a ...vi DAILY EDITION H)l IX., No. WM. grants pam, jouEram ooumr, owdgoh. Thursday, august is, join. WHOLE NUMBER HAS. L... J J. . .1 i YANKS LAND ON RUSSIAN SOIL 10 AID CZECHS J5VAITATIOX OK MOtMDW MY HO VIKT TIM KM OI'KXH WAY FOR aij.ik ox east nto.vr JAPS STRIKE AT RAILWAY CENTER 0H'liHloiiik III HIIhtIi lUiH.rtrU in ItaMWnmii riiHliii-MlrillU JlwUwl With Knlliulm Washington, Aug. 1 5. American loops today tieitau to disembark Hi Vladivostok and lll .Immediately Join the Cloth force In a campaign la Siberia. Washington, Aim. IV Th. Bus Ian pennant are r'l'rtU flocking to Iho (anilurd of the dec hi, who arw now optratlii SOU tulles runt of Moscow. Particular significance I iillarfmd to the report that Sovlut troops arr tvauatlng Moscow, opon Ink a way fur the allies tg reestab llah Iho eastern front mut-li further west tlmil ' believed possible, Guarded Intlinatlona are given that (he Japanese government antli'liat d the need of speedy assistance to thn Ctechs In western Siberia, and bare planned to atrlke directly at Lake llalkal, most Important renter of action on the Siberian railroad. London, Art. 15. Ctncho-Slovaka in Siberia are In ft dangerous" ponltlon and liable to be cut off altogether, aays the Times correspondent at Vla divostok. , ... J London, Aug. 15. 'Heuters learns that the British trnnpa on their way to Join the Cxecho-glovaks on the Ussurl front were received by !xecha with great enthusiasm. the AMERICAN TIUMM'H SET NEW RMXHID IX HEALTH Washington, Auk. 15. American tronpa are setting world records for "ficalth and low dealh rate. In announcing tnday that deaths fro mdlseaae among the anldlera for the week ending July 2(1 were at the rate of 1.9 per thousand a year. Sur geon General Onrgas said such a re cord never had been surpassed by --any military establishment. I London. Aug. 15. King George Tcturned to Kngliind yesterday from nlno days' trip to tho British front in Franco, during which time he In spected the vnrloits centers of mili tary activity, passing at times throiiKh places which were tinder the enemy's fire. Among the many reviews held by the king was one of some American tronpa, who heartily cheered the monarch. King George hnd long -talks with Genornls Pershing and Bliss and 'other American officers, lie expressed great admlrntton Aver 'the splendid physlqu of the Ameri cans and their engorness for the frny -and complimented thorn on their fine work In driving the Germans back from the Marne. INTEREST RATE ON LOANS RE Portland, Aug. 15. The war fln sance corporation today reduced Jfrora 6 per cent to 6 per cent the annual "Interest rate on short term advances to banks to cover loans to farmers to If 1 nance the crop movements. KBfiDH HAVE CflllFEHEtlCE Auxtrian ltul ihttm tit German llnMlijUMricra to Dt'llhcrate on Important tyicatlims Amsterdam, Aug. .15. Kmperor Charles of Auatrla la at the German main headquarter today, according to a telegram to the Berlin Loksl Anxleger. lie la attending an Im portant conference with Kmperor Wllhelm and advliora, deliberating on military and political questions. 1. H. CASUALTY IJ8T 4 Washington, A nit. 15. The army casualty Hat (or today la: IT killed and 5 wounded. 31 AMERICAN DBS Washington, Aug. 1 S.--In connec tion with tho announcement of the formation In Krace of the first Am erican field army Aug. to, General March, chief of staff, today disclosed that there were then 31 American divisions In Franrn and the field army Included approximately 1,250,- 000 men. It la assumed that General Persh ing haa taken over his own staff as the staff of the first field army. In that case,- Major General James W. McAndrew Is the chief of staff both of the army and of the American ex peditionary force. The chief of staff took occasion to frown upon the name "Sammy" for American troops. No American sol dier In Prance approves the use of that name, he aald, nor do either the French or British understand why big, strong men like the Americans should be tsgged with such a nick name. The British soldiers call their Americans comrades "Ysnks." General March aald no American trnopa had landed In Siberia as yet. SPRUCE IN TO CO OVER SEAS DEC. 1 Aberdeen, Wash., Aug. 15.T-De-cember 1 Is set as a definite date for the formation of a rvglment of spruce production soldiers for overseas ser vice, in an order received thla morn ing at locnl headquarters, spruce pro- dilution bureau. The date of de parture of soldiers assigned to the new regiment for Vancouver for oversens training will depend upon the rapidity with which the selective service department supplies limited strvlce men to take the places of the genoial service men In the woods. OF FLYING CORPS KILLED Cincinnati, 0 Aug. 15. Captain James Fits' Morris, of tho British Uoyal Flying Corps, was killed Just west of this city today, when his en gine died JiiRt as ho rnso from the grounds of the Western Hills Coun try Club to complcto the last lap of a Journey from Indianapolis to Cin cinnati. Captain. Fits Morris was In stantly killed, when his plane crash ed to earth In a nose dlvo, -Brigadier General Lee. announced that Captain Fits Morris had a totnl of 29 Gorman airplanes to his cred it. During the three yenrs of ser vice on the front Captain Fits Mor rla was decorared with, the cross of the 'Belgian Legion of Honor and the military cross with one bar added In honor of additional herolo services performed after receiving the cross, RIBECOURT FALLS TO GEN. HUMBERTS IN Violent Artillery Dcel Centimes Between Avre and Oise Both Sides Hake Preparations For Resumption of Heavy Fighting-British Push Toward Bucqaoy With the British Army, Aug. IS. The Germans hare evacuated for ward poaltlona on the northern end of the.Plcardy front. Albert la still held strongly by the Germans. Ixindon, Aug. IS. The French have captured high ground on LI is I g noy massif. Further retirement of the enemy In that sector la probable, according to advices here this after noon. With the British Army, Aug. 15. Lebuterns salient has practically dis appeared aa a result of German re tirement. The British pushed far Co ward Bncquoy. ' 4 I'arla, Aug. 15. The violent ar tillery duel between the Avre and the 01 ho la continuing. Both sides are gathering strength for the re sumption of heavy fighting. Gen eral Humbert's men have carried lllbescourt, on the rosd to Noyon. raria, Aug. 15. The capture of Itlbecourt by the French mark anleratlons along the Somme. important epoch In the offensive which haa for Ita Immediate purpose the freeing of the region between the Somme and the Olse. As a gain front thi "strategic standpoint It ranks with the taking by the French of the forest and hill positions be tween the Mats and the Olse, which has brought the French almost to the gate of Laaslgny. Through Rlbe- KKATTLR MAYOK HKMfi OUT IX SHIPYARD Seattle, Aug. 15. Mayor Ole Han son today enrolled himself as a shin yard worker and -will put In a two months' stretch at one of Seattle's shipyards. He elected to take the first night shift, which calls for his working from 4 o'clock until 12. S FAIL IN 10 HUN IT OVER Oil DDTiDBO IKS With the American Troops In France, June" 29. (Correspondence of the Associated Tress.) Though the American troops have had three engagements In the Toul sector dur ing the past three months men in the division say "there has been Just one flght." The big raid on Apremont In April thoy call "tho Apremont affair;" ,,. .... ....m, ainMmnJ"1 l" ' lue " " " 'place untenable and take prisoners. rcy, ten days later as "the SlecUop- Tne effort wbb well organized and rey thing;" but, the morning of JunejniKj,t have BUcceeded but for the 16 at Xivray. they sny "there was a'WOrk of the quick-firers. fight. '. I at hntwIrnH man ndvonoArl tn tha This distinction does no wrong to;attQk . nn . a thnn . the defenders of Apremont and Selch - eprey. The men did their best there, and t,hat best was ns good m. could ne expociea unoer me circumstances. but tholr best then was not so good ns their best at Xivray. That Is the significance given the dlatlnctlon by rrracn omccrs. u.ey say mai ,wsi at Xivray the men holding the sector siiowea iney nun learnen now to au what must be done In the front line. Xivray haa a similar meaning to tho Germans In that sector If the evi dence of prisoners may be trusted. The men captured there show In creased respect for the fighting qual ities of the Americans and betray a doeper awe of the American machine gun. It la now disparagement of the work the ordinary rifle did there to say that the quick-firers decided the Issue. Two companies of Infantry, court lies an open route-up the Olse valley to Noyon a route by rail and the big national thoroughfare, not to mention the canal which paral lels the roadways for the greater part of the way. Noyon la only a little more than six miles northeast of Rlbecourt. German front-line trenches at Beaumont Hamel, Serre, Pu!;!?x Au Mont and Bucquoy have been found untenable by the enemy in the face of the recent activity by the British all along the line from Al bert to Arras, while the French have persevered In their violent attacks against the Germans on the sector which dominatea the lower portion of the Tlcardy plain and the Oise valley and have encroached further upon the Laaslgny massif and the Th'.c.v court plateau and farther south have captured the Important town of Rl becourt. The giving up of front-line trenches north ft Albert may mean the Germans forsee the ultimate suc cess of the Americans and British op- In any event the retrograde movement seemingly Indicates that the ten-mile salient between Beaumont Hamel and Bray on the Somme, with Albert aa Its apex, now must give way In order that the German front here may come Into alllgnment with that In the south across the Somme. Prob ably the Germans purpose to readjust their front from the Somme to Arras. 81'XBAY SHOULD BE DAY , OF KIC8T IX SHIPYARDS Philadelphia, Aug. 15. Sunday work In shipyards is discouraged by the Emergency Fleet Corporation In an order Issued today, stating that the management la Btrongly of the opinion that a greater tonnage will result It the day Is observed as period of rest. PLAN TO SLIP without dugouts to shelter Uiem held their grounds on the right of the po sition through a heavy artillery pre paration And kept the enemy from bringing up reinforcements through out the fight. Meanwhile, in the cen- Iter at Xivray and on the left, the ma chine gunners did the rest. The enemy's plan . according to prisoners, was to force the village, . t colnmn8( ,ed by tw0 hunared lplcked mlan storming troops, iTh(Jy came up on the rght f,ank on , the ,eft ftnd on ,ne wnt(r ttnd'cov. er of smoke, making a dark night ,. darke, Thev ... thp ,neg and 8lIpl)pd lhrough thft ho,. ,w Tne ,.,, ear8 of 8entrlcB lR,one prevented a totn, Burprae. Their guns laid down a heavy box barrngo that prevented the reinforce lng of the front line. One platoon. lod by Lieutenant Donn, from Maine, got through the first, curtain of fire. Doan even went through the second with some voluntcors, but that was all the help that could be sent to the 225 men thnt were hnlrtln tho lln. attacked .i..ir.j ti... i.. , " "VtW VWIJ . VIIV v three but they fought In a way to sjtr prise and dismay the 600 Germans. (Continued on Page 2) SOU SUNK BY SHELL FIRE Tanker Frederick Kellogir Which Wan TurNdMnI TuiwUy MU1 Re maining Afloat off IUmegat Washington, Aug. 15 Th Ameri can schooner Dorothy Barret waa sunk by shell firs from a German submarine yesterday near Cape May the nary department announced to day. The tanker Frederick R Kellogg which was torpedoed Tuesday, Is still afloat off 'Barnegat, the navy de partment advises. U.S. TO Washington, Aug. 15. United States and Great Britain have Joined In a diplomatic protest to Mexico against the oil land decrees of Car ranza, which la contended amounts to the confiscation. Meanwhile Atnerl can and English oil companies have agreed to refuse to meet terms of the decree. Mexico City, Aug. 15. Replying to a protest from Great Britain against provisions of the oil decree of Feb ruary 22, which waa declared to be confiscatory and In violation of the rights of English companies holding oil claims, the Mexican government has declared that It does not recog- nlie the right of any foreign govern ment to protest agalnat decrees of thla nature. ' It holda that the Mexican govern ment Is free to adopt such fiscal leg lalation as la necessary. It suggests that recourse to the courts would be the proper method of determining whether the oil land decree Is nn Just and confiscatory. London, Aug. 15 One tot the most significant features of the aerial bombing offensive of the British .Is the loud response It has elicited from the German people, say British news papers. The bombjng of England brought no complaint, but only renewed reso lution from the Brlt'sh people; yet Germany, suffering from the first preliminary pangs of the British at tacks, at once began to cry out against It, and protest upon protest Is pouring into the German authorities from the populace of the different areas attacked. This cieans that the British bomb ing offensive Is effective, that far reaching destruction has been caus ed to railway Junctions and factories, and that the German claim that Brlt- Ish raids, have accomplished nothing serious have been untrue. Details of the damage caused by the British raids, can easily be sup pressed by the German censorship but the voice of the German people cannot permanently be stifled, and It Is asserted there Is abundant pho tographic and captured documentary evidence that their fears are based upon real execution done. WEAR OUT YOUR OLD DVD8 - IS flOYERXMEXT ADVICE New York, Aug. 15. Despite the fact that the government has taken over the entire wool stacks or grow ers and dealers for war uses, there romalns in the hands of jobbers and cutters-up enough material to sup ply clvlan clothing needs for a year, nerI,m rcuunuy, cniet ot me ouieu division of the war industries board, said today. Mr. Peabody advised the clothiers to urge customers to wear their ap parel as long as possible. purara DRAFT BILL C. S. Mt'BT 8EXD OVER EXOIGH MEX TO WIX THE WAK OX THE WE8TERX FHOXT War Program Calls for 8,000,000' American In Franc by Jane SO, 1019 Washington, Aug. 15. Plans for the consideration of the draft bill next Monday la the senate, Is blocked todsy by the failure of a quorum to appear when the bill was presented. Washington, Aug. 15. Reporting on the draft bill this morning, Sena tor Chamberlain disclosed to the sen ate that General March had told the military committee It waa op to the United States to send enough men to France to win thewar In the west and expressed the belief that 4,000,- 000 Americans could go' through the German lines where they pleased. All men called under the proposed draft, General March said would bs In France by next June. The report showed that -the program calls for. over ,3,000.000. menin .France ., by June 30 next year. PRESIDEflTISOiniL VISIT PACIFIC COAST Washington, Aug. 1 5. President Wilson has changed his mind again and will positively visit Portland and other Pacific coast points, after de ciding Tuesday not to go, tentative arrangements are being made this morning for a special train to leave Washington within the next fortnight for Oregon and Washington points. The complete reversal ot the pres ident's attitude is due to the report ot Director General McAdoo, who urged the trip on many grounds, po litical necessity predominating. LOGANBERRY CROP IS The loganberry crop of the Rogue River Orchard company has been picked and shipped ' to Portrand, where It was placed In cold storage for W. H. Polheums, of the Pullman, Wash., cannery. The berries were shipped In 50 gallon barrels, each containing 15 pounds of ice, shipped out by express at night and in the morning was placed In a Portland cold storage warehouse. Mr. Reed, ot the Rogue River Orchard company stated that the price received was $80 per ton, and although the crop was light, owing to a late frost, the company shipped 10 tons. ' . This company Is now picking pears and expects to ship about eight car loads, five of them Bartletts. The price realized ta $1.70 t.lo. b. Grants Pass, or a net price of $1.32. E Manchester, N. H., Aug. 15. Pres ident Wilson and his wife arrived to day for a visit at the home ot Col onel House. . ' HOC ED