WORLD HAPPENINGS OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Erenti of Noted People, Government! and Pacific Northwest and Other Things Worth Knowing. The Christiania Social Demokraten asserts that Norway has provisions for only one month. Import prospects are also gloomy, it is said. The State department was advised Sunday of the sinking August 23 of the American schooner Carl F. Creasy, of Bath. Me., by a submarine. The crew of seven was saved. According to information from Mad rid, the Portuguese government em ployes in the postal and telegraph service have gone on strike. Suspen sion of all communication has resulted, Conscientious objectors accepted for military service were advised by Sec retary Baker Tuesday to make no pro test until assigned in training camp to some task particularly violating their scruples. According to the Cologne Gazette, the first step toward the self-government of Poland has been taken. From now on justice will be administered in the name of the Polish crown and by Polish judges. German airplanes visited the South east coast of England Monday night, dropping bombs at various places, ac cording to an official statement. The Petrograd Council of Work men's and Soldiers' Deputies Tuesday adopted a resolution of protest against the re-establishment of the death pen alty at the front. They demanded that the measure be revoked. H. W. Griesbach, of Sweet Grass, Mont., and J. R. BrennHn, of Tacoma, Wash., were listed as killed in action in the Canadian casualty liBt issued Monday. Among the gased is named R. J. McAdam, Butte, Mont. Practically one-third of the Bmall arms ammunition supplied to General Pershing's troops in France has been found defetcive from chemical reaction set up in the powder after manufac ture at the Frankfort arsenal. ' German troops appeared for the first time on the Carso (Italy) front Thurs day morning, according to Austrian prisoners. The Austrians are rushing reinforcements from the Russo-Rou-manian front, the prisoners Bay. Snow has put out a serious fire near Gordon Pass, in the Flathead country, according to reports received at forest service headquarters at Missoula, Mont. All fires were abating and con trol line have been establiched every where. The National War Committee an nounces a prize essay contest for chil dren between the ages of 8 and 18 on the topic; VWhy America Entered the War." The prizes include a $r0 Lib erty Bond and gold coins of $25, $15 and $10 respectively. from a concealed position on a mountainside near Middlesboro, Ky., 200 shots were fired across the valley early Monday at a party of repair men, proceeding to the mines of the Lower Lignite Coal company, where a strike of union coal miners is in prog ress. The Swiss sanitary authorities at Basel and all along the German fron tier are taking measures to prevent dysentery, typhus and scarlatina. which prevail in Rhine towns, from entering Switzerland. All travelers coming from Germany are required to undergo medical examination. Five Italian aviators have returned from a successful flight to Vienna. Leaving the Italian front the machines passed over the Austrian lines unob served and flew straight to the' Aus trian capital, where the aviators dropped pamphlets informing the peo ple of the city of the great Italian vic tory. The certificate of death of Kiolpgn, an Indian, who died July 7, near Ko- nan, Mont., on the Flathead Indian reservation at the age of 110, has been filed with the state board of health, He was an Oregon Indian. Membership of the American Red Cross has reached the 3,500,000 mark and is increasing at the rate of 25,000 to 100,000 a day, according to a head Quarters announcement. At the be ginning of the year the total was 275,- 000. ; -. Federal authorities at St. Paul, after examining John Slump, who told Fort Snelling officers that he'was a German spy, announced that the man was mentally deranged and that he had been treated at a hospital for the in sane in Washington state. Eleven men pleaded guilty in the United States district court in Spo kane Thursday to having failed to reg ister under the selective draft law and were sentenced to from one day to ix months in jail. Three other men indicted for having failed to register pleaded not guilty. RUSSIANS QUIT RIGA Big Gulfport Falls Into Hands of Teu tons, but Winter May Prevent Pressing Their Advantage. Riga, Russia's big port on the Gulf of Raig, is in the hands of the Ger mans and its garrison and the civilian population are in retreat eastward. Following up rapidly the advantage they gained in driving the Russians across the Dvina river on both sides of Uxkrull last Saturday, the Germans threw bridges across this stream and soon were on the heels of the former defenders, some of whom offered re sistance, but others of whom showed the white feather, giving the invaders no trouble in marching up the eastern bank of the Dvina toward Riga, 15 miles distant. With the falling back of the Rus sians from the city proper and the ad vance of the Germans northward along both Bides of the stream, the Russians still defending the western bank around Dahlen seemingly are in danger of being caught between the two fast moving bodies of the enemy and made prisoner. Behind them the Russians, in their retreat from Riga, are laying the country in waste, burning villages and farms. Whether the city itself remains intact has not yet been made known, but doubtless the guns in the fortress and the ammunition stores either were moved or destroyed to pre vent them falling into the hands of the Germans. Aside from the strategic value of controlling the Gulf of Riga and of a base nearer the mouth of the Gulf of Finland, at the head of which Petro grad is situated, for the moment it is impossible to Bee the importance of the German gain, especialy with the near approach of winter, when milli tary operations in this northern region are almost impossible. Washington, D. C. Abandonment of Riga in the face of the new German drive into Russia, and even the evacua tion of Petrograd itself, have been forecast as possibilities in confidential advices to the American government during the last two weeks. Such a development is not regarded with so much alarm as might be supposed. With Riga abandoned and German occupation of Petrograd in prospect, the seat of the Russian provisional government undoubtedly will be moved to Moscow. Much as they regret see ing the Russian captial occupied by a German army, the forceful thinking men of Kussia, working to set up a government, may regard it as a bless ing in disguise. There are many advantages in mov ing the Russian capital to Moscow. It is the center of the Conservative group and commands the sentimental, almost religious regard of the Russian popu lace as the ancient capital of the old empire, surrounded with the tradition of Russia's greatness, the triumphs of Alexander, Catherine and Peter the Great. Furthermore, some Russians of the new government are said to think that a German occupation of Riga and even Petrograd, might be a wholesome object lesson for the Radi cal element which has been hampering the new government, and that an ex perience under the military heel of Germany might convince them of the need of supporting the government as now constituted to save their father land for Russia. USE BAYONETS ON STRIKERS Illinois Guardsmen Disperse Rioting Mob Bricks Hurled Freely. Springfield, 111. Charging with fixed bayonets, Ilinois Guardsmen Monday night dispersed a mob of more than 1000. streetcar-sympathizers who half an hour before had wrecked tour streetcars and were then attacking the headquarters of the railway company intent on wrecking and ransacking the building. , Dispersed by the soldiers from the corner In the main business section. Where the cars had been attacked, the mob headed for the offices of the rail road company and the Springfield Gas & Electric company, subsidiary. Six soldiers on guard at the building held the crowd in check for some time, but bolder ones in the mob finally started hurling bricks at the plateglass windows, riddling the, front of the building. As -reinforcements arrived and charged them with the butts of their guns, the rioters fled in confu sion, a few of them being trampled, but none seriously injured. No shots were fired by the soldiers. Holland Fears Misery. Amsterdam Representing 150,000 workers, a trades union congress that met here Tuesday discussed food prob lems in connection with the stoppage of imports from America and the un favorable outlook for the home crops, which have been greatly damaged by the continuous rain storms. The meet ing adopted resolution calling upon the government to reduce the maxi mum prices on food, fuel and shoe leather, and to take other measures to' prevent misery an! ..want among the working classes during winter. 169 Whales Are Captured. Aberdeen, Wash. A total of 169 whales has been brought in this season by the four whaling ships of the Bay City station, fifteen miles " west of here, with Ave weeks of whale-hunting remaining, The year's caUih will ap proximate 250. i Seven tons, 14,000 pounds, of whale meat, was taken recently from one finback, which is the largest amount of meat furnished by any whale taken this season. PRESIDEN I NEW ARMY PARADE First Increment of Selective Draft Leaves for Camps. MANY MARCH AWAY Members of House and Senate Join Ranks of Soldiers to Pay Honor to Departing Young Army. Washington, D. C. The President and congress of the United States and the allied nations, through their diplo matic representatives, joined Tuesday in paying honor to the men selected from the District of Columbia for service in America's National army raised for the battle for democracy. Washington, long used to glittering processions, opened its eyes and cheered itself hoarse at the spectacle. For two hours, while in other cities throughout the Nation other thousands moved over the first part of the long road that may lead to French battle fields, Pennsylvania avenue heard the tramp of marching men, the jingle of spurs and the rumble of artillery. About 26,000 men, women end children passed a reviewing stand be fore the White House, where the Pres ident and his guests watched the parade. More than half of the long line was in uniform. There were reg ulars from infantry, cavalry and artil lery regiments stationed near by, mar ines from the officers' training camp at Fort Myer and hundreds of Army and Navy officers attached to the de partments here. President Wilson himself, eyes to the front, stepping out like a freshly trained recruit, marched at the head of the long line, surrounded by a commit tee of citizens which arranged the par ade. Behind him, in unbroken ranks, came most of the members of the sen ate and house, in such a tribute as they probably never have given on any occasion in the long years Bince this country became a nation. When he reached the White House the President left the ranks and took his place in the stand by Mrs. Wilson. It was the second time he had gone a-foot over Pennsylvania avenue. The first time when he led the preparedness parade before the United States went to war. At the head of the senators marched Senators Nelson and Warren, of the Union army, and Martin and Bank head, who fought on the Bide of the gray in the Civil War, and with them Senators Chamberlain, chairman of the military committee, and Lodge, rank ing Republican of the naval commit tee. The house turned out hundreds of its membership, headed by Speaker Clark and " Uncle Joe Cannon. Sen ators La Follette and Gronna were conspicuously absent. MAYOR IS HUNG IN EFFIGY Council Votes Praise to Gov. Lowden for Refusing Pacifist Meeting. Chicago Chicago's City counci sitting as a committee of the whole, at the end of a turbulent four-hour ses sion Wednesday, adopted by a vote of 42 to 6 a resolution praising Governor Frank O. Lowden for his action in overriding Mayor --William Hale Thompson by refusing permission to the People s Council for Democracy and Peace Terms to meet in Illinois and urging the Btate's chief executive to prevent any meeting in the future which may be inimical to the public safety or disloyal or treasonable to the United States. Mayor Thompson and his friends in the council made a stubborn parliamen tary fight to prevent the adoption of the resoltion. Traffic was blocked Wednesday night on Michigan boulevard by a large crowd and scores of automobiles which gathered . around an effigy ' of Mayor Thompson, hanged to a lamp post on an island of safety at the Randolph street crossing of the thoroughfare. A placard pinned to the manikin bore the inscription: "Sic semper Billbus. "Veterans of foreign wars." Rich Man's Son is Loser. Salt Lake City George Low Ab bott, son of a wealthy Ogden manu facturer, who was ordered to report for military service, but who success fully claimed exemption, will have to go to war, after all. Abbott claimed exemption because he said his wife was dependent upon him. Following its action when it granted exemption, the board Wednesday decided to accept an offer made by I. N. Parker, of Redmond, Utah, who said that he would be prepared to support Abbott's wife while he was on military duty. ' Peace Answer Discussed. Amsterdam Baron von Kuehlmann, the German foreign secretary, who is on a visit to Vienna, discussed Wednes day with Count Czernin, the Austro Hungarian foreign minister, the terms of the reply of the central powers to the pope. - The emperor received both ministers and heard their proposals re garding the answer. Baron von Kuehl mann is expected to return' to Berlin at once and will proceed Immediately to headquarter to report to the kaiser. 1 TO AID FAMILIES OF Red Cross Undertakes to Care for the Dependents of Sol , diers and Sailors. PREPARE FOR A LARGE TASK "Not Work of Charity, but Most Sa cred Duty to See That They Lack for No Comfort," Says Director Lies. By CHARLES LEE BRYSON. Chicago. Many an American sol dier and sailor will fight with Infinitely stronger spirit In this war for the knowledge that the American Red Cross Is standing firm between those he leaves at home, and the grim spec ter of want. For the announcement has gone forth from Washington that the fumllles of fighting men are to be un der the protection of the great hu manitarian arm of the government. The whole world knows of the work the Red Cross has done In caring for the sick and wounded In war, relieving the distress of the victims of fire and flood, earthquake, famine and tornado In civil disaster, and organizing base hospitals for the army and navy. But few realize that while all this was be ing done, preparation was under way to look after the loved ones whom the fighting men will leave at home. When the United States troops were at the Mexican border the Red Cross found It necessary to make provision for the families of ninny Guardsmen who had left dependents ut home. This made plain what must be done In case an army of a million men should be called abroad, and with characteristic Red Cross forelmndednoss a plan was at once formulated. So far as possible, the war department will choose men who have no dependents ; but In spite of everything many a married man, many a son whose mother depends on him, and many others to whom rela tives look for support, will go to the front. It is these who are left behind that will be watched over by the Red Cross. Department of Family Relief. To safeguard those who may need our care, the Red Cross has estab lished, under the director general of civilian relief, a new department called that of family relief. It has called to the head of this department Eugene T. Lies, for many years general superin tendent of the United Charities of Chi cago, a man of wide experience and ripe judgment, Mr. Lies was one of those who at tended a conference of national and division officers of the Red Cross, cnlled at Chicago by John J. O'Connor, director of the central division, and at this conference Mr, Lies outlined his policy. Later, at the National Confer ence of Charities nt Pittsburgh, Mr. Lies enlarged upon this subject. He made It very plain that It Is a labor of love, and In no sense of charity, that the Rod Cross hns undertaken. "We must remember," said Mr. Lies, HEADS BELGIAN RELIEF Jonkheor Charles Ruys de Boerenr brock, n noted Dutchman, has been ap pointed as head of the Belgian relief commission, succeeding Herbert Hoov er, America's food chief. The Jonkheer Is a Roman Catholic deputy for a Llmburg constituency and a son of the queen's commission for that province. He Is an expert social worker and hns given much as sistance to Belgian refugees. Hoover built a complete organiza tion for the Belgian relief work and it la running so smoothly that the Jonk heer will have little trouble la con tinuing the great machinery for the distribution of food and clothing for the needy In Belgium. h. b U. S. FIGHTERS "that there Is not the faintest shadow of 'charity' In Its usual meaning, at tached to this work we are undertak ing. If there Is want among the fami lies of our soldiers and sailors. It Is not because they have been Idle or wasteful, or Improvident, or that they have been In anywise to blame. Rather It is because they have done the finest and the noblest thing possible, and have given to their country those to whom they have looked for support and protection. "We go to them, not as doing them a charity, but as expressing our gatltude to them for what they have done as a duty we owe to those whom they have given to fight our battles. Look ing at It In this light, we can see how little we can afford to permit any one of these to suffer because of the noble thing they have done." Task a Big One. The officers of the Red Cross have shown a large grasp of the situation. They realize the task that will be theirs. This Is shown In a part of Mr. Lies' Pittsburgh talk, in which he said. that very soon there will be 300,000 National Guardsmen In the field, and that "by January 1 next It Is altogether possible that there will be under arms about 2,800,000 men In all branches of the service. "We must prepare for a large task, to be executed through the civilian re lief committee of the various Red Cross chapters. These committees should have carefully chosen members, some, at least, of whom have experi ence In social work." It Is not merely as a feeding and clothing agency that the Red Cross proposes to act toward these depend ents, as Mr. Lies points out, but as a sort of "next friend" In all troubles such as wages, Insurance, ' difficulties with landlords, Illness, accident and the moral welfare of children. "We would show ourselves unfit to enjoy the blessings of democracy," says Mr. Lies, "if, while sending our sol diers to the front to fight the enemy, we permitted their families at home to fight want, disease, and moral dangers alone. It would look like willful pun ishment for the sacrifices made by them. "Only by getting close to them through friendly , visitation, sympa thetic Inquiry, nelghborllness and Intel ligent interpretation of home condi tions, can untoward fuctors be discov ered. The Red Cross Is in the field to do just this kind of service In addition to supplementary relief work, and It wants to do It as thoroughly as pos sible." It Is In this spirit, then, that the Red Cross Is approaching the task of pro tecting the dependents left behind by the fighting men. Backed by the Amer ican people, there Is no room for doubt as to how It will perform this task. CALL BRITISH TARS "LIMEYS" American Bluejackets In European Waters Have Nickname for Everything They See. London. American bluejackets on duty In European waters have a nick name of their own for England's sail ors and soldiers. They call them "limeys;" the individual being known as a "lime." The American sailor men apply the designation to all English fighters Just as the British refer to their soldiers as "Tommies." The sailor from the United States has his nickname for nearly every thing he sees. Bluejackets who had served In the near and far East first started calling British sailors and sol diers "lime Juicers," because of their fondness for fruit Juice and charged water. . Now the designation has been short ened down and everything British Is "limey." British soldiers' and sailors clubs are known as "limey clubs," and British-brewed lager beer Is commonly spoken of as "limey beer." HAS NINE GRANDSONS IN BRITISH ARMY Denver, Colo. The Victoria Cross might be the reward of Mrs. S. Harris, -aged seventy, were her contributions to the allied cause brought to the at tention of King George. Mrs. Harris has nine grandsons now fighting In the British armies, and an only son is about to en list In Uncle Sam's army of lib erty. All nine grandsons are broth ers, children of Mrs. Harris' daughter, who Is now dead. The boys were living In Saskatche wan, In western Canada, when the Dominion government '. first called for volunteers. Seven of them enlisted In the famous Princess Pat regiment and, de spite the heavy casualties In that crack organization, they ore all alive. Two others en tered the British navy. The boys are Thomas, George, Wil liam, James, J. B., Justus, Lar ry, W. B. and Dennis Pollard, and range In age from nineteen to thirty-three years. Mrs. Harris' husband was a Confederate soldier. Finds Lost Watch. Bryan, u. ieer sno.v, uvtng near Stryker, lost his watch while plowing three years ago. ne found that Iden tical watch dragging along behind his riding cultivator several days ago. .It was not ticking, but It will a soon as aome slight repairs are made. RECOVERS POWER OF SPEECH if iS Joseph Getzelowltz, dumb from; birth, suddenly recovered his powerl of speech in Bellevue hospital, New; York, while . recovering from a fall. ' Several boys had been tormenting; Getzelowltz In Henry street, near the home of his sister," where he lived. In I chasing the boys, he stumbled ana; fell. A policeman picked him up and! had him sent to Bellevue. There the( physicians examined the young Rus- slan and found that his vocal chords had all the appearances of being nor-i mal and In their opinion simply lacked! the will to talk. While reading a prayer book he suddenly began speak- lng Yiddish with ease and perfect pro-1 nunclatlon. He now speaks a few words of Eng lish. ; GUIDES FOR IT'S SOLDIERS Great Britain Carefully Provides for the Man Home on Leave ; From the Front London. Soldiers on leave from the front in the early days of the war had the greatest difficulty In finding their, way about London and across it to; main line centers leading to their pro! vlnclal homes, but this has all been' altered, and what was once chaos at Victoria station now works like any, part of the military machine. This has been made possible by the help of the volunteers of the National . Guard and by members of the Worn- an's Reserve Ambulance company, who take charge of the men on arrival, j change their French money Into Eng-, llsh, grant them loans and personally,, conduct them to the various stations they may require to travel from. The, same thing is done when leave Is upv The soldier, used to discipline, likes; being handed on from one to another rather than being left in a stra'nge place to his own devices. IN KAISER'S ROOM, TAR SAYS, NO KICK COMING Lorain, O. William Kelsner, who Joined the navy four months ago, has written his par ents that he is well treated, . He 4 e in- 4 Is evidently on one of the terned German Bhlps seized by the United States. "The walls are covered with silk and Inlaid with silver. The room to which I was assigned was reserved for the kaiser when the ship was German," says his letter. . ; SCULPTOR TO DO HIS BIT: Will Turn Talents From Modeling Inj Clay to Remaking Faces of the Wounded. j Cleveland, O. Max Kallsh, Clevw land sculptor, Is going to do his bIB and it's a strange bit, too. Kallsh la turning his talents from creating faces In clay to remaking those of human beings. Kallsh Is one of a small anna of American sculptors who are going to the battle front to help battle scarred veterans. They propose to reV make the mangled features of the sol diers Injured In battle. I They call these fellows plastiqj sculptors.- They replace the missings parts of the face with copper oti papier mache nnd then graft skin over. It. Little Is known of the science In' America and the sculptors are going' to France shortly to learn the fine! points of the art ACCLAIMED ' BRITAIN'S . HERO! London Schoolteacher, Wounded Battle In France, Attains ' High Fame. In. London. A London schoolmasten named Wlman, who enlisted and losfl an arm and a leg In France, returned1 to teaching after his recovery and be came the Idol of his students. The discipline among members of hi class was perfect, the boys enforcing! It among themselves. Finally, after th authorities discovered him to be a bet' ter teacher than ever, the school rt- ranged for an exhibition hearing of one of his history lessons. At this exhibit tlon Wlman asked : , "Now, boys, who is the greatest ontr standing British military hero of all: timer . The boys Instantly stood, cheerefl thrice and shouted In chorus "Mr. Wl man I"