WORLD'S DOINGS OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume of General News from Ail Around the Earth. UNIVERSAL HAPPENINGS IN A NUTSP Live News Items of All Nations and Pacific Northwest Condensed for Our Busy Readers. Lassen peak is "spouting" again. Pendleton, Ore., Round-Up starts off with deeds of daring before an audi ence of 9000. The Bank of London is to put on a line of freight-carrying steamers be tween San Francisco and Hongkong. A noted physician of Denver de clares that within ten years science will practically, eliminate death from tuberculosis. Great Britain is seeking hundreds of physicians in this country, writes Sir James Barr, who declares "conscrip tion is coming. " It is declared that 800,000 German Boldiers are ready to attempt a passage through Serbia. . A Nish dispatch stateB that the Teutons will undertake this move soon. By a vote of 28 to 7 the Western Water Power conference passed a reso lution memorializing congress to pass laws giving state rights in matters of the disposition of water powers. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who 1b visiting the mines in Colorado, danced with a pretty woman at a school house at Cameron, to the tune of "Tippe rary." All damsels present had their "turn." Movements to have all Austro-Hun-garians quit the plants where they are employed in making munitions of war for the enemies of Austria have begun at Wheeling, W. Va. A speaker representing a Cleveland society ad dressed such workmen at Bridgeport, 0 Saturday night. A Swiss, who has just returned to Geneva from Constantinople, writes to the Gazette de Lausanne that there is no gas, electricity or 'candles in the Turkish capital and that conditions of life there are almost intolerable for foreigners. He says that 2000 work men from the Krupp plant in Germany are idle, owing to lack of raw ma terials. Although department of Justice officials have not completed their ex amination. of papers in possession of the government relating to the activi ties of James F. J. Archibald the Artierlran who acted as mosse-.er for Dr. Constantin T. Dumb, the Aus trian Ambassador, it 1b believed here that no attempt will be made to pro ceed against Archibald. Lynn Fuller, of Washington, D. C, attending Bchool at Stanford Univer sity, is declared to have died from an injury received in a class rush Septem ber 3. He died at the home of Repre sentative Hayes, near San Jose, where he was taken. An autopsy performed showed that his appendix burst. This is the second death that has resulted from inter-class fights in the history of Stanford, it was said. October 9 haB been designated by Gov. Withycombe, of Oregon, as "fire prevention day." A . resolution approving the exten sion of foreign credit, wholly as a matter of business and indorsing the neutrality policy of the national ad ministration was adopted unanimously by the Investment Bankers' associa tion of America in convention in Denver. Two Americans are reported to have been kidnaped by Mexican ban dits at Santo Domingo, near Villa Ahumada, 80 miles south of Juarez. The names of the men are given in messages to El Paso, Tex., as Fuller and McCabe. The meager information indicates they were taken from Ful ler's home. Of the 84 Austrian and German pa pers found in the possession of James F. J. Archibald, the American news paper correspondent, when he was ap prehended August 30 at Falmouth while proceeding from New York on board the Bteamer Rotterdam for Rot terdam, 17 are described as having been made public and the other 17 as being "insufficient to warrant publi cation, ine documents Include a letter from Dr. Constantin T. Dumba, the Austro-Hungarian minister of for eign affairs, which criticised Secretary of State Lansing's reply to Baron von Burian's protest against the large de liveries of weapons to the allies. Anthony Comstock, secretary of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, died at his home in Summit, N. J., after a brief illness. After more than 76 years of wedded life, Mrs. Thomas Slifer, aged 96 years, is dead at her home in Lanark, 111. Her husband, at the age of 97 years, survives her. Committees in the Western States Water Power conference in session in Portland have been named. Many speeches against the Ferris bill were made. States as far East as North Dakota are represented in the session. Full military honors crowned the burial of two victims of the F-4, which was lost in Honolulu harbor March 25, at the naval cemetery at Mare Island, California. Two more spies have been convicted by court martial in London. Official announcement was made here that a man and a woman of German origin, whose names were not given, were found guilty of attempting to commun icate information concerning the fleet. The man waa sentenced to be shot. The woman was sentenced to ten years in jail. FLEEING CONVICT SHOOTS TO DEATH SUPERINTENDENT OF PENITENTIARY Salem, Or. Harry Minto, superin tendent of the Oregon penitentiary, was shot and killed at 11 :30 Tuesday night a few miles north of Albany, by Otto Hooker, an escaped convict. A few hours earlier, Hooker had shot and perhaps fatally wounded J, J. Benson, city marshal of Jefferson. After Hooker had shot Marshal Ben son, Superintendent Minto started di rectly for Albany to head off the fugi tive convict. Returning north from Albany in company with Guard John son, he came upon Hooker. Minto and the convict opened fire at about the same time, Minto using a shotgun and the convict a revolver. A bullet hit Minto in the head, kill ing him instantly. Hooker escaped amid a hail of shots fired by Guard Johnson. Hooker evidently was not hit. He was seen an hour later near MillerBville station, some distance south of Jefferson. The gun with which Hooker killed Minto had been taken from Marshal Benson at Jefferson, the convict hav ing shot the officer while they were scuffling. Hooker escaped from a gang of 25 convicts grubbing brush a mile south of the penitentiary. When Hooker slipped into the brush from the field where the gang of pris oners was at work, he was not missed immediately. Later when the alarm was sounded, Superintendent Minto rushed to the scene in an automobile. Gasoline Causes Death of 35 and Sets Fire to Entire Town Ardmore, Okla. A spark from a workman's hammer ignited a tank of gasoline here late Tuesday, and from the ruins of two city ; blocks razed by the resulting explosion and the fires which followed, 31 bodies had been re covered. Fifty persons were believed to have been crushed to death under falling walls or burned to death while pinned in the debris. Search among the ruins is proceeding, the workerB cen tering their efforts on the tangled mass of lumber and bricks which had been the department store of Maddin & Co., where it was feared the bodies of many girl and woman shoppers and employes would be found. The property damage was estimated at $500,000. A score of fires caused by the flaming gasoline, which was thrown for blocks when the car ex ploded with a terrific detonation, were got under control after two hours' des perate work by the small local fire department, aided by every able-bodied man in the city not assisting the in jured. The city immediately was placed under martial law. The explosion wrecked an entire block of buildings in the heart of town and precipitated a scene of panic. Along Main street from the station to tte Whittington Hotel, every building was demolished, and on the opposite side of the street the plant of Swift & Co., a two-story rooming house and cafe and other business buildings were razed. Allies Still Push Against Germany's Strongholds on Western Front London The great offensive of the second British forces against both sides of the elbow joint on the German positions on the western front had not slackened Tuesday, but General Joffre's bulletin reported no new out standing success. The British official statement told briefly of heavy losses inflicted on the Germans northwest of Hulluch, where heavy German counter attacks were carried out during the course of the day. Berlin maintains that by means of counter attacks the allies' drives have been checked, with heavy losses, but as the Germans make no claim of hav ing recovered the ground taken from them, the indications are the allied gains of Saturday and Sunday general ly have been maintained and at some points improved, and that the fighting has reached the shite of viciouB at tacks and counter attacks, which may persist for weeks. Berlin reports insist that any stor- iea that the German line haB been pierced are untrue, and it is pointed out that those who have seen Bervice in the west know it to be impossible for the allies to break through. Man, 01, Seeks Office. Elizabeth, N. J. Milton C. Loudon, aged 91, of Linden, decided Tuesday morning to seek his first political office at the fall election. He has been nominated for justice of th peace by Linden Democrats, and his candidacy was returned by the Repub lican organization of the borough. Although he has never before been a candidate for any political office, Mr. Louden declares that if his ser vices as justice of the peace prove pleasing he will seek higher honors at the polls. Harriman Estate Loses. Rochester, N. Y. A verdict of $60, 000 against Mrs. Mary W. Harriman and the estate of her husband, the late Edward H. Harriman, railroad mag nate, was rendered by a sheriff's jury 1 uesday. Mrs. Anna N. Laner, of Penfield, brought the action to recover dam ages, alleging that false representa tions were made to her regarding i tract of land which she purchased from agents of Mr. Harriman in 11)0-1. No defense was entered by Mrs. Harriman. Air Bombs Hit Gat Works. Amsterdam, via London Airmen of the entente allies have again bom barded Bruges, Belgium. The sudden cessation of the flow of gas at Sluis, on the Belgian frontier, which is sup plied from Bruges, led to the suspicion here that bombs from the air craft struck the gas works, and a message received later from Bruges confirmed this belief. The whole city has been thrown in to darkness, the dispatch said. ROCKEFELLER GETS "TIP" FROM PUPIL How to Make 40 Per Cent Told by Colorado Child. CHILDREN MASTERS OF HIGH FINANCE School Store and Bank Maintained by Boys and Girls in Remote Mining Town Big Success. Trinidad, Colo. A 12-year-old girl Thursday told John D. Rockefeller, Jr., how to deal in stocks and bonds, how to run a bank, and how to finance a corporation that would pay a 40-cent annual dividend on a 10-cent block of common stock. It was at Sopris, where Mr. Rockefeller, in the course of his examination of Colorado Fuel & Iron company properties, Etopped long enough to visit the public school. In the highest grade of the school the teacher told the Standard Oil magnate that the pupils had established a bank and a store in which school supplies were sold. "Really," said Mr. Rockefeller, with the delight of a boy at a country fair, I should like to know something more about this system of high finance." Blanche, said the teacher, will you explain it to Mr. Rockefeller?" Then Blanche McArthur, daughter of a coal digger, walked to the front LIEUT. H. A. WADA Lieut. H. A. Wada, an aviator of the Japanese army who became a na tlonal hero at the storming of Ttlng tau, has recently passed through the United States on his way to France to study army aeronautic In the Eu ropean war. of the room, shook hands calmly with Mr. Rockefeller, and gravely began her financial lesson. "You see," Bhe began, "I am cash ier of the bank. We already have $5 on deposit, all brought by the chil dren. "Five dollars!" exclaimed Mr. Rockefeller. "Wonderful!" "We have part of this lent out to pupils on good security, of course, We are looking around for a perma nent investment for the rest of the money." Blanche then branched off into a dis cussion of stocks and bonds. Mr. Rockefeller listened gravely as the child detailed the elements which make bond issues safe or unsafe. "We have a store, too, Mr. Rocke- teller, sne continued. It waa formed by some of us boys and girls, who each subscribed 10 cents to the capital stock. We buy school supplies pencils and tablets at wholesale and sell them to the pupils. Last year the store paid between 80 and 40 cents dividend on each 10 cents in stock.' Drink Curbed in London. London King George has signed an order, which will be issued next week, applying the clauses of the control of liquor act to the London area. The order will prevent "treating" in Lon don. A similar order, which has been applied to other areas under the pow ers conferred by the defense of the realm, has decreased the number of cases of drunkenness, dealt with by the police 40 per cent. It is expected that the hours during which drink may be sold will be shortened and that di lution of spirits will be insisted on. 10,000 to Get Apples. Walla Walla, Wash. Ten thousand Jonathan apples, the finest to be found in the valley, have been shipped to San Francisco for free distribution Walla Walla day, September 29, at the exposition. The 100 boxes are the gift of the Baker Langdon orchard. They will be distributed by five girls. Literature describing the orchard and the valley will also be distributed. With this shipment was one of equal size for exhibit in the Washington display. $140,000 Mill Is Burned. Tacoma, Wash. Fire of unknown origin Thursday night wiped out the plant of the Lindstrom Handforth Lumber company at Rainier, 20 miles south of Tacoma, destroying the saw mill, shingle mill and lumber shed and 5,000,000 feet of lumber. The loss is estimated at more than $140,000, partly insured. OREGON SfflE NEWS Supreme Court Refuses to Check Naming Boundaries Salem Evils of gerrymandering school districtg by county boundary boards that the taxable area may be increased, are not within the province of the Supreme court to correct, but are administrative questions, accord ing to an opinion by Justice Burnett. A suit was brought by School District No. 35, in Tillamook county, to re strain the board from annexing part of its territory to aid the school district in which lies the town of Tillamook. The opinion sustains the decision of Circuit Judge Holmes and the suit is ordered dismissed. Efforts of the town of Tillamook to add to its taxable area for school pur poses led to the boundary board ex tending the lines of the district em bracing the town about 30 miles out, so as to include valuable timber land. The taxable wealth of the district was thus increased more than $1,000, 000. Alleging that a school district is a municipality, School DiBtrict No. 35, from which territory was taken, attempted to restrain the board. The complainants contended that only by vote of the electors could the district boundaries be altered. The changing of the limits, it was asserted, was tantamount to the amendment of the charter of a municipality. Suggestions for Handling Bees. Corvailis Beginners of bee-keeping should use hives of the Langstroth type because of thfe simplicity of both con struction and handling, is the recom mendation made by Professor H. F. Wilson, entomologist of the Oregon Agricultural College. The hives hold ing eight or ten frames are generally used, and the beginner Bhould first try the eight-frame hive. These can be made at home more cheaply than they can be purchased, but the factory-built ones are more satisfactory. All hives and parts should be of the same size and well painted, preferably white. This will protect the parts from decay, which will be further pre vented by raising them slightly above the surface of the ground. In Oregon where it is not necessary to put the hives in cellars during the winter, or to protect the bees by putting them in cases, the hives Bhould be put under shelter. A stand for housing six or eight hives may be made for from six to eight dollars. Tops and sides are detachable so that they may be re moved in summer without disturbing the bees. If a smoker is needed, the larger size is recommended, since it does not have to be replenished with fuel often. Bee veils may be bought ready-made or made at home. A piece of black netting in the shape of a sack open at both ends serves well. A better one is made of wire screen, rolled into a cylinder that will go over the head, covered on top by a piece of canvas, and finished by attaching two pieces of canvas to the lower end so that they will fall about the shoulderB and pre vent bees from crawling under the screen. A small tool for prying open the hive covers is needed; a screw driver will do. Queen excluders are placed between the body of the hive and the supers to prevent the queen from entering the extraction frames and depositing eggs. They are zinc sheets containing per forations large enough to permit the passage of the workers, but too small to allow the queen to pass through. They may be plain, or fastened to wooden frames to Btand about a fourth of an inch above the frames of the main body. Wire embedders are used to press the wire of the frames into the wax They are toothed rollers, A small brush, similar to a dining table scrap brush, will also be needed A pound spool of Mo. 30 tinned wire and a pair of gloves without fingers should also be provided. Professor Wilson thinks that a certain amount of equipment is essential to success in handling bees. College Head Resigns. Albany Harry Means Crooks has resigned as president of Albany Col lege to accept the presidency of Alma College, Michigan. He will leave about November 1. His successor has not been chosen. The executive com mittee of the board of trustees met to consider the resignation, but no an nouncement as to men under considera tion for the presidency has been made, President Crooks has been president of Albany College 10 years. During this time the endowment raised from $3300 to $213,000. Kendall Plans in Scale. Roseburg Upon the outcome of a meeting of the stockholders of the Douglas County Park & Fair associa tion, to be held here soon, probably will depend to a great extent the fu ture investments of Kendall Brothers, of Pittsburg, in this vicinity. The meeting was called to formulate plans whereby the local fair grounds could be surrendered to Kendall Brothers for a Bite for their proposed sawmill, Persons opposed to the railroad and sawmill have refused to surrender their stock in the grounds. Polk County Prunes Disanooint. Dallas Polk county prune growers are much disappointed over this year's crop. Prior to the picking season it was generally believed that an ordin ary yield would be harvested, but with the picking practically completed in dications point to the fact that hardly more than half a crop has been real ized. Many growers contracted their prunes at prices ranging from 4 cents to 5) cents a pound. Oregon Normal School Starts Well Monmouth The Oregon Normal School closed its first week of the year 1916-16 with a total enrollment of three hundred and ten, being an in crease of 60 per cent over a like period last year. The outlook is very favor able for total enrollment of at least four hundred during the year. HOSPITAL ft f - t If J IX1C2L! Army cooks preparing food In the tmusement place that has been taken VETERAN OF The Portsmouth, seventy - elght - year song and story, as Bhe was burning oft ment to a Junk dealer. Having been ADMIRAL TOMOSABURO KAT0 Vice-Admtral Tomosaburo Kato, minister of the navy in the new cabi net formed by Premier Okuma. He was chief of staff of one of the Japa nese squadrons during the Russian war, and commanded- the first squad ron in the siege of Tsingtau. He is not a politician, Japanese law requir ing that the navy and army heads shall always be officers on the active list. Tomato as a Fruit. After an argument In the Brooklyn courts lasting more than two months, a police court judge has ruled that a tomato is a fruit and not a vegetable. Two months ago Miss Eva Schecter was arrosted for selling tomatoes ou Sunday, iu violation of a law which for bids the selling of vegetables on that day. The woman raised the point that a tomato was not a vegetable, but a fruit, and the judge, after delv ing deep into the authorities, discov ered that the article in question was a first cousin to the persimmon, the grape and the currant The woman was discharged. Well, Rather. Uncle Jackson (showing city boy the farm) With all your city eddlra tion, sonny, I'll warrant you don t know which Bide you milk a cow from? The Boy Sure, I do! It's the un der Bide! Hamburg Patriot TAKEN FROM EXCHANGES There are no words of more than Mx syllables In the Bible. The British empire possesses more than 11,000 merchant ships. There are more than 400,000,000 people In the British empire. If the sun were made of solid coal It would burn out in less than 5,000 years. Norway's annual per capita con sumption of oats for food averages about 113 pounds. W1JMUU, l'..LM. - mill iiMtwiiiiwiimiJiiWiW II KITCHEN AT HELIOPOLIS, EGYPT "W3!d WWf ik.Sw?;v. jsssr.f KM V"- 5 r' '-' sioi; British hospital at Luna Park, Hellopolls, near Cairo. Luna Park is an over for the uso of wounded soldiers, AMERICAN NAVY PUT - old wooden frigate of war of the United States navy, famous In history, Governor's Island, near Boston, after having been sold ly the govern stripped or everything valuable, the hulk BERSAGLIERI IN ....: ft t $iJTt?' v ) kA4iT-4 v Detachment of Bersaglieri, the crack infantry of the Italian army, bat tling at the outskirts of a forest in the Carso region. They had been hidden in the thickets seen at the back of the picture and, upon the approach of the Austrians, came out to meet them. PRINCE LEOPOLD is III IfSfw h2 p UNDERWOOD. ll ''Ij' vis uNDeRwooo q First picture received of the German occupation of Warsaw, showing Prince Leopold of Bavaria riding at the head of his staff along one of the principal streets of the old Polish capital which his army had captured. The Himalaya was the last of the high mountain ranges to be climbed. From deep water to deep water the Panama canal is 60 miles in length. Tacks have been scattered in the streets of Jitney bus-infested Savan nah, Ga. They were pushed through sheets of cardboards and arranged business end rampant Col. Sherman Slarvlll, who was sworn in recently as mayor of Laurel, Del., is only twenty-four years old, and is the only Republican ever elected mayor there. saw,' Sup? ? 'IE , Jsww Z1E3I most of whom are Australians. TO TORCH was set afire and soon sank. THE CARSO REGION OCCUPYING WARSAW England, France and Russia possess about six times as many submarines as Germany. Over 5,000 Belgian residents In Can: ada have enlisted as recruits for their country's forces at the front Owing to the enormous number of guns lost by Austria, the artillery were recently provided with guns dis carded as obsolete. Diamonds exposed to radium be come highly radioactive and remain so for several years, according to a British scientist-