flW.rlUM..rfVt t-ie tfif :ti- pMBfHIEDmO!l I'orrcajH for Fa- Oregon, by the Unltal fiUtnt VUrp Olirref at Iortland. Cloudy tonight and Wednesday, Probably rain or anow. DAILY EVENING EDITION MSI TO ADVERTISERS. Tb Rut Oregt nlan has the largest paid rlreolatlon of an) paper In Oregon. Mat of Portland and ovat twlca tta circulation la ftndletoe of any otbar ntwipaper. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER ri)VMl OFFICIAL rAPEU VOL. 26 DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 101 4. XO. S3G2 n 0 HI'S OPS ARE ileb agist I q u i f ., , g-Vv. . , -y 1 BIS i UIAIIS BIG nn aiid w LOCKED III COMBAT Oil II MILE LI Germans Making Desperate Effort to Fling Czar's Forces Back Von Hinddnburg Reinforced. KAISEB'S FORGES HOLD FIRM VIVID WORD PICTURE OF. SIEGE OF PRZEISL BY 1 RUSK PAINTED BY AMERICAN WRITER Orman Line Said to Do Intact Rut retrograd I Confident That Rus sians Will ttomplolcly Cruidi Kn emy Eincror William poronallj Supervising Battle, rETHOGKAD. lee. 1. The Czar left for Uie front at ten a. ni today. It was Mat 1 lie will visit Uie head quarters of hi army In Ioland. PETROGRAD, Dec. 1. German troopi of the first Una were today be ing hurled against the forces of the izur In Russian Poland. Up to this time, youths of the sec- end and third lines have borne tho brunt of the fighting. The RunnluK war office did not de ny that the Teutons were putting- up a desperate struggle In the vicinity of Lodz, It was said that the louses have been enormous. The Germans have cut their way through the circle drawn by the Rus sian troops to the south of Lodx In spite of a murderous fire from the Russian artillery. Withal of their frantic efforts to extricate themselves from their peril ous position It was believed that the German Invaders were doomed to be crushed completely. LONDON. Dec. 1 Teuton and Slav forces battled desperately today along a hunJred milo front stretching north and south, through Russian Poland. Petrograd statements were brought to accord with Herlln to the extent' that tho German line was intact. Rus sian military experts still Insisted the csar'a army occupied a better posi tion, but conceded that no decisive re mit was near. Tlx Germans seemed i In full confidence of a victory. Field Marshal Von Hlndenburg.l their commander, had finally been! strongly reinforced and was putting' Mntp hUnwfly Cl,mm. up a lerrme iignt. h -in sonal pr Hence ui mo eastern ironij was believed here to imply a supreme. German effort to drive tho Russians, back to Warsaw. ! It was predicted that If the Teuton" First-hand Account of Battle That Has Raged in the Eastern Theater of the War is Received From Correspondent With the Ausrian Forces and Tells in Dramatic Style of the Horror of Struggle That is Being Carried on in Europe. By William G. Shepherd, Correspondent of the United Press PRZEMYSL, Oct . (Passed by the War Press Bureau.) (By Mall to New York.) This Is my diary of yea terday, which I spent on the firing line, II miles from here. 7:45 a. m. Under the escort of Colonel John and Captain Mlakch we started for the front. "W" Included John Qulncy Adams, the great Amer ican painter: Robert W. Dunn of the New York Evening Post, who had Just arrived and myself. We bundled In to one of the typical sprlngleas, bas ket bodied Gallclan wagons. 8 a. m. We are on the main road leading from the great fortification of Przemysl to the hills where the ar tillery firing Is heaviest At 8:10 we pass the cholera hospital and five minutes later, we pass through the gate of the Inner fortifications. The road Is covered with wagons. Two tightly packed lines of them are go ing In our direction. Another line on the left side Is going toward Przemysl with sick and wounded. The steam from thousands of sweating horses rises like a thin mint along the trail. The sight Is ao wonderful that even the wounded men keep their eyes on It The sick men, some with the green faces and loose, opened mouths of cholera victims, hang their heads half dead. 8:15 a. m.-On both aides of the road, on ploughed farm land, huge hands of recruits are training. They have stamped the wet earth into a black, smooth, shining field that glit ters like Jet. 8:30 a. in. Among the thousands of sights we catch a glimpse of a pig, riding on a seat like a soldier. He has been tied there to keep him from running away from dinner, though It will be someone else's meal, not his own. 8:35 a. m. We pass the outer line of fortifications. The trenches are lined and floored with willow or straw matting. As far as our eyes can reach, to the right and left, stretch small "forests' of posts, hitching posts high, with barbed wire hung and tangled between them. 9:10 a. m. Our wagon Is spring less. Now I know why alKhe wound ed men in the carts have strained faces. IAVAL GATTLE IS SUED III H ABAII in British and Japanese Warships are Reported to be Closing in on the German Squadron There. TRAFFIC IS AT STANDSTILL Kaiser's Ilattlcflect Said to lie Off te .Mouth of Uie Plata River Ja pan's Pacific 11 cot and To Brit Mkts Are Following Steunifcliip Narrowly Escapes MONTEVIDEO. Uruguay, Dec. 1 British and Japanese warships were reported closing In on the Ger man squadron In South American wa ters A big naval battle is expected. Traffic in the South Atlantic is at a standstill. The German squadron was report ed off the mouth of the River Plata. Two British warships and the Jap anese Pacific squadron are following the Germans. The British steamship Voltalne, en route to New York, heard the Ger mans exchanging wireless messages and fearing capture, immediately put Into port Officers of the Voltaire said the enemy was calling supply ships. (Continued on page three) STATE ML 1VET ROAD TO CDI d mpc (im pnninmnMo itiiiuo ui uumuiiiuiw ATTORNEY DISBARRED FROM PRACTICE FOR 3 MONTHS LEADER OF MOB AT MARSH HELD CENSURED IX DE CISION AT SALEM. lost In Poland, they also would retire in Belgium to their second line of dofenscs. King George spent but one day with the troops In the western theater of war. He lunded at some unstated spot on the northern ' French coast and was met by Field Marshal French's staff and by the Prince of j Wales, who accompanied him on a I tour of the military hospitals. It was believed his majesty was on the way back to England. The British ruler's visit to the front was thought to foro- hailow an early assumption or mo offensive by the all lea. If asked to do so by the count court, will make n survey for a road leading to Cold Spring landing Id Hated by l.yniun Grlswold, assistant Mate highway engineer who was here yesterday afternoon and left on the 5 o'clock train for Yule. The county court would have to pay for the work but would get the money back In the event the road was Improved. According to Grlswold this survey monev would he returned to the county even should a dirt road be made down to the Columbia. The ftate commission Insists that the ex pense of the surey lx? met by the county ut the start for the reason that otherwise needless demands for surveys might be made of the commis sion. It Is possible that In view of the es timated heavy cost of a hard surface road an effort may be made to build a dirt road that will suffice for the Cold springs traffic at the start Should such a plan be undertaken it is possible the farmers Interested mav SALEV," Ore., Dec. 1. Because he participated In the deportatin of J. W. Edgeworth, Wesley Everett .and Fred Roberts, members of the In dustrial Workers from Marshfleld, the Mate supreme court handed down a decision disbarring Robert O. Graves from the practice of law for three months. The court vigorously denounced mob rule. The complaint against Graves was filed by Clarence Mc Laughlin who asserted Graves acted as spokesman and leader of a mob ' w hich forced the Industrialists to I leave Marshfleld In a launch. SAYS MOTHER-IN-UW HEifE TO GO TO AFFINITY (Continued on page eight) C. A. MURPHY SEEMS IN LINE FOR NEW POSITION SALEM, Dec, 1. Governor West has received a letter from Dr. Jamea Wlthycombe In which he stated he did not care to take part In any appoint ment until after he assumes office. It Is understood Governor West will probably recommend Charles A. Mur phy of Pendleton, for superintendent of the state training school. It Is said the name of Col. J. 11. Cradlcbaugh of Salem will be presented to West as a candidate for state printer. British Aviators Prop Bombs. THE HAGUE, Doc. 1. Two BrltiBh aviators flew over Ghent Monday, ac cording to advices received here rain ing bombs on the city. It was stated seven Germans were wounded. " TEXAS GETS NEW NORMAL SCHOOL CANYON, Texns. Dee. 1. Work began today on a new state normal school building to replace one lost by fire last winter. The 1100 students will study In temporary quarters in 4 4 churches and publlo buildings 4 until the new structure 1s oom- pleted.. MA? SHOWING BUTTLE LINES IN RUSSIAN POLAND o2ir Tsing Tao i:planatlon. TOKYO, Japan, Dec. 1. It is said here that the true reuson for the early surrender of Tsing Tuo was the desire of the Germans to spare the lives of a large number of men In the garri son conversane with trade methods In the far east. It had taken more than 20 years to give them the re quisite training. This is looked on as proof that Germany still hopes to re tain its vast trade in Asia. SATISFACTORY SETTLEMENT SEEN IN MEXICO BY WILSON ' s i s ' .... -rV" hi X "I V' ; : tv , ' . --vvrl I--' 4 ;; i vi ' 1 ;v;-V '--H il . ' ! ' " ' , $ II . , . .-A- i - :' .' J! f v ' '.:5 . . -." .. v. 1 l. - t"' . a, f v - V,r.:.-W V . - . r.J ! FOH HEV ATTEPJPT TO A U Every Man That Can be Spared From Belgium Being Sent for Assault Between Ypres and the Lys River. OFFENSIVE BELIEVED PLAII Anticipating Xeit More of the All lea, Germans Hasten to prparo for Movement I'orward lUHnforrcw menu I5Hng Uttslied to Scrue In fantry Attavcks Suspended. PARIS, Dec. 1. Fully 100,009 Ger mans were massed tod ly for what was believed would develop Into an assault between Tpres and the Lys river. Every able-bodied German whom the kaiser could spare from Belgium was on the fighting line between Tpres and the sea. From the Bordeaux war office came the following official announcement this afternoon: "North of Arras, the Germans were most active yesterday. There Is heavy cannonading In Bel gium but no Infantry attacks have been attempted. Elsewhere, conditions are unchanged-" Military men believed that the kai ser had anticipated the assumption of an offensive movement by the allies In the north and to meet It by an of fensive movement of his own. le now hurling reinforcements Into the region. BERLIN. Dec. 1. An official state ment received from Constantinople said the Turks were six miles from Batum an important Russian Black seaport in Trans-Caucasia, GOVERNOR AVILES OF LOWER CALIFORNIA FLEES COUNTRY VIIX.VS TROOPS OX WAY TO AT TACK GAltlMMIX AT CITY OF TIJI AXA. Mrs. Kathcrine Lyall broker, has now started a $50,000 al- NEW YORK. Dec. 1. After blam-i ienation suit against her mother, Mrs lnar Richard S. Darling, a promoter. Edith B. Lyall. charging that she de- for the loss of his beautiful wife's af-J liberately encouraged her daughter to fectlons, Robert H. Shaw, a wealthy j teek Darlings company. KIATEL1 CHARITIES TO BE FORMED HERE TO HELP NEEDY PRESIDENT EXPRESSES CONFI DENCE OVER FINAL OUT COME OF TROUBLE. WASHINGTON', Dec. 1. President Wilson let It be known today that he has received information which indi cated the Mexican situation is work ing out satisfactorily. He said the re cent alarming reports seemed to have been Inspired in San Antonio and El Paso. Wilson denied that he had decided in advance to oppose Representative Gardner's plan tc Investigate the coun try's naval and military resources. The president conferred with Bryan and Solicitor Lansing regarding the proposal by certain South American diplomats to create a neutral xone for commerce extending around the Unit ed States and all of South America. It was snld no tangible progress had been made toward such an agreement. C3CAL&-OF-niL&... 1 J-Gumhlnnen, which Is reported to have been captured by the Russians after five days of terrible fighting. 2 Warsaw, capital of Russian Po land, which wns tho objective point of the German advance. 3 Stalluponen, where the whole weight of the German forces In east Prussia Is being thrown In an effort to turn tho Russian left. 4 Plocx, where the Germans de feated the Russians and started off on n new dash toward Warsaw. 6 I.owlcx, where the Kitsslans are reported to have routed the Germans. WHEAT UP PENCE TODAY IN 1JVERPOOL Cable advices today show that spot wheat has advanced one pence since yesterday. This menus nn advance of two cents for the English measure of 9S pounds. In American money Liverpool price Is slightly loss than $140 per bushel. An Associated Charities organiza tion will be effected in Tendleton In the immediate future for the. relief of needy persons and the organiatlon will be made upon a permanent ba sis. Letters are today being sent out (C prominent residents who take an ac tive Interest in charity work, request ing their co-operation In the move ment, and a meeting for formal or ganization wll be called within a few days. Judge Stephen A. Lowell, County Judge J. W. Maloney and W. w Har rah are signing the letters sent out, all three being strong advocates of the movement It is the intention to make the society an institution of the community and to make it the head of all relief campaigns. Members will make personal contributions and the soclcy will receive contributions from any individual or organization. The plan contemplates the retain ing of a city missionary who will dis cover the residents worthy of relief and who will superintend the distri bution of funds, food and clothing. It Is possible this office will be com bined with the county office of Ju venile and truant officer. The organized Associated Charities will replace the present haphazard methods of caring for the destitute. Now, with different churches and different lodges as well as Individ uals contributing to such needy peo ple as come to their notice, there Is much duplication of charity and nt the same time this kind of charity is r.ot as Intelligent as that which Is systematized. Again a city missionary will be In a position to discover cases of poverty that would never come to general attention otherwise. Such thoughts have prompted (he sponsors of the movement, Interned Germans Break Parole. THE HAGUE, via London. Dec. 1. Two German officers interned in Holland, who had given their word of honor that they would not attempt to escape, have broken their parole and crossed the German frontier, ac cording to an announcement made here. SAN DIEGO. Cal., Dc. 1. Lower California Is a seething hotbed of rev olution, riot." counterplot, revolt and rrrolut'on are under way. Early today Governor Avilee was hiding In San Diego and SS0 troops of Villa were marching on Tijuana, and the garrison there w-as preparing to defend the town. Avlles escaped from Ensenada by automobile last night as the steamer Manuel Her rerlas landed Villa's troops there. No troops were stationed at Ensenada. so the occupation was peaceful. VILLA PREPARES TQ (JOVE INTO THE MEXICAN CAPITAL NEWS SUMMARY General. Germany hurls first line troops against Slavs in Russian Poland. Germans aro masking near Ypres for attemot to reach French roast. Naval battle being awaited In South .-Invert can waters. Villa said to bo In Mexico City. Local. Associated churttie will bo formed here on permanent hunts. State highway commission w ill make survey of road to Cold Springs under certain conditions. Girl of high school to open basket ball sca.Min lYUluv. LEADER NOW IUS HEADQUAR TERS WITHIN M MINUTES FROM THE CITY. J EL PASO, Trxa Dv, t. A delay ed dispatch rcoMved this afternoon reported the arrival of General Villa and several thousand of Mi troops In Mexico City jrvfrday. EL PASO. Texas, Dec. 1 Villa to day moved his headquarters to Tlalt apntla, only SO minutes from Mexico City. Arrangements for his entry In to the capital have been completed but Villa will delay his departure un-. til the arrival of provisional President Gutierrez. Villa's headquarters re ceived word that 3000 Vllllstaa had repulsed the Carranxlstos at Pachu ca. commanded by General Trevlno, after a short fight. WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 Advices from Vera Crux said that OtnraI Carranza'had Issued a decree order ing the formulation of laws granting divorces, the national operation of mines, oil field and timberland and the distribution of Mexican land. Crime IcrcNod by War. LONDON, Dev. 1 "The d'-'crea of crime In this country slrx-e the he. ginning of the wur has been truly remarkable. Compared to thre years ago, there has been a diminution of 30 per cent In Indictable offense" siiii Justice Robert Wj!l:ne In chug Ing the grand Jury. The JimMr plained that he attributed thl de crease purtly to puMIr reNtraltit In war time, but principally In tint num ber of hour nrw porml'vi to stay open.