'FINANCIAL EDITION NIGHT EXTRA liamtmu SMiger NIGHT EXTRA vol. m.-xo. 1G PIIHiADELl'IHA, MONDAY, OCTOJUSH U, 1910 Constant, 1010, t mi rcsiio Laoats Commht" PRICE ONJS OBKT SCHOOL ARMY MOBILIZED AFTER DELAY OF MONTH S-T ' ' ' WW. !, pimp, www., -. ,,w ,, w nn-w .I...W nil ,miiiimmg'i fBBassassasV B 'Iks JfW CvaLT flH0lStf?VMbMVlla vraWJ,k BKP'iBI tsmr9ssJm JsJBsfcssssssB B"aK'OP8Mi bH jtssasisassaaaaaaaaH HVK sr, f tHBP ju bbbpjhHhmjh 35S HfiBBi.IIHEKi w. 3R 'HIllllH i pyBv "lf- . BR BF iD SsN B ' '.)l'V , iS .KL . . Atrreement Scouted by M . M 3KkmK0BP . : , t fM TJiu i WORK OF Bmb-' o-BBK., n ? t. . :..,'"....'!: -,M.-r.i?.--;.iJiiiJi.-.&a QUICK NEWS BOSTON, 1st G.. 000000 0 0 00 2 0 PHILLIES 010010 0 Ox- 2 7 2 llnsntl nnd Goy; Alwtnmtcrr nml KUlcfoi'. Hmsllc nud 0'JJay. BOSTON, 2d G. PHILLIES.... 10 0 0 1 ' . 'i Z,v'J .41. ReullMch nut! (rftwriy; Dcmtiec nnd Killorci'. JJiiHHto iiiid O'Urty. " . I v . : '- ATHLETICS. BOSTON'. ... 0 0 0 0 2 0 10 ALLIED ARMIES PUSH FORWARD ON THE SOMME All of Faucourt L'Abbaye ' Now in Hands of Brit ish Troops 1914 TRANSIT PACT HOLDS IN SPITE OF EXTENSION PLANS Agreement Scouted Mayor, Provides for Added Lines RUSSIANS OFFENSIVE CLIQUE SEEN BERLIN, Oct. 2. Rumanian troops hare invaded Bulgaria for the first time since Rumania entered the, war. An official statement from the War Office this afternoon announced that the. Ru manians succeeded In crossfnff'thc Dan ube south of Bucharest, gaining a foot hold on Bulgarian soil. Battles of the first magnitude are raging in four theaters of war. On the Sommo front, in Franco, both the ' French and British have scored fresh gains. The British now hold all of the village of Faucourt-l'Abbayo, about which there has been severe . fighting for nearly a week. Powerful German counter-attacks were repulsed with heavy losses. Farther south the Frcnclvhnvo gained ground near Bou cheveanes, where mnny Germans wero captured. In Gnlicla the Russians are pressing home fresh assaults in the renewal of their drivo toward Lembcrg. Moro than 4200 prisoners have been captured in Galicia by tho Russians. . Both the British and Serbians have scored successes over tho Bulgarians in Macedonia, where fighting is in prog ress at many points. The British cap tureditwo villages and the Serbians one Village from the Bulgarians. In tho Transylvania theater of war tho army group of General von Falken hayn, former German Chief of Staff, is at grips with the main army group of the Rumanians. The Rumanians have been compelled to yield some ground, but dispatches indicate that, with tho arrival of reinforcements, tho Rumanians aro offering battlo to tho German allies on a strategic field that was chosen for the action. . . i4ir .J UV. wm,i .i. ixt, m -VM"-' ".t- - n teOsefTHoto1 I-U61. Philadelphia's school system began its fall operations today witn uuu.uuu children to provide for. Tho upper picture shows the throng gathered at tho door of the McCnll School, Seventh and Dc Lanccy streets. Below is a scene characteristic of school interiors today. i 300,000 CHILDREN 60 BACK TO BOOKS AFTER LONGEST VACATION Pupils of Public, Private and Parochial Schools Resume Studies Month Later ' Than Usual SESSIONS TO BE LONGER Seven New Schools Open Doors to Students John L. Kinsey, Sixty-fifth avenue and Limekiln pike. Franklin, Crescentville. Stowo Aimex, Seventieth street nnd Woodland avenue. John Hay Annex, Seventh and Wharton streets. Sharswood Annex, Second and Wolf streets. , William C. Jacobs Annex, Bustleton. . . .. ' West Philadelphia Boys? .Catholic High School, Fifty-fifth street and Cedar avenue. DAUGHTER OF BREWER AND YOUNG MOTORIST VANISH FROM AVALON Jean Bergner and Harry F. Michell, of Philadelphia Seed Concern, Leave Jersey Re sortTraced Here GIRL SOUGHT BY FATHER n...i jtiJ Sohr.nj; Same and Ctuly. TODAY'S RACING RESULTS Tirst Laurel race, maiden 2-ytnr-olds, 5 1-2 furlongs Counsel, 114, Schuttinfccr, S1.40, ?3.30, ?2.80, won; Fencer, 114, Forehand. O.IO. $1.10, second; Lynctte, 111, Cislunon, !?4.30, third. Time, 1.00. Second Liunel met, sellinu, 3-ytni-clds pud up, 1 1-10 miles Soldier, 100, W. Doyle, ?12.10, ?.").00, i?l.SO, won; Benjamin, 100, Ityinc, $8.0O, !?5.00, second; Queen of Fnmillse, 103, II. Schilling, 3.00, third. Time, 1.17 -l-S. AMERICANS CAPTURED DY MEXICANS EL FASO. Oct.,, 2. Imports reaching l-o today fioin NoguUx, AWj., c'.atcti It.".; 1 . tnty-ssj American soldiers ai;il truck dnveia ;uc held nrSsouora at the Mexican jail lu Nognlcs, SJcr.orn, jirat acW&i lliu liordei, following aovvml itots butwcu Aincrlcnns nml Moxicuu. ALEX PITCHES THE PHILS TO 2-0 VICTORY Moranmen Go Into First Place When the Great Shuts Out Braves SQUEEZE PLAY WORKS Grovcr Breaks All Records, Win ning Sixteenth Shut-Out -IIrb Won Thirty-three Games Ahead Once More 0 a 0 0 1 it 0 z 1108TON All. R. Hi O 8nodcmi, rt 4 o 1 4 MarnfiTlllr, ......... 13 Wlllinll. rf 4 Knnrtrhr. lb..,, 4 Hmltli, 3b S Clmpprllf, If, 3 Keun, 3b ,. 2 Fltipatrlck, Sli..., O Oonilj-, c. , . . ,..,. a lllarklmrn, o., 0 llaenn, p 2 Alln, p, o Connolly l tCollIni ...k, Maffeo ...... .... ... . 1 A,H. 1 3 O O S e 8 O 1 o e s 6 o e n e o ' o o 3 i is , Totals i ............ . 30 rillLUKS , An. n.ii. o. a. rankort. rf . ,,M ...... 4 o 1 0 llyrno, 3b 1 o 1 0 S Slock. 4 0 1X8 WhltUil. If 4 1X30 Cravatli, rf o 0 0 0 l.uilrim, lb 3 O X 13 , 1 Nlrlioir. 2b , . 3 0 X 4 8 Kljlefrr, a S X I I o Alexander, p - o 0 0 4 X, H U I e FIRST BATTALION N. J. FIELD ARTILLERY ORDERED HOME WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. Tho First Battalion, New Jersey Field Artillery, with tho exception of llattery C, has been ordered homo from tho border by Major General Funston. ALL OF FLAC0URT L'ABBAYE NOW IN BRITISH HANDS; FRENCH EXTEND GROUND LONDON. Oct 3 All of th village of Faucourt IVAbfcaye, about which there h been savage Hunting on tho Somme front for aeveral days, ,1a now In the hands of the British. There was hand-to-hand fighting In the streets and in the battle-btasted houses befpro the remnants of the German garrison were dfThe official report of the War Office today announced the complete capture of Fau eoutt VAbbaye. It admitted that tho Per- Centlnof on rate Bit, Column Two THE WEATHER FORECAST For Philadelphia and vicinity Fair ninht ' and- Tuetdau; somewhat warmer Tuesday; gentle easterly winds, IXNOTII OV WAV Baa rlui..i.. B :ST a.ra.lHoon rl... )ftP'mi IS iJtl..-. e;P.m.Mon .ouths. 4U!flp.ra. OHLAWAKK KlViai TIOK CHANOE CHESTNUT STREET tow wattr.. 12.02 .m.Ixiw wur..I3e p.m. W& water 4:4s a.m.lUUb vratr.. B?! p.m. TKMl'KKATUBK AT KACHIIOCK Th feet that cretplng- slow to school Went atorrolns out to Plav,n',A.'vvhlttler. Three hundred thousand little rhlladel phlans laid aside their baseball bats and hoops Way to take up pencils and books after the longest vacation they ever en Joyed. With Infantile paralysis . atlll prevalent n this and other cities, all classrooms were thrown open at 9 o'clock this morning In the publlo and parochial schools aftef a month's delay because of the epidemic. No report of the attendance In the public schools has been received yet at the head quarters of the Board of Education, but rollcalls Indicated that many of the parents, still fearful of the plague, were keeping their children at home. The city's educational machinery, how ever, was set In motion without friction or disorder. Books were furnished to every pupil i It) all schools except where part, time classes have been necessitated by over 'crowding there was a seat for eery child,, and an army of 6600 men and womeir teach ers was prepared for the opening of the new school year. - Kven the slight confusion that usually attends the beginning of the term was avoided and the usual complaints from P,r.J ents aDQUl miaiaaca in , Krsuing, it vt textbooks and other difficulties were no ticeably laoklng. Sessions will bfi .held this afternoon. Jn former years In the first week of the school year a single session was held each day; but this year, because of the lime ost when the schools wore closed on account of the epidemic- two sessions will Ve Inaugurate Immediately. About 16.Q00 pupils will attend part-time Oustavus W. Bergner, head of the Born ner & Kngel Beswlng Company, and Do tectlve Chnpman Marks are scouring the city to ascertain tho whereabouts of Miss Jean Bergner. daughter of tho wealthy brewer. Miss Bergner, who Iq nbout eighteen years old, left her father's home at Avalon. N. J., late yesterday, in an auto mobile owned and driven by Harry P. Michell, who was a week-end visitor nt the seashore cl(y. Mr. Bergner, after detectives had gono over the route taken by the couple, l now convinced that his daughter eloped with Michell and that they are now married In the hope that they have not had thjs wed ding ceremony performed, however, he has set detectives on a search for them In New York, with Instructions to "head them off." Mr. Michell Is but three or four years older than Miss Bergner, and the two are said to have been frequent companions, al though the young nan was not regarded' as a suitor by the Bergner family. The murrltfee license bureau In this city, every clergyman In Klkton, Md., as well as other possible rendezvous for elopers have beeft questioned without tidings of the miss ing young people. Detective Marks, accompanied by James Oallagher, of Fifty-sixth street and Glrard avenue, a life-long friend of Mr. Bergner, this afternoon located the automobile In which the young people left Avalon. The machine was found In the garage of the Autocar Service Company, at Twenty-third The co-operative agreement of May, 19U, between tho Philadelphia ltapld Transit Company and representatives of the city is not abrogated by tho 'inclusion, sJnco it was formally, accepted, of a high-Booed lino to Iloxborough, On the contrary, thouch npt named, sptciilcnlly, that. Unfl-nrid.otheriof.r V tiioHsam5Eof t were Toresce'it hy- former Director Taylor and Included tin the plan which he submitted to the signatory parties and was accepted by them. Mayor Smith was quoted today as say. Ing that, In his opinion, tho Taylor-Stotes-bury-Mltten pact docs not amount to any. thing at this time, because "wo havo decided to build more lines." Tho co-operative ngreement to which the Mayor refers contains a caption, "Future High-Speed Lines." Under this. In the plainest language possible, the agreement empowers tho "rlty to linre the rlelit to re. quire company to rqulp and nprrute on the abote linnU additional rapid trunult linn or extrmlons which the city may from time to time build." QOVKttS ALT INTENSION This section, In tho opinion of persons familiar with contracts and similar agree ments, covcrB fully the noxboroush exten sion, or any other line, whether new or In part operated, which the demands of traffic may compel. Changes In detail of the original comprehensive plan for ad ditional lines, under (he paragraph quoted, are foreseen and provided for. The signers of tho agreement, on the part of tho vari ous parties at Interest, Including the city, accepted them. City Solicitor Connelly, at that time a member of Councils', both as chairman of the Finance Committee and of tho commit tee specially appointed to consider the "Taylor plan," represented the city during RULGARS REPORT CAPTURE OF FRENCH FLYER UUIU.IN, Oct. 2. Tim capturo of n French ncroplano after a raid on Sofia Is described In n Bulgarian ofticlnl statement received hero today. ,It says: "A French biplane on Soptctnher SO flow over Sofia and was Immediately nttackod by our fortress defense. The hostile aeroplane could drop only one bomb, which fell tAoiiptjtspfY tho. twpmrilers'bwuEUtdawnh uccuMHH3 ii rencn pilot iuia a ocru(n ' uuaurver were1 uiiuui 4iuu ,,vt:iu- iusvv prisoners. (A Puilo official report of September 30 tella of an'utlack on Sofia by n French nlrfnnn dnil his safe landing In Bucharest, cnpltnt of ItumanU.) EXILED FRENCH PRISONERS BACK IN GERMANY IinHI.IN, Oct. -. Ten thousand French wur prisoners, some time ago sent Into Ilusslan ton!toiy occupied by Germany, have been returned to German prison camps, tho Overseas News Agency nnnhunccd today. It is expected that tho French prisoners wero Rent to Hussla as n "measure of reprisal," tho French authorities having previously sent German prisoners to Morocco, Algiers and Tunis. 'Now that theso German prisoners havo been returned to France, "tho German measure has fulfilled Its aim," It Is .semiofficially stated. U-BOAT SINKS TWO NORSE SHIPS IN ARCTIC CIiniSTIANIA, Norway, Oct. 2. A German submarlno has penetrated the Arctic Ocean, where It has sunk two Norwegian ships. STRIKE TIES UP ALBANY TROLLEY LINES ALBANY, N. Y., Oct. 2. City trolleymon wont on strlko today, completely tying up thn United Traction Company linea In Albany and Rensselaer. Moro than 1000 rrien are out of work as a result of tho walk-out. FROST DESTROYS 5500,000 LANCASTER TOBACCO CROP LANCASTER, Pa.. Oct. 2. Frost Saturday and Sunday nights virtually de stroyed all tobacco In Lancaster County still uncut, estimated nt twenty per cent of tho crop. The loss will ho fully halt a million dollars. Sunday many growers cut their crop, but too latu to save It for unything but scrap. Continued on Face llfteen. Column Three GIRL HURT AS SHE SLIDES FOR LIBERTY Continued on rae Tow. CtehtMa Tjo Continued on l'ace nfUtn.'Colomn Too MAN KICKS MAN TO DEATH SeventyYear-Oid Workman Fatally Attacked by Fellow-Laborer WKST CHESTER. Ta., Oct. 2 James Brown, more than seventy years old, who had been employed by a contractpr on a threshing crew In Kast Bradford township, near this place, is aeau ui mis .iibsici County Hospital as the result of having been kicked In the stomach late Saturday afternoon by Robert M, Stern, a young man, employed also on the road work. Following the assault, Oacar Flowers, -who witnessed the fray, badly beat Htwn and later gave ball for a furtfeer ho ring before Magistrate 8. M. Faxse. Itare. TV Justice also held Stern In ball to awaK the iMutt of the InJurlee to the eeswr mas. a4 I the police are now seeking Win. Makes Rope of Sheets and Tries to Escape From Detention House ' A daring attempt to escape from the House of Detention, at Twenty-second and Arch streets, today, may cost Jennie Hallo well her life. With the aid of bed sheets, which she took from rooms In the Institution, the girl made a rope. She tied one end of It to the bed In her room and then slid toward the ground from tho third floor. When within about 20 fret of the ground tho Im provised rope parted and the girl was thrbwn head first to the sidewalk. She was' found unconscious and bleeding by tho watchman. He sent her to the Women's Southern Homeopathic Hospital. There It was found she had received serious bodily Injuries. The girl was arrested on Saturday In a Market street department store and ac cused of shoplifting. Despite a tearful story she was sent to the Houee of Deten tion. i. At th.e time of her arrest she gave her name as Ketber WI1H and said a lived at WIMwocxL Met Anally admitted that her name wj .JiUHoweU, She lived for a time with a hum' family lit atysfli Dennis, Cape r filiy. S. J. For Um last few mPBtbe sate- had Hved with a brother In this city. RUSSIA'S POPULATION RISES 3,800,000 DURING WAR PUTIIOGUAD, Oct. 2, According to the statistics for tho' year 191C, which now aro available, the population of Russia Increased inoro than 03,000,000, or 42 per cent, since 18!7, It Increased moro than .1,800,000, or mo'ro than 2 per cent, since 1914. Tho total population Is set down as 132,182,000, U. S. ENVOY TAKES HAND IN NICARAGUA ELECTION MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Oct. 2. Dr. Benjamin L, Jefferson, American minister to Nicaragua, Is reported to havo given notlco that nny one who participated In tho regime of President Zelaya or who has conspired against the present Government will bo excluded from runnlpg for tho presidency In the presidential elections which began today. CUBAN PAPER WANTS TO BET $10,000 ON ALLIES NEW YORK, Oct. 2. La Lucha, of Havana, a leading newspaper of Cuba,' announces through Its correspondent hero that It Is willing to wager $10,000 that tho Allies will win tho war. La Lucha will accept n wager from any part of tho world, Its offer remaining open until October 7. TACKS DAMAGE TIRES ON WALNUT LANE BRIDGE Tacks sprinkled along' "Walnut lane bridge between Manayunk nnd German town resulted Jn forty-soven complaints being lodged In two days at the Haines street and Germantown avonuo police station by nutomoblllsts. Plain-clothes men ore watching for the source of the tire damage. 25 PER CENT TAX INCREASE URGED BY GEORGE W. NORRIS Total, jo S 77 18 j! Ilnttnl for Keen in eighth. tllatted for dowdy In eighth. illattrd for Ilagan In eighth. Doubles AVhlttrd, Ludcrus Ivlllefer, Harrtnces, MnranTlllr, Crarath, Alexander, Ilyrne, 3...Htolen bases l'askert. Htnek out by Alexander, It Karon, 3.,, Base on Imlls on llrcan, 1. Double plays, Maran tllle, l'gan and Kenetchy. Umpires, Kmlle and O'Day. UP-TO-DATE STANDING Club. Won. Lost. Pet Phillies 90 C8 .606 Brooklyn 91 59 .607 Uo3ton 85 62 .578 By CHANDLER "D. RICHTER arovetAlexander vdn Jits .thirty-third VI . .r ' v - i t: tpry of the .soason this afternoon, when he "Z shut out tho Boston Braves In tho opening game of the double-header. Incidentally, the Phils wont Into first place, displacing Brooklyn. Aloran's men are less than on point nhead of their Flatbueh rivals. The Phillies scored their first run In the second Inning on doubles by Whlted and Luderus. In the fifth they aded another on Klllefcr's double, Alexander's sacrifice and a perfect squeeze play engineered with IClIlefer on third and Byrne nt the bat Ragan did the pitching for the visitors. Although both runs ore ofllclally credited as earned, the last one would not have been mado had It not been for bad Judgment on the part of Snodgrass, who misjudged K1I- lefer's flay and allowed the catcher to make two bases on tho drive. This shut-out Is the sixteenth for Ale:' ander and breaks all records for no-ru, victories In the major leagues. 1 FIRST INNING. The crowd gave Alexander the Great' wonderful ovation when he went to mound. Snodgrass greeted Alexander w a wicked single Into center. Paskert h the hit to a single by making a brllllff one-handed atop. llaranvlllo sacr!fl Snodgrass to second. Luderus to Nleht Nlehoff tossed out Wtlholt, Snodgrass ta Ing third. After Alexander got In the he ho pulled himself together and caused, Ko etcliy to roll a weak bounder through th' box. Alexander grabbed the ball and to&ae him out, tho fans cheering wildly. No run' one hit, no errors. uagan Knocicea uawn i-nsKervs orr ,f through the box and threw him 'out. .Wl f l the count three ana two, uyrne sift, line uma iuiu ion ier u. auisie. aimvur muffed Stock's high fly, but reeoveref'fir ume io save niinseu an error uv to MaranUlle, forcing Byrne. Htv to steal on tho second ball plU Whitted. but despite the fact that a large lead, dowdy's throw to-Ma retired him, Ko runs, one hit, no erf. SECOND INNINd Smith rolled a slow grounder Qvef ond, but Stock scooped the ball up ani the runner nt first. Larry Chapp!! two long fouls, but then roll a J grounder to Alexander, who toeaed Wan1' After getting Alexander In a hole, f smashed a terrlno drive between WW and Paskert It looked like a sure fo und perhaps the ball might have boun into the bleachers, but Whitted tea, across the field and took the havtl at shoe tops. It was a wonderful play t tho crowd cheered wildly. No ruae, no h' no errors, Whitted was given a great haaal when stepped to the plate and he rwpoadea1 smashing the ball against th bleach. lor a oou-oie. vtsvsin wvnw pmiw. An Increase of twenty-flve percent In the tax rate advocated by George t&LjKJ1 nVoteTsthVU , Norrls, former Director of Wharves, Pocks end Ferries, now chairman of the Federal Farm Loan Board. A municipal tax into of J1.2G on the $1000, with the 60-cent school tax, would bo sufficient with tho strict economy practiced during the BlanUenbnrg administration, he said. GASOLINE FROM GAS SHOWS BIG 1015 INCREASE WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. Vast Increase In the production f raw wwellae, fro natural gas. resulted from expansion of the casing head gasoline Industry during the last calendar year. The geological eurvoy announced today that M,!, gallon of raw .gasoline were extracted and sold during the year. That ycaa a ln or1 H,712, gallons, ur 63 per cent, over 114. GBRMANS TAKETHREE NEUTRALv VBSSILS AS PKIS ', JUCK-WK. Oct 2. An AaWy aiwweiaK ; Make, "Qafsaga M TsMMay tttofet rfit M Ire Use wow im. jawweui Lea, with contraband, and twe EhttU tugboat, the utkf 'M and each with 'two lighters, all bound for England." CkAw ri The count was two strikes and no V"-'' Luderus, when he met a ft MU U.l and hit It Into right centeon tho bound. The drive WM goes) for a dooWe. vnaaine lha nlai with the ftrat rttsv. ' vWe knocked dawn NUhoTs nfe J abort, bat ta rolled a wrw a fMMt Mm, and Luderua mlfet IsajV-! fef fee had itaetwn lor tna puti, win tsatd ktai t t- xaranvuie onw XUtofwr's bounder ta deep start, Satisle play twuKed. slarmi4M tt UrXoaotehy. Killafer lltnpe to flrat, or ha .would have txuur ana louen ewi Onerua. tsni Mtsv m TfllKl) 1NNINO lipr -i" fM twe ftmiy, who tbon rslaoa a UaatisutM) sa rasa tntlmm. ERRSSE "Mv Married Life " a Confession, a" New and Remarkable Feture,.Be.Jins in This Issue of the Evening Ledger, on Pi a? t