I . BB& - . N DAILY EVENING EDITION DAILY EVENING EDITION I nwat for Eastern Orrnn hr the railed Statna Wrnllier Observer at Portland TO ADVERTISERS. The Esst Oregonlan hi the largest ptld rlrcolatloB of oj piper In Oregon, eut uf Cortland tod over twice the circulation In IVnuietoD uf in; other newspaper. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER VOL. 27. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, V?sS m NO. 8(541 I East liLmMmm OST s a f HILL OF THE TAKEN FROM THE FRENCH IN W EST Germans are Now Directing Efforts Against Town But Allied Troops Clain to Repulse Attacks. TEUTON LOSSES STAGGERING .Meantime in l ast, itulKur- unU tier- ; luanK arc Squeezing Serbia in a Ite- . lenllcss Vice lurloiis Artillery Haiti, Qoai on Along Dvlna Front W llh Hie ItllsMiulls. LONDON, Nov. 1. While the Teu tons i,nti the llulgurs are programing . triumphantly through Serbia dsvalon. DMDtl ill the WWt front command at -trillion today. The hill of Tuhure, In, the i huiupagnc, is hi the hands of i the Germans. They ure now direct- , Ing blows ut the town of Tahure. The ' hill m taken after Heveral days pounding. The French elaim the i let loan loimos have been enormous and th.it elsewhere they have been I rapufaatd. Meantlnie, Teutons and llulgurs are i squeezing Serbia In a relentless vice. Heavy battling between the French J and the Bulgarians In tho Stcumnltza ! and Krlvolak regions Is reported. In Russia, u terrific artillery battle Is be- Ing fought on the Pvlnsk front. A ! partial repulse of the Herman offen- J slve around the Strypa-P-nlester Junc tion. Is claimed. On the Italian front, the offensive continues unabated, but the Italians still are hard pressed. An official Italian statement early today told of successes In Went valley. Artillery still thunders on the Isonzo front. That the Russians will be permitted to cross Rumania to help the allies In the Balkans Is the growing belief. 'It la expected permission from Ruma. nla. however, will be delayed. Mean time the allies' fleets are again bom barding the Aegean const of Bulgaria. PIONEER WOMAN OF PENDLETON GALLED BY DEATH SATURDAY MRS. JOHN M'AI'l'l .. WHO C1IOS8 ED THE plains IX ism HIES AT AGE Or 63 Mrs John McAfee, one of Pendle ton's pioneer citizens, succumbed to an illness Saturday evening at her home In this city. The funeral , will ba held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Methodist chun ih with Hev. C. A. Hodshlre in charge. Ai number of relatives nre expected to arrive before the date of the funeral. Deceased was born In 1'tnh. August !i. and was thus 63 years old. She was married to Mr. McAfee on November U, 1876, at Jewell City. Kansas, and In 1884. came with her husband to this county, settling neur Pendleton She Is survived by her husband and three daughters. Mrs Mal.i jinklns of this city, Mrs. Jes sie Hoffman of Grant. Mont.. Mrs Laura Marshall of Glenwood, Wash Her only son Is deceased. IMPORTERS' REQUEST DECLINED BY BRITAIN W ASHINGTON, Nov. L -The Brlt 'sh foreign office todu.s notified the state .deportment that the latter's re quest for an extension of time In vhkh American importers could prove that goods purchased In Ger man' had been contracted for before Man h 1 had been refused. An extension of one month from November 1 was asked. The only concession accorded was permission for Importers to file their proofs, with the state department's trade ad viser up to November 1 Instead of re quiring filing In London by that date. WILSON WEDDING TO HE LAST OF DECEMBER WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 The White House officially announc- ed the president will he mar- ried "near the close of lie- Ctmssr." He plans for n very simple ceremony, which will he quietly performed at Mrs. Gait's residence, the announce- ment said. No Invitations will be issued and It Is expected that the only guests will be members of the families. The honeymoon may be spent at Pass Christian. Mississippi. ! Uncle Sam's New Fighter mggggggggggggggggm the i I Home is Damaged to Extent of $500 in Early Morn Fire BLAZE II ts MYSTEHIOIs OHIO IX GETS, good sTAitT BE FORE FIREMEN ARRII E Fire early yesterday morning did I at the home of Mrs. L. M. Reed at 71 R Marie street before the flames I were extinguished by the fire depart-1 ment No satisfactory' explanation of j the origin of the fire can be given' by the firemen. The alarm was turned In about' 4:20 and the fire truck humid down. Alta street The person turning In I the alarm failed to remain at the seeing a small fire In front of the! box to direct the firemen and they. Seeing a small fire In front of the Warren Construction Company's plant at the end of Alta street.! where there had been a fire the' week before, drove on there, thus losing a few minutes The flames j were In the hallway and kitchen and burned up the stairway. They were drowned out In a short time. The house belongs to Judge T. P. j Ollllland of Pilot Hock, and insur-j nncc was carried on both the house! and furniture. TREATY Tj) HELP THE SEAMEN'S MEASURE ONLY NATION THAT II AS COX SF.NTEI) IN VIEW OP 1A IXM.LETES HILL. WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. Great Hrltaln has consented to the abroga tion of her trade treaty with the United States which would have pre vented the operation of La Follette's seiunans' act as far as Ttrltlshers are concerned. A new treaty will be ne gotiated unless the seaman's law is repealed at the coming session of congress. Great Hrltaln la the only nation which will assent to an abrogation ol her treaty and to negotiations fur : nCW one. rlfiieh Make twins. PA HIS, Oct. SO. French gains at Boise en Hache and southeast ol Souchez are officially announced The Germans were repulsed K Hill HO and four German attacks iround I.aiourtlne were driven back The era of submarine warfare be gun In February. 1SS4. when the t'nl ted States sloop llousatonlc was sunk by an underwater craft by means of n torpedo at the end of n spar pro ItCttng from it. M I mightiest of Uncle Sam's dread-1 BsssLsH noughts Is to her trials i raH nn" '' I or a J MImBH ns -"he went bridge I for her trial : H trips The Nevada carries teu four U n ln ii kuiis. and n other battli IB ship In the world is arranged wltn j I three of such enormous guns I H turret. as she went under Brooklyn bridge on ier way to the New York niv DETACHMENT OF VILLISTAS ANNIHILATED BY DYNAMITE WHOLE OOMPANT STREWN PAR vi WIDE WHEN CACHE SUDDENLY LETS GO. DOCQLAS, Nov. 1. Fifty men and IS horses were torn to atoms and i men were horribly mangled when a detachment of Villa troops was Klown up by American dynamite each T. miles southeast of here, it was learned. The accident occurred lass week. Fleeing before Villa's advance. the Americans covered their underground dynamite Cham ber so It was completely concealed. The VUllstas encamped over the mine anil kindled a fire directly above the dynamite. The resultant explosion completely obliterated the entire detachment. Villi soldiers ar riving here Buy the grniind was strewn with shreds of human bod lee. 'FRISCO FEELS SLIGHT EARTHQUAKE EARLY TODAY BAN FRANCISCO, Nov. slighi earthquake shocks turU today. Two felt WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. Heavy earthquakes were recorded by the ieorgetown University seismograph arly today. It is estimated the shocks were 4000 miles distant. Three shocks were felt. NEWS SUMMARY General. Hill of Tahure Is ruptured by the Germans In the weal. Capital of Serbia Is shelled hy Bul garians. Villa trains cannon against Cumin, za: baitle Is near. British Abrogate treaty to nonm m'odato seamen's bill. Local, Hjrri Pettigrew, local teamster, meets death under wagon wheels, Mr-. John McAfee, pioneer resident, posses sway, Serbian commits suicide on Bnttrt Creek, , Ufa does ISM dama::i' to residence of Mrs, Recti. 39, J& '" v Wsfif-B sBaaatBall fl ! B ) ;::' Xar rOUNG TEAMSTER MEETS DEATH IN FALL FROM SEAT James Pettigrew, Well Kncwn Young Laborer Almost Instantly Killed in Accident This Morning. BODY CRUSHED UNDER WHEELS WM Driving t' Webb Street With load of Gravel Young Man liii n Way to tiie Hospital Wai 14 Years Old ami Had l.iMxl III 100-1 dleton for Ite Y'oars. James Byrel Pettigrew. well known young teamster of this city, was al most instantly killed this morning when he fell from a loaded gravel wagon under the heavy wheel". Two wheels passed over him, one crush ing bis skull. He expired while be ing taken to .St. Anthonys hospital. The unfortunate young man was driving a wagon loaded with two yards of dirt up Webb street about 3:3a, the dirt being designed for use in the fill for the sidewalk being built on East Webb street by the u'Melveny Construction Co At a point on Webb stret about midway between Johnson and Thompson street, he drove his team across the railroad tracks to pass out around the 0 Melveny concrete mixer whi:h was being hauled up the street. As he did so one of the horses shied a little and the teamster leaned a little forward and out to whip the horse with the end cthe line. A', that moment one of re wheels struck the north rail of the track and skidded throwing the driver out of the wa gon. A front wheel passed diagonal ly over his chest and the hind wheel passed over the chest and up over the head. Jack Garrison, who was sitting In the seat with young Pettigrew. at tempted to prevent the fall. He and Guy O'Melveny, who was driving the mixer, picked the injured man up and hurried him to the hospital, but he died on the way. Deceased, who was 24 years' old, had been in Pendleton five years and for the past four years had been in the employ of I. Wilkes, who does a general teaming business. He was unmarried His parents live in -Seymour, Iowa, and have been notified btqnOst t He Held. A coroner's inquest will be held this afternoon at 4 o'clock by Justice of the Peace Joe H. Parkes, acting coroner In the absence of J. T. Brown. An examination of the de ceased makes it doubtful Whether the wheels of the wagon actually ran over the head There Is a. mark on the forehead as from, a violent blow Death w-as undoubtedly :aus ed from the hemmorrhage ensuing from wheels crushing the chest. A pathetic feature of the case lies in the fact that the young man was preparing to leave for Iowa to visit his parents whom he had not seen for several years. He had written them of his Intention and friends say he had made plans to quit work at noon today. ANOTHER AMERICAN VESSEL SEIZED BY BRITISH GREW NO REASON is ASSIGNED FOR ACTION NEW FOLK V BELIETKD AIXIITED. WASHINGTON. Nov. 1 A Brit-' ish prize crew seized the American steamer Llama, afterward grounded' off Scotland, on Sunday, the Ameri-1 can consul reported. No reason was assigned. The Llama was not seri-l ously groitssied The American ves sel Hooking has been seized by Brit ish warships and taken to Halifax The Panlsh steamer Hamburg also has been seised. Some believe the British sre beginning a new poli.'V concerning neutral ships suspected of engaging In German trade. French Submarine is Sunk hy Turks and Crew is Taken OTTOMAN ARiill.KRV PROVES EFFECTIVE i TRANSPORT Is ILBO SI NK. BERLIN. Nov 1.- Turkish artil- lery fire sank the French submarine j Turquoise off Anafarta Sundiy se-i cording to an Official announcement! in Constantinople Two officer; and 14 men were taken prisoners The Turks nlso hit nn allied transport v c En jBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBSSSSSSS, IsssssPtk sFhsssssssH iSpSMMssB issslLssssaasssssLsssssssssssssssK MISS EDITH CAVELL This photograph of Miss Edith I World's Fair. It is the only one of Caveli was given by her to Mrs. G. X. ! the woman so far found in the Unit Olson of Chicago, at the time of theied States Serbian Homesteader Ends Life at Buttercreek by Shooting (Special Correspondence ) ECHO. Ore.. Nov. I. Shiva Msjci. known by the name of Samuel Main, a Serbian homesteader, living west of Butter creek, committed suicide at f, o'clock this morning at the C. P Bowman place by shooting himseltjfor Mr. Bowman in the head. He had been sick and it the man had nc is thought he committed the deed be-; country. Villa Trains Guns Against Agua Prieta; Battle is Near DOUGLAS, Nov. 1. The advancing Refugees are coming to the Ameri Villistas and Carranzistas outposts j fan slde Earlv todav Villa had train-' clashed a mile from Agua Prieta at ; fd ftnd maohine guns noon. i nc mum am arm w being hurled aKainst the city. It is now three miles from the Carranza trenches and is advancing rapidly, spreading over a large territory. LATE BULLETINS Mien l aw I iiconslltutlonal. WASHINGTON. Nov. 1 Arizona's alien labor law. which provided that employers of over five persons must have SO per cent of them qualified electors or native citizens, was held unconstitutional by the supreme court. .Iniuin to Limit lnicrani. TOKIO, Ntv. I. Owing to pressure of financial conditions. Japan's navy department has decided to retrench In Its naval-buildinR program. Reargiiment is Ordered. WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. The su preme court ordered a reargument ol the West Virginia liquor cases. Involv- , inn the constitutionally of the Webb-j Kenyon law. Will Me Lansing. WASHINGTON. Nov. 1. The state department announced that Von 1'ernstorff will confer with Lansing tomorrow-. King Is Improving. LONDON, Nov 1. King George continues to Improve. A bulletin said he still Is "weak.'- though improving and that his temperature and puis are normal More rrested. NKW YORK. Nov. 1- Three men. "water pirates.'' the police said Ware arrested on the Staten Island pier presumably In connection with the Rober; Fa bomb con !r,o Their NurseShot to Death - . spies. cause of despondency over his ill-! 'oss w"man ws c.urt-marti-ness. He was in Echo yesterdav -and f ed and evicted of a charge of sj was acting somewhat strangely. I ,Pionaf f.fter 5h'" had "ruered The dead man had a homestead of 'V't ' M"nt,'lier' Marseille, acres all of which is in cuItiva-iT ,"e movement or i. He had been there for three 1 troop and et oth" information re rs and of late had been working qu'red b' the 9wns he wag ar. So far as known relatives in this I en Agua Pri Three thousand American soldiers are entrenched the American side of the border. la claims to have tt,6ASj men. on identity and the charges against them are kept secret British Ycsst-l sunk. j LONOOX, Nov. 1. The British ves-: sel Taward was sunk by a German submarine, but the crew was saved, j SEASIDE COTTAGES HIT BY BIG WAVES the frontier Former Premier n- SEASIDF., Ore.. Nov. I. A single ' izelos remains at Athens The Am lowering breaker detacheu itself "lean cruiser IH-s M,,m.s .,.,. . from a mediocre sea at 3 o'clock yesterday and thrashed Into the hoard walk from which it tore whole sections and on top of lawns n sum mer cottages the peak of the which penetrated from 100 to i we feet further shoreward thar any other breaker, flowed even to the porch of the Piper cottage. So pow erful was the wave that It tossed boulders on to the Doard walk and lawns. . Stretches of the hoard walk erefS smashed, but the force of the break- efs was shown most In front the I Piper and Malarkey cottages, rock wall fronting Dr. Locked mer home was ripped away. The When James Klnkaid. wh.. o ate a large farm In Hurfivii. N J . returned from the PftltadelphU markets and figured out Ins retarn.1 from a two-horse wagonloa tUCS lad beets he found Ih i let-had BULBARS BATTER AT DEFENSES OF SERB'S CAPITAL Nish is Under Fire of the Enemy's Artillery According to Dispatch Received From Sofia. SHOWS 6REAT 6AIN MADE Bombardment H Directed Against the Outer Forts of the City Rus sian Troops on W'a to Inrado llni garla Are Approaching Varna Warships Are shelhng the Port. LONDON. Norv. 1 Serbia's war time capital, Nish. Is under fire of Bulgarian artillery, according to a Sofia dispatch. If true, It Indicates a rapid advance of 40 miles by the Bulgars. The report declared the Bulgars' fire Is directed to the outer forts of the city. P.ussian troops on the way to In vade Bulgaria were reported ap proaching Varna Sunday, while war ships convoying the transports blaz ed away with a bombardment of the port. Paris officially reported the Bulgars had withdrew to the Isttb region, after reconnoltering. 2 Women Spies in France go to Death After Found Guilty XO SE RET IS MADE Of EXECV TIOXS NOT LIKE CAVELI. 18E IT IS SAID. PARIS. Nov. L France makes no secret of the fact she has executed two women spies. Officials refuse to be drawn into a discussion from a standpoint of the German execution of Miss Cavell. The cases re not similar, according to French records. Miss Cavell was only charged with helping recruits escape from Belgi um, not with spying. Ottllie Vosa and Marguerite Schmidt, the women exe cuted in France were guilty of being '"' reoruary The Schmidt woman was given monev to rn to France. She Jiad a book of questions erman officers had prepared to ask In French. She was ed March :') for espionage. which for h, GrJece is " No Hurry Over Going Into the Struggle CH IXCEq OF ENTERING W In PRESENT TIME VRE VKln REMOTE. (BY WILLIAM SHEPHERD . i (Copyright 1915 by the Cnite.t press) ATHENS, Nov. l.-The ChSACeS of Greece entering the war ar. ,x tremely remote at tne present tune. Public opinion regarding Qr re'l participation is exactly what it is in the United States everybody w tats to keep out. If the Bulge uu should spill over the frontr. a small Greco-Bulgarian conflUt Is possible. Germany promises. how ever, the Bulgarians wiH not i the busy scene in the harbor raeus. the port of Athens PI- (erman Meter Bah bin L0UI8, Nov, I, Col Eeft ST f 111- Ger American Publishing nipi Ushers of the Times and the We.t llche Post, suicided earl', today by shooting himself in the hrad He n injured two years ago In an automo bile accident and bad nev-r full', re Covered 5 (MM) Bli.shHs of Bluestem are Sold CHICAGO. Nov I a afe 1 1 a A Nl, V"i I ' : mi , Maantten rive thousand buahsbj 0 .' A A. 95 1-: i-:. r