X WEATHER Maximum Yesterday 1021.; Minimum Today GO. FORECAST Ton iglit and Tomorrow Fair. Medford Mail Tribune Forty-seventh Tear. Dally Twelfth Year. . MEDFOTt'D, OREGON, WKDNES1) AY, JULY IS. 1917 NO. 100 C;c;:n Exchr.nses V SLAVS RETAKE KA 1 GERMAN FORCES Germans Heavily Reinforce Line and Battle is Still in Progress British Fighting With Slavs In Gaiicia Increased Activity Upon Rumanian Front French Gain round. PETROGRAD, July 18. Heavy fighting is continuing; in Hie region of Novica, and Knlusznin, eastern Gn licia, the war offiee announced today. The Russians were driven from a height in this region by a strong at tack but afterwards by a counter thrust reoccupicd the eminence. Brltis With Russians. WASHINGTON, July 38. British armored motor detachments arc tak ing part in the Russian offensive in Gaiicia, according to a semi-official information received today from Petrograd by the Russian embassy here. This is the first mention of the presence of British forces in Rus sia and says the armored ears are co-operating effectively with Belgian detnehmcnts sent there soon after the war begun. BERLIN, July J 8 Increased no-, tivity on the Rumanian front is rc Ijfrtcd in today's official statement. Artillery fighting was revived in the sectors of Archduke Joseph and Field Murslinl Von Muckensen. On the northern end of the Russo-Ga-lician front in the regions of Riga, Dvinsk and Smorgon, the artillery engagements were more severe. BERLIN, July 18. The trenches recently captured by the Germans near Mnlancoiirt wood and on both sides of the Mnlancourt-Ksncs road were penetrated by tho French yes terday, tho war office announcement says. On Western Front. Meanwhile there is notable activity along the Franco-Belgian front. The French at Verdun have just complet ed an important operation in the re alignment of their front northwest of Verdun, which was disturbed by Ger man nttaeks in the vicinity of Hill 304 last month. The French in fact carried their successful counter attack even be-' Nond the original line and drove near ly two-thirds of a mile into the Ger man front from Avocourt wood to west of Hill 301. The new ground is being firmly held, several counter uttacks under taken by the crown prince's troops last night being repulsed. On the British front, there is pro nounced artillery activity and there lias been u notable amount of heavy work done by the artillery, partic ularly along the lines in Belgium, SEATTLE TROLLEYS FAIL TO MOVE SEATTLE, Wn., July 18. The Paget Sound Traction, Light and Power company, whose 1 11(10 street .ir conductors and motornien struck yesterday for recognition of the un ion, made no effort today to run cars, but announced that cars would be run next Friday and offered to reinstate those of its men who ap plied for work. A remarkable fu ture of the strike is the facility with which traffic is handled by the linn dreds of motor buses, which nre cov ering all portions of the city. Bus iness is proceeding almost ns usual in spito of the lack of ear scrvi e. The city has not decided on n plan of action against the traction com pany. Mayor Gill advocates suit to forfeit the franchises of the com pany, nnd Corporation Counsel C.ild well says the-better plan would be to ask A receiver for the company. which is in arrenrs in its payment o taxes to the city. REGIMENT OF M0R0S FOR SERVICE IN FRANCE MANILA, July 18. Plnns are un der way for the formation of a full reiriment of Moros. in the lioite that eventually it will be attached to the American exieditionary force France. PROHIBIT SALES CROP SITUATION TO GOVERNMENT GROWS ACUTEAS BY ITS AGENTS CONGRESSTALKS Senate Adopts Amendment Limiting Power of Members of National De fense Council Charges Made De clared False Vote $15,000,000 for Making Fertilizers at Cost. WASHINGTON, July IS.. After a week's discussion and In beginning to vote on amendments to the food con trol biTl, tho senate today tentatively adopted, 54 to 17, a substitute amend ment by Sonator Pomorone of Ohio, prohibiting government agents, In cluding national defense council ad vlcory members, from executing gov ernment contracts in which they are personally interested. Meets Objections. The Pomcrone substitute was de signed to meet objections to the ori ginal amendment which would have prohibited such persons from selling to the government thru any company in which they were stockholders or officers. The substitute would per mit service in advisory capacity with the existence of the Interest disclosed. Senators voting against the modi fied amendment were: Senators Bo rah, Broussard, Cummins, Gore, Gron- na, Hardwick, Johnson of California; Konyon, LaFollottc, McKellar, McNa ry. Nelson, Norris, Itansdell, Shields, Sutherland and Trammcll. Senator Poinerene warned against enacting any legislation that would in any way tend to disrupt the advisory commission and criticized member of tho senato for attacking officials of tho government without verifying their statements In advance. Kcnyon's Charges False. Charges wore ropoated yesterday by Senator Kenyon that the W. II. Mc Elwaln company, a shoo concern of which J. F. McKlwaln, chairman of the advisory commission's shoo com mittee, is a member, had been award ed contracts to furnish 100,000 pairs of army shoes at Sii.17 a pair, fifteen cents more than tho lowest bidder. Senator Pomcrcno said he had been advised by the secretary of war that this concern had submitted no bidB and received no contracts since Janu ary 1, 1917. Senator Tillman gave notice that ho would ask for a separate vote to morrow on tho amendment proposed by Senator Smith of South Carolina to have the government spend $15,000, 000 for fertilizer and furnish it to the farmers at cost. U. S. ARMY RONS PARIS, July 18. Offi-ial an nouncement is made that the I'nitcd Stales transport service is taking over control of the French lines from the port bases to the permanent camp and the front. Tracks are being laid and sidings enlarged. The roads will he manned later by American en gineer regiments. American loeomo tives, mostly narrow guage will be utilized. Most of the supplies wi'I be imported from the I'nitcd St ites. A section of the French state lor ests has been turned over to the I'nitcd States. American lumbermen will take ottt lumber ofr railroad ties, barracks nnd other purposes. In addition to this .'lO.OIIO tons of lumber will be imported from Amer ica monthly. PALLAS, Ore., July IS. Moro than one-half million feet of lumber, It Is estimated, has been destroyed by a forest fire which has been burn ing slnco Sunday on the tract of the Sheridan Lumbor company at Cedar Mill camp. 12 miles from Sheridan Ore., according to reports reaching here. The fire is Mill beyond con trol. Over 300 acres have been burned. It Is believed the blaze started from sparks from a donkey engine. Nation Faces Chaos in Handling and Marketing Crops Unless Food Con trol Bill Is Passed Old System Is Demoralized and No Machinery Whereby Farmer Can Market. (Staff Special.) WASHINGTON, July 18. The harvest and distribution of this year's wheat, already upset for lack of authority to stabulizo prices and stimulate movement when wnr has disarranged normal trade, will be in absolute chaos within two weeks un less the senate stops jamming hot air nnd passes the food control bill. .Situation Acute The situation is more acute daily. Experienced grain men have shown administration leaders liow unless the bill is passed quickly, both the farmer and consumer will suffer tre mendous losses and the whole wheat crop machinery will be deadlocked. Even the president has pleaded for action. But congress still tal'.;s. The food bill, constantly before congress since May 22, has been the one subject before the senate for three weeks. All pet hobbies, fiom prohibition to reforestation, have been offered ns amendments, while the senate ran its whole gamut of obstructive tactics. Meanwhile more than one-half the wheat is in shock nnd winter wheat threshing i under way. The fanner, trying llo jnarket bis iwhcalj, only finds failure of congress to act has left him in a hole. Demoralization Rules. Millers nnd elevator men, ham pered by bank credits restricted by uncertainly, arc timid and reluctant buyers. Prices nre wobbly. Trans portation is uncertain. Tho whole grain market is "up in the air." It is not the threat of what will happen if the food bill pusses, it is the overturning of normal con ditions without the slabalizing influ ences to meet war conditions, that is responsible. In pence supply nnd demand lvgn late grain prices. On the prices thus fixed hanks arc willing nnd anxious to financo the purchase nnd move ment of grain. All legitimate de ilcrs millers, elevnlor men, exporters are normally nble to protect them selves against speculative fluctua tions. In war the whole system has gone to smash. With America the f.nle wheat source for half the world, n.p ply and demand no longer work. Eu rope, paying us with our own money, would pay any price in open market. Prices would soar beyond the reach of millions. An open market would leave the field wide open to the spec ulator. At the very best, unless the coun try sticks a prod under congress and demands that it. slop talking rnd vole, it will be August 1 before, the bill can become a law. It may be August .r. FIRST ACTION PICTURES OF I. W. W. STRIKE TROUBLE IN ARIZONA. imdyHM mm . te fienernl view of rofimofl rnmp at ColunibiiH, X. !., where 1 1(11 men, deported from Arizona, hit lielng cured for by V. H. troop In command of Colonel II. ti. nickel. AImiiiI 50 mt cent of the exiles ore Americans, The foreigners nre Kcrvliin, linllnns, Mct Icons, Austrian, Kiiitllxlimcn and n few (irrman.. Many of tho men had hern without food for fW hours when Uicy reached Columbus... About 100 am registered for the. draft nnd mnny linve bought Mlwrty bond nml Bided the Hod Cross fund. Twenty of the men nro Imslncfts men from lllice. HE'S MAN OF II HOUR fcfeiSi,. fin , pgrl Vnrior Cirnenil Korniloff's tairiorship tlio rocent miu vcloiis oiIvhih-c of the new Russian democracy's amiy toward IxMitlrrrg, raj). till of Gaiicia, has bcn ttuiric. LI SELL COURT-PLASTER KANSAS CITY, July 18. A plot to spread terror thru the slaM of Kansas by the means of disease in noculation thru court plaster was slated today by Trod Iiobcrlson, United States district attorney of Kansas, at Kansns City, Kan., to have been broken up thru the arrests of three different men in that, stale. Government tests conducted by W. S. Smirli, government chemist, and three uidcM were said to have reveal ed tetanus genus on plasters the three men men were selling and giv ing away. Other genus, not yet iden tified, were declared lo have been found. The names of the three vcrc withheld. Mr. Robertson was at a loss to find a motive for the nllcgcd plot. The fact that the names of the three persons under arrest were of Ger munic origin and other features con nected with it. might indicate, he said, that it was of an enemy nature. "It is apparent that these persons wanted to start some sort of trou ble," he said, "but I don't know just, how W attribute it. It may be mere ly the work of cranks orit mav have a broader scope. We aro continuing our investigations." AMSTKHDAM, July 17. The Ber lin Rcichsnnzcigcr publishes an of ficial announcement of the recall and retirement of llcrr Michnclis, the German minister to Norwnv. ON THE RUSSIAN FRONT L ,G. KORJIXLOFF LONDON, July 18. Sir Kdward Carson bus relinquished his post as first lord of I he ailuiirall.y and joined the war cabinet without portfolio, according to mi official announce ment of new ministerial appointment!- issued this evening. Sir Kdward will be succeeded by Sir Erie Campbell Geddcs, who has been director-gen era! ol munitions supplv. Edwin Samuel Montague, n former cabinet minister, is made secretary lor India. Sir (ledilcs was born in India 41 years ago. At 17 he left school in England to seek practical experience in America. He was with the Home stead steel works at Pittsburg for a year and with the the Balliiuore 4 Ohio railroad three more. Then he returned to India. After six years ill India he was called to England in P.MIH by the Northeastern railroad. When with the outbreak of the var, Iird Kitchener called on the rail road managers of England to nid In the swift, and secret. I ransportntion of troops to the front, the work of (leddes attracted attention. Kitch ener retained him in the service of the war department to superintend the transportation of munitions from factory to the front. Later Sir Eric was sent to Franco lo help reor,;an ize the congested French railroads. REICHSTAG TO MEET THURSDAY TO TALK PEACE New German Chancellor Summons Parliament for a Communication From the Government Pan-German Accent to Speech Probable Will Likely Ask for 6 Weeks Grace. LONDON, July 18.-A dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph company from Berlin, via. Amsterdam, an nounces that Chancellor Michnclis has asked tho president of the reieh- slag to summon tho members Thurs day afternoon for a "communication from the government." BASEL, July 18. Tho Neustes Nnchriclilen of Munich sitys tho dec laration of the new German chan cellor, Dr. Michnclis beforo the lcich stag tomorrow will he for pence, hnv ing the same general trend ns the resolution prepared by the parties of the left. Pcac4 Itftsoliition. The resolution referred to probably is tho ono drawn up by tho radical, socialists and entholie'dcputies In the reichstng before the resignation of Dr. Von Bctlimann-IIollweg. This resolution which the majority bloc decided to introduce unchanged up on tho reassembling of the parlia ment, stated that the reichstng was laboring for peaco nnd reconciliation, that forced acquisitions of territory and political, economic and financial violations were incompatible with such a peace, that ceonomic pence must bo assured and tho reichstng would promote, the creation of inter nationul judicial organizations. Silent ns Sphinx, COPf'lNIIAOKN, July 18.-Chnn-cellor Michnclis is preserving the silence of a sphinx on the Germnn peace program anil the questions of internal reform, hut the liberal press and politicians in Gerninny manil'esl an increasing apprehension that when the sphinx finally breaks si lence ho will spenk with a decided pun-German accent in his maiden speech Thursday before tho rcich slag. The speech is not expected to go exhaustively into questions of re fonn or peuse ns the time is too short for Chancellor Michnclis to elab orate u definite progrnm. The so cialist agency reports that in all prob ability lie will ask six weeks grace (o inform himself and work out n de tailed policy. The agency undoubt edly speaking for llcrr Sclicidemann, the socialist, leader, demands, how ever, that llcrr Michacn's immediate ly and unequivocally mako clear his attitude' on the Prussian ' franchise reform mid the peace formula. WASHINGTON, July 18.-H.land S. Mums, of Philadelphia, has been chosen for appointment ns ambassa dor to Japan to succeed the late Ambassador Guthrie. It. is under stood he is persona grata to Japan and that the nomination will go to the senate shortly. Iloland S. Morris, who has been selected for thn vnrant ambassador ship to Japan, Is a Philadelphia law yer, and Is about t l years old. IIo Is a graduate of Princeton university and of the law school of tho Univers ity of Pennsylvania, .Mr. Morris Is Identified with thn so-called le-orKiinlzntlon wing of thn domorcatlc. party In Ponsnylviinls and was one of the Penuslyvanla lundnrs who Btood steadfast for President Wilson In the bnllotllng at tho Bal timore convention. SOLDIERS AT FRONT LONGING FOR STOGIES CHICAGO, July 1H. -I,ctlers re ccived here from American soldiers in Franc ('indicate that a few st.igies would be much upprcciatcd gifts by the men at I he front, Pipe, tubacco and cigarettes nre available, bul, snys one letter, "we are really suf fering for good old I'nitcd States nickel cigars." COSSACKS USED TO QUELL RIOTS MUTINEERS Council of Soldiers, Workmen and Peasants Supports Government and Orders End to All Acts by Isolated Military Elements, Which Dishonor Revolutionary Petrograd. PETROGRAD, July 18. The out break of armed sailors and soldiers yostorduy was a repetition of those of tho day boforo, except that they oc curred at 2 o'clock In the aftornoon, whereas the first outbreak occurred around midnight. Tho manlfoBtants were grouped , along tho same part of the Nevsky Prospect. A number of Stray shot wore hoard, followed by tho firing of rifles against upper windows and roof tops at a seemingly Imaginary foe, ' 'Cossacks Appear. ' For tho first time since the revolu tion Cossacks appeared and patrolled the streets. Companies here and thoro carried machine guns strapped to their Baddies, tho men loading their horses. The council of the now body of sol diers, workmen and peasants of all Russia, tho extremists abstaining from participation, passed a resolu tion today after an all-night session rejecting "with Indignation all at tempts to Influence" the attitude of that body. "It IS Inadmissible," continues the resolution, "that armed demonstra tions should sock to Imposo the will of Isolated military elements upon the whole of Russia. Blood has been Bhed In the streets of Petrograd. All these acts towards our revolutionary army, which is defending tho conquosts of tho revolution nt tho front, are acts of treachery and folony." Orders Knd to Disorders. "Whoever attacks tho recognized democratic agencies, whoover sows discord in their ranks, Is striking a dagger's blow in the hack ot the rev olutionary nrmy which is fighting against tho troops of William." ' The resolution protests against the "dcplorahlo symptoms of decomposi tion" which compromise tho whole national authority and the future con stituent assembly, and It demands that an end bo mado once and for all "to all acts which dishonor revolu tionary Petrograd." 10 ME LAW INTO GLOBE, Ariz., July 18. Warning that, the Industrial Workers of tho World would take the law into their own hands if any attempt is mado to deport Industrial Workers ot tho World from I he Globe-Miami 'is trict was contained in a telegram from F. M. Little, organizer of the I. W. W. received by Governor Thomas K. Campbell lust night nnd made public today. The telegram from Lillle, who re cently left. Globe, was dated nt Salt Lake City and follows: "rinlcrstand Hint the initio owners mob will take same action at Globe and Miami as was taken at Bisbce. The membership of the I. W. V. is getting tired of Hie lawlessness of the cupilali-tic class and will no longer stand for such notion. If you, us governor, cannot uphold the Inw, we will lake same into our twn hands. Will you act or must we" In reply, Governor Campbell said he felt sure no deportations could occur with federal troops stationed in Hie dislrict and that he was using his best efforts to protect rights of all citizens. Concluding, ho mid: "I resent your disloyal and untimo ly threats in view of my earnest ef forts to bring law nnd order and such forces as will maintain same ami furllirr like behavior on pour part will be punished to tho full Cl ient of my niilhorily." President Charles Mover of tho International I'nion of Mine, Mill rnd Smeller Workers, wired Governor Campbell saving be understood 00 ef fort would be made to bring strike breakers inlo the district from Mis. sniiri. He asked that this be tire vented. Governor Campbell said he knew nothing of. any such movement,