Today's News Printed Today nil urn if i Blil n f...J 1 nnpiiro ' far cd France to - Force ffOI Still Refuse to Her Mies (37 Hr.ry Wwd.) w,A'i!. M. Imnieiliatciv fulioiv UMM'Wnt tlist flrea! liriUm tit yi:t A'Mtris-Hmuary an gsaHwt moeti:ii was aeld, mii to a ili-'jiatt-h rerttive'l here to Vienna. j n!pwiE"J this km with i view illiij hi Italy ti) aiiii'-rt' M iu p, an i'r th tiTinn of the trtjil." tri." (ifrn'.miv, Austria lliir.i!:iiy to!;, by (oaiiiii! to Austria's in I. illiaw reiiiire'l eivh of tin 'I ('iijitkieb siitiml it to h! either nit' the oilnTs if tin"-' s.in'iM I , fir ai the matter of formal Mtwu n fom'erne.l, initiated ilitin insi'te l that its allies were t(oi lh iiwivn, de-pitc their Hit rtiljr thi'v h.i. 1 3 M,n Nt'iispil to join tliem. 'nMf ilrawu a war .Mara ' Iras Ureal Britinn, it was .. 1 tin tie A"triiuu wu'ild nut m still sore ur Piit rt' ii,",t, or per 'Hni,l,for ai,l, i!lt:,if,lt that Italy would Tl.at this muU l.rin- Istrian au,l probably a !" f wan con- H enough. CuMif scnti "fc!tnin,t Austria; how 'I b Kuerallv believed a - nnH b, procipitato.! if the "Pwniartt houl.l join tic Am' i naicr. BASEBALL TODAY sue Ii. H. R I 4 n 2 It) (i ma Wbi, .. slvn mi I R. H. E. 0 4 () -" 3 5 o Renlba-h ami Mr- R. it. E. 5 11 1 3 a o lork " ' an,! Cow', 'l Movers. . .JirtmariJ vrnm. "I game mil indSnyiier": R. H. K 2 4 o r, 5 o Wains an,i c.,i. iiiton t n " K.I RS " 3 0 -79 2 ".Ha; b. n. E. - 1 5 0! -08 1 Leonard,' r .autaiuabr. R. 3 i) s Hage:tiian U GRADE neh tn;i. . .. tiu 10 a.i ' rti- 111 n.:. 'Jic 11 ;lrilgist, . ' n Sllli'o i Mi.." .k tr. e ' icawitV, ?. t o. , .rt"rian war illjtniin c, "V in; una 1 ice rJ, """tM ion j : "Iftnw '"wrs i.j ."'am or i., InJ .. ""111 iorinn . tthVor Qw. arc nwfar.t,Ire t!i3 'Mr "lV. r"?e for . K1, tOW I A..! . 1,1 Ind: oiai'ho. II a t. - wth TBas.'lvaceii . "'W. i Olli..!,. .m,1- I.B ' dl Utfe'to colors. ONE GREAT BATTLE RACES OVER FRONT OF FULLY 300 MILES The Germans still strove today to force through Belgium to the French frontier. Alone: the Franco-German "mciHMTHS ATTACK in" ra?ecl from the Belgian to the Swiss border. ILttflM Iflf M French, Belgians and English struggled desperately to , dr;ve the Germans back. If fever, It Is Claimed The Germans professed to be advancing steadily and Jiic('iiDX,nfA :s-.irely; the allies to have checked them at all points. Redly the issue was still in doubt. What really was one mighty battle raged from the nor the.Ti Belgian frontier to the Jura mountains. Tiu- fighting front was more than UOO miles long. It. ftivtched through central Belgium and Luxemburg and along the whole length of the Franco-German border. Tno engagement threatened to overflow into Holland oo tho north and into Switzerland at the southern extrem ity of the line. From east to west there were places where the oppos ing ranks of warriors were sixty miles deep. No accurate estimate of the number of killed and wounded had been made, but the total must have been (Mbut Ri.ie m HM.-h ruir.Miii-Mt enormous, judging from the points here and there along let military experts agreed that the fight had only be mm. At ninht drove 1 1 utli-ii , Ifclgium, Wednesday 111 r.-' fit tlis of a htning (ionium Viu killed before the Belgians thi'm buck and it whs added taut tin' r j r t ion of killi'd to wniiiul I'd h an liiLt.li. Thrice Wi'dnt'wlay nilit the (icrmniM cii.tvir'd and lust Uuhmi'Im, Bi'lgiuiii, wirli ciuirniiiii.'t Im.i.ich. Tln (n'liiiiin ndvance ou Nomur was rcpurtcd tdn'cki'il today with mure 'I'tninnuiis Iiims'.'h. " TIic I.icjji' forts Btill hold out under n heavy honilinrdnii'iit. Tiu Hclifiiui t! vi'rnment nccuscd thtf 'i i main or Killing wounded cnomien, I of tiirturiiig eiviliann and of hujjo thel'H of money, nnd planned an appeal fo iiiMttruLs nijainst Hindi conduct. s! Having passed through LuxomhuiK, the (iennun guns woro hammering at ; t.njwy, France, defensec. ! Hard fit;litin progressod about pin- i mil (, I'ontnMous.ion shelled. was being heavily It was surmised this mennt a Oermnn attempt to penetrate the "Toul-Kpinnl gap" in the French fortifications If this happened, the French be lieved the enemy would, find themselves trapped. There was actual hand to hand fight "ig at several places along the fron tier. Though tho ftermans declared they '''""red Alsace 0f the French, they asserted they still held their defenses south of Mulhausen. France's mobilization waa completed. li issiu claimed victories in a series 'r siiuill fight.) along tho German and Austrian frontiers.. me Herman war offie.n was quoted on its east- admitting heavy losao ' oonier. Servians and Montenegrins had itiiing their own way in Bosnia ... . ' ' " J "i .J'lmuu. ar havinir lm... i... n t expected to ask Italy again for aid, "null it was considered certain Italy n"l'ld aeain refnau ' H. E.',r!u";p published its declaration r 3i War "t'linst Austria. y; .unitary cabinet said it could not Ki , "'nAnr''IH,rt!I of an nUl,mI't to kill Albert of Belgium. toll V i Cl!",,, of Dut,h reserves was told to bo ready for a call eo the colors. mall 7" " BritiMh th Dover. Knirln,i ... , . thoifirincr 6 -T""ca nennng sea Sen- British k't.a"yeft;; r9,"?e at Austria's fiee l ,i , . nuuttuiun auy orr aiinn.1Mnn 1 - eo w'i8ar.!u.D,,.y! British m "IT";:. , . fcC.wlirri :n,,.,tedOB a .!"" """gtong fired t -"' 10 m l ..... i ... -"1'iiiiese S HI). rinmnTu,l it .. J M!iii . "-aiu r,nn . i ui h pthw vn ; ,--iuor . .. l""i ri-euiatlnna " ciln. '"-c luce 1 r.r.i-t ... " iKiiuuuif xue ro'idv tn ' Japanese ahips were M aL l'V ,n,itlsh and French ts utt," k Tsinh Tclmu. Londm? ttacAu9trtan Fleet ' not TtM'i- 1?T"0rt Britain hv. lav A""tria.Hungary Wedne a.lor f'ir?rUnt,iM' A,,strinn A"" Thww no.u"8 for Protection. 3t-tionaaV;rn:rt;emWeVer'0fail,,,"On- an'tliree'fT h,as in the Mediterra 8r"'orcd cruiser, . 8 CrUisers' several late of war, according to the way frontier, too. fierce firht- reports of heavy losses at the line. NEWS WILL EE OFFICIAL. Loinlrrn, g. 13. War Min ister Lord Kitchener announced today that British newspapers which publish news concerning uriuy and navy operations not authorized by "the official mili tary press bureau will be hus pended. Iiritish declaration, from midnight. boenme effective Showinff Their Teeth Home, Aug. l.'t. That tho Austrian fleet was cleared for action fifteen miles off Tola, while the British and French squadron awaited them at the entrance to the Adriatic, was asserted by commanders of steamships which ar rived at Venice today. They were of tho opinion that there would be a battle soon. German Ships Dismantled. London, Aug. 13. The sultan's rep resentative denied reports that Turkey had purchased the German cruisers Go ben ami Hreslau, which reached Turkish waters after a hot pursuit by British and French warships. The impresiou had prevailed here that tho Turks were preparing to enter the war as a German ally and that the kaiser turned the two ships over to them for use in connection with their expected campaign. The ambassadors account was that tho two vessels enter ed the Dardanelles flying the Turkish flag and that they had been dismantled to be held until the war was over. SOME MORTGAGE. Lcwiston, Idaho, Aug. 13. One of tho heaviest mortgages ever recorded in Nez Perce county was that filed yes terday by the O.-W. R. & N. company with the county auditor, being a blank et mortgage to tho Farmers Loan & Trust company, of New York, for $111, 020,000, covering all the railroads, ex tensions, branches, main track, real es tnte, wharf or dock property and roll ing stock belonging to the line. The mortgage was signed by C. C. Stillinnn, vice-president. The filing fee was only $0.00, as tho document was a short one. SHAVE FIRST SINCE 1877. Vancouver, Wash., Aug. 13. For the first time since 187" D. B. Brumngin, veteran engineer on tho Vancouver ferryboat, shaved Tuesday. . When Mr. Brumngin went to work today the crew did not recognize him until he spoke. The beard kept wrin kles awny, not a line showing on Mr. Brumngin 's face, although he is nearly )0 years old. Mrs. Brumngin is on her vacation and the clean-shaven husband has fears over the surprise in store for her when sho returns. M'LOTJGLIN WINS MATCH. New York, Aug. 13. McLoughlin won his tennis match with Brookes, 17 15. It was the most stubborn contest ever seen on the Forest Hill courts. In the first set each man won his service fifteen straight times. Mft Loughlin won Brookes' sixteenth ser vice and then won his own service. The set lasted an hour and 20 minutes. At the end of the twenty second game, the acore stood 11-11. Brokei made repeated returns backward over his head from the base line. their BALEU OREQOK, r THOBSDAriAOOVST 13, . MCE TWO CEITO 'SP.gg CATTLE COST AND BEEF PIE (IP mm GRAFT President Calls Attention of Attorney General to the Rising Prices MUST DEFEND COUNTRY AGAINST GRAFTERS Increase of Foodstuffs on Pretext of European War Is Inexcusable Washington, Aug. 13. President Wil son today personally wrote to Attorney (renernl McRoynoldn asking him to in vestiuato tho apparently abnormal in flation of food prices and ascertain whether there was any conspiracy to boost prices. President Wilson's letter to Attorney General Mclteynolils follows: "The rapid and unwarranted increase in tho prices of foodstuffs in thin coun try on the pretext of conditions exist ing in Europe ia ho serious and vital a matter that I take tho liberty of call ing your attention to it. I would be greatly obliged if you would advise nie whether under existing laws, there is any action the department of justice ! could take by way of investigation or legal process, and what federal legis lation, if any, in your judgment, is justiliable under the circumstances. "1 feel this matter cannot be let pass by without or trying to serve the coun try. Certainly the country ought to bo I iieiemieii, ir possible, against men tak i ing advantage of such circumstances to increase the price of food and tho dif ficulty of living." Starts the Inquiry. ; Washington, Aug. 13. The de partment of .justice started an investi gation into the cnusj for tho sudden I rise of foodstuffs prices immediately I upon receipt today of President Wil son's letter. The president this after noon asked the department of com merce to aid the department of justice in its investigation. To Raise More Revenue. Secretary McAdoo and Senators Sim mons and Overman decided that the government needed $100,000,000 annual ly to offset the loss in revenue. Congressmen were deluged with re quests to tax exports. l.epresentative Underwood this aft ernoon assembled the house ways and means committee to discuss taxable ar ticles fcnd the amounts each would pro duce. Senator Simmons urged immediate action on a war tax bill. "Unless it is done soon to supple ment the present revenue," he said, "the government will faco a deficit." Cattle Down, Beef Up. Chicago, Aug. 13. The price of beef advanced here today despite a big drop in the price of cattle. The receipts to day at the stock yards were liberal, and butchers say the packers, taking ad vantage of the war, were boating the prices unnecessarily. The price of meat here has advanced 3' cents per pound since Saturday. CHECK GERMAN ADVANCE. Brussels, Aug. 13. Germany's ad vnnco on Namur has been checked by the Belgians and French at Eghzee, the war announced this afternoon. Tho German losses were enormous, it was stated. The allies captured a number of now German machine guns, niount;d on automobile trucks. The Germans were moving south ward through Eghczee said the war of fice, when the Belgians and French took the offensive against them and, by a series of fierce charges, drove the advance guard back on the reserves. Tho Belgian cavalry, it was added, moved with extraordinary speed, plain ly disconcerting tho kaiser a troops. FOOD, RAW POTATOES. Namur, Aug. 13. Several dead Ger man officers were found in Belgium Luxemburg with partly eaten raw po tatoes in their pockets. Others, offi cers and men, wore existing on unripe fruit and vegetables. Many of the German horses were said to have died of starvation. The Weather Ocnerally fair tonight and Fri day; northwest winds.' . Ml FIGHT ON SOIL IS FIERCE ONE AND HAND TO HAND . (By William Philip Sims.) Pans, Aug. 13. French and Germans were fighting furiously today on French soil just west of the Luxemburg frontier. The engagement opened with a French repulse by a su perior German force near Spincourt. The French, rein forced, took the offensive. They forced the Germans back on the main advance base with heavy losses and broke the German line with a bayonet charge. Much of the fighting, instead of being at long range, which it was expected would be the rule in the present war, was hand to hand, and the slaughter was dreadful. The men of one German battery, it was stated, were all slam and several guns were captured at the bayonets' points. Fighting continued today. Germans Lose Heavily. Paris. Auer. 13. The French in AIsppp linvo infi;,. heavy losses on the Germans, es louay. The Germans made a furious attack on the French en trenchments south of Mulhausen Mnndav I stated. The French feimed 1'ians were enticed into a dangerous position. Wednesday tne French, strongly reinforced, met them fiercely and repulsed them with severe slaughter. General Joffre, the French commander, was covering immense distances up and down the lines in a racing auto mobile. Georges Boillot, thrice winner of the Grand Prix, acted as his chauffeur. Government officials admitted that French operations in Alsace were in tended to divert the Germans' attention from the French concentration along the frontier. They insisted that the position the French took, just south of Mulhausen, whan they evacuated that place, was Mill nel.l. Tha Germans-were again on the offen sive in Belgium today. The Liege forts, the dispatches said, continued to hold out. Experts said the nature of the Ger n an maneuvres were such as to suggest a plan to attack Antwerp. ENTIRE ARMY ENGAGED. Nancy, France, Aug. 13. The entire German army was hammering the French and Belgian lines tO'jay. In this vicinity the Germans were in strongest force in Belgian Luxem burg, in tho adjoining duchy of the same name and on the French frontier south of Spincourt. They were also heavily shelling the French town bf Pont-A-Mousson, about 20 miles north of here. This attack on Pont-A-Mousson was considered highly significant, military experts inclining to think the kaiser's through what is known as the '?oul forces expected to attempt pushing Epinal gap in the French frontier fortifications. This apparently weak spot in a 200 or 300 mile line of almost impregnable defenses is so obvious that the popular view has long been it is some sort of a trap and many predictions were made that the Germans would meet with disaster if they undertook to avail themselves of it. Slaughter Is Terrific Brussels, Aug. 13. German attempts to break the Belgian-French front Wel- nesday hight failed, the war office here announced today. Fierce fighting occurred at many points and losses were enormous, it was stated. That tho German attack on the Belgian-French positions had only begun was admitted by the war office. The bombardment of the Liege forts continued, but the forts still held out. A Wednesday night assault on them was defeated, the Belgian artillery killing and wounding large numbers of Ger mans. The Germans, however, had bridged the Mouse with pontoons, and were rushing cannon forward. Fighting was believed to be in pro gress at Namur, but details were lack ing. Thrice the Germans took Hassels on Wednesday night and thrice Belgians recaptured it. Here, too, the losses were frightful. The German attempt at ft flankir. movement, according to the war office, was overwhelmingly defeated. It was very extensive in operation, it was stat ed, 10,000 German" cavalry beiug engag ed in one out of a large number of en counters. At Tirlemont 250 Germans were killed in the first few minutes. Their attack there had been intended as a surprise, but Belgian aviators gave warning of their approach, the Belgian-French allies prepared for them, and when they ap peared they galloped into a trap and were mowed down in heaps. King Albert automobiled constantly from point to point .on the Belgian- FRENCH the war office here announc a retirement. Thus the rw French lines, keeping in touch with both the forces in the field and the general staff, (Note. In the foregoing all referen ces to exact geographical positions were eliminated by the censor. U. P. A.) Three Fifths Put Out. j Brussels, Aug. 13. That three fifths or tne uermans who took part in Wed nesday's fight north of Tirlemont were killed or disabled by their wounds was asserted by the Belgian war office to day. ine Dattie centered at Haelen, it was stated, the lines extending north to Diest, about five miles away. A mixed brigade was said to have supported the Belgian cavalry and in fantry and artillery the German Second cavalry division. The engagement con tinued until the Germans retreated to the north. A church, brewery and several houses were destroyed at Haelen. The percentage of German dead in relation to their wounded was verv large, the war office said 200 of their killed being counted in a space 50 yards square. , The Belgians captured many horses and large quantities of supplies. Germans' Dead 1000. Brussels, Aug. 13. Additional details of Wednesday night's battle of Haelen were published this afternoon. The German dead, it was said, ex ceeded 1,000. The kaisor's troops attacked the Bel gian barricades savagely, it was stated, men and horses falling in heaps in tht entanglements. The war office referred to the Ger man retreat toward Tongres as a " dis orderly rout." RUSSIANS CLAIM SERIES OF VICTORIES Claim Success Was Almost Uniform In All Clashes With Austrians No Ger man Invasion of Poland. St. Petersburg, Aug. 13. Almost uni form successes in their fights thus far with the Germans and Austrians were claimed by the Russians today. The war office issued the following: "At Zolozchte the Thirteenth Rus sian lancers attacked the Thirty-third Austrian regiment and drove them from their entrenchments in disorder with heavy losses. " At Volonchizck the Russians killed 1(1 Austrians and captured many. "At Zbaraje a Russian infantry de tachment defeated the Austrians. "August 10 the Eleventh German in fantry, supported by artillery, attack ed Eydtkuhnene, East Prussia, which the Russians had occupied, and wore repulsed. "No general German invasion of liussian Poland has been attempted. A German general commands the Austrians." Twelve million men have been drawn from productive industry in Europe because of national ambition, race hos tility and human pugnacity. It is a tremendous waste which somebody will have to make good. DECIDE 10 REPAIR THE STEEL BHIDGE WILL BID LATER Will Put in New Planking and Replace Some Piling That Is Decayed ESTIMATE REPAIRS WILL COST $2500 Site for New Bridge Suggest ed With East End at Court Street F-ecision to replank the Btcel bridge uver me u niamette river nere, to put new stringers where needed, and to stiffen the approach at the west end was made this morning as the result of an examination of the bridge by the county courts of Marion and Polk counties. This work is found neces sary to make the bridge passable until a new structure could be built. Tho repairs will cost approximately 2S0O and will be commenced as soon as pos sible. The work will be done by the Polk county court. It is probable that the expense will be equally divided be tween Polk and Marion counties and tho city of Salem. During tho examination this morning it was found that the top portions of the stringers had become infested with dry rot, that the nails were working looso from the planking, and that a majority of the piling sustaining the approach were mere hollow shells, the inside being weakened by dry rot. Pounding on the outside with a pocket knife resulted in revealing the decayed interior. Bolts were found to be loose, although the bracings were strong and well put together. West Span Weakest. The weakest span in -the entire bridge is the west one. When the bridge was built the work was com menced on the east side and continued as far as the third span. Bridge engi neers are at a loss to understand the reasons for tho construction of this span in the manner it was built. It is declared to be a makeshift and utterly unlike anything that has been put into bridgce in this vicinity. That it has stocd the strain of the past 20 years muses wonaer. Fire was discovered yesterday on one of the pilings on the west side at the point where the approach joins the first west span. The blaze was discovered by Watchman Irvin and with the aid of a couple of men pressed into serv ice it was extinguished, but not before the piling had been severed from the ground. It is believed that had the firo gained any headway it would have destroyed that portion of the bridge. It is thought that tramps, who are making the cool underbrush near there a rendezvous at present, started the fire, but that is mere conjecture. New Site Suggested. A tentative site for the new bridge whs picked out by City Attorney Page and Councilman Southwick. This site would start the approach from the point where it now is nnd bring it across the river so that the east ap proach would end at the foot of Court street. The steel structure would end on the banks and from the west bank to the end of the west approach it is proposed to build concrete arches which would not need repair and which would hist for at least 100 years. When the work on the new structure begins, how ever, careful survey of the ground will be made and the site chosen that will present the least engineering difficul ties. The site chosen as ideal this morning makes the distance less and presents few -difficulties. That this site will be chosen finally is probable, as it will bring the traffic from the west side directly into the heart of the city instead of landing it half a dozen blocks away, as at present. Railroad Is Interested. Mr. Powers, passenger agent for the Oregon Electric, was present at the in vestigation. Through him it was learn ed that the Oregon Electric company is vitully interested in the construction of the new bridge. He will take up the matter of assisting wit hthe con struction with the heads of the eleetrie system. It is believed that when the bridge is built the Oregon Electric will seek a franchise across it for one of its interurban lines. After the inspection, the county courts of Marion and Polk counties ga thered under a tree at the west end of tho approach and held an informnl bus iness meeting at which the replanking ami repairing was aeciuea upon. Tne roiK county court expressed itself as being willing to do all within its pow er 10 mane tne Driage as sate as pos sible flu ftnnn fin nnasihta Tt- vni rani. ized that the present structure had to do repaired suincientiy to stand until the new bridge is built, which will ap proximate two years. Mast Protect Banks. It was found on inspection that the (Continued from page 3.)