THE WEATHER EAIN TO-NIGHT AND TO-MORROvV Report. Page • n®T*?. L i I s s " ED VOL. 77—NO. 51 BRIDGE IN CANADA IS WRECKED; A GERMAN ARRESTED Span of Viaduct Over St. Croix River at Maine Border Shat tered by Dynamite THE SUSPECT IS SOON IN CUSTODY Police Say Man Arrested for Deed Ad mits He Is Officer in Service of Germany and That He Exploded Dynamite Cap at Bridge By Associated Press, Vanceboro, Me., Feb. 2.—An attempt to destroy the railroad bridge spanning the St. Croix river, which forms the international boundary line between Eastern Maine and New Brunswick, was made early to day. One of the the three spans of the structure was blown up by dynamite. The attack on the bridge caused great excitement 01 the N nv Brunswick side, where runu - _ "Serman plo* spread rapidly and r -siuted in au im mediate investigs "by the pro vincial authorities. Man Arrested for Crime Inquiry was also -begun on this side and this led to the arrest alt a local liotel of a man who gave his name as j "VVerrenerVan Horn. According to the po [ lire the prisoner said he was an officer I in the service of Germany, but refused I to divulge his rank. The police assert that he admitted he exploded the dyna mite under a section of bridge and that a dynamite cap and a plan of the bridge were found in his pockets. Von Horn, according to 'the police, de scribed himself as ii~ years old. He is iiv t > feet eleven inches in height and ■weighs about 200 pounds. He is smooth shaven. The arrest was made by Deputy Sheriff lioss, who was accompanied by a .Maino Central detective and two Canadian officers from McAdam junc tion, N. B. He was removed to the United States immigration rooms where he was closely guarded. Carried German Flag in Pocket W hen taken into custody at his room | in the hotel, Van Horn made no resist- I nnce, but is alleged to have told the of ficers the circumstances of the dynamit ing. He seemed unable to speak very good English. No papers were found to identify him. In a coat pocket he car ried a German flag. Asked why lie had dynamited the bridge, the prisoner, the polico say, made the simple expla nation that his country was at war J with Great Britain and that Canada j was a part of the enemy's country. He j said, according to the officers, that he i came from Now York, having left that i city on Friday night and arrived here Saturday. Immediately after discharg ing the explosive, he returned to the hotel. As evidence of his experience, lie displayed a frost-bitten thumb. His clothing had been entrusted with ice and wan soaked through. Bridge Connecting Link The bridge is the connecting link be tween the Maine Central and the Canadian Pacific tracks, the Canadian Pacific having traffic rights over the former road from Mattawamkeage to the boundary. Thiß is the through route from Upper and Western Canada to the maritime provinces, directly con necting Montreal with the ports of St. .Johns and Halifax. War Shipments Passed Over Bridge In tho winter season St. Johns, N. 8., is the principal eastern port of Canada and thither have conic from Montreal and further west great quan tities of provisions and other munitions of war for shipment to England and < France. The shipments have passed over the bridge which it was sought to ' Continued on Fourth Page, w ' ■ Oil |€ Star- Snfrcpcn&avt BRITAIN NOTIFIES U. S. FOODSTUFFS FOR FORMER'S ENEMIES ARECONTRABAND j Washington, Feb. 2. —Oreat Britain j notified the United States to-day, al though not in official form, that fo>od- I stuffs of any kind destined for Ger many, Austria and Turkey would: be re j garded as contraband of war. The ac • I tion of the British government is j based upon the recent German decree wheretby that government will ta-ke j over aJI grain in Germany for common l use. I Because the steamer Wilihelimina j sailed from New York for Bremen be j fore the issuance of 'the decree it is un derstood that her cargo of food for German civilians will be paid for and appropriated by the British government and the ship allowed to go free. " But, hereafter, food-laden ships sail ing from the United States directly for German ports or for neutral ports in Europe where it appears that the cargo may ultimately reach Germany, will be subject to seizure outright, shiip and cargo, without compensation. The State Department now is consid ering this latest announcement of the British government but so far has not . committed itself to its approval. AGREE ON BEIDLEMAN FOR PRESIDENT PRO. TEMPORE Majority of the Republican Senators Pledge Themselves to Vote for the Dauphin County Man for That Im portant Post in Next Session Senator E. E. Beidleman, of Harris burg, representing the Dauphin Sen atorial district, has been agreed upon tj be made the next President pro tern, of the Senate. It is customary among the older Re publican Senators at the beginning of aj legislative session to fix upon one of! their number to preside at tho next! session as President pro tem. in the ab-' sence of the Lieutenant Governor and I | to perform certain other functions per-1 j taining to the office, and, it was learned I I this morning, the choice at this session I has fallen upon Senator Beidleman. Ho J will be selected by the Republican eau j cus at the close of the present session, and, in the event of his re-election to j the Senate in 1916, he will be the SENATOR E. E. BEIDLEMAN | choice for President pro tem. for the entire session of 1917. Senator Crow, one of the oldest Re publican Senators, who is also chairman of the Republican State Committee, has had charge of the paper to obtain sig natures in support of Senator lioid.e man for this important position, and ! ( to-day had the signatures of thirty Re publican Senators to the pledge to vote ] for the Dauphin man. At it only re- . quires but twenty-six to elect, Senator ! Beidleman will be certain of election. 1 j Senator Beidleman is native Harris- s | burger, bom in 1873. He studied law with the present Judge Samuel J. M. | 1 | McCarrell and was admitted to the bar j r in 1898. He was a member of the' i House of Representatives in 1905 and j 1907, serving on a number of impor- j tout committees, and in 1912 was elect-! j. Ed Senator, serving in tho Senate of | 1913. He is now serving his second j ' session, but will be a candidate for re- t. election in 1916. Dauphin county's last President pro 1 tem. was Senator McCarrell, who pre- s sided in 1597. 8 ALL FAVOR SUFFRAGE BILL • s Members of Judiciary General Commit- ' tee Decide Unanimously to Report " It Favorably To-night [ The joint resolution proposing an amendment to the constitution giving the right of suffrage to women, was taken up by the Judiciary General com- c mittee of the House this afternoon for " consideration. No one was present to speak for or against it, and the commit- tee unanimously decided to report it F favorably to the House to-night. si It will pass first reading to morrow " morning; second reading on Monday ' next, and finally by the House at next S Tuesday's session. n The resolution will then go to tho u Senate where the disposition is to pass tl it and get it out of the way as soon as si possible. P HARRISBURG, PA., TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2, 1915 12 PAGES. OPENS WAY FOR A FREE BRIDGE HERE Senator McConnell In troduces Bill Which Would Let State Buy a River Viaduct HE EXPLAINS THE PROCESS Says Measure Permits State to Acquire One of the Structures Connecting Dauphin and Cumberland Counties —State Intended to Abolish Tolls Special interest is taken here and in Cumberland and the other cross-river counties whose people have to use cither of the toll bridges into or out of this city, in the bill introduced in the Sen ate last night by Senator MeConnell, of Northumberland county, which pro vides a method by which tolls may be abolished on bridges more than 2,000 | feet long. The introduction of the McConnell bill recalled the fact that when the : State authorized the construction of the j firs bridge occupying the site of the present Market street bride, it was the ! State's intention that it be made a free | bridge, and it revived interest in the i project of giving this community a free i river bridge. Senator McConnell's measure for tho abolition of tolls on lonig bridges pro vides that the State shall pay for dam ages after a board of viewers has been appointed by the Dauphin county court, and, in effect, provides that the State can buy such bridges. If a bridge con nects two counties, 20 or more resi dents ami taxpayers of each shall file a j petition expressing the desire for a I free bridge and setting forth that tho j tolls are burdensome. If two bridges are within a quarter mile of ea<-h other, no purchase of one can be made unless the assent of the' stockholders of the remaining bridge i be first ha«l at a meeting specially 1 callecj. J Bill Could Apply Here When asked to-day whether his bill, if it beeaine a law, could be made to apply to the river bridges from Har ris,burg, Senator McConnell said that his measure is of a general charact'f and applies to all toll bridges, 2,000 or more feet long, where there is not a bridge within a quarter of a mile of them. "If you have no free bridge between Dauphin ami Cumberland county," said Senator McConnell, "this bill would ap ply to the present bridges, but only tij one of them, for, after the one is made j Continued on fourth I'ujtr. WHEAT REACHES $1.65 MARK First Sales at Chicago To-day Show a Jump of Nearly Four Cents a Bushol By Associated l'ress. ■Chicago, Feb. 2.—Wheat raced up- j ward in price to-day, the first sales j showing a jump of as much as 3% a ! bushel. The May delivery touched j $1.60 '/s- Extraordinary rises in quotations at i Liverpool excited wheat traders here. | C. 'H. Canby, president of the Chicago j Board of Trade, said the Liverpool j prices wore probably due to an advance in war risk insurance and to fear that submarine attacks would hinder the ar- | rival of British supplies and make sihip- ! merits from other countries to Great j Britain more difficult. On a second strong swell the mar ket swept upward in the last hour to $1.65 for May, a gain of 9% cents a bushel compared with last night. Transactions in the May option became so hazardous that the bulk of trading shifted to the July delivery. I'rgeney of export demand overruled every other influence. It was said that sales to the Italian government alone in the last 24 hours amounted to 1,- 000,000 bushels. USE OF CORN MEAL SUGGESTED Advice of Mrs. Heath in Threatened Rise in Price of Bread New York, Feb. 2.—There has been considerable formal discussion here among bakers for some days past re garding the advisability of 'raising the price of bread as a result of dearer wheat and flour. Leading bakers in statements given to the press to-day say that a rise in the price of the ordi nary five-cent loaf of white and rye bread to six cents is inevitable. Mrs. Julian Heath, president of the Housewives' League, advises that the average housewife, in view of the sit uation, would do well to learn more of the use of cornmeal, the price of which »he says, haj not gone up to any ap preciable extent. WIFE TARGET'2H YEARS. SHE SAYS Mrs. Lila Johnson Tells the Court Her Hus band Frequently Threatened Her Life STORMY SCENES IN THEIR HOME Woman Declares She Was Blamed When the Weather Was Warm—Asserts Spouse Once Tore the Chandelier From the Ceiling in the Parlor I • Declaring that domestic felicity pre : \ ai'led in lict home in but two of the I twenty-two years of her married life, | Mrs. L,ila Johnson, in her suit for legal ! separation at a continued session of divorce court this morning, told Judge | Knnkel that she frequently was made i tlie target for missiles thrown by her I husband aud that many times she c»- j i'aped by a hair's breadth of being j killed 'by him. The Johnsons have not been living | together since May 29, 1914, the day the wife declares >jhe was driven from | the house under threat of being killed, I but she charged that Johnson several j times since then attacked her both on the street and at her home, j On the day of the separation Mrs. j Johnson said her husband fought with i her, saying she was tho cause of the i weather being warm, and before the J neighbors took a hand, she said, he had ; torn the parlor chandelier from its | fastenings, thrown the coffee pot, con taining boiling coffee, on the floor, aud j struck her several times, j He once refused to permit a phy j sician to enter the house when his ! wife was suffering with tonsilitis, she : said, and choked lict when she made an I effort to get medicine from a druggirt. j liho wife said that when neighbors learned h'e had destroyed a communion service he accused his wife of spread ing the story. "Until I proved to him that I had not told any person about it, he held a shovel at my head anil threatened to j crash out my brains," sihe added. Telephone as a Weapon j Subsequently, Mrs. Johnson said, her . husband pulled the telephone from its wall fasteningß and 4 »would have i struck me with it had not friends, who were visiting us, interfered." George Pasaic, Shanois street, who Continued on Fourth I'hkp DR. MUDGE IMED IN FALL Pastor of Pine Street Church Fractures CoUar Bone on His Way to At tend Services j Tho Rev, l>r. Lewis Mudge, pias j tor of the Pine street Presbyterian j church, suffered a fracture of his right collar bone in a fall last evening on an j icy sidewalk while on his way from his ! home, 315 Xorth Front street, to the ! church at Third and Pine streets. He was treated at his home but this | morning went to the Harrisburg hos ipital when an X-ray examination was j made of the injury, determining thiat | tho bone was fractured. He suffered | no other injury and is able to be about | this morning and it is believed he will i be able to carry on the activities of the | church as usual although it will take j some weeks before he will fully recover, j JUDGE WITJIEK IS STRICKEN His Illness Causes Postponement of Ar gument Court Here To-day United States argument court, which was scheduled to be held this afternoon in the Federal building, was postponed because of the serious illness of Judge Charles B. Witmer, of Sun bury. A telegram from his secretary said that he was taken ill this morning with a heavy cold, and was forbidden by his physician to leave his bed. Naturalization court will be held to morrow as scheduled. Judge Oliver B. Dickinson, of the Eastern district, will preside. There will be soventy-eight cases heard. FINDS 100 POUNDS OF BRASS Cop Recovers Loot Stolen From Abram son Yards While making his rounds this morn ing at 6 o'clock, Policeman Romich came upon 400 pounds of brass on a small sled in the Hcrr street subwav and hauled it to police headquarters. It was not long until it was discov ered that the junk yards of Isadore Abramson. 1107 North Seventh street, had been entered and tho brass stolen.' Efforts to capture the thief have thus far proven futile. PICTURES OF OLD CAPITOL Eighteen years ago to-day, on February 2, 1807, occurred the mem orable fire which destroyed the pic turesque old capitol building in thia city. The Star-Independent still has left a few of the 1015 calendars containing a picture of the historical structure,—a building of beautiful colonial lines, —which it will dis pose of to persons desiring to possess one of these pictures for its historic and artistic value. The price is ten cents or fifteen cents packed in form convenient for mailing. GOT BA CK PICTURE OF HER BA CK MAN WMS ACCUSED OF S TEALING iHHiiwlii Cleveland, Ohio, P'eb. 2. —Duo to the efforts of the police prosecutor of this city, a youth was compelled to bring back a picture of a back, and one young lady, Miss Edna Tyler, is duly happy. The young man in question was accused of having stolen her picture, and her WILSON HAS HOPES FOR THESHIPBm Seeks Basis to Make Measure Agreeable to Progressive Mem bers of the Senate AIMS TO FILL THE DEMOCRATIC GAP ——— Sudden Deflection of Nine Senators of the Majority Party Yesterday Threw the Measure Into the Shadow of Defeat By Associatrd Prc.it. Washington, Feb. 2.—While the ad ! ministration Senate Democrats cau cused to-day to reorganize their shat tered lines and renew the fight for the ship bill, President Wilson conferred | with Progressive Republican Senators i at the White House, seeking a basis to i make the bill agreeable to enough of | that wing and fill the gap caused by the sudden deflection of nine Democratic votes in yesterday's sensation coup, when the anti-admiuistration Senators threw the measure into the shadow of defeat. One of the strong possibilities of a basis of compromise was that a dec laration of principle might be incor porated in the bill, saying the govern ment intended to buy no ships which would involve controversies with the Contlaued on Fourth Page FLAN FOR SIX-FOOT WALK It Will Be Constructed In Second Street South of the Subway Through an agreement with the 1 Pennsylvania Railroad Company, which j now is constructing two subways under j Mulberry street, ono at Second and one | at Front, and which company also has ! begun work incident to the erection of I a freight warehouse on Second street and south of Mulberry, Highway' Co mmissioner Lynch ha* made a plan for providing a six-foot sidewalk along the eastside of the South Second street retaining wall, the walk to extend 477 feet southward from a point 155 feet south of Mulberry street. An ordinance providing for the side walk, which is to be six inches above the street grade, vfcas introduced by Mr.' Lynch at the meeting of the Commis sioners to-day and passed first reading. It will be considered further at the meeting one week hence. When the rail road company presented its original plans for the subway and the ware house, more than a .year ago, it object ed to this sidewalk plan, but the objec tion was withdrawn when Lynch point ed out the possible danger to pedes trians because of the heavy traffic. j objection to his having it was that she 1 was so carelessly draped by the plio t tographer. Tne picture herewith shows I a perfectly moulded back and was the I cause of the trouble, but with its re j turn Miss Tyier is pleased and the I young goes unmolested. M BRIDGE AT WHSIREET City Commissioners Take First Step To ward Building Via duct Over Railroad THE ORDINANCE GOES IN TO-DA^ It Provides Merely for Opening Thor oughfare to Tenth Street But It Is Proposed to ASK Voters to Authorize Loan for Construction of Bridge What City Commissioners sav 'l3 the first move in a plan to open anil bridge Walnut street, across the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad, was taken at their regular meeting this afternoon when Harry P. Bowman, Commissioner of I'lilblit' Safety, introduced an ordi | nance providing for the opening of Wal nut street from a point 400 feet east j of Cowden street to Tenth street. The measure was passed 011 first I reading and was laid over for print | ing, second reacting and final p-assnge. I The cost of the bridge, plans for which j soon are to be prepared, will be paid out of a loan which the voters will be j asked to approve next November. The amount of this loa.ii has not been i fixed or ascertained, but the Commis sioners say it will be less than the j $300,000 loan by which the Mulberry street viaduct was built. The opening anil bridging of Walnut street, across the Pennsylvania Kail road, it now is conceded, can, within the next voar or two, be effected at a cost much less than if the plan haul been attempted years ago, due princi pally to the wiping out of many Biglvfch ward houses for the extension of Capi tol park. Thut removes the possibility of many property owners making claims for consequential damages. The fact that experts have said the undernames of the present Mulberry street viaduct fast are deteriorating, due to engine smoke, prompts the sug gestion among city officials that the proposed Walnut street bridge s>hould foe a steel structure, encased in con crete. However, 110 such plans have been decided upon definitely. In fact the Commissioners now are dealing principally with getting the prelimi naries in shape rather than concerning themselves with tihe uration cf the type of bridge. Wilson Talks About Peace in Europe Washington, Feb. 2.—President Wil son said to-day that, while he saw noth ing definite toward the making of peace j in Kuropc at this time, there was a' strong growing hope anil sentiment for pence all over the world. The Presi dent was asked if there was anything definite in sight. He replied he was sorry to say there was not. Seized :),00<),0 Tons of Grain Rotterdam, Feb. 2, Via London, 10.J5 A. M. —The ''Couraut'' learns that the German War Grain Company, an organization the purpose of which is to acquire all the available grain in Germany and store it until next May, has seized over 3,000,000 tons of grain. The paper says that none of this foodstuff would bo disposed of by next summer. POSTSCRIPT PKICE, ONE GENT. RUSSIANS IN ROUT CLOSE TO WARSAW I Compelled to Retire to the Second Line of Trenches. Admits Petrograd Statement i GERMAN ATTACK IS VERY VIOLENT ! | Renewal of Fierce Offensive by the Kaiser's Troops in the Region of | Sochaczow and Bolimovo Routs | Czar's Forces Petrograd, Fete. 2. — Renewal of .1 i fierce offensive l>v the Germans in the region of Sochaczow and Bolimovo on tho road to Warsaw is admitted in an official statement here to-day. The vio lence of the German attack, the state ment says, compelled some of the Rus sian units to retire to the second line of trenches. The communication was as follows: "On the right, bank of the lower , Vistula on January 31 our cavalry j made a sudden and successful assault , upon the German line along the front I between Brezen and Lake Orezelcjo, 10 miles north of Sierpec, capturing many officers and soldiers. "The attempt of the Germans 011 the 30th to open an offensive movement in the direction of Lipno and Dobrzyn, supported by artillery fire, was checked. Germans Abandon Many Dead "On the left bank of the Vistula 'front at the villages of Makow and IDyblin the enemy was thrown back to tho liue of the villages ol' Wcleze and Xasiguewo, northwest of Wloclawek. i The Germans in retreating abandoned j at Makow many of their dead. "In the course of tho day of Jaa i uary 81 the enemy, after having con ! centrated in the region of Sochaczow, Bolimovo and South of Bolimovo, a j large force of artillery developed active I operations against our positions with j very considerable forces. The German offensive was distinguished by great ! tenacity advancing iu close ranks 1 strongly supported from the rear. "After having concentrated a vio lent fire in the morning upou that re gion, the fierceness of the German of fensive compelled some of our units to retire to the second line of trenches. Russians Regain Trenches "In the meanwhile a counter attack, from another detachment of our forces drove the enemy from all toe trenches Continued on Fourth K'ntfr. A RUMORED ZEPPELIN RAID ON LONDON CAUSES WHEAT ALARM London, Feb. 2, 3.30 A. M.—Noth ' ing further lias been heard up to this j iiour of a Zeppelin raid, nor is thero 1 any confirmation of reports that Ger ! man submarines were seen yesterday in j tho Irish sea between Holy Head and I Dublin. Cross-channel service is still | running and iit is considered there is : 110 great danger for swift vessels. There seemingly was no occasion for alarm in London over a Zeppelin raid I and the authorities have been unable ' to discover how the rumors arose that j one was imminent. Submarine Attacks Hospital Ship Paris, Feb. 2, 2 P. M.—"A German submarine yesterday made an unsuc cessful attempt to torpedo the British ! hospital ship Asturias," according to a 1 communication given out to-day by the Ministry of Marine. LATE NEWS SUBIMftRY The new German attack on the War saw front has led to some of the heavi est fighting of the war in the east thus far. An official statement from Petro grad to-day admits that the Germans succeeded in carrying Russian trenches in the region of Soichzew and Bolimow, near the Vistula and about SO miles west of Warsaw but states that the German successes were of small Import ance compared .with the losses they sustained which are described as enor mous. On the front less than a mile long, more than «,000 Germans are said to have been killed in a week. The Rus sians charged the captured trenches and Petrograd reports that they suc ceeded in winning back a large part of ! them. The battle for possession of Car | pathian passes continues without defl | nite success for either the Russians or the Austrlans. Winston Spencer Churchill, first lord of the Admiralty, is quoted as having , said that on account of England's con trol of the seas, Germany was like a man throttled with a heavy gag, and jthat "the effort wears out the heart ! and Germany knows It.'' WALL S7 REBT CLOSING New York, Feb. a.—Steel crossed 41 in the late dealings, which caused some covering of short contracts in the general list. Prices receded frac tionally at the end. The close was strong. Stocks ruled well above yes terday's closing level for the better part of to-day's session. U. S. Steel was relatively the strongest of the leading Issues.