THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 24, 1915. ALLIES' RETURN TO SALQNIK1 REPORTED Berlin Hears Anglo-French Troops on Way to Serbia Have Been Recalled. BULGARS FAIL AT VRANYA Serbs on Offensive at Some Points, but Central Powers Advance at Others Russian Aid Within Fortnight Promised. BERLIN, Oct. 23. by wireless to Say Ille. N. T. Five trains containing: Anglo-French troops on their -way from Salonikl to Serbia have been called back by order of the chief commanders and have returned to Salonikl, accord ing: to a dispatch from Greece to the Cologne Gazette. The sanitary conditions of the en tente troops in the Balkans, the mes sage adds, are bad. Transports in the harDor of Salonikl, It is said, cannot disbark their soldiers because there are no barracks ashore. LONDON, Oct. 23 Dispatches from the scene of war in the Balkans con flict in some particulars. Berlin and Sofia report continued advances by the forces of the central powers, while Athens says the Serbians have assumed the offensive at certain points, at which they have forced the invaders to retire. Serbian Reported in Bnlgaria. The Athens correspondent, whose message was received here by way of Paris, adds: "The Serbian minister says that the Serbians repulsed the Bulgarians who entered Vranya. French and British military attaches arriving from Nish also say that Vranya was not occupied. They declare the Serbians have entered Bulgaria." A Berlin report says that' German troops have crossed the Drina River in Northwestern Serbia near Visegrad, driving southward the Serbians on the heights, according to the official state ment Issued today by German army headquarters. It Is also announced - that Bulgarian troops have captured the Serbian towns of Negotin and Roglyevo. An official Bulgarian report received in Amsterdam from Sofia says the Bulgarian invasion of Serbia continues, Bulgarian Pursuit Continues. "Our troops have reached the right bank of the Upper Timok," says this report "In Macedonia the enemy is being pursued further. "During the afternoon and evening of October 21 British and French ships bombarded the Aegean coast, especially The open towns ox Porto Lagos, Maiconis, Makri and Dedeagatch, which have no fortifications whatever. These operations of the hostile fleet were without military significance." Bucharest hears that the seat of the Ferbian government has been trans ferred from Nish to Kraljevo, 5 miles northwest of Nish. Roumanian newspapers, as quoted in a dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company from Zurich, say that the Russian General, Vlnsnoliko, asserted: "In a fortnight at the latest Russian troops will land on the Bulgarian coast." JUSTICE MOORE SPEAKS ADVICE GIVEN EMBRYO LAWYERS AT UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Prospective Attorneys Told to Eschew Dishonesty and Be Careful mt 1 Criminal Practice. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Oct. 23. (Special.) The prospective law graduates of the State University were told yesterday by Chief Justice Frank A. Moore, of the Supreme Court of Oregon, what the preparation, prac tice and ideals of a lawyer should be. Chief Justice Moore was speaking upon "Law as a Vocation." They were told that the surest road to ultimate success in law was the de fire and ability of the lawyer to be a peacemaker in his community and to keep his clients out of court. They were also told not to place fees above justice. "As an officer of the court, an attorney is the natural guardian of justice," he said. "Honesty is the best policy in law, as well as in business." Chief Justice Moore comforted the young men over the years of struggle the new lawyer commonly puts in be fore he has a paying practice. "It is a struggle that develops character and makes the great lawyer. It should be used for constant study: in fact, a law yer must be a student all his'life. Law is pre-eminently the intellectual pro fession." The young lawyer was warned Against identifying himself unduly with criminal cases, "for by constant association with crime and criminals the moral tone is almost necessarily lowered," said Chief Justice Moore. Warning against vulgarisms was also given. The talk was preceded by a banquet. BABY'S CRY HALTS SUICIDE lpponlont Voung Father Falters iu Attempt to End Life. rHTUAPlil.rHIA. Oct. 20. A hanc that trembled when he heard his baby cry, the police say. probably saved froiZ: suicide a. despondent young husband, who was released by the police of the Nineteenth and Oxford streets station. He Is 'James Hartnett, of 1815 Mont gomery avenue. Hartnett, who has been estranged from his wife for a week, went to the home of relatives at 1930 Harlan street, where she took their baby when she left him. He attempted a recon dilation, but failed. He tlien went to an alley in the rear of the house and, ac cording to the police, had raised a bot tie of acid to his lips, when his child's voice caused him to shake. The acid was dasned over his face and neck and he fell to the ground, writhing with pain. A passerby, in an automobile. took him to tot. Joseph s Hospital, where his burns were treated. Creamery Tays Mueli Money. KELSO, Wash. Oct. 23. (Special.) Puring the first nine months of this year the Kelso Creamery has paid out to adjacent farmers in cream checks J:i4.797.52. Tills is almost 4000 a month The Keiso Creamery had done a steadily Increasing business since it was pur chased bv v. w. Curtis is months ago. Targe shipments are now coming here from Ridgefleld and south of here and from lower Columbia points. t - "' J " MAP SHOWING THE BATTLE LINES IN SERBIA. V ' j GUESTS NUMB S Swiss Hotel Men Troubled to :: v I mm" Please All. t GiiH RISE IN PARIS : "0 1'"-' ! STATUES All Trace of Things Teutonic Being Painted Out of French Capital. Brave Nurse's Sacrifice Brings Blessing. BY CAROLYN WILSON; (Copyright. 1915. by the Chicago Tribune. Published by arrangement.) PARIS, Sept. 30. I went into a Paris hotel to see a noted French feminist who is now in town, and at the desk 1 recognized the head of the Swiss hotel where I had stayed at Montreaux. 1 asked him If he were now in charge of the Paris hotel, and with a satisfied sigh he nodded his head. "No one can have any idea of the dif ficulties of running a. Swiss hotel dur ing the war, particularly in a Summer resort, where the visitors have more time on 'their hands than in the big centers, where the clients are usually business men. You can t imagine what it is to have a mixture of 400 French, German, Austrians and Italians in your house, with just enough firmly-opin- ioned Americans to start trouble with whatever group tney happen to be. At best the Germans aren t noted for their tact, and in that section of Switzerland the sympathies are almost entirely for the French. Consequently there were quarrels and high words every moment of the day. I'm sure I can't understand why they didn't stay over on the other side near Zurich, for there the people speak German and are to a large degree friendly to th Ger man cause. Discussions and Hatreds Constant. "Children get into the most terrific fights and even grown people playing tennis, for instance, would end up in nsults and injuries. You may imagine how pleasant it was for me to hear some Germans addressing a refugee family from Lille as 'my dear fellow countrymen,' or to hear another telling a lady who was returning to Versailles that "I envy you s, my dear: you will probably see our dear Kaiser in such a short time." 'People bring up foolish enough complaints and insults separated by several hundred miles. We see, of course, French, English and German papers, and some of the discussions and hatreds are amusingly infantile, es pecially that English hobby against German music as lewd. Well, all these things were condensed into the space of one hotel veranda, and SO times a day I had clients coming to me from either one side or the other saying that Madame feo-and-bo or Slgnor This or Frau That had insulted them and they desired their bill at once, as they re fused to stay in a hotel which har bored such vile specimens of the hu man race as the French or the Italians, or the English, or the German, which ever the case might be. O me. It is not amusing. And I feel as If a huge weight had been lifted off my back now that I have charge of this hotel. Here at least you only hear one sort of conversation." For many months every trace of things German here in Paris has been wiped out in business and business signs, all the streets named after Ger man towns have been replaced by pat riotic suggestions, and now comes the turn of the statues. The four statues of Vienna, Berlin, Frankfort and Co logne, which formerly decorated the front of the Gare du Nord, have had their names scratched out, and a com mittee of painters has gone all through this and all the other large stations, painting out signs written in German. There is, I understand, to be a new statue erected to the little baker girl of Exoudan. She has already received a medal and a kiss from the president of the republic, so that she is in a fair way to be a second Jeanne d'Arc. Since the beginning of the war, when the mobilization called out all the men from her village, anud when her father, the baker, left with the others, she has taken entire charge of the bakery, al though she is only 14 years old. and with her little brother of 10 has mixed the breads, stoked the fires, tended the counter, in fact, done everything to keep the village in bread and provide for the soldiers quartered there. This child has succeeded in putting out as much as 1200 pounds of bread a day. Xnnie'l Sacrifice Brlaga Blessing. Another splendid example of devotion has been shown by Miss Mary Davles. a nurse out at the American hospital at Neuilly. Miss avies. who was assist ing Dr. Taylor, bacteriologist of th imperial cancer research for the cure of gas gangrene, naa loiiow-ea him along with his work on guinea pigs, which never came to a definite success because of the lack of experimentation on human beings. There were in the hospital many cases of gas gangrene, but all complicated by other forms of infection and so of no use for the ex periment. I It wu necessary to have an uncom- (1) French Troop in First Clash 'With Bnlgara In Cihevgbell. Worth of Greek: Frontier, 42) Bnlgara Threaten ttumanovo and Vranle, Im portant Towns on Nish-Uslcnb Railway, Alain Line of Communlca tlons of Serbian Army. 13) Mnlgars Advance In Timok Valley and Threaten Right Flank of Serbian Army Opposing Anstro-Germana Invading From North. 4) Germans Capture All Heights South of Belgrade and Semendrla and Advance Down Morava Valley. 5 Austrians J'rrsn Back Left Flank of Serbians In Knveloplns; Move ment From Northwest. - (6) Allies' Relief Expedition From Salo nikl Reported to Be Advancing, to Relief of Serbians Defending Nlsh-Lsknb-Salonlkt Railway. plicated case to inoculate with tho pure culture. Miss Davies had studied bacteriology at the Pasteur Institute, and she had not only tended more than 200 fatal cases of gas gangrene since the war, but she had also seen many of the guinea pigs die in the experi ment, so that her courage deserves extra commendation. She gave herself an injection of the culture and then sent for Dr. Taylor. Two hours afterwards the symptoms of gas gangrene developed and in 24 hours she was out of danger, due to the quinine injection which is the doc tor's experiment. Probably through her bravery she will .be the means of sav ing many lives, for the treatment al ready is In force at the American hos pital and two British hospitals. War Shift Fills Hospitals. Work has now commenced again in earnest at all the hospitals in Paris. The new offensive has brought in thousands of wounded and every man who can drive a car and every single ambulance is being rushed out to La Chapelle to bring in the wounded. Men who had been In the Paris hospitals for ten months were evacuated to the country. There has never been such a clearing out. For at last, under the new health chief, Justin Godart, it has been realized that the long journeys forced on the wounded to Central and Southern France have aggravated by BO per cent their maladies and in such cases as did not prove fatal, dangerous and long complications set in which made invalids for life of wounded who would soon have been out and around if they had had a six-hour trip to Paris in place of 30 hours or worse to the south. Godart himself and two of his assis tants went to Champagne, where the worst of the fighting has been, and personally looyed into every smallest detail of the removing, dressing, evac uating and transportation. Up to thl stime the nurses wno nave been relieved of care during t,he com parative calm of the Summer have been making new sweaters and socks and caps for the men. Thousands of pieces of apparel have gone out from the vari ous hospitals, for the Winter will soon be here and it is hoped to avoid the frostbite and pneumonia of last Winter. FIANCE'S POLICY IS WON Miss Connor Wins Insurance Figlit After Eleven Years.. NEW YORK. Oct. 20. The protracted efforts of Miss May Connor to collect S1000 from the New York Life lnsur ance Company- on a policy issued to her fiance, Frederick W innlngton, who was drowned at Coney Island 11 years ago, met with success when County Judge Hylan. of Brooklyn, decided that th; insurance company and not Miss Con nor had been responsible for the long delav. Failure to recover Winnington's body caused all the trouble. Soon after his death Miss Connor demanded pay ment, but was told that she would have to wait seven years unless 'she could produce positive proof that the insured man was dead. She waited seven years and renewed her demand, but the company again refused to pay, this time invoking the statute of lim itations. Judge Hylan holds that the statute does not apply, as the delay was of the company's own making. Germany Has Big Potato Crop. LONDON Oct. 17. Germany is har vesting the largest potato crop in its history, according to a Berne dlspatcn to the Morning Post. The crop Is esti mated at 60.000.000 tons. The supply Is so abundant that the government has withdrawn the order prohibiting ex portation of potatoes to Switzerland. 'SOUP BETRAYS CONVICT EXPLOSION FOLLOWS DYNAMITE BOILING IN HONOR CAMP. State Powder Proves Wrong Kind; Man Who Made Attempt Will Be Sent Back to Walla Walla. OLYMPIA. Wash, Oct. 23. (Special.) An ingenious plan on the part of a. convict at the state honor camp at Coburly Canyon. Douglas County, to extract "soup." the technical term used by yeggmen for nitro-glycerinc, from dynamite used In road work, was frus trated this week by the fact thit he State Highway Department had lelect ed "soupless" powder for tho state work. This is the explanation given by Highway Commissioner William 1L Roy, after personal investigation of an early morning explosion at the honor camp last Monday. As a result Henry Ldwards. a member of the camp, is In the Waterville jail awaiting the arrival of a guard to take him back to the Walla Walla penitentiary, and the con ditional pardon granted Edwards has been revoked by Governor Lister. The nitro-glycerine can -be, extracted from ordinary dynamite by. boiling the latter in water. Commissioner Roy ex plains, the "soup" rising to the surface. ready to b skimmed oft" for subsequent use in sate-cracRing. The nitro-tellurin dynamite used by the state, however. when boiled produces nitro-glycerine compounds in such volatile form that detonation occurs before a liquid is formed. This evidently is what happened last Monday. After . an explosion that wrecked a corner of the bunkhouse and intlicted minor injuries to two sleep ing convicts, Edwards was found' fully dressed, while fragments of a metal kettle were scattered in all directions. There was no evidence that other con victs were involved in the plot. LAKES DRAINAGE PROPOSED Tenmile District Residents Plan Reclaim Dairying Land. to MARSH FIELD, Or., Oct. 23. (Spe cial.) Residents of Tenmile district. 12 miles north of Coos Bay, which comprise a separate watershed, pro pose to bond the area adjoining the two Tenmile lakes, to organize a drain age district and to lower the water in the lakes to Summer level. There is a shoreline on the two lakes of be tween 80 and 90 miles, serrated with numerous inlets, on which there is a large amount of bottom land, which, when reclaimed, will add much to the dairying industry. Undsr existing conditions Winter freshets raise the lakes from three to five feat and bottom lands which In the dry season form excellent pasturage for cattle are inundated and useless. The cost Is estimated varlcubly be tween $12,000 and $11,000 and the bond issue which will be submitted at a spe. cial election will be for J15.000. Ten mile is a. dairying region.' - STOPS TOBACCO HABIT. Elders' Sanitarium, located at 518 Main St.. St. Joseph. Mo has published a took showing the deadly effect of the tobacco habit, and how it can be stopped in three to five days. As they are distributing this book free, anyone wanting a copy should send their name and address at once. Adv. . i Cegsricht Hart Schmllner Mrx SamT The Our New Location : EXPORTS ARE AIDED American Trust Will Handle Commerce With Neutrals. GUARANTEE TO BE GIVEN Unofficial Recognition to Be Ex tended by Governments Com plete Neutrality of Trade AVill Be Insisted . On. WASHINGTON, " Oct. 23. Formation of the American Trust Company, simi lar in organization to The Netherlands Overseas Trust, to handle American products abroad with assurances that they will not reach the belligerents, was announced today by Secretary Redfield. of the Department of Com merce. The company will have the un official recognition of the Government. Secretary Redfield said that It was contemplated to have the company handle all export shipments irom me United States to neutral countries. He said that while the Government would not officially guarantee to belligerent countries in Europe that the goods shipped under agreement with the American company would not reacn their enemies, the Government would exercise such supervision as would In sure the complete neutrality of the commerce carried on by the new Ameri can" company. Secretary Redfield said mat tne com pany itself, under the unofficial recog nition of the Government, would make such arrangements with belligerent European countries as would assure the safety of American neutral-bound commerce from interference Dy Deing erents. In considering unofficial recognition bv the Government for the new con cern it was made a condition that the company must .handle the export bus! ness of all American firms which might make application, provided they could meet the conditions laid down by the belligerent countries with which the concern might operate. The under standing was reached that agents of tho Treasury Department in export cities in the United States and com mercial agents of the Department of Commerce abroad would co-operate to assure the complete neutrality of all transactions handled through the con cern. MRS. GASTNER INDORSED HOOD RIVER CLUBS 'BACK RACE FOR FEDERATION PRESIDENT. Business and Social Organizations Launch Campaign for Woman Long Active In Civic Affairs. HOOD RIVER. Or.. Oct. 23. (Spe cial.) Almost any town In the state may find reason to support a favorite son who seeks some political honor, but Hood River is now making novel history by advancing support for favorite daughter. Mrs. Charles H. Castner. who Is a candidate for the presidency of the Oregon State Feder ation of Woman's Clubs, Since her candidacy was announced Mrs. Castner has received support from her club and from business, religious, civic and social elements of the city. While there has been none of the dem onstrations that" would characterize the campaign of a favorite son in state politics, Mrs. Castner will leave next week for Salem with the Unanimous backing of Hood River organizations. Mrs. Castner has been a resident of Hood River for the past 27 years. She Is a charter member of the Woman's Club. She has always been prominent in fraternal work. Mrs. Castner is now secretary of the board of trustees of the Riverside Con gregational Church. She was a mem ber of the committee that last Summer conducted a successful campaign for a municipal swimming pooL She was one of the leading spirits in securing the Hood River County library. Dele?rates of the local Woman's Club who will leave Monday for Salem are: Mrs. W. W. Rodwell. Mrs. Frank Dav enport, Jr.. Mrs. Jesse Edgington. Mrs. A. L. Page. Mrs. W. F. Laraway and Mrs. C. A. Bell. Douglas Copper Mines to Open. ROSEBURG, Or.. Oct. 23. (Spe cial.) It was announced here today that within the next few weeks at "Stream Line" YOU know that word: it's used in nearly every automobile adver tisement to describe a car built on smooth, flowing lines. We could almost call the Hart Schaff ner & Marx suits "stream line" clothes; they have the smooth, flowing lines that bring out the best of a young man's build. Look at the picture. Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits for Young men You ought to see these new Fall models. Don't miss them; make a point of com ing here. They're right. The suit like the one shown can be had for $25 ; others more and less. Rosenblatt Men's Store for Quality and Service 266 Morrison, Between Third and Fourth Streets least several of the best copper claims in the Southern Douglas County dis tricts will be put in operation. Ten claims belonging to DeWitt Van Os trand. of Wisconsin, and a number of Grants Pass people have been im proved lately, it is understood, and sev eral thousand dollars are being ex pended in equipping the claims with machinery. FRUIT PLANTING DECLINES Records Show Washington Resident: Growing More Shrubs. CLARKSTON, Wash.. Oct. 23. (Spe cial.) Showing that there has been a great falling off in the number of ap pies, pears, prunes, peaches and other fruits, in the number of trees planted In the state during the fapring of 191d while ornamental trees, nuts and orna mental shrubs have made an enormous increase, figures were received here from T. O. Morrison, Commissioner of Horticulture, on planting of nursery stock for the present year. Last Spring there were planted 100,- 500 apple trees, whereas in the spring of 1914 655,962 apple trees were set out. and in the Spring of 1913 723.197 trees were planted. Shrubs, on the other hand, show 60.782 planted in the Spring of 1913, 79,163 in 1914, and 133,610 in 1915. The decrease in number of fruit trees planted is attributed by Commissioner Morrison to the sudden decline of the land boom of & few years ago, when real estate speculators planted large orchards in order to dispose of land at high values. ' ELKS TO ADD 60 MEMBERS Campaign at Aberdeen Brings Lodge Membership to 300. ABERDEEN, Wash.. Oct. S3. (Spe cial.) Sixty new members will be added to the Aberdeen lodge of Elks before the close of October, due to a campaign for new members which was completed last week. Twenty of the 60 were initiated last week and that many more will be initiated on Thurs day evening. Several of the new members are the sons of men who helped build the present hall in 1904. Most of them are young business or professional men. The campaign for an increased membership lasted only about a month and from the first ap plications began to pour in to the sec retary. The initiation of the 60 will give the local lodge a membership ex ceeding 3V0. The recent enlargement of the Aber deen Elks' club rooms have given it accommodations for handling a much larger number of members. - Guardsmen to Be Hosts. CENTRALIA, Wash.. Oct. 23. (Spe cial.) Wednesday night the members of Company M, Second Regiment. Na- "00-y! My Corn-n!" H-m,Use 'Gets-It' Then You'll Have No Corns to Bump! Your Corns Will Come "Clean Off," Quick! Did you ever see a corn peel off after you've used "Gets-lt" on It? Well, it's a moving-picture for your life! And you hardly do a thing to it. Put a little "Gets-It" on. it dries at once. There's nothing to stick. Put shoes and stockinfirs on risrht over it. No oain no fuss. 48 hours corns gone. "Gets- It" never hurts the true flesh, never maKes toes sore, ir you nave tried al most everything else for corns, you will be much more surprised to see how quickly and easily your corns and calluses will come right off with "Gets- It." Quit limping and wrinkling up your face with corn-wrinkles. Try "Gets-It" tonight on that corn, callus, wart or bunion, and you'll be glad you uets-jt Is sold by-all druggist. -c a bottle, or sent direct by K. Uwrence & Co.. Chicago. bold in Portland ay The Owl Drug Co., 21 stores on the Paciiio coast. ' "Sere Corn Bumped Againl Vm Get-It,' Corns , i J 1 & Co. tional Guard of Washington, will be hosts for the young men of the city at an' entertainment in the local Ar mory. A programme is being arranged. Including a banquet and competition in military tactics. The purpose of the entertainment is to show the young men of Centralia what they are miss- ng by not enlisting in the National Guard.' SUFFERERS EAT BIG MEALS NOW No Fear of Indigestion, Gas, Sourness, Heartburn or Acidity. 'Pape's Diapepsin" Is Quickest, Surest Stomach Regulator Known. Every year regularly 'more than a million stomach sufferers in the United States. England and Canada take Pape's Diapepsin and realize not only immediate but lasting relief. This harmless preparation will digest anything you eat and overcome a sour. gassy or out-of-order stomach five minutes afterwards. If your meals don't fit comfortably. or what you eat lays like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that is a sign of indiges tion. Get from your pharmacist a 50-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and eat a rew of these candy-like tablets just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas. or heartburn, no fullness or heavy feeling In the stomach. no nausea. debilitating headaches, dizziness or in testinal griping. This will all go. and besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape s Diapepsin promptly regulates out-of-order stomachs, because it neu tralizes the acids In the stomach and digests your food Just the same as if your Btomach wasn't there. Relief in live minutes from all stom ach misery is waiting for you at anv drugstore. These large BO-cent 'cases contain more than sufficient to' thoroughly overcome any case of dyspeDsta in digestion or any other stomach dis order. Adv. MAKE YOUR OWN LIQU0RAT HOME CINCINNATI. O.. Oct. 23. By a. new method of concentration an expert dis tiller, of this city, has produced a. con centrated extract with which anyone can easily and quickly make in their own home any liquor, whiskey or cor dial at a. saving of over 50 per cent of the liquor dealers prices. A few min utes does the work, requiring: no ap paratus, no boil ins", no experience whatsoever. While the llquor-makinjc-at-home idea is new and startling' in its possibilities, its legality has been carefully investigated by the highest authorities and Its method has been found to conform with the laws in every respect. This new .method will be welcomed by thousands of people living- in districts where it is now even impossible-to obtain whiskey for medic inal purposes Anyone ran now save the heavy expenses, high licenses and enormous profits of the saloon keener and liquor dealers and can have in his home at any- time a pure, nourishing1 liquor at a very low cost. It is indeed a remarkable discovery, and he has already received thousands of letters of, praise. Anyone can try a full quart of his favorite liquor free by writing: to M. W. Prickett. 1376 Uni versal building:, Cincinnati, O., and ask for his booklet, 'Secrets of Making Liquors at Home. sent to anyone send ing their name and address Adv. mrs Toothache Gum - "A sweu. affair9 i 1 o. v- " nut uuiy oiups 5) Toothache, but cleanses 5 the cavity, removes all I odor, prevents decay. ( There sre imitations. See that you get uent ( 1 ootnache bum. All Drocxhts, or by mail ISc C. I. DENT A CO., Dttml. axa MILLION STOMACH FT 105.0