See Poultry . pagev for scfen- SJA'u tlfie analysis ot Vj r poultry canons. VOL. XIII. NO. 311. PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 6, 1915 TWO SECTIONS 14 PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS ON TRAINS AND NEWS CTAUDS riVE CENTS SHARP NOTE IS BYWASHiNGTON Mexican Factional Leader Is Told to Relieve Conditions in Mexico City at Once and to Retain Troops There. MASSACRE WOULD BE . "VERY UNFORTUNATE" 'Representations Are Strong est Yet Made to Any Mex ican Faction by U.:S. ' rUnel Prw Leaned Wire. ' Washington, March 6. The sharpest "representations ever sent to any gov- : eminent or faction of Mexico were for- .warded by the ; government of the United States to General Venustlano Carranra, provisional president. The "first chief constitutionalist was told In no uncertain language that the starvation now threatening Mexico City must be relieved at once. Car ranza was warned that the United States does not appfove of the plan of ' General Alvaro Obregon, Carranza's troop commander, to withdraw nis troops artd to leave the capital to Its fata at tha first fdcn-i of a rfntnu. dcm ' onstration. All official and unofficial f advices received by the state depart ment snowed the rood situation is men aclng and that something' must be done immediately.. .Meantime General Francisco Villa . has been; informally . advised that masaacr. of foreigners would be "very unfortunate." It Is reported Villa is pressing his campaign against Tampico but it Is doubtful whether he can force a change In the military situation in time to prevent a crisis. What steps the government of the United States proposes to take in the even its warnings go unheeded re main a secret. One high official today : admitted the administration leaders " were perplexed. Intervention would be difficult as it would . require two -v months for an. expeditionary force to fight Its way through to the capital . ana in tnat time all foreigners in Mei- " Ico CUy wauld becorna victims of mobs. in unueu states responsible for the protection of; foreigners., Suggestions rlieara today, that an -.allied, force aim liar to that which went to Peking dur lng the Boxer uprising, might be sent to Mexico City were unfavorably re- , ceived. Close' observers hold that such action would precipitate a quick exnlo " slon in a situation that has been 'freely , aescnoed a -"run or dynamite." . President Wilson, relieved of the arduous duties connected with the ses i slon of 'congress, is now in personal charge of the Mexican situation and he is receiving . ana sending all messages - regarding it. s - While it was declared at thei'Whltn House that no news had been received ' of the reported decision of the- diplo j matic corps at Mexico City to leave - that capital in a body, it was admitted that conditions, there were such as to render such a decision possible With out notification. It is stated that m- ? basstes, legations, and consulates at : Mexico City have been laying in sup , plies and that, as a result they are " now practically the only places in the capital having foodstuffs on hand Hence food riots would be directed . against these places. Bad Check Game Is Played on Mrs. Gran Several days ago a man of good ap- pearance, giving the nam W. I. Heed went- to Mrs. - John Cran. of 395 ' Twelfth street, wife of one of the ! pfbneer merchants of Ixmdon, and ; negotiated for the rental of a house -on the east side. He agreed to pay '" $35 rent a months and yesterday gave ner a arait ror ?tu. sue gave him ' back $25 in change. : A' short time afterwards, at the. i-bank. she found that the draft was fraudulent: City Detectives Moloney ;and Roy) e started an investigation and learned today that similar frauds have been perpetrated on several other property owners in the city in the last ten aays. Male Kittens and Young Ducks ; Some rather unusual offers ap pear in the Want Ads today.' Here are some of them. Swap Column. 25 30 CHICKENS, 2 young ducks and ;. dra.ke. trad? for furniture. Lr?xchan8' Estate. 34 tlXCllANGH 6 room nearly new house with 4 lots all clear for a farm. 30 to 40 acres. Must nave a. 4 or 5 room house and barn, partly under cultivation, with some tools wagon, horse and cow preferred.. 1 Tor Sale Miscellaneous. ! l j 2 MACH1NKS for sale, one for ! grinding safety ; razor bladec, one for grinding lawn mowers. - Housekeeping Booms. East Side Private Family. 74 A BARGAIN Front suite; mod i crn, $11 month: electric lights gas range, running water, phone! 1 ' Automobiles "Wanted 78 $600 KyUlTV in a small modern j Portland home and some casn for a used light delivery car. ij Wanted -Miscellaneous. 73 !WANTK1 3A Graflex camera, with Cooke lens, series II, ot with B.-& L, Zeiss Tessa r Scries . IC. :: . , - 1 . TWO Angora male kittens. 6 nios. -1 v, old,, for sale.! BATTLESHIP MAINE SINKS AT HER DOCK AT BROOKLYN YARDS Cause - of Accident Which Sends Mew Warship to .Pottom of Harbor Unknown r-Hj Prrn Leased Wlr. New York, March 6. With her en gineroom and hold half, filled with water, the battleship Maine rested this afternoon at the bottom of Shal low "Whitney Basin, at the Brooklyn navy yard. The cause of the.accident which sent the warship down was not definitely, known. At. the. navy yard it was reported . that in some manner the sea valves had been left pen, . let ting the water into the hold. As soon as this fact was discovered. it. was said, the pumps were, started, but were unable to discharge the water as fast as it entered, and the vessel finally settled to the bottom. She went down In the shallow water close to shore, and her decks were not submerged. The pumps were kept going during the afternoon, 'While tugs stood by ready to tow the Maine to her dock Whenever she should be sufficiently lightened to be moved. The sea valyes through which it is supposed the" water entered, are used in discharging torpedo tubes. The chief engineer, whose department Is responsible for the condition of the valves. Is declared to have been ab sent from the ship for three days. First reports had it that the break ing of a waterpipe in the Maine's en gineroom had partially filled her hold. but that she was in no danger of sink ing. WAR SUMMARY BY j. W. T. MASON United Press Staff Correspondent. New York, March 6. Evidence is accumulating that the -labor' situation In England is far f pm satisfactory. The British censor Is concealing true conditions. It is impossible, however, to account for the sudden stoppage of sailings between New York and British ports on any other ground than the refusal of strikers to return to work. ' : Particulars regarding the extent of England's labor troubles have not been received in America, -- except vaguely. Only . brief articles s nave appeared in. the Brittehpress.-r although trade disputes are usually considered among the .most important stories published in England.- , The seriousness of the situation is Indicated not only by the curtailment of steamer sailings, but also ' by the recent speech of Chancellor of the Ex chequer David Lloyd-George, In which he urged workingmen to put patriotism above the right to get drunk and not hamper the manufacture of war ma terials by indulging in strike talk while in an intoxicated condition. British pride is most sensitive to maritime humillation, and only serious causes wil be permitted to interrupt mercantile sailings to New York. ' It must also he remembered that Lloyd George owes his political popularity to extreme; radicalism and his per sistent championship of labor. It is inconceivable that he would use his biting oratorical style to attack the sobriety of workingmen under present conditions unless the need . was most urgent. j - . j Insane Lumberman Kills Five, Hurts 8 Monroe Phillips, Distracted by Busi ness Troubles, nres Volley la Streets of Brunswick; Xa Killed. Brunswick, Georgia, March 6. H. F. Dunwoody, a prominent attorney, and four other persons were killed and eight persons were wounded, five se riously, when Monroe Phillips, a lum berman, fired a fusillade of random shots on the street here: this afternoon.- Phillips : was then shot and killed by a policeman. Those killed besides Dunwoody were H. A. Padgett, a former policeman; George Asbell, motorman; Rex. Den ver, policeman, and W. A. Hackett. un dertaker. Phillips is said to have been driven insane by business reverses. Dunwoody was killed while sitting at a desk in his office by a stray shot. The other men rushel in and a vol ley from Phillips' gun followed. Bill Passed, Even ThougmtfladNot Been Introduced Olympia, Wash., March 6.-- The, house yesterday broke all ' - records this session by passing . -jjf-senate bill 402, appropriations of $2,000,000, before it had ever been introduced, read' first or -Jfr second time, or gone to commit tee. The bill carries appropria- -actions for highways. Attorneys say so long as the bill is certi- Jfc fled by the speaker and regu- x larly passed, failure to follow jfc- customary .procedure , is not serious. - Jf ff" 3ft Passengers Saw Vessel Blown Up New York.' i March j 6. Passengers who arrived here on the steamer Rynd ham. which docked at Hoboken today, declared they-saw a big freighter blown up off Dover on February 24 either by a submarine or a mine. The freighter was sailing without a flag. A British destroyer took off the freighter's crew, atter signalling the Ryndham to keep- away, as the English channel was full of floating mines. MEN GIVEN UP AS BY SEARCHERS Forty-five Miners Entombed for 48 Hours by West Vir ginia Explosion Brought Up From Galleries of Mine. NINETY KNOWN DEAD FORTY-FIVE MISSING Five First Found . Alive Di rect Rescuers to Com rades Underground. . (United Prs Leased Wire.) , iayiand, W. Va March 6. Forty- five men rescued alive, 45 others still missing, 90 known dead. This was the situation reported by officials of. the Layland No. 3 mine of the ftew River & Pocahontas Coal Co. this afternoon after a large number of the men who were entombed when the shaft was wrecked by an explosion of gas four days ago, were brought to the surface. .M ej me ted rescuers were I- working frantically In the dangerous passes this afternoon, hoping to bring out more of the missing men. Of the 45 men rescued from a living death, all were famished and very weak, but none was in acute physical distress. All said they were working in pock ets orr tne main passages when the explosion filled the passages witn aeons and walled them in. This cut them off from escape, but it also cut oir the deadly gases which swept the mine immediately after. the explosion. They groped about in total darkness curing the four days or their imprison ment, they said, but were unable to find a way out until they heard the picks of the rescuers tearing at the debris which stood between them and safety. Five men were first found alive. These, when brought to the surface, told where nine others were, located, and the nine revealed the whereabouts of 33 others. ; r -' FOR INVESTIGATION; ITES FOUND Deposits in Sum of $6061,10 Shown in Name of Retired Fisherman-of Kalama. Certificate!! or dennsit In tha sum dr $6061.10 which are sajd to have been stolen from Fred Ahles, a retired fish erman, who lives in the vicinity of Kalama. Wash., were found in the pos session of Fred Hawkins, an ex-con- vict, wno was arrested on a charge of simple Intoxication, on Burnside street,' by Patrolman O'Brien last night. The local authorities today received telegraphic information that Ahles had been robbed at his lonely home about 10 days ago by two men. In addition to the certificates the robbers ob tained $330 in cash. The news of the robbary was . received from Sheriff Kl'jse of Kalama. Hawkins was nuout to be released this morning, when Captain of Police Moore spied the certificates of large denomination, and ordered Hawkins held for investigation by the detec tives. Hawkins at first said he had found them at Kalama yesterday, but this morning he told Detectives Moloney and Boyle that he had stolen them from another man who was drunk, in an east Bide rooming house last night. The detectives first ascertained that the money represented by the certifi cates was on deposit in the various Portland banks indorsed on the voucn ers, and then notified Sheriff Klose of Kalama. The latter told the officers that Fred Ahles is a man past '70 years old, who resides in a shack a mile from town, along the Columbia river. Ahles,- whom Sheriff Klose said had bee"h hoarding .his money for years, has not been seen about Kalama for several days, and the sheriff stated that he. would leave at once for the old man's home, to see if anything had happened to him. ; j! Some of the certificates were yel lowed with age, but in every instance they were found to be good. One, dated October 22, 1897, repre sents a $1400 deposit in the First Na tional bank. Another shows a deposit for $328.32, made June 13, 1902. in the Ainsworth National bank, now, the United States National bank. The others are as follows: Iadd"& Tllton bank, $1000 deposit made, Oc tober 31, 1905 ; Pacific National bank, Tacoma, $1139.69. deposited May 20, 1907, and Merchants' National bank. $423 deposit made, October 31. 1905. The detectives found that the Ladd & Tilton bank owns all the paper. Besides the deposit slips. Hawkins was found carrying $40 in cash.. Haw kins was shown his record . at - detec tive headquarters this morning and admitted serving at sentence in the Walla Walla penitentiary ? in 1908 for forgery. . Host of Kings Is Dead. London, March 6. George Henrv Cadogan, fifth earl of Cadogan, one of ionaons wealthiest landlords, died here today, aged 75 years, s He. was famous for his lavish entertainment of royalty. .. -. - DEAD SAVED EX-CONVIGTtlS-HEtD CERTIFIC FRENCH LINER LA i s- s - v'r,o , Z4i ''.'i, Is S ' La Touraine is a steel twin screw., steamer built tn 1800. by ! the Campae General Transatlantlque. . ! l HavTe. . She 'carries, crew of 2 oa and ha ,4 passengers boai ANGLO-FRENCH FLEET ENTERS NARROWS OF DARDANELLES STRAIT l-Land Defenses Heavily Dam aged and Magazine Blown. Up British Admiralty Says, By Ed L. Keen, United Press Staff Correspondent. " London. March 6. The admiralty announced this afternoon that the Anglo-French fleet has entered, the narrows "f . the Dardanelles and is bombarding the forts on both, sides of the strait Th ; land defenses have been heavily damaged and onenaga- sine has been blown up. . -. " That three Russian dreadnaughts. re cently rushed to completion," ' have Joined the Russian Black sea fleet' now descending upon the straits of Bos porus and Constantinople was the re port In admiralty circles today. Admiralty officials refused, to con firm this and would not even comment on the Bucharest dispatches declaring the Russian warships will be bombard ing the Bosporus forts, less than 18 miles from Constantinople, by tomor row night. The new Russian dreadnaughts are declared to be the Ekaterina . II, the Imperatriza Maria and the Alexander II. t. Each : of these ships , has' a dis placement of 22,500 tons and carries a number-of 12 inch guns. Lacking the enormous 15 inch guns, however, the Russians will face a harder task than the allies, as the Bosporus straits are fringed by a string of", almost impregnable fort resses. . The admiralty's statement was taken to mean that Fort Kilid Bahr and pos sibly Fort Canak had been silenced, by the fire or the 15-inch guns or the fleet. The narrows is the name give to that part ef the Dardanelles which leads past the Gallipoli peninsula into the Sea of Marmora. It is one and one-fifth miles wide. Once th allied fleet is past this part of the straits, however, the way will be clear to Con stantinople. The narrows are heavily strewn with mines and are guarded by forts of the most moaern type. The distance across the Sea of Mar mora from the end of the Dardanelles to Constantinople is about 125 miles, but there Is nothing to. stand in the way of a fleet steaming against the Turkish capital and shelling, it. , The admiralty statement shows, therefore, that the Anglo-French ar mada has entered Hipon the most criti cal part of its task of battering a way through the Dardanelles and seizing, the chief city of Islam. Russians Come Back. Petrograd, March 6.. Continued suc cesses in the new Russian offensive aginst Prussia were 'announced today In an official statement issued by the war office, which declared the Rus sian advanqe guard was within three miles of the frontier. Cossacks on reconnoitering expedi tions, it was said, have even ' crossed the border south of Friderlschot while north of Przasnysz a .detach-, ment occupied a village near the fron tier. . ' ' ' ' ' The statement announces the taking of 20,000 . prisoners by the czar's arf mies. French Successes Claimed, Paris, March 6. Bloody fighting in a ravin nortnwest of Beausejour, in which ' the French were victorious. marked the progress of the Charopagne region conflict, the war office here an nounced in an official statement issued today. .''..! French gains in the vicinity of Perthes were claimed. ' Reasonable Rates On Stock Are Asked Washington, March 6.- Reasonable Joint rates for shipments in single and double decked cars from all Ore gon .Short- Line -points - in Utah and Oregon to Los Angeles were asked in a. petition filed with the interstate commerce commission ,- today by the American ; National Livestock associa tion and the ' National Woolgrowera' association. . .: . ,. , TOURAINE ON FIRE OFF f -V w - S.,- 5 THIGPEN AND EX-WIFE : OF GEORGE PRIMROSE IJ Former Hotelman of Portland Weds Ex-Wife of Minstrel Who Lived Here, (United Press I(ie? TTir.) San Francisco. Cal. March 6. W. Gainer Thigpen, a prominent hotelman, and ?Mrs. Esther Nerney . Primrose, di vorced wife- of ' George Primrose, tha minstrel, announced today that- they had been married last Sunday at Sao xiazaet ana wouia start xms axternoon m?nd htwtfeerfhBi8r southern. Calif ornia. - Justice of the Peace 'Robert Magee, "the marrying Justice," t performed the ceremony. Whit taker Ray of Gait. BL J. Archer of Seattle, and Mrs. Kather ine Burke of San Francisco were wit nesses. Thigpen is owner of the Wake Robin Inn In the Santa Cruz mountains, where his wife also, owns property. Thigpen has been assistant manager of the Hotel Del Coronado. the Vir ginia hotel at Long Beach and the Multnomah, and Oregon hotels at Port land, lie resigned his position as as sistant manager of the Sutter hotel here today. Mrs. Thigpen is the daughter of Dennis Nerney, one of the forty-niners. Before her marriage to Primrose she studied for grand opera. W. Gainer Thigpen is well known to Portland people, and 'as a hotel man has a reputation that is country-wide. He began his career in Portland as chief clerk of the Portland under H. C. Bowers, present manager of the Multnomah. Leaving the Portland after about a year's service, he went to Minneapolis, and was employed at the new Radisson. Later be was with one of the leading resorts of the guir coast. Returning west, Mr. Thigpen was connected with the St. Francis at San Francisco for a time. Later he was assistant manager of the Coro nado and Virginia, southern California beach resorts. Coming; back to Portland in May, 1912, "he became chief -clerk- of the Multnomah under Manager Bowers, and was later advanced to the posi tion of assistant manager. Resigning from this place, he hecame 'assistant manager' of the new Oregon, and con tinued until the new part was taken over by S.' Benson and renamed the Benson. : For several months he was connected with the Oregon In Portland and the Hotel Seattle in that city. He purchased the Wake Robin Inn, in the Santa Cruz mountains, near San Fran Cisco, about a year ago. - -' His marriage to Mrs. Primrose was hot unexpected locally. Bishop Sumner Is Back From East Xead of Episcopal Church la Oregon Visited- Expositions la California oa MARRY CALIFORNIA Way Horn. . Bishop Walter Taylor Sumner, of thei Episcopal diocese of Oregon, re turned this morning from Manchester, N. H.. where he was called January 27 by the death of his father. The re turn was made by way of California, and Bishop Sumner saw the' San Diego and San Francisco expositions. Bishop Sumner began-work soon after his ar rival this morning,' announcing that the first thing to do is to rebuild St. Helens hall. Tonight he will go to Salem to confirm, a class in St. Paul's church tomorrow. He will remain in the capital Monday, and will address the women's missionary society of St. Paul's. , Bishop Sumner is now the guest, of Rev. and Mrs. A. A. Morrison, but will establish his residence at Bishopcrof t soon. He expects to eep open house for his eastern friends through the summer. , .. - . . SUFFRAGE LOSES IN TEXAS Austin, Texas, March Q.- The reso lution providing for - submission of a constitutional amendment grant! ng the vote to women was defeated in the sen ate today. It failed by five votes to get the required two-thirds majority. ' h ' THE COAST, OF IRELAND ON WAY TO HAVRE :v-: tv' f i. 1 , " .... mi RESTA LEADING THE VANDERBILT RACERS AT TWENTIETH LAP Pullen Second, Burman, Old field and Carlson' Follow ing; Average 67 Miles. - Details of aaderMlt Oap Baes. Tlme12:30 o'clock this aft ernoon. '. Place- Panama-Pacific 'Inter- national exposition grounds. Course Z.9 - miles. ; lnehidii Zl company had .. planked. . Keftialnderor" Wack' -asphalt Distance 29 miles. Laps to be covered 77; ' Number of starters 31. Prizes -Vanderbilt cup and first prize of $3000; second prize, $2000; third prize, 11600; fourth prize. $1000; fifth prize. $500. .'.. Entrance fee $250. Requirements Cars of . 930 Inch piston displacement. (rotted Pre Leased Wire.) Exposition Stadium, San Francisco, March 6.- Under ideal weather condi tions and with' the course in perfect shape, the Vanderbilt "cup automobile race was run here! today over the Panama-Pacific exposition eourse. .There was 31 starters. Darius Resta, winner of last Saturday's grand , prix; Ralph de Palma, twice winner of the Vanderbilt cup, and R. C. Durant. were sent away promptly at 12:30. The driyers were sent away to a perfect start by Chief Starter Fred J. Wagner, the cars leaping down the planked course-in front of the main grandstands at intervals of 15 sec onds, three at a time. , Ralph da Palma led at the end .of the first ' lap with D. Resta close at his mudguard.. At the end of the third lap Ed Rick- enbacker (Maxwell) ' had wrested, the lead away from de Palma. At-the end of the tenth lap Tom Alley ' (Deusenberg) was leading, lils time' for this .distance. was 33:46, an average of 67 miles an hour. Darius Resta (Peugeot), Eddie Pullen, Old field, Auckstell followed in the order named. . ' Louis "ikrent (Mercer) was official ly declared out ot tne race. - At 1:30 p. m. it was officially an nounced that four cars were Officially declared out of the race. They were; Nlkrent (Mercer)., Rlckenbacker .(Max well), Lecain (Chevrolet) and Durant (Chevrolet). At the end of the fifteenth lap Alley was leading. His time for the 16 laps was 51:17, an average of S7 miles an hour. The next four drivers and their times:. Resta, 51:47; Pullen, 51.58; Disbrow, 52:07; Old field, 52.33. ' Oldfield, who had resumed his Iden tifying cigar, was' running a .sensa tional race, and had passed De Palma In the fifteenth lap. De Palma was fighting l.:j way alid was by no means through. ' i - Marquis was officially out of the race because of a broken spring.' At the'end of the twentieth lap the standing' was: . Resta first, time 1 hour, 8 minutes, 41 seconds, an aver age of 676 miles an hour for the en tire distance, ' - Peullen, second, 1:09:15; ". Burman, 1:09:64; Oldfield. 1:10:08; Carlson, 1:10:37. De palma was in tenth place. His time for the 20 laps was 1:11:32. The Bagatti driven by Marquis was declared out of the race, account of broken spring. At 2 o'clock an announcement was made that there were 15,000 persons in the main grandstands. In the stands near the tower of Jewels a great crowd was in attendance, the immense stands being three-quarters filled. BRITISH TRAWLER IS LOST - London, March 6.--The , British trawler Bernlcla, carrying a crew of nine, has been lost' in the North sea, according to a dispatch, to Lloyds. It is presumed' that she struck a mine. i .rve- 4 - s v.- M8 Xength 5SO feet. i : : ' ' Her home port ENGINEER ELLIOTT IS UPHELD ill Members Are Unanimous in Opinion After Hearing Ar guments in Case, ' - - (Salem Burtn nf Tti Jonmnl.) Salem, Or., March . The state highway. . commission unanimously voted today to retain Engineer J. E. Elliott on the Columbia highway Job in Hood River count, it ' w k . . m lno ?MnteM' opinioa that the Nwnort 1 failed, to tnake la caseVswffleient rto n ..v ins iciuvflU' o f))HTtt. The latter has had charge of the Hood niver contract since" work was started and is employed under State, Highway Engineer Bowlby. ' . The decision of the highway com. mission in effect sustains the state highway engineer, under whose direc tions Elliott, has been working. - After hearing both side's of the Hood. River - Columbia High way controversy; the state high way commission yesterday afternoon took the matter under advisement. The Newport Land & Construction company, which has the contract, sought to show that Engineer Elliott, in charge of the work under State Highway En gineer Bowlby; was unfair and unrea sonable and had put'tbe company , to unnecessary expense. The company also sought to show that Elliott could not give them a square deal In com pleting the rest of the work, especially because of the fact that he had a $10, 000 damage suit pending against the company, because of an assault made upon him by. 'Ross Newport. It was charged that the ; company was re- (Concluded on Page FlT. Column four) HIGHWAY BY THE COMMISSION PATRIOTIC BELGIAN MONK KEEPS LONELY VIGIL IN TOWER ON THE FLEMISH FRONT DIRECTING FIRE OF ARTILLERY, WHILE SHELLS FALL THICK . . - j . ,.." . Water About the Tiny. Island" Is Foul With the Bodies of Invaders -Who Have Perished in Attempting to Force King Albert's Soldiers further Back.. By William Phiilp Sims, United . Pre Staff. Correspondent. . Flanders, Feb. 14. (With the Bel gian army at the front. By mall to New York) The chief observer for the Belgian army, the -mn occupying the most dangerous post along the entire Flemish front,' is a;'V Capuchin monk. " .. - Hidden In. a . medieval " tower . of chimney-like proportions, : but with walls six- feet thick, part of an an cient church, this fighting man of God spends his. days, telephone re ceiver at his ear, field glasses to his eyes, informing the Belgian artillery whether their shots are too long, too short or just tight.. - All? day long his snaggled tower, rising from a tiny island not more than 100 feet square, is bombarded and battered by German guns planted along the Yser.- i Only middle age masonry of granite mixture co,uld stand thiaA daily hammering, and eve" that must finally yield, for as this is being written" the, old-church steeple is ail Jagged at the top, where half has been shot ; away and great holes two feet deep pockmark its sides. Monk Will Hot Tlald Post. And when at 'last It collapses under the blows, the monk will certainly be there, for, he: stubbornly refuses to yield his place to, another, even for a day or night. " "" - : For two months and two weeks he has stuck to his ruined church tower, surrounded by a flood of seawater an4 river water mixed, which Inundates the- country for 40 miles in all direc tions. - His post is the most desolate in; Europe. When his superior offi- llTOUlf AFIRE ATSEA 284AB0ARD French Liner Carrying Am munition, Machine Guns, a Crew of 200 and 84 Pas sengers Wirelesses for Aid Off Irish Coast. FOUR STEAMSHIPS ARE RUSHING TO HELP HER Vessel Sailed From New York February 26 and Includes Among Passengers Com plete American Hospital Unit Bound for France. (United Ir-. L Wir.) London, March The French liner La Touraine is arire 700 miles from Brest, according to a wireless dis patch to Lloyd's today. Thenteam ers Rotterdam. Swanmore, Cornlsh man and Arabic are rushing to her as sistance. The agents of the Compagnle Gen erals Trans-Atlantlque, which owns the vessel. Insisted that the ship was not In- great danger because uf the proximity of the British coast. . Their statement, however, does not agree with the Lloyds dispatch us to the lo cation of La Touraine. The following statement was Issued by the owners: "La Touraine, bound from New York to Havre, Is afire off the coast of Ireland. She Is due In Havre tomor row. Consequently she 'cannot be In great danger owing to her nearnexa to the English coast. Plenty of as sistance is en. .route. The Only news regarding her condition ha been re ceived through the . Valentia wireless station." ' La Touraine sailed from New York February 26 and Included In her pas senger list were fve American phys icians and Iff nurses en route, to,-the hntUs. front in Pmnr. The remainder st, the 'passengers' were largely ArntTi- (poiiclmb-d on feifr '!, Column tit I Woodstock School Girl Is Missing j v . : ; . ... y Pretty Mollit Cioffane, Affed 11, Caanvt Be Pound, and Police Are Aiding In the Search for Her. Mollle Cioffane, a pretty little Italian girl of 11 years, who is a student in the fifth, grade of tlie , Woodbtock school, has been missing four day, and relatives, friends and the . police. Who have; been searching, have found no' trace of her. The girl is the daughter of Cecil Cioffane, "a laborer, of 4456 Korty fifth avenue southeast, Woodstock. She came home from school Tuesday evening and steppnd put into the yard to do some work. - She failed to return. She Is described us five feet till, slim, With intensely black hair, dark eyes and darw kin. Slie Man. wearing a red sweater coat when last seer. cers, under the rover of night, go to ' him and beg him to take a rent, he smiles like an embarrassed child and replies: "Why? I am less lonely here than In my cell." vi , . Escorted by a, Belgian staff officer on hts round of inspection. I was per- i mitted to visit the outpost. The night was pitch black. Heavy clouds hun? low and, driven ijefore a 40. mile gal blowing in from the. North sea, a drenching rain stung us in the face. In the shelter of roofed front lino trenches, dosing by the side of char coal fires, the troops were . to be ; envied. -, a. , )( .. . Secret Path-Through Wires. ; Through a break in the trenches we; started forward, but were stopped a? the end of 50 feet by an 'ntanglenieni Of barbed wire. The officer f!ah.e4 his electric lamp here and there , it discover-the secret' pat o through fhi r network. Instantly - there came M i challenge from the hooded sentry i'3n,; the other side of the nttwork: J f "Qui vlve!" " ( "An officer,"' came tie reply. I I j "Advance and give th word of the night." ; - ,' - . -;. f j. The officer fumbled? about f or fseV eral - seconds, finally locating a jtho loose ends which M turned Lack, slowly reversing th bathed mveh. -We were allowed to proceed.- h j . Once clear of front lin trffaihf and the barbed web. We slushed jito n the" ridge called a road, the only iaiid anywhere near; us standing above;tha Inundation. After a'. few; ininuteW fof this the road dipped; slightly- ahd we found ourselves wading In thof iflobd." lCwulbUrl on i'atie tivt, (,'uIuujo iret