HARRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH ghc stor- Unfltprnftrnt. LXXXVI— No. 105 18 PAGES U. S. TO LAND ARMY IN FRANCE - WHEN ALLIES MAKE REQUEST AMERICAN TROOPS OFFERED FOR ACTIVE SERVICE IN FIELD Small Contingent of Fighting Men Will be Placed on Foreign Soil For Moral Effect; Administration Un decided Whether to Send Regular Army, National Guard or Parts of Both Organizations TIME OF SENDING EXPEDITION WILL DEPEND ON SHIPPING FACILITIES Psychological Effect Will More Than Offset Disadvantages Advanced by the General Army Staff; Training Will he Given Men Within Sound of Big Guns; Action to Give America Place at Peace Board W'ashinvton, May The United States stands ready .o cnd an army to Europe whenever the allies deem it wise to divert tlie necessary shipping from transporting food to transporting men . H has become known definitely that the government has of fered troops to the allies, but has suggested that the alarming shortage of world shipping may make it impracticable to send theiu at once. In spite of objections of the general staff to putting any American forces on the firing line before the great war army has been raised and trained, the administration has determined that the small contingent earnestly desired by France for moral effect shall be sent as soon as possible. The general belief here is that the way soon will be found. Whether the force first to carry the Stars and Stripes into battle in France shall be made up of regulars or National Guards men, or both, has not been worked out. Good Effect Seen matic advantages far outweighed the State Department officials have technical and training difficulties continuously urged the sending of an advanced by the general staff, they army, solely for its psychological ef- " ave felt that such a step would con fect, not only in encouraging the al- secrate the United States as a full lied troops but in discouraging the Germans. Convinced that the diplo- [Continued on Page 4] AMERICAN SAFETY IS THREATENED BY U-BOAT SUCCESSES By Associated Press Washington, May 2. Secretary Lane told the governors conferring here to-day with the Council of Na tional Defense on the part state gov ernments will take in the war that the federal government had heard that 400,000 tons of shipping had been sunk in the last week by German submarines. The destruction. Secretory l.nne Malil, nu not only threntenlnK the ex istence of Knuliind and France, hut a* nliirminK the I nlleil States. Study of intentions to combat the sabmn rine menace is helm; diligently pur sued lu the Interior Department, he said. The United States must bullil ships as rapidly as possible, he told the del egates. "If nr don't flccht the war on thr other side," lie said, "we shall hme to tight It on this side of the Atlantic." Secretary l.ane declared he believed the war would last several years and that every resource of the country must he brouKht lato place to brln It to a successful conclusion. War May I.ast I.ong "Many persons thought," said Sec retary Lane, "that all we had to do was to issue bonds and that Ger many would bow her head in BUbmls [theweather Fur llnrriaburK and vicinity I Fair to-nliibt, proliuhly IlKht frost, with lowest temperature about !IS ilearers; Thursday fair, with moderate temperature.' For Knstern Pennsylvania! Fair to-niKht, probably IlKht frost in north and west portlonsi Thursday falri moderate weat to northwest winds. Hlve'r The North Branch will rlae slight ly below Towanda. Other atrenms of the system will fall nlovtly or remain nearly sta tionary. A stage of about 4.2 feet is indicated for IlarrlsburK Thursday morning. Temperature: N a. m., degrees. Sum Hlses. 4t7 a. m. Moon: Full moon. May 8. Itlver Stage: 4. feet. Yesterday'a Weather Ilißhest temperature, SS. I.owest temperature, 47. Mean temperature, 32. •Normal temperature, 57. United States to Carry American Col I sion. Nothing could be farther from | the truth. We do not know when J this war will end. It may not be a | one-year war. Personally I believe it j will last Beveral years. Herbert C. 1 Hoover lias informed this government ■ that Germany has food enough to last ! two years, perhaps longer. j "Germany has put up the greatest j light of history and she has the ad ; vantage of now lighting a defensive I warfare. Don't go back home and | inspire your people with the thought that immed.ate action can bring this | war to an immediate end. Your peo j pie must look to this year's crop and next year's crop and the next after I that. | "We can't alt'ord to fail In tliln war. Every man In this country Is Involved (n tills work mid every man In the 1 country is a Nolillrr. The French hope ; to break donn the morale of the (>er mnn armies. Our concern Is to see to It that our own morale rises." Hollweg Postpones His Proposed Peace Speech By Associated Press J Copenhagen. May 2.—The speech I which was to have been made in the I Knichstag liy Dr. Von Bethmann-Holl i weg, the German Imperial chancellor, ! on peace and international relations, has been postponed to a more lltting < occasion, according to word received here. According to the Berliner Tage lilatt, as quoted in a dispatch from The Hague on Tuesday, Dr. Von Beth mann-Hollweg was to have made a peace offer in the Helchstag on 1 Thursday. The speech had been I awaited with the greatest interest because of an intimation in a German ■ newspaper that the moderation of the German peace terms would "astonish the world." War Risk Insurance For Merchant Seamen Urged by Sec. McAdoo By Associated I'ress Washington, May 2.—Secretary Mc- Adoo lias recommended to Congress tlint the powers of the government ar risk Insurance bureau be enlarg ed so as to permit the insuring of lives of officers and men on merchant i shlua. Americans Probably Will Be in France Within Three Months President Wilson's Cabinet believes that an American force should be sent to the !• reach front immediately. 1 here is every indication the dispatch of United States troops will take place at a much earlier date than was contemplated by the General Start probably as early as three months hence. The Army Draft bill will not reach a conference com mittee for several davs. A compromise is expected on the age limits, possibly 21 and 35 vcars. NEW GOVERNMENT IS DEMAND OF GERMAN PAPERS Forecast People Will Turn From the Kaiser to Democracy Amsterdam. May 2.—The Hamburg er lrcmdenblatt, at the end of a three-rolumn editorial, comes to the conclusion that the German political sysetm is a failure and must be changed. The paper says: | "There is no use theorizing. There | is something wrong with our govern- I mental system, as is clearly proved |by Germany's political failures and jin fact by the whole war. Fresh [Continued on Page -1] STATE TENDERS SIGNAL HONOR TO MARSHAL JOFFRE Offers Him Freedom of Com monwealth and Wants Speech Marshal Joffre, who will arrive In this city some time between the hours of 12:30 and 2 o'clock Tues day afternoon has been extended the freedom of the State and an invita tion to address a joint session of the Legislature. The Chamber of Commerce, through w'hich organization the peo ple of Harrisburg will be privileged to see the noted FYench hero and his party, announced this morning that extensive preparations are being made for the reception of the [Continued on Page I] All Work Stopped in Dual Monarchy; Labor Demands Peace By Associated Press London, May 2.—Work stopped completely throughout Austria-Hun gary on May Day, according to wire less dispatches from Berne. All of the Vienna munition factories were left idle, while the workers gathered at sixty mass meetings, where the food question and the need of Im mediate peace were the chief topics. Identical resolutions were passed at all the meetings demanding peace without annexation or indemnities. A procession of 100,000 men and women marched along the Ring strasse and from there to the Prater, Vienna's great pleasure park, where a fete was held. The dis patch says there was no disorder throughout the day. In Hungary a holiday was ob served in all the towns. 75 Norwegian Vessels Sunk in April by U-Boats Christiania. Norway, May 2.—Sev enty-five Norwegian vessels were sunk by German submarines in April and more than 100 sailors lost their lives. If such a monthly loss was maintained Norway's merchant navy would be destroyed In a vear and a half. According to the Central News the Norwegian foreign office has an nounced the sinking of the Norwe gian steamers Hectoria and Lang land by German submarines. The crews were saved. HARRISBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 2, 1917 ( —^ PART OF THE ANTI-SUBMARINE COAST PATROL SUEfr-tsuzurz. CHAstra WMV 1 The submarine chaser Lynx, of which Ensign Blake has command. Is now up for repairs at Hoston after patrolling; the New England coast on the lookout for lierman submarines. Knsign Blake is a Harvard graduate. AMERICAN SHIP SUNK BY U-BOAT Py Associated Press London, May 2.—The American steamer Rockingham has I)een sunk by a German submarine. Thirteen men are missing. Two boats containing 33 men were picked up yester day, one by a patrol vessel. One boat containing 13 men is missing. MANY HEED CALL TO FARM AS FOOD PRODUCTION STEP Men, Women and Children Rally lo Call to Nation For ! More Gardening i While Harrisburg is sending hun dreds of men and boys into the U. S. army and navy other hundreds, ' jin addition to many women and 1 children are volunteering 10 increase the food supply. "WAKE UP TECH THE FARM IS CALLING YOU ! i IK OS MAN. HEICHER, ZIMMER- I MAN AND BATTEN ARE i WILLING TO FIGHT FOR US. ARE WE WILLING TO DO OUR HIT TOWARDS FEEDING THEM ?" This is the announcement that j | stares every Tech High School boy : in the face as he enters the corridors of the Maroon institution. As a result of the plea that is 1 being made for students to take J jup farm and gardening work 100 I students responded to the call in I 1 one-half a day, giving their name I i and address, and signifying their i j willingness to go at once to work I |on the farm. It is understood that ! | oniy those students will be recoin- j [Continued on Page 13] Survivors of 127 th Pa. Volunteers to Hold Annual j Reunion Here Tomorrow 1 The twenty-ninth annual reunion of! the survivors of the 127 th Regiment. Pennsylvania Volunteers, will be held in Post 58 hall to-morrow. 11. C. ! Hemming is the president and N. A. ' Walmer secretary. This was called the Dauphin Coun ty Regiment. Eight companies be longed to the county, and two from Lebanon, and it was commanded by j Colonel W. W. Jennings, in the Civil War. 717 Airplanes Shot Down in Month of Battling i ; London, May 2.—A compilation ! | front British. French and German I official communiques shows that 717 . ! airplanes were shot down on the j western front during April. The Ger- 1 | mans lost 369, the French and Bel j glans 201 and the British 147. This . is a great increase over the casualties I for any similar period. The highest j previous total was 332 in last Sep- I tembar. L DRIVE CONTINUES WITHOUT SIGN OF FALTERING Membership Enrollment Is ! Nearing 0,000 Mark; School Pupils Join Without faltering the Red Cross | membership list has crossed the 15,000 mark and is pulling strong for the next objective—6,ooo. The total j is now close to that marl; and !t is I , expected by the end of the week j nearly 10,000 will have joined. Volunteer canvassers are enrolling I scores, while the enrollments at i headquarters as a result of the Civic { i Club campaign in the schools are growing fast. | This morning it was announced i t that the total membership was 5,929.: j The total receipts amount to SIO,OOO j : or more, including contributions and | membership funds. The contribu- j tions total $4,221. j William Jennings, one of the lead- ! ers of the campaign submitted a re- j port from Duncannon this morning! | stating that 230 members and $230 ; have been received from Duncannon i | alone. j Late enrollments in the Red ' Cross campaign follow: Mrs. Anna Snyder, E. R. Miller. | [Continued on Page 7] 1,300,000 Germans Have | Been Killed in War j By Associated Press Amsterdam, May 2. —One million,! three hundred thousand Germans have perished in the war, accord ! ing to a statement made by Joseph Fricdrlch Naunann, formerly a con- I servative member of the Reichstag. ; Herr Naunann, lecturing on the "in- I fluence of the war on population," [said in part: "Until now the war has caused a loss of 1,300,000 dead. This to-! jgether with the decrease in birth. ( i gives a reduction of 3,800,000. The surplus of females has increased ! from SOO.OOO to far more than 2,- i 000,000. The nation has bled as never since the Thirty Years War." V. S. SHIP FOLIjOWEI) By Associated Press New York. May 2.—An unidenti- ' tied sailing ship, equipped with uuxil- | iary power and answering the pre viously reported description of the Germun raider Seeadldr. intercepted and followed for six hours an Amerl- i can steamship. which arrived licit jio-day from South America ITTNER CHARGES ARE DENIED BY G. W. M'ILHENNY Refutes Accusations of St , Louis Architect; Lloyd Makes Statement George W. Mcllhenny in an inter } view and affidavit made public to day, supported by sworn statements ot' contractors who built schools in Harrisburg during the period of Mr. Mcllhenny's admitted influence with the school board, denies emphatical ly and in every particular all the charges made against liim by Wil liam B. ittner, the St. Louis archi tect, and officials of the American [Continued on Pngc 12] WOULD SUSPEND 'FULL CREW LAW' FOR WAR PERIOD I Bill Presented Today Would Rule It Out Until After Peace Conies Senator McKee, of Allegheny, in- I troduced a bill at the session to-day ' which is intended to suspend the l operations of the full crew act dur- I ing the war with Germany and for j six months thereafter. The bill con tains a preamble which recites that State and nation are suffering from a shortage of labor because of the demand made upon industry by virtue of the enlistment of large . numbers of citizens in the army and | navy. [ It is set forth t]iut the industrial situation may be relieved to a large i extent by the suspension for a speci | lied period of labor laws. The act to | promote the safety of travelers and > employes upon railroads by com pelling common carriers to properly i man their trains "shall not be in force during the time that the gov ! ernment of the United States is in ! war with a foreign government or j power and for a period of six months ! after the dose of such war," the bill j recites. It was referred to the torn : mittce on railroads. Nine More Survivors of Torpedoed Vacuum Land in Liverpool By Associated Press Liverpool, May 2.—Nino survivors, including Captain S. S. Harris, from ; the American oil tank steamer Vacuum, which was sunk by a Ger man submarine Saturday, have been ! landed. This makes 27 men saved I from a total of 45 aboard the vessel. Captain Harris wired to the ofll !ces of the Vacuum company that he j with the third mate, E. D. Husted, lof Mount Vernon, N. Y„ the boat swain, and six gunners were picked | up by a patrol boat and landed. Lieutenant Thomas, U. S. N., lost his life by the sinking of the Vacuum, according to a telegram re i celved to-day from Captain Harris by the American consul here, H. L. ! Washington. Captain Harris also reports that |S. 11. Loree died of exposure after ' being landed and that A. Donald, C. J. Fisher and C. F. Luckhum were lost. Captain Harris "reports that 18 j men of hIH crewr were lost. Eight .gunners and 18 members of the [crew were saved, 1. Single Copy, 2 Cents HOME EDITION CENSOR KEEPS LID TIGHT ON LABOR STRIKES Great Disturbances Rumored From Borders of Central Empires, But Close Guard on News Channels Makes Imposible Forming of Definite Opinion Regarding Seriousness of Situation; Deadlock Reported o* Fighting Front in France Beyond an officially inspired dispatch from Berlin stating that no disorders occured in Geraniny during May Day, the veil of secrecy which has been drawn over the situation in the central empires remains unbroken as far as any direct news is concerned. News dispatches from the German frontier speak of great strikes and rumors pile up on rumors in regard to the growing unrest among the Teutonic nations, but there is little that is tangible an which to base a judgment. Everything points to a crisis hav ing been reached in the internal affairs of both Germany and Austria, but the outcome is uncertain. I he demand for internal reforms is growing louder and more insistent in Germany and the newspapers are voicing this demand with a boldness never known since the commencement cf the war. I I lie one certain thing of significance is that the German govern jment is proceeding to unheard of lengths to prevent the outside I world from learning the truth of the situation. Attack llollwcg It is reported that Chancellor Von ' Bethmann-Hollweg win make a new peace offer before the Reichstag to morrow, but thin is based entirely ; on a newspaper statement and lacks I either detail or confirmation. The ! storm of criticism against tlie chan cellor is steadily growing in bitter- j ness and from all quarters is heard the demand for a "strong man" to guide Germany through the trouble; which beset her. The great labor demonstration in Sweden, which it was freely predict ed might cause grave disturbances, took place without any disorder I ' ' PRESIDENT URGES STATES TO FIGHT lent Wilson to-day i J 1 ' here that it was the supreme duty to the United States to co ordinate its , 1 1 ill be vindicated and the world shown that the government does not live ?n am. ' , WHEAT AGAIN SOARS 8 ' Chic. : ;o, M. y ? - Rep it the German Chan t ilor's peace speech had been postponed led to sharp jj J upturn* in wheat. May advanced 17 cents to $272. ' HOUSE RAISES SALARIES ' ' Harrisburg.—The House to-day passed the bill to r increase salaries of members of the general assembly 1 I from $1,500 to $2,500 by 134 to 38. The bill was de feated last week, but reconsidered. 'The House also i \ I passed the bill increasing salaries in the State Banking Department. .; ' NORWAY LOSES 75 SHIPS i , 1 Christiania, Norway, May 2. Seventy-five Nor* weigian vessels were sunk by German submarine I ■ April and more than 100 sailors lost their lives. ? TO REGISTER 7,000,000 MEN I Washington, May 2. Election systems will b % used to register men for army the war depart- f ment announced txMiay. Seven million men will be Jb > 9 registered 15 days after the army bill is signed. Washington, May 2. • Members of the British ! commission to-day declared that Germany has been putting out peace feelers on condition,of her retaining [ a way through the Balkans to Bagdad.' This has been refused Prospects of a separate peace with any of ' * Germany's allies is discounted , ■ SAVE THE "EYES" OF POTATOES > ■ Harrisburg.—Governor Brumbaugh to-day issued 1 a notice to the public, especially to hotelmen. to save i > the eyes of potatoes for planting and calling on the > people to increase the planting of beans. , ■ ; ____ ■ MARRIAGE LICENSES , Seymour Kill* IlraKle and l.lln Slump, Milton. < Inrrncr Harnra nnd l.aurn Hrunrr, llarrlNliurir IVtilr .Naram-lr anil 'l'errrln llirdln, Ntrrlton. Willlr Jnmrn l.atiit anil Kthrl Kritlna Johnson, Harrhknn . ram-o t iim-y and Katlp Urecn, Hnrrlnbunf. I ' 'V' A A ■■ A) |< A j | being reported and a similar demon stration in Austria is declared to have passed peaceably. (■l'eat Armies Deadlocked Along the lighting front in France the deadlock which has existed for some days persists. The results of the French offensive have caused considerable dissatisfaction in Paris and the minister of war will have to face the lire of a number of deputies when the French parlia ment meets later in the month. In England criticism is centered 011 the admiraliiy, the growing submarine menace rapidly increasing critics of Sir Edward Carson.