THE WEATHER FATE TO-NIGHT AMD TO-MORROW OtMIM Hip it, Pm* • K5. A MBP" VOL. 77—NO. 121. siun i TECH QUALIFY IN JHE RACES Former Gets a Fourth Place and Later a Third in Philadel phia Relays WEATHER FINE FOR THE SPORT Athletes in Tip-Top Condition for Events Scheduled for This After noon on Franklin Field at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania Franklin Field, Philadelphia, April 24.—80 th Harrisburg Tech and Steel ton High Schools captured places in the preliminary one-mile relay racee in the University of Pennsylvania games on Kranklin Field this afternoon. Tech was third in its race, which was won by Morris High School, of New York City, in 3.35 4-5. Trenton High was second in this event. Steelton was fourth in its race which was somewhat slower, being won by Masten Park High, of Buffalo, in 3.3S 3-5. Central High did not win a place in this event in which it was entered. Williamsport finished second and Reading third. The race in which Tech ran th : was won in next to the fastest 4 made by any high school team afternoon. The runners aver*" than 55 seconds to eacb Preparatory schoo' won by Franklin a emy; second, Newar«. 0., Academy; third, Westtown (N. J.) Academy; fourth, Harrisburg Prep. Time, 3.41 4-5. The intercollegiate javelin throw ■was won by Phillips, Idaho University, distance 177 feet 4 3-4 inches, break ing the collegiate record of 169 feet S 1-4 inches held by Dorizas, Pennsyl vania; second, Nourse. Princeton, 176 fert 5 5-S inches: third, Berry. Penn sylvania, 152 feet 6 5-8 inches; fourth, Bachman. Notre Dame. 133 feet 2 3-4 inches. Both Phillips and Nourse passed the'old record. The teams which represented the lo cal schools and Steelton iu the Univer sity Reiay Carnival on Franklin Field this afternoon follow: Central High McMateee. Houtz, Smeltzer, Mays and Winn, substitute. Tech—Demminp. Stansfield, Stiteler, Da\ies, Evans Hefflefinger. Harrisburg Academy—Krall, Stack pole. Holmes. White. Steelton Higa—Wueschinski, Sellers. Barber. Hocker. The Steelton team left last evening 1 for Philadelphia, the other schools leav- j ing this morning. The high school re lay events were scheduled to be run off one after another starting - at 1.30 j ••'clock this afternoon. Central and' Steelton opposed each other in their event. Harrisburg Academy and Tech ' ran in separate classes. Philadelphia. April 24.—Champions I in track and field events from the east | and west were to measure speed and j strength in the concluding day's sport | of the University of Pennsylvania's; twenty-first annual relay carnival on. Franklin Field to-day. The weather was warm and the track fast, a combi nation which promised to help the title holders in various events in their at tempts to break records. Among the features of the day were the one, two 3ni four-mile relay races for the college championship of Amer ica. Never in the long history of Penn sylvania s relay games has their been brought together such a large number of high class performers as were en tered Ln these three contests. The greatest interest centered in the four-mile championship. Eight teams were on the program to start and among these Cornell, Wisconsin, Mich igan and Chicago had teams good enough to beat eighteen minutes. Cor nell had a quartet of champions enter ed. Wisconsin, Michigan and Chicago, who fought out the four-mile relay race at Drake last M-itßin. Franklin and several other counties cattle mfcy be shipped on the owner's certificate to the railroad company that the animals are not infected. This quarantine has been on since Xoveroler 4. In the event of any doubt existing as to the cattle suffering from the disease the owner can call up Dr. Ainsworth. at the Kunkel building in Harrisburg, and he will send men to examine the cattle. INJURED AT BASKETBALL Ralph Kirk Le in charge of the Rev. Dr. J. Ritchie Smith of Princeton Theological Seminary, and the Rev. Dr. George B. Stewart, president of Auburn Theological Seminary, Auburn, N. Y., both former pastors of (Market Square Presbyterian church, assisted by the Rev. William B. Cook, the present pas tor-in-charge. Late this afternoon rela tives who had sent requests to Dr. Smith and Dr. Stewart to participate in the services had not yet heard from them. Mrs. McCauley died at her residence after an illness of more than four months. She was 69 year* old. For many years she was among the most active workers in Market Square church, being superintendent of the in fant department of the Sunday school. She also was in charge of the sewing class of the cnurch. She was much in terested iu the Y. M. C. A. and was president of the Women's Auxiliary of the local association for a number of vears. Gilbert M. McCauley, her husband, who died about fourteen years ago. was formerly general manager of the Cen tral Iron and Steel Works and presi dent of the Y. M. C. A. It was through him that Mrs. MeCauley became es pecially interested in the association's work. Mrs. McCauley was a great-grand daughter of John Elder, a pioneer set tler of this vicinity and a pastor of the old Paxton Presbyterian church. "Parson" Elder was a conspicuous fig ure in the days of the Revolutionary war. Mrs. McCauley is survived bv one brother, H. C. Doll', of Denver, Col. DIES AFTER RETAKES EXERCISE Louis Fink, Manager of Livingston's Store, Expires at Y. M. C. A. Louis Fink, manager of Livingston's WeTrust-U Store, 9 South Market square, died at the Young Men s Chris tian Association last evening after be ing taken suddenly ill. Mr. Fink had just finished taking his daily exercise on the gymnasium floor and came from one of the baths. Mr. -Fink had been a daily attendant at the M. C. A. for a number of years, and had gone through the regu lar drills. H'hen he came from the baths he complained of feoiing ill. He bad just about finished dressing when he turned to several men and remarked that he believed he ate something that caused indigestion. He immediately became unconscious and died ten min utes later. Mr. Fink was 42 vears of age and resided at 314 North Second street, where services will be held Monday aft ernoon at 2 o'clock in charge of Rab bi Charles J. Freund, pastor of Ohev Sholom synagogue. Interment will be in the Ohev Sholom cemetery. KILLED IX RUSSIAN POLAND George Suchi, Who Kept "Murder House," Ends Life in Battle George Suchi, who operated a boarding house at 735 North Seventh street June 26, 1913, at the time when Maisa Moroni was thrown or fell from the third story window and was killed, land who afterward figured in a sen sational police investigation in which the first dictograph was ever used by the local department, was killed in battle in Russian Poland, according to word received here by his friends. ■Suchi and a half a dozen other Au strians were under arrest for Moroni's death. They were indicted for mur der and afterward released when the Grand Jury did not find a true bill in th« case on the dictograph testimony. Suchi left soon afterward for his home in Austria. John Shebu, another man who was .jointly indicted with Suchi and who was a boarder in the North Seventh street house, received word that Suchi was killed. SACREDRfIBE STOLENAND USED AS A TABLE CLOTH Police Recover Costly Garment. Which Is Torn and Shows Cigarette Barns —Other Articles Taken Prom Syn agogue Still Are Missing A sacred robe used by T the rabbi of a Jewish synagogue has been doing duty as a tab!e cloth in a house on Fil btrt street, according to a statement made to-day by the police, who recov ered the ro'oe of Rabbi Goldberg. The rabbi identified it this morning in Po lice Headquarters. The robe was seen swinging in the breeze from a wash line back of the Filbert street house and a search war rant was sworn out. Patrolmen Schel has and Owens later took the warrant and found the robe in the house. It is much the worse for wear and cannot be j used again for the purpose for which it was intended. It is torn in several places and is full of cigarette burns. No arrests have been made and as yet no charge has been entered against any individual. According to Rabbi Goldberg, the Kesher Israel synagogue, at Fourth and State streets, was entered last Septem ber, when this robe and a silver collar were stolen. A collar similar to the cne taken was returned to Kabbi Gold berg this morning, he said, by a color ed woman in whose house the robe was found. A second robbery, according to Rab bi Goldberg, was committed two weeks ago, when another robe was stolen, to gether with the contents of a Jerusalem mission box. None of the loot taken in thi* last robbery has been recovered. imiiiN W Id POVERTY Sweatshop Wages in France Not Sufficient to Keep Body and Soul Together FRENCH SENATE IN WARM DEBATE Extraordinary Statements ln Contro versy to Fix Minimum Living Wage When Report of Boards Created by Government Are Submitted By Associated Press, Paris, April 24. 5.55 P. M.—Some extraordinary statements regarding sweatshop wages in this country were brought out in . the Senate yesterday during tho debate on a bill to fix a minimum living wage throughout France by boards created by the gov ernment. Jeau Merel said that between nine hundred thousand and one million women in France are now enduring in supportable servitude and receiving wages barely sufl'.cient to maintain life. M. Morel, Henry Cheron and Edouard Herist stated that seventy-five per cent, of the workers at home on household linen goods make from 2 1-10 cents to 4 cents per hour by intense industry. In provincial centers pay for uch work is one cent per hour. In Paris fourteen per cent, of the women working upon undergarments make a maximum of fatty dollars year ly. Makers of artificial flowers employ ing much vaste aud manual dexterity, are able to make in the best season from eighty cents to a dollar per day, but more than fitty per cent, never are able to get beyond 30 or 40 cents. In the provinces women working on nnder wear and ready-made clothing are able to make only 10 to 12 cents a day in most cases and rarely as much as 20 cents. M. IMorel. who prepared the sena torial committee's report, went into the question of how such women are able to live. He cited one case of a woman who made 19 cents a day. She paid 13 cents on an average for bread, cheese and vegetables, leaving 6 cents a.day for lodging and clothing. Another case was that of a woman who had a child to support. The moth er began to sew at the machine at 3 o'clock in the morning and worked all day and part of the night. She was able to earn 25 cents a day, hut could afford nothing more to eat* than soups. The bill passed its first reading in the Senate. It had already passed tho Chamber in November, 1911. 100 DETECTIVES ON TRAIL March From Police Headquarters to Seek Slayer of Brooklyn Woman By Associated Press. New York, April 24.—A squad of one hundred . detectives, the largeet ever assigned by the central office to a single case, marched out of police headquarters to-day to seek the man accused pf the murder of Mrs. Julia Heilner, wife of Seligman L. Heilner, a wealthy manufacturer of corsets, who was killed in her home in Brook lyn yesterday. The detectives sought Joseph Hanel, formerly a ship steward and, the po lice assert, an ex-convict who had been sent eight days ago to the Heilner home from the Seaman's Church Insti tute, at the request of Mrs. Heilner, who sought to furnish employment to some needy man. Robbery was the apparent motive of the crime. A suit of clothes and articles of jewelry including the wed ding ring Mrs. Heilner wore, were missing. PIONEER PACKER DIES AT 71 John Cudahy Never Fully Recovered From Operation Four Years Ago By Associated Press. Chicago, April 24.—John Cudahy, Board of Trade operator, banker and pioneer packer, died at his home here last night, aged 71. Physicians as serted that Mr. Cudahy had never com pletely recovered from an operation for appendicitis he underwent four years ago. He sought to renew his health in California teveral months ago, but was forced to return two weeks ago and since then has been in the care of physicians. He is survived by the widow, two daughters and "two sons. Cudahy entered the packing industry as a boy in Milwaukee, first with Ed ward Reddis and then with John Plank inton. He became a partner of Chapin & Company in Chicago in 1875, the firm becoming Chapin & Cudahy in 1877 and later the Cudahy Packing Company. DARING DAYLIGHT HOLDUP Two Colored Boys Figure ln'Sobbing Foreigner In Eighth Ward Two colored boys committed a dar ing daylight robbery in the Eighth ward late yesterday afternoon. Trako Polovic, a North Seventh street, resi dent, was approached by the youths. They threatened bodily harm to the foreigner, who allowed "one of the boys to go through his pockets while the other stood menacingly near. Polovic lost 17.80, be told the po lice. He cannot speak English very good and being unfamiliar with the city he was unable to aid the police very materially in the search for the boj a. ALLIED AEROPLANES BUSY IN THE VICINITY OF SMYRNA Paris, April 24, 5.15 A. M.—Allied aeroplanes are showing great activity over Smyrna, says a special dispatch from Salouiki. A French aviator re cently dropped two bombs on Fort. Kas tro, killing several soldiers; another sank a German ship lying in port and a third struck the railroad station. Observations made by aviators, ac cording to tho dispatch, indicate that the Turkish forces assigned for the de fense of Smyrna number 35,000, They occupy trenches extending from Vour lah to Smyrna and are posted on heights commanding the city. Forts Two Brothers and Pastrati have been repaired. A new fortifica tion built above the farm of St. George has been armed thirty heavy guns supposed to have been brought from Constantinople. GERMANS DEFEAT ALLIES AND THE LATTER ADMIT IT London, April 24, 12.45 P. M.—The War Office to-day gave out the follow ing official note: "The fight for the ground into which the Germans penetrated between Steenstraate and Langomarck'still con tinues. The loss of this part of the line laid bare the left of the Canadian division, which was forced to fall back in order to keep in touch with the right of the neighboring troops. '' In th** rear of the latter had been mour Canadian 4.7.inch guns, which thus passed into the hands of the ene my. But some hours later the Cana dians made a most brilliant and success ful advance, recapturing these guns and taking a considerable number of German prisouers, including a colonel. ''The Canadians had many casual ties, but their gallantry and determi nation undoubtedly saved the situation. Their conduct had been magnificent throughout. Ottawa, Ont.. April 24.—The 4.7 guns of the Canadian division, lost and then recaptured at Ypres, are part of the heavy artillery brigade. They are 45-pounders from Montreal, under the 1 command of Major Hall. SEPARATE PEACE STORIES FROM AUSTRIA ARE CURRENT London, April 24, 2.10 A. M.—The "Daily Mail's" Warsaw correspon j dents send to their newspaper a long statement from "a high authoritative source," in which the possibility is discussed of an early conclusion of a separate peace with Austria. "Although the air is full of such stories, and the indications show that Austria is desirous of an instant and lasting peace," the statement says, "it must be understood that if Austria ceased to be a bellige: ent her position as a neutral would mean that she would be able to offer as great, if not a greater, obstacle to the success of Russian arms as if she remained a bel ligerent. "The Russian plan of campaign now is definitely based on Grant's despised American Civil war theory of a con tinuous extension of battle line. It is necessary that Russia possess herself, temporarily at least, of the Austro- German frontier line from Cracow westward. Grant failed to hack his way through, although he had the prepon derance of five men to his opponent's two, which is a greater preponderance than we can hope to attain. Hut he kept extending his line until one day the foe failed to get him and was out flanked. LATE WARI-WS SUMMARY * The new battle in Belgium, which has developed suddenly Into one of the most important encounters in the west since the present battle line was formed, is being carried j>n by a re lentless German attack and a deter mined resistance on the part of the British. It is now apparent that the Germans have brought up heavy rein forcements for this attack, and it is suggested in London that their im mediate objective is the capture of Ypres, preliminary to another attempt to break through to the English Chan nel. An official statement from the Brit ish war office to-day says that the British troops are still fighting for the ground which they were compelled to yield to the Germans. The loss of these positions exposed the Canadian divi sion, which was compelled to fall back. The Canadians lost four pieces of artillery, but lateT recaptured them in a counter attack which, although occasioning heavy losses is described aa successful. Berlin is elated at the German victory and newspapers there say that It evens the score for the British capture of Neuve Chapelle last month. The Finnish steamer Frack has been sunk in the Baltic Sea by a German submarine. The crew is believed to have been saved. Aviators of the allies operating over Smyrna report that the Tnrks are de fending the dty with 35, 000 troops Cratlaaed om fourth Pmm• POSTSCRIPT PRICE, ONE CENT. ALLIES LAND TROOPS AT 3 TURKPOINTS New Attack on Darda nelles Begun With In vasion of Forces in Sultan's Domain AIM TO CAPTURE TURKISH FORTS Allied Forces Reported to Have Cap tured Enos and Passage From That Port Into Interior Is Expected Soon to Follow London, April 24, 3.43 A. M.— The "Daily Mail' " Athens correspondent j says: ''The now Dardanelles attack by the I allies has begun with the landing of troops at. three points, Enos,, on tho Suvla promotory oli the west of the Gallipoli peninsula, and on the Bulair isthmus. "The object of these troops is the capture of the Turkish forts on the Gal lipoli peninsula and to prevent the send ing of Turkish reinforcements across the Bulair isthmus. The troops have captured EIIOS ami tho passage from that port into the interior is not ex pected to offer difficulties. "Meanwhile the fleet on Thursday renewed its vigorous bombardment of the straits and of various points on the i west const of frallipoli." JAPS SEND ULTIMATUM TO CHINA FOR QUICK REPLY Honolulu, April 24.—An ultimatum demanding a satisfactory reply with in three days to the demands of Japan on China has been seut by the Ja|>an ese Cabinet to Ski Hioki, the Japan ese minister at Pekin, for delivery to the representatives of China at the negotiations according to a dispatch from Tokio to the Hawaii Shinpo, a Japanese newspaper here. Finnish Steamer Torpedoed Stockholm, April 24, via London, I W-22 P. M. —The Finnish steumer j Frack has been torpedoed and sunk in the Baltic by a German submarine. It is believed that the meinbera of her crew were saved. The Frack carried a cargo of iron ore and was on her way to Abo, Finland. British Battleship Damaged? Washington, April 24.—The Ger man embassy announced to-day it had information "from a reliable source" that a Biitish battleship was sevorely damaged in the last. Ze,>peliu attack over the Tyne. Germans Sink Freighter . London, April 24, 2.37 p. M.—The freighter Ruth was sunk by a German submarine on Wednesday when about 100 miles e.i.st of May "island in the North Sea. The crew was rescued and landed at Loith, Scotland. GOHL FINDS ANCIENT RELICS Pottery Antedating Indians Excavated at Owasco Lake Auburn, N. Y., April 24.—Discov eries of reliis, said to antedate the Iro quois Indians, have been made at the foot of Owasco Lake, near this city. Edward H. Gohl, formerly of Harris burg, an adopted member of the Onon daga tribe of Indians, recently found a fragment of pottery. Further investi gations resulted in the finding of sev eral other pieces of other relics. A scientific survey of the entire field has been begun. A force of men has been employed and nearly half an acre already has been explored. Most of the articles found thus far were at a depth of several feet. < Mr. Gohl is a brother of John H. Gohl, of the firm of Gohl & Bruaw, contracting painters, of this city. He became interested in Indian lore early in life and has maiie an exhaustive study of the Red Man and has lived their life for many years. He is an ar tist of note and recently completed a frieso in the public library, at Syracuse, N. Y., which shows the Indian from his early life to the present day. The friese is six by eighty feet. It took nearly two years to do the work. Bank Reserve Shows Increase By Asaocinted Preaa, New York, April 24. —The state ment of the actual condition of Clear ing House banks and trust companies shows that they hold $171,034,870 re serve in excess of legal requirements. This is an increase of (12,977,050 over last year.