THE WEATHER FAIR TO-NIGHT AND TO MORROW Oetfllcd Report. Pace 6 5^ A ?. L i"" Kn VOL. 76—XO. 149. THE SOLVAY PLANT NOW RUINED HEAP Works Near the Bruges Ship Canal Destroyed Under Fire of British Warships MUCH DAMAGE TO ZEEBRUGGE CITY Coast Guard Building and Public Schools Destroyed—Military Traini at Solvay Works Blown to Frag ments During the Bombardment By Associated Press. Ixvndon, Nov. 25, 3.35 A. M.—"Ger many's scheme to establish a naval base at Zeerhrugge has been thwarted by British warships," savs the "Dailj Mail's" Rotterdam correspondent "Zeebrugge is hurning, the Solvav works near the Bruges ship canal are a heap of ruins ami the sections of si' submarine boats which had been brought there are reduced to twisted iron. A large quantity of stores also were destroyed. "The bombardment .lasted from 2 o'clock until o o'clock Monday after noon. The coast guard building and the public schools were destroyed. The military trains at the Solvay works were blown to fragments and a large crane which was being used for put ting the submarines together simply disappeared. "In desperation the Germans tried to remove their stores, including the apparatus for making hydrogen for Ze;>pelins. to Bruges, but found a sec tion of the railway had been blown up. "For several weeks Germanv had been collecting stores at and fortifying Zet'brugge in the hope of making it a strong naval base. - ' The same interests that operated the Solvay plant destroyed at Zeebrugge also control the coke plant at Steelton, which supplies gas in this city through the Harrisburg Gas Company. GERM ASS TO SISK KARLSRI'HE KATHER TH AN GIVE UP VESSEL New Orleans, Nov. 25.—Officers And the crew of the German cruiser KarN rulie have sworn to sink their vesse rather than surrender if cornered by hostile warships, according to Charles T. Torraen, a chemist of Baton Rouge, l*a., who was a passenger on the steam er Van Dyck, which fell a prize to the commerce destroyer October 26. Tor raen, who reached here last night from Para, Brazil, said he learned of tli< Germans' purpose from members of the crew. Torraen said he was landed at Para from the German steamer Asuncion with passengers and crews of five ves sels captured by the German warship late in October. LATE WAR NEWS SUMMARY Reports from Russian sources dur ing the last two days of an imposing victory in the war with Austria and Germany are at variance with an of ficial statement to-day from Berlin. While the German military authorities stated previously that the advance to ward Warsaw had been checked by the arrival of Russian reinforcements, there was no Indication in to-day'e statement that any decisive results had been attained by either of the oppos ing forces. The official statement speaks con fidently of the German operations in the east and says that a counter-offen sive Russian movement between the Vistula and Wartha rivers, the scene of the main action, had failed. To the north, in East Prussia, it is said, all Russian attacks were repulsed while similar results are reported to have at tended the efforts of the enemy to the south, in the movement against Cracow and the Silesian frontier of Germany. Later advices from Petrograd made no departure from previous claims of important successes, so that the situa tion in the eaßt remained obscure. > To-day's official communications! from Paris, Berlin and London con cerning the situation in Belgium and France gave partial confirmation of private reports that the Germans were beginning another great effort to smash through their way to the Eng lish Channel. Both the British and French statements mention fighting along the line south of Ypres. Belgium. The French war office states that Continued on Mrrond Pace. o* Star- Inkpenktit „ N. Y. Herald. THE GUEST OF HONOR SIOU EIACTS DEATH OF BALZRC Pleads With Angel for Extension of Life,and Then Falls Prostrate on 'Platform WIFE TO BURN HUBBTS CARDS Prior to Sermon, Revivalist Repeats As sertion That Detectives Are Follow ing Him, and Declares New Yoik Gunman Means Murder ID enacting the death of Balzac, the great man of letters, at the end of his sermon at the tafbernacle last night Evangelist Stough put what was mani festly his supreme effort in his perform anee, and made as deep an impression on his audience as he has yet made by his avowedly sensational preaching i:i this citv. I The evangelist represented Balzac en ! treating with the Angel of Death to ! let him live a while longer. .Sitting in his chair, pretending to be writing rap ■ idly, he first asked for three years j longer to live, then, crouehing in liis [ seat and trembling as with great feat, he begged for three more months. Fall i ing from the chair to his knees, he en i treated for a postponement of three weeks, and, following the imaginary angel on his knees, as if clinging to the angel's garments, he implored for three ; days, even three minutes. The suppli | cations were of no avail and the flushed. J perspiring man fell at full length oc the platform in representation of Bal j zae's corpse. As the actor of the death scene rose Continued on Klfventh I*AKC. INDIAN TROOPS REPORTED DEFEATEDJf THE TURKS Berlin, Nov. 25 (By Wireless to Say ville) —The British Indian troops along the Suez canal have been defeated, ac cording to a report from Milan, and the Turks are advancing with heavy bat , teries to destroy the constructive works of the canal and bottle up the British] warships now in the waterway. Pardons as Thanksgiving Presents B.y Associated Press, Columbia, S. C., Nov. 25.—Governor| Cole Blease, of South Carolina, an-! noum-ed to-day that he would giv e 75 State convicts pardons or paroles as Thanksgiving Day presents. HARRIS BURG, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 25, 1914—12 PAGES. TIIIKEYS SELL AS HIGH AS 40 CENTS Big Demand for Them in the Markets—City Dealers Sell Them Cheaper CRANBERRIES DROP IN PRICE Bring to Cents in Early Hours but De cline to B—Football Game and Church Services Will Be Important Features of the Holiday The turkey has been led to the slaughter and will decorate thousands ot Harrisburg tables to-morrow in a wide observance of Thanksgiving Day. A substitute for turkey in many in stances will he used, because of the high cost of the fowl; but thousands of these birds have been purchased and Harrisburg is sure to have an old-time holidav. Thousands of persons will give tip business routine for a day of rest or pleasure. The eitv will be dosed tight in so far as commercial life *is con cerned, but other things will occupy the time of Harrisburgers. Union church services will be held and there will be a big meeting in the Stough tabernacle during the afternoon. Thursday fair with mild tempera ture," is the way the local officials of the Weather Bureau are forecasting conditions for to-morrow. From indica tions it will be a day long to be re membered as a model of autumn weather. It will .just be the kind of day that will give everybody a change to do what he pleases out doors. Of ficials fix to-night's minimum tempera ture at 40 degrees. This mark is ten degrees above the lowest temperature for last night. An event of no mean importance will be the annual football game between the two local high school teams. The greatest crowd of the vear is expected to nee that game. The'kickoff is sched uled for 2.30 o'clock. The students of the rival schools are arranging as nev er before a demonstration for their re spective teams. Parades will feature the early afternoon ending on Jslnn l Park, the scene of the struggle. Bands have been engaged by the students of both the Tech and the Central schools anil it will be a regular football game with all the trimmings. The teams have been carefully groomed for the contest, coaches put ting in final licks at practice to-day. Continued on Seventh Pace ■■ \ NO PAPER TO-MORROW Tomorrow being Thanksgiving Day, a legal holiday, the Ktar-Inde pendent will not be published, ac cording to its usual custom. i WINNERS 111 THE (Hill CONTEST Opinions Still Differ as to Which Advertisers Are Making the Best Offers GOOD REASONS FOR CHOICES The Three Prizes This Week For Sub mitting Best Letters Go to Albert Senior, A. Gross and Homer Bals baugh Opinions still differ widely as to which advertisers on the Star-Inde pendent's bargain page each Wednes day are offering the best bargains. Since good reasons are advanced for the choice of best offers, in nearly all cases, the contest each week is a live ly one, and increases in interest with each succeeding Wednesday. The prize winners this week are, first prize of $3, Albert Senior, 603 Dauphin street; second prize of $2, A. Gross, 2015 North Sixth street, and third prize, Homer Balsbaugh, 634 Oamp street. The prize winning letters follow: First Prize Winner Bargain Editor. I Dear Sir—An advertisement does not become a bargain until some one ! has taken advantage of the offer. The four per cent, inducement of j the Commercial Bank, like all others, ; is just an offer, but different in results, I because when the reader has taken ad vantage of the advertisement it means ! the beginning of a career of thrift, prosperity and success. And since the advertisement offers, and makes possible by its offer, the highest awards on earth to humanity, Cuntlnurd on Eighth I'■nr. FALLS DEAD ON SIDEWALK Railway Mail Clerk Succumbs to Apoplexy This Morning A man identified by a card in his pocket as H. B. Stevens, 7 7 South Hermitage avenue, Trenton, N. J., fell over on the sidewalk in front of 19 North Fourth street, this morning and died before he could be taken to the Harrisburg hospital. Physicians diag nosed his ailment as apoplexy. George T. Cunkle and Arthur L. Cunklc, who were working on the building, noticed the man stagger and fall. They called Policeman Murphy who pressed into service a passing! automobile in which the body was 1 taken to the hospital. Life was extinct when they reached there. The body I was turned over to Coroner Eckinger. Stevens was in the railway mail serv ice and is believed to be about 57 years old. BOB!; OFFICE OF THE PROSECDTOH Thief Gets Away With Coat While Stroup Is BusyPlanningtoCon vict Crooks IT BELONGS TO STENOGRAPHER None of the District Attorney's Office Force Pays Any Attention to Slick Intruder—Police Make Arrest Two Hours Afterward Almost under the eves of Dauphin county's District Attorney. Michael E. ■Stroup, and several of his oflice at taches, a sneak thief went into the prosecutor's office in the Russ build ing, North (Market Square, at 9.30 o'clock last night, roamed about at will and then walked out with a valuable coat belonging to Miss Clara I. Miller, stenographer. " Kdward Welsh, a police character and reputed panhandler, was arrested two hours after the theft and it is said he confessed his guilt to the police. He now is in tho county jail awaiting court trial, but Miss iM'iller yet is without the coat. Welsh is said to have told the police that he sold the garment to a colored woman "over in the Kigivth ward," although the purchaser thus fat has not been found. What is more, the police say, Welsh declared he sold that ■perfectly good coat for "four bits," half dollar. Of course the District Attorney was sorry that his stenographer felt a vic tim to a thief, anil offered her his over coat to wear on the way to her home, 14 40 Derry street. She, however, didn't want to be seen wearing a man's overcoat, so she went to her home in a toxical). The District Attorney could have prevented the robbery if he had permit ted himself to he interrupted while he was dictating letters on legal subjects to the stenographer, and while the rest of the office force was industriously en gaged preparing data for the prosecu tion of sneak thieves and other crooks to be tried in next week's session of criminal court. As it was the intruder just walked in, looked around, stole the coat and walked out with no one saying a word to hiin. "If only I had gone to the outer office when Jlitw ».\liller remarked aDout the noise of the man entering," said Mr. Stroup, who is a powerfully-ibuilt former college football player, "1 could have caught the thief as he was leaving the office with the coat under bis arm." The watchman in the Russ building noted the appearance of the intruder and aided the police in the apprehension of Welsh. RICHARDCROIBR.7IJO WED Former Tammany Hall Leader Will Marry Miss Edmonson, Descendant of Cherokee Indian Chieftain R/L Associated PICSI, New York, Nov. 25.—Interviewers to-day sought to see Miss Beulah Ben . ton Edmonson, descendant of a Chero kee Indian chieftain, to ascertain from her the truth of published reports that I she was to become the bride to-morrow of Richard Croker, former loader of Tammany Hall. Miss Edmonson denied herself to callers. At the Studio club, i where she has made her home for the last year, a woman who represented herself a# Miss Edmonson's spokesman i announced to callers that Miss Edmon | son had nothing to say, "one way or the other." It was reported that Miss Edmon | son, who has been studying here for a ! year, met Mr. Crokcr at the National I Democratic convention in Kansas City, I where her father was a delegate from j Oklahoma. Miss Edmonson was one of the leading figures in tfie suffrage pa rade in this city in May, 1913, when she appeared as a squaw, in buckskins j and with her long, black braids bound ! with red ribbon, rode astride an Itnu. I pony. The wedding of Mr. Croker is to be I solemnized to-morrow. He is 71 ami a widower. TEN THA.\KS(»JVIN(j WEDDINGS Unusual Activity Shown To-day at the Marriage License Bureau I Ten marriage licenses were issued to j day to coupies who plan to wed to-mor row, Thanksgiving Day. Those who I obtained license are: Percy S. 'Nicholls, Swissvale, and Jane 8. Ijea, city; Warren I. Schara • i'i n and Ella V. Barnhart, city; Janko Gajdeh and Anna Berdek, city; Th/oinas H. Hynica and Nellie H. Cast, city; .lames H. Albright and Virginia J. Par sons, city; John F. Lenker and Beulah L. Mounts?, city; Daniel P. Pasnacht, Lititz, and Mabel E. Yorty, Hummels town; Roman G. Eckenrode, Steelton, and Alice Clark, city; Guy K. Thomas an.i Eva B. Rice, Biglerville; Paul H. Furman, city, and Catherine P. Weav er, Steelton. Change of Venu e for' Colonel By Associated Press. Albany, N. Y., Nov. 25.—The Ap pellate Division to-day reversed the ruling of Supreme Court Justic« Chester which refused a change of venue for the trial of the $50,000 libel suit brought by William-Barnes against Col onel Theodore Roosevelt. Colonel Roosevelt bought the change. IMPROVISED WATER TOWER CHECKS DANGEROUS BLAZE Rigged Up by Use of Extension Ladder and a Line of Hose to Fight Fire in D., P. & s. Warehouse—Loss Kept Down to SI,OOO A water tower improvised by Fire Chief Kindler by use of tbe Mt. Yer non honk and latter truck was put into service last evening in fighting a fire in a 3-story brick warehouse of Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart 011 Ninth street, north of Market. This enabled the tire men to reach the blaze more effectively than could have been done in any other way and kept the amount of damage down to $ 1,000. Chief Kindler realized that more than the district apparatus which had responded to the box alarm was needed to quickly conquer the blaze, and the Mt. Verinn truck, together with the Ciood Will and Hope companies, were ordered to the fire in addition. The Mt. Vernon truck was placed in front of the burning building and an extension ladder run up in a perpen dicular position, not resting against tho warehouse. A length of hose was at tached to the ladder and a stream was directed into the topmost window of the building from this improvised wa ter tower. This stream, coming in from the top, did effective work. Other streams could not be directed effective ly on the blaze from the positions the tiremen were compelled to take. Beds, mattresses and other supplies in the second floor of the building were damaged and in the third floor some store decorations were ruined. It is believed the fire was of in cendiary origin, ( harles Schriver was | going into the building when he saw j tho flames. He called to a man outside jto send in an alarm. The man refused and Schriver himself was compelled to turn it in, later going back to the warehouse, from which he removed several delivery autos which are kept in the first floor. HOUTZ WINS KUMKBL PRIZE t Eight Orators, Girls' Glee Club, Choir and Orchestra Take Part In ProgTam The prizes of $25, |ls and $lO in the Samuel Kunkel oratorical contest at Central High school this afternoon were awarded, respectively, to Harold Houtz, Harold Eckert, and Horace Nuneniachev. The subjects of the orations given by the eight contestants were: "Our American Flag," Harold Houtz; "Our Responsibility in the World War Crisis," Homer Kreider; "The Ameri can War,'' Robert Michael; ''Tous saint L'Ouverture," Horace Nune macher; "What to the American Slave is the Fourth of July," Alan Carter; "The Necessity of Force in CuUi," George Kenig; "The Naval Holiday," Harold Amos, and "The Affairs in Mexico," Harold Eckert. At the opening of the program, the Rev. Harry Nelson Basslor, pastor of Second Reformed church, led in prayer. Instrumental music was furnished by the High School orchestra and vocal music by the Junior Girls' Glee club and by the school choir. The judges were T. Kittera Van Dyke, the Rev. Harry Nelson Bassler ,and Harry A. Boyer. Mr. Van Dyke presented the prizes. The prizes in the contest are award | ed each year through the generosity ! of Samuel Kunkel. THREATENED WITH DEATH U. S. Calls for Report Concerning Memphis Man in Mexico By Associated Press, Washington, Nov. 25.—The State | Department has called for a report i from Consul Hostetter at Hermosillo, ! Mexico, on private advices that T. W. | Carraway, of Memphis, is threatened i with execution there. Carraway, with J. C. Wilson and J. R. Melnery, was , arrested more than a month ago, | charged with complicity in dynamiting bridges in Sonora. When the Americans were arrested the State Department took the matter | up with General Villa, who instructed ! the authorities at Hermosillo to release ; them if they were innocent of the j charges, which was the report made by ; the American consul at Nogales, who 1 investigated the case. GIRL STUDENTS FLEE FIRE Stonewall Jackson Institute Burned With a Loss of SIOO,OOO Abingdon, Va., Nov. 25.—Fire here early to-day destroyed one girl's school, threatened another and at one time en dangered the entire town. One hundred students at the Stonewall Jackson In stitute escaped when that school burned j and students at Martha Washington College, nearby, were hurried from the! dormitories wheu it appeared that this| institution, too, would burn. The fire was controlled with an esti mated loss of SIOO,OOO. Attorney and Daughter Murdered By Associated Press, Miami, Fla., Nov. 25. —A. A. Hoggs, a prominent Florida attorney, and his daughter, Marjorie, 18 years old, were found murdered early to-day in the charred ruins of their country home near here. Former G. A. R. Commander Dies By Associated Press. Philadelphia, Nov. 25. —Colonel Robert 11. Beath. past commander-in chief of the (irarid Army of the lie public, died at his home here xo-day. He was 75 vears old. POSTSCRIPT PRICE, ONE CENT. BfIFF IS FINALLY II IB VICTIM Lured to Market Place and Rilled by Thugs Who Escape in an Auto WAS A TARGET IN MANY CRIMES Had Been Threatened Many Times With Death Since His Testimony Sent Numbers of New York City's Poultry Trust to Prison Rtl Associated Press. New orU, \ov. 25.—The assassina tion of Barnet Baff, characterized by Coroner Feinberg as the culmination of the greatest conspiracy since the murder of Herman Rosenthal, placed a read murder mystery in the Central detect ive office to-day for solution. Clues pointed many ways. The authorities de clared that the mystery had so inaiiv ramifications that it took on the as | pects of a Chinese puzzle, j I lie victim, a well-to-do independent ! poultry dealer, was lured to his death i by a decoy message given him at fi ; o clock last night by a young man who j entered his place of business in Wash- I ington market. Two shots, fired in the street, killed him. Two men darted away to an automobile, waiting witli thrumming engine nearby, who made off. The car had not been located, nor the men identified this forenoon. Relentlessly Pursued by Enemies Going over Raff's past life in a quest of (dues, detectives learned that jhe had been threatened many times j with violent death since he had testified j for tile State in a trial that sent num bers of New York City's poultry trust to prison several years ago. In the re- I leirtiess campaign waged by his enemies, j fires had been lighted, bonwis exploded, j his horses poisoned, his sou attacked ; and his chain of stoics robbed. One , of his neighbors was-killed by a gun man, in mistake, it was believed, for Baff. Baff himself ha I been scarred } for life by an assault made on him by . a thug armed with a bottle. The police worked on the theory I that Baff had four sets of active ene ■ mies. One of these consisted of those j he made while warring against the poultry trust; another of members of j the gang that robbed his Harlem market, five of whom were sent to ! s 'ng Sing; a third grew out of his dif j ferences with certain wholesale deal | ers, who charged Ball' had tricked tshem by selling poultry at wholesale and then I underselling tliein to retailers. Parallels Rosenthal Case The fourth was ot' more recent origin. Not long ago a number of fowls shipped Jro New ork for other dcalors \ - ern seized and condemned becnuse it was j charged their crops had been filled with gravel to add to their weight. As a result of this a number of men were thrown out of work. They are said to j have blamed BaflT. Inspector Faurot announced today ! that detectives were working on the | theory tliat gunmen had been hired to murder Baff, as in the Rosenthal case. District Attorney Whitman's oflice as j signed detectives to the case. Mr. | Whitman declared lie considered the I crime as much an attack on the law as ! on Baff. A revolver was found near the spot, ' where B„ff was shot. Detectives sought to trace the murder by this weapon. TO REOPEN U. S. HOTEL Welsh Brothers, Circus Men, Lease It for Ten Years—Will Refurnish and Run It Without a Bar The old t'nited states Hotel, at the corner of Market, and Cowdeu streets, which has been closed since lasl spring, will be reopened by January 1 as a hotel to be conducted on the"European plan, having been leased b v the \Welsh Brothers, the widely known eircusXpro prietors, who have been in the hotel , business in Philadelphia for some tim'C. The hotel, which is owned by Cluster 'iV Kay, has been closed since last j Spring, when the proprietor, Angelio A. j Boschelli, was arrested for selling liq uor illegally and his license revoked. Boschelli disappeared, alleged to have forfeited his bail, and although efforts have been made to bring him back here for trial they have been unsuccessful. The Welsh Brothers, according to Mr. Kay, one of I lie owners, will complete | ly remodel the hotel and refurnish six ty-five rooms for sleeping purposes with every accommodation. The lower floor will be used for bowling and pool rooms, but there will bo no bar in the build ing. A restaurant will be installed. The Welsh Brothers obtained a leaso on the hotel property for ten years. It. is understood that none of the tenants in the store rooms iu the building will bo disturbed for the present. Actor Leaves Hospital Alfred Bilford, of Berlin, Germany, trick cyclist, who fell from a twelve foot ladder on the stage at the Orpheum on the evening of November 16, suffer ing a concussion of the brain, was dis charged cured from the H&rrisburg hos pital this afternoon. Kennedy a Candidate (ieorge W. Kennedy, member of the Harrisburg Board of School Directors, whose terms expires in December, t.ext, year, ha.s announced his candidacy for re-election.