A-. FORECAST l'.VIH TONIGHT A.i lutnuv Fortv-Blxth.Tonr. Unity Hlfvonth Yrar. NEW OFFENSIVE I Greek Port ot Kavala Pillaged by Bulgarians and Inhabitants Massa cred by Turks Serbs and Bulgars Engaged in Battle Rumanians Re pulse Germans in Dobrudja. LONDON', Sept. 14. A wireless dispatch from Koine says tlmt ut the general rouneil of the central pow ers lit tliQ liciiil(iiiirters of the Gcr lniin emperor, un offensive campaign in the !iilkuiis whs mapped out and that Germany will send '200.000 men mid Austria 100,000 men for this pur pose. Kavala Pillaged PAiilN, Sept. 14. The Greek port of Kavala was pillaged and civiljans niassaered by Turkish unsliilmsnuks on Hie withdrawal of the Greek Har rison, according to n Snloniki dis puteh to the lluvns agency. The dis pateli says that the ltulgnrians sent an iiltiiiiatum to Colonel Christobuii los, commander of the garrison, on the night of September 10. Colonel Christoboulos then left with 1500 men for Thasos. A terrible panie occurred ill the city when the garrison withdrew. The bashibiisouks entered and after breaking open the prisons indulged in all orgy of pillage and innssaerc. All who could fled before the invaders. Tlie Bulgarians are now camped at Caldornian and Kucliuksorman. Ilul garian aeroplanes flew over Kavala on Tuesday and dropped bombs which killed nine persons. ' Kavala Evacuated . . ' . ATHKNS, SeptTflC'Viu" London, Sept. H.-TI10 llritish legation today t informed'' Garrett Droppers. . the American minister, that the Greeks have surrendered to the Bulgarians the last of the forts defending the seaport of Kavala, in northeastern Greece. Several of the forts were oc cupied some time ago by the Bulgar ians. Warships of the entente allies have removed 1300 Greek Holdiers to Thasos. Iiiotiiig at Kavala is reported and it is said houses and shops have been pillaged. A number of Americans are endangered, as is property of Aineri . eiin tobacco companies to the amount of more than $2,000,000. No ships are permitted to remain ill the har bor. Itulgars ltepnlsed ri'.TROGKAD, Sept. 14. Ruman ian troops have repulsed a series of attacks bv the Germans and Bulgar ians in Dobrudja, the war office an nounced today. "la the region of Silistria. on the light bank of the Danube, fighting is still proceeding," the statement says. "The Hiiiaanians repelled a series of attacks by Gcnniiii-Dulgarian troops and captured eight light guns.'' PARIS, Sept. 14. Serbians and Bulgarians are engaged in violent fighting on the Macedonian front. The war office announced today that the Serbians had captured Bulgarian trenches near Vcrrenik, and a height northwest of Lake Ostrovo. An en gagement south of the lake is turning in fuvor of the allies. Engagement Impends LONDON. Sept. 14. The Mace donian campaign of the entente forces apparently is not being press ed on the right of the Suloniki "si- ( Continued on Page Two.) BERLIN, Sept. 14. Recording to a Sofia dispatch to the Overseas News agency, Bulgaria la greatly aroused over the atrocities upon Bulgarians In Dobrudja charged against the Ru manians and the entire press Is de manding punitive measures. The Bulgarian government, adds the dispatch, intends to Invite the diplomatic representatives of neutral countries at Sofia to make an Inves- elgatlon of the district and will reg ister an energetic protest with neutral nowers. GERMANS PLAN IN THE BALKANS ATROCITIES AROUSE BULGAR RESENTMENT MEDFORD SECURITIES GO UP UKE ROCKETS Extraordinary Rise in Stock Market, Unequalled Since War Bride Boom of Year Ago Steel Rises to 107 All 0liers Gain From 2 to 5 Points Reading Sells at 114. N KV YOliK, Sept. 14. The ex traordinary rise in the stock market of the last fortnight, uneipialled since last year's movement in war brides, attained wider and more impressive proportions todav, the first hours trading of almost half a million shares being attended by gains of 1 to 3 points ill industrials, equipments, mo tors, oils and shares of almost every oilier description, with a 20-point ad vance in Bethlehem Steel at 375. United States Steel was the eliieS feature, rising to iW'- in the first hour and exceeding its previous rec ord by three-quarters of n point. All Stocks Gain Demand for Studebnkcr, Industrial Alcohol, Lackawanna Steel, Baldwin Locomotive, New York Airbrake, Mexican Petroleum and related issues carried those stocks 2 to 5 points above yesterday's final prices. Hails were relatively inconspicuous, although Heading, Union Pacific and New Haven were higher by 1 to 21," points, Realizing sales or profit tak ing, was ia such enormous volume during the forenoon as to effect re versnls of 1 to 2 iioints from best prices of the opening. This was off set, however, by fresh buying power, much ofwhirli seemed to orinigate from out-of-town sources. There was no let-up of the fever ish activity of, the first hour; fiulesui "1 o'clock 'amounting to 1,170,000 shares, or at the rate of almost 2,000,000 shares for the full session. High Records Made Additions to early high records were made by United' States Steel at 107, lieoublic Steel nt 0!) nnd sev eral of the leading coppers. General Motor was the star performer, rising .').') points to 750, a gain of 17fi points since last week. Heading also sold at the unpreec dented price of 114 and other lead ing rails developed renewed strength. END IN FAILURE PARIS, Sept. 14. The Germans made vigorous efforts last night to drive the French from territory cap tured recently on the Somme and Verdun fronts. The war office today announced the repulse of several as saults north and south of the Somme and east ot the Meuse at Vaux-Chap- Itre wood. LONDON, Sept. 14. The British have made further progress on the Somme front north of Glnchy, It was announced officially today. "The general situation is un changed," says the statement. . PETROGRAD, Sept. 14. "On the western (Russian and Galician) front the situation Is unchanged," says to day's announcement from the war of fice. "On the Caucasian front In the re gion west of Kighi hostile Kurds are showing Increased activity. Nea Hamadan in the valley of the River Falplanrhat, our detachments as a re sult of engagements captured camels and cattle from the enemy." BKRLIN, Sept. 14. The Danish maiT on board the Norwegian liner Kri.-tinniiif.jord, from New York to Bergen. wa confiscated by the Brit ish authorities at Kirkwall, accord ing to a report of the po-tmn-ter gen eral of Denmark, the Overseas News agency announced today. IN STOCK BOOM MEDFORD OUKfiOX. THURSDAY, REITKMnEI? 14,'-1916 1" GENERAL STRIKE NEW YORK AT WEEK'S END Sympathetic Walkout of 70,000 Unionists Allied With Striking Sheet Railway Employes Threat ened Unless Mayor Succeeds in Se curing. Amicable Settlement. NKW YORK. Sept. 14. A sympa thetic strike of 70,000 unionists allied with the striking street railway em ployes will be called Saturday night unless Mayor Mltchel and the public service commission succeed In bring ing about an amicable settlement prior to that time, was the prediction made by James P. Holland, president of the state federation ot labor, at a masa meeting held today, following a parade of 10,000 ot the striking traction men and sympathizers. "The match is ready," Holland de clared, "if nothing It done by Satur day a strike that; will astonish the world will be called." StWJce-broakcrs Enough The New York Railways company. operating many surface-cars lines, has dismissed employment agencies re tained to engage strikebreakers, and more than 1,000 of the latter have been discharged Today's parade, In which labor leaders said, inocr than 10.000 men would participate, was planned to start at eight o'clock and proceed to Union square where a mass meeting was to be held this afternoon. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, Meyer London. prominent socialist, and leaders of the car men's unions were on the pro grain. ' Mivynr Has No Plan Mayor Mltchel admitted today that lib had no plan which promised any settlement of the strike. He rejected suggestions to grant a franchise to a motor omnibus company or to ask the governor for a special session of the legislature to enact a compulsory law. Officials of the transit companies per sisted In the refusal to submit to arbi tration. Five trolley cars came together in series of rear end collisions on Westchester avenue In the Bronx to day and ten passengers were Injured, one soriously. The accidents occur red nt the foot of a steep Incline and the car crews, who said they were strike-breakers, claimed the rails had been greased so that the brakes would not hold. ZAIMIS RESENTS POLICY OF FORCE USED BY ALLIES ATIIKNS, Sept. 12, via London Sept. 14. Kvery effort to persuade Alexander Zaimis, the aged premier, to remain in of live was fruitless. His pride was wounded by the appearance ot the allied fleet off Piraeus at the very moment when negotiations had been begun for the entry of Greece into the war. The arrest of Austri ans and (lemnins in Athens by French and llritish ligents and the invasion of the French legation by Russians who tired shots there, taken in conjunc tion with the continual internal dis cord in -the face of a great national crisis completely discouraged the en tire cabinet. The result was not only to precipitate the retirement of the Zuiinis ministry, but to bring to a standstill and ios-ibly even to end all discussion of a departure from neu trality lor Greece.' ' iiojM; the entente now sees where its policy of trying to force matters lead-," a prominent Greek official with sympathies for the entente said to the A-socialed Press today. "The moral effect of Greece's entry into the war with the allies unquestionably would have been a shortening of the war by many month-. Without a fig lire like Zninii-, detached from pol ltics, to conduct the negotiations there is scarcely a ghost of a chance tliHt this can be arranged. God know.-, nobody in Greece has opposed enlrv into the war lor the last fort night, ami if this country does not go in, the responsibility must fall upon those who are too impatient to await the end of legitimate discussion of de tails." Mail Tribune ITALY'S GREATEST ACTRESS REPORTED DYING y3:.,v .... i-eT f 111 .11 1 - i; . I . I Kleonoru Duse, grealc-t Italian actress ami often called the richest woman of the stage, is reported dying at her villa in Lugano, Italy. She is .17 and has been on the slage forty years. She visited America twice. 1 CIUI-AGO, Sept. IM-Mnrtiu 11. Flnnuignn, a saloonkeeper, was ar rested here today in connection with the mysterious robbery five years ago of the branch of the Hank of Montrc al at New Westminster. II. ('. Loot umounling to $271,000 was obtained by the robbers. . The arrest of Flaanigau was made as a result of the arrest in Toronto, Can., yesterday of Michael B. Short all, a marble worker of Chicago, who was attempting to pry open a safety deposit box in the vault of the Bank of Toronto. f The box, rented by Flnmiigan four years ago, was found to be stuffed with Canadian bunk notes. Shorlall told the Toronto police he had been employed by Flaiinigaii to make the trip lo Toronto. Flannignn, the police say. is the same man arreslcd three years ago oa a charge of having in his possession stolen Wesl minster bank notes. That time Flaiiuigaii gave the name of Michael J. Flanagan, He escaped conviction, as the numbers on the notes did not correspond with those stolen from the British Columbia bunk. ('harles Larkin, child' of Ihe de tective bureau, said Iliat Flaiinigan denied any knowledge of the bank robbery, anil that he was in no way connected with the arrest of Short - all. Flaiinigan is being held for Can adian authorities. Flannlgan later was released after the police had qucntioued hlin. PRESIDENT'S SISTER NF.W LONDON, Conn.. Sept. 14. - tr t,, 11. .u I',-.. f v;i -... si-tcr. ),.. i- nr'v,.U ill her,.. r. norte.l todav In ln'e -.rnnn wcL-er The bulletin i.,i,..l bv l!ic t lendii... physician said : "Mrs. Howe bed a cnmfnrtahlc night, but -how- more weakne-s in tbcj la-t tweiily-four hour-." INCREASE IN INFANTILE ' PARALYSIS REPORTED NI'.W Y'lHK. Sept. I I. The report on infantile parah-i- for the twenty-four hours ending at 1(1 a. m. to day -hows an increa-e over the low record of the previous day. There were thirty-six new case-t and eleven deaths, as against thirty-one new cases and nine death- for the day before. T. .jr.- "-.-I TfBW LtlNTlTIKfCimn". &ptt'IS-- Amciiciin moniln'i's ol' tlio inturmi- iiohti! ctimmissiiui mooting In re were occupied IimIjiv with the Me.icjin run t'erces in invest iptlinp: Hie ciuisejnil effect of Mexican tuiuiiiK decrees niul mlvisiiur with Mnjnr (lenenil IMIkh as (o the inililnrv situation on the hol der. Then; is little prospect Mint the joint commission will return to the formulation of n bonier protocol un til the American members have reach ed a tentative agreement amoni' them selves its tti the wisest course to pur sue. They will then present their ideas to their Mexican associates for general discussion. It was indicated today Mint niie tious of real estate and other taxes in Mexico as thev effect American niiUK'tl v holders will he lmhcil tat Sy the joint eomaiisMoli y jhcjijts ex ai.uualion ol the tinning taxes been completed, ' In the case of land under Carrana decrees a pauit iV damni is assessi'd npiin.-t lands .tying idle which American iiitere.-ts.have com plained to the stale department amounted to con fiscal ion of their holdings. Ah in the ease of mining tnxen, i'arranza officials have asserted that their purpose, was to foster small no 'eraloiH and lo compel Ihe abandon meat of In rye holdings for sneciila live purpose only. CAMP WITH YCOMIJi:. Or., Sept j 14. M company. Third Oregon In Ifanlry, the first company In the Unit Ie,i Ht""'" lo l,e """-' lnto '' 1 oral service following President Wll "' '',lcr for mobilization, seemed I " to paKH OUt Of existence today RH a military unit With the exception of four men. the entire company which was organized In Salem, tuned lo take the federal oath ncres sary for their continuance as a Na tional Guard organization when they are mustered out of the federal sr i' It was staled y memliers or tne company that they had refused to continue In the service because of ob lections to Captain Max (Sehlhar re nialnliiK In command. (.1 company of Oregon City also Is showing a dlsln cllnatlon to take the new oath on si in liar objections to Its captain. Offl cers believed, however, that the men would not hold out. NEW T PRESERVE OPEN Russia and Japan Formally Assure United States That New Russo- Japanese Treaty Preserves Integ rity of China and Open-Door Pol icy as Guaranteed In Treaties. WASHINGTON, Sept. 14. Doth Japan and Russia have given the United States formal assurances that the new Kusso-Japanese treaty docs not repeal or affect the treaties ot 1907 oi 1910, In which these nations pledged themselves to maintain the integrity of China and the open door policy. The assurances wore given to Am bassadors Guthrie nt Tokio and Fran cis at Petrograd, In response to In quiries. The state department today received from Mr. Guthrie a note on the subject addrossed to him by the Japanese foreign office Btutlng In unequivocal terms that Japan had not for n moment ontertalned an Inten tion of departing from these policies. Departmental officials let It be known that tho statements were en tirely satisfactory nnd that Inquiries regarding the new treaty ovor which they had been considerably perturbed, probably would not be pressed furth- Cb Ion's Integrity Assure The treaties ot 1807 and 1910 be tween Japan and Itusula affirmed China's territorial Integrity and the open door policy. Article two of the 1907 treaty, which was reaffirmed with rllghtly different wording In the 1910 convention, roads: "The two high contracting' partleB recognize ..the Independence and ter ritorial fiiferfHTy' oT"the"erilpIre o'fTtrl7 na and tho principle of equal oppor tunity In whatever concerns commerce and. .industries of all nations In that omplre,. unci cnnano to sustain and defend the, maintenance of this status quo,and respect for this people by nil the hpcclflc means within .their reach." Satisfaction Expressed Stile department officials today express satisfaction with the unequlv. ocal reply made by Japan and the statement from the Russian foreign office. They felt theso assurances left no doubt as to tho maintenance of the open door policy and regard for American Interests In China un der tho terms of tho now Russo-Jap anese treaty, although Its text has not yet teen madu public. Officials do not expect that American lnqurles at Toklo and Pclrograd will be pressed further, nnd Hint a copy of tho new convention will be forwarded In due course. IL' T INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. II Vice-President Thomas K. Marshall will be notified of hi- renominatioii on the deuiocnil ic ticket tonight Prominent democratic leaders, includ ing National ('hairman Vance Me Connick, were to arrive here today. The program a- arranged calls for nddrcHM.-. by J. A. M. Adair, demo era tie candidate tor Knveraor of In diana; Kvatm Wonlleii of Ithlianap oh mid Martin II, (ilvnit of New York. Mr, Olynu i to deliver tbe no tificatioti address, after which Mr. .Marshall will accept formally tli uouiiunlinu. ATTACK BY VILLA SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Sept. II General FuiiHtnn said today that Gen cral Hell at i'A Paso had sent a n'.es sage that be bad reports that an at tack on Chihuahua City by Kranclseo Villa was feared by the Carranlstas. He facto government troops wcro lie ins rushed into tho city from the south, It was roported. General Pershing's latest dispatches placed Villa near Guerrero, some 80 miles west of Chihuahua City. REATIES DOOR IN CHINA University of Oregon library WEATHER Maximum Yesterday IKS; Minimum Toduy 4H, NO. 130 3G00 Attend Barbecue at Fair Grounds Community and School Day Provide Program of Interest ing Events Exhibits Surpass Those of Previous Years. Friday, Ashland's Day llaseball, commencing l'J o'clock. j Two-year-old running race, three-eijihths mile. Cowboys' pony race. Hull riding. Quarter-mile running race, float roping. Cowgirls' riinnint! race. Half-mile running race. IJclay race. Ducking contests. Wild-horse race. Novelty races mill stunts. f f ' f f Uptown Show Tonight t'ptown exhibit, corner Central and Sixth streets, 8:1.) p. m. Style show and program, vocal solos, quartet selections and u concert by the Med ford bund, followed by dancing. The 11(10 Jackson county fair op ened today with tile largest exhibits of livestock, fruit, grains, manufac tures and minerals in its history. All available display space, with tho ex ception of small sections in the space, devoted to minerals and mnnufac-' turos, hrof Wen filledT' It was Com- 'At 1 o clock tins ntlcmooh more- I li ii n 11000 people had passed through the gates to parlako of tho barbeeuo and to witness the field sports, the ball game and the relay nice! At tendance from tho rural districts is especially heavy, ".000 Fed ut llarbeeue At 12:05 the attack began on the barbecue feast. In spite of the fact that over 2000 people were fed, and generously, there was plenty for nil. Klever. hundred und forty-four pounds of beef were roasted, ;i(((( Inrge loaves of bread were consumed, together with "00 pounds of beans ' and 1.10 gallons of coffee. About" tbirtv-l'ive merchants attired in while aps and aprons served the hungry throng. 'flic program for Ihe afternoon eon- sisled of a ball game between the l!cavcr Portland Cement plant team f Cold Hill ami the Medford city (cam. Kollowing Ihe ball game was a field meet between Ihe various schools ol' the futility. The entries for these vents were large, the small schools bing well represented. Ashland sent a team of seven men under tho tutel age of lleiuie lleudcnreich, former University of Oregon track star. Medford was well represented by six of Conch Klum's huskies. Indoor Exhibits At the Vawler-Davis building, where the women's and children's ex hibits and those of local incrchunts are on display, a style show and pro gram will be given beginning ut 8 : l." this evening. On the program are' a number of vocal solos and quartets. (Continued on Pago Two.) ASKS IE TO ATIIF'.NS. Sept. l:i, via London. Sept. 14. M. Ilimitracopulos has a-ked King Con-tnntine to allow him forty-eight hours in which to con sult his friends before deciding as to whether he will undertake the for mation of a new cabinet. The former minister of justice also wishes to sound the minister- of the entente before reaching a del ision. M. Ilimitracopulos is known to have declared that his acceptance of the premiership will only be made on the ha.-is that he is given full power to control tho national policy. He will insist that his hands must bo free to take whatever steps the pres ent crisis calls for, even to lite entry of Greece into (he war. . RECORD CROWD OPENING DAY AT COUNTY FAIR -V