CHARGE OF BRITISH UNDER F RECURTA1N ONG El RMAN TRENCHES Shrieking Shells Burst Just in Advance of Steel-Helmet-ed Infantry, PRISONERS TROT BACK Those Germans Who Attempted to treat From Bettered Hiding1 Fleoes Are Cat Bows Between Mres. By Frederick Palmer. At the BrltUh Front. Aug. 23. L N. S.) (11:10 p. m.) The artillery commander spoke his patent "curtain of fire" and never In all the seven weeks of the Sornme battle has the correspondent witnessed anything equal to this "show," as the officers call every action, of taking one of the purs of the Thlepval ridge yesterday afternoon. Ever elnce July 1, when they failed in their effort to storm It, Thlepval rid; has glared at the British which kept hammering It with their guns. The Germans seem to have set the same store by It as by the heights of Olvenchy and Ouillemont, on their other flank. In front of the position captured yesterday the British Infantry has been decimated by machine gun fire elnce July 1. The trenches were Just as strong as they were then, with deep dugouts, the results of two years Of building. Shell Fire Beyond Endurance. Prisoners taken early in the of fensive had said that the British could never get a foothold on that ridge. Those taken yesterday, who also had been at Verdun, said they suffered nothing there at all equiva lent to the deluge of British shells and that it was impossible for human beings to endure such tornadoes. A thousand yards of front, both of the first line and of the support trench, were taken. One pair of eyes could see no more fetalis than the correspondent saw yesterday. The British and Germans engaged were outlined as clearly as a play around the second base from the grand stand. A home company of national guard doing a skirmish drill In camp could not be more distinct when seen from the side lines. It was '.he very finesse of war. The air was clear. It was a bright afternoon. The sun shining over one's houlder, one looked across the tiny valley toward the slope. Here the bare ground was cut by. a slash of a new British trench and beyond that one across the area, there was seen the dead grass among the wavy maze Of the old Orman flmt Una trnnch vongues ox oeain Jteaon xrenones. A Niagara rush of whistling creams from the capsules of a con centrated hell through the air began bursting over It. Their flashes hugged It in an infernal ecstacy, sweeping It with myriads of bullets and frag ments, shooting forked tongues of death Into its burrows. To show a head and escape being hit and bit more than once was as hopeless as to stand up in a thick hailstorm with out being hit by an icy bullet. Some Germans who had trusted flight rather than staying in the dug outs when the first dash of projectiles came, were seen running away toward the open. Now out of a British trench appeared a row of kbakl-tinted mush rooms with the steel helmets the Bri tish soldiers wear, then heads and shoulders and full forms as the charge went over the parapet. Every man with his full equipment In all Us details was visible Every figure and uniform, with all the others to the last item could be clearly observed. Machine anna Absent. No ominous and wicked staccato of a German machine gun coming into action was heard. No machine gunner could live at his post in that trench. The British line opened to go around the shell craters or obstacles that closed up their way. Occasionally a figure dropped and was lost in the grass. . Right into the face of that curtain of death from the shells going only a few feet over their heads they were moving. Then suddenly as It was laid the curtain of shell fire was lifted. Not a ingle shell out of thousands burst Short. Now the British were going over the German parapets, their bayo nets glistening la the sun. as they descended Into the trenches, the earth seemed to have swallowed them up again. Little clouds of smoke from bursting bombs arose from the trench. -There was hot work proceeding out of sight In the burrows. lrleoners Emerge rrorn Dugouts. One after another, as If they were eomlng to the top of the stairs, beads MAN AT WHEEL OF CAR WHICH SHOT OFF BRIDGE WAS INEXPERIENCED HAND u .... .w,,-wr . m lib. i,- -J tJji !n -7T. m& yr ml ' 0 'i: t Si r'' -irimufi i i I,,. mi iim iiif iiim.iiii.h iHfc ih t-iTli in isW"1 "O ''"u'"m'm" nun I ii mi i mi i r mi i ii i liimnwiiiiiririif STATE ORGANIZATION OP WILSON LEAGUES TO BE FINISe SOON iWork to Be Commenced by State Organizer Harry on September 1, MANY BRANCHES PLANNED Damaged auto as it appeared following fatal accident near Troutdale, Sunday night. and shoulders appeared out of the trench. Each man had his hands up and in file the prisoners moved past a Briton standing on the parapet. There is something humorous about It. The Briton might be a ticket taker. These Germans who had not waited to bo bombed jut of their dugouts but had surrendered, came legging it at top speed back toward the British first line trenches. What about tbe Ger man who had fled toward the German support trench? A light machine gun tbe British had put up rattled Into their backs. Ahead of them Was the British cur tain of fire. The British fire was now lifted onto the German support trench. They seem to disappear into the earth, some shot down, some wounded, others seeking security in shell craters. One figure alone held the eta go for a fraction of a minute, therein that lifeless space around them, a German officer stands up on the edge of a trench and looks around. lie goes down abruptly as if he had been hit a hard blow back of his knees. Another Charge Begins. New British helmets rise from the German first line and start another charge to the German support trenche. They will clear up any Germans ly ing In shell craters. They grow dim with the distance and the falling light. But they got there. They have the support trench, their signals say. And there la a bunch of running German prisoners coming from the British rear as fast as they can. They are envel oped in some shell bursts, the Ger man curtain of fire now being laid upon the old first line of the British trench area, which explains why all prisoners taken do not reach the col lecting stations alive. Those eeen fairly well out of the range of shell fire were smiling and seemed much relieved. "They will have a good square meal over in the camp by that clump of trees tonight." said a general. "And they have been under fire for the last time in thla war." Walking with them were British wounded, also smiling. Thus big gains are made between the big attacks, and the British now are within a thousand yards of Thlepval and retain their bold on Gulllemont. They are within 300 yards of Ginchy and Martinpuich. Ballinger-Pinchot Row Has Aftermath DRIVER OF MACHINE HELD RESPONSIBLE Fl TAL A 0 NT Coroner Makes Investigation of Mishap Which Cost the Life of a Girl, Federal Mstrict Court Considering Ac tion Tiled Against X, X Olavls, former &aad Office Official. San Francisco, Aug. 23. (U. P.) A an aftermath of the Ballinger Pinchot controversy, the federal dis trict court Is today considering an ac tion filed by the United States against Louis R. Glavls, former chief of the Paciflo coaat land"- office division, to recover $320. It is alleged that Glavls, as special disbursing agent, paid himself that amount as chief of the land office for the expenses of a trip to confer with President Taft and Gifford Pinchot in behalf of the latter, just before Bal linger resigned as secretary of the In terior. The government asserts the transcontinental trip was Unauthor ized. Hotel Man Faces Killing Charge. Los Angeles, CaX, Aug. ii. (P. N. S.) A verdict of homicide was re turned against Eben J. Gregory at the Inquest today over the body of John Brennan. Gregory, a rooming house proprietor, accused Brennan, a former tenant, of having stolen linen from the lodging house. A quarref arose and Gregory shot Brennan to death. Investigation by the county coroner of the "automobile accident which oc curred last Sunday night at the high wooden bridge, about one mile south of Troutdale, resulted in the driver of the wrecked machine being held re sponsible for the death of Miss Olive Krikaon of Seattle and the serious injury of her sister, Agnes, of Port land and J. H. Shields. W. H. Counsell of Milwaukie was driving south and bad stopped about 15 feet north of the bridge to let the Shields machine pass. Shields did not notice the stopped machine, the lights of the latter car being somewhat dim, and ran directly into It, interlocking the front wheels. Mr. Shields, who was not an exper ienced driver, started to back tela ma chine but, at the suggestion of his son, was going to let the latter take the wheel when suddenly he lost con tr 1 and tbe machine shot off the bridge Into the gully about 40 feet below. Both Shields and Miss Agnes Erick son are getting along as well as can be expected at the Good Samaritan hospital. Their complete recovery is believed to be assured by attending physicians. Mr. Shields has three broken ribs and one of the fractured bones punctured hla lung. The body of Miss Olive Erlckson was shipped to Seattle yesterday for interment. Pythians Thankful For Local Reception tetters Beoeived From Number of Su preme Representatives Mindful of Treatment at T. M. C. A, Appreciation of their reception at the T. M. C. A. during their atay In Port- iland baa been expressed by a number of supreme representatives to the re recent supreme convention of the Knlghta of Pythias in Portland In let ters received by association secretaries1. Particularly pleased with the provision that had been made for them in the Y. M. C. A, cafeteria were some of these representatives, notably W. E. Wilson and Will U. Mackey of the "Desert of Nevada, Oasis of Reno." Letters received by Stoney Dement, secretary in charge of the cafeteria," tell of the enjoyment of their visit to Portland and their stay at the Y. M. C. A., and Invite Portland association of ficials to Reno for a counter visit, promising royal entertainment. Every Town of Consequence- la State to Be Brought Into the Demo cratic Program. Hebrew Lecturer Draws Big Crowd j Many Are Turned Away From Library 1 Sail, Wnere Sr. Julian Morgeustexn Opened Series of Lectures. j Dr. Julian Morgenstern of the He- j brew Union college of Cincinnati gave the first series of three lectures on Genesis at the publlo library last nisht The attendance was so great that many people were turned away. Dr. Morgenstern spoke of the first two stories of the creation of Genesis. He told of the original adaptations of the first Babylonian myths by the Jewish writers to convey the religious ideals of the" Jewish faith. Dr. Mor genstern explained that the Jewish religion was based on the idea of uni versal good. He said that the mod ern Jewish view had been used by few writers in the sixth century, B. C. He talked of the key sentence of the creation story, which means that God saw for a good purpose. Dr. Morgenstern speaka tonight and tomorrow night at library hall. The final work In the organization of Woodrow Wilson leagues throughout the state will be commenced on the first of the coming month, at which time G. Y. Harry, state orgunizer, will leave for a trip throughout eastern Oregon. H. W. Lang, secretary of the con ference which met in Portland recently, and which resulted In the organization of the Oregon Association of Woodrow Wilson leagues, is now working on the report of that conference. It will be ready for publication and distribution within a few days. The work of organizing the state will be under the active direction of Mr. Harry, secretary attid general or ganiser of the association. It Is ex pected that a branch league will be formed in every town of consequence In the state. The officers of the state association are: President. Dr. C. J. Smith of Portland; first vice preeldent. Dr. Es ther Pohl-Lovejoy of Portland; second vice president. El H, Richard of Giants Pass; third vice president, J. R. Plack aby of Ontario; fourth vice president, Mre. J. E. Rogers of Portland; treas urer, A. F. Flegel of Portland; execu tive committee, C. J. Smith, A. F. Flegel, Dr. Esther Pohl-Lovejoy, G. Y. Harry, all of Portland; George K. Bald win of Klamath Falls. A. 8. Bor.nett of The Dalles and John H. Smith of Astoria. LEAGUE WILL MEET TONIGHT Two Addresses Scheduled for Wil son Organization. The regular meeting of the Woodrow Wilson league will be held this eve ning at 8 o'clock at Central Library hall. Two addresses are schedulel, one by Miss Anne Shannon Monroe, who will speak on Woodrow Wilson, and the other by Dr. Esther Pohl Lovejoy, who will discuss the recent Woman's Party convention at Colo rado Springs and its attitude towards the accomplishment of woman's suff rage. In addition to the addresses Miss Anna Allen will sing, being accompa nied on the piano by Mrs. Osborn. Dr. Lovejoy will leave for the east In a few days to attend the notification meeting at Shadow Lawn, N. J., at which time President Wilson will be notified of his nomination. Modern Woodmen Are to Act as Hosts Everybody Will Se Invited to Columbia Park Saturday to Annual Field Day of fraternal Organisation, The five Portland camps of the Mod ern Woodmen of America will hold their annual field day at Columbia Park Saturday, and committees from all the camps are working industrious ly on the day's program. Everyone is invited to attend, and preparations are being made to accommodate a large Ciowd. A feature of the program will be an outdoor initiation, which will be open to everyone without charge. A live goat will play a prominent part in the ceremonies. Sol Rlchanbach. venerable consul of Rose City camp, will preside and have charge of the work.' H. A. Edwards will act as adviser, John Voll mer as past consul, Charles Meadows as banker. J. W. Simmons, deputy bead consul for the state of Oregon, as es cort, and P. S. Schrader as watchman. The program for the day will com mence at 2 p. m. and will continue un til a late hour at night. Raees for everyone but one-legged people will be staged, a greased pole contest, a red hot five-inning baseball game between the fats and leans and a pie eating con test. Rev. J. G. Tate will cloae the program with a few remarks. The evening program will begin at 8 p. m. with a pillow fight between the Bears and the Polecats for the Modern Woodmen championship of the city. This will be followed by a tug of war between teams from Alberta and Oregon Fir camps. Following will come the public initiation. Neighbor 44 Girls Signed For Training at Barracks School Forty-four girls have -enrolled for the National Service srhool it to open tomorrow afternoon at Vancouver barracks and their ijfc numbers will bo augmented by 4 several Vancouver girls, which 4t will total about 56 student to begin work tomorrow evening. There will be the flag raising s at 4 o'clock when all those en- listed must be present. The principal aim in ntab llshlng the Service school is to instruct women in elenven- try hygiene and home cure of the sick In order that they may be assigned positions at Jteti Cross base hospitals. The stu- dents who obtain certificates from the school can cjUHllfy nn t nurses and may receive appoint- ment from Washington, i. c. 4 ft J. W. Bimmons will deliver the address of the evening at the close of the In itiation. The committee in charge connlsla of J. J. Gotthardt. chairman; A. 1. Cage, secretary; George Dearlove, Joseph Goodal, N. D. Turtledove, George Matthews, J. P. Vollmar. Sol Rlchan bach, J. Poffenberger, Kred Grappe, A. Li. Marcy and Ii. W. Free. ' DEATHS OF NORTHWEST Mrs. II. O. Craven, Dallas. Dallas, Or., Aug. 23. Mrs. Tempa Grace Craven, wife of R. C. Craven, died at her home in this city, Monday evening, after a long Illness from cancer. Mrs. Craven was one of the most highly esteemed women of Dal las. Besides her husband, she leaves three children. Funeral services will be held at the United Evangelical church this afternoon. Bond Interest Is Dne. Every effort is to e made to have property owners pay interest now due and payable on bonded street and sewer assessment installments. Ap proximately 457,000 is due In Interest between now and September 1. On thai date the city will have to meet the interest on outstanding improvement bonds, totaling approximately $50,000. Mrs. Minnie Wiltse, Albany. Albany, Or., Aug. 23. Mrs. Minnie Wiltse, aged 23, wife of Charles Wiltse of Catlow, Hartley county, Ore gon, died here yesterday as the result of an operation. She is a daughter of Mrs. J. H. Colwell, who lives near Plainvlew, east of this city. Besides her mother and husband she is sur vived by two children, Esther, aged 6, and Clarke, aged 3. Three brothers, Clarance Colwell of FossIL Or.; George and Valentine Colwell of Plain view, and two sisters, Mrs. Annie Oommow of Catlow and Miss Vesta Colwell of Plainvlew also survive. She j was born five miles east of Albany i July 12, 1893. The funeral was held , from the Christian church" here this! afternoon. Burial In Riverside cemetery. H. E. Mann, Chemawa. Chemawa, Or.. Aug. 28. The fu neral of H. EL Mann, who died Thurs day in Portland, was held yesterday at ' Salem. For 15 years he had been the I blacksmith here, and was enjoying his vacation In Portland when stricken ' with appendicitis and operated upon. 1 He is survived by his daughters, Nora and Maria, and son Edward. His wife and two daughters recently died. J. H. Hart, Dallas. i Dallas, Or., Aug. 23. J. H. Hart, ' well-known citizen of Dallas, died Monday night He is survived by a wife and several grown children, one ' daughter being the wife of W. I. Ford, ' superintendent of the Dallas city school a j Mrs. T. C. Case, Lebanon. Albany, Or.. Aug. 23 Mrs. T. . Case of Lebanon died In St. Mary's hospital here yesterday morning from organic heart trouble. The body was taken to Lebanon for burial. She was I 49 years old. Fake Weather Prognosticators Scored LongRange EstimatesTermeJ Worthless m Aw go on! Ask htm. He knows more about that fragrant Presado Blend than the fellow who writes these advertisements. lOM'iiEENE the cigar with that Presado Blend J. R. SMITH COMPANY, Distributor Portland, Orevon V District Forecaster E. A. Beals of the United States weather office In Portland told the Rotary club yester day that all calendars making fore casts for the year are fakes. All long" range weather predictions have been found merltless, he said, and the predictors are usually mere pub licity seekers. Makers of barometers who Indicate "fair," "rainy," "cloudy" and so forth at various positions on tbe Instruments are deceiving pur chasers because while the barometer measures atmospheric pressure It is no true guide to the state of the weather, whether it will be cloudy or clear. Forecasters, he said, must be men of quick intelligence, able to compre hend, having retentive memories and long experience. It isn't safe to pre dict longer than a day ahead and after every consideration has been taken Into account the prediction may be wrong. Still, 85 per cent of the predictions are correct. "Probably fair," Mr. Beals explained, means that It isn't likely to rain over more than one-fourth of the district forecaster's territory. Sometimes rain Is predicted and falls to materialise In Portland, but will fall Just outside. Then the weather office Is charged with an other "miss.- It is hard to predict the weather as between eastern and western Oregon because a rain wind may not contain enough moisture for rain after it gets over the Cascade mountains. There are points on the coast where the annual precipitation IS 131 inches, and points in eastern Oregon where the rainfall is less than eight Inches sT year. ... The Etruscans, before the tim of the Romans, were the first to make weather predictions, said Mr. Beals. For a long time weather predictions were left to soothsayers, magicians, oracles and priests. The government weather service of this country was established in 1870. The first publi cation of weather maps was under taken in Portland 25 years ago. All cfvlllaed countries now have weather service. The river weather service, declared the forecaster, represents a value much greater than the entire an nual cost of maintaining the weather office in Portland. If You Suffer From Pulmonary Troubles Jt is most Important that you should pay special attention to diet and living conditions, and get plenty of rest and fresh air day and nightT In many instances, hves claimed by such affections might have been saved by timely care of this sort. Freauentlv however, a weakened system needs assistance. Under these circumstances trv Eok. man's Alterative, a lime treatment which has the unique quality of beine easily assimilated by the aTersil person. ,e It is a widely-used preparation, which has effected beneficial results in many cases of severe pulmonary affections. la arty event, it may be tried with out risk or danger. It contains no opiates, narcotics or habit forming dni""- J Sold by The Owl Drug Co. and leading druggists. i Zckaaaa laboratory, Philadelphia. I When writing or culling on adv rllen, pieafe mention Tli Journal. i rty.) s tt. V"le 4 '4 'S raw w m was jr CNN iOS 7 &&i3SSy , dWszs .sTA ' xt V'3vv7 'if t'7 JeZ&&'''Sy V t'Y 1023 r 1023 Ca&Tlad cSrs Kdenie3 in the iUfe Of UreJOft Compare 1023 with th figure shown for any other fr iri trie Cadillac price field. Compare 1023 with the sum total of all of those cars listing at anywhere near the Cadillac price. 672 Dodge Brothers cars registered as neW ptirchases since the 1916 number plates were first issued. Compare 672 with the balance of the figure shown for new! car tales. Then consider the length of time that the Dodge Brother car has been on the market, and consider that during this comparatively short time not a single Dodge Brothers dealer has been able to procure rufficient cars to meet the demand. Washington Street, at 21st, Portland, Ore. Y. M. C. A. Business School Both Day and Evening Courses. New Terms Opens September 8. This school offers very thorough and very practical course in Business Office) Training including Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typewriting and all sub sidiary subjects needed with such a course of training. The Instructors are experts, the individual element predominates. Special emphasis Is placed upon Penmanship, Spelling and Business Letter Writing iq the Stenographic School. OTHER Y. M. C A. SCHOOLS DAY SCHOOLS Electrical Engineering, Wireless Telegraphy, College Preparatory, Automobile and Machine, and Boys' Academic (Elementlry). These courses range in length of time from two months to four years. NIGHT SCHOOLS All of the above courses are offered in the Night Schools in addition to the following: Pharmacy, Salesmanship, Business Administration and Accountancy, Advertising, Architecture, Mechanical Drafting, Public Speaking, Surveying and Mapping. Show Card Writing and Conversational Spanish. BULLETIN NUMBER ONE, showing a complete schrdule of courses and prices, will be mailed on request. ' DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, Y. M. C A., PORTLAND e Excursions East VIA THE "MILWAUKEE" Every day until September 30th ?WS1f,CfBcPoJ"tIanL . cbLco lves Union Depot 7 P. M. daily via Spokane Butte, Aberdeen. H. D.. Minneapolis. Columbian trains over this newly electrified Mountain Route. ?cinde,r"' dust no smoke to obscure the view. Electrifica tion and other literature gladly furnished upon request Portland Office, Third and Stark Sts. Phones , B. at. OAsUUSOJr, siatrtet might sad rasssftrs Arst.