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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1915)
THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON, FRIDAY. SEPT. 10. 1013- Sport Pitcher Sberrod Smith Looks When Making While Sherro.1 Smith was VSiirago recently, some of stories relative to the eceeiitri beating I he olil . . were recalled by a arribe who was with the Pirates when Smith wan tried out. warrb for the telephone, Smith realized On the first railroad night trip Smith he was the butt of tie joke and crawled imitated on a "down" berth, a be wan bark into bed, threatening dire en liable to fall out of a "high one up." In-geanee ou Gibby. Some great stories the uiiddle of the night ila-'k (Jibson are tulj of the unsophisticated ot woke Smith op and told bun be Smith when he first gut into the big 'wanted ou the lung distance telephone, show. Track Record Broken By Great Directum 1 Hartford, Conn., Sept. 1'J. The fea tore of the fourth day of racing at the irand Circuit meeting at ( barter Oak I'ark venter. lav was the successful at tempt of the pacer Directum 1, driven bv Tommy .Murphy, to lower tne tracK record of two minutes. The former rer un! vat wade bv Star Pointer in IS:".' Tne ehe.tnut stallion wan in fine fn m, and, on a fait track. clipe. l'a second off the track record. The first quarter was not very fast, but the teond quarter was pared in less than half a mirAite and the third in .f an-vnd. The la it quarter was just a trifle ilvwer than the thir l, the stallion was noticeably t red a few feet froru the wire, though he did not Mop. The n ark tie the season's record ot h.lf'j made by William. Tueie were two. ra-e. on the pro gram, and they rrnilted in a ( bum"' itsv for Tornmv Murphy. Ijist vtsi Murphy won all three races in one day, and ne repeated his etfurmarh e today, -ounttrig hi succcsful a..anlt upon the track r.eord with Directum I. He took the 2:11 trot in strn :ht heutt with Mtrthtul, iiavirg no lomi-etition evept la the fin.il heut, when Auien Aiba-.'en wan sent out ti get in tne ruotie . He n'iMi fe. ured the ":-l trot with 1'eter Sott, bu to far out. Ia-ed hi tiiat tiiere wan no il uibt an to lb. fume. fie OIBBOK8 IS FAVORITE New York. Sept. Ill Mike CibUnn a rt to 5 favorite t.xlay oxer I'ark "t Mi la rls nd fur their Iimi r iiind b.uit here tomnrrnw tnjjlit. liil.fnus i- oh the long end of the betting rnvnu-e of ;pu!r belief that M. Farlaml ianiu.1 '' roiae bark. " The advance sjile for the fight i bvy. It.ith men thev were "fit and ready." Their trainiiig is finifhed, ami toduy they ilid jurt enough wurk to keep their jnu' li'i plirnit. nTZ IS SOLD OUT Mi lurhen. X. .1 , Sept. In C-.li Til Miiiiiuort today i wiihout hi iherilie. firm and ife Miu.ber 4, whcnn he ev Trt, to rejoin lino and ae the pbi e. Ilis fifty arret West Dutiuellen, ueiir fiere, were oold under foreelnsure pro- ee.lings by Sheriff Houghton. The nle was under an eieeotion held by Cornel ius See, Chieago Liw yer, who hud a pirt in the divorie rit-ee.lirig!t inititut e bv Mi. Fit rjiimiiioii nun ber I!. PREMIER MARATHON RUNNER OakUnd. Cab. Sept. 10 - For the sec Mid tune Oliver Mitlsrd of the Olympic club, San Francisco, today stands as the premier i ar-1 one -quarter imirn tho runner iu Oakland Millurd made the rivotd time of .Vlilft IS over the 1-nke Merrit rourse, beating his (ne lous tiaie of ,1.f:J5 CUBS BUY PITCHER Chicago. Sept. Il) The Chicago Cub bought Pitcher Phil Ibuiglas fi.-in th BriHiktya club, it was announced her t.xlav. After BrooWlvn asked f r waiv ers on fKugU. he tutclied a three hit ( game agsia't the Phillies and the D-idg er would have recalled the waiver bal it been possible. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. K. c. and Marie lluIThnrg to Mvrtlc I'oss, lot li, block I, Ito huioiid addition to Saleia. I.wi tlrafe et al to Flif.be'h O. Crafe, ten aires. O. and C. 'J. V K. .1. I. Ilorliet et in to II. V WaiuoiV, pjitt lots 0 and 7, bio. k i.'o, I'nivrrity 4 Luton. ..... -v. lit't.'U "There afl trying Fatimas" Faticruts have; alwwvsj bc Shiftily popuhu In thva town. But lately, alnes) we've keen Wllir anovkcra how SKN 6UILE ihcy arc, Fallma asilra have bm JunifMnff every dcy. Nearly cverjrbodv mml M be try .of ihwn. Ermtybodj wente "mi 6c"vuxarilc ot that tc COOL to ih throat and toriru aoi be bom aftM-Scvia. Fatlnva )nt the snfr aonai. blc cigarctta but no mlicc cnsiMc on accnv to plcaM SO mar. irvcn's Uitc. Mor Fatimaa an sold iron ny othcl rigsrett roctuv, ovc Jc TuvWy'a th cist jva atuMilJ try tbcta. ITwTuilili E!cnd GAiictlt? m a, 1a WMMM News muuu.Tuumiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)ii: for Telephone His First Trip on a Pullman ' " Must 1m- something wrong down in man borne in Alabama." said Smith, ail L. I . i ,.t ik. .....I, Tl.l ur liumiri) out w uppv, o. i . . i train was Groins about sixty miles an j,,,,,, AfWr trn n,iuutes ,",f fruitless 1 STANDING Of THE TEA-MS National Leafrue. W. I., ivt. Philadelphia 72 M Brooklyn 71 l .5-1 T Bnstou" ' W .5-1 ( hirago Hi C1 . St. l.imi tii "0 .474 Pittsburg O.'i "0 .474 Cineiukti til 'hi .4'i! Xe York 59 til .4i3 American League. w. I., rt. Hton 4-1 .'i,;4 lletroit Mi 47 V7 Chieagi Ts 51 .f.W Washington 71 5i .54o Ne York to it .4'i."j Si. I.ouis Si 7S .4i Clev.-lsn.l 5.1 t2 ,:i7 Philadelphia ." w .7 federal league. W. I.. Pet. Pittsburg 7.1 5ti .ooii Kansnt City !! ' .-' !4 st. i.ouis .'. 'if til .r',i Chicago 70 i!2 .5.'.H .Newark 'i7 i'mj .3i'7 Hcffulo r.7 .4'.oi Brooklyn M tlf .41 Bultimure 4 t3 ..'Jtii Pacific Coast League. W. I.. IVt. S:iu Fraioiseo ... 91 't .57i! I.o Angeles '- 75 .51'.' Vernon tit to ..Vmi n!t Lake 77 7s .i.7 Portlnn.l o So .14 1 (lukbiiid 71 !'-' .4 !.", Vesterday'i Remit. At Onklaml Portland 5 7. Oaklund o-a. At I.o AngcTes Pan Francis co :Mi, I .oa Angi'lt-s 0 . At salt l-ake Vernon If. Suit I.UKe i. Watching the Scoreboard lok like the Angels dow n for the third lime. Cup I ) 1 1 1 1 in hasn't got Sun Francisco walloped were going the pitchers, the seraphs i twice yesterday. In eer department of the sjxirt Sun Pisiiciscu appeared to lime the e-lge on l.o Angeles. Hut Vernon did its best to uphold the houoi of Southern t aliform by its work at Salt Lake. The Hies hit I herb for ten hits and four runs. lint the Tigers hit a whole battalion of Itee lo-Bvers for Jn hits and lit run.. and the band played Annie Laurie. The (aks aud Heavers on i-lc-l. 1H ; the afternoon pruugh was hit pretty , hard by tL' Beavers, and vhihlan-1 er- rore.l etpensiely. Itrooklyn got one run off the Braves and it was enough to win. j The Ciants lost again. Th'ee ntraight ' to Philadelphia. The lloston lird Sol got four runs. ptiio iimlly a -li li-lua on pe. liefenting Phil Kiioisoti of the losers was the pass iMicr. i lev i land 's errors enabled lVtroit cop, i to five. lo TUB BIRTH Of A NATION.' A S'c'acle on the Heeopstruction of i h if. County after the Civil Wit. f for this film jl-taile a Village lin-lto be built to set the play in, a bat tie had to be fought over miles of ground, and, to innke it aecuiate, it was done by the t alitoruia state militia, after plans made bv military ciort 'or one iio i. lent alone the h-w'ting of Lit"'"!o--a repf i.i ncl ion of the 11: lerior of Ford's theatre lisd lo be ion- stl'Kted. Tie plot takes two southi rii and one loothc war, iiitetlniks their families, one 11. through the .iilerest. and flcsllv mute them bv two iMirriages. Aft.-r the War these two love clones get tur'her tangled op bv the '',iti al trout I., btought oa by giving the vote to th.. free.l sUve. and the ri.iug v f the Kit Kh- Klan to set Ihein tight. : l'hc h-.ro suffer, .eai'v injustues from a lioih.tto who . ele. t..l lieutenant e -vcrnor -f the ntc. He orsiii.-es tlie h!im. whi.h sr'orin two drcieat.c riONEER Of lsov. BURIED. 1 In I. pendelo e, dr. S.-(t. M.--M'. M.wthii A'lh Al. vse ler. a pmnV-er of lt', it-e.1 at the residence of her ' .LcO-fcr, Vic W. . evott. . nth of luds-is'i -'en e. Moil. lav. Mr. Alvxaa- .ler was botn 10 Franklin' eovinrv, Ken tii.kv. al-oit .'s yiars ago and w. n-srii.d lo .lames levun.ier befose I. -iiiti for the et bv u team Si-e wss the riothcr of I- i-i.il.lrew, !in. of wliotn survive h.f The fu I101.1I . rvi es were eoii l o te-l Tuesday Ifi.cti th' lUeti-t chiircn wilk in'er .cent .,; the Oddfellows' yenieterv The ch.Mieu are: J II. Aletaa-ler,. I'orti.m.t: .iliw, A M Lock. IVitlan.l: . Ab-xsnder, lade rwdeuce; Mr.: W A S. of, l.epeBiem-e: Mrs. J. W.i N-utt, Montoouih. Or; Mm. 1). P Staple ' Wn'. Iv.b'isriides. e: John Stapleton. ' Montan; P. K. Aleiaader, la.tep len.-e-, VI rc Jamr S.misatoa, I nd.-pea Jcacv. Sep'tl5th he will U don the . GOTHIC W the new 0 vik MROW jflCOLLAR CH-TT. rLAOOY CO toMwl H. S. BILE RETURNS Manager of Fruit Union Im pressed With Advertising Oregon Receives ; ; i ! i II. S. Gile, manager of the Willamette Vnii.... i i -,...;.,iw.n k..m t. i ' ' i !u extended visit to the San Francis.'!) exiHjition. During his visit there, he' j sut the greater part of his time at the Oregon building and in assisting I those in charge of the Willamette Val- ; ley display. What impressed him more than anything else, was the wonderful amount of advertising- Oregon is re reiving from the lregon building and the displays of the Willamette Valley! association. The efficiency of the men: 1U charge of the Willamette alley JU jday has done much to advertise t!meered. Thev fouifht dcr'ratelv pnrt of the state. At present, W. A. Ivr. of Madeay, K. M. Warren, of ; teacher of tactica at St. Ovr, the Frere' Kugene. and II. Charles Duusmore, of j West Point, outmaneuvered them, drove I.leii.len.e, have charge of the ex-j a murderous wedge into their lines and Inbit. Both Mr. Taylor and Mr. Warrenjsent them back almost in panic under re epericnceii men in mis iieiu, asia they bad charge of the Seattle exhibit and understand the work. These men have been untiring in their efforts to answer all inquiries regarding all sections of the state and were broad I minded enough to understand the gmt benefit Willamette Valley is to the ea- tire state. Haing lived' in Oregnu for- so manv years, they were well informed: on anv product nrul could satisfactorily ar.-swer aav questions. The eastern people were especially in- tereste.l in the displav of dried fruits, snid Mr. (iile, nod especially in the dis-i plays of the Willamette Valley Prune Rsswiation, the Salem Fruit I'nion and ' H. S. (iile i Co. This exhibit included. that of prunes in all forms of prepara-1 tion, loganberries packed and the logan j berrv juice. The eastern folks at once1 became interested in the loiraaherrv.'. which accor-liug to Mr. Tavlor, : "Oreeon's newest fift to the' nation."! The loganberry juice attracted hundreds; Lever. I,.. I k .1 1. .l.o.,. but had ueve'r tasted. To manv visitors! from this section the stn.e. it seemed that the large crowds in the Oregon building were brought there by the at '""'ions of the loganberry display and 'he loganberry juice so freely offered them. According to Mr. (iile. and others who have recently returned from the Kxposi tion, what is needed now- in the Oregon' ""s " "i'i"' "" " a.. ,,.,. u ne.i .e.e... pola lore, . r,..,erves while his reserves a,l onions, sweet corn and other producu vaneed to meet him. Furthermu're be which s.s.e special merit. The ex- profited bv the le-vns of lx.ii which position will coutinue until in rveemberi wer(, ,ii,t,,',ctlv to the effect that con and in order to get these fresh exhibits,' quered territory mav be re.leeni.-vl bur it will require the co owrntion of every1, beaten urine 'r.i. '..n i,..r v.. loyal Oregonian with their nearest Com nietciul club. In lhi section, the Wil lauiette alley Exposition Association; of battle until such a 'ime as he deem will be g ad to send to San rranciscojcd the chance, were ... hi. favor. -Not any samples brought in by those inter- even to save .u.lj he allow him- e.ted in the contiiinej success of the, self to engi.ge i a Jc. iaive struggle if display from tins valley. Fruits, grains he felt the moment bad not come. or vegetable! of any kind that may be Hoping the favorable moment might donate,! for the Oregon building will be sent at once if left with Fred S. Hymn, secretary of the Willlamette Valley ex IHisitiuti association, or at the Com mercial club. V 1 in iuovernor Aiienasrair; ! Second Stock Parade and Good Race Program (I a; .t.il S.-ui, Or . loiiri-.al Sept. H p.s ml S,-rice '.overn-.r Jauie. itiiv. onil-e attend. I t ... I. tun count) fair voter, lav, the three .'.ay ,'!';! 1111 1'iten.elv l..tere-.e. .eeoi.d day of a I'lie governor si. '.n the larm ex hil- i's and vm:1 tne .li the , c.ll.t.tv of the woi k -I bov. aad girls In I lie 11 ir.-n .g the s...-n, s!o. k pa i I eu the fiur groi n l-.. 1 be I hor.e. .n.'.i cattle of tae c.ouitrv were .toiwo in ex ,.(,. , ,, t,,i(. ,1,,,, .urrotchii. celle.it tuiui. Ti.diiv the award of prires and till-on. will be male. What .i t 1 lone been monoplane flight by Aithur Ame-oii, of Tacoma. eu!.-,i at'er n .er.es of attempts in a la.tlv niisM:e. 11. a- In ne w lien it crs-to-.l head en g int.. a bail-r-l wire fen.e. Ar n.-sen . ap. . iiijory . la the a.'te.uoviu tlie ..von.l Jsy ' ra. nig program was omelet e-,1. Priu'.-e battle, owned bv F. WwhIco. k t.ok f.r.t place in three straight heat 10 bet time of I 10 la tie second heat ou the half mile ta. k. Hurnt Wuv,l owned bv Jnko l oficld was second, " li a M." owned bv lleers and Mauev third. The i IS 1 ,-iee wa. won' haadilv b Chiquita. o u.sl by K. C. steals in'hat Von Hu.. w 's wc-e jwuring across! three tr gal h.ats. Her best time was the Marne at manr p-di'ta. He sent fort I 'S! In- the half Hole. Yesterday Cb.i sir .l"hn Freneh c-mmndinf the j )iuta etab,.he,l a teeord of I iVt f ,,r 1 Hntish. The British, ia the forest of I t ie S,io tia.k. Ora e II. owned bv i I- Soulier, was and Snauv j ow Be I by II C. Dais, third. I A running race of J 4 11 le waa , I' Maxwell, ow ned bv W, II. Mc Names. Iron, a field of thiee. Today will be the closing day of the' iir. 1 1 St. Is'uif Stan A tetit ne-lifine firm hat refused to aril goods ia the .Ute of G.s.rg.a Hutil the itiob whiel hasgevl Fraak is pr.svntel. Ccsrgia'H I health atati.t.ca should take a audJea rise. BA TTLE SA VED PARIS AFTER FIVE DAYS OF FIERCE FIGHTING rute A year ago the battle that t Maunoury 'a army in and north of Paris, saved Paris rime-to an end after five ' and at lean eight divisions strong he days of desperate fighting. It is now would not have dared turn his flank to known a the Battle of the Murne. Id it the way he did. I am told he thought the day when the struggle TO raging as did Von Buelow, that there nas only .Simms sent a atream of "cablegrams tell- one army in Pans and that it would be ing of developmenta as thev occurred, held for the capital's defense. As a For the anniversary, he has sent a matter of fact there were two the complete account of the l-a'rle as it army of Paris and the army of ilaun would have been told September l'h oury. 1H14. had it been humanly possible to( i tne meantime the British with assemble all "the faets atd get them ;ve infantry divisions and five bri-! past the censor.) By William Philip Simms. (t'nited Presa staff curre-pondent.) I .iris, Sept. 10, 11 . The German army is in full retreat. The aiiied forces are everywhere victorious. Aft- er getting within aight of Paris and wtiei; it seemed that iwtnn.g eanu eou'J stot) their drive, the icvaders have been hurled back in Ji-order and the capital is safe. With a recklessness bordering pudence, the result of seeing f" after fortress surrender mreiv t i: mi Ters efi-r-' the menace of their approach, tt; gign iguored the nerves the have known were masi here. eastward from Paris expecting to crash a weak and routed enemy. In so doing they uncovered their right and Ceneral Maunoury struck. Surprised, dazed at- most, they turned to face the new en- emy wueu again xneT were tiu on nit flank, this time by General French. IJ' . the British: Franchet d'Est-erev Fifth; Foch of the Ninth reserves. ti .' t Von KI,k nil Von Bu,.lflWi ,..,,);, the H.rm.. rk.hf wPre com stag 311-1 tried to rally their armies but F storm ot trench 75 shells. The German "battle without a tomor row," has failed. The morrow is here and with it signal defeat. T:o- Battle of the Marne is over and the Frenc h have w on. In Paris the news was hailed as the announcement of a, miracle." Ka- h d.v une 40,imo or 50.0UI) j-o le had been abandoning the city, eipeetiug the . memaie entrance ot trie iicrruan It was known that the kaiser's legions "'ere near and advanciug twenty aid thirty mile a day. The Fren, ii an ! rit i.-ii seemed powcrlc-s to check them nJ a irredeemable di-n.-ter app.-ared inevitable. i f" ,n" ,,1V' however, shn.-in, ,'""t"::'"1'' t,f l;,nt'ral i, j tlu" rr'"1'" commaiid. r-in-cro.-f. )ll U,r.v ' Kratifying but n -t s.irpr " vuua ,ke logical re.ult .. th. ing. the made immediately after n.arleroi. . W h"n "or " deelartu Joffre knew ! we ituuiu uuir iu lao- n i.ar me iT.-r- ni : ns called u "br .siii I attack." .'i.-t " " ""5 " '''' had 11,1 l.b-a. AK''',1!' one "' -i deon 's n.axin -s ' 'vcry,, here then see.' h- ',,. ,,' .,, nd eiideavore-l t the enemv. Tin- mass move came through Belgium nr,.l Luxembourg, the point least c.-ct,-i. with the result that Jof f re 's reserved were a long way off. Oreatly outnum bered and without sufficient time to bring up reint -ti ements, Jof f re. win naj )(,t ,ne rh i y 's streugth at Char i ler-ji. determined to t, 1 boek ii.,..i. ter wnat liatipen.-.'. he resolved to keep hi armies intact to refne nil offer, come somewhere along the Champagne Goebel. of Kansas city, Kansas, vice tableUnds. Joffre started the formation -brc.i lent: Fred E. Farnsworth. New of a new army at Amiens. This was the I York, secretary; W. G. Fitxwilson. New Ninth army, under tieueral Maunoury. : Vork. assistarit seeretary; E. M. Wing, The tru.n. tra n-port it. this army I.ai "rose. Wisconsin, treasurer, an-1 raove.1 only at night and, I am told by Thomas H. I'atoti. New York, generat staff officer., the Germans were not - vounel. aware of its formation. j ' leveland an-i Milwaukee, it is an- Hut 'he German u-Cance was too ' """need, w-vtild vie next year for the rspi.l. The ne jn;iV was not more convention. than half formed when Amieus had to t-c abandoned, l.i!!,.. Arms and most of uorthe-n Frtin.-e vv. overrun so. acnin by night, the i"i t t vrniiiiourv hast. eed back t Pur . ri us c tt.l-leted. i-ptemher 3 the (',. rmans were sig.it . ? the . iii-i'.i f.-w miles t-i the n their line Co' tin .. ! I eastward and n--rt'., t trol. res. 1.,-d the . eat of Pans and I of the S'ine to the I The tierm.m gerc fide whether thev w 1 mediately or t" f- ii J army which th.-v K Their right was rtii f Paris while 1 1. toufhea.tward, ' s ard. I'hlai. pa-1 e . to the south-! 1 thin a few miles 1. -'hwest. j si .taff had to de- ; a' I take Paris im ( up and crush an j hcved to be demur- i 1 allied, routed ' opp.vti'io.1. Thev- , i'lc-vvable of Keriou.' ii -.e the latter alter- native the only pr--t,-r one from a military point of vi.-w. for with the al- 1 bed armv crii.lo'.l 1 rile fruit into the f-.r the tr.se . iii.tcs 1 of f-. southward and er - Kluck ' nrmv in c-o, Huclow ' armv tnrse :. would fall like ' hand that shook 1 ' lining directly cRf. Paris Von J H-tion w ith Von I eastward to .le-) ; liver the k.i.vk..-,t i..,v. ! .loffre't bmg.'.l f P ruinnte aad come. Mlis air fronts r. 1 .rte.1 that Vcn 1 Mufk svsc- hsd fv.-ed the east and I tl.lOreey and fxtenditii? esatward tnwanls t oulomoiicrs, would Veen in touch with th Fifth aririv nude d Esrerer. Other xrrnr commanders were ordered to be inn their attack at .Una September n. Joffre in his order of the eT, eonctud- ir.f wilk "An armv wWa c.a wo longer ad vance, must Vol,, ,j ;f n ,aa act hold, atu.t die." At davbreak na the : t t H Maaaonrr'f reserve struck, fall U Vv Kl.w flsnk. Fsi.leetlv the latter' Utelti reace derartmeat kad failed aigwallr. Had a know a ot th prose c of zades of cavalrv, were moving north eastward with comparatively little re sistance. By night they had reached a position astride the Grand Morin. their right being at Dagny, on the Aubetin river. Further east the fighting had been much hotter for here it was a frontal attack. D 'Esperev had to carve his wav forward and he did not get far on the sixth. He had against him the bulk ot Von Kluck'a army; the Westphalians. Hanoverians and t.rrandenburghers. Foh, with his Ninth reserves, east of D'Esperey not only had Von Buelow orDesii2 him but the riirht wine of Van Prus- Hausen's Saions. The Duke of Wur ni'Jsf temberg met attack with attack when -rntMi ' Lanirle 's Fourth armv struck at him nt.ar -jtrv aI1j u'i3 Dest t0 break throiiifh. 'The result was a standstill fight. .-arr-til. around Verdun, had be0n less i,,,.,t. for the liermnn crown nrince nn,l the crown nrince of Bavaria stock w-ir! all their might hoping to take Verdun. i the forts along the heights of the Mouse 'and so turn the French right. They gained some ground, though they failed in their greater task. i On the seventh the fighting was re- i sumed more fiercely than ever.' Maun- oury's flanking movements went for-! , ward with a dash and the British were , ' carried along with it. The plateaus i along the river Ourcq were piled high with German dead. Elsewhere, despite j desperate attacks the French merely , held their own. j The eighth seems to have been th? ! critical day. Maunoury kept up hisj advance with the Bnrtsti on his right j while Fie'h saw the opening for his wedge. During the night he continued1 his tuanouvers so that at dawn on the j ninth he was pounding away at a large gap between Von Hansen and Von Bue- low, at the same time, with his left he. i too. struck at Von Buelow s right, un-i covered by Maunoury and the British. , The retreat of Von Buelow imposed.' Caught in a pecket only a rapid re tirement could save him and his army. : This he did very cleverly, staff of-i ficers declare only a genius could have extricated himself, for. at times, under' violent shellfire fr.-m the French three-iic-h rapid-fire field pieces, his troops, showe 1 signs of panic. j The retreat of Von fCluck was f i V.V.-1 v that of Von Biel.nv and the' -'her commanders eastward to the. Y-.-.-s. . , - . atlOnal tOaVentlOIl of Bankers Closed S. artle. Wash.. Sept. lo. Delegates Th the An.etican linkers association : .o:;e-it:or. the;r wic. and families ar.'1 er, ;oyir.g to.'ny an ail day steamer ex-j ci.rioK on Ptiget sound, vtsiting Ta-' coma an-i 'he navy yard at Bremerton.' The ci mention was officially ad journed .me .ne Thins. lav evening with the eie-uti-e cuin-il favoring Kansas ( ity. M isouri. the next : me -ting. Ex-Presidt-nt Wi:hm H. Taft will be tendered an informal reeertion at the , Press club ton :o,t between in and li oVRkk j At noon Taft a-i-be-sed the chamber of con:n.er.-e membership lua.-heoa at the New Washington hotel ' dames K. Lvm-h of San Francisco was install..! "vesterdav afterno.m Hi president of the association- Peter W - Kcs,ilutio.i were adopted at tiie fina! session cotiiinenoing President Wilson and Se.-retsrv of Suite Lan!: for at- 1 tempts they have made toward irettin Did It Ever Happen IJltxH If East Through California You can travel to any city in the East or South through. California at little additional expense. Ton can visit Panama-Pacific Exposition San Francisco and Pan-California Exposition San Diego Yon are allowed 10 days stopover at San Francisco, 10 days atopover at Los Angeles and 10 days atopover at El Paso without eharge. Tou will see grand mountains, fertile valleys, thriving cities and strange people. 4 Trains a Day In each direction provide comfortable ac commodations and connect with through trains at San Francisco for Eastern and South ern points. Let our nearest Agent outline your trip. Our folders "Wayside Notes" and "Cali fornia Expositions" will be of interest. They are free, SOUTHERN PACIFIC John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. HklmilKy II I'M ici iiffii'il it a niodifica.ion of England's. France 's au-i eaii s ueci.ituuuu oi cotton as a contraband of war. CANDIDATE FOB BISHOP. ciltTle W.'l-ih S.mt 111 Vat- -A.ln W Leonard pastor of the First Methot-! i-t church, is being boosted by friends' here, in Tacoma, Belliugham and other I ciries of the Puget Sound conference of' Methodist churches, as the candidate1 for bishop. Eight delegates to the natitinal con- f ereuce of the church at Saratoga, next May, were chosen today. A bishop isri to be appointed at t'uat'convention. i it chosen. Dr. Leonard will be the first bishop ever rppointed on' the Pa cific ctrist. SYMPATHETIC WOMEN JTOORS. Seattle. Wash.. Sept. 10. When sev eral women jurors rushed to tiie aid of M.ss Mayme Lee. aged is, who is suing loha C. Michaels, proprietor of the New York Lunch, for sjixi.000 damages for personal injuries, when she fainted on the witness stand in Judge Jtirev's department r.f the superbr court, Mich- of .. .... " r aeis attorneys moved for a dimi.ni denied. The girl1 to You? 3'XWIWSM J,l i,,0aV;i.e rw. 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