THE WORLD HAPPENINGS OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest and Other Things Worth Knowing. General Michael V. Alexief has been definitely appointed commander- in-chief of the Russian armies. He was appointed acting commander-in- chief few weeks ago. Eight men of undetermined nation­ ality were arrested by San Bernardino County, Cal., authorities charged with having damaged a United States U- boat chaser that was being shipped by freight. John D. Rockefeller’s Pocantico Hills estate of 6000 acres is to be transformed into a vegetable garden for the benefit of the residents of Tar­ rytown, it is announced by Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. The senate adopted a resolution Tuesday by Senator Owen expressing its approval of President Wilson’s proclamation to the people calling on all for war service. This action was taken without debate. The government has saved $850,000 on cartridge cases bought for the navy under the new agreement made with copper producers by Bernard Baruch, of the advisory commission of the Council of National defense. A British steamer reports that she engaged in a running fight with a sub- marine while off the coast of Ireland on a westbound trans-Atlantic trip re­ cently. The steamer escaped in a smoke screen which she threw out when the chase started. a A special service will be held in Manchester, England, Cathedral Fri­ day “to invoke a divine benediction on the strengthened ties between Great Britain and the United States.” The Lord Mayor will attend in his official capacity as representative of the city. President Menocal, of Cuba, has an­ nounced ‘ in Havana that the entire Cuban army of 25,000 men will be placed at the orders of the United States government for service through- out the war with Germany, according to Eduardo R. Mendez, a Cuban sugar planter. Representative Britten, of Illinois, has introduced a resolution that ex­ emption of married men from military duty under any future compulsory serv­ ice legislation shall not apply to those married after April 1 this year, except under a special order by the secretary of War. The German legation and consulate at Buenos Ayres, have been attacked by a mob, as have the newspapers Deutsche La Plata Zeitung and La Union. The windows of the buildings were broken. The police dispersed the manifestants, making numerous ar­ rests. The editor of the German news­ paper was wounded, as were several of the demonstrators. WARNS OF TREASON President Wilson Makes Proclamation Defining Offenses Against United States—Penalties are Severe. Washington, D. C.—All persons in the United States, citizens and aliens, are warned in a proclamation issued Tuesday by President Wilson that treasonable acts or attempts to shield those committing such acts will be vigorously prosecuted by the govern­ ment. The proclamation defines treason, citing statutes, provisions of the con­ stitution and decisions of the courts, and declares that the acts described will be regarded as treasonable whether committed within the borders of the United States or elsewhere. Far-reaching importance attaches to the direction of the warning to aliens and the declaration that resident aliens, as well as citizens, owe alleg­ iance to the United States, “and there­ fore are equally subject to the laws against treason and like crimes.” At war, the United States is in a very different position from a neutral. Bomb plotters may now be gripped with an iron hand. Not only are con­ spirators themselves subject to heavy penalties, but anyone, even a German resident, who has knowledge of trea­ sonable acts and fails to make known the facts to the authorities, may be sent to prison for seven years and fined $1000 for concealment of treason. 100 Cars of Wheat to Leave Northwest Warehouses Daily For a time about 100 carloads of wheat will leave the Northwest each day for the Atlantic seaboard, destined for the allies in Europe, the initial railroad lines having agreed to give foodstuffs right of way and the quick­ est possible dispatch. It is said the unprecedented action on the part of the railroads was brought about by influence of the Brit­ ish and American governments, the former having demonstrated to author­ ities at Washington the imperative need of hurrying wheat supplies with­ out delay. They in turn enlisted the aid of the railroad heads. Purchases by the British government have been exceptionally heavy of late, and while they bought in large amounts before, much wheat remained stored in warehouses in the interior because of the inability of shippers to obtain cars. Furthermore, because of the conges­ tion in the East, cars have been block­ ed en route and it has proved difficult to keep the movement regular so that vessels held at Atlantic Coast ports could be loaded for Europe. Germans Lose 4,180,966. London—German casualties, as re­ ported in the German official lists for the month of March, total 54,803 men, according to a statement made public here. The statement says that the March casualties, added to those reported previously, bring the total given in the German official lists since the begin­ ning of the war to 4,180,966, as fol­ lows: Killed or died of wounds, 960,- 760; died of sickness, 63,920; prison- ers or missing, 512,858; wounded, 2,- 643,428. ________________ Carranza Forces Near Border. Calexico, Cal. — Two hundred Car­ ranza soldiers, with an airplane and machine guns, are encamped at the mouth of the Colorado river, opposite La Bolsa, Lower California, 60 miles southeast of here, according to a man who arrived Sunday. He reported the Mexican gunboat Guerrero had re­ turned to Guaymas, after being in the The Uruguayan government has is- upper part of the Gulf of California ued a decree of neutrality in the war several days, but it was not known between the United States and Ger- whether the mission of the vessel was to bring in reinforcements as had been many. It is decided in Paris that the, Laf­ ayette flying squadron, composed of Americans who have distinguished themselves at the front, will change from the French to the American mili­ tary uniform. Hereafter they will carry the American flag at the French front. The Norwegian Shipping Gazette gives the total Norwegian losses to March 24 as 312 steamers of a tonnage of 493,143 and 80 ships of a tonnage of 65,357, as a result of submarines and mines. The number of men and women who perished is given as 312 and the missing as 25. Lady Walnut Hill, of Lexington, Ky., a pullet in the Federal egg-laying contest, failed Friday to continue her remarkable cycle. The pullet the day before laid her 94th consecutive egg. Thia is 12 eggs more than the previous known world's record of 82 eggs made in a Missouri egg-laying contest. Villa Again Disappears. Juarez—Francisco Villa, with his characteristic cunning, is believed to have slipped out of the trap carefully laid by General Francisco Murguia to capture him in Western Chihuahua General Murguia was at El Valle, south of Casas Grandes, Monday, and his scouts have been unable to locate Villa and his forces in the Namiquipa district, where he was reported to save gone following the fight at San Andres on April 3. John D.'s Brother Dies. Cleveland, Ohio—Frank Rockefeller, 72, youngest brother of John D. Rock­ efeller, died Sunday. He was not on speaking terms with his brother, John D., as a result of a quarrel they had years ago. Frank Rockefeller was a brother of John D. and William A. Rocke­ feller, and was for many years asso- elated with them in the oil busi­ ness, but was not as widely known as they. HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON. NO MEALTICKETS FOR AMERICA" Is Slogan of National League for Women’s Service, Which Urges Food Production by Women. Oregon, Washington and Idaho to Help Meet Great Needs. With the food supply problem be- coming serious, the National League for Woman’s Service is appealing to every woman to enter the service of her country by practising economy in her home. Further, through its agri­ cultural division, the league is laying plans to increase the crops by organ­ izing home-garden efforts wherever women can be taught to utilize avail­ able space for growing the most needed of foodstuffs. “No meal tickets for America” is the slogan, and the league is prepared to send out printed suggestions as to how women can help to obviate any need of putting our population on gov- erhment-ordered rations. “The woman in the home can help, for example, by saving the water in which she boils her vegetables,” said Miss Grace Parker, national command­ ant of the league. “This water con­ tains nutritious juices and makes very good soups and sauces—only a slight economy, but very worth while when we consider what the women of other countries have done to solve their food problems. “She can help still further by pre­ serving and canning more than for­ merly, so helping to save the general stock of food, which will be depleted as a result of the reduction of food­ producing activities by service at the front or in the industries.” The National League for Woman’s Service, with headquarters in New York City, now has hundreds of thou­ sands of women enrolled through scores of co-operating organizations in 34 states, and is working in conjunction with the National Council of Defense and the department of Labor in urging the women of the country to increase and conserve the nation’s food supply. Here are some of the striking points emphasized by the league: Bread and bullets are equally essen­ tial. A nation fights on its stomach. Victory depends on the food supply. Every woman can serve her country effectively by helping to solve the food supply problem, which is already becoming acute. Plant a kitchen garden; encourage your neighbors to do likewise. Avoid waste in buying, preparing, cooking, and serving. Do without food that you don’t need. Observance of these simple rules on the part of American housewives will obviate the necessity of government- issued meal tickets. Call at the local branch of the Na­ tional League for Woman’s Service for directions as to how you can co- operate. State of Idaho to Raise Crops—Idle Acres Bloom Boise — Governor Alexander has asked B. Harvey Allred, director of the farm markets bureau, to direct the planting of vacant grounds owned by the state in the vicinity of state char­ itable and penal institutions to crops this spring. The asylum at Blackfoot has 4000 acres of land that can be cultivated; the state penitentiary has 1000 acres of uncleared and in the Gem district farm, and the institution for the feeble-minded at Nampa and the state sanitarium at Orofino both have large tracts of land that the governor wants cropped. If necessary, said the governor in his letter to the head of the farm mar­ kets bureau, the state should provide seed for planting purposes and the teams with which to cultivate its va­ cant lands at the institutions. Washington Urged by Secre­ tary to Plant More Wheat Farmers of the spring wheat belt of Washington, Montana and Idaho are called upon by Secretary Houston to plant more wheat immediately to make up the serious shortage threat­ ened by the unpromising condition of the winter wheat crop. ‘ Action at once is imperative, said the secretary, and the best opportun­ ities will be found in the regions in which spring wheat already is pro­ duced extensively. “Attempts to increase the acreage of spring wheat outside the present spring wheat belt, on the other hand, might prove less successful, because of a lack of familiarity by farmers with the crop,” continued the statement, "and especially because of the diffi-1 cuity of obtaining harvesting machin- | A letter from Miss Pauline Jordan, of Haverhill, Mass, who went with a Red Cross party to Bucharest last No- vember, brought the information that 6000 Canadians is Cost. she had been imprisoned by the Ger­ Ottawa, Ont.—Estimates of Cana­ mans. She wrote that she had been placed in a basement, which was bit­ dian losses around Vimy, based on terly cold, and was provided with only good authority, place the casualties from the commencement of the Vimy a little food. offensive until Tuesday night at be­ The strike that recently was de- tween 500C and 6000. Three hundred Wilson Behind the Hoe. dared in 60 vaudeville theaters and thirty Canadian officers fell last Washington, D. C.—The White house throughout the country by the White week on Vimy ridge, according to the is about to join the increased food pro­ Rata Actors' union and Associated Ac- information. The totals include killed duction movement with a garden, in tresses of America, has been suspend­ and wounded, with the latter dominat- which Presdient Wilson may wield a ing.________________ ed by the unions. hoe when he finds a spare moment. Farmers Are Summoned. With the approval of Secretary Tu­ Rioting in several towns in Bulgaria is reported in a dispatch from the Sacramento, Cat—At the recom­ multy Whitehouse employes obtained French headquarters on the Macedon­ mendation of the state council of de­ permission to use for gardening pur­ ian front. In Sofia German cavalry is fense, Governor Stephens haa issued a poses a half acre of vacant land in said to have charged the rioters, caus­ proclamation celling upon producers down town Washington. The assist­ ing many casualties. In some cases, and distributors of foodstuffs to set ance of the department of Agriculture the dispatch reports Bulgarian troops aside their usual occupations and at­ will be asked in selecting seed for the have taken aides with the manifest- tend a aeries of conferences to be held land, and there will be a formal break­ ing of ground. ants. April 28. ery and the added likelihood of the crop suffering for a lack of labor at harvest time. “A concentration of large crop pro­ duction will make possible the more effective utility of labor, whether the laborers assemble individually or un­ der a directing agency. “The bulk of spring wheat of the United States is grown in five states, North Dakota, Minnesota, South , Da­ kota, Washington and Montana. While production is relatively small in the remaining states, a number of com­ munities exist in each of these states in which the growing of spring wheat is well established. Such communi­ ties, like those in the principal spring wheat growing states, offer good fields for the extension of the spring wheat acreage. “Seeding is already under way throughout the greater portion of the spring wheat belt, but in many sec­ tions it should be possible to increase appreciably the area seeded to wheat during the next few weeks. Where such increase would interfere with the conduct of an established industry, such as dairying, it would of course be inadvisable.” Oregon Leagues Busy For More Food—Railroads Help Oregon is going to do its share to meet President Wilson’s appeal for bigger crops, more food, thrift and economy. The Oregon Patriotic Service League has taken official cognizance of the President’s message to the people of the nation and will endeavor to spread the doctrine broadcast through the state. Orders were issued to have 5000 copies of the special message, together with the same number of copies of President Wilson’s classic war mes­ sage, printed and distributed to the farmers. They will be sent to the head of every grange in Oregon. In addition to this, people in the cit­ ies and small rural communities will be asked to turn their back yards and idle acres into gardens. The season is late and immediate action is necessary. Every piece of land that can be farmed must be farmed this year, says H. H. Ward, president of the league, who is pushing the campaign with vigor. Governor Withycombe has issued a personal appeal to residents of the state asking them to join in the move­ ment. He wants every boy and girl in Ore­ gon to do something in the patriotic cause of increasing the state’s food production. The children should be employed, during vacation season, in cultivating back yards and gardens, he says. The government reports on the win­ ter wheat crop show it to be far below normal — only 63 per cent. Unless conditions improve in the next few weeks this means that the country will be short millions of bushels this year. Even if the spring wheat crop is above normal the price will be distressingly high. The high price of wheat is expected to stimulate the farmers to increased energy. They will sow bigger acre­ ages of spring wheat, but the total crop of the Northwest threatens to be exceedingly short. The railroads have come to the sup­ port of the campaign by offering free use of their right of way and other lands, not otherwise utilized, by people who want to farm them in accordance with the President’s appeal. The O.-W. R. & N. company, the North Bank system, and the Portland Railway, Light & Power company have offered their property to their own respective employes, but if it is not taken up by employes it will.be offered to the general public. The Laurehurst district in Portland has been particularly active in this connection. Some time ago officials of the Laurelhurst Club opened a “clear­ ing house” for lot owners and persons desiring to use the lota. As a result more than 1200 lots will be cultivated. A few more are available and can be procured by deserving persons who are willing to use them. So that there will be no conflict of purpose in the conservation work of the state, efforts are being made to direct all such activity through the offices of the Oregon Patriotic Service League, which maintains branches in many cities and towns of Oregon and which hopes to organize in others. ALL ASKED TO HELP President Wilson Appeals to Every Man, Woman and Child, to Aid U. S. Increase Production. Washington, D. C. — In a personal appeal addressed Sunday night to his fellow countrymen, President Wilson calls on every American citizen—man, woman and child, to join together to make the Nation a unit for the preser­ vation of its ideals and for triumph of democracy in the world war. “The supreme test of the Nation haa come,” says the address. “We must all speak, act and serve together.” Putting the Navy on a war footing and raising a great Army are the sim­ plest parts of the great task ahead, the President declares. - . He urges all the people, with par­ ticular emphasis on his words to the farmers, to concentrate their energies, practice economy, prove unselfishness and demonstrate efficiency. The ad­ dress in part follows : “My fellow countrymen: “The entrance of our beloved coun­ try into the grim and terrible war for democracy and human rights which had shaken the world, creates so many problems of National life and action which call for immediate consideration and settlement that I hope you will permit me to address to you a few words of earnest counsel and appeal with regard to them. “We are fighting for what we be­ lieve and wish to be the rights of mankind and for the future peace and security of the world. “To do this great thing worthily and successfully, we must devote ourselves to the service without regard to profit or material advantage and with an en­ ergy and intelligence that will rise to the level of the enterprise itself. We must realize to the full how great the task and how many things, how many kinds and elements of capacity and service and self-sacrifice it involves. “We must supply abundant food for ourselves and for our armies and our seamen not only, but also for a large part of the nations with whom we have now made common cause, in whose support and by whose sides we shall be fighting. “Thousands, nay, hundreds of thou­ sands of men otherwise liable to mili­ tary service will of right and necessity be excused from that service and as­ signed to the fundamental, sustaining work of the fields and factories and mines, and they will be as much a part of the great patriotic forces of the na­ tion as the men under fire. “I take the liberty, therefore, of addressing this word to the farmers of the country and to all who work bn the farms : The supreme need of our own nation and the nations with which we are co-operating is an abundance of supplies, and especially of foodstuffs. The importance of an adequate food supply, especially for the present year, is superlative. Without abundant food, alike for the armies and the peo­ ples at war, the whole great enterpise upon which we have embarked will break down and fail. The world’s food reserves are low. “This let me say to the middlemen of every sort, whether they are hand­ ling our foodstuffs or our raw mater­ ials of manufacture or the products of our mills and factories: The eyes of the country will be especially upon you. This is your opportunity for sig­ nal service, efficient and disinterested. The country expects you, as it expects all others, to forego unusual profits, to organize and expedite shipments of supplies of every kind, but especially of food, with an eye to the service you are rendering and in the spirit of those who enlist in the ranks, for their peo­ ple, not for themselves, I shall confi­ dently expect you to deserve and win the confidence of people of every sort and station.” German Attack on Hindenburg Line Fails; 1500 Dead on Field London — Fifteen hundred German dead were left in front of the British positions after the unsuccessful attack delivered early Sunday morning by strong German forces along a six-mile front, on the Bapaume-Cambrai road, according to the official report from Field Marshal Haig. The British gained further ground in their advance upon both St. Quentin and Lens. “The the enemy is still in his ma­ chine gun redoubts in some places, these are only rear guards, for the main body has retreated,” says a dis­ patch. RUSSIA PROMISES NEVER TO YIELD Dispels All Fear That Socialists May Force Separate Peace. WASHINGTON EASIER Workingmen Are Going Baek to Shops and Soldiers Falling in Line to Renew Campaign in Field. Washington, D. C. — Assurances reached Washington Thursday that un­ der no conditions that are now con­ ceivable will the provincial govern­ ment of Russia yield to the overtures from German and Austrian socialistic representatives to negotiate a separate peace. The entente embassies with this as­ surance before them, frankly confessed great relief. The gathering of social­ ists at Stockholm, known to be fo­ mented by Germans and Austrians, was looked upon with dread and sus­ picion, and it was feared that cunning appeals to the altruistic principles of socialism, the universal brotherhood of working men and such considerations, might force the provisional govern­ ment to consent to a separate peace to terminate the war. It is now learned from an authorita­ tive source that these apprehensions and misgivings were based on misun­ derstanding of the aims of the extreme socialist element in Russia and of the real strength of the provisional gov­ ernment. So far from contemplating any peace on the basis of existing gov­ ernments, the advanced Russian social­ ists want to carry their democratizing ideas by force into the enemy coun­ tries, and to appeal to their brother socialists in Austria and Germany to rise in revolt, overturn the monarchies and establish true socialistic republics in their places. This movement is reported gather­ ing strength rapidly in Russia among the soldiers and workingmen. The former are falling in line again to re­ new the campaign in the East and the workingmen are going back to their shops to turn out shot and shell and powder on the greatest possible scale. From every quarter comes assurances of support for the provisional govern­ ment. " • Rehabilitation of the crippled Rus­ sian railways by a corps of more than 500 trained American railroad men will be the early result of an appal to the President from several of Russia’s ablset engineers. The new govern­ ment thus will be strengthened against the pressure to make a separate pace with Germany. Plans to lend the Russian govern­ ment some $2,000,000,000 out of the new $5,000,000,000 war bond issue have already been formulated, but American aid is to go still further and make effective the expenditure of the great sums of money the new Russian democracy is to receive from the Unit­ ed States. T. R. May Become General. Oyster Bay, N. Y. — Colonel Theo­ dore Roosevelt in a statement Thurs­ day night declared that in furtherance of his plan to lead an army division to France “it may be that conditions will become such as to make it wise” for him to accept a commission as major general of the National Guard of New York offered by Governor Whitman. His preference, however, he said, would be to raise a division of United States volunteers similar to the troops he commanded in Cuba during the Spanish-American war. America Censors Letters. San Francisco—Uncle Sam’s censor­ ship of mail has begun. The first American censored letter to arrive in San Francisco came to a local news­ paper accompanied by 50 cents for a month’s subscription. It was written aboard a government warship. The envelope bore the imprint, “Passed by censor,” and the postmark on the out­ side of the envelope, as well as the date line indicating the whereabouts of his ship, were blotted out. U-Boat Carries Disguise. New York—A German submarine disguised as a sailing ship, carrying three masts, was sighted by the Brit­ ish steamship Southern Down on April 3 when about 300 miles west of Lis- bon. For two hours the British freighter was chased, escaping capture or destruction through her superior speed, according to officers of the Southern Down on arrival of the vessel Thursday at an American port. Tree Kills Youth Walking With Giri. Eugene, Or.—Sidney Leroy Barnes, aged 18, while gathering wild flowers in company with a girl companion at Pingree, near Lowell, Lane county, was instantly killed by a falling snag from a dead tree Sunday. The young man was employed at the Gibson saw­ mill. Barnes and Miss Neva Grace Gibson, aged 17, daughter of the own­ er of the mill, had gone but a short Railway May Offer Land. distance in the woods when the top of San Francisco—The Southern Pacific the tree came crashing down. The railroad, it has become known, is con­ trunk of the tree, 14 inches thick, sidering a plan to aid the campaign to Forest Reserves Add to Food Supply. struck Barnes squarely on the head. increase the country’s food supply by North Yakima. Wash.—G. F. Allen, which it would permit farmers, rent supervisor of the Rainier national for­ Anti-Plot Bill Favored. free, to use its agricutural lands. Washington, D. C.—The senate bill Many millions of acres are held by the est, is organizing co-operative cattle associations among stockmen with the imposing a maximum penalty of $10,- railroad along its right of way. object of making the grass in the for­ 000 fine, 30 years’ imprisonment, or Britain to Fly U. S. Flag. est reserves available to the greatest both, on “whoever in the United London—The American flag will fly extent possible and by that means in­ States, during time of war, shall wil- creasing the number of cattle which fuly injure or destroy by fire, or by from the great Victoria tower of the will be fatenod for market. Stock- use of explosives, or by other violent Houses of Parliament on Friday, this men with only a few animals are join­ means, or shall attempt to injure or being the first time in history that any ing these associations and their stock destroy any war material, war prem­ but the British flag has flown there. will be sent to the reserves, the gov­ ises or any war utilities, building or The sale of American flags in Lon­ ernment dealing in all matters of busi- other United States prope rty ," was don has been enormous, many dealers ness with the association officers. being sold out. favorably reported to the house.