r THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAX, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1918. FOOD GOWSEfiVAra HON T One Kind of Meat to Patron Restaurant Limit. iitnirii me ip nnnncn Recipes Call for Veal. Which May "o Longer Mingle With Chick- . . en in Delectable' PaMrjr. GERMAN REPLY VIEWED WITH SUSPICION BY PRESS OF U. S. Little Hope of Peace Expressed Despite Apparent-Acquiescence to Presi dent's Demands Clear Statement, of Facts Still Desired.- ' "Good-bye. chicken pie." Sb-h-h! Draw near, for the lecret f the, lament deep and dark 1 about to be. revealed. It was a restaurant owner who said those ominous words. He said 'em yesterday mornins; and why he said "em you guessed it that's the secret. Amour the new food conservation regulations thaP went into effect yes terday morning- was one prescribing that no public eating houso may serve more than one kind of meat to a patron. car Allawaaee Cat. Those same drastio orders put signs WP in every responding eating place, announcing that oach patron may have but one spoonful of sugar. If he wants sweetening both for a drink and a ce real or fruit ha may divide the spoon ful. Or. many places began offering ayrup and honey as a sweetening me dium which the pussled patron might choose for his cereal. Heretofore the restaurants have merely trusted to their, own ability to keep -the use of augar down to the limitation of two pounds for 0 servings. - Yesterday also witnessed the passing of whipped cream as the delectable topping for the piece of pl or other tasty dessert. It was even ruled that the restaurateur may not whip and use cream skimmed from his supply . of whole milk. Toast and bacon as gar aiturea likewise disappeared from their accustomed places. All in all. it waa ouite. a food conservation reformation that went Into effect over the country. Jake Is ,Made Plala. ' Beg pardon T- Oh. the Joke about the - chicken pie wasn't made plain? Stupid work, stupid work. Of course, the point about serving but one kind of meat to a patron was plain? Very well, . to get the full forc and effect, then, of that rueful remark of the restaurant -' man It Is only necessary to ask the next one you meet or any honest chef will do just wkat proportion of veal his chicken pie recipe rails for. Though an excellent responsa of Portland eating house managers to the drastic new restrictions waa reported yesterday. It was said that hera and there alien managers ara playing the "Bw-aawy role. Sly attempts at eva alon arc expected both here and among J smaller restaurants out In the state. Mia mrnara o. viiuuo, cniiiuau i hotel and restaurant committee of the Food Administration. VMllan Will Be Fad. Violators, said Mr. Childs. are going to experience a rude awakening. An Inspector has been appointed and those who transgress will suddenly fin! their places closed, as has happened already In other states. In the main, the dis position of the public to patronise theJ patriotic business house is countea on to win adherence to tha rules. MRS. BERTHA COOK SHOT WOMAN" APPARENTLY COMMITS ' ACT WHILE ASLEEP. Wife of Deputy Sheriff of Clackamas County Is Seriously Wounded and Is Taken to Hospital. Mrs. Bertha Viola Cook, wife of B. 9. Took, of LJnnton. Deputy Sheriff of Clackamas County, was shot In the ab detrien with a revolver last night as she lay in bed. The bullet came out above the' pelvic bone and passed through her right leg.- The revolver, which Mr. Cook said he owned, had been left in the house beneath his pil low. Sirs. Cook was taken to the Good Sa maritan Hospital from Ltnnton by Mr. Cook and at a late hour Igst night her condition was favorable, air. Cook, who is employed by the Associated Oil Com pany at LJnnton. told Inspectors Howell and Golts that the first inkling he had that anything waa wrong was when one of hia fellow workers told him his wife had been shot. He hurried home and found his wife was standing on the front porch in her night clothes, screaming that she had been shot. Mr. Cook said he works at night. Tha shot was beard at about :X0 o'clock by-neighbors. Cook was taken to police headquarters and held for investigation, and his version of the affair, according to the police, is that his wife shot herself while asleep. Mr. Cook said he always left the gun beneath his pillow and that bis wife knew it waa there. Ha said ahe was in the habit of reading herself to sleep when retiring, and that he believes in her dreams she seised the revolver and shot herself. The gun was found be neath the bedclothes by Mr. Cook and Dr. Mann with the one bullet dis charged. The bedclothlng was scorched by the fire and smoke. CHICAGO TRIBUNE From the Ger man response it is apparent, that the ruling powers at Berlin now look complete defeat in the face. There is but one mind in America on this war, that it shall go on to victory, to the utter destruction of Prussian mili tarism and to the establishment of peace founded on its ashes. Seattle Post-Intelllgencer Dr. - golfs latest note emphasises tbe necessity of reducing principles to realities. The time has come for specific utterance, for our fuil and complete demands. If we want unconditional military surren der, if we want an emphatic and un equivocal repudiation of the Kaiser and others, let us say so, with specifi cations as to the form it shall take. .- Los Angeles Times Two things have apparently, been achieved, the U-boat atrocities have been stopped and Kai serlam has bon put out of business. Now let ift aobmit armistice questions to the Supreme War Council. Ger many must come to termsehe is on the way. - Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution Tho latest German peace note to President Wilson is involved and - ambiguous. . . . Now, let us refer all further communications from Germany to Gen eral Koch for hia attention. If we are to have peace it will come that way. .. Idaho Statesman (Boise) Ths time seems to have come when we should tell Germany, In ss few words as pos sible, that when sheT Is ready to sur render without conditions or reserva tions we shall be .clad to be apprised of the fact, and that meanwhile further notes will not ba considered nor ac corded the recognition of replies. , e e Dallas (Tex.) News The nots is al together ansatlsfactory. The strong and sinister personally of the Kaiser must go before negotiations can pro ceed. e Baltimore American There is, noth ing in this note actually to promote peace; the evident disposition o& the German authorities Is to give way step bv step as they are forced so to do. The United States and Its auies nave yet before them to follow out the pre rcription of force without stint or limit. And this will be followed until Germany has boon brouht to a full con cession of silled and American de mands. . - m Baltimore Burt The German govern ment "trusts that the President of the United States will approve of no de mand which should be irreconcilable with the honor of the German people and with opening a way to a peace of justice." What grim humor! 'What hypocrisy! Tho German government knows thst 'any peace reconoilable with the German ser.se of honor, as it has disclosed Itself during the last four years, would be an atrocious one. rniumhia Vs. C State The omission of reference to guarantees as demanded by President Wilson in his note of October 14. gives to the German reply the character of deriance. Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch The German reply falls far snort oi ine terms demanded and is entitled to out oaa answer unqualified rejection. ' Duluth (Miniu) one answer should Noorvick. a native village near Nome, Alaska, is raid to bo the only Eskimo village in Northern Alaska possessing electric lights and a wireless, plant. (MM HEALS SCALPTROUBLE Dandruff and Scales On Scalp. Hair Fell Out. Disfigured. "I first had a little dandruff but k grew worse. There were scales on my acaip wnicn.wncn scraxcoca. made my scalp sore and red. The dandruff scaled off and could be seen cm toy cloth ing, snd my hair fell out until I had almost cone left, and my head was disfigured. The itrhinv waa ao intense n - that I irritated nry scalp by scratching. Hearing aoout wuucani ooap uh Ointment 1 bought them and after using two cakes of Cuxicura Soap with two boxes of Ointment I waa healed. (Signed) Miss Ethel Gingrich, New Kantlcoe. wssn., reo. i, iio. Kmrt, wonr aim dear bv using Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment for every -day toilet purposes. Nothing better. Omw. Oral a. BOTtos" Sold Trwbun. WS. OMBISuSl TOeawSc News-Tribune But d be made this great est of criminal and liars, it snoum refer the German government to the llltarv council for all runner parley and refuse to receive any further com munications until thearmies nave sur Indianaoolia Star The war lords know the way to an armistice. They Vnnw thev ara fooling none outside of Germany in denying their illegal and inhuman acts. They may nope w time or some' military advantage oy making a showing ot doing sometnmg in meet onr terms. but their real ob jective is to consolldate-sentiment be hind their lines. inij aro irjms prove to tho gullible people, rather than to us who know tho facts, that Germany is not as charged In the al lied indictment. Houston (Tex.) Post ' The -latest German note indicate the earnest Ger man desire for peace, but not a willing ness to take the one necessary step to secure peace, which is unconditional surrender. The armistice. Germany's Immediate objective, is a matter to do determined by Commander-in-Cnier Foch and not the President. - Colorado Springs (Colo. Gazette Tha German reply does not deservs a rejoinder. On to Berlin! - Cedar Rapids (la.) Republican The note Is full of diplomatic cunning.- There appears no reason why the allied na tions should give up the .advantages that a series of victories has given them. Two words should remain the allied slogan: Unconditional sur render." . ' . Blootnlngton (I1U Pantagraph The latest German peace note Is thoroughly in line with previous hypocritical emanations from Hun land. It shows clearly that those behind the German government are far from the attitude of unconditional surrender. . . Omaha (Neb.) Bee The latest note from the German government, replying to the virtual ultimatum of President Wilson interpreted as a demand for unconditional surrender, does not meet the requirements. In no sense, gener ally or specifically, is it responsive. . . . To say that the present govern ment posseses "the confidence of the majority of the Reichatag" and. there fore, fills tho bill, is to Jnsult our in telligence. ' . ' . ' : Washington (D. C.) Post The- Com munication is nothing else than an eft fort to obtain relief for the German army by uttering a series of falsehoods and false promises to President. Wil son. . . . There should be only, one answer hereafter to anything that Ger many may say: "Surrender t Foch." Kansas City Journal The adroff Ger man foreign office .has placed the bur den of continuing . the correspondence on the President. But if President Wil son is well advised he will ignore this whining, blubbering. lying and quib bling anawer and go on with the war until Germany is well whipped and confesses it. Kansas City Times Germany is beaten fundamentally beaten. She might fight on for months, but ber dom is written in the only language she understands the language of arms. The only possible peace is tho peace of unconditional surrender. The sooner Germany Js given to understand this, the better. . e ... ' St. Louis Globe Democrat Whatever the German note means, it la wholly unsatisfactory and wholly hypocritical. It does not come to the point. It is a mere beating about the bush to gain time, to save tJO German face. Westllche Post. St. Louis Tho note clearly indicates that the German peo ple clamor for peace. The German government at last recognizes the fact that the German people cannot bs led any longer by tha privileged few. The note indicates that the German, people will see that Germany fulfills all the promises and pledges it makes to the President. - a ' " Providence (R. I.) Journal The Ge'r- maa government offers a reply that is fot worth the paper on which it is rinted. . ., . It is a compliance in form without yielding anything except what has to be yielded to the hard ar gument of force. " Portland (Me.) Press The reply Is nothing more than a clur.isy effort to keep" open the door of negotiations and to provoke further discussion. - It will not impress the American people as sincere. San Francisco Chronicle There .is absolutely nothing in the latest Ger man reply which calls for further dip lomatic discussion by the allies. It should be handed to the nearest clerk with instructions to file and index for reference by future historians oX the war. . New Tork Herald Today, as on the heels of the American note of October 8. the demand of the American people will be no armistice, no negotiations, no discussions, no peace until there is open admission of defeat by whatever government Germany may have, and no thought of peace until the Ger man armies have surrendered uncon ditionally. On with the war! We have just begun to fight! -New Tork German. Herold An ex amination of the wireless version seems to show that there Is at least some en deavor on' the part of Germany to ful fill the basic conditions as enunciated by Mr. Wilson . . . We trust the German rulers are, at la inclined to let reason rule, and see -things as thaf are. Springfield (Mass.) Republican The outlook is not hopeful for peace. Boston Globe The Ink and paper of the German reply to President Wilson are new; but it is the aame old liand writing. Item by item, the note re veals its insincerity New Tork World Germany is not yet ready to admit its defeat and ac cept the terms which it begins to fear are to be Imposed by Its triumphant adversaries. When it presently recog nizes that It cannot win In the field and that all its strategems elsewhere do not involve its adversaries in Jeal ousies snd- disputes, it will yield, as many another nation as proud, if not as powerful, hss had to yield Chicago Herald-Examiner Germany's latest communication to President Wil son, as reported from London, is char acteristically indefinite It Is far from a Tlurrender -, If the London text is authentic it would be a safe bet that the war is still on Spokane (Wssh.) Spokesman-Review Germany made a show of accepting the President's conditions, but now hedges in its offer with confusing mod ifications and restrictions. Having an swered one note, it will be difficult for the President to cut off the corre spondence, but tho hope will rise strong that he will find a way to do it ef fectively and silence Instantly the dan gerous German peace pVopaganda. New Tork Times The terms of peace will be Just to the rest of the world, however harsh Germany and the Ger man people may deem thorn to be. It remains for them not to qhoose the terms, but to accept whatever terms may be imposed. The armies of Mar shal J'o-jh will give them no respite un til they come to that conclusion. . New. York Sun Tho great fact that stands forth In the last note of "the present German government" is the swift progress of that government in tho direction of unconditional surren der. . .- .- The apparent intect--. . Is to bring the people . . .'o a state of mind which shalf realise and accept the defeat now Inevitable with out turning upon the dynasty primarily responsible for the national disaster. " " .-'' . ' Boston Herald We hope the Presi dent will break off thesa negotiations by proclaiming at once the. keynote of the situation. This keynote is uncon ditional surrender. Philadelphia Enquirer In brief, nothing less than unconditional sur render will All tbe bill. .. Philadelphia Public Ledger The gen eral feeling will be that he must be trusted to answer this last fulmlnation from Berlin without any pressure of unipformed public opinion upon him, one way or the other. e Fresno (Cal.) Republican The note in no sense meets President Wilson's conditions, and if it deserves any an swer at all. the reply should be merely a curt reminder of this fact. ' .. Detroit Free ' Press The best im mediate answer will he tlvg roar of Foch's cannon. e St "Louis Republic President Wilson should conclude with a statement like this: '"Talk to Foch; I have no further time to argue with a treacherous, lying Hun." ARREST ON TREASON Ig GHAR8EIS ADMinEDip 1 1 ; William Isensee, German, and. . Bond Slacker, on Trial. GERMANY VISITED IN 1915 DUNDALK SUNK, 17 MISSING Irish Steamer Torpedoed; IS of the Crew Are Rescued. BELFAST, Oct. SI. The Irish steamer Dundalk was torpedoed in ttu Irish Sea last week. Of .the crew of more than 30, only IS were rescued. .- The Dundalk was owned by the Dun dalk and Newry Steam Packet Com pany. She measured 86J tons. , 42 Die of "Flu" in Seattle. SEATTLE. Wash, Oct. 21. Deaths .from Spanish influenza in Seattle over Sunday and Monday were 42 and -new cases 518, according to announcement tonight by- tho city health authorities. There were 20 deaths reported today. Health conditions at the University of Washington were so Improved today that all war schools were convened strain. Portlander Who Refused to Buy lib erty Bonds, Though Able, Also Has Conscientious Scruples. William Isensee, a German black smith and liberty bond slacker, visit ed relatives In, Germany In 1915 and was arrested on a charge of treason In Canada upon his return to this con tinent. . -' These admissions were procured from the unwilling witness yesterday in Cir cuit Judge Kavanaugh's court while he was under cross-examination by Deputy City Attorney Hindman. Isensee as serted, however, that the charge against him fn Canada was dismissed. Isensee was on trial yesterday for disorderly conduct, complaint against him , having been filed -by solicitors of the fourth liberty loan, who, said Jsensee, assumed a warlike attitude when they went to Isensee's machine Shop on North First street to solicit for liberty .bonds. The .case was in tne Circuit . Court on appeal from the Municipal Court, where be was fined $500 and sentenced to 30 days in jail. The case was concluded yesterday afternoon, but Judge Kavanaugh re served decision- until tomorrow. Isensee Has Much Property. Isensee admitted he has property valued at $50,000 but said he could not afford to buy liberty bonds. Even though he could afford it, he told Judge Kavanaugh, he would not purchase them because of conscientious scruples. "Isn't it a fact that you subscribed for the third German war loan?" was a question shot at the defendant by Prosecutor Hindman. The court sustained-objections to tho question. "The Government commandeers our blood; if it wants our property let it commandeer that also," was one reply Isensee made to Judgo Kavanaugh In an effort to explain his scruples against liberty bonds. George Bowen . and F. L. Gifford, liberty loan solicitors. appeared as chief witnesses', against Isensee. They said the German picked up a chair and started to fight when they asked him to buy bonds. He also made sedi tious statements against' the Govern ment, they testified. Isensee referred to the visit of the liberty loan workers as'mob ' rule," and as he was leaving the witness stand, he muttered: "I haven't got. "any chance here, either." Isensee said lis left Germany to escape military service when a young man. He was a British subject for sev eral years and then came to the United States. If i IBB fell. nil Double S. & H. Stamps Today and Tomorrow on All Cash Purchases of luc or Uver on ttrst J nree rioors - An Opportune Time to Buy. Your Christmas Gifts at a Saving n . r- ll TOO PLOTTERS CONVICTED ITALIAN TRAITOR AND GERMAN OFFICIAL INVOLVED. N Minister Erzberger . Mentioned in Case Just Ended in Courts of '' - Switzerland. ' ZURICH, Switzerland, Oct. 21. (Brit ish Wireless Service.) Linot Androi: a deserter from the' Italian army, and Rudolph Engelman. a German Consular agent, have been found gutlty in the Swiss Courts of having in their pos session bombs, infernal machines and revolutionary - pamphlets for use in Italy. Engelman was sentenced to two and a half years' imprisonment, to pay a fine of 5000 francs and expulsion from Switzerland for- life. Androi receiVed 20 months in prison, a fine of 1000 franca .and expulsioa. The revolutionary pamphlets found In the shop were printed at the office of La Paix in Berlin. - -La Paix is a pacifist organ directed by Herr .Erzberger, the German Cen trist leader and recently appointed minister without portfolio in the cab inet of Prince Maximilian. . Sisters Pick Four Tons of Berries. ASTORIA, Or., Oct. 21. (Special.) To Irene Anderson and her sister, Nina Anderson, belong the credit of having picked a greater number of cranber ries than any other group of twopick ers. These young women came to the cranberry marshes of this section' for a vacation from Portland four weeks ago and had never seen a cranberry grow. In less than four weeks they picked more than 1000. pecks between them. SAFETY FIRST If You Wear DAYTON GLASSES YOU ARE SURE ' fete J FIFTH AND WASHINGTON STS. 50S-S09 SHETLAND BLPG- BTH FLR. Ah! . " Boiled Spareribs and Sauerkraut that's one of the specials the Hazelwood menu holds for you Today and its price is . ; ' 40c ' Vv -v They're prepared in the famous Hazelwood way. a way you'll thoroughly enjoy. ' , 7 rinrrrr " A NECESSITY IS ILLNESS A COMFORT IN HEALTH A MOST ACCEPTABLE GIFT Safety Electric Warming Pad There's no m u s s, no odor, no bursting or scalding, no' leaking water, no inconvenience, no danger, with the SAFETY PAD It doesn't leak, doesn't get cold and clammy, and isn't bulky or cumbersome. Price $7.00 HOTPOINT VACUUM CLEANER Operates from any electric jmas lamp socket.- Its motor is air-cooled all parts made as light as possible with out sacrificing durability." We will demonstrate in your home. 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