TRYING TO TRACK REDS RESPONSIBLE FOR BOMB PLOTS Every Federal and Municipal Agency Is at Work By Associated Press. New York, May 1. Every i agency of the national and mu- j nicipal governments is at work j to-day trying to track the "reds" responsible for the terrorist j bomb plot which has startle.! the country. Sixteen of the most diaboli- j cal infernal machines ever en-; countered by experts were j found, literally by chance, early yesterday in the general post | office in this city. Apparentlyj they were identical with six others which went through the | "RHEUMATIC KINKS" GO "NEUTRONE PRESCRIPTION 99" A WONDER At last a real does-what-lt-savs Rheumatic Remedy, nothing like it was ever before known and that is no joke. Every man and woman who has Rheumatism, Gout or Neuralgia, ought to try "Ncutrone Prescription 99" at once and see how marvelously it works. Cut out those fiery liniments and dirty salves, use a good clean internal remedy. "Neutrone Prescription 99" is remarkable because it purifies the blood, . assists in nature's way, gives you what i you need to fight oft Rheumatic j Poisons, a good clean healthy system. It's not one of those temporary relief effairs, good only while using, it is } lasting. Get a bottle today and your | Rheumatic days are over, no more in- | llnmed, stiff aching joints and muscles, j can you imagine it, well it's all true Geo. A. Gorgas, the druggist, and' leading druggists everywhere. BLISS NATIVE HERB TABLETS THE GREATEST FAMILY MEDICINE It is very gratifying to receive I words of praise every day from all parts of the universe as to the beneficial results experienced by people in all walks ot life fftr tak- | ing Bliss Native Herb Tablets. Yet. the ingredients used in these tab lets contain nothing injurious, con sisting of roots, barks and herbs, scientifically compounded in proper proportions. They assist nature to perform its functions, correcting ; constipation, indigestion and bili- | ousness, relieving sick headache and j rheumatism. They have been serv- j ing people for more than thirty I years and are the favorite house- ' hold remedy in many thousands of ' homes. Mrs. Mary Jackson, Scott City, ! Kans., writes: "1 know Bliss Native 1 Herb Tablets is the best family ; medicine in the world, and would not be without them. I am now I Standard Bread Brings Back to Mind Your Mother's Bread Remember how good your mother's bread tasted? You'll find that home-made flavor in STANDARD BREAD because the same honest conscientious effort and pure ingredients have been put into making it, just as your mother used to put into her own baking. STANDARD BREAD—the new peace-time Bread, is the same, sweet, wholesome, satisfying bread it was before the war. Crust and color perfect, texture fine and smooth and delicious to the last crumb. Truly the Bread worth buying. It's wrapped, by machine, with porous parchment paper, at the ovens—it's absolutely clean. Ask your grocer which Bread he's selling the most of He'll tell you STANDARD, of course—there's a reason. Standard Baking Company TENTH AND MARKET STS. HARRISBURG, PA. THURSDAY EVENING, HABRISBURO TELEGRAPH MAY 1, 1919. mails safely and were delivered to the persons to whom they were addressed. Fortunately, however, none of the intended victims has been injured thus i far. How many others have j been mailed no one can tell. From all the information avail- I able it is apparent the makers of the | bombs hoped to exterminate every one who has been prominently in volved in the prosecution or depor tation of members of the I. IV. YV. Timed l'or May Day Not only wore officers of the Im migration Bureau marked for de i struction, but also the authors of I the bill which would have stopped j immigration for a year. This meas ure would have made it difficult for I Russian radicals to gain access to ! this country. Agents of the Department of Jus- I tice said they believed the mailing | of the bombs was timed to cause a I reign of terror on May Day, ob | served throughout the world not j only by peaceful labor organizations | but the most pronounced radicals. It was recalled that radicals in this I country had threatened a demon ' stration to-day in behalf of Thomas J. Mooney, under sentence of life imprisonment in California for mur der in connection with the pre paredness day bomb outrage. Labor generally has advocated action of some kind in his behalf, but has frowned on radical ideas. Mis. Mooney Talks "We are not dynamiters and bombers and our friends are not bomb throwers," was the comment of Mrs. Thomas J. Mooney last night when told the details of the terror ist plot. I "I suppose, however, that by some | circuitous mode of reasoning the of ficials will reach the conclusion that we had a hand in the affair." Mrs. Mooney will speak at a Mooney mass meeting here to-night. The deductions of the government ' agents were based not only on the i list of those who have received the j t ombs addressed to them, but the ! names on the wrappers of the in ! fernal machines seized in the Post ! Office here. Mayor Ole Hanson, of Seattle. , i Wash., who brought to a sudden end ; I the "general strike" instituted by 1 | the I. W. W. in the Washington 1 city, was the first to receive one of ' the deadly packages. Former Senator Thomas W. Hard- eighty-five years old and for the past twenty-two years have used Bliss Native Herb Tablets when needed. I live alone, do my own housework, and thank you for your wonderful prescription, for it is due to them that 1 am able to do my own work." It you feel run-down, fatigued or have no appetite, take Bliss Native Herb Tablets, and you will be agreeably surprised at the improve ment in your condition. ' One tablet at night will make the next day bright. Bliss Native Herb Tablets are put up in a yellow box of 2uo tablets. The genuine have the photo- . graph of Alonzo O. Bliss on ?->} the cover. Every tablet is 1 V take no other. Price $1 per box. Look for our money back guarantee on every box. Sold by leading drug gists and local agents everywhere. Persons to Whom the Bombs Were Addressed THE addresses on the sixteen packages seized in the New i York Post Office were all i typewritten and were intended for the following persons: William M. Wood, 21 Fair field street. Boston, Mass. Frederick C. Howe, Commis sioner of Immigration, New York, N. Y. Mitchell A. Palmer. U. S. At torney General, Washington. Anthony Caminetti, Bureau of Immigration. Washington. William B. Wilson. Secretary of Labor, Washington. Senator T. Lurry Kyre, Ches ter, Pa. William H. Lamar, Solicitor 1 General. Washington. W. H. Finch, Department of Justice. N. Y. A. S. Burleson, Postmaster General. Washington. ; J. F. Hvlan, Mayor, New Y'ork City. N. Y*. Rich E. Enright, Police Com i missioner. New York City, N. Y. | John D. Rockefeller. Pocantico | Hills, Tarrytown, N. Y. William I. SehntTor. Attorney I General, Hnrrishurg, Pa. Governor William C. Sproul, Chester, Pa. Oliver Wendell Homes, U. S. i Clfief Justice, 1720-lst, Wash i ington. J. P. Morgan, 231 Madison avenue. New Y'ork City. jl | wick, of Atlanta, Ga.. author of the Senate bill to stop immigration, was I the second. His wife was injured i when the bomb exploded. Burnett Receives Bomb A bomb was received last night by Representative John L. Burnett, of Gadsden, Ala., former chairman of the House Committee of Immi gration. Another of those marked for de struction was Judge Kenesaw Moun- I tain Landis, of Chicago, before | whom William D. Haywood and his | followers were tried and found ' guilty. : Bombs also were sent to Charles 1 M. Fickert, District Attorney of San Francisco, and his assistant. Ed ward Cunha, who were prominent in ; the prosecution of Mooney and otli ! ere implicated with him. Included in the list of those to whom the bombs found here were i addressed were: Anthony Caminetti. Commissioner i General of Immigration, who issued I orders for the deportation of a large 1 number of I. W. W. agitators round -1 ed up in the west. Frederick C. Howe. Commissioner 1 of Immigration at New Y'ork, who has confessed to somewhat radical ideas of hie own but wllo was , charged with carrying out the or ders of his chief. William B. Wilson. Secretary of | Labor, whose jurisdiction extends I overbite Bureau of Immigration. Attorney General Palmer, who ' directs the operations of the de partment in enforcing prosecutions of alleged violators of the espionage law and plotters against the govern ment. W. H. Finch, one of the repre sentatives of the Department of Jus j tice in this city. Others Marked ! Bombs also were deposited in the mails for Mayor Hylan, of this city, and Police Commissioner Enright. I Radicals have aocused them of mak ! ing it impossible to rent halls in which to hold demonstrations. They also have barred ttie red flag in parades or at meetings of any kind. Others on the list of those marked for death by the reds were John D. Rockefeller and J. P. Morgan. ; In this connection it was recalled I that Thomas J. Tunney, inspector of ! police in this city, testified before I the Senate committee which inves APRIL BUSINESS ; AT THE TREASURY ; Total Balances in the Strong Box Drops During Month Closing Yesterday anco in tho State I close of April was ; 49,757,723.87 against $10,088,382.42; :at the end of March. ! The general fund contained $5,- • | 945,416.03 at the end of April and j | the motor vehicle fund $2,085,971.04,: 'the month's receipts for this account' I being $488,175.92. j The game fund balance was $22 4,- | 694.43 and the bounty fund $272,- 141.57. Figuring the Cost Governor i Sprout consulted with legislators J regarding a definite understanding j as to what the Woodruff teachers' j salary bill in Its revised form will cost the Commonwealth. He said J one estimate was $6,000,000 a year, j The subject is being considered by j several legislators over the adjourn- i nient period. To Issue Early—The State will i probably issue $30,000,000 of good roads bonds in the next two years, according to an estimate by the Governor. He figures out that sl2.- j 000,000 worth will be issued this year and $18,000,000, The Police Bill —ln all probabil ity a motion to reconsider the vote | by which the Powell bill reorgan ising the State Police Department j was defeated this week in the j House will be made Monday or ' Tuesday. The Governor discussed I tte matter with a number of mem hers of the House and one of his j visitors, John A. McSparran, mas- ■ ter of the State Grange, is said to I favor it. The Governor also went j over the proposed amendments to I the antisedition bill with Attorney I General Schaffer and Representa- | tive John M. Flynn. This bill will j be considered by the House judic iary general committee next week. Perry Contracts—The contracts to light Marysville and New Bloomfield ' were submitted to the Public Serv ice Commission yesterday. Honor York Mail—The House of Representatives adjourned yester day as a compliment to Representa tive Thomas E. Rrooks, of York I county, who was celebrating a birth p: tigated propaganda, that New York anarchists had planned in 1914. shortly before the outbreak of the World War, to wipe out the fam ilies of Mr. Rockefeller and other I wealthy persons. Mr. Rockefeller also aroused the animosity of radi- , cals in connection with the labor j troubles in Colorado. The reasons for placing Mr. Mor- I gan on the list are move obscure. So i far as known he has taken no hand j in. the efforts to put an end to the activities of the I. W. W. and other extreme radicals, but the reds na turally hate him because of his great wealth. At his Glen Cove ' home last night he declined to com- I ment on the mailing of a bomb to I him. i Government officers made no at tempt to minimize the seriousness of | the situation. They admitted frankly they had no idea how many of the i ! bombs had been mailed, ali appar ; ently wrapped in paper purporting ' to come from the department store ' j of Gimbel Brothers in this city, but i declared by members of that firm | never to have been in their estab- l lishment. It was pointed out that fourteen of the infernal machines i had been held up in post offices | I along the Pacific coast. Postmasters Notified The Post Office Department has I I sent a general alarm to postmasters , all over the United States, directing ; them to watch the malls carefull i for packages similar to those seized i here. Inspectors in different parts j of the country have been set at wors I <gi the different angles of the plot. Chief Inspector William E. Coch- I ran, of the Post Office Department, j took charge of the investigation in I this city. His operations have ex- I panded until they include a score of j j agents of the Deartment of Justice, j Police Inspector Faurot and scores of New York detectives, members of I the police "bomb squad," and Chief j Inspector Dixon and Inspector Egan. of the Bureau of Combustibles of ' the Fire Department. One of the ! Department of Justice men at work on the case is Finch, to whom one ! of the bombs was addressed. Detectives who know all the ! prominent anarchists and radicals in 1 New York are rounding them up i and questioning them in the hope j of obtaining some helpful clues. An ' especially careful watch was being ) kept on the known haunts of I. W. W. agitators. German Troops Capture Two Villages Near Munich By Associated Press. Copenhagen. May I.—The ring of! government troops is closing around : Munich, according to Berlin dis patches. The villages of Schongau j and Uniting have been captured I from the Soviet forces without loss.' They are about 40 miles northwest; of the city. TRAIN FOM.OWS VICTIMS Emporium, Pa., May I. Mr. and ' Mrs. Edward Richie, prominent res-! idents of this city, were instantly! killed this morning by a Pennsylva nia passenger train. They were walking along the track on which' the train was running and as It! closely approached they crossed to j the next track. Just as they did sol the train reached a crossover switch which sent it over upon the track on I which they were walking. The ac- j cident occurred at the West Creek ; bridge, a route which Mr. and Mrs. i Richie usually took for a morning j walk. Italy Gets New Loan From U. S. to Cover War Contracts Here ( Washington. May I.—ltaly was i given a new loan of $60,000,000 yes-' terday by the treasury to cover a| number of obligations Incurred by the Italian government on contracts for war materials and foodstuffs from American producers. The credit extension brought Italy's total ■ borrowings from the United States 'to *l,s7l.fO(tfH* TROTZKY SOUNDS CALL FOR DRIVE AGAINST ALLIES Soviet Government of Russia! Making Efforts to Raise Troops For Offensive By Associated Press, Copenhagen, May I.—The Soviet government of Russia is making ex-1 traordinary efforts to secure troops, to carry out an offensive against the forces of Admiral Koleliak, in East ern and Southeastern Russia, ac cording to a dispatch filed at Libaul on Tuesday. Leon Trotzky, the Bolshevik min ister of war and .marine, has ap- "The Live Store" "Always I Better Clothes The merchant who expects to sell the majority of men their clothes these days must have the kind most men want to buy; that's why we insist on having "good clothes"; there's nothing in buying price alone. It's so easy to fool yourself when buying clothes. If you are looking for poorly made, inferior quality, bear in mind you can't get that kind here at any price, but if you want clothes with a reputation, that can be fully guaranteed, we invite you to come to Doutrichs for I Hart Schaffner & Marx | I Society Brand Clothes | I When you have these clothes JPf' • 1 to talk about, your customers hear f-jfej what you say, they know you are selling ser- I H vice as well as clothes. We see new friends I j^^mW every day who have been buying "other V, j. 19 iHgF clothes" elsewhere but have heard so much & j 7 about the Dependable Doutrich Service, they J| | flßr jnl x\< " v ' are anxious to become identified with a store JHf that does so much to satisfy its customers. lißwS You can always get your money back, or new IP clothes if you are not pleased with any pur- fcoriftg Irani dlo^tf j Manhattan Shirts j The days are warming up and you will be B getting ready to enjoy outdoor sports, take a trip in your car, a walk to the park and River Front, of course you will shed your overcoat and display the new Spring clothes you bought at Doutrichs. You'll also want to do justice to that new suit with a fine Manhattan Shirt and a beautiful tie, they will add to your appearance, but you will enjoy wearing these new fix ings all the more if they're bought at the Right Store where you are sure they handle nothing but known quality merchandise. I Coopers Underwear Stetson Hats ■ 304 Market Street, Harrisburg, Penna. pealed to all organizations for swift action, saying: "it is necessary to defeat Kolclink within the shortest possible time." It is planned at Moscow to mobi lize ten per cent, of the members of the professional unions and twenty ! per cent, of the communists. XEMRO KNIGHTS VISIT TEMPI. io i\ itI:\HIM; hour hundred members of Zotnbo j Temple attended a eeremonial session of Rajah Temple, Mystric Shrine, at I Reading list night, as a sprprise to the patentate of the Reading organi | zation, Mr. Eisenbrown. i The members were taken to Read ling in u special train. Reaching the I Berks county city they paraded I through the principal streets with the] ; "emtio band and patrol in full dress. ; The patrol was under the leadership of Francis 11. Hoy and the band undet .Charles Stoner's direction. RUN ON MARKET PAGE STOCK EXt llWtilO TO CLOSE \ew York. May 1. The board of governors of the New York Stock Ex | change announced to-day that Tuos -1 day. May 6, would be a holiday on the Exchange on account of the parade of the Seventy-seventh Division here. Program Announced For Academy Contest Mrs. Roy Q. Cox will sing nnd Pro fessor Franklin Williams will play at the annual Kilgore Deelnmation Contest to be held to-morrow night. The following oratorical program will be presented by the Harrisburg Acud >i my students: "Force to the Utmost" (Wilson). Roroy Q. Consylman: "Jean Deprcz" (Service). Thomas R. Wlokersham; "Regulus to the Carthagenlans" (Kel logg). James F. Mersereau: "Sparta eus to the Gladiators" (Kellogg), Harry V. lister; "The Vision of War" (Ingersoli), Robert Kirk Moyer; WITTENMYER LUMBER CO. WE HANDI.E ROUGH AND SURFACED I.I'MBER OF ALL. KINDS Special bills cut to order in Oak, Ash, Poplar, Chestnut and Pino at our two sawmills, operating on 500 acres of timber, (our miles from the city. Office and Yard, Harrisburg, Pa. "The Blue and the Gray" (Henry Cabot Bodge), Wendell Moiganthftler; •■'Osier .Toe" (anonymous), Clyde W. ltife: "The Subjugation of the Philip pines" (Iloar), Donald K. Royal. "Our Responsibilities as a Nation" (Roosevelt), William 11. Snyder. Rely On Cuticura For Skin Troubles Illdrufffiala; Soap 26. Ointment 26 kSO. Talcum 26. JftMiipW* each free of "Cattcava, Dept. I, BmIOB." 15
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers