TT T 1 TtVmTSV I Iff m WW sILMWMjAVAY 'UIKAWlUYKliUi May Several Weeks Be- fore Bodies Are Removed From Debris Prince Max. on Defense Over an Ancient Letter DASEL. Switzerland, Oct. 15. Prince Maximilian of Baden, the German chancellor, according to ad Tires received he-e. has made a state ment to the party - leaders in the reicbetag concern In it his famous let- ter to Prince Alexander of Ilohen lohe, which showed that Prince Max imilian was reactionary in his politi cal attitude and was a firm support er of the German reigning family and the pan-Germans. Prince Maximilian is quoted as ISLAY, Scotland, Oct. 15.A Bri tish amy labor battalion has begun j to remore the Otraato wreckage piled J having told, the party, leaders that ln enormous masses in many deep! the ideas he held now were not of -gullies on this savage shore. Only I recent formation. He said he had I'W nM, i.wi- repeatedly expressed himself in 1917 I Z r7. and 1918 1a favor of a categorical .wor can me oooies oejremovea mas declaration on the subject of Del- t.H may be several weeks before the! electoral reform and the proper car ... w m m 1p la anVOTi wx I a a1 rt M wa Ka4Ia m m 1 f a m il v a v f a - . - " " --'--aaB wu , - v fcuv a cai-uiiu DaV imprisoned: in Rocky Inlets and In (treaty. .great beds of kelp, or tangleweed.as .What had divided him and Prince tne islanders term It. .- foe otranto went to pieces on great rock a mile out. jalmost at the very entrance to Machir bay, whose . sandy beach might have offered. a . haven to the disabled transport. A s .year ago a small steamer stranded In ft town on that beach intact, without - .ft loss of a- single life. - ' The storm that raged at the time of the loss of the Otranto was so ter rifle that wreckage wis, carried by -huge ave over the cliffs a quarter ) of a mile inland. It Ik regarded as Alexander was mot the object. the means to attain it, he said. but Regrets Sinkings Which He Coils Hand ol Fate LONDON. Oct. 16. A dispatch to the Daily Mail from The llacue quotes Matthias Erxberger, minister without portfolio in the German gov ernment, as . expressing regret over the sinking of the Irish mall steam ft n:lrac!e that anyone on board es-ler Leinster.bat declaring that it was tape J. yet with one or two exceptions J the hand of fate, for which' Germany ire twenty survivors who, reacneo i couia not be neid responsible. tslay showed little effects of their! "The -occurrence is exceptionally Tearful ordeal. '-v.- I regrettable. Erzberger is quoted as Servant Mae Donald j a husky lilt- f saying. "I learn with deep sympa- o!sUoy, was hurled by, a giant I thy of the disaster which has over- comber Info one of the deepest rocky I taken so many women and children. Mtlnmi iMnnr a-Hadlne timbers. I XT r nttltnln nn iimh muinna... - , . ' '"fv m ' I v a. v m uvhuncutCB 19 'broken Doxes and portions or tne I well -known. ; In 1915 I exoreased Otranto's cargo. He climbed out l my regrets of the manv Tictims nf itlth scarcely a scratch and with I tne Lusitania. ; My regret is Increas strength so little Impaired that he led In this sad ease to genuine vain. wis able to help two others get 0r The hand of fate, for which ve can yona tne reacn or toe pursuing not be made responsible, has gov r mmrm tpb i i drn can nsM " Privste Robert F. Shawd of Le- a . . . 1. mil. - i nanon. ra., naa a iiiue more reraars- c '1m W t Mir able experience. According to Shawd 0011071 invokes Allah .two of his brotners were on tne tus-i : ' iv trit if r anta and both were saved. Their 1 ; r IteuaTC OI M UTRCj experience caused him to learn how to swim, f . - ? - t I BASEL. Oct, 15. At the ooeninr .' If 1 had not taken their advice," of the Turkish : parliament the sul- Ehawd said, M I would not be alive tan, in bis speech from the throne. today." He tried to iumn from the recalled the difficult . situation In Otranto to the destroyer! but fell into I which Turkey i had been placed by the sea.' Eventually he! was. thrown I the defection of Bulgaria, according 'up on Islay. " - -i - iio a uonsianunopie dispatch recelv Reveril nrvlvnr nr hm attnn I eo nere. padded collar of their life preservers I Th government, he said, in corn- saved them from f atal ; blows 'by mon.-wun lis auiqs. naa sougbt to pieces or wreckage and Ithky believe 'Te the people an honorable peace If the heads ot. the swimmers had but had taken necessary steps for been similarly protectedJTnatiy others the defense ot the country. t would Urobahlrave escaned, ThlsL ine utan Doped the wir would fhtnn i nmiArf''ni. w m ui n navvy ruuiuc ana invo iPfi ' ' ' f 1 ' 1 - V W T , .UXJ WUUIW I . . ..... A . 1 . . tnnmA t i. K.ii... 1 tne sia or Allah to nreserve Tnrkev Rilled py:tImTr than were drowned. V"1 "nwme sirue. - Name Shirts After Wilson in the Shops of Paris PARIS. Oct. 15 The name of President Wilson has supplanted those of King George V of England and ot the late Emperor Nicholas of Russia as a label for popular styles of men's wearing apparel : Jn' the Paris shops. "I went to my tailors to order a new suit, a blue serge, the sort of thing I've been wearing the last twenty years" writes a humorous contributor to L'OEUVRE "and that worthy called out to the bookkeeper One Wood row Wilson suit. adding In explanation to me, 'That's the name of the goods.' - "Then I went to the shirtmaker's where I selected some shirts that only differed from those I used to buy before the war in costing $4 In stead of il.0, and I heard the sales man announce, "Six President Wilson shirts.' , "My new boots, comfortable but devoid of elegance, bear branded up on their soles the name of the United States' president. ; "My hatter showed me a hat of the very shape that before the war we called Tyrolean (and paid three times less for). The Tyrol has lost caste and these hats today are 'WII son, although they were 'George Fifths' during the first years of the war. : "Mr collars remind me of our glor lous ally, for though the laundry Governor Borrows Money T To Bay an Extra Bond LOS ANGELES. Oct. 15. Govern or William D. " Stephens today rar thased through Helen Keller, the famous blind, deaf and once mute woman, a 10OO liberty bond. To make this subscription, an additional one, tne cnier executive or me siaie said be had boiTOwed the money. "I think it theMrtty of every cltl za to buy every dollars worth of bonds In this, the fourth liberty loan, that he can In any way handle." de clared the governor. Livestock Sanitary Board Calls Meeting at Heppner To consider the spring and fall dip ping program of Oregon sheep rais ers, a special meeting ofthe state liver tock sanitary board will be held at Heppner,, Friday, Oct. 18. State Veterinarian W. II. Lytle announced yesterday. Other questions of Im portance to the sheep men will be discussed. ' j REFORMING 'WOMEN'S DRESS. Will ths Vesting of trousers In stead of skirts by women ever be come universal The readiness with which many who are doing war work HINDENBURG CAUSE OF GERMAN NOTE (Continued from psgs 1). cuemicais nave rewu.ru , im. taking up with overalls, bloom Viot nt tVi PriMnt remains In-1"" u " ' - T I M .!-.- . m delible. and yet these same collars paniaienea pcu a Tor for years -could boast of bearing tne I or tne cnange, especiauy u uey iina. name of Nicholas IL" las Dr. Mary Walker did. that the '' bifurcated dress Is mors congenial TO fJU9IHAAIir.r.lS aiMHM. -nd mori romfort-hle. Mol.t. bare a . a a. Aft. a r--rw r rv i r. n.m. MMrwa, ogwTr, uui women M a. a rV mm mM u L.. - M M m lations for commandeetlng of the I dress Is not tending to ths mannish Dritisb Columbia salmon pock were I effect but more to the flaring order. approved today by tne governor gen- as the war is over and things eral of Cannda. The following per- . Bttled tna -tries wlU be- centages of the 1918 i)ackft has been " u,e1 commandeered: Sockeyes. 100: red cn more feminine than ever. It has sDrtnes. 100: cohoes. 75: pinks. 70. been asserted. The war purchasing commission will determine the prices to be paid. SIOUX CITY CLOSED. . - Jl Dress reform has occupied ft prom inent place In the public mind for many years. Efforts are forever be ing made to revolutionize style but SIOUX CITY. Ia., Oct. 15. TheltrTough many innovations occur' the city council, sitting as a board of general trend seems to be along one health tonight, ordered the public I --.i. Ttndln thronrh a TwHrvH of schools, theaters, moving picture l-tiM .hr... .nH ii nuhtir mt- ometlm" scores of years. Some peo- Ings closed as a precautionary meas- Pl' object to certain styles because ore . against the spread of influenza. I they are ''too Immodest." Others de clare the same gowns to be too old fashioned to meet the needs of the day. And so it goes. Today we find both the mannish and the feminine effects struggling for precedence.' When the - women's - rights move- NEW YORK. Oct. 15 Robort Rudd WbitlBg. - former editor of Alnslee's' Magazine and a member of the committee on. public information. diri tnriav of nninmonll at hla hnmn. n Darlen Conn., according to word meat began to be agitated nearly TO received here tonigbL . Ambulance Service Men vk ', ' Spridd Ahoktthe Front Several Millions Lost rt:;. 7 m Great Oil Dock Fire SEATTLE. Oct. 16.-The Great Northern Railroad company's oil dock at Smith Cove caught fire late last night and at an early hour this morning. was reported to be a total loss. An' enormous Quantity of oil PARIS Oct i 16 Because -they been scattered .throughout the' vari ous regiments of the. French army. men oi ine American amoaiance bct- .vice have been '.'out of luck". In the past when it came- to. igettlng any .7;,, Zr. JC H -f.701 . h. vff-va .n. tored on the dock, set afire, sent 7,." " , ia burning stream into the water en ""mJZ:uu?. ' A 1 . dangerlng a huge Jaoanese . liner. . i 86 lr - ,av OI The loss was uaofflcially esUmated vw;;; i.0?-i;;;.tf at evcral mmion dollar,t- ,ths French, land a scheme has been I tI. , tt , . ' . devised by the Knights of Columbus W Oman LlVCn 10 I COTS for to get supplies to them. i Obstructing Bond Sales MILES CITY, i Mont.. Oct. 15.1 Mrs. W. K. Smith, convicted Satur day on a charge of sedition, for al- r$ hisvappointed- some of his force I leged obstruction of liberty bond vns "acting secretaries" and to tbem saies. was xoaay sentenced to serve re iet' bundles of cigarettes, choc-1 n lnueiermmaie sentence of Jrom 'olate.-gtbletle material sad station- ve 10 len ery from the Knights of - Columbus iienuary. . It was impossible to send a Knights ot Columbus - Secretary to 'ach of the units, for there sre only about. ten men In each of them, but Colonel Percy Jones, their command years in the state peal- headquarters od the first da-y ot ev- Her husband, W. K. Smith, con ery month. ' ' 'j , t dieted on a similar charge, will be 7:fft : aentenced Saturday,. : ? i lOSTPOXE REICTISTAd KITTIXQ. 1 1 r Only Daughter of Buffalo Bill Dies After Influenza BASEL.. Switzerland, i Oct. 15 'Advices from-Berlin say that the . president of the relchstag'has post poned the sitting of the reichstag, CODY, Wyo., Oct. 15. Mrs. Irma which was to have begun tomorrow, Cody Garlow, only daughter of .yeservlng to .Jiimself the.i right to Colonel W. F. Cody (Buffalo Bill). r.Siimmon mq tegiaiBUTe t ouy uk -aiea nere or neart disease superin later date.' 1 r duced by Influenza. v t TIRING i-::'BUSliWES ' : 7 . i - ' 7-i or; Before November 1 ! &. 0a account of failing health and inability to secure ef ficient health I find it necessary to retire from business. jCoFponBpU'redeemable until January 1st 1 ;'-- , r.-i-;'.-:' ;'-7, h ;h..v i.. '. r . Until November 1st we will conduct business as usuaL Afterwards, Pheasant Northwest Products Company tiJiZzt & will continue the business i ! For information phone J. Stellman, phone 1737Jor 415 : SMEM-:IGEGO AINS LEE'S EDITOR DIES. EIGHTEEN DIE IV SEATTLE. i SEATTLE. Oct. . 15. Eighteen deaths and..427 new cases of Spanish Influenza were reported today to the I fields they -ought not to be hamper- years ,ago- thre also started In the United States a movement for dress reform. Those favoring it argued that if women were to compete with men In Industry and professional city health authorities, who said the doctors were too busy to report all the cases which probablyf were twice as large. .-. . . . ' - SOCIALISTS FAVOR MAX. ed and handicapped by clinging skirts. In 1149 Mrs. Ann Bloomer appear ed clad In an outfit that caused even the most radical reformers to gasp. Berlin dispatches received here the leee. Urt reaching jait below German Socialists have decided. In tQe hnees and a pair of Turkish view of the general-political situation trousers. But' though the wearer ad- pf1f" ?ee MMimiiian of Tertlsed the costume widely. and en deavored by lecturing about the Baden retaining his post of imperial canceuor. i FLTJ HITS KOUTII AMERICA. BUENOS AIRES. Oct. 15. Span ish Influenza has made its appear ance in Buenos Aires. Rio Janeiro and Montevideo. Tribute. . Briton sad Frcaea and BctcUaa. Stalwart aad atraag aad iia. Brotaara. a would a tribal tar To yoa who kava hid tha lint! Yaa tvutto wlu-a taa flrht fieraaat. Io spilled 7mr bloi lika win. BWdlair and dftnf and lmt dsn law foacM bat yaa Said tb Uaal country to get others to adopt it It never became popular! The few who were won over were so ridiculed everywhere that they soon gave It up. Soon after bloomers dlssappeared the styles swept to the opposite ex treme and hoopsklrts came into fash- Ion. But as is the case with etery- j thing Immoderate these lasted only la short time and were soon displaced by a dress so tight that almost every line of the figure was revealed. Women of means ten, five, and even two years ago thought little of WwVU!rJi"5.7i?i4I!,?1 L1!!" Uvthlng except society, culture, and - w -. W " - .... . . ...I .... urea, xoaay conaiuous are Ollier- Bot, eoairadca, wa knew tha debt w aw -T'yafcaTa bale ths Ho I - AUea B. Mehals ia Kv Tork HaraJJ. The War Eerocs. ent and we find wives and daughters of millionaires working lndefatlgably for the benefit of mankind. Less time is being spent in worrying ' about Wkikd ta( Uiaed with keroat v. jna I wM-umuucu are Ka kroa la ear tea.' wa liked la mt Jnt eommna men, vita eommoa aima, tby L4t1oc Ihcir allotted spaa, whv tailed aad aeaaneo. Deapaired and hoped, with ker aad tbara a rar Of soma diviner tenia that Itada a atav, Or flaak ( lorelight that stoat them cleaned. the main features sought lifter. Women doing certain kinds of work today hare .found, as those years ago contended, that skirts Ma dered and hampered them and mads their labors harder to perform. So reqaeit. Wrenched lor away, waved cheer and hopa to ML Aad fell anfulfed ia story and oar tears. Emma P. Seabarr. with ft directness born of a belief in A 1 Il IL A A I " fT- supreme wn . vA ,tl.. ik.i, .v r manhood s tiest and braeeat: at tha eall I w " vahw mc iwa For country, home, and Ufa. Ood's promised the offending garments off and don- YQ&Tt a I a They stood onniaehingiT, smiled at Death's ucu some toai attoraea a xreer move ment of their bodies. The Question arises whether the new costumes that are appearing do not rob women of their feminity and make them coarse and mannish. Or do they permit & healthier, better womanhood by allowing a fuller de velopment of the distinctive Qualities ot the feminine sex and' better fit women to become the mothers of the future race? The war Is bringing about num berless reforms. The popular trend today . Is toward efficiency and women who sre compelled to do man ual work have found that they can't f The Service Fla. Dear little flat ia' tha window there. Hans: with a tea'r aad a woman's Braver: CMld ef Old Glory, bom with a star Oh. what wonderful flag you are! Btaa Is year star in Its field of while. Dipped in the red that was horn of ficht: Born of tha blood that our forebears shed To raise your mother, tha flag, a'erhead. Aad vow you've eone. ia this f resiled dav. Tn apeak from a window to speak aad say: I am tne voire of a soldier aoa Gone to ba gooa till tha victory's woa. opposed such a course, but Imperial SDoroval was given on iiinaen- burr a clans .and the request for rjeace followed. No indication has been given as to when replies will be msde by Pres ident Wilson to the Austrian and Turkish appeals for peace. It la un derstood that there Is no ground for the apprehension which has arisen in I Austria that the president would re fuse to renlv to Premier Durlan's anneal because of the autocratic character of the Austrian govern ment. It waa sail that this might well ritrure In a final peace proposal. but would not operate to prevent the ennalderation of ID armistice WB1CU Austria seeks. The same is true of the Turklan appeal LONDON. Oct 15 The London venlnr niDiDr comment on Pres- Lrtent wilnnn'a renlv to uermany. i generally favorable In tone. The Standard says that the note "has re lieve! certain raise injpreaiuB. hut rerreta that the president did not refer to punishment for U-boat crimes and the burning of towna. The Pall Mall Gazette says Presi dent Wilson's reply "reschest his hltrhest standards of point and nromotnesa." The Globe finds there is no smblg- nttr aboil the reolr and Is "afraid the Germans will not like the man ner In which President Wilson re ceived their reauest ' "Focb. Halg and Pershing.' the newnaner asserts, "will determine In concert the guarantees they must hare in mind before granting a ces sation of hostilities." The Westminster Cazette gives first place to President Wilson's de mand for "the destruction of every arbitrary power.". The Manchester Gusrdlsn says that Germany has surrendered, and slthouch much remains to be defined snd settled, that great central fact stands established, which means a SDcedv end of the war. On the question of an armistice, the Guardian suggests as seeurty the temporary occupation of essen. the evacuation of the whole of Alsace Lorraine and the surrender of the German IT-boat fleet. "These military terms may appear severe, but It is best to make It plain from the beginning that an armistice means without doubt a peace, equit able as President Wilson has de fined equities and sure as we all mean to assure It. We shall not exact vengeance. We shall not lm- roe needless humiliation. We shall certainly require of Germany to do whatever !a necessary for expiation and renaratlon and the safety ot the world j CHICAGO, Oct. 15. Archbishop Mundeleln of Chicago, warned the National Catholic War council today not to be lulled into Inaction by the cry that peace Is near.' - "It would be a dresdful thine If. becau of our haste Into peace now. any country In cur time should be forced to ro throurh sgain the tra vail tbt has been mffered by Bel gium. Frsnce and Serbia" he de clared. "Rut our destiny is In safe hands. ft first lie- In the hands of -God. who controls all and In whom we have faith, and In a material way If Is In the hands of Preidnt Wilson. In whom we plsce Implicit trust. BISHOP, Cal., Oct. 15 Amateur arcneologlsta of this section are en deavoring to Interest professions! scientists of the east In the epi graphs which abound on the rocks of Round Valley, not far from this city, and which are believed to be as old. If not older, than the hieroglyph ics of earliest Egypt, to which they bear a strange resemblance. It Is 'believed by many that the strange markings constituted ths mesas by which ancient tribes mark ed the source ot wster supply for the benefit of those of their number who lived roving Uvea. xnese bierogiypnics bsve never been deciphered, slthouzh they sre matters ef record In the lesding mu seums of the country. It Is said. The Indian tribe now living In this vi cinity d eels res they are not the work of the Indlsns of North Amer ica and that they antedate all abor iginal lore. Borne who bsve examined the strange makings In the flinty boul ders say the hieroglyphics closely re semble those of earliest Egypt and may replace the latter as the first written language of humanity. They are found always In the vi cinity of water supplies, the same markings discovered, near Bishop ap pearing also on rocks extending through the Canadian border, down through Washington. Oregon and California, to the Mexican line and beyond. This fact. It Is argued. In dicates that prehistoric tribes mark ed a highway for their . migrating members or for their armies, givfag specific directions as to the best wa ter supplies along the way. Tha flag of his mother I speak for her "I am the flaa af tha aerviea. air: WhA ataads by asy window and waits aad I be efficient and wear skirts. Wheth Bat hides from tha others her aaweot Wars. 'r tn Bult continue after the I tha flat of th wive, who wait 0r 001 de,n,t tttter n"- The For tha aafa retarn of a martial mate. I fact la that there la an immana T."a. work to be done and that women are asked to do a large part mm lunuCeVS mix. shoe : polish J J5 CvilNOliA ' Vh same pAj TEN CENTS r'vr r-r'l ccN:f' WW i'- i US' I ARGE quantities of SmrolA are par- cnasedby the Government to be cold . to the Soldiers and Sailors.- S I Vj We flm to make SactoiA cost the men serving: their country and the public back of the -rAen, as little as possible. War conditions turn men's heads to profit making. We believe friends and users are more valuable than the profit of the moment. That is Trhy you can. buy-.SiiKOiA at the same price as always .' . BicitAii-vmrre-nro av 1 1 1 n TU m 7)1 rw i WmXi bK in an editorial on President Wilson's reply to Germsny. says the ref!y Justifies all the high hopes the si- t I A . aSL .a - ties rrpoci in tne president, sum med op In ft line, says the newspa per. It Is a call for "unconditional surrender. "In a State DSOer. whlrh la a m'rwlel for Ita dignity, penetration and restraint.- says the Daily Mall, "the president translates Into simcle and direct words the thoughts of every anted government and of every allied soldier and citiien. He has not beea csught In the German staff's trap. Read Ite Claiilficfl Ads. skattlj: U).x miy. SEATTLE. Oct. 15. &eat:! a still more than SC.O0u.0ft0 s?-t d Its fourth liberty loan quota. i $:0.i;.O00 officially rtporfd. T It n Mian consulate here hxs c: subscriptions for liberty bosda. CX)LOf.IK CISED TIG ITT. DENVER. Oct. 18. An order r hlbiting all public gatherlxrs U s Indoors aad outdoors was raai bight by the state board of kt i to check the spread of Fpaalsh lr' -enxa. The order applies to lis tire state. I am tha flc of the sweethearts trae: The often anthoncht of tha oisters. too; I am tha fie of a mother's aoa Aad won't eoma down till tha victory's i wen i Dear little flat la the window there. Hang with a tear and a womaa's prayer. Child of Old Glory, bora with a star Oh, what a wanderfal flag yaa are! - Wb, HerseheU la Indianapolis Vtws. r4,- n.... v ' " v. w can readily recall when In a!- niae?r.dThat rZttZ bla mo,t ery family there was a mous dlscovercd that the feet of the kaiser tacbe cup. that was alwsys pUced at M v. v.. i lather's plate. of It If they can do their work bet ter and with less effort by wearing garments that are neither prudish nor immodest who In these times of stress is going to deny them that privlIcdgoT E. NEW TORK. Oct 15 President Wllon's latest note to Oermany will tx banded down from generation to generation as one or the historical documents of the world, declared Baron Emll de Car tier de Marrhl- enne. Belgian minister to the I'nlted States, In sn address here tonight. Expressing the gratitude of Del glum to the United States, "which found us by the wsyslde where we had been left half dead." the Belgian minister said: "Through the advertisement riven by the wsr we have found one of our best friends. We have found Amer lea and America has found us. The advertisement has been rostly but fo that result, at least, we shall be ever grateful." Captain Giuseppe Bevlone of the Italian army, former of the Italian chamber of deputies, another speak er, asserted that Italy experts not only the overthrowing of the llohen xollern dynasty but that the 1 laps burgs, with the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary. LOXDOX. Oct 16 The Dally Mall. To Be In Want IS COMMON To Stav In Want IS UNNECESSARY ht Clauifled Colrxnnj of The ' olalcxmaa can fill all kinds of want for all Jdnrji of people. 1 cent a word T (First Iasertlon) 1 2 cent a word (Subsequent Insertion)