TIIE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1917 rape Two EVERYBODY KNOWS VALVE-IN-HEAD MEANS BUICK UICK Announcing New Models for 1918 THE NEW BUICK LINE for nineteen-eighteen is complete from every standpoint of finish, refinement, comfort and service and provides a car for every demand. The successful development of the valve-in-head motor by Buick builders proves what can be done when the idea is right and its application sound. NO DUST-NO EXPOSURE NEW MODEL BUICK VALVES ENCLOSED IN DUST-PROOF CASE. E- i E-34 E-35 E44 New Buick Prices : $920. ' E45 $141 5-pas. touring car, 6 cyl. $925. Two-passenger roadster. E46 $1845. '4-passenger Coupe, 6 cyl. $925. Five-passenger touring car. E-47 $1945. 5-passenger Sedan, 6 cyl. $1415. 3-pas. roadster; 6-cylinder. E-49 $1645. 7- pas. touring car, 6 cyl. E-50 $2325. 7 passenger Sedan, 6 cyl. ALBERT BO WKER LOCAL AGENT HEPPNER GARAGE TTTTtTTTtttTTTtTtI AAAAAAAAAAAAAA1 When it is Time to Eat JUST REMEMBER The 0. K. Restaurant CAN PREPARE THE HEAL THE WAY YOU WANT IT. OUR EXCEL LENT SERVICE IS MAINTAINED TO GIVE UTMOST SATISFACTION We Invite Your Patronage PROVIDENCE JOURNAL VULCANIZING , We do all work from the smallest patch to re-treading. Expert mechanics, and all work guaranteed. SEND YOUR TIKES BY PARCEL POST Arlington Vulcanizing Works TON! ClYITA, Prop. Arlington, Ore. MT. HOOP ICE CREAM Pure -:- Delicious -s- Refreshing Something Special Every Sunday ALL SOFT DRINKS SERVED HERE THE VERY BEST THE PALM LOWNEY'S CHOCOLATES BEST CANDIES The Story of How Wide Awake News paper Gathered Evidence Against Intriguers. The fololwing is the amazing story of how German plots and Intrigues against the American government were uncovered by the Providence Journal. Newspaper met guile with guile and spy with spy, and for al most three years kept our govern ment Informed of Teutonic Intrigue adn treachery in this country. The story of how this was done Is related by the editor of the Journal. How the Providence Journal met guile with sruile, and spy with spy, how it had its man in BernstorfE's' own household and its two wireless stations "listeniiift In" on the German Sayvllle "line" to Berlin how, in fact, this one New England newspaper for almost three years kept the United States gov ernment informed of the German-Austrian plots in America has at last been revealed. John It, Rathom, in a speech made at the convention of the Canadian Press association in Toronto, and reported in the Editor and Publisher from the Tor onto Star, weaves a story of plot and counter-plot as remarkable as any that have come from the pen of E. Phlllipn Oppenheim. And Mr. Kathom says thai he has a safe full of documents yet un used which he will pull out if the situa tion ever again requires it. The story bristles with dramatic lit. tie scenes almost unbelievable In hum drum America. There Is llernstorff's confidential secrelary at the last mo ment at Halifax revealing himself as an American. There Is the pretty stenoK rapher who sat on the packing box with Captain von Pnpen and made him write the evidence of his own guilt. And through it all tuns the trail of the "green blubber." which is Mr. Kath om's Word for the strange "air holes" In German brains which make them over look the most obvious things. We see the "gieen blubber" when Van Homo, the spy, dressed tip like a workman and then rode In a Pullman. Follows, too, the incident of the foolish street car fight that cost !octor Albert his fa mous portfolio of treacherous secrets. It' a irent Story. It's a geat ritrv-v, nnrl greater Btill in AG of fee Tip ONE WAY TO HELP REDUCE THE HIGH COST OF LIVING Everybody wins but the "Tin Trust.' ' Do you know it costs 7 cents per pound to put Coffee in the tins? That means you pay 40 cents for a 30c. to 33c. Coffee, or 20 waste, as the cans are useless to you. To get as near 100 food value for your money as possible, try our BULK COFFEE. VE WILL GRIND IT FCR YOU ON OUR NKW ELECTRIC COFFEE GRINDER A Complete Stock of both Bulk and Package Coffees Phelps Grocery Co. Its hints of what It might be. Her It is: "Th Providence JournaL." begin the Editor and Publisher, "happened upon its course of exposure through having had for 10 yean before the war what other papers described aa a 'bug on wirelesa telegraphy. The paper had maintained two powerful wireless planta at Point Judith and at Block Is land. When war broke out they had decided to 'listen In' on the messages crossing the Atlantic. For five months they kept record of these messages, and then they set out to find the codes and make revelations. Of the material they secured they used only a fractional part. "One of the newspaper's stenogra phers was sent and secured an appoint ment In the Austrian consulate In New York. Others of Its workers were con stantly engaged In shadowing Captain Boy-Ed, Captain Von Papon, former Austrian Ambassador Dumba, the Ger man Ambassador Bernstoiff and othe German and Austrian ortlclnls. The two wireless plants unceasingly lis tened In, two shifts of operators a' work dny and night, on Sayville and Nantucket, the two wireless station" which were being used mostlv hv the Germans to keep in touch with Berlin, from where they received instructions lor every detail of their plotting policy "For the United States government the Brooklyn navy yard had had In structions to keep a close watch on th' sayvllle and Nantucket stations, but nothing suspicious was" ever reported untu Mr. Katnom iook some or the met sages which he had received from hl operators to the state department. It was then learned that the navy yard operators had been in the pay of Ger man agents in America, and had been told not to hear too much. iBgralona Codes l ard. . : "The codes used by the Germans were of the most ingenious nature. Many of mem preienaea 10 oe siock quotations, and some were even done ud aa funeral directions. In some cases, however, the codes showed evidence of the "green blubber." referred to by the speaker, as on one occasion when Mr. Rathom was able to go to President Wilson and show him copies of eight separate mes sages seat by the wireless plant within nine days, all relating that "little Em- , uy naa aied or such ana such an- III' ness, In a certain part of a room, had been burled In a certain cemetery be side such and such a previously deceas ed relative. In every one of these mes sages the illness, the part of the room, the name of the relative, the cemetery and so on, varied, and a clear code was , detected in each of the messages. Greta Blabber la Brala. ' "The first revelation which Mr. Rath ; om told illustrated the Gorman capacity for blundering. It was the story of werner Horne me man who was re snonsible for the attempt to blow up the Vanceboro bridge. Home had been detected as a German spy by one of the Journal reporters in New York. In an effort to disguise himself Horne allowed his beard to grow for three days, put on an old suit which he purchased for three dollars (even this detail was re ported) and packed his personal effects in an old carpet bag. Having carried out these elaborate precautions he took passage for the point where the "Job" was to be done, on one of the finest and most luxurious trains in the United States. As is well known now, he was I caught. When asked later by Mr. Rathom why he had been foolish enouerh to travel first-class In such shabby dress. Horne replied that he was a German officer and a gentleman and always traveled In the best style. Pansport r'raud Outlined. "Another German scheme In which the Journal reporters outwitted the Teutons occurred soon after in New York also. A fraudulent passport- bu reau, operated by German officials, was discovered doing a land-office business in an office building on Broadway. The Journal men faking as a public ac countant on the one side, and a manu facturers' agent on the other sand wiched the passport forgers between then. Every word that passed in this office was recorded by means of instru ments used for that purpose, and re ported to the Providence Journal. When sufficient evidence was gathered the United States secret service was noti fied and the three forgers were taken away. As soon as they had been re moved three of the Journal's employees were allowed to take charge of the of fice to receive the patrons. It was not long after that Von Papen and the Ger man military attache at Tokyo came In with a list of names of men for whom they desired passports. The name at the top of the list was that of Werner Horne. Journal Man Uernstorff's Secretary. " 'A friend of mine,' said Mr. Rath om, 'thinking himself very friendly, but In a thing which I objected to, went to Paris and while there bought a lot of war relics. Among them was one of the first iron crosses that had been given by the German emperor to a major of a German regiment, who died on the field and whose cross had been taken from him and taken to Paris. It was sold to my friend, with statements as to whom It had belonged, and my friend sent it to me. I sent it to Bernstoiff with a letter, saying that that mark of honor able distinction of a man who had done hia duty for his country belongs to his family. I gave the name of the man and the name of the family, and begged him to take care of the cross so that It could be sent back after the war or at some time to the man's people. Tears Note to Piece. '" "The ambassador tore the note to pieces, threw the note in the face 01 the man I sent, and threw the cross on the floor, saving that, after having been defiled by the hands of American dogs, that cross was of no use to any body in Germany. I knew my man was telling the truth, becase the man I had In there reported the Incident to me exactly the way he did. Incidentally I might sav that the individual to whom I refer was in the German embassy 17 months as one of the ambassador's sec retaries, and the ambassador had no knowledge that he was not what he nretended to be until the Frederic VIII left New York for Halifax. He said to my man, "You had better get aboard of you will lose your boat," and he replied: "I am safer on this side." Mr. eBrnstorff had no idea of that i.intitt- ot whom bfl wns KArvin? until he left New York. And he wrote ti letter from Halifax to a friend in New York, which he attempted to get smu uoun, uui .......v..v. telling some of his friends what tie thOUlrni or inia iiiuiviuum. wlijii Hiiprfn Met Ilos'-Ed. " 'The famous Huerta cnHe, the at tempt of the German government to embroil us with Mexico, an attempt that the recent Zimmerman letter prov ed beyond any doubt to be true, was al ready proven uy um a iuuh liiho uuujid rariy hi i" don me for that; 1 mean our man, for I am not tne ituviuunuw .iuuiuu.i wn ordered by Captain Boy-Ed to go to New York and get a suite of six quiet rooms in a hotel where Hoy-Ed and his people couiu meet riueria. nuiuruiiy enougn, my nothing else than select the room we selected tor mm, hu no wbiu iw too Manhattan hotel and got a suite of rooms which he rigged up with the ap paratus 1 spoke of; and, to make as surance doubly sure, I got another man to act as chauffeur on the auto that brought Huerta. " 'They had their conference, and at the conclcuslon of that conference ev ery word that was uttered uttered throuh an Interpreter, because Boy-Ed did not speak Spanish was cent to the department of state the next morning. They had the entire facts before them and knew everything, and for several months later, when Boy-Ed and Bern storff were frothing at the mouth and uttering denials, the state denaitment had the very words that were utteren Romance Among; Spits. " 'Another Incident,' he continued, that ifc of great interest came when one of our valued and keenest sten ographers In our own office, a girl that came to us seven years ago from about 20 miles outside of Providence, was given a position in the oltice of the Austrian' consul general In New York city. Bhe had never been In New York (Continued on Page 7) WE SELL PURE WHITE FLOUR NONE BETTER HEPPNER FARMERS' UNION WAREHOUSE CO. WE HANDLE WHEAT AND WOOL. 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