DAILY EVEHIHG EDITION TO ADVERTISERS. TIi Raat Oregnnlnn ha th lnrt pal l ' circulation of any puiwr In Oregon, eaat oi j'orllanil and orer tl tli clrculatluo In lD(lli(oo of an otuer neiiapr. DAILY EVENING EDITION Fun-cant for Eastern Oregon, by Uk I iilc.il Mka Uc-titer Olxrtrr al Portland. Rain tonight and Thursday; utmnt southerly wind. 9: COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER COVSTY OFFICIAL PAPER. VOL 20 ,DAILY,EAST OKEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. WKDXKSDA V, MAIcCJf 17, NO. 8i:, oust (ffe 77 PEOPLES WAREHOUSE OFFERS $1 000 AS STARTER FOR COLD fy2INGS ROAD FUND POEM TO 11' AH 1 Soldiers are Massing for Invasion of Albania Where Dominating Place be Seized and Held. British Commander Denies Dresden Was in Neutral Waters IEs RIITlOX OF FIGHT ON' SUN DAY IS DESCRIBED ItV .NAVAL OFFICER. VALPARAISO, March 17. German assertions that the t-rulHrr Dresden! win In neutral water when a British i sijuadron sent her to the bottom were c'enled uy Lieutenant Commander Fielding of the IlrltUh auxiliary cruiser Orama, one of the ship which uttacked the German vessel. "The story that the Dresden wa bunk in neutral waters la nonsense." he auid. "Thia can be disproved H-Hdily by locating the hulk. Our squadron sighted the Dresden 12 mile off Juan Fernandez. Our fast- Milt St mri-, While ill Italy, popnlur rat cruder, the Glasgow, immediately Clamor 1-4 In-tinlciit for Entrance gave chase, Yollowed by the Kent and Into the War on hide of tin? Allies tir.una. The Glasgow opened fire at Austria DMIked. jehort range. Several hut were fir- ed before the Dresden's guna got Into ROME, March 17. Private advlcea notion. The Dresden was running to. BULGARIA BECOMING ACTIVE F.HU In llulUaiw HHtiiidnc linii-t BRITISH ATTEMPT TO EXPLAIN ORDER IT BE IGNORED United States Will Tell Britain There Will be no Recognition of Block ade on High Seas. i E IS Gil 10 HE ihrOO E 0 I M BTEA01AU T CUSTOMS RECEIPTS SUFFER Voluntary Offer by Leon Cohen Starts Ball A-Rolling; Farmers' Committee Rejoices Over Action-Subscription of $100,009 Waited-County Bonds to Meet the Remainder of Expense-Present Laws Sufficient. IVtllllUUll tllf lAfM Will I'A' IIOO.IMH) a I Hi) ThroiiKh Kiu;laiid'H Dcara-j lion to ( lost? F) Grrmuii Port- j ProtcM W ill Be Sliari Order Con trary to Prccoclc-nt. Cold Springs Road Fund Peoples Warehouse by Leon Cohen - $1000 2 More Vessels of England Torpedoed By Undersea Craft SI BMARIXE SENDS ONK TO ROT TOM OTIIFH REACHES PORT CRIPPLED. WASHINGTON, March 17. Th from I skub Indicated that Serbia la ward the coast and the Kent iwunl stoppage of American Import from ' massing troopa In the direction of in to head It off. Before the Kent I Germany aa a result of the Rrlilxh! opened fire, the upper works of the; order-in council, eatabllahlng af:''sfcd bv It. (). Katnhart in the Eat ()rc"onian of March The Kent niockade the Albanian frontier. With the object of retaining acceaa to the Adriatic, which she haa al ready gained. Serbia la reported to be determined to Invade Albania aud denly and selxe a dominating place In that newly created country. Omlnoua report are coming In Dreaden were In flamea. fired half a dozen ahola. all taking effect, and the Dresden ran up the white flag. "We stood by to take off the crew or (iermany. win mean a Ii-hs of $100,000 per day In customs receipt. This waa the' estimate of Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia and Senator Walah of Montana after a conference with President Wilson land Immediately afterward there , u-u. lorrifi,- Tiil,.l,,n the nmir-lsnd Secretary of Commerce Redfield. from Salonlca of Important Bulgar-, , , r,rpj(1,Hn ,,iunced The stoppage of exports also will lan movements which have been ob 'served to be taking place in the di rection of the Turko-Bulgarlan fron tier. These movements Indicate, dla patches state, that the Bulgarian are massing trooiH southward toward the Gulf of Saras. If the movements on the part of Serbia and Bulgaria are officially confirmed they will be or the hlgu est significance In the llalkans. Ser bia for years has coveted an outlet to the Adriatic and Bulgaria want tuj drive Turkey entirely out of Europe and gain the commanding place In the Italkan states. Meanwhile the agltutlon In Italy continues In favor of the Italian gov ernment casting Its lot with the al lies in the war. The feeling against Austria la undoubtedly growing, es pecially In the northern province. Antl-Austrlan demonstrations wero anain reported today In a number ol up. downward and disappeared." The Dresden was sunk on Sunday. After IU eecape from the battle off the Falkland Islands, ships of both Ilritaln and Japan had been seeking the cruiser but It succeeded In evad ing them. HOMAGE IS PAID TODAY TO PATRON SAINT OF IRELAND WKRIN(i Till: GRKF.X IS FASH. lONARIJ-: IX KKKPIXO ST. PATRICK'S DAY. 4,I will be one of 100 men to jiivi .$1,000 each to raise $100,000 for a mm surface roail to ( oM jiriii-r tinder the terms of the jl;in mijt 13. hat's all." This voluntary an.l unsolicited offer on the jart of Loon Cohen, owner of The Peoples. Warehouse, was made tinlav ami etarts the ball rolling toward the bir Mibs-rition needed if Tinatilla eountv U to pet in line to secure th Ix-nt fit of the ojien Columbia river. The offer bv Mr. Cohen wiw made to the East Oretronian during the fort'iusm and when the news va r-ommunieated to the fanners' cnu mittee that has lecn at work on the problem it caused miltounded joy. "That is the hu.-ine-i," said J. K. Montiioinerv. wcreta'rv of the Cold lng most of his attention to the, Spring eoniinittee. "If a IVndleto,, men-bant' can afford to rive $1, blockade and the international tjues- . .i i i -n i . i- i i u i Hons growing from it. The attempt M '" T'il wl" w" ' ' little to him 1.cronallv Uraus of Hrltain to Justify Its action and j it is the consumer who jiavs the freight the farmers certainly can af the request that the United states ford to snlwrilio when the road will mean so much to thoui in lower consider the blockade aa parallel tojw,oat rM(. pCr,allv I will stlbseriU' a thousanl dollars to this fund any time otH I taliove farmers generally will do the same. It is UJl to US to JJft llXSVj j nean a reduction In the world's con sumption of American cotton by 30, OUO bales a week. Wilson Is deVot- Pendleton Is all Irish today. All I other nationalities are forgotten while nu.n ruin, hut .,vernment officials St. Patricks Day. the great Hibernian Insist, however, that there Is no holiday, ia being observed and due cause for alarm and no danger that' homage paid to the patron saint of there will be any change in Italy's determination to remain neutral. Negotiations are being continued, it Is raid, by Prince Von Buelow. th German ambassador, to Austria to voluntarily cede her territory to Italy Italy's neutrality. SOLUTION TO DIFFERENCES B-TWEEN CHINA-JAPAN NEAR .AGRF.FMF.NT HAS HF.F.X RKACIIF.D HIT DFTAILS OF IT ARK YKT FX KNOWN'. the Kmerald Isle, Everybody on the street Is "a wearln' of the green," Im itation shamrocks, green carnations nnd green neckwear everywhere pro- persuadoj laimlng that due cognlxance has been some of I taken of the " 1 .ill ol ireiunu. In return for At the Catholic church masses were celebrated at 7 and 9 o'clock this morning and at the latter mass Father Joy of Athena delivered the panegyric to St. Patrick. Services will be held this evening at 7 o'clock In ,he same church. A number of festivities will mark this evening. Public dances will be held In both the Eagle-Woodman and the Moose hall, while at the Catholic rectory the Knlghfi, of Columbus will give a literary and musical program. LONDON. March 17. The Japan ese foreign office Issued an official stutement today announcing that a satisfactory solution Is in sight over the differences between Japan and China. This news was contained In a dispatch from Toklo to the Central Newa Agency here. The basis of the aettlement la unknown. Japan's' demands regarding the atatua of Chinese territory on the Shantung peninsula haa caused pro tracted negotiations between Pekln and Toklo. The situation haa been closely watched by the American atate department because of fear that the "open door" policy In China might be In. danger. the action of the north during the' civil war will be Ignored by the ad ministration. The I'nited States will flatly tell England and her allies that this) country does not and cannot recog nize the right of any belligerent to establish a blockade on the high seas. Senator Walsh, an expert In Interna tional law, was outspoken in his dis cussion of the orders. He did not believe the administration should mince worda In voicing Its protest' against the policy, which he declared I was contrary to all law and prece dent. LONDON. March 17. The British steamers Atalanta and Fingal have been Mrpedoed and one of them sunk by a German submarine, the admir alty announced this afternoon. The first vessel was torpedoed on Sunday but tearhed port badly dam aged. The other went down of I Xorthcuiiiherland. six members of the crew drowning. The remarkable prowess of Ger many's new secretly-designed sub marine was demonstrated in a strik ing manner by the torpedoing of these two vessels. The Atalanta was struck off the coast of Innlsturk. Galway, Indicating the submarines have cruising radius of 300 miles. The ad miralty refused to accept" the theory the Germans have a secret base some where on the British coast which confirms reports current for some time that new submarines have been equipped for a dash across the Atlant ic if ordered to do so. Thia latest exploit of the Kaiser's ships, revealing this phase of war on merchantmen, has stirred great In terest throughout England. The At Atalanta'a crew was saved after bring ing the damaged ship Into port. The Fingal's crew was less fortunate, only 24 being rescued. The dead Include the chief mate and the stewardess. Ill FETE CJTV TOO E OF SAFETY All who are Able are Leaving Mexican Capital for Vera Cruz Trains are Furnished Them. PROGRESO CONDITIONS ALARM ROUND-UP PICTURE IS 0 EXHIBITION AT BIS FAIR j What the Plan Is. ! The Cold Springs road plan as pro ) posed by It. O. Earnhart. president of the Farmers Cnion of I'liiatilla coun ty, is that a hard surface road he built with money raised by subscription and by a county bond issue. It is estimat ed the total cost will approximate 1500,000 and a subscription equal to 20 per cent is desired, so as not to place all the burden upiyi the entire county. Those who subscribe will be allowed to pay In 10 annual payments, Interest not to exceed six per cent. The plan outlined by Mr. Earnhart calls for a hard surface road from Chilean Paors ITotcst. VALPARAL0. March 17. Chilean ..... .i ( o 1 In s-kl-lntr tVlA nntria .u,.,-, a.c " '"""' v""r7" , Cold Springs landing to Tendleton and Ion that both British and German . .. .. rhlps violated Chilean neutrality In Wl the recent naval engagement result ing In the sinking of the German cruiser Dresden was less than 4 00 tally that the government make it the matter of representations to Eng land and Germany. According to the press the Dresden was less than 400 yards off the surf line when It was fired upon. A man argues with a woman not because It does any particular good but because of the pleasure It affords her. for a spur road leading from some point on the road eastward to connect with the Wild Horse highway. This idea in the spur road is to give ad vantages of the river freight rates to Adams, Athena, Weston, Milton. Free water and to the farming country ad jacent to those places. By raising 20 per cent of the cost of the road from those who will be most directly affected it Is argued the road can be built under practical ly the same terms that would have been possible had the Brown road bill been adopted by the legislature. The remainder of the cost of the road will be borne through a county bond Issue. Cnder the law such a bond issue can be put up to the people at a special election providing a sufficient petition calling for that action is presented the county court. The bonds will be paid for by taxation upon all the property of the county, including towns, such as Pendleton, that are exempt from ordinary road taxes. The Celilo canal will be open May 5 and water transportation will be In vogue In the near future. Owing to the magnitude cf the work it will beiMr. Meacham Impossible to get the Pendleton-Cold Springs road built in time to handle the coming crop. However, by prompt work it is believed the move can be carried through so as to have the road finished before the harvest of 1916. It Is contended the road will reduce the freight rate on wheat from two to four cents a bushel, which benefits would soon compensate for the cost of the road. I.L DO (iOOD DEAL TO ADVER TISE FRONTIER SHOW AM ' ONC, VISITORS. Defeat of InMircc-nt by (ferranzbrtJM AdU to Danger, According to Word from Consular Agc-nt Sillinutn Carranza pronil-- to Send &ui!t4 to Mexico City. WASHINGTON, March 17. A gen eral exodus of foreigner from Mexi co City is In progreMy AH who are able to leave are pre paring to go to Vera Crux and large numbers of foreigners are already on the way to the Mexican seaport town. Both Villa and Carranza have been requested to furnish trains for the transportation of foreigners and not to interrupt the Journey from Mexi co City. American Consular Agent SIHiman advised the state department that he is greatly alarmed over the conditions at Progreso as a result of the defeat of the Insurgents by the Carranxistaa. Foreigners he said, were seeking safety in American warships. Both Carranza and Villa have promised to aid foreigners who want to leave Mexico City. Carranza. he said, ha promised to forward Red Croaa sup ( lies to .the Mexican capital. IMPROVED RflAO NEEDED . TO HOLD GRANT CO. TRADE News was received by the Commer cial assoiatlon this morning from W. E. Meacham, secretary of the Baker Commercial association, and repre sentative of that county at the Pan ama exposition, that the Round-up picture has been received and Is now on display. Mr. Meacham states that "It looks good and will probably at traot a good deal of attention since there is nothing like It In the expo- Kithtn ' llo sfnfpa that thA nlrflir will do a great deal of effective ad-! """hern part of the county and see vertising for the Round-up next year. ' u od r"ad Provided , . i trom Pendleton to the Grant county In his letter to Secretary Cranston If fh(t nPPHpn, rn,, n. proved Pendleton is going to lose I'KI H SI PERVISOR rilGES GOOD ROAD FROM PENDLETON TO COUNTY LINE. "Pendleton people should take in creased Interest In the roads In the Plans of Britain's Great Battleship GERMAN AVIATOR ATTACKS STEAMER; 1 OF CREW KILLED ROM It IS DROPPED FROM OVER HEAD DECLARES CA1TAIX OF ENGLISH CRAFT. SOUTH SHIELDS, Eng.. March 17. I ' II ll II X J I I as - . mi 1 1 II II II x r l n i m war n ii ii w ni x i I n Li i 111 !' '! ll ll I I U ) ., i i , , , . . f " : k . . . . i i ' j ;;: I - , : y if W.rSrliJ;! 1 '4 I ? j 7 I ! 10 j " ? j ' I M I j ! " ! ;; jrg-ZT- . ELIZABETH ? SPEED OCMONS GET AWAY IN 300 MILE AUTO RACE TWEXT-OXE CONTESTANTS EN TERED FOR GRAND PRIZE AT VENICE, CAL. VENICE. Cal., March 17. Twenty The steamer Bloode arrived here cne PeAl demons, contesting for today and reported she had been at- honors In the Venice grand prtx au tacked by a German aviator in a tomoblle race, started shortly after Taube monoplane. The aviator drop- l on SOO-mlle endurance' contest ped a bomb, killing one of the' Eurant In a Chevrolet -was sent Bloode's crew. j away first. The others followed. Av- tator Martin dipped over the spec ta il Is no pleasure for a man to do tcr M th 8,art WM made- Scoren as he pleases until after he gets mar- wer hurt wnen tne wlnd Dlew down rled and then he can't. a core b-rd- ecain in a Chevrolet dropped out at the eighteenth lap because of ra diator trouble. Eddie Pullen was forced out at the start by a defec tive engine. At the JOth lap RIcken bacher waa leading. Ruckstall was second, Klein was third. Grant In a Stutt went Into a ditch in the !5th lap and lost five minutes. s'.ates that the grain bins are now finished and the thresh ed grain is now on display. He slates that there will also be an at tractive display In the agricultural building of grain from this section of the country. tiade from Grant county because Hep. pner Is building a road that will give Grant county people easier access to Heppner than they now have to Pen dleton." This Is the declaration of J. T. Hus ton, road supervisor at Ukiah who has been here today. Mr. Huston be lieves that a dirt road to Uklah Is suf ficient If It Is kept Improved. He de clares that a hard surface road from Pendleton to the Columbia river will aid the southern part of the county through bringing down the freight rate. "Without boasting." Mr. Meacham writes. "I can truly say that eastern Oregon has as good. If not a better, display than any other section of the state." It Is expected that Oregon will get a great deal of advertising from the fair, and Mr. Meacham says that eastern Oregon witl be In the front. The exhibits are being completed every day and in a short time every-j it requires long years of practice thing will oe in a good shape for tne i to enable a man to fall In love and exhibition, he writes. There Is plen ty on display at present to keep peo ple occupied, and with the addition of new exhibits things will soon be well filled up. Mr. Meacham says "that for the money spent Oregon has accomplish ed more than any other state." There is a sufficient supply of grain at pres ent but there still remains room for all the fruit that can b sent, since It is hard to keep It after shipping to far. light on his feet. HARRY THAW DIRECTING HIS CASE FROM TOMBS STRENUOUS FIGHT TO OAIN HH FREEDOM IS NOW BEING WAGED. No greater shock has been admin istered the Germans In this war than the news of the other day that the Queen Elizabeth, the greatest battle ship ever built In Europe, one with eight fifteen-Inch guns that shoot more than twelve milca, had arrived nt the Dardanelles and was batter ing the last defenses of. the Turkish empire In Europe. This wonderful ship has stood out of range of the best guna on the Turkish forts on the Dardanelles and yet been able to throw her tons of steel Into forts that had been thought Impregnable. A Week after she be gan the bombardment, supported by some other forty ships of the British and French navies, she had silenced most of the forts of the Dardanelles, and It was considered only a ques tion of time when she would reach the Bosporus. But long before then It was predicted the sultan and all Turkish officials will have fled to Asia. Thus the opening; of the Bos porus and the Dardanelles to Rus sian commerce will have become ono of the greatest feats of history. This great ship there are five In her class nenrlng completion, the Wnrsplte, Valiant, Barham and Mal- Gcrmans to Have- St. Patrick. SEATTLE, Wash., March 17. The German flag will be ringled with the flag of Erin tonight In the Joint cele bration here of St, Patrick's Day. The German-American societies met wit representatives of the leading Irish societies recently and decided to par- 1 ticipate in the ceremonies honoring Ireland's patron saint. Teutons and Rga Is of 27.000 tons displacement. Germans will celebrate with proper She is 650 feet long with a beam of service during the day and tonight ninety-four feet, and a draught of banquet and ball, twenty-seven and a half feet. Be- sides her great battery of eight flf- Kansas Farmers Confer, teen-inch guns, she carries sixteen NORTON, Kans., March 17. More six-inch guns, twelve anti-aerial 12- than 500 farmers attended the agrl pounders or four-inch guns, four cultural conference for northwestern three poundsrs and four submerged Kansas which opened here today, twenty-one lnh torpedo tubes. She Speakers were furnished by tho agri cost about $12,500,000. cultural college. Blessed are the meek, for they are never expected to rise to the occa sion. NEWS SUMMARY General. British attcnn to explain German blockade will be Ignore! by tlte Unit ed States. Serbia Is prcarlng to Invade At ban la. Two more stcaiuers art; sunk bj German submarine. Foreigners fleeing Mexico City. Local. The roopJes Warehouse with $1. 000 offer heads Cold Springs road subscription. Dr. Uusttoil II. Conwell delivers fa mous lecture for 5103 time here. Evans and Shannon fight fifteen rounds to a draw. Eastern Oregon exhibit at fair right al the front. Pendleton docs homag-e to St. Iat rlc-W. NEW YORK. March 17. From the Tombs, Harry Thaw is directing per sonally the next moves to be made In the legal fight to establish his sanity and gain freedom. According to th present plans. Attorney Stanchfleid I will ask Judge BIJour on Friday to postpone the hearing on Thaw's pe tition for a writ of habeas corpus M Permit his counsel to submit aupport- lng affidavits and briefs. If It is j granted, the court will be asked to set a date within a month for a trial by Jury. San Franc-lsoo's St. Patric k's Day. SAN FRANCISCO. March 17. Th biggest celebration of St. Patrick's Day San Francisco has ever known la in progress here today. The Panama Pacific Exposition set aside the day for special ceremonies at the Tower of Jewels, In the fair grounds and these are being partici pated In by representatives of all the Irish societies In the, Hay city. At the City Auditorium. howevr, the principal ceremonies will Ukt place. The most eminent speaker of the Irish race whom Han Frano!.'- ran boast will participate In tho pro gram at the Auditorium and thl v. ring a grand St. Putrlck's Day bail ill close the day.