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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1917)
THE 3IORNING OREGOMAN. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17, 1917. -V GERMAN PLOTS ORIENT DISCLOSED Teutons Reported to Be Busy Stirring Up Dissensions in China. MONEY IS USED FREELY Bandits Employed and Everything Possible Done to 'Undermine Influence of Pekin Government. PEKIN, Sept. 10. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) German plots to promote internal trouble in China are being disclosed almost daily, and the situation is so serious that China undoubtedly will find it necessary to intern many Germans and Austrians, if not all of them, before the end of the year. The allied Ministers are ex tremely uneasy over the situation. China, with its lack of adequate com munication and great territory, offers a fine field for German plots. For many years German agents have carried on commercial undertakings in Tibet, Turkestan, Mongolia and other interior parts of China. Consequently they speak Chinese fluently and have great influence with the lower classes. Money Is Freely Used. Through the German and Austrian legations in Pekin these interior agents have been supplied with money to stir up dissension. They have aroused the Mohammedans in Western China by telling them that this is a religious war designed to eliminate Turkey and Mohammedanism. - Similar arguments have been used among the Mohamme dans in Southwestern China. In Mongolia the German and Austrian agents enlisted many bandits in the monarchical movement, and have done everything in their power to under mine the influence of the Pekin gov ernment. The work of the agitators has been more effective in Mongolia than elsewhere, as they have been able to harass the trans-Siberian line by en couraging the Mongolians to move north into Siberia and Manchuria and to attack railway towns. Siberian Railway Threatened. Russia's military forces are some what limited now in Eastern Siberia, and consequently the Trans-Siberian line is seriously threatened by the Mon golian uprisings. German agents also have been' able to assist many German and Austrian war prisoners to escape from Siberia into Mongolia and thence into other parts of China. Much of the German propaganda has been traced directly to the German banks and prominent German com mercial men in Pekin and Tien-tsin. Both the British Charge d' Affaires and the Russian Minister have named the leading German intriguers in letters to the foreign office, and suggested their internment. McCrea, Cleveland, O.; vice-president, Gustav Bischoff, Jr., St. Louis. Mo.; secretary, George L. McCarthy, New York; treasurer. Max N. Agger, Cincin nati. Efforts to locate Lieutenant M. H. English, missing from his station' at the Camp Fremont military post since October 5. are so far unavailing. Five Mexican bandits swam the Rio Grande about 4 o'clock yesterday morn ing and attacked the Mexican village of Grangeno. six miles southeast of Mis sion. Tex. Armed citizens replied to the bandits' rifle fire and the invaders dlsappeared- Indianapolis is designated as official headquarters for the Grand Army of the Republic in a general order issued by Orlando A. Somers, of Kokomo, Ind., commander-in-chief of the organization. Among appointments on the staff of the commander-in-chief announced is Assistant Adjutant-General C. A. Will iams, Portland, Or. The publication known as Bull, of which Jeremiah A. O'Leary. mentioned in German official dispatches made public by recent State Department dis closures, has been the directing head, has suspended, its publishers announce. Wesley M. Owen, aged 48, who was Associate Judge in the Panama Canal Zone during the second administration of President Roosevelt, died at Bloom ington, 11L. Oct. 16. The Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes, eec retary of Yale University, declines the call to become principal of Hampton Institute, succeeding the late Dr. Frlssell. FUGITIVES GOME BACK GERXAN ALIE.V S WHO FLED FROM ANGEL ISLAND RETtTRJT. to World Briefs for Busy Folk. National. NEGOTIATIONS between the War Trade Board and Hans Sulzer, the Swiss Minister, have reached the stage where propositions made by the United States Government regarding the ques tion of supplies for Switzerland have been forwarded by Minister Sulzer to his government for its consideration. Harold H. Duke, a fireman aboard a United States destroyer, has been com mended by Secretary Daniels for gal lantry in jumping overboard from his vessel on the night of September 14 and rescuing a shipmate from drown ing. A committee representing the Na tional Garment Retailers' Association ;ind comprising several of New York City's leading merchants, has been des ignated to attend a conference in Washington Thursday for the purpose of "devising ways and means to insure a judicious use of cloth in the making of women s garments. Sheffield, Alabama, as a site for one of the nitrate plants for which Con gress appropriated $20, 000. 000 is an nounced by the War Department. The Japanese parliamentary mission of five delegates from the Japanese Diet, headed by Dr. T. Masao, is in Washington today to make a special study of United States Congress meth ods and to ascertain the state of pub lie feeling in America. Another spe cial mission, representing the imperial Japanese railways to study American transportation and industrial condi tions, will arrive in New York Octo bcr 21. Merely Wanted to Say Good-bye Friends Before Being; Sent Eastt Teutons Say SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 16. Lone liness, spiced with a desire for ad venture to break dull routine, led to the escape early today of Captain G Brauch and Engineer Lorenzo Lau from the detention camp on Angel Island, where they were confined as alien ene mies, they announced when they vol- ntarily returned a few hours after their disappearance had caused a fran tic search by Federal, Immigration and civil authorities. The two Germans, officers of a seized erman merchantman, commandeered lifeboat belonging to a Government essel, rowed across several -miles of whitecapped water before dawn, landed and boarded a ferry and arrived here. where they enjoyed a three-hour chat with friends. Later, while authorities were scour ing land and sea, they took the captain of the Angel Island tugboat into their onfidence, told him who they were and were immediately escorted back to camp. They explained that they merely wanted to tell friends good-bye before eing transferred to detention camps in the East. Captain Carl Branch Is well known along the Portland waterfront because of having been master of the German bark Dalbek, renamed the Red Jacket when seized in April byi the United States Government, and since rechris- tened the Monongahela. The Dalbek came here In July, 1914. and was ordered laid up by her owners on war being declared. For a time she was moored above the bridges and then shifted to Linnton, where she was seized in April, and Captain Brauch and officers and men "from other ships, the Kurt and Arnoldus Vinnen, taken to Puget Sound. A short ' time later they were transferred to Angel Island. Men who knew Captain Brauch here were not surprised on learning that he had attempted to escape, as it was known he chafed because of being de tained in America during the war, at least up to the time the United States joined with the allies. Domestic American Meat Packers' Association closed its annual meeting at Chicago oy electing officers: President. J. M FIGHTING FOR HAPPINESS When you get into a frame of mind that makes life seem one tiresome duty after another, with no pleasure in it; when ill health seems to take all the joy out of life and you worry over things that are not really worth wor rying about, then your nervous sys tem is becoming exhaused and you are approaching neurasthenia. Your happiness is. worth fighting for and red blood is your best ally. It is a hopeless task to try to restore your health while your blood is deficient in quantity or quality. To build up the blood there is one remedy that has been a household word for a generation. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. They tone tip the entire system, make the blood rich and red, strengthen the nerves, increase the appetite, put color in the cheeks and lips and drive away that unnatural tired feeling. The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co. Schenectady, N. Y.. has published t free book on nervous disorders that contains a chapter on neurasthenia, in which the symptoms are fully de scribed and the correct treatment given. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by your own druggist or will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per box. six boxes for $2.50. Adv. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS MAY BE OVERCOME If you have Catarrhal Deafness or bead Tiotpes go to your druggist and met 1 ounce ot Parmlnc (double strenth. and add to it h pint or not water ana ounces or granu lated usar. Take 1 tablespoon ful four times a, day This will often bring quirk results from xnw aiHtreasins nena nutses. Clogged nostril uouia open, creaming become easy and th mucus stop dropping into the throat. It easy to prepare, costs little and is pleasant to tan. Any ona wno nan oaTarrnai Oeaf nBH or head noises shoi& tfei pre WORK RESUMED IN OF' MINES EXOO Agreement With United States on Gold Exports Starts Operations. CORN IMPORTS PERMITTED Allowance Is Million Bushels of Cereal Monthly, Sale Regulated, and Xone to Be Sent Out of Republic. MEXICO CTTT, Oct. IS. An agree ment has been reached between Ignacio Bonillas, Mexican Ambassador at Wash ington, and the United States Treasury Department, according to reports here, by which Mexico will take off the re strictions on the exports of metals, which required the reimportation of an equal amount of gold for all gold bul lion exported and 25 per cent on all silver exported. In return money due on the balance of trade to Mexico will be paid In gold. Under the agreement Mexico will re ceive $8,000,000 gold thig month, $5, 000,000 in November and $2,000,000 each month thereafter, under a distinct un derstanding that Mexico must not ship the gold to other countries. The parity of American gold In Mex ico, the agreement provides, is to be maintained. Mines and melters, which discontin ued operating 10 days ago, have re sumed activities 'now that an agree ment has been reached. EL, PASO, Tex.; Oct. 16. Mexico will be permitted to import 1,000.000 bushels of corn monthly as a result of the agreement reached over Mexico's metal embargo, mining companies here were informed by their Washington repre sentatives Joday. The corn may not be . resold at a profit of more than 5 per cent or shipped out of Mexico, according to the information here, and mining com panies will be allowed to send corn into Mexico to feed their employes. . Dagbladet asserts that enrollments of Swedes are proceeding under a law of 1909. The Svenska Morgenbladet publishes a letter from a man in Vaesteras who declares that his son, who went to America in 191 to study, received mus tering order No. 332 and was mustered in in September under Army No. 6409. The writer declares further that his son was exempted from military serv ice in Sweden because of poor eye sight. Replying to the note sent by the Peruvian government announcing the severance of diplomatic relations Octo ber 5 between Peru and Germany, the Chilean Foreign Minister says Peru's action is -applauded by Chileans; that his government is gratified by the course taken by Peru, as it is a further step toward the unification of the South American republics. M. I. Terestcaenko. Minister of For eign Affairs in Russia, at a meeting in observance of the 100th anniversary of the death of Kosciusko, the Polish patriot, declares it is the conviction of the entente powers that "any peace should recognize the Independence of an indivisible Poland." This differs from the declaration is sued by the provisional Russian gov ernment last March, in which it was urged that Poland should be given au tonomy under nominal Russian guid ance. American Ambassador Francis drew a parallel between the American and Russian revolutions, saying that, as America's problems had been solved and her Issues settled, eo would Rus sia's problems be solved by the sober second thought of Intelligent and pa triotic citizens. REAL FLYERS WANTED AVIATION CORPS OPENS DOORS TO ADVENTUROUS. SOLDIERS TO HEAR GLUCK Y. 31. C. A. Provides for Appearance of Star at Camp Lewis. TACOMA. "Wash., Oct. 16. (Special.) Alma Gluck, grand opera star, will sing for the 40.000 men of the 91st National Army Division at Camp Lewis under the auspices of the camp Y. M. C. A. on October 31. The concert will be free, in the open air. Miss Gluck will sing from a spe cially constructed stand backed by a gigantic sounding board. She will sing such songs as "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia." In the event of rain the grand opera star will sing in the new Y. M. C. A. auditorium, which will seat 5000 persons. When the T. M. C. A men at Camp Lewis learned that Alma Gluck was to be in Portland they speedily got in touch with her and she readily prom ised to sing for the soldier boys. MANY GIVE SERVICES S I'M MARY OF RED CROSS SALARIES SHOWS 73 UNPAID. Most Officers and Clerks Receive Less Than 92000$ Number of Paid Workers Kali Inc. WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. A summary of salaries paid at Red Cross National headquarters, made public today, shows hat 73 officers and clerks are giving their services free and that 486 mem bers of the staff are paid employes. Forty-one receive $2000 or more a year; 39 others receive salaries ranging upward to $r000, but only three are paid more than the latter sum and none exceeds $6000. All others receive ess than $J000, ranging down to $600 and below. The announcement says that in the Summer of 1916, when the Red Cross was on a peace basis, there were 75 paid officers and employes, of whom 9 received salaries ranging from $2000 to $7500 a year. The number of paid workers now is being reduced. LANE COUNTY MAN SUICIDE Frank Schultz, In 111 Healtli, Sends Bullet Through Head. EUGENE, Or., Oct. 16. (Special.) Frank Schultz, aged tO years, well known rancher of the fall Creek re gion, committed suicide today by shoot ing himself with a rifle. He sat down in a chair and, pointing the gun at his head, pulled the trigger. Schultz had been in ill health for some time and is survived by his widow and five sons. He had been a resident of Lane County for 25 years and owned the ftfrm where his death occurred. Adna Farm Brings $14,000. CENTRALIA, Wash., Oct. 16. (Spe cial.) The sale of the Nist farm at Adna, one of the most highly improved dairy farms in Lewis County, to C. G. Melius was announced yesterday by a local realty firm. The consideration is understood to have been $14,000. An other deal announced yesterday was the sale of the Bungalow Garage in this city, owned by L. Lamont, to E. E Miller, who comes here from the East. What People Are Saying. Rare Opportunity Offered Young Men Reasonably Well Qualified for Service. SAX FRANCIS CO, Oct. 16. Doors of the Aviation Corps, the cream of all services for the . adventurous, were thrown wide open today to all young men of reasonable qualifications by announcements from Major D. C. Em mons, aeronautical officer for the Western Department of the Army. Real flyers are wanted. They are needed principally as what the Army calls "'observers." An "observer" gets plenty of opportunity to observe. He also learns to pilot the new type aero plane with its wonderful liberty en gine, to operate a wireless instrument, to judge and record topography, to rain bullets from a machine gun, to drop bombs where they will do the most harm and otherwise to partic ipate in the most thrilling occupation the world has ever seen. For this service men of four years' high school work or its equivalent are wanted. College men also are sought. and presidents of colleges in tha Far West will be invited to nominate can didates for tile service. Contrary to somewhat common belief, the physical requirements are reason able. Major Emmons said. Good eye sight and a normal physique fill the bill. Once past this test, the applicant will be sent to school at Fort Sill, Okla.. or South San Antonio, Tex., until he is qualified for commission, when he will be made an officer in the signal officers reserve corps. Opportunities also are open In this service for the young men handy around machinery, who dropped school somewhat early in the game. The me chanical knack possessed by many of these will be given special opportunity for development in enlisted service where it la. specially in demand. Arson Charged In Complaint. CENTRALIA. Wash..- Oct. . 16. (Spe cial.) Prosecuting Attorney W. H. Cameron yesterday filed information in the Lewis County Superior Court charging Ross Feizette and James Bax ter,- Centralians, with second degree arson. The men were arrested on a charge of being responsible for the fire that destroyed the grain warehouse of Sears Bros. & Roswell, entailing a less of 15.000. India Has Record Wheat Crop. WASHINGTON. Oct. 16. A record crop of wheat in India was reported today in a dispatch to the Department of Agriculture. British India officials estimate the 1916-17 crop at 379.232,000 bushels. compared with, 323,008,000 bushels the year before, AMERICA need3 two million miles of good roads, to bring it to the maximum of efficiency in this re spect, and they should be planned and constructed by the Government as part of the preparedness plans, says Will iam F. McCombs. chairman of the New York good roads committee of the Southern Commercial Congress, in con vention at Aew York. Max Thelen. of California, president of the National Association of Railway Commissioners, addressing the meeting at Washington of delegates of the asso ciation, who represent 31 states, says the railroad problem in the United States has permanently moved beyond the ownership and operation of the railroads as disconnected entities by private companies. "The issue now and hereafter," he declared, "is an issue between consoli dated operation of our railroads in pri vate ownership and their unified oper ation directly by the Government through Government ownership." The liberty motor and America's new merchant marine will prove tremendous factors in crushing German militarism, says Lord Northcliffe, head of the Brit ish war mission, at Detroit. "The liberty motor, if perfected, will help inconceivably in carrying our forces beyond the German lines, but the motor must be perfect. "No heed should be paid to reports of weakness or debilitation in Germany," says the British publisher. "Those re ports are manufactured and sent out from Germany for the deliberate pur pose of slackening America's efforts. Foreign newspapers in England were suppressed the first fortnight of the war. That is what the United States should do." Premier Palnleve communicates to the Cabinet the result of inquiry into charges against Louis J. Malvy, former Minister of the Interior, accused by Leajj Daudet, editor of L'Action Fran caise, of having betrayed secrets to Germany. The Premier says the accusa tions are unfounded. Mrs. Swinburne Hale (Beatrice Forbes Robertson), of New York, a lead er in the suffrage movement in that state, speaking in behalf of woman suffrage at St. Louis, says if the world is to be made safe for democracy America cannot consistently deny the ballot to women. Mrs. Hale, reviewnig the activities of women during the war, relates how women, by entering indus trial fields, have released men for the armies. Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, she says, has secured more men for the army than any other recruiting individ ual In the British Lmpire. Emperor William of Germany sends this message to General von Beseler, the Governor-General of Poland: "I have found it advisable, In agree ment with my illustrious ally, the Em peror of Austria-Hungary, and in the spirit of article I of the decree of September 12. 1917, to install as mem bers of the Council of Regency of the Kingdom of Poland the archbishop of Warsaw, Alexander von Laeksoki; the Mayor of Warsaw, Prince Lubomirsky, and the landed proprietor, Josef Hon- ostrowski. David R. Francis, the American Am bassador, will deliver in person to Madame Catherine Breshkovskaya. the "grandmother of the revolution." a tel egram from President Wilson express ing the President's confidence in the intelligence of Russia. A portion of the Swedish press re fuses to believe that Swedish subjects are not being enrolled in the American Army, despite the American State De partment's message that the enroll ment bill had not. passed. The- Svenska BRYAN URGES ACTION WAR LONGER QUESTION OF OPINION, SAYS COLONEL. Every American's Faramonnt Doty Now to Stand Behind Presi dent and Congress. NEW YORK. Oct. 16. Every Ameri can's paramount -duty is to stand be hind the President and Congress and support "anything and everything our Government does in this war," William Jennings Bryan told members of the New York Advertising Club today. He said he came from the W est to spend three days here, speaking for woman suffrage and at the request of Sec- retary McAdoo campaigning for the second liberty loan. "The furnishing of money," said Mr. Bryan, "is one of the most important ways of supporting the Government. Before we entered the war, it was matter of opinion and discussion, but it is no longer a question of opinion. It is time for action now." He declared he would make no com plaint against high taxes, as long as there are men giving their lives for the country. "I shall not put the dollar above the man nor property above blood," he said. OREGON STUDENT EDITOR H. S. Mitchell, of Astoria, Honored by Washington "Varsity. UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON. Se attle, Oct. 16. (Special.) H. Sherman Mitchell, a senior in the department of journalism, of Astoria. Or., was elected editor of the University of Washington Daily, the student paper, for the pres ent quarter. Mitchell fills the vacancy resulting from the drafting of Thomas Dobbs. of Tacoma, editor-elect. Mitchell is the first Oregon student to hold the editor's chair in several years. He is a member of Sigma Delta Chi, National Journalism fraternity, and of Alpha Sigma Phi and was grad uated from Astoria High School in 1914. LANE COUNTY TAXES FIRST $2 7 5,000 Dae From O. & C. Rail road Lands -Will Be Paid. EUGENE, Or?, Oct. 16. (Special.) Lane County will be the first county in the state to receive payment of back taxes on Oregon & California railroad grant lands, under act of Congress re vesting title to these lands in the United States Government. Sheriff J. C. Parker tonight received a telegram from former Governor Os wald West, acting as a special agent of the Interior Department, stating that he would be in Eugene tomorrow, when he would turn over to Lane County $275,000, representing back taxes on the land, 'interest and penalties to June, 1916. I f iiiiaipiiiii nit i n 1 sr' T' Vj :'C I! II j mk ilUaa J1 WW x - - : 3; I I--, f c - j r ?t "aIwI ( I J fcTvV fM i j I It All generations today are most suitably lilted in II i'll Society Brand Clothes sons, fathers and grandfathers. I I f ! r I HVO of the livest models of the season for 1 , 1 I young men and older men who want to j I'll Mil I I HI I it -w t 1 i I ;!!' TWO of the livest models of the season for young men and older men who want to look young. In style in tailoring-? in fab ric and in pattern, these clothes reflect good taste and good judgment.- - Go to "Style Headquarters" the store thatsclls Society Brand Clothes. No garment is a genuine Society Brand model unless the inside pocket bears the label A postal card will bring you our Fall Fashion Book ALFRED DECKER & COHN. Makers Chicago For Canada: SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES. Limited; Montreal 131 II I (J IJ ! j ( (I II IPIIJIj ).!! UPJ ! 1 1 i! 1 1 I -IJJJJ III If I i!M Li o UR stocks of these better suits and overcoats are complete. We invite you to come and see them. Third Floor. Tnt Quality- Storb or Portland fill , STYLB HEADQUARTERS THE STORE THAT SELLS SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES cline are -wanted by the Government. By tomorrow night Mr. Holmes will likely have a survey of the entire state ready for Washington. Instructions by telegraph and mall are pouring in on the fuel adminis trator, end, coupled with his chairman ship of the liberty bond matter, 24 hours a day is not time enough to com plete his work. Railroad Pays Injury Claim. CENTRALIA, Wash.. Oct. 16. (Spe cial.) A. K. Laramie, of this city, bas received from the O.-W. R. & N. Com pany a check for $750. Laramie.7who was employed as brakeman by the rail road company, filed suit for 125.000 for the loss of a leg a year agro in a 'train accident at Saginaw. The case wai settled out of court. In addition to th check Laramie has been offered an ether position with the company. COAL ORDERS SUPERVISED rontinued From Kirst' Page.) three responses tonight, and indicate that in Portland, one Southern Oregon town and La Grande there has been no increase and in one Instance a decline of 50 cents a ton on one grade of coal. - The. dealers' -reasons for -rise or de- BUSY, HARD-WORKED MEN AND' WOMEN Will find that the sarsaparllla. pepsin, nux and iron treatment comprised in Hood's Sarsaparilla and Peptlron will give brain and nerve force, relieve the nervous strain incident to "too much to do in too little time," characteristic of life today. These . blood and nerve medicines seem to lift the nervous and over worked lntp new life, enabling them to accomplish easily the things that have fretted them and have seemed to bring them to a standstill. - Hood's Sarsaparllla and Peptiron are very effectively supplemented by Hood's Pills, in cases where a laxative is needed. These three preparations are all sold by your druggist. Get them today. Adv. ....... THE FIVE-FOOT Exquisite in tone and occupying" no more space than an upright And Caruso says," Its TOHE is wonderful!" ss $725 asy terms if desired, .Morrison Street at Broadway $