Ilarrisburg be closed from noon un til 0 o'clock in the evening of the clay of the parade, Saturday, April 21, the 11ARRISBURG 'TELE GRAPH on that date will be issued at noon* This will IH' done in order that the entire Telegraph Family may have the privilege of |>artici pating in the doings of the day. All the editions of the newspaper on that day will be combined in one ami the Sports Extra will he sus- pcmlcd on that occasion. IWE WEATHER 1 For Harrishurit and vicinity: Fair, continued cool to-niKht and Sun day; loufHt tcm lie rat urc to-fiittht about 32 decree*. For Knstcrn I'ennnyl\ania: Prob ably (air to-nli;lit and Sunday; front to-nii&ht; moderate north west Hindi*. RlTer The Susquehuniia river and all Its tributaries will fall slowly or re main nearly Mtatioaary. A staKe of about 5.0 feet la indicated for HarriMburjt Sunday morning. (ienernl Conditions Tbe Atlantic coast disturbance of Friday has passed oft' seaivard. It eauscd rain in tlie last twenty iour hours over the Knst Gvlf States and In the Atlantic States from Northern Maine to Southern Florida, with snow flurries iu the I ppcr Ohio Valley and alonK the eastern border of the tireat l.akes. A n extensive area of hluh barometric pressure covers the tireat Central valleys and the western part of the Take HCKIOII with Its crest over Manitoba. I'ressure In low west of the Kocky Mountnins, except alonß the im mediate Pacific coast. I.iuht rains have fallen In Orfnon and Idaho and liKht. scattered rains aad snowa In Kansas, lowa, the l)a --kotas and Northern Minnesota. Temperatures are 2 to 20 decrees lower than on Friday morniui; over practically all the country south and enst of the Great l.akes. In North Colorado, !S>- raka, the Dakotaa, Western Minnesota and the Pacific slope. Temperature! R a. m., 32. Sum Rlnes, R>24 a. m.; nets, 0i47 p. m. Moont New moon, April 2S, 12t53 a. m. River Stattet 5.8 feet above low water mark. Yesterday's Weather Highest temperature, 50. I,owest temperature. 37. Mean temperature, 44. Aormal temperature. 50. Royal Arcanum Receiver Appointed When Charge of. Mismanagement Is Made By Associated Press Boston, April 14.—Thomas J. Boynton, formerly Attorney General of Massachusetts, was appointed re ceiver of the Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum by Federal Judge Aldrich to-day. The appointment was made on pe tition of Arthur L. Hobart, of Bain tree, a member of the order, who holds a death benetit calling for SSOO. j Hobart alleged that 'he reserve fund of the organization amounting to $3,- i 800,000, had been illegally adminis [ tered and that it would be entirely i depleted within two years unless the I court interfered. He asked that an I injunction be issued restraining the I officers from further administering the funds and that the receiver wind ■ up the affairs of the council. The petition stated that SIIO,OOO I was lost last year in the sale of bonds |of the Commonwealth of Massachu setts and that in 1915 the sum of I $1,500,000 was illegally used in the ; payment of preferential death benefit I claims. Predicts Peace Within Two Months and a Half Copenhagen, April 14, via London. —Peace within two months and a half is predicted by the Copenhagen correspondent of the Danish Socialist press, which confirms the reports of ■ unofficial negotiations between Rus | sians and German Socialists, as ! i against the diplomatic denials in the | Socialist newspapers here and in Ber lin. The first negotiations, says the cor respondent, who is a Socialist mem ber of the Danish parliament, were broken off, enabling two papers to launch a denial that they were In | progress, but they were immediately resumed and are being prosecuted vigorously. The correspondent then I enters into a discussion of peace i terms, in which he appears to take i German Socialist expectations and ! hopes for the government policy. TEUTON SAVED FROM MOB By Associated Pre\i Pittsburgh, Pa., April 14. Police reserves were called out here last night to disperse a crowd of several hun dred people who threatened the life of Theodore Cossman, proprietor of a motion picture theater, following a! street address made by Cossman! against enlistment in the government i service. Cossman was arrested on a! charge of high misdemeanor and com- ; mitted to jail in default of $10,000) ball. While Cossman was being held j at an alderman's office, another largo I crowd surrounded the office demand- ! ing that he be turned over to them. ' Two riot calls were sent In and ad- i dltlonal reserves were resisted bv tho I crowd. Patriotic Canine Series THIS DOG SALUTES FLAG Whenever "Patsy," owned by Mr I and Mrs. Clarence K. Zorger, 548 1 Mactay street, passes the American ilag he lifts his right paw to his head and salutes, they say. He also wears a flag of his own which he carefully '.guards and protects. HARRISRURC,, PA., SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 14, 1917 I ONE OF FIRST OF GREAT WOODEN ARMADA V. _> RT-TIXDI-Nc; "WOQr>X>T..SHJ3P /v* 7ro -*£-. , > . *' lG P' an devised by the TTnited States authorities to break the German submarine blockade is the eon aui/llii ? n ot an enormous number of wooden ships. Major-General Goethals, builder of the Panama Canal, has been SiJri il° m? ch \ irße ot " thls work - uis expected that several ships a week of 3,000 tons each can be built without Ju u v ' The photograph shows a wooden ship o*£hat type being constructed at Essex, Mass., at an old shipyard wjuch has not been used for many years. P.R.R.TOTHROW OPEN NEW FREIGHT STATION MONDAY First Completed Step in $1,500,- 000 Improvement Campaign For Harrisburg On Monday morning at 7 o'clock the new southbound freight station of the Pennsylvania Railroad in South Harrisburg will be opened for busi ness. To make this event a certainty painters, plumbers, electric light forces and construction gangs will work to-night and to-morrow. The new freight building is a mod ern structure and faces Second street. It is only a part of the big freight station improvements which have been under way in South Harrisburg for more than a year. Warren Moore, the contractor, has been handi capped because of the failure of the contractors in charge of the founda tions to get the work finished. Other [Continued on Page 12] SEVEN BILLION DOLLAR REVENUE BILL TO PASS Almost Unanimous Vole Prom ised First of War Meas ure This Evening By Associated Press Washington, April 14. —Passage be fore night of the seven billion dollar war revenue bill by the House by an almost unanimous vote was assured to-day. The measure was taken up in the House at 11 o'clock this morning un der an agreement to begin discussion of amendments under the five minute rule. General debate closed last [Continued on Page 12] MEXICAN'S NEAR BORDER By Associated Press Calexico, Mex., April 14. Two hundred Carranza soldiers, with an airplane and machine guns mounted on powerful launches, are encamped at the mouth of the Colorado river, opposite La Bolsa. Lower California, sixty miles southeast of here, accord ing to reports here yesterday. U.S. MUNITIONS PLANTS READY TO SUPPLY SHELLS Enormous Quantity of Fighting Material Can Be Turned Out at Once By Associated Press Washington, April 14. The Navy Department made public to-day bids received from 25 munition makers on an order for 1,578,000 shells of all cal ibers. The figures bring out sharp ly the enormous capacity of American plants. Eleven bidders each offered to ab sorb the entire order for 1,170,000 one-pounder projectiles and within a few weeks to begin delivery at the rate [Continued on Page 12] SHELL IX PRESSROOM By Associated Press New York, April 14. A loaded three-inch shell weighing 15 pounds, made in the United States, was found last night In the press room of the New York Globe after the last edition had gone to press. According to the police, the shell was leaning against one of the presses In such a position that it would have been exploded had the machinery been started. SThr Star- 3fni>cpmfccnL JOHN G.JOHNSON, FAMOUS LAWYER, DIES SUDDENLY Retained by Great Corpora tions in Nearly All Import- ant Cases Philadelphia, April 14.—John G. Johnson, tlie widely-known lawyer, died at his home here to-day. Death was due to heart disease. Mr. John son had been in ill health but a few days, although this did not be come publicly known until after his death. He was ' 7 years old. John G. Jiohnson stood in the front rank of his profession, having been retained, largely by < orporations, in many of the great legal cases that have come before the Supreme Court of the United States in the last twenty years. He appeared before that tribunal fft the famous 'Northern Securities case, the Standard Oil [Continued on Page 3] TO ASK STATE AID TO GUARD WATER SUPPLY City May Decide to Name at Least Nine Additional Uni formed Officers Also An appeal for State police and prep arations to have Council authorize the appointment of at least nine addi tional uniformed and armed officers for patrol duty were the two moves made to-day by city commissioners to provide adequate protection of the city reservoir, pumping station and filter plant. Commissioner K. Z. Gross, to whom a communication was addressed yes [Continued on Paso 12] MIXED WEATHER COMING Washing-ton, April 14. Weather predictions for the week beginning Sunday issued b ythe Weather Bu reau to-day are: Middle Atlantic States: Generally fair except for rains Tuesday and Wednesday. Tem perature below seasonal normal ex cept warmer weather is probable Monday and Tuesday. BOLIVIA BREAKS WITH GERMANY AS U-BOAT PROTECT Soutli American Country Joins With United States Against Sea Pirates I-a Paz, Bolivia, April 14. —The German minister and his staff have | been handed their passports by the Bolivian government with a note de claring that diplomatic relations be tween Bolivia and Germany have been severed. The note of the Bolivian govern ment to the German minister an nouncing the severance of diplomatic relations with Germany denounces the attacks of German submarines on neutral vessels as violations of Inter national law and of The Hague con ventions. The note recalls that the Bolivian minister to Berlin was on board the Holland-Lloyd steamer Tu [Continued on Page 3] KAISER NOT ILL By Associated Press Amsterdam, April 14, via London.— An official statement Issued in Berlin says that all recent reports of the Ill ness of the emperor are unfounded. NATIVE OF PENNA. DIES FIGHTING IN GERMAN TRENCHES Dr. C. R. Gregory, Aged 70 Years, and Friend of Dr. Na than G. Schaeffer, Shot Dr. Nathan C. Schaelter. Superintend ent of Public instruction, in speaking of the death of his former classmate, Dr. C. R. Gregory, aged 70, who died in the German trenches, said this morning; "To fny mind this shows how desperate the German government lias been in filling its ranks with sol diers and what the great universities [Continued on Page 3] BURNED YEAR AGO; DIES Michael Snyder, aged 37, died yes terday in the.Harrisburg hospital from burns received more than a year ago at a lime kiln. Coroner Jacob lOck inger pronounced death due to burns. FLYING SQUAD WILL OPEN DRIVE OF RED CROSS In Automobiles to Scour City For New Members; Goal Without Limit Plans are completed for the big spring drive for memberships in the Ilarrisburg Chapter of the American Red Cross. The goal is now without limit as to the number of memberships. First 5,000 were sought, then the limit was raised to 10,000, but now anything is possible within the limits of the pop ulation of Harrisburg and its suburbs. Just as this city's industrial and commercial lifeMs listed in the general [Continued oil Page 12] ST. PETERSBURG AGAIN By Associated Press Amsterdam, April 14, via London. —German correspondents on the Rus sian and Swedish frontiers report that the Russian provisional government intends to change the name of the capital back to St. Petersburg. The government is said to have decided upon this 'because Petrograd recalls to every Russian the saddest time in Russian history." "ON TO BERLIN" IS SUGGESTED AS , RECRUIT SLOGAN Captain Harrell Lauds Harris burg's Showing, but Wants More Men "Let the slogan of every Harrisburg j man of military age who is free to enter the army or the navy be "On to Merlin,said Captain William F. Har i rell, in charge of the Harrisburg army recruiting office, this morning. "Harrisburg lias responded nobly to, the call, but there are more men here who are free to go and should feel it their duty to do so. We have been enlisting more men in the Ilarrisburg district, comparatively, than the New [Continued on Page 3] MEXICO IS NEUTRAL Mexico City, April 14. ln its an swer to the American government's notice of the existence of a state of war between Germany and the United States, made public here last , night, the Mexican government announeed in efTect that It regretted the United States had been unable to solve its difficulties with Germany In a peace ful manner, but that Mexico, inspired by the desires expressed In her re cent peace note, would omit no effort j to contribute to the bringing about of peace Single Copy, 2 Cents HOME EDITION BRITISH ARMY UNCHECKED IN GREAT DRIVE Hindenburg Line Riddled on Northern End; Lens Is Fast Being Hemmed in and Teutons Are Falling Back Under Haig's Fire NERVES OF GERMAN PEOPLE ARE SHAKEN BY CONTINUED REVERSES IN FRANCE Fall of St. Quentin Imminent As Fortified Villages Nearby Fall; More Than 13,000 Meci Taken Prisoners By English Along With Big Guns * V*s By Associated Press British assaults have broken four miles more of the German ; front in an important sector of the Arras battlefield. The Hindenburg line has been riddled on its northern end, Lens is fast being hemmed in and General Haig's forces arc sweeping back the Germans from the Loos sector far to the southeast of Arras. Correspondents report every indication of a continuation of the ! German retirement under the smashing offensive of the British. The Teutons are being hard pressed as they retreat and explosions and fires are observed in their rear. Great importance is attached to the success of the British in the fighting north of Vimy. They have carried there several im portant positions including points between Givenchy-en-Gohelle and Angres, enabling General Haig to link up the ground won in the engagements early this week in the Arras region with the positions gained long ago in the costly battle of Loos. This movement is resulting in the envelopment of Lens, with its valuable coal fields. The fall of St. Quentin also seems imminent. London reports the capture by British forces of the village of Fayet, one mile north west of St. Quentin. The French are close to this important forti fied position on the south and Paris to-day announces the French U&uns hammering St. Quentin's defenses. - Between St. Quentin and the main total of 106 captured, with more tluin battlefield of Arras. British troops 13,000 prisoners in oil, while to-day continue to press forward towards the London official reports mention Cambrai, pushing ahead north of the four more 8-inch howitzers taken. Bapaume - Cambrai road towards Letters to German newspapers in- Queant. • dicate that the nerves of the German More big Runs arc being taken public are being shaken by the re from the Germans as they retire. ' Bast night General llaig reported a [Continued on I'IIKC 1-] f GERMANS HOPE RUSS WILL QUIT T ? Petrcgrad, April 14.—Austrian officers who have desert- I J ed, declare that the central empire!, are hoping the various ' > ft organizations in the interior of Russia who are trying to j 1 obstruct the new government will bring on a state of an ® ► I jl CENTRAL IRON AND STEEL GRANTS INCREASES il Harrisburg. The Central Iron and Steel Company an- . | ! nounced to-day that all day and tonnage men will receive, .in 1 9 increase in wages, approximating 10 per cent., the increase tp I I go into erti 1 The men received an increase in | j I wages last December 1^ j 9 QUENTIN ROOSEVELT TO FLY t , Montreal, April 14. Quenten Roowrvelt, son of the i former President has joined the Canadian aviation corps to 3j < obtain instructing for service in the American army shouk; 1 an expedition go abroad. I )• 1 FRENCH ATTRACT ATTENTION 7 | 1 Washington, April 14.—French bluejackets in uniform | I attracted much attention ur the streets of Washington t • > II day. Groups cf them walking about town were cheered b • ' J pedestrians. I [ £ U. S. TO HELP RUSSIA [ Washington, April 14.—Official confirmation that the t \ f United Stati ering sending a commission to Rusk; J J to sec in wh untry can aid to the new , J i ment. ; I BOYS TO OFFER SERVICES New York, April 14.—More than 100,000 boy* under 1 | I military a*e affiliated with the Boys' Club Federation have 1 1 been called by the organization to tender their services to ' i the country as angers and hf food supply sources • ! _ _l! ' MARRIAGE LICENSES Henry Hank Rloueh, Philadelphia, unil lira Alta Dcnenlierger, !S>w Cumberland. Walter Henry Aitklii and Lucy Fleldn, Sterlton. Jniiieng I i .Qulnter <>aynian and Verna Itebeeca Cinell, llarrlMhu ri£. (ieorge .Deuey , i < "Martin and Caroline laabell Her, Harrlnbtara;. Jo K <*ib Kdtvard Weacrd, IMillndolplila, nad Ituth Marian l)onry t I'ennnbnry. Hermnn Clay and Kllle Hebeeea Carl, Went Hanover to\vn*h|p. Joseph Cuajak and Mary < staraNlnlc, Steellon. Kduartl Schhonl and ItoNlna Cainacel, Swatarn. Harvey Grant Jury and Kllr.aheth Irene Shepley, Halifax. Stephen Makong I Cnd Therein Krlxpak, Steelton. John Clarence Wllllard and Anna Mildred < 1 Wallace, l,,vkea.