weather. nTM I K ffnl v xysv l5?f! v WixA ' - Hi r Lgl ; JjjjS 1 ' ' DAILY EDITIOIl ::: r , - SALKM, -OKKti03ft WKPSKS1MY MQlt.M.;, KBKUAKY 3. . ... v,. ... ; . v- . ', VlUCK MVI3 CLMS MORE-WAR PROCLAIMED 4 - I BY ENGLAND King- George eesnWith President Wilson That No Basis for Peace Is Found by . Democratic; Governments ACTIVITY ON WEST FRONT DAILY f.Rnwc French Capture 300 Aus trian Columns Torn Up-f Americans Active (Associated Press Bmnnuary,) ! King George and David Lloyd George, 'the British prime minister, in addresses to the British parlia ment the former before a Joint ses- house of t commons have 'declared again that in the recent utterances ot the!' spokesmen of the Teutonic allies there can he found ho basis for a peace which will fulfill the da- mandf' of the democratic govern hieents. --: ' ! The addresses of both the monarch and his prime minister were as one with President Wilson speech to congress Monday. King' George de clared that until there was recogni tion of ; the baste 'principles upon which an honorable peace could be concluded It was the duty of the British to prosecute the war with all tae vigort tney possess. , England Does Kot Recede. I , Mr. Lloyd - George asserted that President Wilson's estimate of the recent speeches of Count vpn Hert ling, the- imperial German chancel lor, and Count Czernin, the Austro Huaaarian foreign -- minister, was a correct one. tie added - that ; tne British government had not receded as lota from' its announced war aims , Until some better proof than had bees provided by the speeches of the central . powers was offered that . those countries were "-prepared "'to consider tne alms ana ideals Tor which the allies and the United States v were fighting. ' Mr. Lloyd George sid. it woHld be Great Brit ain's regrettable doty to go on and make preparations necessary to es tablish international right, 1 The military activity on the west ern front is dally increasing. : Patrol encounters are being carried out b7 increasingly large parties and more zest is being added to the fighting. ' French) Capture 300. f . . The British near Epehy and La Bassee have conducted, further In cursions into the enemy positions, In the latter region. Inflicting num erous : casualties, taking ; prisoners and - machine " guns. ; North of tho Aiiette river and In the Woevre so tor the French have made successful attacks which hesulted in the -sap-tare- of nearly 300 prisoners. I A somewhat ambitious attack by tha Germans in the Verdun sector! was put down by the French with sever casualties. T; Between the Americans and the Germans there Is constant exchange Cf artillery fire and the Americans continue to carry out patrolling manetvers ; toward the enemy trenches. The Germans evidently are anxious to gauge the positions occupied by the Americans and also to ascertain the number of men they are employing, for daily their air craft are hovering over the lines taking photographs and making ob servations. Anti-aircraft guns sev eral times have driven off the enemy. Austrian Column Torn Up. j There is no indication as yet when the Germans will txftln their niuch heralded general offensive. A Ger man captured by the Brtish says that at least one big attack is dot to begin some time In March. Mean while Urge concentrations of fresh troops daily are arriving behind the German line and carrying out prac tice maneuvers. '. On the Italian fronts the Austri an again have endeavored to -test the strength of the Italians in the Sette Communi plateau sector. The German war office asserts that the Anstrians carried out a most suc cessful attack here but the Italian official communication declares that the Austrian! columns were torn to pieces by the Italian artillery as they tried to gain the. southern slopes of Monte Sasso Ros'so and other posl tions "and ' the Offensive completely repulsed. There was a considerable Increase ra the number of aerial attacks de livered by entente airmen on German tewas in January. In an 11 of these raids were made, according to a Ger man official statement. Karlsruhe, Mannheim, v Fried rtchshaves. the home of the Zeppelin airship Indus try, and other towns were bombed. The statement says the entente lost 'oar airplanes dnrihg the attacks. . HOME, Feb. if .The Austrfans yesterday renewed their attacks on the northern front wesTof the Bren ts river but were held W check ny1 the Italians. ' The Austrian columns wer,e torn to pieces by the Italian FORTY NAMES REMOVED FROM LIST OF MISSING Six Oregon Survivors of Tus cania Are Recuperating at Halifax MILL CITY MAN IS SAFE Fate of 300 Still Unknown Archie Roberts, Salem, Accounted For AHCHIK D. . ROBERTA AND J lttr K. ; ViiWKL&OX , i 1 Aiut. HA V Kll. Thei Statesman was informed by the , Associated Press last night that Archie D. Roberts of Salem land Roy E. Powelson of 4 Mill City, two Marion county - men ' who had been numbered among the missing soldiers who were aboard the Tuscania, have been saved. No Information has been received to give hope that Cortisj Wlllson was saved. Ilia mother and other relatives live .. here. I ' WASlIMlTON, Feb. 12. Forty names were removed today from the list of unreported American soldiers who Were oh board : the torpedoed liner Tuscania, leaving 300 still to be accounted for. As the war de partment advices show only 113 sol diers lost,' 18? Of those now unre ported probably are safe. J Only seven additional survivors were named ' in today's ; dispatches and the department had not succeed ed in deciphering a number cf names garbled In cable transmission. Twenty-one men whose names ; ap peared on the Tuscania's passenger list were removed from 'the roll of unreported when the department was advised that they had been taken off for hospital treatment when the ship touched at Halifax. Twelve others were eliminated be cause they had been reported Iti press ditspatches at hospitals in Ire land. . - The safety of twenty or more troopers who salledm tha Tuscania was assured today fry announcement from the war department of men taken from the ship at Halifax, be caase they were 111. Cart V. facobson, Elk City, Or. : Jesse Robert Kime, Deer Park, Wash. Roderick D. McDonald, Belling ham, Wash. , Stephen F. Meed. Reed. Or. Edward Ft Parker. Grants Pass, Oregon. Roy E. Powelson, Mill City, Or. . ' Elvin O. Stephens, Springfield, Or, Rupert A.. Davis. Frisco, Texas. : Albert Diaz, Mission, Texas. Henry E. Forshee, Hayward, Oil. William T. George, Waverly, Tenn. Fred J. Groomer, Horseshoe Bend, Idaho. ' Jefferson Davis Jones, Wlnfield, Texas. Jacob W. Martin. Fort Worth, Tex. Howard W. Monely, Saskawa, Oklahoma. '-' -j- Ervin Miller, Ansel mo. Iteh. " Theodore Pollak, Adklus, Texas. , ; George TV. Rogers, Dallas, Wis. Rufus W, Taff, San Saba, Texas. Joe L. Taylor, San Rntonio, Texas. The war department also reported the following additional survivors, reducing the number not reported as survivors to 300. 3 Private Guss Johnson, Reedsport, Oregon. - ' w j Private George A. Stierlen, Fern dale, Wash. Private Lester "L. Smith, Gallce, Oregon. : r r r Private Walter T Larson, Warren, Oregon. ':;..: Private George R. Baker, Carter City, Texas. ' Setgeant Oliver Cote, Weedon Sta tion, Canada. Private Elmer - Holden, Fort Worth, Texas. Private Hallie M. Hoselton, .Co burg, Canada. Private Robert J. Moody, Cam bridge, Minn. ' ' Private Joseph E. McDonald, Hin ton, Okla. ' : Private Albert I. Nauraan, Minne apolis. Minn. Private ; Sidney R. Hall, Gaines ville. Texas. - ' " Private Ernest Llnthicum, Okla homa City, Okla. Private John Ridge, Pleasant Hill, Okla. - . Private John Kemper, Fairfax, Okla.' - - ; -.-i'.- . .Private. Virgil Roberts El Reno. Okla. . Private Benjamin Birmingham. Corpus Christie Texas - - First Lieutenant Clifford Welliag ton Wftller. Fenton. Mich ' The war department had no offi cial. Information to confirm ahle dispatches from a Scotch port saying that approximately 158 Americans had been lost. ? ; a The dispatches said that thus far 145 bodies had been buried along the Scotch coast and fourteen addi tional bodies were. recovered yester day, v. - " ... i ' ' ' FINAL TEST TO COME ON WEST FRONT Ukrainian ; Peace Pact and Russian Demobilization Give Central Powers Op portunity for Concentration PRISONER EXCHANGE DOES NOT ALARM U. S. Many of Captives Are Aus trians Not Available for - 'Western Front WASHIXGTOX. Feb! 1 2. - With the opening of the great campaign of 1918 on the western front appar ently In sight, military men here ex amined today with profound interest the situation created .by the signing of a peace pact between the central powers and the new Ukraine republic and the decision of the Bolshevik Russian I government td demobilize the army. Their conclusions . were not dis couraging. These events on their face would appear to set free enor mons German forces for theim pend ing battle in the west and also to furnish new sources of food supply for- the Teutonic allies, but . many factors detract from the advantages the central powers may derive. IVisoners Mostly, Austrian. One of the threats against the western! front dwelt-upon in public discussion is the fact that presum ably 1.500,000 prisoners of war held in Russia would be released to strengthen the German army. The fact is said to be, however, that the great majority of, the soldiers cap tured by the Russians are Austrian, bot available for western front ope rations by present indications. Mot of the others are civilians or camp followers of one kind or another and so far as known, only a small num ber of German troops were captured on that front. Any men from the prison camps are regarded . as of doubtful military value -for some time to come, as the Russians, un able to feed their own soldiers, hard ly have improved the health of -the captives. There Is doubt here, also, as to the extent to which the agricultural resources of the Ukraine or of Rus sia can be brought to the aid of the German people in the near future. Failure , of the Russian transporta tion system worked in Germany's In terest in undermining the fighting power of the Russian armies. The same agency now, necessarily, works against the central powers In its de sire to get out food supplies. More over, the best wheat regions which may be opened to the . Germans are in a remote section of the Ukraine and In such poor condition that the agricultural system may have to be made over,, a difficult process with the confusion that prevails through out the region. , Some Forces Most Stay. ' Demobilisation of the Russian army wilt not -mean that the Austro-German-Bulgar forces on the front iers can be wholly withdrawn. There will be a constant threat of renewed hostilities and the Germans must see to it that ample force is always at hand. . ' ;: " -; ' f In fact, diplomatic observers say. Germany is confronted with the most difficult and unprecedented problem she has met during the present war as a result of the declaration that Russia1 has abandoned hostilities without the signing of a peace treaty. The refusal of the Russians to sign any treaties alienating the Russian, western provinces, the . diplomats point out. will leax the central pow ers without any legal claim to their possession.: German and Austrian tenure will rest entirely upon the as sertion of force, without recognition of international law and consequent ly must' be subject to th decision of whatever form of tribunal finally de termines the basis of general peace. Should Germany and Austria re solve to refuse to recognize the Bol shevik decree as terminating the war without the 'confirmation of that ac tion by a treaty in the usual form, their aries would be in a position of killing an unresting and unarmed people, a proceeding regarded here as certln to cause trouble for the Teutonic governments with their people at home. An appeal from the Russian peasants 4 the working classes of Germany and Austria, it is believed here, would not fail of a sympathetic : response embarrassing to the mtitary parties. W Front Is Final Test. 3 The United States has never osrnized the Bolshevik regime rec and Rifela's abandonment of the war will not alter existing relations. This was made clear at the state department today where It also was stated that the formal signing of a peace treaty by the new government of the i Uk raine could have no diplomatic ef fect so far as this government is concerned. The first official intima tion that peace had been signed was i ; (Continued on page 5) SENATE DEBATE ON WAR CABINET WILL END SOON Controversy Expected to End in Concrete Action at Early Date BAKER' QUERYING ENPS Secretary's Statement on Ton nage for Soldiers Still Is Questioned WASH INGTON, Feb. 1 2. Contro versy over American war efficiency and, reorganization promises soon to reach concrete form for action In congress. I The senate military committee's inquiry, which began just two months ago. virtually was concluded today with the submission by Secre tary Baker of confidential informa tion regarding shipping facilities. About the same time it became known that President Wilson, unal terably opposed the committee's hill for a war council and a munitions director, plans to begin tomorrow a series of conferences with members of congress. Republicans and -Democrats, calling them -to the White House to discuss legislation giving him power to effect such reorganiz ation as he desires. The bill the president had Senator Overman In troduce last week, and which be talked over last night with Senators Overman and Nelson, probably will be amended by the judiciary com mittee and soon brought ..before the senate. . Renewal Of the senate debate, which has been suspended for a few days, is scheduled for next Thurs day, Senator. James of Kentucky, an administration -spokesman, giving notice today that he would speak then on "America and Her National Defense. He, will be followed Fri day by Senator Weeks of .Massachus etts, a Republican member of the military committee, in support of the bills for a war cabinet and monitions director. I . Chairman Chamberlain of Che mil itary committee announced late to day that' Secretary Baker probably would not be recalled again for questioning by, the committee, his detailed statement on the shipping situation being regarded as making it unnecessary. Secretary Baker, according to com mittee members, submitted complete Information regarding available American tonnage and prospects of securing allied tonnage for trans portation and supply vof American forces, sent abroad. Doubt remains in the committee, however. Chair man Chamberlain said, as to whether Mr. Baker's information! supports his statement that the prospects were not unpromising for putting a million and a half American soldiers in Europe this year. Mr. Baker, in his statement, reiterated the opinion that but two tons gross, or 1.6 tons net. are required to maintain each man In Europe. Senator Hithcock recently asserted five tons were man are necessary.. ' Although the secretary's data will not be public, Senator Weeks Unex pected to make a general statement in his speech challenging some of the conclusions. . 2 i Unregistered Enemy Aliens ' to Be Interned for War WASHINGTON. Feo. 12. Unnat uralized Germans who do not register with the police or postmasters by to morrow night will be subject to in terment for the duration of the war. the department of justice explained today in a final warning to those subject to registration. The time was extended from last Satunfv to allow the enrollment of farmers in the west who could not get to town during the bad weather of last week. Reports totiay Indicated that, many Germans remained unregistered in eastern cities, where the depart ment had been particularly anxious to obtain a full census of enemy aliens who might prove dangerous. TAR PARTY HELD FOR ATTORNEY Chicago Man Escorted to City Limits and Given Tar , and Feathers ST. , LOUIS, Feb. 12. Reports were received tonight that the Am erican Protective League of Staun ton, 111., near here. In an effort to lid the city of disloyal persons to night took by force S. Oberdan, an alleged I. W. W. leader, and John II. Metzen, an attorney of Chicago, escorted them to the, city limits, ap plied a coat of tar and feathers and started the former walking toward St. Louis and the latter toward Chi cago. -. . .... ... LEADERSHIP ! EMPHASIZED BY ASQUITH Former Premier Declares Cri sis Must Be Met by Unity of Home Forces and Confi dence in Chosen Leaders BACKING GIVEN HAIG UNSHAKEN, ASSERTION Concentrated Efforts Must Crush Militarism Which, Prevents Peace LONDON. Feb. 12. The former premier H. II. Asquith, commenting on the latest developments of the general war situation, said that a number of salient and novel facts had emerged since the beginning of the year. . "We have had a re-staemeot of the peace aims in behalf of this country by the premier, he sahi, "a state ment in.. which I entirely concur, both In the spirit and the letter, anl ou behalf or the United States by President Wilson. We have had. in addition, replies to these statements by Czernla and Von Hertling. We bad next a resumption of the Brest Litovsk negotiations which resulted In a treaty between the central pow ers and Ukraine. " After referring to the fact that Russia was no longer in the war, he said: And, finally, we read this morn ing two remarkable and Sharply con trasted declarations by -great and re sponsible persons: Firstly, a declar ation by the German emperor. The emperor's aspiration for friendship with other nations is confined in its expression to neighboring nations. That phrase does not seem to include ourselves at first sight, but perhaps it has been a lapse of speech. "What is more important for. us to note is that past experience has taught us that it might be a great mistake, that what the emperor said is a condition of peace, is what the German people and the German reicb stag really think and feel." MilitaristM Prevent Peace. Mr. Asquith then referred to Pres ident Wilson's address of yesterday and said: "The president discriminater just ly both in regard to the tone and substance between the declarations of the German and Austrian chan cellor It would seem as though, as President Wilson said, the military party in Germany alone rejected and rould have nothing to do with a peace based upon lines which, in principle, at any rate, the whole of the rest of the world is ready to ac cept. -. "It is such a peace only, and a new international order which we believe it would bring about, that would compensate for the sacrifice which justified, even necessitated, the pro longation of the war. "The peace for which we are fighting must be a clean and lasting peace, resting oh foundations of in ternational Justice. That is not only our opinion, bnt the opinion of all our allies, and we will rigorously (Continued on pagh 6.) WATER'S EDGE AT BASE OF ROCKY CUFFSl IN IRELAND IS RESTING PLAGE OF GALLANT SONS OF U: S. Twenty-five Survivors of Tuscania Dig Graves for; Dead Comrades; Mourners, Headed by British Colonel and American Private, Stand on Cliff 300 Feet Above Scene . of Burial; Correspondent of Associated Press Aids SCOTCH SF:Al Oil", Monday. Feb. 11. A cor tT.pondent of the Associ ated Press who reached hero this morning with wo American offk-erd, after a perliou voyau from Irelan-I. Is able to g'.ve tho first account of the last rooments of many if the American victims vtn-j perished as a result of tha Tuscania disaster, and of pathetic incidents attending their bnriai o the bleak an I rocky shores of this bar-en coast. The corrctsi-on-ient if tlay astute'! Iti the burial of sixteen Ameilcas?, bringing tht total of those buit.i thus far tc 145. FourJeen bodlea of 'Vmerl' jcs were recove;: today aud will be buried tomorrow.: The bodies of eight members ofthe crew .save be&n r' overed. . , - - Dead Comrades Untied. x Today's burial was at the water's edge at the base of rocky cliffs and was picturesque in the extreme. AH the tiny villages for miles around were in mourning for the Americans, and farm and fisher folk came from distances to attend the ceremonies. Twenty-five American survivors of the disaster who had been left be DEATH SENTENCE WILL BE ASKED FOR BOLO PASHA Evidence Is Concluded and Prosecution's Arguments Due Today BROTHER APPEARS AGAIN i - - Authenticity of Bernstorff Telegrams Attacked Ac countant Refutes PARIS. Feb. 12. All the evidence, testimony and. speeches by witnesses in the case of Bolo Pasha, no is on trial for treason, and apparently all the other "affaires now under in vestigation before, the French court, bad been, concluded this' afternoon and tomorrow's Sitting will open with arguments of the prosecutor. He will ask that the sentence of death be imposed upon Bolo. The trial was resumed today with M. Doyen, an expert accountant, again on the stand to refute charges made by Monsignor Bolo, brother of the defendant, . that Doyen had dis honored himself by falsifying a por tion of his original report on Bolo's activities. The witness spoke' with great reserve and moderation, de claring merely. that he took excep tion "to the form In which these criticisms were presented by a man who strangely abuses the moral au thority conferred' on him by the cloth he wears. ' M. Doyen then reiterated and explained in detail the portions of his report which the prisoner's brother had challenged. : I trot her Appears Again. After M. Doyen had testified, Mon signor Bolo again took the stand and reiterated his attacks of yesterday, especially on the authenticity of the telegrams of Cohnt von Bernstorff. former German ambassador to the "United States, duplicates of which he than to rely on American state de insistcl should be produced rather partment documents. - . . When the prosecutor repeated, as on Monday, that the American gov ernment could not be questioned, the priest created a sensation by assert ing passionately the American gov ernment has not the .right to shoot my innocent brother." v Maurice Vlllette, former minister of subsistence, testified that the cur rent opinion among parliamentary and ministerial circles in August, 1917. was that no case would be found against Bolo Pasha, and that M. Palnleve. then minister of "war. had asserted that the case did not warrant an arrest. - - ood Deed Recalled. The last witnesses of-the day re-' counted the good deeds of JolO Pasha and Darius Porchere, an ac countant, who is a co-defendant with Bolo. and also told ofJie personal feuds between the newspaper men for and against Senator Charles Humbert, former owner of the Paris Journal, one character . witness for Bolo. M Delancle. said he was sur prised that the goternmcnt had chargeed Bolo with being a friend of bbas Hilmi. former khedive of Egypt, who. It has been charged, sent money to Bolo for use in car rying on German propaganda. "Why, said Delanche. "President Wilson has not. yet said he was an enemy of Turkey."-, ' hind for the purpose t assisted the natives in digging the graves into which the khaki-clad troops tenderly placed their dead comrades. . Looking down from the top of the cliffs 300 feet above stood ; the mourners, headed by a British colon el and an American private carrying an "old glory, made for the occasion by a group of Scotch women, who on learning that the Americans had no large flag, obtained a - - small ' silk i handkerchief edition of the flag from a sergeant and remained up all night copying It on a large scale'. . Clergymen carne from rallei and read the Scotch and Episcopal serv ices; after which volnteers fired thrfe vofeys, which re-echoed against the hillsides. , While this was "going on. the only photographer within? twenty miles photographed the scene, v 1 Finger Prints FotTnd Impossible. Tho ceremony was much the same as was carried out at the same spot on the previous day, when 34 Ameri cans were laid to rest in two other graves. So badly . mutilated were (Continued on page 6) WAR BLAME rs LAID OK CAPITALIST e Russians Refuse to Continue War on Workmen Is State ment; Peace Pact Willi Landlord Class Is Refuse ' ORDER TO DEMOBILIZE GIVEN CONFIRMATION Young Soldiers to Stay c : frontiers Peace Nego tiations Ended i LOXliON. Feb. 1 2.-Confirmatio.i of the German report that Russia has withdrawn from the war is con tained in an official Russian state ment received here today. The statement says Russia de clares the war with Germany, Air-tria-Ilungary. Turkey and Bnlgari . to hare ended Russian 'troops el- munaneousiy receiving an order for demobilization on all front. For tl defense of thefrontier some detach ments of ; younger eoldiers will be left. The negotiations for peace wit", the central powers have been ende !, the statement says. The Russian del egation refused to sign a treaty pro viding for annexations by Germany. Nevertheless, Russia will not cor -tjnne the war fth the,Germana an ; Anstrians, "workmen and peasant . like ourselves." The text of the statement says: CapitalUt Class Warned. "The peace, negotiations are at c end. The German capitalists, bar. -ers and landlords, supported by V silent co-operation of the Ehgli and French bourgeoisie, submitt to our comrades, members of t! peace delegation it "Brest-Litovi , conditions such as could not-be su -scribed to by the Russian revolution. VTbe governments of German and Austria possess countries ar peoples vanquished by force of arm ;. To this authority the Russian peopi , workmen and peasants, could r. give its acquiescence. ,We could c sign a peace which; would bring wit: It sadness, oppression and sufferir to millions of workmen and peasant . . War on I'eawnts to Stop. "But we also cannot, will iot ar : must. not continue a war begun f czars and capitalists in alliance wi: czars and capitalists. We will c and we must not-continue to be ft war With the Germans and Austria; workmen and peasants like our selves.1 . " : "We are not signing a peace f ' landlords and capitalists. Let t! German and Austrian soldiers kno who are placing them in the field ( battle amd let them know for what they are struggling. Let them kno also that we refuse to fight again: them. V - '. "Our delegation, fully conscioi of Its responsibility before the llu sian people and the oppressed work ers and peasants of other countri declared on February 10, in t' name of the council of the people commlsslonaries of ; the 'governmcr of the federal Russian republic the governments of the peoples Involved-In the war with us and of tLo neutral countries, that it refused f sign an annexationist treaty. Russf i. for Its part, declares the present we -with Germany and Austria-Hungary, Turkey and Bulgaria at an end. "Simultaneously, the Rusk!:v troops receive an order for comtU ' demobilization on all fronts."' The signatures of Leon Trotz'-r; and other members of the delega tion are appended. - HORSTSiTAICE UP NEWER INDUSTilY -'i World's Biggest Hop -Yard t : Be Devoted to Vegetatls ,. Evaporation The largest hop ranch in the wori that ot Horst brothers near Independ ence, will be converted to the evap orated vegetable industry and the big hop yard drying plants will to turned Into evaporating plants, Ac cording to information that h: reached Salem and said to come di rectly from tho Horsts. The farm is located two mil' nortfi of Independence. Four hund red "acres of the ranch are to t in tho evaporators and crops pi o duced on other acreage in that sec tion may be contracted for. Independence business men hav offered to donate a ite for the pla: at that place and it is reported thr ' there is'a possibility that tne pia: . may be moved into the town. (Contlhued oft Page t (Continued on page 2)