Know Belgium as Brand Whitlock Knows It, .Through The ; Sunday Journal Beginning Feb; 17 ti rv-K Tonight ' fair an.1 . , .utuxj . colder;-fair Wed-' EDira. nesday; southerly, V J v v ' 1 wind8- Humidity . ii V; . SENATOR SAYS END OF WAR t VOL: XVI. NO. ' 230 , . ; . PORTLAND, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 5, 1918. SIXTEEN PAGES. . , PRICE TWO CENTS tawd'"i i pkSt? - f.. - .-.t .. i . . " ) ' ' .... - t ' ' " ' ' . ' ',.-'. ' MOT IN SIGHT; . i . ' . ' . " . W ' - LEE SAYS ROADS " 1 .. L n I" .... V DON - i : - - i : rr I : anwav. BBt SBa BSBl BB1 '.SBBBBa. Bsl ' SBBBBBBsl BBBBBBBB1 BBBsV' mmmm I til I - BP- - H B - I ISCHE Russ Leader Known Here President of Brotherhood of Trainmen Says Owners Anxious to Make Out That Government Operation Is Total Failure. Engines Allowed to Freeze Dur ingfcCold Weather and Com petent Men Replaced by Green Hands in Order to Hinder. 1FASHINQT0N. Feb. vv 5. (I. N. S.) The traffic congestion rf the railroads 'during the cold Veatfter was caused by the in tentional lack of cooperation on the part of railroad; managers, it " was charged' at th hearing be-,-fore - the, railroad wage commis-J slon today by? W. G.-: Lee, , presF 'dent of the Brothefhood of Railroad . Trainmen. Lee further . tharged that the managers de lirect to . discredit the . operation of the Adamson . law by inflating artificially the increased cost to the railways by this law. "They do not want the government ' to make a success of Its operation of the railroad. I can back up the state ment that experienced railroad men are not permitted to perform their duties aa their . experience would dictate. They know that If the rorernment makes success m-railroad operations they -will never be .handed back. Do you think the public will let them go back? That Is why I want to see the government make a success of It" "I hope you will excuse me," Mr. Lee .aid, "for being suspicious, but I have been dealing with these gentlemen for half a century." ' "The entire handling of the railroad properties," Mr.' Lee asserted, "Is not In the hands of the government, but was left In "the hands of men who had the power to make it either a failure or a success.!. I leave to you to judge which they desired from the public record of the past few weeks. "The railroad managers can make government operation of the railroads a success or not as they please. The con gestion during the cold weather Is the result of the present methods of the Mrs Schwab WithTrotsky Led Cannery Girls' Strike Was Arrested in Portland Dur ing Industrial Trouble . on East Side. Mrs. Mary Schwab, once the strike leader of girls employed In Portland by the Oregon Canning company. Is now high in the councils of the Bolshevik! n Russia. Mrs. Schwab and Leon Trotsky, once an Indifferent reporter on a Yiddish paper in New York Dut now head of the Bolshevlkl. are de scribed by Emll Schaff of 511 Mont gomery street. Mr. Schaff was born In Gallcia but came to America more than 25 years ago. He met' Trotsky fre quently In New York. He was In Port land when Mrs. Schwab, of cool audacity and burning tongue, confronted Gov ernor West, the Industrial welfare com mission and the Portland police with witty but stinging words uttered in be half of the striking cannery workers. "There are ' many Trotskys left In America more able than the man that chance and fortune have placed at the head of Russian affairs," said Mr. Schaff. "When I knew him he was earning perhaps $15 or $18 a week, and he was scarcely attending to his work because 'he was putting so much burning energy Into soap box oratory. He was steeped In Karl Marx and he was ' a member of a group with headquarters In New York, but with hope that In Russia they might bring about the very thing that the war has brought about. ; "When I knew Trotsky he hated the csar, but he also hated the kaiser and all others who claim to rule by divine right. I feel quite sure that Russia will not be of much further aid to the allies, but I also feel quite as, sure' that the kaiser will get little comfqrt from Russia as long aa TroUky-U in. con trol." The word 'Bolshevik,' Mr. SChaff ex plained, means "the majority of the proletariat." . The name "Trotsky'' means "opponent."- As Schaff remem bers' it, Trotsky's real nam'e la ' Berfti stein. Mrs. Schwab, he says, continued In her strike leader career' after she was in Portland, then returned to New York and finally returned to Russia when the turn of the wheel mad It possible for the Trotskys to go back. Mrs. Schwab, or Schuab, is on the records both of the -city and county jails. MARY SCHWAB FORMER Portland strike : leader who is now one of Trotsky's chief counsel lors among the Bolsheviki. FIXEDPRICE '. 1 1 l T4a "'"T3 trr:&si li-yeniiiiMiiiat m &i :' .... . , ...... . Federal Food Administrators Dis cuss Fishing Problems and De cide fo Avoid Surplus of Canneries-on the Pacific Coast. -ii wnmirrn pnii BREAD RATION TWO OUNCES IN THE U S. J w ASHISOTOJT. T. (!. IT. S.) Patroat of hotels, reitaa- raatt mad dlnlag cart were today pat oa bread rations. Food Administrator Hoever ordered that ladlvldaal porUoas of wheat bread or rolls shall not exceed two oaaees. In the ease of bread or rolls baked of eorm meal, oatmeal or bras, the portion may not exceed fonr omaeet. Telegrams were seat to the hotel represeatatlTet of the food ad mis titration la every tUte asking that they enforce the order strictly. van raze tn InlUliLLU I UIL 001 ATTACK Oavallini Admits TIMBER OPERATOR RADIO PLANT HAD Regulation of Industry Sought in Order to Protect Present Investments and Not to Upset Labor Market; Bread4May Rise Fish problems occupied the attention of the federal food administrators of the Pacific coast states In session with lead ing cannerymen at the Portland hotel today : . The objects of the meeting are : To regulate the prices of canned sal mon : Increase the output of salmon and nH. er fish; Regulate the establishment of new canneries ; Guard against a surplus of eannlnr plants; Conserve the aupply and avoid waste ; Allocate the catch to the fresh salmon distribution ; Establish nriM tn r.ol4 fi.h.. InHhe districts ; ; Regulate Independent traD operators. seiners nd fish wheel operators. , v Representative cannerymen from Alaskav Puget Sound -and Oregon were in attendance at the meeting. It clearly developed In the early atages of the session that it is the purpose of the administrators not to al low any, more , canneries , to .be. located In districts already adequately served. The" object of this safeguard Is two fold, namely, . to . prevent Increased cost of the products and to protect the labor market. It la not the intention of the administration' to let the 'field be so overcrowded, that the plants will be bid ding against each other for help.- Applications will be granted to pros- ARMENIAN DRIVE Paris. Feb. 5. (U. P.) Phillppo Cav- alllnl. one of the defendants Involved In the charges of treason for, which Bolo Pasha Is on trial here, admits handling more than $400,000 from Kevll Pasha, another of those Involved, the prosecu tion announced today. Bolo Pasha declared he saw no harm In his relations with Abbas Hilml, form er khedlve of former minister. Saddlk Pasha. "Everybody knew It President Poln calre. Lord Bertie and Delcasse." (OoacltMted ea Pace Three, Column- roar) Mrs. Wilson Sends Appeal tor Nations , ? Washington, Feb. B.(U. P.) Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of the' president, today launched an international move ment to throw about .the fighters in Europe and their mothers, sisters and ' laughters the highest moral Influence luring the war. ' 8peak(ng for the mothers of America, Mrs.' Wilson dispatched the message. Jointly ' signed by Mrs. Anna Howard Shaw, chairman of the National Defense CounclV women's committee, to all em bassies abroad, , : Trade Incubator For Garden Tools Sacrifice Studebaker Car Swap Column tt 200 EOO Sure Hatch incubator to trade for garden tools or what' have you? . Sheriff of Washinffton Countv Mandlmg $4UU,UUU Confiscated Instruments S. P. Agent Had in Home. HUlsboro. Or., Feb." 5. Sheriff Apple- gate yesterdajr uncovered a radio plant a half mile ; from Timber and confls catea tne apparatus. -It belonged to Ji E. Jacobsen, the operator -and "ticket Egypt and the latter's agent for the Southern pacific at Tim ber station on the Tillamook line. The radio from appearances Is capable of re ceivlng and sending a radius of 600 or 700 miles and Is practically new. It Is unaerstooa mat the government radio stations have been comnlalnlnsr about interruptions from radio currents . and. aa nearly as possible to locate it. it was decided that It came from the Kehalem. Jacobsen had the plant In his house and nis aero wires were difficult to locate we says mat ne installed the plant for bis own satisfaction. The radio outfit Vas i brought to- HUlsboro and further action Is awaiting orders from the United States marshal. Jacobsen u paratUB was operated. which the ap- Roont. Board Prlrate Family 7 A CHILD to board In my homo ; . splendid care. ' " Avtomobtl, Accessories 44 '17 SERIRS Studebaker, 7 passen ger touring car, In splendid me chanical condition, all good tires. Owner needs the cash and will sac rifice for 575. Tou need not waste time In seeE Ing a D'cely furnished room that . win meet all your requirements, for 3 THE JOURN AIj WAffT COI.-. .UMNS aro lust full of such ads. Scan them carefully today and you . will bo sure to find the very place yon want. Or. if this falls, why not run a' small JOURNAL. WANT AD your self, stating just the sort of a place Sou aro looking for, and you cannot"' elp but get It In a day or two. : A direct way to accomplish many imperative demands may be found ' in THE JOURNAL WANT COL UMNS. - William S. Biddle To Serve as Major William S. Biddle, former captain In United States army, well known in Port land, received his appointment today aa major in the adjutant general's depart ment of the national army. He win leave Portland in a few days and join rlSZ ,r' . . -.w'.-fci. wife and two children 1,1 "J"' "',u. . . . V""" Uvlne in the hnm fmm.u-M ... llTvaf Dvfnr in - l mhk b nn . SAfva in t raa I " - - If CSV A k au XJ v B-vy V 111 Mv regular army until 1907. He participated In the Apache Indian campaign against the Indian. Chief Oeronlmo, later in the Spanish-American war and In toe Phil ippine Insurrection. ; Benson Appointed Supreme Court Clerk 1 -Salem, Or., Feb. 6. Arthur S. Ben son, who. has been deputy clerk of the supreme court for ' the; last 16 years. was today appointed, clerk of the court to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge J. C. Moreland. Benson is ha- son i of Judge Henry X.. Benson, member or me court, iso appointment was made of a deputy clerk. Boriar Law Tells . British Losses London. Feb. 6. (U, P.) Enemy sub marines and air raiders have killed 14,120 British-noncombatanta men. women and children Chancellor of the Exchequer Bonar Law declared in the house of commons' today, c .-- , Von Rihtelen and Associates Guilty New York. Feb. 5. (I. N. S. Cap tain von Rlntelen and 11 ' German - asso ciates were found guilty here this after noon" of conspiring to plant bombs 'on vessel carrying supplies ' and ammuni tion to, the powers at war vrlth Qer many and her allies. . on in full swing Enthusiasm Marks Start of Cam paign to Secure Money for Starving People. FIRST MORSISG'S TOTALS Women's Division .. ilea's BItUIob Total S,lii.tf ..17,114.18 (Cowclnded on Pr Ttirge. Colnron Twe The headquarters of the drive for Armenian and Syrian relief In tho Hotel Portland this morning presented a scene of animation andV enthusiasm that pronv lses well for the success of the drive. By 9 o'clock more than 125 men and women were at headquarters getting their credentials and shortly afterward were on their way to carry tho appeal from a starving people to tbegenerou hearted Portland people. . An Intensity feeling and strength or purpose- wnicn. nas not cnaracterlsed other drives was apparent at tho dinner anfl meeting of .the officers, committees and workers for the drive held Monday evening at '.Hotel Portland, with covers for 176. Wells Gilbert, general for the drive, presided over the meeting. The program was introduced by a number of selec tions on the silver chimes by Waldo Davis, accompanied by M. L. Hleb. Fritz do Bruin sang a group of songs, accompanied by Miss Evelyn Paddock. Mr. Gilbert introduced as the toastmas- U.S. Must Place Millions in Field To Beat Hun, Says Returning Solon Accurate Gun Fire Believed to Have Inflicted Heavy Losses on Germans Massed for Dash on American Trench Defenders Representative Miller Points Out Country's Need of Ships foe Transports. American Soldiers Eager for Go at Enemy Wounded Men Re fuse to Be Carried Back From Firing Line; Gas Attack Fails. By Tfewtoa C. Parke With the American Army in France, Feb. 6. (L N. a) Another attempted German raid on the American sector of the battle front was beaten off Monday morning by the prompt . and ' efficient action of our artillery. a The Germans had massed a consider' able force before the American trenches and It Is believed that the Yankee gun ners inflicted heavy casualties upon mem. .-.. t Information had reached the Amer icana that the boches planned to de liver a surpvise attack on Monday morn lng without . any artillery preparation, counting - on Saturday night's artillery duel to have cut the American telephone wires. - v.. " . . The censor now permits It to be made known that - the Americana 'are holding the line at a point northwest of -TouL. t ' (T6ul lies tl miles southeast of St. Mihtet and about the same distance frtrtu the .German frontier.- : This indicates that-the Americana are on the Woevre plain, that section of France- lying be tween - the Mouse and. Moselle : rivers. StwMlhlel lies about 20-miles south of Verdun, ana is the apex of the famous St. Mlhlel salient. It waa there that the Germans were able to establish them selves -on i the western bank of the (Concluded on Pge Tw1t, Colnmn Ttaf) (The following editorial from bat Sundaj's Journal la reprinted today by noixat.) BLEEDING THE CAR RIDERS WHITE (Concluded on Pact Mis Colnmn Two) TEST OF SOT HY bleed the car riders white? There was a contract that gave them "a fat-e of five cents and no more." They bought homes in outlying districts on the understand ing that the five-cents-a-ride contract was binding and that the city government . would see that the five-cent ride would be protected. How fares it with them now with the fare at six cents T When a street car stops down town, it -pours out its passengers who flock into the business places and make purchases. That episode of the street ears pouring out their passengers makes busy thoroughfares. It makes a street an active business street instead of a dull business street " It makes the property along that street more valuable, and the businesses along that street more profitable. It gives the professional men up in the office buildings along that street more clients, more patients and more patrons. Who pays for those cars and the operation. of those cars? The car riders pay it all in fares. The owners of the office buildings do not pay one cent. They ride in automobiles. -The owners of the businesses pay little or nothing. Most of them ride in automobiles. The whole burden of providing Portland with a rapid transit system is carried by the car riders.- They pay Banker Clark's 110,000 salary. They pay the wages of employes-and the salaries of all officials. They pay for the cars.jay for the tracks, pay for the oil, pay for the electric Juice, pay the rent on the company's .offices. They even pay for wear and tear on , the bridges through the bridge tolls. They pay for. free rides for city employes: Why should a car rider pay. for free rides for city-employes? Is It any more a car rider's business to pay for the rides of a city employe than for the owner of an office build ing to pay it, or for' the owner of a ship plant to pay It? . The car rider pays for paving along the tracks. He has already paid about f2,00C,O0O on that account. And. he s now made to pay "a return to the company" on that' f2,0C0jC00 investment. He is made to pay the com pany "a return" on the very money he paid for this paving. And he is made to pay for maintenance of the paving. Altogether, the company says, the charge he is thus called upon to pay is $225,000 a year. Is not the car rider being. bled white?, The car rider is made to pay the taxes on street car franchises and the general taxes of the company. He pays everything. If the wages of employes oWhe company are increased, he is called upon for a higher fare to pay the increase.- The company pays nothing, because of our new rangled doctrine that the company must be guaranteed a profit satisfactory to itself over and, above r expenses. FARE RULING FILED City Sues P. R., L At P. Co. to Determine Right of Commis sion to Order Increase. William R. Bryon, special agent of the aeparuneni oi justice, nas Had Inform. tlon regarding the existence of the wire less plant but because of the rush of more Immediate duties had not made personal Investigation. Washington county authorities,, however, had simi lar information,, and the plant was un der observation on orders of the district attorney of the county, Mr. Bryon said. ; It is probable that prosecution of Jacobsen, if it is instituteo, will depend upon the use he had made of the plant. Southern Facmc officials stated this morning" that wireless is not being em ployed in railway business and they were greatly surprised to learn that their agent was the- possessor of such apparatus. V, ' ' ' Lieutenant Wolf of Seattle Is In gen eral charge j. of wireless activities for the government In this district" ; No re' port has been received !? from him by ... . . I T t thtt etloa( n cvilom .aaeeA M,i4 rt Ai , W . W l . 1 A man a monuu nneiner ' or not tne " - wm o.h-ju f uui u uaw imuuii uu; iiivcuuun anu use Timber radio plant had interfered with of the automobile, which is the fact, and if the company loses revenue as a nis wont is not Known nere. result Mhreof vvhih la. lh fat th mi r-iAmr. m,v. ih. i. - - - - - - - ...v v. . ".V, IliUO, S,B4&C U&O IVOO W the company. He must not only pay everything eisv but he must protect the company against any loss it may sustain through the moving ahead of the world by invention and the adoption of more modern transit devices and appliances. ( ' ' ; ;::;-(. . . This car rideV whose home is modest, who must count his pennies care fully; who must pay car fare for the children attending TsehooL vho has no store laid aside for a day of sickness or bad luck or unemployment, this car rider who toils and spins, and backs up his country, to the best of his powers in the wr,.Is all alone, providing this great, rich citv nf Portia rvi Vilh its. rapid transit system. He makes It possible for downtown businesses to have customers from the outlying districts. His nickels enable the city to expand in area and population. He pays it alL s 'And the city, after he doe's all this, Us not protecting him in the' contract on which he'built his little home out - in the suburbs to wheb. he was to have Ta fare-of five oenU and nomore . - French Destroy 8 Htm Airplanes Paris. Feb. 6-(U. P- Eight German airplanes were completely destroyed and five others "were, brought flaming -to earth by French aviators in a series of formidable air battles over the German lines Sunday, It was officially announced today. - , - - v . . "An enemy , attack in . the Chemln des Dames( region, following artillery prepa ration, was thrown back before the at tacking waves reached the French lines, It "was announce . , . Suit against the Portland . Railway, LJgnt Power company to test the validity of the -cent fare ruling made by the Oregon public service commis sion was filed in the circuit court at noon today by the city. One of the principal allegations made in tne complaint Is that the commission has no authority to fix rates of .the streetcar company in Portland, because of a provision In the act creating the commission, which specifies that Jaws and regulations passed bv the neonle prior to the adoption of the public jiwrv- Ice act In 1913 are" exempt from the op erations of the commission. Fare Order Is Called Told The complaint points out that the voters of Portland passed the present charter in Mli. prior to creation of the public service commission and that this charter provided for a complete system of regulation of public utilities by the city and regulations under which the city should fix rates for all public util ities. , . . - Argument is made in the complaint to Show the act gives the commission the power to regulate and fix rates for pub lic utilities of the state, except In cases where ordinances or other municipal reg ulations have been initiated by the' peo ple prior to the creation of the commis sion. , , , . Because the state was not represent ed in the public service rate hearing when the streetcar company was. grant ed the increased fare by any law offi cers or was not a party to the hearing the complaint holds that the increased fare Is not an act of tne state. The complaint alleges that the pub lic service commission increased fare order is void because-it violates the con stitutions of the United States and the state of Oregon by Impairing the oblige tlon of contracts, In this case a part of franchisee. - Lenthy Argameets Made The city also contends that the in creased .fare Is unlawful because the railway company failed to allege In its proceeding before the public service commission that the regulation of rates by the city at 6 cents was unreasonable. The state law, the attorneys claim. holds that city ordinances regulating rates are valid until proved to be un reasonble and take the stand that the company has taken no steps to sjrovc that the i cent fare prescribed in the franchise Is not reasonable. The Increased fare order Is In viola tion of the home rule amendments of the constitution of the state. -according to the complaint. - - , Lengthy argument to support the al legations are also included uv the com plain t j - Washington. Feb. 5. (L N. S.) Un til the United States has 3,000,000 men In France, the war will not be won. Representative Miller of Minnesota, who has Just returned from the French bat- ueironu ioia tne nouse today. "We must have 4.000.000 and we shoald have 5.000,000." he said. "We will never win the war by a revolution In Ger many. Some slight eruptions mAy oc cur, but not sufficient, to be of any particular value. There is Just one way to beat Germany and that is to beat her army. Germany has 9.000.000 men perfectly trained and splendidly equipped," Mil ler aeciarea. "Tne weak spot tn our preparations to beat such an armv is our weakness In the department of trans- i portation. And British officers told me transportation Is 90 per cent of the game," he said. Holding Sabsiarlaet in Check Summing up the submarine situation. Miller said the Germans had built, all told, 265 submarines and the allies had. destroyed more than 100. Now subma rines are . being destroyed as fast as they are manufactured.; With the re turn of the summer there will be a large Increase In the total tonnage de stroyed by U-boats, Miller predicted. He insisted that one step that must be taken to Increase the- efficiency of the shipping of the United States Is to put the whole transportation problem in tne nanas of the navy. - . ; . h said eacn man- at the . frost win require six rttm-f -sfcJpptag-each year and therefore to maintain three million men abroad. 13.000,000 tons of-shipping would xe required- . ' ,- rrget Greater Activity Ja the Xary "We cannot build anywhere near the number of ships we shall need," he add ed,- "and therefore we must, by effi cient operation, make those that we ha$e go farther." "The first duty of our navy is to pro tect the line of communication from France to America," Miller declared. Disaster ha been narrowly averted more than once. . We cannot expect prov idence to be with, us all the tune. We must fight our ..own battle part of the time." v ' He made a plea for "getting out the navy." The navy never will help win the war "If It Is locked up and her metically sealed In some safe harbor of the United States," he added. Debarkatloa Port Condition Teld Conditions at the French port which has been given over 'to the United States for the debarkation of troops and sup plies were described by Miller as "lntolr erable." ' He complained of the enor mous charges being made because Amer ican ships are using the facilities' of this port. "These charges In many instances are positively 'fabulous,' 'he said. "It is the height of absurdity for us to continue to use this port and have it completely under the control of the French. . It should be turned over to us absolutely and It should be exclusively under our control with full permission to make all needed changes." j- , It would be cheaper, he said, to rent the entire port from the French govern ment The same thing is true of the railroads in France, Miller said. HE El FOOD ft! n d Ecn luun ullli Senator Wadsworth Says Arner ica's Effort. Must Constant!) Expand to Meet the Increasing Demands for Troops Overseas. Declares "End of the War Is -Not in Sight; That We Shall ' Travel a Long, Hard Road Be fore We Reach " the " Goal." WASHINGTON. Feb. 5. (U. P. . "Lack of vision," has." stalled America's war engine . Senator Wadsworth charged In , the senate today, "and a greater breakdown than the one from . which we are : now . : suffering i threatens, unless some' directing "y agency Iscfeated," ' " "I entertain the deep conviction that the end of the war Is not in sight; that we shall travel a long, hard road be fore we reach the goal." he said. "I feel certain that the strain will grow more and more severe as the months goby. . , , "America's effort must constantly ex pand ; we must send more and ' more troops abroad, must build more and - more ships to carry them, must grow more and more food . to feed the troops and to feed the allies, and we must make use of an ever-Increasing percent. . age of our mines, transportation Jaclll ties and manufacturing facilities. - In short. I am convinced that .we are only on the threshold of this tremen dous undertaking." 'In short, I am convinced that we art only on the threshold of this tremendous undertaking. 1 am not satisfied that we have the kind of organisation and ma- - Ship Caught in Gale Sinking Calls for Aid An Atlantic Port. Feb. 5. (I.'N. S A wireless call tor immeaiate neip rrom an unidentified steamer that is in danger of, sinking at a point 20 miles off the Northern Atlantic coast, has been forwarded to the authorities here by the captain of the steamship Ad miral Seoree. He caught the message which said 'that the ship was in dire straits early-, today, hut communica tlon was cut off before he could get the name. I The captain reports that his ship is having a hard time holding her own in a terrific gale that Is raging: and that he cannot go jo ine rescue. ROLL OF HONOR tVuhincton. Feb. . ft- X. S.t On mem ber of the expeditionary fare waa klllwt in ae- tiim and alx war iiMaur wonnara on renra ary 2, the war department 'announced thia after- n0"vvw.-krr. LEWIS OCSUET. Infantrr.' killed, lib father. Alvaa .Omley. lira at Wil ton. !. I. I - Tiu wounded were: Private Boyd A. Cloaa, Infantry, Potaad. Ind. Corporal . Krnert Soddelby, Infantry, Loui- Prtrata fell Woyoakly. infantry, Wyoav Private veuaa v. i man try, l.moa- villa. N. C 1 ' - Private Joe Matthew,; Infantry, Bismarck, If. D. i ' prfnii fclme V. Tnenc Farmenbon. Ind. Ftva deatba from natural caoaaa alao were ra- IX-rted : . ' - KCKSE ALICE a. mr.iu, army aura eorpa, pneumonia.- ateoia, ra. , PBITATB CUABXES VlTrGOOD, artlUry, rmttum. Demr. N. H. ! PRIVATE HOT L SWAXSOX, field arUQeTy. dilauos- tn aiOTiacu. . vvvia otowi, latnar, PBIVATK PEKCT WAHD, field Srtillary. Korean Canter, Vt. - - . .. ,-. . PRIVATE WnXI , CL-SBtaa. stavedorei. aerannan, r ..- (Cooclnded on Pas Three. Column Threer- BOLSHEVIKI FIGHT : WITH ROUMANIANS Reports , From Vladivostok Are That Hotel Guests Are Robbed by Soldiers. - Copenhagen. Feb. 6 I. J. S.) - " Fighting between the Bolsheviki and -the Roumanians now extends over a , wide front in Southwestern Russia, ac cording -to advices from Petrograd to day, saying that the Bolshevik govern ment has .begun to concentrate rein forcements against the Roumanians. The fighting tone extends ..acroei Moldavia and ..into the Russian prov- -I nee of Bessarabia as far as the Denister river; Washington. Feb. S I. N. &) Con firmation of outrages against .civilians In -Vladivostok, presumably by Bolsbe- vlk. soldiers, reached the state depart ment today. A cable from; the consular representative there states I that 80 sol- ' diers in uniform entered i the leading hotel' and demanded the passports of all persons. After "Inspecting these,- the . 1 men stole all money, and jewelry which the guests had. The department did not state whether the men robbed were Americans. ' - 1 ' . ; Confirmation of the cable reports that communication between the Roumanian government at Jassy and ; the Russian Bolshevik! is Interrupted came today , from Ambassador Francis at Petrograd, He cabled that on January 29 the Rou manian minister In . Petrograd was given 10 hours to leave for Jassy, and-, added that he "got away within the time limit-- : While the text of the dispatch was not made public. It Is said that the situa tion between Roumanla and the present i Russian government is distinctly critical. - t ' - " .' 1 ' if.rf 'i.y Safety of Americans Feared Minneapolis. Feb. 5. (I. T. 8. Velled fears for the safety of the Amer ican railway mission to Russia, headed 4 by Colonel George H, Emerson of gt, Paul are expressed In a cablegram re- . celved - here from Toklo i today. The cablegram said John F. Stevens, noted engineer; had left Japan for Vladivostok ta learn If the 300 American engineers ' -d arrived safely. . - . : . ., i - .. i Ji'