daily eve:;:::3 editio:i Fcrwat for Fjwtb Orrgnn by the United Mate Weather Otwerrer t Portland. DAILY EVO EilTi:: TO ADVERTISERS. Th Et Oregontan hn the largest pH clrrnlstlou or say paper In Oregon. Mt of J'ortlsnd, rd 07r twk th circulation Is Veudletua 01 any other newpper. V.: 1 ycAsi Fair tonlaht and Thursday; warm er Thursday. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER NO. 8318 VOL. 26 DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1915. : 1 s 7 S J DANISH VESSEL IS SUNK BY TQRPEOD OFF FIE ISLAND German Submarine Attacks Ship English Steamer is Also Sent to the Bottom by Germans. ATTACKED IN IKE KORTH SEA Seven Member ot U Crew Are Drowned When Small BoM Cp xizCH Eighty paaMengers and 49 Member of Uo Crow Are Landed Hteamslilp Wat Large Vessel. ' LONDON, June 2. The Danish steamer Soeborg haa been torpedoed by a German submarine, admiralty dispatches announced. The Tenet waa torpedoed off Farne Island on (he coat coaat ot England. The Aus trian consul general to Denmark 1 re ported to be the principal stockhold er. the Danish Shipping Com par owning the vesael. LONDON, June 8. The Brltlah ateamer Saldieh waa torpedoed by a Herman aubmarlne In the North Sea yeatenlay, the admiralty announced The Saldieh lank. Seven member ot the crew and the stewardast were drowned when one of the email boats In which they put out capsized. Eighty paaaengeri and 46 members of the crew were landed today at Chatham by a ateam trawler. The Saldleh waa a large vessel and plied between England and Egypt. LACK OF SillPS MAY 'ER WHEAT PRICE ai VUTKltS AUK LISTED AT 87 SHILLING ONK CONCERN gets siurs. Titer Is so much uncertainty re garding shipping affairs and so much doubt concerning what conditions will prevail In Europe next fall when wheat shipments will be made that It Is problematical what will be paid for the coming wheat crop. This Is the statement made by J W. Ganong, vice president ot the Portland Flouring Mills Co., who waa here this morning. According to Mr. Ganong his latest Information a to ahip charters is from Liverpool and to the effect ship owners Ask 87 shill ings, six pence. This la approximate ly three times the normal charge and means that figured on a bushel basis the freight rate Is 40 cents per bueh 1 above the normal. Thta I exclu. slve ot the war risk which ia carried by the European purchaser. Mr. Ganong was here this morning In company with C. D. Uruun, presi dent of the Blake-McFall Co. ot Port land. Both men have land near Her mlston and they came up for th pur pose of looking at their Investment The trip to Pendleton was made on the motor car this forenoon and the two men returned to Portland on train No. 17. A report In last evening' Portland Journal told of the chartering there of a ship for new crop tailing at 85 shillings. From the report It appears that, one Portland exporter, aald to be M. H. Ho user, It grabbing all the available shipping In tight- He 1 re garded at taking chancel but will make a fortune if th venture turnt out well. WILL THE STEAM ROLLER BE USED AGAIN BY DYER? NORTH SIDE PAJtK QUESTION AGAIN COMES BEIXHtE CITY COUNCIL TONIGHT. Will there be another exhibition of the steam roller at the weekly coun cil meeting this evening? This la a subject of considerable speculation In view of the fact the quostlon ot pur chasing the Johnson lot adjoining the north aide cemetery will again be be fore the city father. Last Wedneaday the subject came before the council and th finance -committee reported In favor ot buying th land In compliance with a pro position made by the ladles civic clu"b. But when Councilman J, E. Mont gomery moved that the report of the committee be adopted he was ruled out of order by Acting Mayor Dyer. It was an application of steam roller methods and concontlnued by th acting mayor when on an appeal from the decision he was outvoted. There haa been much Indignation expressed regarding the arbitrary ac tion of the mayor last week and there Is promise of a good attendance at the council mcetng tonight In view of the possibility of more fireworks, mm CONFERENCE 1 PRESIDENT II German Ambassador Believed to Have Said His Country Ready to Make Reparation Wherever Due MEETIXS USTS HALF AN HOUR Xo Statement Issued at Close of Con fen-nce Believed, However, That Position of Germany Waa Outlined In Detail and That Lusltanla Inci dent Not Insurmountable. WASHINGTON. Juno 1 Proi.id.nl Wilson and the German ambassador, Von Bernstorff, held a conference of thirty mlnutea at the White House today. No statement was issued at the conclusion of the conference. It is believed the ambassador told the president, substantially, that Ger many ia ready to do everything re quired toward reparation whenever It Is shown there has been an infringe ment of American righta. Regarding the Lusltanla the ambassador Is be lieved to have told the president Ger many has reason to believe in the soundness ot her position regarding the vessel's defiance of the rules of International warfare and the viola tion of an American statute as to carrying explosives, but that this pre sents no Insurmountable obstacle. The most saneulne obmrvvn d!d not expect Von Bernstorff to indicate Germany's willingness to abandon her submarine warfure, unless the United Mates was In a position to compel Knitland to abandon her "starvation Policy" or unless England would do so without compulsion bv neutral dow. era whose rights are being violated ty the British order-ln-councll. The effect of Von Bernstorff". ren reseniatlnns upon the president could not te judged. Plan is on to Have Holiday Week While Chautauqua is Held COMMERCIAL CLI 11 ENDORSES I'ltOTOSAIz-TTV WILL BE GAILY DECORATED. To make Chautauqua week durlrg this month a holiday week for town and country people alike Is the pur pose of a move started by A. J. Mc Alllster, chairman of the Chautauqua committee, and endorsed by the Com mercial association last evening. Mr. McAllister was empowered to select a committee to tee that the city is decorated for the occasion and that other measures be taken to make the week of entertainment a big one. The Chautauqua this year will be held from June 22 to June 28, Inclu sive, thus closing on the Tuesday be fore the Fourth of July. Mr. McAl lister explained that the merchants are all in favor of making the Chau tauqua a big event and leaving the celebrations of the Fourth for the country towna. So enthusiastic Is Mr. McAllister over the Chautauqua and so firmly is he convinced that It will develop In to a great success here that he has personally given the Ellison-White people a pledge of enough tickets to defray expenses and la giving a great deal of his time toward attending to the many preparatory details. Wallace Struble of Lewlston and Astoria was present at the meetlntf last evening and teconded Mr. Mc Allisters' remarks, declaring the Chau tauqua without an equal as a feature of entertainment. "In time the Pen dleton Chautauqua will become such a success that It will not only be self sustaining but will net profit which may be put Into other civic ventures." NEWS SUMMARY General. United State will take step to set tle affair In Mexico unless factional leader agree to end their differences. DauUli vessel la torpedoed by Gor man submarine. Itounuuita I preparing to enter war unless, Austria grants territorial con cessions. Local. Umatilla county exhibit In tripli cate being gatlirrvd. Federal officials make examination of INrisnn Ridge. Chautauqua week will be made big holiday week. Austrian appeals to lorttl relatives to help son, prisoner In Russia. High grain cliartora cause unccr- talnty regarding wheat prices. Park proposition to come before council this evening again. Jim Jones paroled to coro for tick wife. Italy's 4Big Five' in Conduct of War IHEII! v n MADE rm Cm GERMA IS 1 Ltrtc&t-I( I ; . ! ouKE CADOBNA If I ; - MA-ABRlttTl I 1 1 ' II RANKING ' CHIM VSTA-PI V , 'f j ADMIiRAL. , " J j NAVY w;, jX-K Wm SONNINO W- It A V k -' A- i ' x ' - r I l j The attention of the world la to-i day focussed on five men. the "Big Five" of Italy Premier Antonio Sal- andra. General Conte Lulgl Cadorna,1 chief of staff of the army, Prince Louis of Savoy, Duke of the Abruzzt, I admiral of the battle fleet. Baron Sidney Sonnlno, minister of foreign, affairs, General Canevu, commander , of the army. . To the Duke of the Abruzzl, well, known to the American public be-! cause of hia romance with Miss Kath erlne Elkins, Italy looks to retrieve the naval disaster on the Adriatic, coast at Llssa In 1S86. Then Austria, with Inferior numbers and an Ill equipped squadron, struck Italy a crushing blow which has left its mark upon Italian naval prestige up to the present day. General Lulgl Cadorna, head of the Italian land forces, comes of a fam ily of soldiers. His father, General Conte Raffaele Cadorna entered Rome with an army in 1870 at the confisca tion of the Papal state and the over throws! of the temporal power of the church. The present chief of staff of the Italian army was then a lieu tenant In his father's army. One brother, Carlo, was once minister ot war and a great advocate of the free church. Another brother is a divi sion general In the army today. Conte Cadorna was born Sept 4, 1S50, at Pallanza, Lake Magglore, In northern Italy. His mother was the Countess Clementina Soppl, a noted beauty of her day. At eighteen the young Conte was a lieutenant and later became colonel of the famous tenth regiment of Bersaglierl Infan try. WAR BULLETINS Americans Registering, BERLIN, June 2. Circular have been posted by the German authorities advising all nationalities to register, except Turks and Austrlans. An or der to this effect has been Issued and the circular urged tpeedy compliance. Many Americans are registering. "Murdered" Is Verdict, LONDON, June 2. "Murdered by tome agent of th hostile force," was the verdict of a coroner' Jury fol lowing an Inquest Into the deaths ot the two victim in the first Zeppelin raid upon London. The two bodies, were those of Hen ry Good and hit wife, who died from suffocation and burnt when an In cendiary bomb dropped by a Zeppelin early yesterday set fire to their home, Wireless Station Destroyed, ROME, June 2. The Italian fleet destroyed the Austrian wireless sta tion on Llssa Island oft Dalmatla and the semaphore ttatlon on the Island of Curaolo, it was announced. General Lulgl Cadrona is noted as a great disciplinarian. He has writ- ten many books on military subjects. He wrote particularly of the Franco- Prussian war of 1870. Slgnor Antonio Salandra, premier of Italy, was trained for the law and 'has spent thirty years as an ac tive participant In parliamentary af- fairs. He was the leader of his par- ty In the chamber of deputies for many years and once served as mill- later of finance. He was called to the premiership In March, 1914, on the resignation of the Giolittl cabinet. Salandra is a great orator and great leader. After his ascendence to the premiership he was confronted with many trying Internal problems. He manoeuvered so cleverly as to sup press the rising of socialists, and at the same time, gain their support. He settled the big railroad strike. Baron Sidney Sonnino, the foreign secretary, was once premier and Sal andra was one of his most ardent sup porters. Sonnino is a Jew by race, a Protestant by faith and a native ot Egypt Born on the banks of the Nile of an English mother, he receiv ed the greater part ot his education In Great Britain. Baron Sonnlno's paternal grandfather migrated from the ghetto of Leghorn, Italy, to Egypt, where he built up an enor mous fortune as a banker. The army will be under the direct command of General Caneva, who fed the Italian forces In the conquest of Tripoli. General Caneva is the only living "generale dell'esercito," a title which la granted only In time of act ual war. He won the honor by his Tripoli campaign. German Commander Captured PETROGRAD, June 2. Baltic newspapers print an unconfirmed re port that General Von Pritlwitz, who commanded the Germans at Llbau, has been captured by a Russian patrol. 6000 German Dead. PARIS, June 2. Five thousand German dead were found after the re cent bloody fighting about Notre Dame De Lorette, according to an of ficial eye-witness report of the en gagement Under a hall of lead from the French artillery as well as the field and machine guns, the Germans became so demoralized they lost all sense of direction and were thrown back In complete confusion. Sight Two Submarines. PHILADELPHIA, June 2. Passen gers on the American liner Dominion, which arrived, declared that two days out of Liverpool the ship sighted the periscopes ot two German submarines, Fearing the ship would be torpedoed, Mrs. Prichard, a stewardess, Jumped overboard and wa lost. SIS AGAIN ET 1 1 Famous Cathedral Bombarded by Enemy and More Damage Done to Already Wrecked Edifice. FISHTIIS KORTH OF ARRAS Furious Engagements Are In Pro gress With French Reporting Gains Against the Teutonic Forces Sev eral Trenches Are Taken by Gaul SouUieast of XeuvlUc. PARIS, June 2. The Germans again bombarded Rhelms. The fa mous cathedral, already badly dam aged by gunfire, again was (helled by German artillery, an official state ment announced. The statement de clared Rheims has been shelled twice Jn the past day and a half, the ca thedral and other parts of the city be ing repeatedly bombarded. North of Arras In the midst of ruined and deserted villages the fight ing has been resumed with the great est fury. The French have succeed ed in driving the Germans out of a group of houses at Neuville and re tained the battered positions despite determined counter attacks made by the enemy. Southeast of Neuville, several trenches were carried at the point of the bayonet. ROUMANIA READY TO GO TO WAR CONCESSIONS ASKED Entrance of Roumania on the Side of the Allies is Believed Certain Unless Austria Agrees to Territorial Grants Army is in Readiness. LONDON, June 2. The en trance of Roumania into the war on the side of the allies is considered certain unless Aus tria agrees to certain territorial concessions which Roumania ii reported to have demanded of the Vienna government. Roumania is making all pre parations for war, most of her troops being ready to move at an instant's notice in case hos tilities are begun. All dispatches received here agree that Roumana has made demands from Austria for ter ritorial concessions as a price for continued neutrality. If Austria rejects these demands, Roumania 's entrance in the war is considered as certain. GLEN RUST FILES DIVORCE SUIT AGAINST YOUNG WIFE CHARGES IMMORAL CONDUCT- ILL-FATED ROMANCE AGAIN IN LIMELIGHT. Another chapter In the ill-fated romance of Glen and Cordelia Rust, which began when they were married on October 13, 1914, at Colfax, after an acquaintance of a few days, was started yesterday afternoon when the husband filed in the circuit court a suit for a divorce, charging his young wife with Immoral and licentious con duct. Toung Rust deserted his showgirl wife a short time after their mar riage because, It is said, ot parental objections. She made charge of non-support against him and, after a sensational trial, he was convicted. Sentence was suspended upon hi un dertaking to provide for her. Some months later he was cited to appear for contempt of court, hia wife charg ing that he was not providing for her properly. Settlement was made by stipulation, the husband promising to contribute 135 per month to her. In hit complaint he charges specif ically that between April 1 and April 10 of this year, his wife went to Echo and conducted herself so scan dalously that the town marshal order ed her to leave the town. Also he charges that her conduct here In Pendleton has been immoral. & Raley are his attorneys. Raley TANG N ifED STATES WILL BEST FOR MEXICO UNLESS LEADERS DF RIVAL FACTMLE DIFFERENCES President Wilson's Note is Firm in its Declara tion That Present Conditions in the Southern Republic Cannot Longer be Tolerated. Strong Government Must be Chosen Protection Must be Given Civilans and Relief PrompUy Extended to Starving Thousands of Mexico's Population Says Note. WASHINGTON, June 2. A demand that the leaders of the warring fac tions in Mexico act together and promptly "for the relief and redemp tion of their prostrate country," waa made by the president today. In an open review of the Mexican situation the president declared the present conditions cannot longer be tolerated. Unless actios is taken by the leaders, the president gave warn ing the United States will "be con strained to decide what means should be employed in order to help Mexico save herself and serve her people." The president called attention to the fact that more than two years of revolutionary conditions have exist ed in Mexico and that the country is apparently no nearer to a solutioa of her tragical troubles than when the revolution was first kindled. He de clared there Is no proper protection for her own citizens or the citizens of other nations and that Mexico is starving and without a government The president declared the citizens of the United States wanted nothing for themselves, but as friends and neighbors, want to lend any aid they properly can to bring about the estab lishment ot a constitutional govern ment In conclusion the president's state ment says: "Patriotic Mexicans are sick at heart and cry out for peace and for every self-sacrifice that may be necessary to procure it. Their East End Farmers Favor Bonding The County For Roads CONNECTION SHOULD BE MADE WITH WALLULA ROAD AT TOUCIIET, SAYS HODGENS. j Louis Hodgens, who is here today from his farm near Freewater, ts a supporter of the plan to bond the county for good roads and says that most of the farmers in his particular neighborhood are favorable to the plan. j Howeve'r, according to Mr. Hod gens, it will be necessary for the bonding committee to treat the east end of the county fairly in order to insure the support of that section. He says the farmers up there are awake to the advantages to be had from a road conencting with the Columbia river. Mr. Hodgens' idea is that a road should be built connecting at Touchet with the highway from Wal la Walla to Wallula. He believes that by connecting at Touchet the greatest number of people will be served. All told he believes the east end of the county should have 20 or 24 miles of road. JULY WHEAT DROPS OYER THREE GENTS AT CHICAGO CHICAGO, June J. (Special A further drop of three and three eights cents marked the operations in the wheat pit to day. At the close July options stood at 11.17 5-8 a decline of 3 3-8 cents from yesterday's price. September quotations closed at $1.16 1-4. PORTLAND, Ore., June 2. (Special) Portland wheat prices today have been: club, 81.04; bluestem 1.05. Country About Tampico is Terrorized by Bandits and Many Americans Lose Lives GALVESTON'. June 2. Fully a dox en Americans have been killed near Tampico in the past few days, ac cording to Captain Oscar Lane of lha j steamship Winnlfred, which arrived from the Mexican port. He said the DECIDE people cry out for food and will pres ently hate, a much a they fear, ev ery man In their country and out'who stand between them and their dally bread. "It Is time therefore that th gov. ernment of the United State frankly tate its policy which. In these extra ordinary circumstances, it become its duty to adopt. "It must do what It hag not hither to done, or felt at liberty to do, len t It active moral support to some man or group of men, If such -may be found, who can rally the aufferlng people to their support in an effort to Ignore, If they cannot unite, the war ring factions, and return to the con stitution of the republic, so long In abeyance and set up a government in Mexico City which the great powers of the world can recognize and deal with, a government with whom a pro. gram of revolution will be a busine and not merely a platform. "I therefore, publicly and very sol emnly, call upon the leaders of th factions In Mexico to act together and promptly for the relief and redemp tion of their prostrate country. I ted it my duty to tell them that If they cannot accommodate their difference and unite for this great purpose with in a very short time, this government will be constrained to decide what means should be employed by the United States In order to help Mexico save herself and serve her people." Man Paroled So He Can Provide for Wife Who is III JAMES JONES. CONVICTED FOU SELLING LIQUOR TO IN DIANS, LKT GO. Because his wife is 111 in bed wla no one to care for her except neigh bors, James Jones, well knewn Cot tonwood street second hand dealer who was convicted several month ago ot selling liquor to Indians, waa today paroled by Circuit Judge Phelps. His original sentence was 3U days in Jail and 2300 fine. He had served 95 days in Jail and the Judge granted him a parole upon his pay ment of a J50 fine. The usual condi tions, requiring good habit and ob servance of the law, were attached to the parole. All of the member ot the Jury which convicted him signed the application for parole. ITALIANS BOMBARD 111; ENEMY HOLDS G POSITIONS ROME. June 2 Italian batterle posted on Monte Altimlsso are shell ing Mori. Railway bridges already have been wrecked. A heavy rain made it impossible to drag the gur.i through the mountains to shell Kov. eredo from Zugno Heights, whlrh) were captured yesterday, but the Mori bombardment continued uninterrupt ed. The Austrian are strongly en trenched In the Mori region. entire country thereabouts Is terror ized by bandits. WASHINGTON. Junfl Z.--J N. (ten. nett, an American, whs shot and kit ed May 27 by VIllNt.is In Mexico, tM state department was informed I't the Tampico consul. STR