Medford Mail Tribune man SECOND EDITION WEATHER Tonight iiimI Wrdncdn Knln. Milt. .-.(( Mln. HO. Ferfv-fiffh Year. rnih T'nth Vrnr MKDFOUD OKI .HON. Tn.sDVV, r.l, II 7. 1 f 1 i XO. 297 !, CONGRESS ENOORSES PRESIDENT By Substantial Majorities House Votes Not to Warn Americans From Armed Merchantmen, Sus taining Policy of President Pro posals to Allow Anti-Administration Amendments Defeated De bate Wages on Resolution Itself. WASHINGTON, March 7.Tho vote In tabling tho MoLomoro rosolu. Hon was 270 for, 113 nsulnst. WASHINGTON'. March 7. Presi dent Wilson's stand that congress ahull not ndviso Americans lo abnn ilnn llioir rifhtt to travel tho sons on merchant shi nrmril for defense in accordance with intctnational law was indorsed in tho house toilnv by two heavy tet votes on the McLe niorc resolution. llv substantial majorities tlie ad ministration forces defeated attempts to nmenil the resolution to the liking, of the president's opponents nnd put it squarely before the house without nmenilment for n vote under n spe cial rulo nt tho end of four bourn' debate. About 0 o'clock this evening tho administration foiccs will move to table the MoLemoro resolution and tho heavy votes they polled in the two preliminary tents indicate that thev will kill it by a substantial ma jority. Dissentient I'Yovtned Upon Once tabled, tho resolution will hove gone tho way of tho Goto reso lution in the senate nnd n majority of congress will have been placed on record before the world as demon strating that it does not indorse tho dissensions against the president's forciiiu policy. In quick i-uccession todny the house rejected tho pnosnl to allow nnti-ndrainistration amendments to the Mrl.crnarti resolution nnd then adopted the special ruin for consid eration of tho resolution itself, rout ing the opposition by voteH of 2."(1 to 1110 and 'J7I to i:S. respectively. Immediately after tho adoption of the rulo debute began ou tho resolu tion itself, Chairman Mood of (ho foreign affair committee mo, tug to table it. Vote Not Partisan Ouo hundred and ninety-two demo crat voted for the administration on the prcious question, which waft tho riuciul test, 01 republicans and ono progiessive, Mart ill. Total, 256". Op posed to the administintion wore '-'1 democrats, 132 republican, 5 pre gicssiwa, I independent (Kent), 1 -.oi-ialist (Londou); loial, 10o nays, Huwley, McArthur and Sinuott of Oregon opposed the administration. I 'u Leoils Attack Mr. I'ou attacked tho McLeniore resolution at tho outset. "It means in effect that if nn American disregards n turning that tin' United State gcrnmont will told its hands," he said. "Is there a single red-blooded person in this house or this country who wants to do that I It is charged that the pres ident wants war. All the imps of hell never devised a more infamous charge. No man since Abraham Lin coln has gone through such a tet as the president has gone through in the Iat six months. He has tried to proene Moce. Ho would not sae utice a single life to moke himself president lor a lifetime. He has the support ot both sides of this chain- (Continued on page six) lw.NI. March 7. A dtl.md Ila a dip.itih tiled in Sulomki on S.iturdiu ynes u rcpoit that almost all the Austrian and (ienuuu troops winch had been concentrated on the It.ilkun front have left fur the west irn tioiit. "- T i'.'-h ic.iniilx, tl--- !!.-- . t t - It I t II' C. -II ' i J,. I 1,1 i.. ' U. t,.- LEAVE KIEL-CRUISE IN THE NORTH SEA HO.MI!, March .", via London, Murch ") (delayed). Twenty Gor man drendnuughts have left Kiel, according to infoi motion received here today. Tho foregoing dispatch was hold up by tho Hritish censor for two days. Another dispatch filed in London at II :2." o'clock this morn ing said that a fleet of twenty five German warships was observ ed Monday cruising in tho North sen. This message was received in London from Yliclund, near North Holland. ITALIAN STEAMER GKNOA, March 7. via I'nns.- Sil io Potcnzuni, commander of the Italian steamship Giavn, which was sunk bv a submarine March 1 in tho Mediterranean while on her way from Leghorn to a Greek port with pns songers nnd u cargo of cement, glws further drte1: of tho destruction ot his ship. Tho commanding officer of the submarine refused to tow tin. boats with the crew and passengers to the neighborhood of tho const of Milo, tho nearest land. On account of tho nature of the cargo, no attempt was mndo to torpedo tho vessel, the big submarine employing for tho de struction of tho Italian vessel tho two three-inch guns which tho wnr craft carried. It required forty-five shot to scud the fieightur to the bottom. Tho captain nf firms that he stop pod his vessel nt tho first warning shot from the submarine, but that the latter continued to fire. The sen was calm and tho trans fer of crew nnd passengers to ih boats was achieved without diffi culty. They were soon discovered bv a Hritish steamship and taken to the island of Milo, where they found HOP) survivors from tho French nuxiliary cruiser It l'rovenee II. The Brit-h vosscl before reaching Milo sighted a submarine which began prepara tions to attack hor, but was fright cned off when llrilish dostroycr showed up in tho distance. The Giavn, 2031 tons gross and .T) i feet long, was built at New Cas tlo in 1S.S1 and was owned in Pal ermo. Imports from Athens stated that tho Giava was sunk by a large submarine living the Austrian Hag nt a ikoint about 1:10 miles from Cnuc Mi.ttapnn. The pacnge! nnl crew in tl ree boat, ach rescued b the Ui.lih UMmship Tuwh.m. E OVER FOREIGN POLICY WASHINGTON. Mni-h 7. Repte tentative (tnbert M. Page of North Carolina will not lie a candidate for re-election because he disagrees with President Wilson in tho submarine (ontrovcrsy. Mr. Paso, who is a brother of Ambassador Page at Lou- don. so announced in a letter to bis coustituentb. The annoiinccmeut aused a sensation in tho house at tho moment of a vote on what prac tically is a proposal not to interfere with the pi trident's diplomatic nego tiation. CITY OF OAXACA WASllINTiTON', M.,uh 7.- The tily of Ouxacu. in Mexico, w buru- 'ed March "), accoiding to informa tion reaching the Mute department toduy from tbe Cafrunu government. It was uUo reported tT(ut thoe who have been in poeion of the city ii.ic i-wicuatcd It. 'ill' l'.i:i.lll I II '10!. t d- 'fil bma WITHOUT WARN NG 1 III ' I ill ..' . 1. 1 .(J, I .,1 1 , Jl u HILL NO. 265 CAPTURED BY GROWN PICE Attack on Verdun Shifts to West and Germans Pound Away From Be yond the Meuse Town of Forces, Nine Miles From Verdun, Taken British Assisting French In Verdun. LONDON, March ".The attack on Verdun has hhifted lo the west nnd tho Germans nit now pounding their way toward the fortress from be yond the Meuse, advancing along tho railroad that parallel the westerly bank. Last night t no crown princes troops assaulted and took tho town of Forges, nine railos northwest of Vet dun, but woro prevented by tho French from debouching ngninst the I'ote do l'Oie, a height about n mile to the south. Today comes tho admission from Paris that tho Germans after u vio lent bombardment succeeded in forc ing their way through Forges and tolong the railroad in the vicinity of Uegnovillc, a village n mile and a hilt southeast. Simultaneously an entire division violently nttnckod and capttned Hill No. 2(1.", southwest of Itegnoulle. Heavy losses were sustained by the Germans in taking this position, 1'nrt.s declares. French linos further west hnvo held nnd they are in possession of IJethin- Court and nearby territory and still occupy Coto do l'Oie. There is still notable artillery nf tivity along tho immediate front of Verdun, east of tho Mouse, as well 'as in tho Woovro district southeast iif the fartreM. The first confirmation of rcM)its that tho ltritish were assisting the 'French in the defense of Verdun onmo today in a statement that nu Aus tralian siege brigade was fighting there J tie ltritish big cutis Hie said to have been doing great execution. It is official! v declared in London that in the Gemian Zeppelin raid of Siinilnv night no niiht.u.. dam.ige was inflicted. PORTLAND. Ore, M.inli ". George T. Whitofleld alias Melee Orr, agod 54, a former teacher of Latin, was In Jul! hero today a self confosiod forger, according to the police. Ills downfall, he Is said to have stated, wus iu to the fact that he was short sighted and hard of hearing and the students in his Latin classes laughed at him. He whs ar rested early today while preparing to catch a train for Suuttlo. He Is alleged to have confessed having forgod checks In San Diego, Los Angoles, Stockton, Sacramento, Portland. Tacoma, Seattle and Vic toria. II. C. According to the police, Whltefleld ! the cleverest forger that has been arrested on the coast In a Rumber of years. According to his alleged confession. Whitoflold taught Lstln and classics at St. Mary's college ut Techny, III, Sacred Heart college at Sucrod Heart, Okla., and at Holy Cross college In N' Orleans Ills physical Infirm! ties, however, and the jibes ot bis scholars, who rnslderod him a per fect specimen of bookworm, diove him from the teu htng profession. L ' MAKSHFIELD, Or., March 7. The landslide which threatened to carry the town of Wedderhurn into the Kogue river haa stopped, accord ingto word received here today from 'iuld Deacb. The rain which has fallen steadily for several days is thawing signs of stopping. Ureal figures several hundred, yards long Vcic upemd at the crc-t of the bill ..' iv(en-:ii i('ii.i'.'i w.i- ilntif. lint STUDENTS DERISION CAUSE 1 " I. 11I1I11 . - mil 1 h ,1 11. In lla I. ..1, THE ROAD r7..o 'mmtfm7'' GERMAN RAIDER :MIUJ0N INCREASE PREYING ON ALLIES j IN BRITISH NAVAL dapicip rTiMMirDpri mMMAPc dv uiad I HUH IU UUIfllllLllUL! I UI1ITOL U KVHh HONOl.t LP. T II . Mhi.Ii 7. Hrltlsh shipping lu the Pacific U en dangered l) the pie.Nince sodium hero In Pacific waters of u Oermsu raider, warnings concerning which have been issued 1 the ltritish admiralty, ac cording to statements of officers of the ltritish steamer Niagara made public here today. The officers of the Niagara, It waa announced, confided to officials of this port that the vessel had been notified by the admiralty of the pres- inc of the raider, sutd to have been seen in the Straits of Magellan and reported to Port Stanley, Falkland Islands, by captains of ressels pass ing through the straits. The Australian battle cruiser Aus trails snd tbe Australian cruiser Sydney, the officer of the Niagara said, are searching for the German raider, and it is believed that tho Japanese cruisers Chltose and To klwa are huh engaged In the search. The Niagara arrived here March 3 from Sydney. AuHtralia. en route to Vancouver. It. (' . and at that time It was reported liv passengers on the vessel that lirttlxli officials in Aus tralia believed there was a German auxiliary omewheie in tbe Pacific. For two weeks the Niagara steamed at full speed, arriving here a day ahead of time. SWEDEN TRIES TO LONIiOX, March 7 -Hauler's Co penhagen orretipourient sends tbe follewing: "A dispatch lo tbe Pulltlkon from Stockholm says It is stated is Swed ish political circles Hunt tbe Swedish government en two separate occas ions applied to the failed States lo obtain President Wiltfg'a co-operation for concerted mediation towards PMM. "President Wilson, who already at an early stage of the war had his of fer rejected, adds the dispatch, de clined to join the movOjent until re guested by the belligerents. "It Is stated that at Stockholm and other neutral capHals, tho ciiu-stlon la lielng ill .j-iii nf foriiiiii. a mt--'lU'ion 1 oiii. " 1 . IiIki'ii ii 1 , OKvistioii ul tl.. I m"-ii ntj I ORGANIZE NEUTRALS TO VERDUN! LONDON, .,., 7. A. J. lial Ymr, tn! lord of the admiralty, Mated in the hini'.e of cunuuons to day thut the tonnage of the Mritiidi tuny had been inereawed by one mil lion sine the outbreak of the war, while the strength of the air diviaion 'of the navy hud grown tcufold. LON'IKJX, March 7.-The ehief in- 1cTct ill the vM'iiing of jiarttanieul IimIhx ecnlen lit the exa(eled impor tant -ItJlcinent by Arthur J. Ualfour, lirxt lord of the admiralty, in Intro ducing the entimulex for the navy for the eexning year. Colonel Winston 1 'hurt-hill, Mr. Iinltour's predeeesMor in office, i cxpiM'tcd to take unrl in (he debate from nn opiraeition stand Htinl. Another feature of (ho heion will be the reply ur Premier Aviuilh to a ipiextion regarding the projected mr iitoruiai for obligations of men uulled Vi the colors. Air. llalfoui speech will coinnrioo a broiiil general mirtey of the eon ilition of the navy, i( j believeil. The mly exuet information which uill be tivi-ii in the navy oiimiite iIiJn year will he ilwit icgunliiig the personnel, approxiiiuiiclv .VtO.Uuu nicer' and men, nu incHiitc n ,"0,MHJ uver llixt c.i r. NATIONAL PARK CONFERENCE CALLED T.W I'MA. Wa.b., Maul. 7. su-icni-.nr I). L. Keiibum l tin- It.uni' r nntii-nnl park left Tacoma lust tucht for Yiihingtou, D, I'., to attend n Vonferciice culled by Htepheu T. Mather, assistant aoeretuiv of tho interim, and by Robert Marshall, geneial KiiM-rintendent of national jwrk'i. The cunfereuce is uiidcrMol to bear on the policy of the aluiini4 trutiou tin-, war iu natioiutl jmrk iuaitcr-.. ADMIRAL ASA WALKER DEAD AT MINNEAPOLIS WAKIIINdTON, Maul. 7. Hear Adinir.il Aa Wulker, icinciL'O, une .1 1. ..1 1 . ti 1.. Ill 1 1 W- - MIIIIIIIMIIII ill llllllllll I''.' . 1 l l" . . Mil, I. I ,.l, I . .ittl'l I ' I ' II' I II, I .'III. I 1 1 r n , ., N II Will CnN'QDnilPV IS SUSTAINED BY UTAH SENA Stitlicrlaml Prefers War to Playinp, Poltroon or Placlnn. Ease Before Honor Submarine Must Yield to Law, for If Law Yields to Submar ine, Security on Seas Has Fled. WASHINGTON', March 7. Dis cussing tho armed ship Ibsiio today In tho fionnto Hcnntor Hutherland of I'tnh, a republican member ot tho foreign relations committee, atood squarely behind President Wilson In I his policy of dealing with Germany In tho submarine negotiations. I do not want wnr nt any tlmo," aid Senator Sutherland, "and I pray God that It may not conio now, but I would rather hnvo wnr with nil Its -aulflres and suffering than that thla nation, with Its long history of lioro lm nnd glory, should play tho pol troon when confronted by tho su preme national duty, because It places greater value upon Its en no than upon Ui honor " No Seeker of Wnr ' I am one of those who doslro pence.' tin senator continued, "but n nation when all other moaiiH fall that will not resent a flagrant nnd IllcKal attempt upon tho lives of Its own citizens Is only Iosh dctostnhlo than a man who will not fight for his vlfo and children. And, believ ing, as I do, about that, It tho llfo of an American cltliun Is iigaln taken bv the Illegal iDid deliberate sinking without warning of a morchniit ship, unarmed or armed only for defense, that this government should hold tho offending nation to a stem reckon ing, I shall never give my consent to tho Iwniauco of a formal and offi cial notice such as has been proposod which If not heeded would, without minimising our duty In tho leant, have the effect of embarrassing mid weakening our moral stand If wo should once moro be under tho sad necessity of seeking retwratiou for the destruction of the lives of our people " Senator Sutherland In discussing tbe legal status of armed merchant ships under International law mid tho relation thereto of the submarine con tended that the submarine must yield to the law and nut tbe law to tho sub marine. Law Aboio Siituuailuo "If the law yields to the submarine," he said, "and allows the underwater boat to sink vessels armed dofonslvo- ly only without warning and without Kiting iwssengers and crow a clinnco to get to a place of safety, It will bo Inviting the sinking nf unarmed ships ss well since, he said, "It Is well nigh Impossible for the officers of n submarine to determine In advance Another a Riven vessel Is armed or tiot. The result will be that unarmed vessels while possessing Im munity lu theory mill have none lu fact. "The question next arises ami, In deed, It Is really the cruklul question shall our cltleius be officially ad vised to forbear fiom traveling 011 belligerent merchant vessels armed fur defense only Or, Indeed, shall w go farther sud forbid their doing so under penalty for disobedlenee7 If I am correct In what t have already said, namely, that these merchant shlpH have the right to cariy defen sive uriiinmi'iit. it follouH that such (Continued on page two.) T IiKXU.K, i -I.-. M.m h 7 For the scccnil time this winter south- westein Culorml" is -iihwIiomihI. l)u rungu, the centci oi the Murui, bus for tcUe hums been cut off from outside commuuieatiun and t luff in jreuerullv in tho Kan Juaubusin i dcuiorulued. Thirty-fie puengrs on a Den ver tt Rio Urande paseuger train have been held at t'bania, N. II., for he days on uccuuut of the drifting now, f Tlie publif utilities eommissiun of Coliir.ido bn- bci'ii upiealed to in a 1 I G0L0RAD0 AGAIN SNOWBOUND l'-il:iii lii.in tin ' ic'i I -. v nu III ,1 ti"U snow bound i" I 11 lellet cXK'dl- UIPU DDiPC flC I 10 BIG PROFITS No Rc.il Competition In Fuel Oil Bus iness, Declares Secretary Lane Pipe Monopoly Never Disturbed Increase Price Shown In Special Dividends nnd Melons. llv atLSON' GAHDKK1L WASHINGTON', Mnroh 7. Profits for tho oil ooinpuiiios-indcpendcnti nnd Standard is tho answer to why gasoline is so high. Tho report of the secretary of tho interior, Frnnk liu I. Lnne, maile to congress, is conclusive on this point. Increased consumption nlid In creased exports there have been, but neither of these enuses is respons ible for the high price of gasoline. There is- no real competition in tho fuel oil business. The fcdoml truilcs iHimmisMiou report just finished set lies that. This document showa that tlio pipe line monopoly which iu tho batd of the control in this industry never has been d'uttuihud, nnd that no independent enn becomo 11 real competitor whilo dependent on tho trust, nn thev all nn, for their pipe line trunspotlntion. Where the iiieroused prioo paid for gasoline is going is shown by tho profit figures of tho companios. Spe eiul dixidendw, regular dividendn, "melons," stock dividend), hnvo been piling tip so fnst thut it takos n Hur rows ndding mnuhino to oven try to comprehend it. Aiunliig DUIdcnds Secretary Lane points out tlitu fuut nnd selects ns a sttmpto iiuuount of dividenils 11 (piotntion from tho "Potrolcum Age" of N'ctv York for tlecember, 10L", ns follews: "Convincing proof of the amazing recovery within tlio oil Industry In tho Just Imlf of 1015 is furnished by the dividend declarations of tho Standard Oil group for the hut quar ter, which reached tho astonishing total nf $J 1,788,(13(1, which is tlio rec ord for any ipmrter since the disso lution, with the exception of tho first quarter of 11)1. 'I, when Standard Oil Co. of 'New Jersey nmdo its fumous 10 ner cent wish distribution. True, it is thut of this sum, .f,8n0,000, representing tlio 1ft per cent dividend of Illinois Pipe Line, ft per uent by Prairie Pipe Line, and 3 per cent by Prairie Oil & flas Co., will not bo imyuble until January lo, but all of them are syulile to December shnro holdern and repiesent distributions. front 11)15 profits. Including those sums, Die total of rogulnr nnd o.tm cash dividends wince the dissolution in December, 1011, reaches tho im preasiw total of JUO.OIJD.OS:!, to which must be udded sioek dividends at par totulling 1100,100,000. Taking into account the present market vnluu of the distributed stock, tho cosh alue of ull distributions iu tho lust four years by this grouo is in oxcesn of hulf a billion dollars. Tho mar ket effect of this enormous oarnintf 'eiiiMicity is slnkmgly rofleeted in the steady appreciation in value of tbe old Standard Oil Co. of Now Jer sey stock 'all on which has risen from Ic-h tlmu 050 al the time of tho dissolution in December, 1011, to a new high record of 1770 during the current mouth." Tniit'i Kuoiiiioiis Profits lluw enormous are the profits on- joyed b the Staudui'd trust itnoo itH "dissulution" by court dooiue 1110 best et out iu the words of Ueibert S. Migdow of C'iuuiniiutl, who Iiuk Kicu some attention to the subjoet. He calls attention to the fact thut 1. lie Mnckholdcr in the Standard lints icilicl vJii.000.000 r year in divi id ml- .nu! that the value of this puv- (Contlnuoa on Page Two) - I 1(1 TLAND, Vi., M'ureh 7. -Tho ijUestiou whether stutewjde prohibi tion, beginninuMay I. shall supplant the local opium torm of lituor soil ing, which Im- In ' 11 c. .me ior thu- teen yours, wn- tited n at the Ull- uual tort 11 iiieeiiiiKs IuiI.in. Vermont GASOL w.i- 111 I lie (uolilbilion ruuks for bull .1 vuluiy up to 1'JiRl, , 11