TODAY'S WEATHER 4,400 SUBSCRIBERS (22,000 EEADEBS) DAILY Only Circulation in Salem Guar anteed by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. - FULL LEASED WIRE DISPATCHES SPECIAL WILLAMETTE VAL LEY NEW.S SEEVICE . Oregon: Fair to night and Satur day; ight , varl-, able winds. ON TRAINS AND NEW STANDH STVH CENTS FORTIETH YEAR NO. 249 SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER .19, 1917 PRICE TWO CENTS COAL SHORTAGE GROWS SEI1IUU8 REPORTS SHlK Thousands of Homes Through out East May Not Be Warmed MANY HOUSE OWNERS ALREADY WITHOUT COAL Supply Is Decreasing Every where and Prices Are . Steadily Rising New York, Oft. 19. Unless gome step is taken at once to relieve what amounts to a nation wide shortage of coal, thousands of homes will not havu heat to ward off winter's chill and the wheels of industry may be slowed. A canvass of the situation conducted today by the United Press revealed this grave situation almost everywhere, in the country. An acute shortage is . expected within the next two weeks. Detailed reports follow: New York All dealers report short age; prices increasing, fuel administra tion named a special agent to devisa means of ameliorating. Many apart ment houso owners declare they are completely without coal. Cleveland Shortago expected to be temporarily relieved as result of an or der holding 20 per cent of all Ohio mined coal on one day for use of Ohio consumers. Many factories -working on ft day to day fuel basis. Boston Manufacturers aroused by "increasing shortage and may cut fac tory hours in an effort to conserve tho supply. New England's shortago by January 3, predicted to be 6,000,000, tons. Detroit Factories hard'' hit by in creasing inability to get even small amounts of coal. Forty thousand homes without coal. Mayor received petitions from 20,000 citizens asking for aid. 3ome coal for heating distributed. St. Louis Estimate present supply of coal sufficient for only-three days. If strike of southern Illinois miners continues beyond that time much suf fering is feared here. St. Louis sup ply comes from the Illinois fields- Chicago Sudden cold wave caused intense suffering duo to gravely ser ious shortage of fuel. Shortage already estimated at 1,250,000 tons. Kvcn hos pitals keeping warm only day by dayi requisitions for coal. Atlanta Fifty thousand tons need ed at once to supply immediate de mands. Only a few shipments received since August, a mere drop in the buck et. Acute shortage feared within a few weeks. Dallas, Tex. But little shortago felt yet, but dealers predict scarcity. "We aro just beting by," was one dealer's comment. Richmond, Va., and Philadelphia were among the few cities of tho na tion which report "no shortage." Kansas City likewise reported "no serious shortage," except in semi-anthracite, which is practically uncsti mable. . There is one good story that has never yet been written that of the military despot, telling the story of his life, and telling all the truth. Napoleon was a great man, but not great enough for that. What would the kaiser's auto biographer, checked up by the record ing angel, not bo worth to the worldl : ABE MARTIN .If you'H wait fer your soup t' cool a bit it won't cause that yodellin' sound It haia't goin' t' hep us win th' war if you eat as mueh as a panther down . town while yor wife skimps at home. Mutiny In Austrian Navy Is Latest Report Washington, Oct. 19. News of a se vere mutiny in the Austrian navy and a clash between Austrian sailorg and German submarine crews at the Aus trian -naval base at Pola, received yes terday at Kome from Berne, reached ho Italian embassy. The cables stated the German sub .2 tine flotilla had been removed from tt to Cattaro, down the Adriatic, as iult of the clash in which there v several casualties on both sides. V Caproni airplnno was lost when twi, 'ion Caproni squadrons bombed I'ola "?rday. A. similar raid was con duotb' - linst Cattaro. The in aviators destroyed their machini and succeeded in reaching the Italian lines after working their way through the Austrian encampment about Trieste. GERMANY SPENDING MONEY FREELY TO INFLUEM NEUMLS Newspapers of Many Nations Are Subsidized or Influ enced with Money (By Webb Miller) (United Press Staff Correspondent) London, Oct. 19. Germany today is pouring vast amounts of money into neutral countries for propaganda design ed to sway public opinion. According to authoritative information her expendi tures for this work will total more than $80,000,000 on the present scale of lavishness. Much of the money is spent in subsi dizing and influencing newspapers. In a number of cases Germans bought newspapers outright and managed them from behind the Bcenes. Large amounts aro also being paid agents to keep peace agitation going. , j It was learned today that on' one. occasion the German minister to Mex ico, von Eckhardt, subsidized a Mexi can newspaper by furnishing it news print paper and securing for it tolls free the Genhan Communique and other "German made news." 'i In return, this newspaper was to fea ture the German communique on the first page and to bury the allied offi cial reports inconspicuously on an in side page. German made editorials were also to be carried. - In the year before China entered the war, authoritative information is- that Germany spent $2,000,000 in that coun try through her agents, seeking to in fluence the Chinese public, against Jap an and the allies. One of the mistakes made was the blundering translations into Chinese of a pamphlet designed to promote anti-ally feeling. The clumsy wording of the pamphlet aroused in dignation of the Chinese. TfZSIMHONS FIGHTS LAST GAME BATTLE Refuses to Quit Until He's Counted Out, and the Crowd Is with Him . Chicago, Oct. 19. A nation watched today while the greatest of modern glad iators fought a game battle with the champion of all time death. Weakened and suffering, with all hope abandoned by friends and physi cians, "Fighting Bob" Fitzsimmons called into play the wonderful stamnia and courage that carried him to the pinnacle of pugilistic fame and refus ed to quit. "I'm not going to give up until I'm counted out," lie panted. "I never have quit and I never will." About the white-sneeted "arena," in Michael Reese hospital, were gather ed his advisers and "seconds," num bering among them the greatest talent in the country. Fitz, his hitherto impregnable body wracked by the suffocating pain of pneumonia, wore a grim smile and tried to instill into the hearts of his wife and other watchers tae faith that he felt. Hundreds of telegrams of encourage ment were received from all parts of the country. ' ' We 're with yon, Bob, " was the bur den of their text. And the game old warrior, where phy sical prowess made htm an internation al figure, knofs that he "has the erowd with him." - They expect a game fight. He won't disappoint them. At 1 o'clock this afternoon Fitzsim mons was still conscious but visibly weaker and Mrs. Fitzsimmons stated he was "not expeeted to live through the day." She had not left his side since he was taken to the hospital and is on the verge of a nervous collapse. Physicians at the hospital declared today that both of Fitz's lungs and his heart are affected and that he has but a few hours to live. His children, Robert, Jr., Martin and Rosalie, have (Continued on page three) ROBBING FOOD SHIPS German Divers of Larger Type Operate Off Beaten Track Now Washington, Oct. 19. Germany's giant pirato U-boats aro now robbing food ships of their cargoes, stowing these within the submarine hold and then sinking tho unfortunate victims spurlos versenkt. That is tho newest development of ruthless undersea: warfare, according to confidential embassy reports today. Using new 1500 ton vessels, in pair, the Germans are operating off the beat en track, apparently several hundred miles outside the old danger zone around Great Britain and France. The newer submarine boats are suf ficiently large to permit of a great portion of a captured cargo being tak en on board. Becauso of this greater capacity the war board has been par l.i.. i ,l -I.:- jt Eurnnean r,ort,. This nls eynlain. whv merchant ships now require heavy con- voys for protection. These convoys aro causing much of the anparcnt difficulty Germany and Austria aro having with their subma rine fleets. The two' mutinies report ed yesterday indicate Teuton seamen, despite iron discipline, are unnerved by the anti-submarine work of the allies and America- "Hooverizmg" Turkey Meat . Is Latest Proposition Dallas, Tex., Oct. 19. Turkey meat is being " Hooverized. " With the supply of turkeys loss than a year ago, the 1917 Thanksgiving price should; be actually a few cents less per pound than in 1916, wholesale dealers declared here today, explain in" that the demand is not going to bo so great., "The demand will be proportionate ly less than the supply is smaller," dealers said, "and consequently the price should be slightly lower than a year ago." And its all on account of the war and Food Administrator Hoover's pleas to "conserve and help over throw the kaiser," it was said. "It's like this," one dealer explain ed, "the American housewife is being ru. mo Auiencvo nuuBvwue in it. i ii ' tauebt to substitute cheauer food. f7 1 laugut to Buosuiuie cneaper iooqs ioru. dearer foods. Thousands of families who in 1916 had turkey for Thanks giving dinner will this year eat some less expensive meat. The American housewife has learned to feed her fam ily just as well on substitutes." There is just one "if" attached to this, another dealer said. Vlf the American turkey tradition is too strong and the housewife for gets to substitute turkeys will be higher than a year ago," he prophe- Turkeys are selling here today at 18 cents a pound, with likelihood of go ing to 25 cents by Thanksgiving, some what less than the 1916 price, dealers said. "HOCRDER KAISER" LIBERTY LOAN WILL BE A GREATSUCCESS Only Third Subscribed Rut Momentum Is Gaining Rapidly SMALL INVESTORS ARE NOW RESPONDING TO CALL Detroit First Large City to Near Its Allotted Goal and Going Strong Washington, Oct. 19.-The second lib ert7 loaI1 developing the momentum necessary for a smashing success. Although only one-third of the $5,000 000,000 maximum has been subscribed, the nation can reach this stupendous goal if it keeps on accelerating its pace as in the past few days. Flying squadrons are preaching lib erty loan purchases to the small inves tor throughout the land. Officials be lieve that numbers of subscribers will be amazingly large and they are now driving at swelling the bulk of the sub scribers, as well as the subscriptions. Detroit was up to 80 per cent of its quota today and still plugging. 'ihe pro-Uerman effort to hamstring the loan is dwindling under the gov riwinri lintr iinfai (ha trnvj ernment's threat of prosecution. The middle west, where this plot cen tered, is in fact turning to heavy pur chases. From all centers come reports reports that citizens of Teuton origin are "do inir their bit." 1. , i .. . . , Rational army and nation guard aol- ECO I .i "- Salem, Nov. 14 for the purpose of es- 000 and these men are boosting the tabliBhin(. a register of persons eligi bonds wherever they g8. ble for appointment as postmaster at The unofficial totals wired today Hubbard from federal reserve district headquar-( To be eli?iblo appointment after ters are: tlm -rntninntinn the annlicant must New York, $550,000,000; Chicago, ..... ... - . . ... ., ,. uu.uuu.uuw ! eveiano, iid,uiju,uuu; . 11nnnnnon- fit T.m.i. .Rnnnn. Boston $110,000,000; Ht. Louis, -80,000,- 000; Richmond, $75,000,000; Kansas the examiner a photograph taken with City, $50,000,000; San Francisco, $50,- jn the past two years and the aee lim 000,000; Minneapolis, $45,000,000; At- it is between 21 and 65 years. The ex- (Continued oa page three) MAJOR KNAPP DIES. Portland, Or., Oet. 19. Major Lawrence II. Knapp, 48, ranking officer of the Oregon national guard, died here today following en operation for appendicitis. GERMANY'S POLITICAL VROW NOMPITAIIT London Opinion. Attaches Lit tle Significance to Cur rent Events By Arthur E. Mann (United Press staff correspondent) London, Oct. 19. Germany's pros ent political crisis is due to a purely political squabble and has no signifi cance from tho standpoint of peace, according to belief expressed in best informed quarters today. Socialistic activity in Germany, it was declared, is due principally to the fact that the radicals have been stung into energetic measures by at tacks on them by the conservatives and tho pan-Germans have been fight ing hard for control after having tried Michaclis as chancellor and found him wanting. British observers today pointed out that repeated montion of Prince von Buclow and Foreign Secretary von Kuehlmann as successors to Michaolis as chancellor might bo regarded as convincing proof that tho kaiser docs does not intend to form a "peace gov ernment." The war lord knows that men of the type of Butflow and Kuehlmann could never conduct negotiations with Eng land becauso England would be uwill ing to deal with such men, whose rec ords have been shown up and who tnnd ns much discredited with Eng land as von Bcrnstorff now stands' with the Untcd States. Tho feeling here today is that there is not the slightest chance lor peace before another spring and summer cam paien with America's might added. However, England expects Germany to make her most desperate drive for a German peace this winter. it 1 1 t KKntmTer 81 il!lC!iara wv w Under Civil Servic? For those who would like the job of .....".(, ""'nl," 8" ""," ,' Tjkn. The l Hubbr,1 opportunity beckons. Ihe United Btates civil service coinmmmwi announce(1 exftmination to be held at ' u. ro.i.1,.,1 in th deliverr district - - - of Hubbard at the time the vacancy j . ...i in occurred. Antdicants must submit to animation will be on the following anb jecta: Arithmetic and accounts, 30 per .cent; penmanship, 10; letter writing, 25; business training and experience, 35. The examination will be held at the civil service rooms of the Salem post oi i ice. : ' ' England, the air-raided, is compelled regretfully to state that if the kaiser ean 't understand her language she mast needs proceed to learn the (tarfa dia lect. Oregon Liberty Bond Subscription Crows Portland, Or., Oct. 19. Oregon's subscription passed the $7,000,000 mark this afternoon with today's sub scriptions, which totalled over a million dollars. Since noon Max Houscr, grain dealer, announced he would buy $250,000 and Peter Kerr $100,000) worth of bonds. These big subscriptions gave new life to the campaign and Oregon is ex pected to pass the $8,250,000 mark half of her quota within the next 24 hours. ' ... .-. i N SUNK -LOSS 70 Ward Liner Antilles Return ing Home Was Struck . by Torpedo ' Washington, Oct. 19. The Ward liner Antilles, an army transport, was tor pedoed, October 17, with about 70 men missing and 167 saved. This was officially announced tonight by the committee on public information. The statement follows: , "Secretary Daniels authorizes the following: . . "The navy department is in receipt of a message from Vico Admiral Sims, which states that the Antilles, an Am erican transport, was torpedoed on Oc tober 17, while returning to this coun try from foreign service. The vessol was under convoy of American patrol vossels at the timo. "The torpedo which struck the An tilles was not seen nor was the sub marine which fired it." "The torpedo hit abreast of the engine room bulkhead and the ship sank within -five minutes. "One hundred and sixty seven per sons out of 237 aboard tho Anilles were saved. ' "About seventy men are misBing. All the naval officers who were on board at t!jr time "Were saved, as were the officers of the ship, with the ex ception of tho following: - - " Walker, tniro engineer oiiicur. ' Boylo, junior engineer officer. " -O'Rouke, junior engineer offi ir. ' ' ' The If ollowinjg ..enlisted personnel were Inst "F, 1Y Kinsev. seaman, second class. next of kin, Thomas M, Jiinsey, iam- er, water vauey, iviisn. " J. W. Hunt, seaman, second elan, next of kin, Isaac Hunt, father, Moun tain Grove, Mo., rural route jno. box 44. . . "C. L. Ausburn, radio electrician, first class; next of kin, R. Ausburn, bro ther, 2800 Louisiana avenue, New Or leans, La. - "H. F. Watson, radio electrician, third class; next of kin, Mrs. W. L. Segar, mother, Rutland, Mass. There were about tnirty-tnrce oi mo army enlisted personnel on board of whom seventeen were saved. The names of tho missing of tjie army enlisted per sonnel and of the merchant crew of the ship cannot be given until the mus ter roll in France of those on board has been consulted. "As soon as the department is in receipt of further details concerning the casualties, they win ue umuu lic immediately." HIGH COST OF LIVING NOT SO Bi AFTER ALL Tf the hkrh school cafeteria and those of the three junior high schools can serve a luncheon to the pupils for irom IS 10 -1" l'Ufc ' llu housekeeper do as well or even beat that figure I A prominent grocery man who has pt pretty close tab on hundreds of) milies for the past fivd years in 8-1 A prominent gruiri-ij inn" "v - kep fam Inm. U of the opinion that very few families average even ine is tuu a meal for each one in the family. If the laborer with a wife and two children happens to be earning on an 75 ft month, this grocer rilm-es thai man 's monthly budget about as follows: Bent, $15; clothes, $15; grocery bill and meat martlet; wu . defenses ot the three great navai iori $25; drugs, doctor and dentist, $10;resse8 at Beval, Viborg and Cronstadt amusement and church, $5. According if tncT desired to chance Bussian mine to these figures, that would leave him fiids and make a try for investment of $5 of his monthly salary for geueraf incidentals. Tho proposition as to the expense ot food for the family of four was figur ed out by the groceryman as follows: With 30 days in the montn, mat would mean the serving of 90 family meals. If there are four in the family, this would figure out the serving of a total of 12 meals each day, with a to tal for the month of 360 meals. That v-ou'.d figure out within a fraction 3t soven cents a meal, if the budget calls for $25 a month for table expenses. The grocer who knows pretty well the average table expense of hundreds of Salem families says this budgot is not far from eorrect and that th sev en cents a meal for each one iu the family is a fair and conservative fig ure as the actual cost of a meal - The figures are submitted for consideration. CAPITAL MAY BE REMOVEDFROM II Menace of German Advance From Riga - Is Given. As Reason r. POLITICAL CONSIDERATION ENTERS INTO DECISION Great Fleet of German War . Ships with Long Range Guns Appears Petrograil, Oct. 1. Potrograd may be abandoned as the capital of Bussia. ' ' On account of the strategical sit uation," caused by the menace of a German adyance from the Gulf of Biga, it was formally stated today that early transfer of the capital from Petrograd iprobably to Moscow, was boing prepar ed for by the government. Evacuation of Beval, Russia's great naval depot- just at the entrance of the Gulf of Finland was announced to day. That the evacuation of Potrograd is being formally prepared for waa indi cated today in announcement that a spe cial "evacuating committee' had been named to make all plans. The person nel of this committee included M. Tro tyakoff, president of the Economis council, and a member of tho eabinet, M. i'alachinsky, president of tho com mittee on national defense, and Minis ter of Public Welfare Kiskin. Emphasis was officially laid today on the fact that the plans for evacuation from Petrograd to Moscow do not eon tomplote precipitate withdrawal." It waa asserted, for instance, fhat - the pre liminary, parliamentary meetings would ia U probability be yld in Petrograd, lator meeting in Moscow, when the gov ernment has had an opportunity to ex plain to tho delegates tho reason for the transfer. (Note: The first meeting of the con stituent assembly has been set for De cember 5 and if this is the "pnslimin ary meeting" meant, it would appear that the transfer is to be deferred for some time). Moscow, it was statod, would be the seat of the constituent assembly, Germany lias a vast naval force around the Kiga gulf. Official roporta today gave the total strength of the enomy fighting craft there as ten dread naughts, ten cruisers, fifty destroyera and eight or ten submarines. Two enemy trawlers, it was announc ed today, had been sunk in Moon sound. "On Wednesday noon the enomy lauded on Dago island near Zorro vil lage," tho statement concluded. Transfer of the capital from Petro grad to Moscow has frequently been considered by the new democratic gov ernment. At the time of the last Ger man drive on land around Kiga it wa formally stated such a step was plan ned. A little more than a month ago a formidable German fleet in the Bal fic and reports of a naval offensive against Petrograd caused a revival of the report. Democratic leaders have since the very start of the new republio regard ed Moscow as more suitable for the capital than Petrograd. A number of weeks ago, when tho Bolsheviki opposition to Premier Ker onsky came to a head, dispatches from William G. Shepherd, United Press staft correspondent, then in Potrograd, re ported that Kerensky was seriously considering the switching of all gov-, crnmental activity to Moscow, the an cient Kussian capital. Moscow nns i- j ,i. l,nn,,,lU .wmnn. . ways neeii -- J other Busman city. Just why there should iato fear of danger to 7 - , t . U7 BUJ ........... Petrourad from the Germans is not clear on tho basia of dispatches so far received and dotail ing the German naval campaign around the mouth of the gulf of Riga. It ia nossible, however, that the Kussians , foresee that the ereat German drcad- nauirhts known to be included in that fleet eould easily outrange any coast Petrograd by Bea. Bevel Is Evacuated. Petrograd, Oct. 19. Evacuation by the Bussians of the naval base of Bevel was begun Tuesday, the Novoe Vremva declared today. The withdrawal o Kussian foreea from the naval depot has been made necessary by operations of Germany 'a groat fleet now operating off the Gulf of Kiga and threatening a further Saval orogram against the Gulf of Finland. Evacuation of Bevel, if confirmed, would appear to ind.eate even greater menace to Bussia by the Gorman Baltic, fleet than its victories so far reported have indicated. Bevel is the first of tho naval bases which a hostile fleet, (Continued on pace, tare.) PETROGRAD SOO