WAR LORD mm Earl Kitchener Goes Down With Ship. ON WAY TO RUSSIA Warship Hampshire Car rying Minister and Staff Sunk by Mine or Tor pedo All Lost. London Admiral Jellicoe, com mander of the British grand fleet, has reported to the admiralty that the British cruiser Hampshire, with Earl Kitchener, British minister of war, and his staff aboard, has been lost off the West Orkneys. The Hampshire was sunk either by a mine or a tor pedo. Admiral Jellicoe reports there is little hope that there were any sur vivors. Earl Kitchener was on hiB way to Russia. The names of the members of Earl Kitchener's staff have not yet been learned. Sir William Robertson, chief of the imperial Btaff, is in Lon don. Accompanying Earl Kitchener as hiB staff were Hugh James O'Breine, for mer councillor of the British embassy at Petrogad, and former minister at Sofia; 0. A. Fitzgerald, Earl Kitch ener's private military secretary; Brigadier General Ellershaw and Sir Frederick Donaldon. Admiral Jellicoe's report to the ad miralty follows : "I have to report with deep regret that His Majesty's ship Hampshire, Captain Herbert J. Savill, R. N., with Lord Kitchener and his staff aboard, was sunk Monday at about 8 p. m., to' the west of the Orkneys either by a mine or a torpedo. "Four boats were seen by observers on shore to leave the ship. The wind was north, northwest and heavy seas were running. Patrol vesselB and de stroyers at once proceeded to the spot and a party was Bent along the coast to search, but only some bodies and a capsized boat have been found. As the whole shore has been searched . from the seaward I greatly fear that there is little hope of there being any survivorB. "No report has yet been received from the search party on shore. H. M. S. Hampshire was on her way to Russia." PRESIDENT CHINESE REPUBLIC IS DEAD Peking Vuun Shi Kai, president of the Chinese republic, died Tuesday. Premier Tunn Chi Jui immediately advised Li Yuan Hung, the vice presi dent, of his succession to the presi dency. Yuan Shi Kai had been ill for sev eral days with stomach trouble, which was followed by a nervous breakdown. Quiet prevails in the capital. The death of the president apparently solves the heated political problem. Li Yuan Huiig'a succession to the presidency meets the demands of the leaders in the Southern provinces. British Lose Lata Gains. British Headquarters in France The British and Germans are fighting hard In the region of Ypres, where last Saturday the Brtiish in hand-to-hand encounters recaptured most of the trenches the GermanB had taken from them peviouBly in the sector from the Ypres-Coniines canal to Hooge Point. In the face of repeated attacks the British have been unable to retain the bulk of the recaptured ground, but still are fighting strenuously to keep what they have and to recapture what they have lost. $711,828 Awarded Indians. Washington, D. C. Judgment against the United States for $711,828 was rendered by the Court of Claims in favor of tho Mtlle Lac tribe of Chippewa Indians, Minnesota, in con sideration of lands and timber taken by the government, homesteaders and the state of Minnesota. The judgment is based on an award to the Indians of credit for 31.G92 acres of land and $202,318 on account of value of timber cut from the lands with interest. Pablo Lc-ei It Executed. Chihuahua City, Mex. Pablo Lopez, Villa a chief lieutenant In the raid up on Columbus, N. M., Tuesday paid the penalty for hia crimes. He faced firing squad of constitutionalists sol diers at Santa Rosa Italian! Repulse Attack. Rome Austrian attacks in the La- garina valley, where a vigorous at tempt was made to carry the import ant Italian positions at Coni Zugna, were repulsed with heavy losses, the war office announces. TORNADO IN ARKANSAS TAKES DEATH TOIL OF FIFTY-NINE Little Rock, Ark. Fifty-nine per sons are reported killed and more than 100 injured in a series of tornadoes which swept Arkansas Monday after noon. All means of communication are crippled and it is feared the list of dead and injured will be greatly in creased by later reports. At least four persons were killed and half a dozen others were injured seriously in a tornado which swept across Garland county and through the southwest portion of Hot Springs, Ark. The electric light and power plant there was put out of commission and the city was without lights of car service. The storm came from the southwest, touching the city first in the vicinity of Oaklawn. There a Methodist church was blown down. Then the wind crushed a few frame buildings across from the Oaklawn track entrance. Farther on several small houses were lifted and crumpled until the wind reached the Majestic park, which is the Spring training home of the Boston Americans. That was swept clean. Then the electric power plant was struck and damaged. From that point northeast, where many homes were damaged and much property was lost. The dead thus far reported are as follows: Judsonia, White county, 25 known dead and 50 injured. Heber Springs, 18 dead. De Lark, Dallas county, 4 dead. Cabot, White county, 5 dead. Hot SpringB, 4 dead. Morrillton, 1 dead. Greenland Washington county, 2 dead. North Arkansas appears to have suffered most severely although the storm was general throughout the state. At Judsonia one-third of the town was said to have been swept away, Twenty-five bodies and 50 injured al ready had been taken from the ruins, Senate Is Accused of Violating Parliamentary Law of Adjournment Washington, D. C. Members of the house were much exercised Tuesday over what they insisted waB a viola tion by the senate of the constitution al provision that neither house shall adjourn for more than three days at a time without the consent of the other. The senate adjourned Saturday until noon lhursday, the leaders counting that a three-day recess because of the intervening Sunday. Republican Leader Mann, supported by Represent ative Garret, of Tennessee, and other house parliamentarians, brought the matter formally to the attention of Speaker Clark, and the Speaker agreed that a bad precedent had been Bet. Later Democrat senators suggested informally that the house dispose of the situation by adopting a resolution consenting to a four-day adjournment. It was said this might be done. Force on Greece Urged. Petrograd The Russian press urges the entente powers to bring pressure ot bear on Greece because of the an tagnostic attitude of that country, Something of a sensation has been caused by the articles, especially those in the Bourse Gazette, expressing the opinion that the king of Greece "would do well to take a rest of some duration at some place better for his health than Athens." The other papers denounce "the po litical felony" of Greece toward the entente. The Novoe Vremya declares the measures taken at Saloniki as in sufficient and calls upon the entente powers to take necessary steps at Piraeus and Athens. Goethals Ready to Rest. Washington, D. C. Major General George W. Goethals, governor of the Canal Zone, conferred with Secretary Baker, and is understood to have reit erated his desire to retire to private life. Secretary Baker declined to dis cuss that feature of the conference, He probably will present the General's request to President Wilson within a few days. General Goethals expressed satisfaction with the condition of the canal, telling the secretary that ade quate precautions had been taken to guard against recurrence of slides. Tornadoes Kill 107. Kansas City Death lists in the storm-swept sections of Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi and Illinois grew hourly as belated reports were re ceived from communtiies which suf fered in a series of tornadoes Monday night and early Tuesday. The deaths of 107 persons had been reported, a number of other persons were unac counted for, and believed dead, and several hundred had been injured, of whom some will die. . Treason Laid to Mexican. Chihuahua City, Mex. A Mexican, giving his name as Luis Sanchez Mena, was arrested by military authorities here on a charge of attempting to ob tain promises from other Mexicans to aid Americans in the event of Ameri can intervention. Military authorities say Mena confessed and that he is be ing held for trial by court-martial. Uruguay Will Send Help. Montevideo, Uruguay The Uru guayan government will dispatch the small steamship Institutopesca to the rescue of the Shackleton expedition. WORLD'S DOINGS OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume of General News from All Around the Earth. UNIVERSAL HAPPENINGS INANUTSHEU Live News Items of AH Nations and Pacific Northwest Condensed for Our Busy Readers. One hundred and eight precincts out of a total of 2297 in the state of Iowa give for suffrage 8069, against, 11,062. Every state in the Union is repre sented among the 1700 men who have arrived at the first Plattsburg, N. Y., camp of military instruction. Only the signature of President Wil son is now lacking to complete the final enactment of the Oregon and Cal ifornia land-grant law, the house hav ing ratified the conference report. The suit brought by George J. Gould and other trustees of the estate of Jay Gould to recover $1,741,000 from the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern railway was dismissed by Federal Judge Hand. The Hawley Pulp & Paper company, of Oregon City, announces a change in its mills from the two-shift to the three-shift plan. More than 60 more men will be employed under the new arrangement. Russian forces have won great suc cesses along the tront trom the 1'ripet marshes to the Roumanian frontier, according to an official announcement from Petrograd. It is stated that the Russians took 13,000 prisoners. The U. S. Supreme court interpreted the Harrison Federal Drug Act of 1914, making it unlawful for any per son not registered under the law to have opium in his possession, as apply ing only to those who deal in the drug and not to those who use it. Possible danger that the present Btrike of the Butte Workingmen's Union might spread to the mines was dissipated when the electricians in the employ of the mining companies met and determined not to go out in sym pathy with the smaller unions of the city under any circumstances. The British destroyer Acasta, which the Germans reported they had sunk, has arrived at a northeast coast port under tow of another deBtroyer. The shell which put her out of action, after she had been in the thick of the fight ing for 40 minutes, exploded in the engine-room, killing five men. The U. S. Supreme court holds that interurban electric cars, crossing state lines, are amenable to the safety ap pliance act, although they move for a part of the route in a city service. Conviction of the Spokane & Inland Empire Railroad company, operating from Spokane to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, for failure to comply with the act, was upheld and a $1500 fine imposed. A Reuter dispatch form Zurich says that members of the German Land sturm, class of 1917, who are living abroad, have been ordered to return home immediately. The Landsturm is a home defense force whicli in cludes, in addition to trained soldiers between the ages of 39 and 45, all those between the ages of 17 and 39 who have received no military train ing. Progress toward the completion of the new automobile consolidation, which embraces the Willys-Overland, the Hudson and the Chalmers automo bile companies, as well as allied con cerns, including the Autolite company, was announced Wednesday. The new company, probably will bear the cor porate title of the American Motors company, with $70,000,000 of pre ferred stock. A Berlin dispatch to the Copenhagen Politiken says that the court which conducted the preliminary examination of Dr. Karl Liebknecht, the Socialist leader, decided that he should be pun ished for treason. The Cologne Volka Zeitung says it is reported, although not confirmed, that King Victor Emmanuel and his special staff have departed from the Italian general headquarters at Udine on ac count of the Austrian offensive and re tired to Venice. Pierre Dreyfus, son of Commandant Alfred Dreyfus, of the famous "Drey fus Affair, " who has been serving on the Verdun front as second lieutenant in the artillery, has just been cited in the orders of the day for having "par ticularly distinguished himself during the violent engagements of February 26, 27 and 28" in the battle of Verdun. lwenty persona were killed or wounded in an outbreak at Maracaibo, Venezuela, against General Garcia, who has been appointed president of the state of Zulta. The planting of 600 acres of land in the Sutherlin, Ore., district to Bugar beets has been completed and the growing crop is considered one of the best prospects In the Northwest Mrs. Josiah Evans Cow lea, of Los Angeles, has been elected president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs by a large majority, defeating Mrs. Samuel B. Sneath, of Tiffin, O. FOR PREPAREDNESS Chicago Has 130,214 People in Line In Behalf of Defense. PORTLAND HAS BIG SHOWING Other Cities Also Indulge in Monster Celebrations to Give Emphasis to National Welfare Call. Chicago The greatest parade ever held in Chicago ended Saturday night after 130,214 persons, one-sixth of whom were women, had filed through the streets in the preparedness demon stration. The parade was 111 hours in passing. More than 1,000,000 per sons are estimated to have witnessed it. The night division was made up largely of militia organizations, which included all branches of the army and navy service. The parade began at 9 o'clock in the morning and did not conclude until nearly midnight. All day long and far into the night the marchers, massed from curb to curb, rolled like a tide through the streets. It was as if the great sky scrapers were the banks of a river and the marching thousands, each person with an American flag, the water mov ing between them. Major General T. H. Barry, com mander of the Central department, U. S. A., who sat in the reviewing stand, declared it to be the greatest and most inspiring spectacle he had ever wit nessed. The demonstration impressed by its bulk, and by the absence, to a large extent, of the hilarity accompanying most parades. There were no floats, no comic costumes and little of the holiday spirit apparent. The airs played by the bands either were pat riotic or military. Portland Has 15,000 in Line. Portland Prepare! This was the unquestioned sentiment of what is variously estimated at between 15,000 and 20,000 citizens who marched through Portland's streets Saturday night, their Bhoulders squared, their heads up, alert and ready, facing the duties of today with confidence and courage. It was one of the biggest parades ever held in Portland. It required one hour and five minutes to pass a given point. On this basis it is estimated that the number in line was approximately 15,000. This was the figure of Judge C. U. Gantenbein, chairman of the committee on arrangements, who saw the entire lines pass in review. Other unofficial estimates placed the number at as high as 20,000. The marching column called atten tion to a world on fire, and drew all eyes to the lamentable fact that Amer ica is living in a house immeasurably far from being fire-proof. The flags that fluttered everywhere waved the messaged to prepare, to guard the country from every possible ill, and they roused in the watching thousands the spirit of the occasion. School Girls Form Living Flag. Providence, R. I. Rhode Island men and women 52,522 strong marched here Saturday in a preparedness parade. The procession was nearly Beven hours in passing the reviewing stand. A feature was a living flag, composed of 1560 schoolgirls. 17,000 Parade in Rain. Hartford, Conn. Men and women, estimated in number at fully 17,000, marched here Saturday afternoon in a "preparedness parade, " Rain fell at frequent intervals, but the 16 divisions swung steadily along, taking nearly two and a half hours to pass a given point. 60,000 in St. Louis Demonstration. St. Louis More than 50,000 St. Louisiana marched through the streets here Saturday ' to demonstrate the city's overwhelming favor toward Na toinal preparedness. 10,000 March at Salt Lake, .Salt Lake City The "preparedness" parade here Saturday afternoon brought out a body of marchers es timated at more than 10,000. 6000 Parade at Lima. Lima, O. Six thousand prepared ness advocates marched in a parade here Saturday. Every marcher car ried a flag. 5000 in Parade at Springfield, O. Springfield, O. City and county officials led a preparedness parade in which 5000 persons participated here Saturday. Mail Rifled of $4000, Roundup, Mont A pouch containing registered mail was cut open and rifled of between $4000 and $5000 in curren cy in the Milwaukee depot in Roundup Thursday night, according to informa tion given out by postal authorities. The cache is said to have consisted of bank remittances and postal funds from Klein to the depositary at Hel ena. The registered packages were inclosed in an ordinary first-class mail pouch. The robbery was not discov ered until the clerk on the train opened the pouch to sort its contents. BRITISH CLAIM GERMANY'S LOSS IN NAVAL FIGHT WAS HEAVIER London The British admiralty Mon day issued a statement saying there was the strongest ground for the be lief that the British navy in the bat tle with the Germans off Jutland last week had accounted for a total of 18 German men-of-war, and that there was nothing to add to or substract from the original announcement of the British losses. The statement gave the German losses as two batttleships, two dread naught battle cruisers, four light cruisers, nine torpedo boat destroyers and a submarine. The pessimism which prevailed as a result of the admiraltiy's original statement of losses, which is . consid ered to have been needlessly candid and conservative in underestimating the extent of the German losses, as compared with those of Great Britain, has been greatly lessened by the latest statement. A dispatch from Copenhagen says rumors are current in Hamburg that two additional German warships be sides those announced in the German communication the battleship West falen and the battle cruiser Lutzowd were sunk in battle. A wireless dis patch received here Saturday from Berlin said the German admiralty ad mitted the loss of the Westfalen. The admiralty statement declares that the German losses in the fight were not only relatively, but absolute ly, greater than those of the British. Maintaining its practice of caution, the admiralty still refrains from giv ing the names of the lost German ships. The official list of the casualties among officers shows that hardly a single officer of the line escaped from the British cruisers sunk in the battle, An additional casualty list of petty officers shows that 43 of them were saved from the Queen Mary, Invinci ble, Fortune, Ardent and Shark. None was saved from the Indefatigible, De fense, Black Prince, Tipperary, Turbu lent, Nomad or NeBtor. Great Oriental Freight Cargo and San Francisco Pier Burn San Francisco Five thousand tons of frieght from the Orient, which were unloaded Sunday from the Shin- yo Maru No. 2, a Japanese freighter, and a concrete pier recently erected by the state at the mouth of Islam Creek, were destroyed in a spectacular blaze of unknown origin here early Monday. The Shinyo and the General Forbes, another freighter, which were tied to the pier, were slightly damaged before they could be removed from the fire's reach. Steamship men said the loss would reach -close to $800,000. The Shinyo arrived Wednesday, bJt the cargo was not touched until Sun day, when its owners granted the de mands of the striking longshoremen. The boat was emptied at 11 o'clock Sunday night, three hours before the fire started. Two coal barges and several box cars were also damaged. One of the barges, the Melrose, the largest on the bay, which was tied to the pier, drift ed out into tne stream with her cargo ablaze when her moorings burned. She bumped another coal barge, which was anchored off the pier. Both burned freely until fire tugs flooded the coal, Later the two broke loose and drifted down the hay with their cargoes smouldering. Tugs caught up with them off the Ferry building. Several narrowly escaped being burned. Customs Lieutenant Patrick Barrett and a pier watchman were on the pier when the fire started. The flames spread rapidly and drove the two men aboard the Forbes. When the fire broke out, Japanese swarmed from the Shinyo'fl forecastle and spread over the ship, seeking ref uge. One jumped overboard, but hi; mates hauled him back on a life pre server. From nearby cities and from far out at sea the sheets of fire and the' glare could be seen. The blaze was the most spectacular and destructive that has visited the local waterfont in years. Shackleton Relief Fixed. London Plans for the relief of Lieutenant Sir Ernest Shackleton, who, with several of his men, is ma rooned in the Antarctic, were com pleted at a meeting of a committee of the Royal Geographical society. A relief ship will sail from London by August 1 for Weddell Sea by way of Buenos Aires and the Falkland Islands. The ship probably will follow the plan of the Aurora, the auxiliary bark of the Shackleton expedition, which drifted from her moorings, and will be fitted out in Buenos Aires. Ice Sweeps Alaska Town. Nome, Alaska Council City was al most completely swept away by float ing ice cakes from the Neukluk river late Sunday. Many buildings in the lower part of the town were demol ished. The ice jammed in a canyon a short distance below the settlement, causing the water to back up, and, with its burden of heavy ice, to flood the streets. A blizzard raged here also, and sluicing operations which began a few days ago, were suspended. Marines Are Reinforced. San Diego, Cal. The Fourth regi ment of Marines, stationed here, has left for New Orleans, where it will embark for Haiti and Santo Domingo on the transport Hancock. It is un derstood the Fourth regiment will sup plement the marines already on duty in the turbulent island republics. GERMANS VICTORS IN BIG SEA FIGHT Fourteen British, Nine German Ships Admitted to Have Been Sunk. IATEST BATTLE IN HISTORY l-Night Engagement in North Sea Greatly Aided by Zeppelins Casualties Reported High. London Picking its way from its base in the Kiel Canal, the German high-sea fleet Wednesday afternoon emerged into the North Sea, and, off the coast of Jutland, engaged a British fleet throughout the afternoon and night in what probably was the great est naval battle in the world's history so far as tonnage engaged and tonnage destroyed was concerned. When the battle ended Great Britain had lost the battle cruisers Queen Mary, Indefatigable and Invincible, the cruisers Defence, Black Prince and Warrior and eight torpedo boat de stroyers. The German battleship Pommern was sent to the bottom by a torpedo and the cruiser Wiesbaden sunk by the British gunfire. In addition several German torpedo craft are missing and the small cruiser Frauenlob was seen badly listing and was believed to have gone to the bottom. These losses have all been admitted by Great Britain and Germany. Aside from Great Britain s conceded losses, Germany says that the British battleship Warsprite, BiBter ship of the Queen Elizabeth, and one of the largest and most powerful ships afloat, had been sunk ; that the battleship Marlborongh, a vessel of 25,000 tons, had been hit by a torpedo, and a sub marine had been destroyed. Great Britain also added to Ger many's acknowledged losses with the claim that one dreadnaught of the Ger mna Kaiser class vessels of 24,700 tons and carrying a complement of 1088 men had been attacked and de stroyed by British torpedo craft; that another battleship of the same class was believed to have been sunk by gunfire; that one battle cruiser had been blown up and two others damaged and that six destroyers and a subma rine also had been sent to the bottom. Great Britain's admitted loss in ton nage was 114,810 for six battle cruis ers and cruisers. That of Germany, excluding the tonnage of the Wiesba den, of which vessel there is no rec ord, was 15,172. That the casualties in the fighting off Jutland were heavy is indicated by the fact that of the crew of some 900 on board the Indefatigable only two men are known to have been saved. Six Zeppelins participated in the naval engagement, according to a dis patch from Copenhagen to the Daily Mail. One of the dirigibles, the L-24, was hit several times and badly dam aged, the report says, but she was able to reach the Schleswig coast. Several of her men were wounded, and all of her supplies had to be thrown over board. The scene of the battle was in the Eastern waters of the North Sea. It is probable that the German fleet was on one of the excursions into the North Sea, which it has taken from time to time during the war, and met, whether or not by design, with the British fleet4 Skager-Rak is an arm of the North Sea between Norway and Denmark. The point referred to in the official German statement as Horn Riff prob ably is the reef off the Horn, on the southwestern extremity of Denmark This would indicate that the battle was fought off the coast of Denmark. From the reef to Helgoland, the main German naval base in the North Sea, is about 1U0 miles. A dispatch from Copenhagen de clares it is generally Btated in Berlin that the activity of the German fleet was due to the energetic demands of Emperor William to his brother, Ad miral Prince Henry of Prussia, commander-in-chief of the navy, and Ad miral von Capelle, minister of the navy, on the emperor's visit last week to Wilhelmshaven. Torpedo Boats First In Fight. Copenhagen A Danish steamer re ports that Wednesday afternoon, 120 miles off Hanstholm, it was stopped by two British torpedo-boats to have its papers examined. At the same mo ment a large German fleet appeared, and the British warships immediately prepared for action. The German fleet consisted of five large modern dread naughts, eight cruisers and 20 torpedo boats and destroyers. Suddenly they began firing, and hundreds of shells splashed around the torpedo boats, without, however, hitting them. Battle Aid to Peace. Washington, D. C. Reports of the naval engagement in the North Sea aroused the greatest interest here, not only in naval circles, but at the vari ous belligerent embassies and amang administration officials. It was freely predicted that if the German fleet demonstrated a real superiority, ship for ship, the effects on the prospects for peace would be considerable. The particulars received here were inadequate as a basis for judgment J