NIGHT EXTRA roi'.in.-no. ;i Enduing VMSTRA V , N fcAis, ant c IMtger NIGHT EXTRA ,667,757 GIVEN IR REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN FUNDS f j ry iraye wnuney flleads List With Con tribution of $30,000 PHILADELPHIA, SATUKDAY, OCTOHBR 28, 15)10 CoriitottT, 1019, it tiii rctuo Inon Conn lit PRICE ONS OE2TT f,006,283 TO DEMOCRATS Avelnnd H. Dodgo Aids Wilson With $79,000 Presi dent Helps WASHINGTON. Oct. 28. Campaign ttments filed by officials ot both llcpun-, an and Democratic organizations with the frk'ot the House of Representatives jJnred Republican contributions amounting fcj' , $lJ7,757.29 and Democratic contrlb- 3 . - - aag to Thira warn 95 55ft T7. ljeefaen contributors nnd 41.882 Dcm- fteieMe. " fjttfrr Payne Whitney leads the Repub- ItoMTln the amount of his Rift, 830,000. JTwland H. podge leads tho Democrats JiS "179,000. pmldent Wilson's name with 12600 Is on AtsS.Deniocratlc list ,ARlV"g Ine coiliriuuiuio lu mc ivhuuumm heaVere: SM.000, Harry Tayno Whitney. 'fctftOO. New Jersey Republican State cemffllttee, It. T. Crane, Jr., Chicago; Ar thur Curtlss James, George F. Halter, Jr. fe LIST OP 820,000 GIFTS ,..,- ,...- - (AHn, Clarence II. Mackay. ,815,000 J. S. Bacho & Co.. 'William T. e, A. D. Jullllard, Julius Hoscnwald. 10,000 William. B. Thompson, George Baker, William lllgtey, Jr., T. Coleman Pont, Mrs. F. M. Anderson, Thomas ;rsn, Warren De Lamo, Mrs. alary ley Flagler, Henry vecder, uailem a. A. Monell, William II. Crokcr. J. W, Sellgman & Co., Mortimer L. Schlff. T. Morgan, A. Tj. Hert, Hornblowcr & Its, Lewis L. Clarke, F. B. Adams, Judgo 1L. Moore, Percy R. Pyne, F. M. Gold- aelth, Louis F. Rothschild. J. B. Duke, fernellus Vanderbllt, John N. Willys, icer Penrose. 11000 Henrv C. Cochran, Union League salgn fund; J. Ogden Armour, J, D. efeller, Jr. 87(00 Ogden Mills. 15500 Edwin a Hotter. 55000 a N. Bliss, Jr., J. Horace Hard- r, Robert Bacon, Robert W. Goelet, Vln- Ator, James A. Patten, H. V, Dav- Am. Charles Steel, Francis L. Hlne, WIN Kelson Cromwell, Howard Falmer, iV Sinclair,. W. L. Harknesii,. Mrs. Stan- McCormiok, Mrs. Henry R. Rea, W. Ie 'Smith; Theodore N. Vail. John F. ie, F. B. Keech. Adolfo Staahl, Felix arburgr Wlllard Straight, W. P. y, Uptown Drygoods Association, Fred- k Q. Bourne, George Lauder, R. Llvr (ton, C. M. MacNelll. A. K. Carlton, KOiPhltU, George S. Myers. C. S.-Morey, ,H. Hawksy. Col. S. P. Colt, Moses Tay- -,-E. R. Johnsoh, 13. It Stcltlnus. William Porter, James H. Walnwrlght, John W. Hin, u. u. iJuia. f 000 Edgar Lackland, 'Robert MacFar- james couzens. ' JJ500 E. J Coolldge. 00,0 John G. Shcdd, Dr. Hubert Work, Waterman, Charles N, Pratt, II. L. John T. Pratt, II. I. Pratt, F. B. U,'Il. D. Hutchlns, Walter Jennings. WORTHINGTON REACHES FINAL R0UNDAT SHORE English Star Eliminates Robert Wier on North field Links by 5 and 4 STEINER BEATS RISLEY Big Gallery Follows Contestants Around the Links Clever Plnys By SANDY McNIDLICK NORTHFIELD COUNTRY CLUB. At lantic City. Oct. 28. J. II. Worthlngton. swatting Sunnlngdale star of England, was In fine walloping fettle today and had little trouble beating Robert Weir. 'Wilmington. B and 4, In tho semifinals to trie fall golf tourney here. Maurice Rlsley, the home hope, was one down to Harold Stelner, Inwood, at the fifteenth In tho other match of the semi- finals. s Smiling skies nnd warm weather brought out a horde of seashore fans nnd tho gallery was' divided In Its attention between the work qf the Englishman, Worthlngton, who Is rated as ono of the first twenty In his country, nnd the local star, Rlsley, who was expected to have a good chance In the play over his own course. Worthlngton, fgcttlng tremendous dis tance off tho tees nnd playing his famous push mashte nnd stop volley shots to perfec tion, led all tho way against Weir, being jut In 39 ton 42. Ho sewed up tho match with one of the best shots of tho tourney, when ho planted a 180-yard cleek shot not twenty Inches from tho pin for a bird threo on thtrslx teenth. "Reckon dot shot'll kill anybody," shouted Worthlngton's dusky bagtoter as the ball came to anchor in tho shadow of the pin. It was the finish of Weir, who was across the green. BBSf x BSBSMBSB sssi '1bsbsbsB GREAT THRONG SEES PENN-PITT FOOTBALL GAME Estimated That 9ver 30,000 Gathered at Forbes Field This Afternoon MUCH ENTHUSIASM JOSEPH SWAIN President of Swarthmorc CoIIcrc, vhich Is celcbrntinR Founders Dny. SWARTHM0RE MARKS "FOUNDERS' DAY" WITH IMPRESSIVE PROGRAM President Faunce, of Brown, Speaker of the Day, Makes Plea for Social Unity ACADEMIC PROCESSION Line-up for Today trnntlrnU rtthiirh rrmtlmrt .left enil t 'njrin Irll mmril. .. earner Mnlhewa . i:thrftnii rr . . . Ilrnnlns . rliht nr(. . . rim, . . .ni'flrtffbufK. ,tt.ht intklr. ,rini .m.nrtr Iftl tiitUbnrk. . .rlrHt lir!,.-irk. .luiumrK... l.lttlo Mlllrr . . I.lrht Irr . . WIMUmi Uerrr . . ff.r.i. l...mll Mu drlhmnt. .Moltoll. rrlnrrtoii. Head llnemi .Mrr rlman, llrnetn. Thnrnl.lll utherUiiil Ik JilM . . . . SeliM . . . Ilrrron . . Morrow . I!ntlnr4 , . . Ilellirt , Mrljirrn t'nnlrr The cards: Worthlnston Out ., ,ln v , Weir Out In , 44II4S46S4 4 3 5 4 3 -3D H A 3 J J 8 12 3 4 0 r a The lead alternated between Rlsley nnd Stelner, Rlsley starting at the second by placing a pitch over Rome mounds from the Bide of the greenv dead for n four. They alternated for three holes, .halved three, and then Atlantic City's survivor stuck his second so close to the 373iyard ninth that he easily ran down the putt 'for a bird three, which mado Rlsley one up at the turn. He was out In 39 to a 42. Stelner took three holes straight from the turn. Stelner lost the fourteenth, but wonUha. fifteenth With a stymie. Ho was a winner nt tho seventeenth two nnd one, when Rls ley only could get a half. Worthlngton and Stelner meet for tho cur this ufternoon. The cards; Ou'tU,.n.e.rrr. 4 7 4 3 0 4 0 4 4-42 In ..!' 4U540448 4 3S 80 Out ".'.Vrr. 44545404 330 In ............. B 4U44B45 4 1180 Lut hole approximate. 12500 DONATIONS 1600 James McLean, J. B. Ford, R. fl&n Cutting, Mrs. Kllxabeth M. Bliss, K. Converse, William Fahnestock, J. R. nar. W. Murray Crane, ,T, W. Scott, ary Ooldman, Mrs. Whltelnw Held, Wll- m L. Benedict, Frank Q. Webster, Frank jPeibody, F. W. Remlck. William Endl- ;C 8. Sargent. N. Bruce Mackelvle. ifemiah Mllbank, Qlbson Fahnstock I. II. m, Charles Ilayden, R. N. Duke, Parkin- Burr, George A. Draper, Otto M. hw, F. 8. Mosley Company, Joseph prer, Francis C. Blsjipp, W. C. Van Ant- , E, W, Harden. C. II. Poynton, R. S. rf F. II. Metcalf. Oeorgo R. White, !-JCr. Q, Frellnghuysen, Stephen O, Met- p. a. Simmons, Albert W, Harris, J. J. ni, Robert II. MoCormlck. JoseDh (ley, Jay Cooke, "Bartlett Arkell, L. W. Dunlevy. Mllbank nnd V.'. a. Low. Ijrtoo Drelcer 4- Co. U P. Bliss, Charles ing, James Dcerlng, R, F. Howe, Harris Mirop ft Co., M. S. Burrlll, Charles P. r, B. H. Brlstow Draper, D. O. Phil- Bond & Qoodwln, George tJ. Case. rl K Foster. Mrs. Anna B. Bliss, V. Barrow, a, W. Whltln, Charles P. t. Baeck Hart, Gerome M. Reynolds, C. MacFarland. Jacob S. Diston. Josenh & Qrundy. Lawrence & Co. AVelllnirton. Mr & Co. Charles E. Hughes's name was not shown w list of contributors. : Wemen who contributed were: Mrs. 15. Anderson and. Mrs. Mary Lily Flagler. ,? each; Mrs, Henry It Ilea, 15000; Bllsabeth M. Bliss, MrsT Whltetaw ,Mrs. a. a. Frellnghuysen, 12509 each; Anna B. BHss, 2000; Mrs. Marshal Br.. J1000. National Republican Congressional ALLIES' AIRMAN SLAYS ENGINEER OF KAISER'S TRAIN Domb Dropped as Emperor Rode About West Front PARIS, Oct. 2S. A Zurich dispatch re ports that an allied aviator dropped a bomb upon a train on which tho Knlscr was rid ing, killing the engineer. The dispatch did not give any details. The Kaiser was reported recently at Bapaume, on the Somme front, and thero personally supervised the preliminaries for n counter-offensive, for which the German troops there were said to have received strong re-enforcements. According to the report, he delivered a brief speech to the ac'rman troops, thanking them for the "heroic manner" In which they had fought. On Monday the Emperor was In Berlin, conferred with the Imperial Chancellor and visited the palace at Pots l.OVAI. TO OI.! HWARTIIMOUK Ta the Me ralte nur totrew loml To name Ihjr irn1eft n'rn And efrmore wr will rrmnln torsi In aid rUvurthmore. Two thousand men nnd women graduates of Sworthmoro College nnd their friends. many of them bringing children who nro to enter the Quaker educational Institution, thronged to tho nutumn-tlnced campus to day for the simple exercises that marked tho forty-seventh annlversnry of the found ing of tho Institution. The annual academic procession, forming at Parrlsh Hall, marched 600 strong over the west campus to tho Ivy-covered amphi theater. In this "open-air auditorium, nestled In a grove of red nnd gold. Dr. Wllllnin Herbert Terry Faunce, president of Brown University, delivered the oration of tho day, "The Task of the Pioneers." A plea for social consciousness was made by President Faunce, who declared that the prime need of the age Is for leaders. ""DOCTOR FAU.NCB'S ADDRKSS "I bring greetings from tho Innd of Roger Williams to tlia land of William Pcnn." he said. "No man can possibly supply our highest needs who does not know our history. The great need of our city Is for pioneers In the realm ot human relations, men who In a day of world-wide tragedy can show human beings how to live together. Vor example, we need men to lend us out .of she'er Indi vidualism Into social consciousness nnd cor porate responsibility. Whnt aro you In business for, or what will you go Into busi ness for? If It Is only to make a llttlo pile nnd retire, you nro unworthy of tho name of citizen. You should then bo classed with the cheap doctor whoso only Interest Is In his fees, and tho traitorous soldier, whoso only euro Is for his monthly wnge. "We need mm who shall lend us out of our provincialism Into the International mind. Our geographical Isolation has made intellectual provincialism. Wo need men who shall lend us out ot racial antagon isms Into national unity and Integrity, With apprehension and nlarm wo havo dis covered signs of disunity umong us. But wo want no man to remain In America un less his political allegiance Is undivided, unless America Is first in his mind and heart." The procession was headed by Dr. Joseph Swain, president of the college; tho orator FORHRS FIELD, Pittsburgh, Oct 10. One of the greatest crowds that ever wit nessed n football gamo In this section of tho State gathered hero this afternoon to seo tho Universities of Pennsylvania nnd Pittsburgh clash on the gridiron this after noon. Before tho opening kick-off It was estimated that nioro than 30,000 rabid, en thusiastic football fans wero seated lu tho big stadium. Tho Pennsylvania rooters, numbering about :Q0O, snng the Red nnd the ltluo nnd lustily cheered Folwell'H eleven ns they ran on to the Meld. When Pittsburgh appeared their followers arose en mnsixj and cheered their heroes untlt the welkin rang. Shortly before the gamo was scheduled to begin Dr. Hancock announced that How ard Herry would start In tho game nt full back. "" "Two days ago 1 did not think Berry had a noHslble- chalico tu play." said Assistant Couch By Dickson till morning. "Before wo left Philadelphia llowurd'a knee was swollen "twice It's sUe, and ho barely could walk. lu the past twenty-four hours, however, the swelling has gono down considerably, and I bcllcvo ho will start tho game. How ever, wo will take no chances, nnd If Berry's ktieo begins to give trouble he will be taken out, even It It is after tho first section of play," Outside of Berry, the members of the l'cnn squud are In groat shape and confi dent of giving the home team n hard bat tle. They renllio that they are up against u tough proposition, but none will admit that tho Red nnd Blue hasn't a chance to triumph. Last Saturday's showing against Penn State has helped the men consider ably and bolstered . their drooping spirits which carrtOftir lh Hworlhmore defeat" They kBlBO feel encouraged over the rnct that ?00 students from l'cnn are on Ihi ground and as many moro atumul to cheer them on during tne uattie. MANY UNDEUQRADS TRESKNT Old-timers who have followed Pcnn in tho big out-of-town games in tho past Fay that never before nha such a large delega tion of undergraduates attended a gamo away from Philadelphia. Even nt the Hnr vard bnttles, which wero fought at tho be ginning of this century, tho crowd was not so large. Special trains which left Phila delphia last night wero filled to the brim, and it wns necessary to put extra Pullmans on tho regular trains. MARSHALL NEVER MET EVE Conllnuxl on I'sie Tho, Column On "Might Have Eaten Two Apples" if Ho'd Been in Eden NEW YORK, Oct, 25. "I think If I had been In Garden of Eden, I wouldn't have eaten the apple, but I don't know I never met that charming, soubrctto Eve. I might have ontcn two apples." This was Vice President Marshall's Illustration of his charge that "Hughes doesn't know what he'd have done if ho had been President" As for tho eight-hour law, Mr. Marshall said: "Solomon worked his men eight .hours building tho Temple, and Solomon was a pretty wlso man." AIR ROUTE FOR MAILS TO BE TESTED BY U.S. Practical Experiment Will Be Made Monday From Chicago' to New York mi Ceattsoed on I'sse Two, Column B.Tca ATHE, WEATHER V. FORBCAlST ffttr PUitulfipMa. and vkMtvFfik ' 4hm mwMfctty UmprhHrt to- mi ,Swdf wA gtle variable IJtSOTH OF BAY muWAHK M4VKM TWK CMAMOM CHESTNUT WnUtBT Mr.. XUt s.n.tHlak wstor.. t:it P.M. w.i ni.s.iiW ur, itut TUMI AT Mm III nr i'lTi CHICAGO, Oct 21. A practical experi ment In the carrying of tho United States mails by neroplano will be, made next Monday, when, If conditions are not too unfavorable, Victor Carlstrom will attempt a Clght from the United States aviation station here to Governor's Island, New York, taking with him soveral packages ot mall matter. The experiment Is being conducted by a "New Yprfc newspaper, wUh the co-operation of the United males poauu amnoruies.,; Carlstrom axpecta to start from Chicago, at t o'clock Monday morning, arriving at Governor' Island at C o'clock In the eve nlng, covering the entire distance in eleven hours. The nvlatpr will not P nearer to Phil adelphia .than gcrantoB, Pa., which point he plan to-reach at U0 p. m. He will make no steps exeept ta ea et accident, but hut pregrew will be Reported W. tele phone' to ' Oeveowr'a Island from 'many plaGM alow the route. MMtxx-oie arrantM inM have boon made for wh servloe by the Amraan Telecrati and Telephone Cewjy. Search Fermi (or LMt, Woodsman UTICA, OX, 8 A mwmm for blood- bouud has oodm r from soarehota Ur Myroq A. Backus, who is loot ta tae AdlroH- Asuka. Backus is a Ufaiojur woodsman. Ha I holloed to W aoraevhore In aa area, f uuny mux bium Sft i Vs I iBhi TBBr .a "I L0VET0R0B PLACES," WOMAN BUGLAR SAYS "But I'm Afraid of the Dark," She Admits Big Loot in Home CHICAGO. Oct 28. Mrs. Nellie- Hantz. forty-eight years old, liaa been a burglar for months and she has robbed more than one hundred houses, but has kept her hus band In Ignorance all this time, sho ad mitted today. t Mrs. Hants, detected enterlnr a house, was arrested, and in her home the police found a large' array of burglar tools and loot worth flSOOf hidden beneath a mat tress. s . "I love to rob places," sho said. "I'd keep on being a burglar If I had a million, put I am afraid of the dark, so I did all my robbing in daylight" WOUiNDED POLICEMAN DIES AFTER GUN FIGHT Bluecoat Succumbs to Injuries Received in Barroom Encounter QUICK NEWS ASSASSIN SHOOTS AT AUSTRALIAN PREMIER; MISSES MARK MKLllOURNE, Australia, Oct. ?8. An unsuccessful attempt wm mud xt.y to nuanwlnnto Trims Minister Hughe nt his fteina in Kew, Vlctorln. A ninn forcotl i window in the rrhnt) MinUtcr'g liom and fired n. revolver nt Hughrn. The shot mlsMd tho XVemtttr. The ninn Ifnpotl to tho ground nnd ficd. BRITISH AVIATOR RESCUED FROM SEA THE IIAOUE, Oot.-28. An English nvlntor, who had evidan'lly fltnrted out on n lone raid ovor Geniinn holl, wne fotind flmtliif; in tho North Sen, fifteen milue off thu conht today. Ho wns roncued by n fUhlnfjr boat. Tlio machine hnd fallen into tho water ns tho rtsult of motor trouble. ' , VILLA AIMS BLOW SOUTH OF CHIHUAHUA CITY BL PASO, Tax., Oct. 28. PnAicho Villa, with ft largo part ot his fojci, today 1b marching upon Santa Itosnlia, about eighty miles HQuthwost of Chihuahua City nftcr cutting tho Mexican Central Rail road lino near Orlta ycslerday, litndcrlng pursuit, according to ad vices to American authorities here. AUSTRALIA VOTES ON CONSCRIPTION ' SYDNEY, N. S. W., Oct. 28. Australia is voting today in a ref erendum election on the question of conscription. Women are voting nn well as men. The question is having a grave effect upon the com monwealth government. Tho ministry of tho treasury, tho vlco pres ident of tho executive council and the assistant minister of marine havo already resigned. TEUTON FORCES PUSH 100 MILES INTO RUMANIA Mackensen and Falkenhayn Drive Further Into Enemy Territory RUSSIANS START DRIVE PRINCE JOACHIM, KAISER'S SON, PROMOTED BERLIN, Oct. 28. Frlnco Joachim, sixth son of tho Kalsor, "has been decorated with the Iron Cross and promoted to a lieutenant colonolcy in command of a division of infantry. JAPANESE POLICING OF AMOY DENIED NEW YORK, Oct. 28. The Ear Eastern Bureau todny mndo pub lic n cablcgrnm from Tckiu denying that tho Jan?53 aro policing.. , - ALLIES RAID GERMAN WAR PLANTS IN LUXEMBURG AMSTKIIDAM, Oct. 28. Pres3 dlBpatchea say that 8000,000 damage has uvn douu topeniuui ammunition factories in Luxembuig by tho. Alllos' air raids. ' ft BRITAIN TURS DOWN U. S. PROTEST ON TRADE BLACKLIST ' . Merely Modifle Practice by Absolving a Iew Firms WASHINOTON. Oct 2?. The State Department today received by mall from the American embassy In London the Brtyeh Government' reply to the protest against the MackHet of American buiineas Arm. Tba Kritlah Government refuaea to dUctlnu tM MackUat Ir prlHclple, Vut lOtaaapta to anwina hls ovnunnt ky ar.alBaT to ramova oartaln larroa Uom Um prevlaiona of tkf oMar. V "'NI U'twt nyiaK to ha fhm 'Tt&Wft. RUSSIAN ARMY TO BE TREBLED BY SPRING I'ETBOGItAD, Oct. 28. Next April will see tho Russiau army three times ns strong as it was Inst December, says a semiofficial an nouncement today. Supremo efforts are being made by tho Russians for tho mest powerful blow they have yet struck against the Ger man allies. SECRET SERVICE HUNTS ESCAPED WILSON THREATENER PITTSBURGH, Oct. 28. Tho dragnet of the United States Secret Service was thrown out today for Morris Diamond, sixty-two, of Bay City, Mich., who was committed to tho Insane hospltnl at Marslmlsea ten days ago after ho confessed sending threatening letters to Presi dent Wilson. Dlaujond and four other Inmates escaped during tho night by biuaklng down a door and then sawing their way through iron bars. A policeman received tntnl Injuries, one man was ehot In the hack and another is suffering from a cut on the uculp which ho declares la the result of a gunshot wound, the outcome of an encounter which hud la cllmux In tho saloon of Oeorgo Munich, at Second ana l'opiar streets, early today. The victims aro: John Smith, policeman of the Seventh District, of 937 tforth Xawrence street. Skull fractured. Died In Roosevelt Hon. pltal five hours after admission. Oeoree Ilau, thirty-five years old, of MS North Tenth street. Bullet wound In back. Ih.Jtoosc'velt Hospital. Daniel Hendrlck, 819 Tioga street, ban 'tender In Munich's aloon. Cut scalp. Treated at lloosevelt Il.onpltal. Accordlne to the police of 'tho Third street ,apd Falrmount avenue station, who are Investigating the case, tho affair fol lowed a robbery at a Second afreet commis sion house, In wlitnh Itau and a companion were concerned. Attempt to dispose of their plunder probably led to the iliootlrtff. According to the bartender, Kau and an other man known only us "IMty Ixmle" entered the saloon early today. They were carrying a tub of butter which they of. ' RUSSIA DENIES POLISH COLONY IN SOUTH AMERICA A roport thai tho ItUHslnn Government Intends to settle 1,000,000 Poles In South America wns donled today in un ofllclal communication forwarded to W. It. Tucker, Russian Consul hero, from PetroKrad tluoiiRh tho Russian Embas-ty, Tho "malicious and obviously absurd invontlon" was emphatically denied In the statement, which brands as Impostors persons representing themselves as agents for tho reportod colonization. The harm that would result through the loss of so many subjects was pointed out. U-BOAT REPORTED OUTSIDE THE VIRGINIA CAPES NORFOLK, Va., Oct 28. A German Hubmurlne, believed to bo tho Doutschland, Is reported here to be outside the Virginia Capes, approaching port, Norman Ham ilton, collector of the port, at 10:30 o'clock bald no subriiarlno has yet entered the three-mile zone of American waters. A lookout is belnir kept. Czar's Troops Begin Great Of fensive in East, Report Says PETROGltAD, Oct, .28 Powerfd attacks by Austro-Gcrman farces e both banks of the Bystritsa River, in the sector of Dorna Vatra, have com pellcd the Russians to give up two hcighta, the War Office reported today. Dorna AVatra is in the Carpathian Mountains. The Austro-GcrmanH arc making fierce attacks on tho Trnnsylvnnlan front near Bran Pass (southwest of Kronstadt), and also in ithe Jiul and Tirguiuj Valleys, the WarOIBco stated. BEniiiN, Oct, :. General von MacKcnsen's army that In vaded Dobrudja has advanced 100 miles Into ltumanlan territory. The Austro-Oer-man force striking nt Rumania from the north has reached the Kampolung district at the edge ot the ltumanlan plain. Kampolumr Is the main objective of the German an Austro-IIungarlan forces that have been at tacking enst of Rothenburm rasa. N Dispatches from tho front today state that the progress of the German allies In both northern nnd eastern Rumania should now be swifter. Von l'alkenhayn's advanee has been'hlndered by strongly fortified bar. rlera In the Transylvania Alps and by heavy snowstorms. In the lower Carpathians the Russo-Ru-manlnn troops are attempting- counter offensives to prevent the Germans from lso latlng Rumania from Russia, and some progrrss has been made. Only on the northwestern frontier ars the Rumanians on the offensive. Hero they have achieved somo local successes, but the position of tills whole northern Rumanian army becomes more perilous as Falkenhayn drives forward against ltsrsuppty lines.' - SOFIA, Oct. 2?, Bulgarian troops have occupied the .Danube town-of, Rertt5i'a,"Iinls.ftiiefiH north-northwest oj"Cernavoda, In their pUr suit ot the Russo-Rumanlans, it was of ficially announced today. LONDON, Oct 28. The Wireless News Agency- today gave out a Romo dispatch asserting that news from German Bources Indicates the begin ning of a tremendous new Russian offensive In Poland and Gallclo. This report is not confirmed from any other source, but If trite. Is believed to mark the beginning ot the Allied attempts to relieve; the pressure on Rumania. PARIS Oct 28v "The situation confront ing Rumania Is serious, but not dangerous," writes the military critic of the Journal, "The final decision does not lie at Con stanza, nor in the hands ot Von Mackensen, but with Von Falkenhayn and the opera tions In the Transylvanlan Alps. Falken hayn must be held. If that Is done, the 'whole German plan falls." Current events are proving that the Ger man allies are still very strong, the writer Bays. RUMANIAN RESISTANCE IN DOBRUDJA IS BROKEN, BERLIN WAR OFFICE SAYS , BKBUK, Oct 28. Russo-Rumantan resistance In .DobrudJ has now broken down, the War Office .an nounced today. Five hundred more pris oners have been captured there by Field Marshall von Mackensen'fl army- group. In Transylvania the advance of the Aue-tro-aerman forces continues. South f Kronstadt (Bratso) the German Allies Ian reached Partsuga valley. The Germnn official report on operations in the Rumanian theater of war follows; Transylvanlan frontFlghtlng In the eastern frontier valleys continues. South of Kronstadt, of Brasso, we de livered a surprise attack against, the Rumanians, capturing a height By sharp pressure we extended our lines as far aa Partzuga Valley. Otherwise, the situation Is not essentially chaniteeV Army group of Field Marshal von Mackensen In northern Dobrudja our pursuing detachments of troops are now meeting with but llttlo resistance from the enemy. Everything Indicates tftt the enemy's retreat was meet prSsol. pltate, Five hunarea moro isoi prisoners and several machine were capiurea. Centliuted en I"e Twe. Colewa Tq 'i 1 1 1 1 i GermaH FaeWrlen UH BEHUK. Oct. II Virtually tka imtlr- Ojarwtftj. suuutfc4rta jodurnr he fcug Mjte ajtecle erfMttsstUa km. Um (W ?m - GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS FACE COAL FAMINE WASHINGTON, Oct. 28. Sudden development of a coal fambap hero threatens, to stop the wheels of government Tho big department bulldlnga'aro almost wlth out coal. The shortage Is due to freight congestion and the, serious car shortage, recently reported by the Interstate Commerce Commission as nation-wide and "be coming more acute." r 15 ALLIED SHIPS SUNK IN RAID, BERLIN SAYS AMSTERDAM, Oct 28. Fifteen Allied ships, Including three Brjtieh destroyers, wero sunk in the Qerrfian raid. In the English Channel and Ave others, including two destroyers, were damaged, it was staled In a dlspatoh from Berlin today. The Ger man Admiralty has reiterated its assertion that all the German destroyers returned to their base. RUSSIANS DRIVBN ACR088, SIIAIIA KIVBK Y ttl ATTACK, rKTKOCVUl) 1 PBTROGRAD, Qet J4- Oerssea yewereay ihsssh mi w Russian PoeMfeft te western kattt the River shw, M m ewsj et vltehl. on tty yers retu lt! " PRESIDENT SAYS HE MAY CARRY THIS STA' The prediction that "maybe" he wo-uM eary Peftylvuita feveeabr I wm mate by President Wilson aa he passed thro aHnitJhln hit (ttu trim riinlnrntl to IMuidow Lawn. ''Uefca a mnisssi mmI yV OsviTy PWBMyhrullV" mU4 of jtheMM mass wte ar.esesl U tf the prtMMet'a apecial Irajll l ka am PW aUUeei Uet aiqM, "Mayta IT M ?! mm , ""r aissWiT njsWrrsr jja s -.. ' "- 467 DrUTMB THIS W BE LiaClwW V Males, W Pemala a4 UB UWNii-Ust We'a Showed 479 Hf ipjiKl m ha asM ), DaUsiS threasAeat the -ity daria 417, as owupre4 wtl IH In tk MMelil,! im