THE WEATHER FAIR TO-NIGHT AND TO MORROW detailed Keport. Pace • ggfWSSL" 0 VOL. 77—NO. 65. LOOPERS LUNCH IN HAZLETON Chamber of Commerce Tourists Speeding Through the Coal Re* gions To-day DUE IN READING BY DINNER TIME Harrisburg Party Is Being Entertained Boyally All Along the Line of the Two-Day Trade Extension Trip— Coming Home To-night BY ROBERT R. FREE Hazleton, Pa., Feb. 18.—Deeply im pressed with the hospitality of Wilkes- Barre, where they spent last night, | the members of the Harrisburg Chamber . of Commerce, who are making a two- ] day trade extension tour of Central [ Pennsylvania cities, arrived in Hazle-} ton at 11.34 o'clock this morning. This is the second highest spot in the State of Pennsylvania and being at so high 1 an altitude was a new experience for; the party, which was augmented by four more Harrisburgers in Wilkes- j Barre. It was cold when the Harris/burgers arrived here but the travelers soon I thawed out when they were taken care of by Hazleton Board oif Trade. Lunch eon in the Hotel Loughran further helped in the thawing process and the visitors were ready and willing to lis ten to local boomers as the latter told of the anthracite industry. All the while the Harrisburgers were getting in a few licks for Harrisburg jobbers, ■wholesalers and manufacturers who ex- 1 ]>ect to flood this section with Harris burg-made goods. No sooner had Robert W. Hoy, of the Harrisburg Light & Power Com pany, joined the party last night than things began to happen. Sitting as a i ■"committing magistrate,'' he issued a ■warrant for the arrest of Harry Low engard, "charged" with the "larceny "j of a traveling bag containing a suit of j pink pnjamas and a tooth brush. "Con-! stable" W. H. Bennethum, Jr., served ■ the warrant. Prosecuting Attorney Wharton entered a plea of "Nolle con tender" before the court and as no body,— not even the court, —knew what that meant the prisoner was dis charged with a reprimand by Magis trate Hoy. With Hoy joining the party in j Wilkes-Barre were F. P. Farqnarson, Clark E. Deihl, City Electrician, who never misses anything in the way of; fun ,and W. H. Bushey, of Lemovne. I W illiatn McCreath, of Harrisburg, | was stopping at the Sterling Hotel in j Wilkes-Barre when the party arrived! last night. He said he was going to: accompany the tourists ba-'k to Har-1 risburg but lie missed the train. In Wilkes-Barre Isaac Long, of, Simon Ixing & Sons, entertained Joseph and Herman Claster, William Strouse, Herman Tausig and Samuel Marks. The party took a trip over to Scran ton. A short stop will be made in Potts-1 ville this afternoon where the members j of the Merchants' Association will greet the Harrisburg party. Through! the kindness of Health Commissioner Dixon, the Harrisburgers have obtained the privilege of inspecting the now ■ State tuberculosis sanitarium in Ham burg, and the Hamburg Chamber of j Commerce has promised plenty of au tomobiles to convey the party. P. G.; Diener, who arranged this feature of ' the trip, was given a vote of thanks when he announced the plan this morn ing. Dinner will be served in the Hotel Berkshire in Reading this evening and the party will embark on the last leg' of the journey,—from Keaii'ing to Har risburg,—at 9 o'clock to-night. TOIRIXti PARTY PASSES XltiHT IX WILKES-BIRRE (Special to the Star-Independent.) Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Feb. 18. —The seventy-five members of the Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce who are making a two-day tour of Central Pennsylva nia cities to advertise Harrisburg as j the " Heat of Distribution" for this territory, arrived here last evening and passed the night in the Sterling hotel. After leaving Sunbury early yester day afternoon the party stopped off in 'Northumberland where it was greeted by the Calhouud band, which played "Tippperary" as the special train pulled into the station. Led by the band the visitors paraded the principal streets of the town. Clyde Belig, presi dent of the Northumberland Bureau of Industry, made a speech in which he Coatianed on Tklrteeatk Pace. | SI)C Slit- Sukpewktii SEEKING NAME OF WRITER OF MYSTERIOUS LETTER Authorities Investigating the Murder Bevealed by Bones Found in Cellar Are Eager to Obtain More Details From Person Who Sent Letter The inquiry now being conducted by District Attorney M. E. Stroup in con ; nection with the finding last Friday of the bones of a young woman buried in the cellar of the house at 133 South Fourteenth street to-day was centered on ascertaining the whereabouts of the relatives of a girl referred to in the anonymous letter received yesterday by t'he State's attorney as the possible victim of the murder. Efforts to lo cate Bessie Guyer, of Mechanicsburg, another girl who has been referred to as the possible victim, thus fat have been futile. The woman whose name just yester day was brought into the case through the mysterious letter to the District Attorney was married when quite young and is believed to have been | the mother of a child. Certain ele- I men in the case, especially that fea ! ture which relates to the fact of there having been a baby, the authorities I say, warrant their laying greater stress ! on this new clue, although they profess ; not to have abandoned the search for I Bessie Guyer, who is not the girl re | ferred to in the mysterious note. County Detective James T. Walters has almost completely switched his line lof investigating since the unsigned ■ letter was received yesterday morning, j He declines, however, to give out full j details of the statements made in the. I letter and is hoping that the writer of j the note will reveal his or her identity ! and thus aid the authorities in the in i quiry. A rumor was about this afternoon I that Bessie Guyer had been located in j Gratz, in the upper end of this county. No information to that effect hail been 1 received at the District Attorney's of fice, however. PARTNERS CANNOT AGREE Ask for Receiver for "V. A. S. Com pany" and Court Appoints One —Assets Said to Be Intact Because certain differences that have arisen between them are declared to be irreconcilable and because they fear the further continuance by them ; of their business would be jeopardising ' the rights of their cerditors, H. E. Von j Hoffs and Ida M. Sjonsler, constituting the "V. A. S. Company,'' a clothing firm having quarters in a room at Fourth an.l Market streets, to-day pe titioned the Dauphin county court to appoint a receiver for their concern. As both members of the firm ac quiesced in the petition the Court at I once named Mercer B. Tate, of this city, receiver, and directed that he fur ! nish a $3,000 bond. "Bhe bond was I tiled. The owners assert the company is in splendid financial condition ami j that the assets, which consist chiefly of I women's apparel, if sold at a fair | market price, will net a return far in excess of tl e total indebtedness. In the petition for the receiver this declaration is made: "Certain differences and disputes have arisen and do now exist between the said partners as to the manner of conducting the partnership business and as to their personal conduct and rela i ti ous thereto, in consequence of which t the business of the partnership cannot j be continued at a profit and the rights ;of the creditors will be jeopardized j thereby.'' FLAMES - KILL_WOIBAN, 70 Mrs. Samuel Manning, of Duncannon, Lives Only a Few Hours After Being Terribly Bunted 'Special to the Star-Independent.) Duncannon, Pa., Feb. 18. —After a feiw hours of severe suffering, Mrs. Samuel Manning, "0 years old, died at i 1 o'clock this morning from burns she | received last night when her dress ; caught fire. Before aid reached her ! the flames had terribly burned thie flesh on her arms and face. The first person to come to Mrs. 1 Manning's aid in response to her j screams was her daughter, Mrs. Harry ; Mutzabaugh. She saw the flames I through a kitchen window, rushed into ' the room and threw water on the burn ing woman. It is not definitely known how the woman's clothes caught fire, but it is believed by members of her family that she came in contact with hot ashes that she was removing from the stove. I'art of the ceiling of the kitchen was 1 burned before neighbors put out the j fire. Mrs. Manning is survived by her hus i band and three children. None of them was in the kitchen when the accident j occurred. (i. C. BI'SER FOR POSTMASTER Nominated by President to Fill Hum melstown Vacancy Word came yesterday from Washing ton of the nomination by President Wilson of Grover C. Buser, of Hnin melstown, for [>o3tmaster of that town. The President's recommendations arc now being ccnsiijered by the Senate. Mr. Buser is at present assistant foreman in the composing room of the Star-lnde[>etident, where he has been employed since learning the printer's trade thirteen years ago. Another nomination sent to the Sen ate is that of Joseph O. Lesher for postmaster of Huntingdon. Kirkendall Appointed Revenue Collector By Associated Proa. Washington, Feb. 18. —Fred C. Kirk endall, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., was to-day nominated collector of internal revenue for the Twelfth Pennsylvania district. HARRISBURG, PA., THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 18, 1915—14 PAGES. RUSSIA ORDERS 1 WAR MITOS IK HARSISBURC MortonTruckCompany Gets Cable Announc ing $ 1,500,000 Con tract Is Obtained MEANS WORK FOR 250 MEN Local Firm Will Begin Making the Ma chines Just as Soon as Arrange ments Can Be Made to Place the Money With Ne-w York Bankers An order for 300 large type of ar mored .motor trucks, for use in thie Eu ropean war, costing in the neighborhood of a million ami a half dollars, was placed to-day by the Russian govern ment with the Morton Truck & Tractor Company, of this city. This announcement was receive*! in a cablegram sent here by a Russian of ficial in Petrograd. The cable was re ceived this morning. Besides stating that the local company's proposal to furnish the trucks hia>d been accepted it asserted that the $1,500,000, the cost of the cars, will be deposited within a day or so in a New York banking house. W. S. Morton, general manager of the local firm, this afternoon announced that preparations at .once will be be gun for filling the order and that it will mean the immediate employment of at least 250 akiditional men in the local plant. The order calls for cais that shall be of the four-wheel drive type and of 120-horsepower capacity. They are to i be used "for the transfer of ammunition and provisions. The list price of these cars, the gen eral manager of the firm said, is $9,000, but for fhe big order the pro posal fixe« the price of each at $5,000. Only recently the Morton company was advised by British government rep resentatives to enlarge its plant and prepare to handle a big order and it was in pursuance of that advice that the concern leased part of the plant of the Harrisburg Manufacturing and Boiler Company. Two of the Morton brothers, mem bers of the local firm, now are in Lon don demonstrating armored cars which were manufactured at the local plant as samples and they this week cabled the firm here that the prospects for get ting a large order from the British are very bright. The British government is a'bout to let contracts for several hundred trucks and tractors, the majority of which are to be armored. SERVIA ORDERS 90 STEEL CARS Contract Obtained by Middletown Plant Means Work for Unemployed Middletown, Feb. 18.—Hope of tho unemployed for better labor conditions here was brightened last evening whon the Middletown Car Company an nounced the receipt of an order for ninety all-steel box cars to be furnished to the Servian government, one of the European belligerent nations. The company recently got an order for fifteen steel tank cars anid work upon the two contracts will be begun within a few weeks or as aoon as the car plant, which now is being re modeled, is completed. Officials of the company are of the opinion that these two jobs will keep the plant going un til other larger orders-, which are ex pected, are obtained. The order for the tank cars was placed by the Bra zilian government. WOMAN AIDSJN BURGLARY Marks of Her Shoes Are Found In the Mud Near a House That Is Bobbed in Paxtang Shoe marks in the mud leading from the home of Harvey A. Frank, Derry street, Paxtang, to the tracks of the Philadelphia & Reading railroad led the Paxtang borough authorities to the con clusion this morning that a man and a woman were parties to the rtfbbery of the Frank home early last evening. Thirty jars of canned fruit, mostly peaches; a bushel of potatoes and other provisions were taken. I'hat the robbery was committed While the Franks were calling on neighbors is indicated by the marks in the mud, which afterward became frozen. A pane of glass was cut from the cellar window, the latch released I and entrance gained. ' The police are [ investigating. 14 MEMBERS DF DESTROYED ZEPPELIN WERE RESCUED London, Feb. 18.—Fourteen mem bers of the crew of the Zeppelin dir igible which was destroyed by an ex plosion on Fancc island were rescued and will be interned by the Danish au thorities, says a dispatch from Copen hagen to licuter's Telegram Company. Tihe Zeppelin was cruising over the island with another dirigible when it caught fire and was compelled to descend, landing before the explosion took place. The destroyed Zeppelin was the L-3, one of the largest in commission. She was completed in 1914 and was 550 feet long, had a diameter of 61 feet and •displaced 32 tons. She was supplied with four motors with a total horse power of 720, and had a speed of 40 knots. Commander Prinz says the sit uation when the fire broke out was critical. He feared that tihe bombs on board the airship would explode before he could get to the ground. AUSTRIANS TAKE TOWN IN CALICIA AFTER HARD FiCHT Vienna, Feb. 18, Via London, 9.10 A # M.—Official reports given out in Vienna say that after two days of hard fighting the Austrians have occupied the town cf Kolomea, in Galicia. "This success was achieved, yester day afternoon by means of a general attack on the Russian positions," the report says. "We drove the enemy in *pite of his stubborn resistance out of his last positions in front of Kolomea, thus reaching the town at one opera tion. We prevented the Russians from blowing up the bridge over the river Pruth. The town, clear of retreating Russians, was occupied by us. We captured 2.000 prisoners and several machine guns and liguit cannon. . "In the Carpathian section, as far as Vysehkoff, t'he fighting continues with great ferocity. Four thousand ad ditional prisoners have been brought in." FOUR VESSELSSU' K BY THE WILHELM DURING THIS YEAR Buenos Argentine, Feb. 18.— The Oerman steamer Helger, which has arrived here, brings news that during the months of January and February, the German auxiliary cruiser Crown Price Wilhelm, operating on the north ern coast of Brazil, sank the British steamer Hemisphere, the British steam er Potard, the sailing ship Sumatra and the sailing ship Wilfred. The crews of these vessels are on board the Helger. LLOYDS RAISE RATES ON U. S. -GERMANY WAR INSURANCE London, Feb. 18, 5.35 P. M.—ln surance was placed at Lloyds to-day at 20 guineas per cent, on policies cov ering the holder against war between the United States and Germany within six month's. One month ago the premium for this same risk and period of time was five guineas per cent. Destroyers Will Convoy Steamers New York, Feb. 18. —Swift British and French destroyers will meet all threatened steamships flying flags of the allies and escort them into port, according to cable messages received by oflicials of steamship companies with offices in this city. Effect of German Blockade London, Feb. 18, 1.40 P. M. —The immediate effect of the German subma rine blockade of the British Isles, be ginning to j «lay, was to tie u.p all pas senger traffic from Knglund to Holland. The Scandinavian lines, however, have not as yet been affected. LUTE WfIRIEWS SUMY Germany has declined to alter her position in consequence of the Ameri can note concerning the war zone de cree, although expressing the most friendly feelings toward this country. The German reply, a summary of which was cabled from Berlin, states that Germany cannot abandon her position, in view of the attempts of England to cut off the food supply of non-combat ants and recommends that the United States send warships to protect Ameri can vessels passing through the danger zone. The German decree went into ef fect at midnight, but there have been few changes in sailings to and from England. Emperor William has telegraphed to the president of the province of East Prussia that the Russians have been completely defeated and driven from the province. An official communication from Vienna says that the Russians have been defeated in Bukowina, where the Austro-German forces have been ad vancing recently. A report from the Russian war office however, asserts that there Is no change in Bukowina. It speaks of ferocious fighting in Northern Poland, and says that the Russians have won the advantage in several en gagements in Galicia, Turkey has yielded to Greece and offered satisfaction for the Insult to the Greek naval attache at Constantinople. The incident which led to the departure of the Greek Minister is now closed. Fourteen members of the crew of the Zeppelin, which was destroyed over Fance Island, were rescued and will he interned by the Danish authorities. The Zeppelin, one of the largest of the Ger man dirigibles caught fire while cruis ing; over the island. GERMAN AMBASSADOR TO U. S. IS REPORTED RECALLED TO BERLIN •OTYKJ+HT rt-tvvAitfH BR «v;« COUNT JOHANNT VON SER-NSTORJ-'P A despuiui received troiu Aaisteiuum l>ic iterliu thai Count von Bernstorff, the German Ambassador to the United States, has been summoned to Berlin. Countess von Bernstorff, It Is added, had engaged passage to jo,in her husband at Washington, but she cancelled the booking a few hours before the vessel left. 11l ME IN AIGWVUE FIRE She Is Rescued With Difficulty From the Burning Fumes of Gasoline REARPARTOF HER HOME DESTROYED Another Menacing Blaze in Business District of Town Which Last Week Voted Against Plan to Spend #lO,- 000 for Purchase of Apparatus (Special to the Star-Independent.) Newville, Pa., Feb. 18.—The town of Newville, which in a special election last week defeated a plan to float a $lO ,000 loan to buy modern fire-fight ing apparatus, this morning had an other dangerous fire in the heart of the business section which almost cost the life of one woman and did damage es timated at $1,500. The firemen with their inadequate apparatus fought for an hour before they got the blaze under control. Mrs. Clyde , Sweigert, wife of the proprietor of a* Newville department store, was seriously burned about the arms and body, but physicians say she will recover. The fire occurred in the Sweigert home and started about 7.45 o'clock while Mrs. Sweigert was cleaning a dress with gasoline. Fumes from the gasoline caught fire from the kitchen range and in a moment' Mrs. Sweigert's clothing was a mass of flames. The dress she had been cleaning took fire I and the receptacle holding the gasoline fell to the floor, the flaimes spreading rapidly. , ' Mrs. Sweigert ran from the house in search of an old piece of carpet to throw about her body. Neighbors who were attracted by her cries, aided her in beating out the flames, but did not succeed in this until she had been seri | ously burned. The Sweigert department store is | immediately adjoining the Sweigert • home, and Mr. Sweigert sent in a fire ! alarm. The rear of the home wan gut j ted by the time the firemen with their limited fire-fighting equipment got the j blaze under control. At one of the fire it was fear ; ed the local department would have to ' call on Carlisle for assistance as it was thought the flames would spread to nearby frame buildings. The drug store of R. B. Cloudy once was ablaze, but the flames were extinguished there be- I fore much damage was done. This was the third fire that has oc curred in the same business block in the last eight months, and the fourth within the year. It was the first fire to occur since the SIO,OOO fire appara tus loan was defeated last week. CHECK FIRE WITH DYNAMITE 924)0,000 Blaze Threatened to Destroy Village of Edensburg By Associated Press. Edensburg, Pa., Feb. 18. —Fire Which threatened to destroy the vil lage was checked to-day by the use of dynamite after 13 buildings in the business section nad been burned, with a lose of 5200.000. f i KILLED AS ROCK PITHS 100F Hummelstown Man,6o Years Old, in Vain Seeks Shelter to Avoid Blast FRIEND AT HIS SIDE IS FELLED Just Before Dynamite Is Set Off, Pair Rush Into Blacksmith Shop to Es cape Missiles, but 20-Pound Boulder Comes Crashing Through (Special to the Star-Independent.) Hummelstown, Pa., Fob. 18.—iHeury Tinney, of this place, was instantly killed, and Peter Fisher, also of Hum melstown, was injured at 10 o'clock this morning when they were struck by stones coining through the roof of the blacksmith shop at the Bradley ries in Swatara following a blast. The men lijjd gone to the quarries to look for work and while walking about the premises before making ap plication at the office, they entered the blacksmith shop as a shelter/from near by blasting and there, by a peculiar circumstance, they were struck by two stones which crashed through the single covering of the structure. Tinney dropped to the floor lifeless without ut tering a sound. According to Fisher, who, following the accident, walked about the quarry with his head bandaged to await the arrival of kroner Eckinger, he and his unfortunate companion had been warned by a whistle of an approaching blast when they were svme little distance from the blacksmith shop, but had gone toward the danger and entered the building, thinking to be protected there. Thought It a Safe Retreat Men were working in the shop, which was about fifty feet from tt»e scene of the blasting. S tones from tlie quarry had never struck the blacksmith shop until this morning, and the place was not thought a perilous one. The stone whioh brought death when it struck Tinney, weighs more than twenty pounds and is six inches across. A sharp point at one end hit the man on the head, behind the right ear, mak ing a ~ound the siz.: of a walnut. A smaller stone struck Fisher, also oil the back of the head, leaving a bad bruise. Henry Tinney, who was killed by the larger stone, was 60 years old. He had been out of employment for some time, and had gone to the quarries with Fisher in the hope of getting work. He ■leaves a widow and the following chil dren: Harry, of Hershey, a: conductor on the lines of the Hershey Rapid Transit Company; Frank, of West Vir ginia, a Methodist clergyman; a mar ried daughter in New Jersey and three daughters at home, Mattie, Hattie and Edna. Fisher's Injury Not Alarming The body was taken from Swatara by William Karmany to his undertaking rooms in Hanover street, this town, across the street from the Tinney home. Coroner Eckinger began an investi gation this morning at Swatara and later examined the body. Funeral ar rangements have not yet been made. The condition of Fisher is not con sidered alarming. POSTSCRIPT PRICE, ONE CENT. REPLY MADE TO 11. S. NOTE BY 6ERMANY Protest of America Against Blockade of Waters An swered at Berlin WILL NOT RECEDE FROM PURPOSE The Germans Firmly Maintain Their Position As Previously Announced In Paper That Is Couched In the Most Friendly Terms By Associated Press. Berlin, via London, Feb. IS, 3.58 A. M.—The reply of Germany to the pro test of the United States against a blockade of British waters is couched in the most friendly terms, but firmly maintains the position of Germany as already announced. The answer which is a lengthy document, was converted into code at the United states embassy un der the direction of Ambassador Ger ard and has been transmitted in full to Washington. The note explains that Germany's proposed action is rendered necessary by Great .Britain's policy of attempt ing to cut off the food supply for the German civil population by a method never recognized in international war. England'B course in ordering merchant men to fly neutral tlajzs, equipping them with artillery with orders to destroy submarines, the German reply contends, renders nugatory the right of search thus giving Germany the right to at tack Knglish shipping. Germany holds that she cannot abandon that right un der the stress which Knglaud has forced upon her. Says Stand Is Necessary Since Germany must compel the na tious wifh which she is at war to re turn to the recognized principles of in ternational law and restore the freedom, of the seas, she argues that the stand she h*s*taken is necessary. The note recommends that the Unit ed States government send warships to England to convoy merchant vessels through the danger zone as security against attack with the understanding that vessels thus guarded shall carry i no war supplies. llo|>e is expressed that the American government will under stand the position in which Germany has been placed and appreciate the rea sons for its course. The reply closes with an expression of the hope that the United States may prevail upon (>r«at Britain "to return to the principles of international law recognized prior to the outbreak of the war," and in particular obtain the ob servance of the London declaration by belligerents o.p|*>sed to Germany. If is were ctone, the note explains, Germany would ®be enabled to import food sup plies and raw materials. Germany would .recognize in this, says the reply, an in valuable service toward a more humane conduct of the war and would act in accordance with the new situation thus create-d. Text of the German Reply The text of the German govern ment's reply to the American note fol lows: "The imperial government has ex amined the communication from the United States in the same spirit of good will and friendship by which tho communication appears to have been dictated. The imperial government is in accord with the United States gov ernment that for both parties it is in a high degree desirable to avoid mis understandings which might arise from measures announced by the German Admiralty and to provide against the Continued on Seventh Pace SITUATION NOT CRITICAL IN OPINION OFUA OFFICIALS Washington, Feb. 18.—Germany's reply to the American note on the naval war zone around the British Isles had not been received to-day at the State Department. Dispatches on other mat ters from Ambassador Gerard, filed in Berlin yesterday, said he had delivered the American note but that the German roply had not then been delivered to him. The outline of the German reply contained in news dispatches, however, commanded close attention in official and diplomatic quarters but comments were being reserved until after the text has been received. Secretary Bryan went early to the White House for a conference with President Wilson. They discussed neu tral shipping generally. Tho official view was that no element in the situa tion was critical. WALL STREET CLOSING By Associated Press. New York, Feb. 18. —Union Pacific, Steel and Amalgamated were sold mod erately in the late dealings. The clos ing was heavy. To-day's narrow and drooping stock market was again large ly influenced by adverse foreign condi tions. Minor declines were general.