Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1916)
s ALL ITALY WATCHES BATTLE OF VE Historian Says Sentiment for Greater Participation in War Grows. ALLIES EXPECTED TO WIN Conflict of Ideas Growing: From Ti tanic Straggle Counted on to Retard Progress More TTian Material Losses. BY JOHN" R. BASS, "af correspondent of the Chicago Daily News. By special cable. MILAN, Italy. March 7, via Londan ! March 8. The-w-hole of Italy is hangr- i tng breathless on the battle of Verdun, j Popular feeling is increasingly favor- able to France,-and thpre is a growing pressure felt in political circles for a 1 wider participation of Italy in the war. j This is seen in the Chamber of Depu- ! ties, which recently reassembled, in the coalition among the smaller parties to i obtain from the government wider I action in conjunction with the allies. I The majority of the Deputies belong to the Gioliti party, which prior to the war favored neutrality, along with I certain Germanophiles. The govern- j merit, although dependent on the tendencies of this majority, is inclined to meet the popular demand for Itsrly'a ! close co-operation with the other mem- j hers of the quadruple entente. ! Italy Watches Frfnoh Straggle. On this subject G.uglielmo Ferrero, the famous historian, said to me in an interview today: "Italy is watching with strained anxiety the result of the present con flict in France because it is known that the welfare of Italy is inextricably in terwoven with the success of France, Britain and Russia. The relations be tween Italy and France since the be ginning of the war have been cemented into a friendship that I believe will be permanent- These relations prior to the war were not good, owing to the triple alliance treaty, which, though its con text is still secret, I believe was broken by the central powers when they en tered upon a war of aggression and conquest without consulting us, thus treating Italy like a vassal state. Allien Expected to Win. "To my mind there is- no doubt that the quadruple alliance will win. The only question is: To what extent will Germany and Austria drag down the rest of Europe in their fall? It will take Europe at least 50 years to re cover. The material loss is a small mat ter. The institutions of Europe, like a badly constructed building, are crumbling under the effects of the war. - There will be after the war a terrible conflict of ideas. In this conflict our generation will be sacrificed. "France will come out of the war the greatest European nation, for she has aRtonishedthe world by the magnitude of her efforts against her powerful enemy, compared with which the ef forts of the rest of the quadruple en tente are Insignificant. . "Italy's participation In the war was induced by the demand of the people who believe Italy was betrayed by the central powers because she had been told that the triple alliance was made to prevent, not to make, a European conflict. From the logic of the situa tion Italy must make every effort with the rest of the quadruple entente to bring the war to an end. I believe the new coalition of parties, backed by pub lic opinion, will bring about a wider participation in the war, and that be fore long there will be a declaration of war against Germany.' German Diplomacy Skillful, Commenting on Germany's manipula tion of American internal affairs, es pecially concerning the new submarine policy, just at a time when action by the American Administration might ef fect the Presidential primary and ejec tion, Signor Ferrero said: "This is a part of Germany's ably or ganized interference In the internal matters of aH neutral countries. In the Balkans she operates through in fluences of German origin; in the lTnited Stales through the influence of Americans of German blood. Every where she has reached out tentacles hungry for power. The American peo ple rightly resent this interference. "I cannot say that should like to pee the United States enter the war. You could not furnish an army, and we lo not need a fleet. Besides, we are going to pull through without help. However, as an Italian, I should liave liked to Fee a breaking of diplomatic relations with Germany by the United States, for the moral effect would, be great and this moral effect is one of the powerful weapons of the war. Be cause of it I believe Germany does not desire a break with the United States." PARTIAL TAXES OFFERED Clarke County Treasurer Refuses Timber Company Tenders. VANCOUVER. Wash.; March 12. (Special. The Clarke County Timber Company and the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, both controlled by th same company, have tendered to the County Treasurer, 1 G. Conant. taxes on the basis Of the assessment made by the Assessor in 1914. The Board of Equalization raised the assessed valuations on these figures. using the disputed timber cruise as a basis. s?o the Treasurer has refused to accept the part payment. - The Clarke County Timber Company tendered a check for S12.734.38, while the tax rolls, under the raised valua tions. show it should be 117.087.14. The other company offered $624.74 in pay ment for the assessment of $1196.18. ST. PAUL SLIDES CLEARED Xortliern Pacific and Great North ern Trains Itunning on Time. SEATTLE. Wash.. March 12. The Chicago, Milwaukee &. St. Paul Rail way, which has been blocked by mud and rock slides in Central Washington since Thursday, cleared its line to night and resumed the movement of transcontinental trains over its town track. The Northern Pacific and the Great Northern reported their lines open and traffic moving regularly. Re ports from the -districts where floods were causing trouble said the rivers were receding rapidly. It snowed in 'th Cnsoade Mountains tAdfty. ELLrANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists RDU CALIFORNIA GIRLS r: - jsfs - ' " " vnl r -"- . ; or, . If ' w ' X 4 f Ji t! - :l : v I i w r rrvt X- - -vM.Wv I H - i - I ; ' "rJ- 1 ' If - t - yl J ; - v- MM - - - - - Jm$m& LOS ANGELES NEW YORK. March 7. (Special.) YORK, March 7.- Park caused many of the curious to rythmic motions with no care for wind or weather. For protection from wintry blasts they had nothing but the gossamer cloth that all ancient Greek and Roman dancers wore. Yesterday's exhibition in the drifts consisted of interpretations of various Gjreek and Roman dances. The girls went through the figures with the utmost aban don for cold and snow and frolicked and gamboled as if dancing on the velvety grass.. The girls are members of a school of Los Angeles, Cal., and have given exhibitions in dancing schools and private parties.-. VERDUN IS NOT KEY Northcliffe Calls It "More In teresting Than Important." SLAUGHTER IS ENORMOUS Briton Pictures Germany as in Po sition' 'of Besieged City, Strilt- ing'Out Blindly Attaclt by Sea Is Predicted. LONDON. March 12. Lord North cliffe, who has Just visited the Ver dun battlefield, in a message to the Weekly Dispatch, declares that Verdun a great deal more Interesting tnan important. The newspaper publisher continues: 'It does not need a-personal visit to the battlefield to realize this. If the Germans ttiink that an attack on the unarmed and dismantled forts of Ver dun opens the road to Paris, they have a faint notion of the French prepara tions and the French power of resist ance. Comparing the present German troops with those who fought early in the war, .Lord Northcliffe says: "Last week I saw Germans prisoners ho had escaped the hellish fire of the French 75s at Verdun. Where had gone those splendid stalwarts captured at the battle of the MarneT Much of the rank and file now left of the Ger mans is undersizea ana Daaiy aressea. with face that bear a look of fright that seems as if it would last a lifetime.- ' Me Declared Weary of War. Their appearance lssuch as to move heart of stone. With two exceptions among those with whom I have spoke., all were utterly weary of warfare and begged to be told vhen peace could be expected. " " . The fact about .the whole war Is Chat Germany is In the position of a besieged city, and she is striking out Mindly by land at Verdun. She will presently, t am convinced, strike out by sea:' . Turning to the actual fighting: at Verdun, Lord Northcliffe says: "Not a word is hinted in anything sent out from Germany of the horrible slaughter to which the German troops have been subjected this week. Thurs day was a black - day for Germans, when, drugged with ether, the men came out in mass formation, to be mowed down by the French 75s and machine guns, as usual. Crown Prince Gambles In. Lives. "Reports published in the English newspapers from Paris are, to my per sonal knowledge, on the . whole most accurate, and they show that for one or-many reasons the Crown Prince is gambling with human life to an extent unprecedented, even in this war." Lord Northcliffe asserts that "if the Germans possess a number of guns of greater caliber than those used by the English and French, they have no weapons in their army equal to the French 75, or gunners at all comparable to the Frenchmen. Disscussing the western theater a whole. Lord Northcliffe says that the "allied defensive wall right across Franco, insofar as attaining any def inite military position is concerned, is absolutely Impregnable. This remark may equally apply to the German line across trance ana Belgium. I LAUNDRYMEN GIVE NOTICE Tacoma Residents Warned Againsfr-j Buying Colors That Will Run.. TACOMA. Wash., -March 12. (Spe cial.) Tacoma laundrymen do not pro pose to allow the makers of dyes which will not stay put to shift the blame on them, so a warning has been sent to all customers against buying colored goods in the future. "As long as we have been unable to find a means of keeping fugitive colors from running away and no way of as certaining whether or not the dyes are fast until the clothing' is washed, we tttr moivktsg OTCEOOXTAN, MONDAY. GO EAST TO DANCE AND FROLIC ' - Photo Copyright by Underwood. GIRLS TRIPPING .LIGHT FANTASTIC IX CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK. The sight of six perfectly moulded linger, shivering and chilled, and watch cannot be responsible when these goods fade, as some of them surely will," said the raundrymen'6 notice. GERMAN MUTINY REPORTED Petrograd lias Report of Trouble in Garrison at Sliavli. PETROGRAD, March 12. Telegraph ing from Dvinsk. the correspondent of the Boerse Gazette reports that a muti ny has taken place among the men of the German garrison at Shavli. a town in the Baltic provinces, owing, it Is 'said, to insufficient food. The mutiny was suppressed by caval ry, the correspondent adds, after 'one officer and three soldiers had been killed and a large number of men wounded. Nine of the leaders of the movement are said to have been triei by court-martial and executed Sunday's War Moves; EXCEPT for infantry action, the fighting In the Verdun region vir tually has ceased for the moment. To the 'north and east of the fortress there has been no infantry engagement since Saturday, when the Germane succeeaea in reaching a small JTencn irencn m the north of-Elx. On both sides of the Meuse from tne northwest of Verdun, along the entire (runt nronnH to the southeast of tne fortress, the .artillery on both sides has continued the tremendous shelling that has been in progress for days. The Germans say they have captured in the fighting around Verdun this far 26,472 unwounde'd French oncers ana men ana ioj guns ana mniiiunQ guns. To the south of the Somme River in the Argonne" forest and in the Ban-de- Kant sector of the Vosges tne t rencn guns" have heavily bombarded German, entrenchments. The Russians have captured trenches from the Germans in the Dniester region of East Galicia, and have made further progress against the Turks in Persia by taking the town of Kirind. The Russians admit the sinking or a Russian, .torpedo-boat destroyer by a submarine of the central powers in the Black Sea off the- Bulgarian port ol Varna. Part of the. crew of the de stroyer was rescued. Desnite the unfavorable weather con ditions in the, mountains, the -Italians are continuing their operations against he Austrians. -They also ate intensely ombardlng the Isonzo fronts The town of Gorizia has had to sustain another hail of Kalian shells. , . The'British fleet auxiliary Fauvette, a vessel of 2644 tons, has been lost, toe-ether with 14 members of her crew, by striking a mine orr ma coast ot England. - . .'. A Paris dispatch says that testimony given the American Consul at Havre Dy the seven Americans on board and the members of the crew of the Norwegian bark Silius. which was sunk off the coast of France, is that the bark was torpedoed by a submarine and without warning. "BIBLE HAS 1000 JOKES" 51. A. Berger Says Humor Has Much to Do With Life of Scriptures. The need of humor for literature to endure was-emphasized by M. A. Ber ger. assistant editor of the Jewish, Spirit, in an address on wit and humor before the Yiddish Literary Society at the Neighborhood House last night- Mr. Berger said that the Bible owes its existence greatly to the fact that it nm-flefies humor. "This humor." he said, "Is especially noticeable in the Talmud. Accordlns to Mark Twain there are only 25 origi nal Jokes. The Bible, however, has at least 1000 original jokes." ITALIAN SLIDE BURIES 252 Several Houses in Agordo District Also Covered by Avalanche. VENICE, via Paris. March 12. An avalanche has buried several houses in the Agordo district. The victims so far reported number :52, IN THE SNOWS. damsel dancing in the snows of Central the barefoot girls go through their Austrian Gunboat Attacks Steamer; Several Killed. TROOPS DEFEND "VESSEL Array Expected Soon to Join . Cause of Allies Following Loss of Life in Spirited Engagement. Crew Rushes to Shelter. LONDON. March 13. rSnecial.1 There is little'doubt remaining that Roumania is about to enter the war on the eide of the Allies. For several days her armies have been mobilized and everything in readiness for the beginning of hostilities. Yesterday, ac cording to a dispatch printed this morning in the Daily Mail, an engage TtTent in which several Roumanians were killed took place in the Danube River when a Roumanian steamer was fired on by an Austrian gunboat. The engagement took place near Rakova. which is 23 miles east of Rustchuk. While the Roumanian ship was loading from a barge in the Rou manian sone of the river, the Bulgarian frontier- guard on shore opened fire Instantly the Bulgarians : signaled to an Austrian gunboat which was at anchor down the stream. The warship responded instantly and ordered the Roumanian merchantman and the barge to the Bulgarian shore. The commander of the-vessel refused to comply with- the order. .A-few min utes later a broadside was, fired from the Austrian gunboat. Few of the shots took effect and the gunboat followed with a heavy . fire from machine guns. Rifles in the hands of seamen were also fired at the" crew1 of the . Roumanian- steamer' as they scurried to shelter, about the deck: - Roumanian -troops on the shore of the Danube brought up a machine gun battery and returned the fire. A lively engagement, lasting several minutes, followed: The steamer returned to the Roumanian shore. Several were killed on, both sides. '-" 'v PRIMARY DUE TUESDAY MINNESOTA TO VOTE FIRST TIME - FOR DELEGATES. Cummins ana' Estabroolc Named by Re publicans and Third Candidate Is W. G. Webster, of Cbleagro. ST. PAUL, March 12. Minnesota's first Presidential preference ' primary election will be held next Tuesday, when delegates to the Republican, Democratic and Prohibition National conventions will be chosen. The Pro gressives have filed an unopposed list of candidates, who will be certified, on the ballot as elected. President Wilson Is without opposi tion on the Democratic ballot, and the Progressives are without a candidate, although the delegate candidates on this ticket express a preference for Governor Johnson of California, The Presidential candidates have filed on the Republican ticket, but the candidates for delegates have named only two as tnelr choice. They are Albert B. Cummins and Henry D. Es tabrook, of New York. The third can didate is William Grant Webster, of Chicago. Two women are among those seeking selection" as delegates on the "Prohibi tion ticket, which has Eugene N. Foas, ex-Governor of Massachusetts. and William. -Sulser, ex-Governor of . New York, as Presidential candidates. Dakota Men Buy Into Bank. ETLVERTON Or., March 1J (Spe cial.) T. T. and T. P. Risteigen. cap italists from Grand Forks. N. D., bave purphased the stock in the People's Bank, held by O. L. Hatteburg and L. Ames. T. T. Risteigen, who has bank ROUMANIAN FIRED ON 31 ARCH 13, 1916. vrq5. gjjj J! HI Byf a 1 jr1 : lis i ite - I I'll lUllllvO"-' - sl-. iVff. -SSLV.. O Jucte (J5 dtli G t! F. in, yvibik Don. ing and farming interests in North Da kota, will divide his time between there and Silverton. At a meeting of the di rectors Saturday afternoon, the follow ing officers were named: President. E. S. Porter; first vice-president, J. W. Hyett; second vice-president . - and cashier, T. T. Risteigen. Infected Dog Gets Wild. GATEWAY, Or.. March 12. (Spe cial.) A coyote with the rabies and a Scotch collie belonging to C P. TJ'Ren have been causing considerable com motion di and about l?askela for the last month. Some time ago the collie fought with a coyote. This coyote bit several sheep of the Conley band that wintered at Jersey. The sheep went mad and bad to be killed, and the coyote was also -shot. Last Sunday the animal visited sev eral neighbors, bit a dog and a hog and killed several chickens. - He alo attacked bis master and was promptly killed. Jitney Firm Incorporated. ALBANY, Or.. March 12. (Special.) The first corporation to be formed in Linn County to handle the jitney busi ness was organized yesterday. Articles of tncorpo-ation - were filed in the County Clerk's office tiers .r the Leb M -m fc . A m Star nn . anav Wf t -'A t-rti . i. for Yourself- Compare Murads vith ANY -25 Cen Cigarettes s cftfli iiiillii r ',- 'lilt: 7 7IIIII Jill III IIIIII IIIWIII anon Jitney Company. The incorpora tors are Alexander Power. H. K- Klrk patrlck and M. R. Kirkpatrick and the capital stock is $1000. "CLEARSJHE SKIN Ifeala Aggravating Affections, Caus ; ing Them to Disappear. Broken-out skin is unpleasant to see, Atari-. .ir, tn endure.' There should be on your medicine shelf a remedy for this above alUphysical disorders. When it comes to a choice accept nothing less efficient than Fosiam. Try Poslam; compare it. Know the Intensity of its healing power, the rapidity of its action. And it can aorvt von in man v ways: from clearing an inflamed complexion overnight to eradicating Eczema, Acne ana atupoorn diseases. Poslam Soap is doubly agreeable, doubly beneficial for the skin, because medicated with Poslam. For samples, send 4c stamps to Emer gency Laboratories, 32 West 23th St., Xsw York Cityc Sold by all DrugsietA POSLAWI QUICKLY .... M-nl f'-m. n ' tm El ' V 41 f 4 ow: coo 10 30 WELL-KNOWN FOB SUPERIOR SERVICE, BEST QUALITY. SATISFACTORY PRICES 30 Years' Wholesaling Beliabl Plumbing and Heating Supplies in Portland IYLL. KLINE. 84-86-87-89 FRONT STREET Ask Your Dealer for Our Faultleaa Plumbing Material, Wnicb Saves in Upkeep tT7 4 OB 1 one. WEEKS' BREAK-UP- COLO TABLIIS - . ft 1 MM Phone Your Want Ads to THE OREGONIAN Main 707Q A 095 . -lea' ,- J 4B 1 1 t 2K 'a VP