THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 9, 1918. 3 JAPAN WITH CHINA TO DEFEND ORIENT Purpose of Recent Military Agreement Between Two ' Nations Made Known. NIPPON IS NOT AGGRESSIVE Rumors Alleging Assumption of Un due Authority In Celestial Realm Declared to Be Without Foundation. By the Associated Press.) TOKIO. June 8. The official state ment issued by the Japanese govern ment explanatory of the Chlno-Jap-anese military agreement declares that this agreement relates only to co-operation by the two nations In defense of the peace and welfare of the Far East and explicitly denies various ru mors to the contrary. The text of the explanatory state ment which accompanied the notes ex changed between the two governments reads: "Having regard to the steady pene tration of hostile influence Into Rus sian territory, jeopardizing the peace and welfare of the Far Fast, and rec ognizing the imperative necessity of co-operation between Japan and China adequately to meet the exigencies of the case, the governments of the two countries, after a frank interchange of views, caused the annexed notes to be exchanged on March 25 between the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Chinese Minister at Tokio. Two Nations to Co-operate. "In pursuance of the purpose of the notes, the imperial government sub sequently sent commissioners repre senting the imperial army and navy to Pekin, where they held conferences with the authorities of the Chinese army and navy. "The negotiations progressing smooth ly, two agreements were concluded, one relating to the navy on May 19. These agreements embody only the concrete arrangements as to the man ner and conditions under which the armies and navies of the two countries are to co-operate in the common de fense against the enemy on the basis of the above-mentioned notes ex changed on March 25. "The details of the arrangements, con stituting as they do, a military secret, cannot be made public, but they con tain no provisions other than those pertaining to the object already de fined. Rumors Declared Groundless. "Currency has been given to various rumors alleging that the agreements contain, for instance, such stipulations as that the Chinese expedition is to be under Japanese command; that Ja pan may construct forts In Chinese ter ritory at such places as she may choose; that Japan will take control of the Chinese railways, shipyards and arsenals, and even that Japan will as sume control of China's finances, will organize China's police system, will ac quire the right of freely operating China's mines, producing materials for the use of arsenals, etc "It cannot be too emphatically stated that these and similar rumors are ab solutely unfounded." AMERICAN TROOPS REVIEWED AT FRONT. TURKS TORTURE GREEKS TREATMENT WORST SINCE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE. Hundreds of Thousands Deported Froi Thrace Parish t Women Are Sold as Slaves. NEW YORK, June 8. Mohammedan prisoners of war in Salonlca. accord ing to a cable message from Athens to the Greek legation in Washington, made public here today by the Ameri can committee for Armenian and Syrian relief, say that "the Greeks in Tur key are undergoing the worst treat ment since the fall of Constantinople, 1453, A. D." The message says that the Moham medan captives assert that since the beginning of the war to the end of 1917 more than 200,000 Greeks between the ages of 15 and 48 have been drafted forcibly into the Turkish army and that thousands of these have died as a result of ill-treatment, hunger and epidemics. "More than 600.000 Greeks' have been deported from Thrace Into Asia Minor. One-half of the deportees died from torture and illness," says the cable message. ' "Many were slaughtered and the survivors are in a terrible plight. With the exception of Smyrna, Con stantinople and a few other towns, all the Greeks in them underwent terrible Buffering, exile, torture and starvation, "Women are sold as slaves, men are forced to become Mohammedans and $5,000,000,000 worth of property belong ing to the Greeks has been confiscated. Forty to fifty deaths occur daily among the Greeks in Symrna as the result of hunger and weakness. "The streets in the larger cities are full of Greek orphans, half naked and begging for bread." , y AY 4 z f' 7 t "4 - , ' t t 4 ' $ v PATRIOTIC APPEAL MADETO OPERATORS Western Union Officials Circu late Among Employes Ad dress to President Wilson. TEXT OF DOCUMENT GIVEN AUSTRIA'S PERIL IS SEEN VIENNA BURGOMASTER DECLARES HIGH TREASON RAMPANT. American- troops were recently reviewed on the western front in France. The color guard heading the division is shown in this French official photograph passing in review. SHIP DODGES DIVERS Extraordinary Means Adopted to Save Vessel. SUCCESS REWARDS EFFORT Many Days Consumed in Zlg-Zag Conrse From West Indies to Atlantic Port Captain and Crew Praised. AN ATLANTIC PORT.- June 8. Rac ine at full speed for nearly a week to escape German submarines, an Ameri can steamship arrived today from the West Indies with 69 passengers, more than half of whom were women and children. With the first inkling that U-boats were at work, the captain took drastic steps to protect his ship and the lives of his passengers.' - Taking a zig-zag course, he ordered the engineers to get up every pound of steam possible, and then ran far out of the route usually followed by steamers engaged in the West Indian trade. Lifeboats were prepared for instant lowering and passengers warned that if they appeared on deck they would be thrown into irons. Officers and men had no sleep for 72 hours while they kept a constant look out for submarines, floating mines or lifeboats from the raiders' victims. The wireless operator picked up an S. O. S. call from the Harpathian. Both crew and passengers showed the tension under which they had been. A. J. Canyon, a Philadelphia banker, and Frank P. Gilroy. a mining engi neer from Denver, in relating their ex periences, paid tribute to the work of officers and men and to the courage of the women passengers. sion once more to launch its tirades against the United States and the President of the United States and to endeavor to find some offset and com fort for the steadily assembling Ameri can hosts in France, which, despite the abuse by the German papers of Pre mier Clemenceau for the inspiration for France he finds in the coming of the Americans, is evidently viewed with anything but equanimity in Germany. The Cologne Gazette concludes a vio lent diatribe against America as fol lows: "It is, therefore, only right and fair that we. too, make use of our war means to chow the friends of humanity in their home land what war looks like and what it means. Our U-boats first visited the American coasts for legitimate, peaceful commerce. The North Americans may now feel the fist of the war lord. "They need not be surprised. He who sows the wind reaps the whirl wind, even when he sits on the other side of the great herring pond, where he is under the delusion that he is safe from the storm." The Cologne Volkes Zeitung talks about "those who are prosecuting a starvation war against our wives and children having revealed to them off their own coasts the seriousness of war when the new strategy of our U boat war. which technically is becom ing increasingly perfected, is also di rected against the other shore of the Atlantic Ocean. This, in view of the character of our American opponent evokes on all sides the liveliest satis faction among the German peoples." U-BOATS PLEASK GERMAN S Teuton Press Launches Tirade Against America and Wilson. AMSTERDAM, June 8. (By the As sociated Press.) News of the German U-boats' operations on the American coast receives page headlines in the latest German newspapers reaching here, and all details available 'are greedily seized upon. The press, moreover, takes the occa- Need Declared for Parliament Where Evils of Bureaucracy May Be Dlncnsaed. AMSTERDAM, Friday, June 7. The Vienna correspondent of the Veiser Zeitung, a radical newspaper of Bremen, says that in a sensational speech Dr. Weiskirchner, Burgomaster of Vienna, declared: "High treason and ingratitude are rampant and the government has proved weak and unsteady. In the present serious time we need a Par liament, for even a bad Parliament is better than none. "It is true that Parliament failed to deal with .the food question, but it re mains the only platform for free speech and the only place where the arbitrary acts of the bureaucracy and the nu merous military encroachments can be discussed. "The supreme and the most urgent duty of the German parties now is to show a united front to Slav treachery." The General Federation of Women's Clubs is urging that war mourning be banned and only a mourning badge of 6iac& jtfui & aray. star. p yoxn, PORTLAND PHYSICIAN JOIXS RANKS OF KNIGHTS' S ECRET ARIES. t f . i - Dr. Harry A. Medernaclc CAMP LEWIS. Wash., June 8. (Special.) Dr. Harry A. Meder nack, with offices In the Broad way building, a graduate of Mount Angel College and later a freshman in the University of Oregon medical department, has joined the ranks of the Knights of Columbus secretaries on this cantonment. He probably will be ordered overseas for service as soon as he has become familiar with routine secretarial work. Dr. Medernack has practiced medicine in Portland since 1905. shortly after his graduation from the Chicago College of Medicine and Surgery. He is also well known in Pendleton, where he moved with his parents when he was 4 years old. His father, James P. Medernack, was one of the pio neers of the motion-picture busi ness in Pendleton. Dr. Meder nack was born in Garnett, Kan. ,. ,t t 1. -JLJU.t III -t-SjLjULHfc STONE SHIPS SUCCESS CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION OCT OF EXPERIMENTAL STAGE. Contracts Soon to Be Let Will Make 208,500 Tonnage Ordered by Shipping; Board. WASHINGTON, June 8. Evidence that the Government regards the con crete ship as having pasted beyond the stage of experiment-to become a prac tical and efficient aid in the country's transportation sj-stem was given today ir a statement by the Shipping Board, showing that no less th&n five differ ent branches of the Government con templates building concrete vessels. Chairman Hurley soon will place contracts for 24 more concrete ves sels, in addition to the 18 already let. making a total tonnage of 298,500. or dered by the Shipping Board. Most of the new ships will be 7500-ton tank ers and will be built in the five Gov ernment yards announced several days ago. The Inland Waterway Commission Is making bids on 21 concrete cargo barges of 600 tons capacity. The Navy Department has let contracts for 12 concrete barges of 500 tons each for harbor use and the quartermaster's de partment of the War Department has advertised for bids on 2 tugboats of re inforced concrete. BERNSTORFF LOSES HONOR Union College Cancels Degree That It Had Conferred. SCHENECTADY, N. T., June 8. The trustees of Union College today by res olution rescinded their action of four years ago conferring the degree of doctor- of laws upon Count Johann von Bernstorff, former German ambassa dor to tbe United States. Next Monday the college will con fer the degree of Doctor of Laws on Secretary of State Robert Lansing and Major-General Peyton C. March. CARD OF THANKS. We desire to thank our many friends for their kindness and sympathy dur ing the illness and death of our be loved husband and father, and for the beautiful floral offering. MRS. J. M. THOMPSON Organization Leaders Say They Have Information That Less Than 40 Per Cent or Em ployes Affix Signatures. Western Union officials of Portland yesterday circulated among employes of the company a testimonial. ad dressed to President Wilson, and calcu lated both to assure him that the tele graphers will stand by the corporation and to put a damper on the growing Inclination of the workers to organize. Organization leaders said last night they have Information to the effect that less than 4 0 per cent of the em ployes signed the document. Company officials declined to make a statement on the subject. Some employes who have not yet become affiliated with the Commercial Telegraphers' Union declared last night that they regard the testimonial, couched as an appeal to patriotism, as a bit of clever camouflage. Loyalty Is Pledged. The text of the domument employes were asked to sign, as carried away by one of tbe displeased workers, fol lows: "President Woodrow Wilson, White House, Washington, D. C: We, as patriotic citizens, first; telegraphers second, and Western Union employes third, deplore the agitation being aroused between employer and em ployes In the telegraph service over the question of unionism at the present time, when It is the manifest duty of all to forward the Govern ment's interests to the utmost in aiding to provide an uninterrupted line of communication for our Government and its essential industries; therefore it Is our desire that the present relations between employer and employes remain unchanged in this war crisis and we pledge ourselves for the prompt ren dering of our duty first, last and all the time." PatrtotUsn ta Asserted. "We maintain." commented James R. Kelly, organizer of the local tele graphers' union, "that those who Join the union and thus abet the move to end the Western Union's opposition to the Government are fully as loyal as any who signed the company's petition. We insist, in case the strike is called, on placing our services at the disposal of the Government for the transmission of its messages absolutely free." Strike instructions are en route through the malls from the union's National headquarters to all local or ganizers and branches, it has been an nounced. WASHINGTON. Tune 8. Final de cisions In the cases of the Bethlehem Steel Company workers and Postal Telegraph Company employes will be rendered by the National War Labor Board at Chicago next Wednesday, the board announced today. OPERATORS OPPOSE STRIKE Loyalty to Government Pledged In Chicago, Seatlte and Spokane. WASHINGTON, June 8. Several thousand telegraphers employed by the Western Union Telegraph Company in Chicago, Seattle and Spokane tele graphed President Wilson today that they would not be parties to any move ment looking to a disruption of the country's commercial telegraph service during the war. They deplored agitation looking to a strike of telegraphers and pledged their loyalty to the Government. Some 3000 telegraph operators in Chicago told the President that they were not represented by any labor leaders who had threatened to call a strike, and that they resented the in ference that they might be "so base and disloyal" as to support a strike. Banquet Held at College. MOUNT ANGEL COLLEGE, 6t. Bene dict. Or., June 8. (Special.) An event 4J you vtijl admire, Ws4 f0appmfe me vfaberdariiei'V Wf -at? fro trforrison at Fourth of the week was the banquet of the Pacific Star staff, held in the college dining-room. Addresses were given by several members. After tbe banquet the staff spent a pleasant evening at various sports. THREE COUPLES UNHAPPY Snlts for Divorce Filed in Oregon City Court. OREGON CITT. Or., June 8. (Spe cial.) Brief has been the matrimonial bliss of Charles O. Hudson and his wife, G. Hudson, who were married April 10 of this year. Today the wife filed suit for divorce, charging cruel and inhu man treatment and asserting that her husband had threatened to kill her. Desertion is charged in the suit for divorce filed by Ray Loner against his wife, Irma Loner. They were married in Vancouver in March, 1917. Jessie E. Little asserts that her husband, George R. Little, has abused her and is an habitual drunkard. They were mar ried in 1910 in New Tork. Coffin Funeral Tomororw. The funeral services for Lester Cof fin, sheepman and capitalist, who died at his home In Wenatchee, Wash., on June 7. will be held at the chapel of J. P. Flnley and Son, Fifth and Mont gomery streets, tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock. The Rev. A. A. Heist will officiate, and Interment will be made -at Rivervlew Cemetery. The pallbearers will be T. J. Seufert, T. J. Johnson, R. M. Donovan. E. M. Win gate. J. E. Forestel and N. W. Roun-tree. V Adv. AND FAMTLY. Grus Spring Oiler Stops That Squeak! Fit All Springs Stiff springs mean noisy, hard-riding cars and expense. Resilient springs mean quite easy riding cars and economy. Grus Oilers make f our springs do their duty. Perfectly ubricates every square inch of each spring leaf. Does not make the spring greasy. Made in sizes to fit ail springs. Covey Motor Car Co. Aecesnory Dep't, State Distributors. Main 6241. Portland, Or. Tokens to Commemorate the School Days must possess suffi cient character and quality to be appreci ated in years to come. Feldenheimer jewelry meets every re quirement. The same applies to Wedding Gifts Here you wil1 fin1 awaitins you the longest list of useful articles in Jewelry, Silverware and Diamonds at con venient prices. As & C. 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