ft CIRCULATION IS OVER 4000 DAILY 1 1 FULL LEASED VVIRR mSPATPTirC! ff fTHIRTY-NINTH YEAR NO. 179 SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1916 PRICE TWO CENTS ggSSSnrFESS (imraifir mil ii 11 ii ii- ui -uffByMjR: u ai iifi )j 1 i 1 1 11 11 CROSSES BORDER HPS HUNGARY 1 30,000 i $rst Army Which It Is filleged, Is In sansylvania BERLItoAYS CHANGE OF ARMIES IS ONLY EFFECT Germans Plan Drive That Will Crush Rumania Can They Do It? $ EXPECT GREECE TO ACT London, Aug. 29. Germany is preparing for Greeces' entry into !; the war, said u Copenhagen dis- patch to the Exchange Tele- gruph today. A number of Greek.. already have left Ger- many, the dispatch said, and diplomats at Berlin believe war inevitable. - Chancellor Von Bethmann- ' Holwegg will receive the Greek sf minister tomorrow, the report Haiti. By Carl W. Ackerman. i United Press staff correspondent.) Berlin, Aug. 29. A great battle may oc.ur along the Rumanian frontier within a few hours. Rumania has beeu concentrating large forces along the Transylvania border for several dnys, the Tageblatt reported to day. The Teutonic forces took prompt measures to guard against a sudden in vasion and have massed sufficient troops to meet the Rumanian attack. The patrol skirmishes reported in yes terday's official war office statement may mark the beginning of an impor tant engagement. The Berlin newspapers commented with grent restraint upon Rumania's entrance into the war. The general opinion of German critics is that Ru mania will play no important part in military affairs except that it will be necessary to regroup the forces of the central powers to some extent to meet the new enemy. The I.okal Anzeiger points out that the Rumania declara tion does not affect the food situation because Rumania has exported little food to Germany and Austria lately. Chancellor Von Bcthmnnn-Hollweg .held a lengthy conference today with the leading ministers, including Dr. Helfferich, vice-chancellor and Acting Under Secretary of Foreign Affairs Ticutler Branteestratur. The Loknl Anzeiger announced today that Field Marshal Mackensen is in command of the Teutonic armies in the Balkans. "The people of the extended entente will find us ready to meet the new sit uation created by Rumania's entrance into the war," said the Lokal "Anzeig er. "Next to Hiiidenburg on the east front, Mackensen will now begin a new bloody work in the Balkans. Now his time has come to reap the harvest of long montus or quiet preparation. Oispatehes from Kronstadt, Transyl vania, six miles from the Rumanian frontier, report that since Sunday an unbroken stream of German and Aus- trimi refugees have been crossing the border from Rumania. They declare that Rumania's declaration of war came as a complete surprise to the in habitants of Kuniauia, but that Russia, (Continued on Paare Seven.) ome folks are like a sky rocket. They make a noisy git away, bust an' then fall by th"' way. Prosperity (mockers are th' latest. BIG FIRE RAGING IN ' FOREST RESERVE Blaze Starts from Careless Campers in Snoqualmie Forest Reserve Tacoma, Wash., Aug. 2!). Fifty ad ditional fire fighters were sent out to day to aid the men already combatting the forest fires reported raging in the Snoqunlmie forest reserve near the summit of the Cascades. The fire is burning along the White Chuck river and 1500 acres of timber already have been burned over. The loss is estimat ed at several thousand dollars. The Northern Pacific railroad station at Lester was saved with difficulty by employes of the company who stretched long lines of hose from locomotives with which to fight the flames. Small fires reported from various parts of Pierce county last week, are now under control. Carelessness on the part of motorist9 and campers is assigned by state fire warden F. E. Pnpe as the cause of the greater number of the fires started in the reserve. IB With Mrs. Hughes Takes Some Hard Climbs in Colorado's Big Park By Perry Arnold (United Press staff correspondent) ; Estes Park, Colo., Aug. 29. The lure of the mountain trails caught Charles E. Hughes today. With Mrs. Hughes by his Bide in a gown of creamy linger ie and white pumps, he essayed a pre cipitous cliff which juts downward from tlMvi'allB river highway in Colon ial Park to view Chasm Falls.' The stiff climb down the rock strewn gorge was entirely impromptu, as Mrs, Hughes explained, ruefully pointing to her dainty pumps. "I do not usually do mountain climbing in these shoes," she said as she caught her husband's hand and was helped from one great boulder to another. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes spent the day motoring, playing golf and in strolling about the lesser nills in the vicinity of Estes Park. In the long ride up the magnificent roadway which rises a sheer 2000 feet within four miles, Mr. Hughes discovered some "teeth" in1 Meeker's Point, the mountain shield-i ing the continental divide, that al most tempted him to start climbing despite his modish sack suit and new russet shoes. He restrained himself, however, until Chnsm Falls was reach ed, when his penchant for overcoming obstacles overcame him. The guests of the Stanley hotel are already getting accustomed to seeing Mr. Hughes lounging easily in a big rocking chair, on the veranda, discuss ing altitudes and mountain climbing with other, enthusiasts. He mislaid his hut today and there was hurried search for it before he could go out and discuss general, but not "political'' conditions, with Wil liam Allen White, who live here dur ing the summer. - ! esneCjiBiy in their relation to the adop ? a . . I tion ot o'n eight hour day. The matter 1 TODAYS BALL SCORES Ji tfcr ,w-eek9 W fiBV u"" m viuu vvvmujv . j rm,uited in a complete dead American First game R. H. E. Detroit 9 12 0 New York 17 1 Covnleski and Spenrerj Cullop, Love and Alexander. Second game R. H. E. Detroit 4 9 0 Xew York 17 0 Dauss and Spencer; Mogridge and Walters. Chicago 2 9 4 Philadelphia 9 10 0 Cicotte. Williams, Dnnforth and Lapp; Johnson and Haley. First game R-St.- Louis 5 H. E.I 6 8 Boston 3 Davenport and Severoid; Leonard,' Ruth and Mays and Thomas. Uf theii demands were refused; the Second game R. H. E-! strike was imminent; it has since been St. Louis 8 ! 1 set for the fourth of September next. Boston i. 2 ti - it aft'ccts the men who man the freight Groom and Severoid; Shore, yckoff ; tra;ng on practically every railway in and Cady. .(the country. The freight service Cleveland Washington 0 Bagbv and O'Neill; Shaw, Ayres and llenrv.- National R. .. 3 .. 2 H. 9 10 New York Cincinnati Ssllee, Shocker and Mctarthy; 3o.it- ehell and Clark Philadelphia .. 8 7 3 Chicago 3 tf 2 Rixey and Burns; Vaughn and El liott. Boston 0 12 2 Pittsburg 18 2 Tvler and Gowdy; Jacobs, Kantelh ner and Schmidt. PRESIDENT TELLS CONGRESS ABOUT STRIKEJATTERS Outlines Trouble from Begin ning and Details His Ef forts for Peace PICTURES DESTRUCTION STRIKE WOULD ENTAIL Suggests Legislation Neces sary for Protection of Entire Country . , Effect of Message On Pending Strike Washington, Aug. 29. The railroad brotherhood leaders in dicated this afternoon after the president's speech that it had no way altered their determina tion to strike Monday unless a satisfactory agreement is reached with the managers. The thirteen general chair men of the railway brotherhood remaining here to deal with the strike situation will leave for home immediately, it was an nounced late this afternoon. Only the four brotherhood pres idents will stay in the city and they plan to direct the strike from here. Railway presidents took the oposite view. "The strike is off for the present," some of them said. 'The brotherhood men will not dare call a strike while congress is threshing the matter out." That the legislative program outlined by the president could be put through congress in two days, possibly is one, provided the joint interstate commerce committee can get together im mediately without serious dif ferences," is the belief of House . Leader Kitchin. . Washington, Aug. 29. The presi dent's speech to congress on the rail road strike issue follows: "Gentlemen of the Congress: "I have come to you to seek your assistance in dealing with a very grave situation, which has arisen out of the demand of the employes of the railroads engaged in freight train service that they be granted an eight hour working day, safeguarded-by payment for an hour and a half of service for every hour of work beyond the eight. "The matter has been agitated for more than a year. The public has been made familiar with the demands of the men and the arguments urged in favor ! of them and even more familiar with the objections of the railroads and their counter demand that certain privileges now enjoyed by their men and certain basis of "payment worked out through many years of contest be reconsidered, lock between the parties. Law is Inadequate. "The means provided by law for the rueOia'.ion of he controversy failed and th.) means of arbitration for which the ht provides were rejected. The rep resentatives of the railway executives pn posed that the demands of the men be submitted in their entirety to arbitra tion r.long with certain questions of re adjustment as to pay and conditions of employment which seemed to them to be cither closely associated with the demands or to call for reconsideration on their own merits; the men absolutely 1 declined arbitration, especially if any j of their established privileges were by that means to be drawn again in question. The law in the matter put no compulsion upon them. The four ltmla.l thnnennrl man frnm tvhnm thA ,iemauj8 proceeded had voted to strike tlirniiahnnt the United States must ' stand still ufitil their places are filled if, indeed, it should prove possible to fill them at all. Cities will be cut off from their food supplies, the whole commerce of the nation will be para lvzed, men of every sort and occupa tion will be thrown out of employment. "i countless thousands will in all likelihood be brought, it may be, to the very point of starvation, and a tragical na tional calamity brought on, to be added to the other distresses of the time, be cause no basis of accommodation or set tlement has been found. Eight Hour Day ia Just "Just so soon as it became evident (Continued on Page Eight.) MARBLEHEAD TO BE AT Governor Notified Department Will Send Cruiser to Take Part At the request of those having charge of the arrangements for t'ne annual As toria regatta, Governor Withycombe has lately taken up with the secretary of the navy, Honorable Josephus Dnuiels, the possibility of securing the U. 8. Marblehead, now stationed in Portland, for participation in the regatta at As toria, September 1 to 4. Governor Withycombe has today re ceived a telegram from Acting Secre tary of the Navy Benson advising him that the governor's request has been granted and the Marblehead will be au thorized to proceed to Astoria and re main there during the regatta, and that the crew will be augmented by two ad ditional officers and 50 men, members of the Oregon Naval Militia. Acting Secretary Bensou further stated that this addition to tht crew of the Mar blehead would be allowed five days' pay and subsistence for that time. E Indian Sold Mine Took Family for Ride in Hearse to Show His Class Maysville, Cal., Aug. 29. Jim Tobin is just an untutored Indian, but he cer taiuly knows how to entertain his fam ily when his days are flush. The best is none too good for him. So when he . soldi a mine on Slate creek, he determined to celebrate in style. Taxicabs had no appeal for Jim when he brought his squaw and pap pooses hero but he saw a discarded hearse in the rear of a livery stable and immediately purchased it. Next he bought a watermelon apiece for the squaw and each of her six children, placed the whole family in the glass enclosed dead wagon and proudly jog ged up and down Main street display ing to the wondering world his idea of "class" in, celebrations. A trail of watermelon seeds and rinds marked the hearse's path. When last seen, Jim was joy riding his hearse over the sixty mile trail to wards home, the proudest Indian in California. $ Late War Bulletins Salonika, Aug. 29. Cheers went up all along the 140 mile front of the al lies in the Balkans when news of Rumania's declaration of war was flashed to the battle front from Salonika. Tho first word was received here early yesterday. Bulletins were dis played in the troop camps and the news was rushed on to the front. Thousands of small slips of paper, carrying word of Rumania's action, were hastily printed and carried to the front by Anglo-French aviators to be showered behind the Bulgarian lines. Rumor of Resignations. The Hague, Aug. 29. A report was circulated in diplomatic circles here to day that both Foreign Secretary Von Jagow and Under Secretary Zimmer man have tendered their resignations to the German chancellor as the result nf Rtittianin'a iteclnrntinn nf war. nnd that the resignations have been ac cepted. General Attack Made. London, Aug. 29. Rumanian troops attacked on the whole Teutonic front yesterday and met with success, said a Bucharest dispatch transmitted from Rome by" wireless today. Fighting Has Begun. Berlin, Aug. 29. Fighting between Teutonic forces and Russo-Rumauia vanguards in the Carpathians, was re ported by the war office this after noon. The wording of the German official statement suggests that Russinn'troops have already joined the Rumanians near the Hungarian border. Humored Assassinations. London, Aug. 29. A wireless dis patch from Rome this afternoon said reports of serious occurrences in Sofia have reached there. It has not been possible to verify these reports, the dispatch added, but from the fragmen tary character of advices reaching Rome it appears that German and Turkish officers in the Bulgarian cap ital have been assinated. Rumanians Defeated. Amsterdam, Aug. 29. Rumanian troops have been - defeated in an en- HI MEN LOOK AT PROPOSED PLANS OF LEGISLATION Must Get Laws In Operation Before Monday Says One Leader NO ONE HAS AUTHORITY TO WITHDRAW ORDER Brotherhood Will Submit De cision Today Rejecting Railroad Proposal By Carl D. Groat. (United Tress staff correspondent.) Washington, Aug. 29. If President Wilson plans to halt threatening rail road strike through a law simijur to the Canadian disputes act, he must get it passed beforo Monday, Otherwise the brotherhood leaders will go ahead with their plans for walking out Labor day. This intimation came very broadly from the brotherhood camp today and the intimation is supported by the nu ture of the Canadian law. The law rrcvents a lockout or a strike being started during a given period. Hence, if the strike is already in effect Mon day, the law will be inoperative in the view of brotherhood leaders. To Reject Proposals. Washington, Aug. 29. Tho four brotherhood chiefs and tho 24 members of the executive committee today agreed to reject the proposal of the rail road presidents as made to President Wilson yesterday. No formal announce ment was made, but it is known this actbn wf) taken". " "We-will submit our decision to the president leday." said President Lee. of tho Brotherhood of Trainmen. Tim . morning meeting heard the re port of tho lour leaders on their con ference with the president Inst night, at which they told him their final pur pose, though they did not report specif ically on the railway presidents' pro posals. Cannot Change Order. The brotherhood heads explained to day they have no authority to rescind the strike for September 4. The resolu tion, adopted Sunday, before the U40 representatives left for home, they said, gave them authority to fix the date and hour of the strike "unless prior to the day and hour so fixed, notice shall have been received that the proposal of the pre?idei't of the United' States, accepted by us August 18, has been accepted by th! lniliond companies." It ii understood that the executive ciinmittee of 24, to whom full powers were aelegateu by the (40, could grant such authority to the four leaders, but that it has thus far withheld it. Brotherhood leaders feel that Presi deat Wilson's proposal for eight hour day laws will be a greater burden to the railroads than to the men. Under it, a vast number of non-union men would automatically become eight hour men and while the brotherhood, men would get only eight hours an no in crease in pay they believe the economic pressure caused by such a svs tem would weigh more heavily on the railroads than granting tho president's demands. "Misery loves company," said a prominent lender. "The railroads' reason for refusing the men's demands is purely economic; our reasons contnin humanitarian elements, so if the rail roads must include in the eight hour day the men whom they call the down trodden eighty per cent, they will be suffering 20 times to our one." Great Throttle in Labor. President Wilson's other proposal creating a law similar to the Canadian disputes act is generally opposed by the brotherhoods. They call it "the great est throttle on labor" ever devised. "While the law provides that no ac tion shall be taken by cither side, pend ing investigation," said a leader, "ex- i perience in Canada hows that capital always has taken advantage of the in vestigation period to prepare for a strike. The Canadian act is named for Lemieux. We have been 'Lcmieux' too mnn times " Whether the brotherhoods will fight the law provided it is passed before in auguration of a strike is conjectural. "I cannot discuss the law, for it is a question when uch a law would be operative," said A. B. Garretson, spokesman for the brotherhoods. "I don't know whether it would be effective." "What would happen if the law were passed about Monday noon after a strike was started" the leader was asked. "Well I should say tho men would have plenty of leisure time to consider it." gagement near Tomos Pass, south of the Transylvania city of Kronstadt, according to Vienna dispatches to night. The Invading forces were driv en back to Rumanian soil. BILL ray Many Witness Ceremony Philippine Bill Also Be comes Law Washington, Aug. 2 President Wil son today signed the army, navy, Phil ippine and bill of ladings bills. The ceremony was featured by the preseace of nearly a hundred persons, including Secretary of War Baker, members of the committees who bundl ed the different bills in the house and senate, prominent Filipinos and others. "I think the whole country will feel," the president said, after signing the army appropriation bill, "that this congress has donea great servico in the cause of national defense. This bill, which provides appropriations for the army and does not deal with the reorganization plan, shows Miat the na tion's finances are behind tho defense movement. "The navy bill Is a remarkable one. Never before hns so much been done to buill up this branch of the service. "The Philippine bill excites pecul iar feeling in me because there have been times when tho people of the is lands have doubted our spirit toward them. This provides for a genuine and broader safe government, contentment and political capacity. It is high time this country admitted tills act of jus tice." FIFTEEN THOUSAND Fiftieth and Perhaps Last Na tional Encampment at Kansas City Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 29. Fifteen thousand veterans thronged Camp Kansas City today for the fiftieth en campment of the Grand Army of the Rcnublic. Downtown thoroughfares wcro crowded with the wearers of the blue, while hotel lobbies and convention hall buzred with stories of 'CI. It was a day of memories for those who had fought and bled for tho fiunl cementing of the Union. While meetings of the national coun cil of administration and the commit tee on credentials were scheduled for today, the rank and file were freo to search foi' the long missing comrade or fight again the battles of the war. Death has claimed two of tho wear ers of the little bronie button whose .latnrminiitinn in MPA tllfl boVS OnCC again was stronger than their- feeble bodies. B. W. Marey, or roiem, nnu Spencer Richardson, of Dallas, both died of heart distase. Joy and Borrow mingled at the reg istration booths. Occasionally there is a meeting of comrades long scparnteJ and registration in that immediate vicinity usually halts for a minute. More often there is disappointment caused by the absence of a comrade, whom the veteran may have come half across the continent to meet. The attendance has decreased some what, due to the fear of a railroad strike, and lack of rates, but will reach forty thousund. A special train brought six hundred veterans of the departmeat of Illinois Into the city from Chicago this morn ing. Delegations from Ohio aud West Virginia ulso arrived. Red Cross stations were opened to day at several downtown points to ' . . . 1 il...!. euro tor weary veterans aim nicir wives. The encampment opens tonight with a semi-official meeting at the conven tion hull. Governor Arthur Capper, of Kansas, will deliver the address of wel come. Trading Was Light Market Not Uneasy New York, Aug. 29. The New York Evening sun financial review today J says: I Trading in tho greater part of to jdav's session was relatively light in volume, with the business poorly dis tributed and chiefly a reflection of the ! operations of the professional clement. Although at time moderato declines were reported, the movement did not accompany important liquidation or evi dence of uneasiness among the sub- 'stantinl Wall street interests regarding the railroad labor situation. Losses recorded in rail stocks, as for instance Union Pacific, Reading nnd New York Central, failed to ottnrct ac tive offerings, while weakness in some of the munition shares and specialties was not effective in bringing on a general selling movement. In the first part of the afternoon prices held firm at or slightly above the early low points, with fair buying noted in Mercantile Marine, many of the cop pers and United States Steel. Tennessee Copper was exceptionally weak. Just because woman was made from man's rib is no reason why he shouldn't have a little backbone left. DRAMATIC CLIMAX 10 NEGOTIATIONS IN LABOR DISPUTE President Appears Before Congress and Asks for Legislation "TO SAFEGUARD LIFE AND INTEREST OF NATION" Pionts Out Things Necessary to Prevent Disaster Now and in Future By Robert J. Bender. (United Press staft correspondent.) Washington, Aug. 29. As a dramatis climax to his unprecedented negotia tions to avert the most disastrous lajjor war that ever threatened the United States, President Wilson this afternoon appeared before a joint session of con gress and urged legislation "to safe guard tho life and intorest of the na tion." Ho said he urged the legislation "not in haste or merely as a means of meet ing a present emergency, but as per manent mid necessary additions to the law, suggested, indeed, by circumstances we had hoped never to see, but impera tive as well as just, if such emergencies are to be prevented in the future." He recommended: Immediate provision for the enlarge ment and administrative reorganization of the interstate commerce commission, enabling the committee to deal with tho duties now devolving upon it "with a promptness and thoroughness whieh. are with its prosent constitution and means of ' action practically impoa liblc." Establishment of an eight hour day as the legal basis ali'.te of work and of wages in the employment of all railroad employes engaged in operating trains in interstate transportation. ' The time fer the institution of thl law is to be de termined by congress. The president suggested no date. Wants Full Investigation. Authorization of the appointment by the president of a commission to study results in the application of the eleht hour dny to railroad operation, alike for the men and for the roads; the In vestigators to report to congress at the earliest possible date but without recom mendation as to legislative action. Approval by congress of consideration bv the interstate commerce commission of freight rate increases to meet such additional expenditures by the roads an are rendered necessary by adoption of the eight hour day. Amendment of the federal law which provides for the mediation, conciliation, and arbitration of such controversies as the present by adding a provision that in caso methods of accommodation now provided should fail, a full public inves tigation shall be instituted and complet ed before a strike or lockout may law fully bo attempted. Empowering the president in ease of military necessity to take control of such portions and rolling stock of the) railway sas may be required for mili tary use and to operate them for mili tary purposes with authority to draft into tho military sorvlce of the coun try such train crews and administrative) Officials lis circumstances require. Told of HU Efforts. The president outliucd in detail his) efforts to effect a settlement of the nendinir dispute through friendly nego tiations. His efforts, he said, had "re sulted in complete deadlock." Now the country faces, he said, a great nntionul calamity with "cities cut off from food supplies and the com merce of the nation paralyzed. Count less thousands will in all likelihood be brought, it may be, to be the very point of starvation." Mediation under the existing laws has failed, he admitted aud arbitration hus been rendcrod impossible "by the ottitude o'f tho men." He said that he had offered the eight hour day as a basis for agreement be cause the "whole spirit of the time and the prepondcrcnt evidence of recent economic experience" spoke out for it. Tn the face of indications that the railroads would "ultimately be obliged to accept the eight hour day by con certed action of organized labor, backed (Continued from Page Five.) ? THE WEATHER ; Oregon: To night and Wed nesday unsettled, probably show ers, cooler to night except near the coast, cooler east por tion Wednesdayj westerly winds.