PORTLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1918. PRICE FIVE CENTS. VOL. LVIIL 3fO. 18,010. FOCI'S STRATEGY SPOimjUH PLAH Fob's Work of FourMonths Undone in Three Weeks. FIRST U. S. FIELD ARMY IS CREATED OT ASKED AMERICAN TROOPS KOW HOLD DEFTXITE PART OF FROXT. EXPLAIN TO WAR TALK Five Full Corps, Comprising Approx imately 1,250,000, Under Com mand of Pershing. Entente Envoys Said to Have Served Notice. WASHINGTON', Aug. 13. Secretary Baker was formally advised today by General Pershing that the first Ameri can field army had been created. Gen eral Pershing retains command of the Army, as well as of ,the entire Amen can expeditionary force for the present. The dispatch added nothing to de tails of the Army organization already made known from Paris, however, Mr. Baker said. Formation of the army is taken here to mean that the Americanization of a definite portion of the front has been completed. The only statement of the location of this American front given is that it is "south of the Marne. The extent of that front has not been disclosed, nor has the definite strength of the Army been given. The advices indicate that It comprises. however, five full corps, which means approximately 1,250.000 men The effect of the taking over of the line is to make a definite beginning at apportioning the long front. The British hold the left flank, aided by the Belgians, from the North Sea to the juncture of the British fourth army and the French first army in Picardy, where an offensive is being conducted at present. In that position the British stand between tha enemv anH tha channel VITM THE FRENCH ARMY IN ports, which would be his only road to FRANCE, Aug. 13. (By the Asso- England while the British fleet exists. (dated Press. 1 The situation since Tne French armies presumably are the battle of the Arre shows a change, bhe,n entrated wholly between , ... I the Picardy juncture with the British wmcn ior rapituty ana extent, nas mnd the American left beyond Verdun. rarely been approached in military They block the roads to Paria tustory. Marshal Foch s Strategy and To the Americans will fall the re masterly tactics have in three weeks malnder of the front to the SwIsa bor wrested from the Germans what re- 3 DAYS ALLOWED FOR REPLY GERMAN LOSS 700,000 MEN Enormous Cost of Offensives of 1918 Goes for Naught; Enemy in Peril. flETIREMENT MADE HARDER Russian Situation Daily More Serious for Germany. PETR0GRAD TO BE ENTERED Kaiser Sending Forward Forces to Seize Former Capital Ukraine Bitterness Toward Invader Is- Increasing. prompt Escape of Von Hutier's Troops Believed to Be ( Impossible. quired four months for them to ob tain at a cost variously estimated at from 700,000 to 1,000,000 men. Big Results From Battle. The immediate results of the coun ter offensives which will have the greatest bearing on subsequent opera tions are the clearing of the Chateau- Thierry pocket, ending the menace to der, when the other American armies shall have been formed. FRESNO HAS $500,000 FIRE Flames Start in Three Sections of I City Almost Simultaneously. FRESNO, CaL, Aug. 13. Three fires starting simultaneously and believed to have been set by incendiaries caused a loss of J500.000 here tonight, de- Fpernay and Paris; the liberation of stroyed two big planing mills, leaped Montdidier, ending the menace to I across the street to the Zellerbach Amiens; the freeing of the important Box company. 4nd threatened the en eastern railroad line from Paris to I tire half block -across the alley from Chalons and the equally important the mills. northern line from Paris to Amiens, Tne three flr" were etrtd at once . . . ... , I one in the pile of refuse, one In the restoring to the allies means of com-L. h.hIrw, th. ,,,. ,, munication which give them enor- third In the rear of a rooming-house. rnously greater ease in future move-1 across the street, south of the mills. inents of troops. I Tne r,re companies had Just arrived at These successes render impossible , Z I n IOU" nl lr . A XL 1- i ill"' - 4 tv ta j uny rupture 01 wie line wmcn wouia abandoned branch of the T. W. C. A. separate the French armies of the a -a A t- " A Al . I irzTjzzrzz holy land French and British. German Plan Wrecked. LONDON, Aug. 13. Action suggestive cf an ultimatum to the Bolshevik gov ernment is reported to have been taken by the allied powers. This move, which Is referred to In Moscow advices by way of Berlin, has taken the form of a demand for an explanation of the war talk recently attributed to Premier Le-nlne. The diplomatic representatives of the allies are said to have handed a col lective note to War Minister Trotzky demanding within three days an ex planation of Premier Lentne's threat that Russia would declare war "against Anglo-French Imperialism." It was reported on Monday that Pre mier Lenlne and War Minister Trotzky had fled from Moscow to the naval stronghold of Kronstadt. and that the Bolsehvik government would follow them there. Dispatch Delayed la Transit. Owing to the difficulties of commu nication with Russia, it seems probable that the above dispatch has been de layed In transit and refers to an event of several days ago. Lenlae's declaration was made prior to August 9 , when American Consul Poole at Moscow informed the State Department at Washington that Lenlne had told a gathering of Soviets that a state of war existed between the Rus sian government and the entente. WASHINGTON. Aug. 13. Reports through Berlin that allied diplomats have demanded an explanation of a threat by Lenlne, the Bolshevikl Pre mier, of a declaration of war against the allies, are assumed here to refer to the action of American and allied Consuls in calling In a body August 1 Complete Outfits Sent to Jewish Ie- oa Tchitcherln, the foreign commis sioner at .Moscow. CRYPTIC "C" AUTHOR YET UNDISCOVERED JTO PLAUSIBLE EXPLANATION OF HOUSE MARKINGS FOUND. Casual Canvass of Residences In Sell wood . District Show Nearly All Bear Mystic Message. The meaning of the mystic symbol Is mysterious and puzzling as ever. Who has been, marking houses In Portland and other cities In Oregon with a cryp tic "C" Is still unknown to the police and. what is more, no plausible ex planation has been set forth. More markings were reported to the police yesterday. A woman living In the Sellwood district . said that after casual ' canvass' of - her neighbors' houses had been made, nearly all bore markings of . the . capital .."C,". some . of them with a heavy line drawn 'across them. Similar markings on -houses In the Irvington - district-also were re. ported. ... . The suggestion that the markings are the work 'of enemy agents preparing to carry on -some form of propaganda is scouted by the police. They point out that the activities of the Secret Service and the bureau of investigation of the Department of Justice are so broad and thorough that any attempt on the part of enemy emissaries ti carry out - a programme: of such a nature would have been thwarted before this time. It is known that some of the markings were made several weeks ago, although most of the mystic symbols only recent ly have been discovered by residents. TROOPS, STRIKERS CLASH Shots Exchanged in Plaza Indepen- dencia at Montevideo. MONTEVIDEO. Aug. 13. Strikers, estimated to number 15,000, assembled in the Plaza Independencia late this afternoon and delivered fiery' speeches in which the president of the republic was frequently mentioned. Cavalry attempted to disperse the fathering and was fired on by the strikers. The cavalrymen returned the fire. No reports as to the number of casualties have been received. The general strike which has been in progress here for several days Is paralyzing commerce, especially trade by sea. - Today the port workers and packing house employes joined the strikers, resulting In the stoppage cf meat shipments to allied nations. Numerous business houses have closed. The scarcity of food supplies in the city Is becoming serious. KNITTING MAY NOT STOP Red Cross Expects Only Reduced Supply of Tarn. FRENCH TRANSPORT SUNK: 442 MISSING Djemnah Torpedoed In Mediterranean. glon In Palestine. ine most oisasirous consequence to WASHlngTon. Aug. is.-Americans xne uermans, asiae irom tne Heavy serving with the British army in Pal losses they sustained in men and ma- estine are to introduce baseball In that terial, is the collapse of their plan to cuntry. nd present plans call for a drive wedges into the allied lines and n,um1ber ,of ame8 ,n Jerualem eta ... , . , . , . . . rival nines among units of these uio suu&equeni, widening ana joining I troops. Which would nave threatened general Complete outfits for four teams were dislocation. Marshal Foch's strategy in reducing the salient wedges wrested the initia tive in operations from the Germans, at once obliging them either to order I Jewish Legion for Service In Palestine, a general retreat to a stronsr line snch composed of Jews from this country ... v c . serving with the army who are below as the Somme or to engage reserves. or .bove the draft w or are phyBlcal. The enemy adopted the second alter- iy disqualified for service with the tiative which, having failed, makes I American forces. eventual retirement immensely more Word From Poole Lacking. The Consuls, after being told by Le nlne that a state of war existed be tween Russia and the allies, demanded an explanation from Tchitcherln. They were told that the statement was not necessarily to be Interpreted as a war declaration; mat it ratner was a declaration of a state of defense shipped from Washington today by the Clark Griffith ball and bat fund at the request of the Zionist organization of America. The outfits will be delivered' to the (Concluded on Page 3, Column 4.) NEW YORK, Aug. IS. The action of the War Industries Board yesterday In halting the production of yarn for knitting In order to conserve wool for Army uniforms "may result In the Red Cross getting less wool than it needs, but does not mean a complete stoppage of knitting in American Red Cross work rooms," according to an an nouncement tonight by officials of the Atlantic division. ' They interpreted the board's order to mean that, after an inventory of the country's wool supply had been made production would be resumed and the Red Cross would receive its allotment after the needs of the Army and Navy had been supplied. THREE IN CONVOY ATTACKED VOLUNTEER GATES TO ARMY CLOSED GRANTING OF COMMISSIONS TO CIVILIANS DISCONTINUED. Secretary Baker Announces Action to Check Enlistments Pending New Draft Legislation. F RENCH DRIVING IN OISE OFFENSIVE Two KeystoThiescourt Plateau Taken. LASSIGNY MASSIF CAPTURED Australian Sent Down and 17 Sailors Killed. THIRD SHIP STAYS AFL0A U-Boats Continue Active Off North Atlantic Coast; Two More Ves sels Sent Down; - Raider Reported Destroyed. PARIS, Aug. 13. Four hundred and forty-two men are missing as a result of the torpedoing of the French steam er Djemnah in the Mediterranean tb night of July 14-15 while bound from Blzerta to Alexandria with troops on board, according to an official an nouncement tonight. Four days later the French steame Australian also was torpedoed in the Mediterranean. Still another steamer was torpedoed, but remained afloat. Official Report Issued. The text of the communication fol lows: t 'The steamer Djemnah, belonging to the Messagerles Marltimes, proceeding from Blzerta to Alexandria with mill tary passengers, was torpedoed and sunk the night of July 14-15. Four hundred and 'forty-two men are miss ing. 'On July 19 the Mediterranean steamer Australian, belonging to the same company, was torpedoed and sunk. Seventeen sailors were killed. Passengers to the number of 948 were saved. Three are missing. "In the same convoy another steamer which was torpedoed was kept afloat. "Numerous bombs 'were thrown at the submerged submarine." WASHINGTON, Aug. IS. The eteam er Henry S. Kellogg has been torpedoed by a German submarine off the New Jersey Coast, according to a report re ceived late tonight by the Navy De partment. No details were available, but it was presumed the steamer still was afloat. NEW YORK. Aug. 13. Available shipping records do not contain the name of the Henry S. Kellogg, bu there is listed a new American tanker, the Frederick R. Kellogg, 4450 tons, owned by the Pan-American Petroleum and Transport Company of Los An geles and commanded by Captain White. She is 425 feet long with beam of 57 feet and was built at Oak land. Cal.. In 1917 by the Moore and Scott Iron Works. NEW YORK, Aug. 13. The reported Inking of an enemy submarine off the North Atlantic coast and the addition (Concluded on Pago 4, Column 1.) ONLY REFUGE NOW. THOMPSON WILL SAW WOOD Recaptured Convict Given Ample I Opportunity for Kxerclse. difficult. i Noyon'a Fall Probable. The first phase of the battle of the Avre finds the French with a footing rr" ' " ' " r SALEM.. Or.. Aug. 13-(Speclal.) "UJU1 vw imporeuice in Bennett Thompson, who was returned future operations. The Germans must I to the State Penitentiary yesterday, ither capture this at high C06t, if they wa Riven a bath, shave and new suit ran. or ahanrlnn Nnrnn. whirh of clothes today and a short Interim i .n - T- J t : v for rst- w'c H" Tomorrow he will be handed a buck- aireaay are unaer imminent menace 01 saw and started sawing wood. Warden capture.. Murphy said today. This is in line The disaster which menaced General wlth the new regulation which win von Hutier's army has been averted appI' to 411 8CPe prisoners. Thomp- m i. i irn OD 18 serving a. life term. Whether ,or me ine lew narrow pas- lhI, punilhment wU1 ,ppiy for tha re. sages mcn now are open ior tne mainder of the sentence the warden withdrawal of his stores are so bar- did not say. rassed by the bombs of aviators and the fire of heavy artillery that prompt HOLES TO BE CONSERVED escape is unpossiDie, rendering prob-l able a desperate effort by the Ger mans to clinz to their 1914 lines. WITH THE BRITISH ARMT IN FRANCE. Aug. 13. (By the Associated Press.) Ground gained by the allied armies in the second battle of the Eomme is held by them everywhere today, although they have been pausing for more than 24 hours. The harassed and disorganized forces of the enemy have launched several counter attacks. It is true, but none of them have car ried the Germans anywhere. War Slmplict j Marks New Direc tory of Phone Company. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 13. The cur rent issue of the telephone directory appeared here today without the usual string band for attaching it to hooks or the string perforations. "We are 'Hooverizing on both holes and string and the public can now con serve the hooks," officials of the com pany announced. Two directories are published each year instead of three as formerly. The At a matter of fact, the small but I company is considering the issuaifce of I nevertheless important local gains made I but one directory a year. ty the allies just north of the Somme JliTer. to aay nothing of other success- eni n I CDC M AV fCT lrtTC ful minor operation, for Improving OWl-u I tno 1.IM I wnj I (UIL positions, more than trebly outweigh Ruling Made by Minnesota State in V Bitxwuimj viignt (imi mu uy i th Germans at a heavy cost at two anoiic oaeity noara. Eolnts In the line. feT. PAUL, Aug. II. Minnesota men in military service. Including those in Strong enemy concentrations have France, 'will have an opportunity to been reported between Koye and vote at the election in November, if Foquescourt. but so far they have done way to register their ballots can be nothing. If really they are there for an I found, the State Public Safety Commis- (.Coacludod. a fas . columa i.) ' sion decided today. Defraatve Barbed Wire Foaad. t HER Within Day or Two. FOE REINFORCING OLD LINE OREGONTAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, Aug. 13. An-order prohibiting the granting of commissions in the Army to men in civilian life between the proposed draft ages of IS to 45 was Issued by Secretary of War Baker today. . This completely closes the door to civilians seeking to enter the millta.ry fvacuatjon Qf RQy Expected J . o. been previously issued suspending all voluntary enlistments in the Army and Navy. The only exception made Is in the case of students In officers' training camps. They will be permitted to com plete their courses and qualify for com missions. Civilians not In training camps whose applications were approved be fore the order was issued will be given commissions, but action on all other application for commisisons will be suspended while the orden is In force. It is planned to continue the order In force until the passage of the man power bill now pending In Congress, which increases draft ages to IS and 45 years. Secretary Baker explained that "his reason for suspending Army enlistment was to check the Indiscriminate enlist ment of men of the new draft ages before the law Is passed. OPERATION WINS IN ARMY Dr. G. E. Riggs, of Albany, Commis sioned First Lieutenant. ALBANY. Or Aug. 14. (Special) After undergoing an operation to fit him for the service. Dr. G. E. Riggs, City Health Officer of Albany, has been commissioned a First Lieutenant in the Medical Corps of the Army, and Positions Held From 1914 to 1917 to Require Heavier Armament to Break; Planes Are I'scd to Bomb Infantry. WITH THE FRENCH ARMY IN FRANCE. Aug. 13. (By the Associated Press.) The French continued their vigorous assaults on the Thiescourt Plateau, taking two more important positions which are keys to the pla teau the Ecuvlllon and St. Claude farms. The Germans are filling the numerous ravines and woods with mustard gas and keeping up a heavy machine-gun fire In trying to cling to the parts of the heights they still hold. FRENCH HEADQUARTERS IN FRANCE, Aug. 13. (Reuter.) In the French sector the dominant factor is the desperate energy with which the enemy is clinging to the western and southern edges of Thiescourt and the hills filling the space between Las- received orders today to report at Fort 8l(fny and th0 ol8(Si whlch con8titut. Riley, Kan., September 1 Dr. Riggs applied for Army service last September, was rejected and ad vised that nothing but an operation would fit him for service. He accord ingly planned for this and was operated on in Portland in May. MANY TO TAKE TRAINING Applications for Next Officers' , Camp Coming in Ten a Day. EUGENE, Or., Aug. 13. (Special.) October 5 will see the opening of the thereby Increasing the menace to the the pillar of General von Hutiers right wing. Voo In 1014 Trraches. On these edges the French hold Gury, Mareu'l, La Motte and Canny-Sur-Matz. A short distance north of Canny is tha Bois Des Loses. Along this line the enemy has established himself in his 1914 trenches and is fighting his hardest. PARIS, Aug. 13. The French ' re sumed the offensive today between the . Mats and the Olse rivers, making prog ress to the north and east of Gury and hird officers' training camp at the University of Oregon. Applications are being made at the rate of ten a day. Men are attending the present camp from Colorado, California, Utah, Idaho, Montana and Washington. R. M. Winger, professor in mathe matics, has been at the Presidio making study of artillery mathematics, and will be one of the instructors in the next camp. Germans at Lasslgny, according to the Wai Office statement tonight. Strong enemy resistance was unavailable to ' itop ihe attackers. The text of the statement reads: "During the day our troops resumed their attacks in the wooded region be tween the Matz and the Oise. In spite of strong enemy resistance, we succeeded in making progress to the north and east of Gury. We have gained a footing in the park of Pleas- sler de Roye and reached Beivai. Further east we have advanced our line about two kilometers to the north Several Killed in Frankfort Durinalof the village of Cambronne." Raid by Fliers Monday. "Aviatlon-On the night of August l.-ld OUT UUHIUIH6 & 1 1 I".".- . ta tons of bombs on stations and enemy AMSTERDAM. Aug. 13. A dispatch Lstablishments at Ham, Nesles. St. received from Frankfort says that, de- Quentin. Tergnier and Noyon. Fires spite the timely alarm given, several raDorted to have been seen at sev- persons were killed and material dam- pri nlllMa. BRITISH AIR BOMBS FATAL age was done, especially in the streets of Frankfort, during the British raid of Monday, NDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 93 aegrees; minimum, os degrees. TODAY'S Showers and cooler; moderate southwest winds. War. Foch's strategy offsets Hun's 1918 campaign. Page 1. French driving on in Oise offensive. Page 1. Allies' prisoners reach 70,000. Page 2, Americans and Huns In artillery exchange on Vesle front. Page Austrian offensive on Italian front expected. Page 2. Official casualty list. Page 3. Ludendorff urges Germans to conserve man power. Page 8. First American field Army created. Page 1. French troop ship sunk. 442 men missing. Page 1. Foreign. War corrupts Berlin police, says Kaiser's dentist. Page 0. Trotzky called on to explain Lenlne's war talk. Page 1. National. Northwest complains against Increased ex press, freight rates. Page 12. Man-power bill ready for report to Senate. Page 4. Occupational taxes to be levied. Page 30. Granting of Army commissions to civilians discontinued. Page 1. American trade vital post-war topic. Page S. Domestic Philadelphia street railway wage case set tled. Page S. Haywood defends sabotage. Page 4. Federal inquiry into cotton prices begins. Page 3. Sports. Fielder Jones, of St. Louis Americans, to train Portland shipyard nine. Page 0. Hunters to leave for Coast timber. Page 6. Pacifte Northwest. Consolidations to net state $836,500 in two years. Page 7. Commercial and Marine. Two plans for selling wheat offered to Nortwestern farmers. Page 15. Potato crop of Northwest 25 per cent less than last year. Page 15. Railway stocks sell at highest prices of year in Wall street. Page 15. Calala enters on career as shipping-board carrier. Page 11. Portland and Vicinity. Cryptic markings on houses still unex plained, fage l. Phone merger awaits Burleson's approval. Page 9. Realty Board members plan auto tour to Seattle convention. Page 7. A. R. officers to arrive today. Page 16. "On the 12th 11 German airplanes were brought down or put out of ac tion. Four captive balloons were de stroyed." LONDON, Aug. 13. After stubborn fighting the French have repulsed a heavy German counter-attack on Las slgny massif, on the southern end of the Picardy front, according to the latest news received from the front today. The French gained control of the entine massif (slope) earlier in the day. Command of DlMtrict Given. This gives command of the town of Lassigny and the valley of the Dlvette, as well as the entire district to the north. The capture of the massif by the French must Inevitably have the most serious effect on the German positions j over a wide area and this effect should begin to show within 48 hours. The , massif was the hinge of the old Ger man positions in the whole angle In the Noyon region, and now that this hinge has burst the entire angle must yield to the relentless allied pressure. Roye Vnder Croasflre. In the opinion of experts here, the evacuation of Roye may be expected within a day or two, for the town is now under a crossfire. The abandon ment of Roye by the Germans would also make Chaulnes difficult to hold. Thus recent history on the Marne Is counted upon to repeat Itself on th new front. In the regionjof Des Loges, south of Roye, the French this afternoon are consolidating their line. They hold the town, but have not regained the woods beyond. It appears that the woods must yield, however, for the French hold all the high ground here over looking the Germans In Roye from the south and commanding the great criss cross of roads leading out of thri town. Line Difficult to Hold. If the German line does not fall back after the manner it did on the Marne, with the expected fall of Roye and Chaulnes, it could hold out only under conditions of the greatest difficulty and at tremendous cost. The French gains on the Lasslgny massif alreadf have forced the Ger mans to evacuate a long line of trenches in the valley of the Oise and udge Carey to head Portland Industrial 1 are calculated to force further evacu- war mm. .rage . .tinns almost Immediately. Noyon will Secretary Olcott s tenure of office quea-1 . , x-rnfc tloned. Pago 10. 1 conm ;y .Weather report, data and forcast. Face 4.' (Concluded on Fag 2, Column U