. CIRCULATION IS OVER 4000 DAILY FULL LEASED WIRE DISPATCHES FORTIETH YEAR -NO. 22 SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1917 PRICE TWO CENTS ON TRAINS AND NEWS STANDS FIVE CENTS SENATE IK HOI DISCUSSION On DIVIDED REPORT Sterilization Bill Is Reported Adversely by Majority Committee BUT MINORITY REPORT IS FINALLY ADOPTED louse Member Objects To Memorials As Expensive Nonsense The stream of business flowed smooth ly mid without, a ripple this morning Un til ftie senate committee reported back senate bill No. TSj relating to the steril- -lion ol the feeble minded and moral (inverts. There were two reports the Committee splitting as near " fifty-fir -ty " as it could, the majority report be iiijj signed by four of the committee ivomending the bill do not pass. The minority report recommending the pass age of the bill was signed by three members. A motion for the substitution of the minority report for that of the majority was like opening the exhaust on a natural gas well for the oratory took a perfervid character at times. Vinton grew eloquent and said the ac tion of those who wanted to force this bill on the people after it had been; voted oh at tie last election and beaten b) B three or four to one vote, reminded inn of the "publican who went out on (be highway and thanked God he was atot as other men." LaFollettt said people change their jninds and he had changed his. lie vot d against the measure, but had been convinced it v.us right He had seen thi feeble minded since at the instil u- i ; i. m and if he could get his friends Vinton and Hurley oul among thcfeeble minded he could convert them. Hurley took the ground the people bad defeated the measure, said they did 'it. I want it, and they should not have a law forced ou them which they had .1.. tinctly said they did not want. It had been said by others that the pt pie did not. understand what they Were voting ou but this was no excuse. It might as well be said they did not understand what they were voting on wl en the voted Oregon dry. 1 Irton was sorry his friend Hurley ha I "got all liel up" as there was noth ing to justify it. All that was wanted (Continued on page three.) & SHOWED JURY HER KNEES Trenton, N. J., Jan. 2.). Mrs. Beatrice Forsyth, an actress, didn't mind il a bit when she was asked to show the evidence lo the jury in her damage uit against the borough of Deal. She jest lifted her skirts above her knees and showed the twelve tried and true the dif ference between her two knees. The jury took a good look and then told her she could cover 'em up if she would give as surance that the evidence might be inspected at. any time. Miss Forsyth alleges she in jured one of her kne swimming tit Deal nt they don't mutch. Tl her in her chosen pi she alleges. Idle now urts s; ; si- A li ABE MARTIN iew photogra.i wifliin th' gift o' sr&t th ' nrice. offlc th1 people Judge Suggests Kissing As Panacea for Troubles of the Unhappily Married I San Francisco, .Inn. B.V Constant ssing as a panacea tor damesti. trou- i i a v. i i.l Q ft u .i i in 'iiiiiuii it-1 ii uill I ur iK'Utll ( Vnerior Judge Graham yesterday,! ml .-iiii u uvuirsui j'.i' lllt-1 una v 'ii the name of "the greater earn reeon( And eeommeiidation whs so s'ro.ig ilia in honor could not refrain from burst i. i'lit out iuto poetry to set forth his . Wheu John Srhuler, who is being : , ' for divorce, com plained that he quarreled frequently with his wife, Judge (irahain advised hiiu to avoid s;uch fusses by Kissing his wife as often as possible. Later the judge mailed tins effusion to Schuler: "When your wife and you fall out, Don 't strut about and, shout, Don't growl at her, or MftWI nt her. or hiss her; Vou will find it doesn't pay; Try your luck another way; Just take her in your arms and gently kiss her. When your wife and Ton must fight, Make her think she's in the right: Don 'I rush off to your club, where you will miss her; Should a fight with wifey start, V'ou play the big man's part, If vou take bat in your arms and gently kiss her."' NOR THCLIFFE TELLS OF AMERICAN BOYS IN ARMIES OF ALLIES si. -t, j- u. ! AMERICAN FIGHTERS WANT "HOME PAPERS" T "I find lack of home news papers to be : - general com print (among Amerieuiisiii the allied armies) and any Arneri- ican whose sympathies with the tine boys lighting out jkfje might do worse than ma) newspaper everv week addressed: "American Soldiers, care Commanding Officer, Royal Canadian Regiment, British Ex peditionary Force, France." From Lord Northclif fe 's story on American fighters at the Bri tish and French front. f V v". vl, V -i- encan music and Boston baked beans (Following is the first of two remark- j familiar, able stories of the American soldiers I Raids Are Feaaure of War. fighting in Europe, written by Lordl A great feature of the war on the xr. U..HM. .v nniuj t t i-i ' western front at the moment is the day Northcliffe for the united Press, iiitue I , . ,-, . . , and niglit raids. 11ns dash and des aas been told to date of the Americans re! ate form of individual fighting is en in the world's greatest fighting line, cotiraged by the British leader, Sir These articles bring ari Uluminating story by one of the leading men of England.) By Lord Northcliffe. (Written for the United Press.) (Copyright 1917 by United Press.) (Copyrighted iit Clreat Britain.) Headquarters of the Canadian Army j.!in Fran i , Jan. 25. Embodied in Hie sjc.iieart W tne great uanouiai) army in -k ! France is a bodv of American citizens in khaki who have already succeeded in effecting another of -several revolu tions produced in warfare by the United States. The first and most important was the n.eroplani second i' Jesigned invented bv the Wrights; tht the machine gun. originally jy Hudson Maxim, with the newer Lewis light machine gun, easily carried, or for use on aeroplanes. The third revolution is one I would hardly believe had I not had ocular demon stration. It is British Tommy beans instead of has foiniht sine. Ihe conversion of the tinents they came. They wore in high lo faith in poik and spirfti. Released from tin Cramped the beef ou which he j tension of always-shelled and water-log-the time of the Nor- ged trenches, they cuinc tumbling over 1 man conquest of England. Sing American Songs. ; These Americans in the British trmy with whom 1 have just spent a day are part of the topsv-turvydom in which we the living and when 1 saw them march ing back from the trenches to such tunes as "My Country 'Tis of Thee" audi "The Star Spangled Banner," with less i and, more modern ragtime music, I won-' ! dered what the small American boys 'who have so often teatfd nie on the Fourth of July celebration in your cov.n-1 j try, would have thought of this factor! i in the war that is not sufficiently: j kuown in the I 'tiii.-d States, j I propose telling you what the Amer-i j ican soldiers in the British and French armies are doing, where they come j from; how they live and w hy the Ger-! 'mans are particularly bitter toward I til II, and say that these splendid Am-'i oricam w ere hired by the allies. From the German point of view the pay of ! Americans who are fighting against! j PruHsiuiiiMi: is doubtless princely. It! ! amounts to exactly a dollar and a quar-. ter a dav. I lenve people in the United 1 States to judge whether that would be the sort of remuneration calculated to j draw American university graduate-. : some with considerable private foruncs, j businessmen, real estate men, clerks. I lumbermen, engineers across the At- j lantie. The falsehood is one of the bits of j German boomerang propaganda with. ! which m-'itrals are becoming acquainted. ! How They Enlisted. The Americans in the British audi i French armies enlisted in divers ways.! In the first few months of the war many came to England direct and enter-' Canadian Officer Shot to Death by Prisoner Windsor, Ont., Jan. 25. "This is wliat 1 got 11 being kind to you," were the last words of Immigration insnoAtor ( T i .1...,, .., ;..; " I v ivi iu. u. m v iiiwi nee. shot to death in tho-smokine ear! of a C P. R. train early today by .lames Stewart, safe blower. Jackson was bringing Stewart to Windsor, where officers were waiting to take him 40 Battle Creek, Mich., where he is wanted for cracking a safe in a bil liard hall. The dfficer was murdered with his own weapon, as the train was about three miles outside of Windsor. Stewart had slipped the gun from the officer's pocket while the two were talking to gether. Jackson had permitted Stewart to make the long .journey from Winnipeg without being manacled. Stewart was still at large late this morning, although both sides of the I Detroit river are being closely guarded. Bloodhounds picked up his trail" at the spot where he jumped from the mov ing train after1 shooting the iminigra- j tion officer, followed it for three miles and then lost. it. Stewart is also wanted on a charge of robbing the cafe of the. Orpheuni theatre in Madison, Wis. ed the British army. Those who were , residents in Europe at the outbreak of ' ' the war formed a union with British residents in France and joined the French. Others came over later and entered the flying service where they have done splendid work. Early in the war during the battle of the Maine, I was billeted with a num ber of our dispatch riders and was much urprised to find the particular cum uli which 1 was spending the night were almost cntnelv 1rom the : United States. I It is almost impossible to estimate the number of Americans in these two armies, but including those engaged in the noble work of the Aerican nmbr ! lance corps in Carta and its numerous automobile and convoys, it has been e j timated at quite a sufficient number to I have made the American language, Am j Douglas Haig, and it is in this that the Canadians and the British who have considerable forces of Americans with! them are adepts. . Each one of these raids is a miniature battle and it was in studvinir this form of warfare that 1 had the pleasure of ... i i. .., a Canadiaa regiment reviewed by a general on their return from the firing line for a rest and festal dinner. Like Lumber Camp Scene. By a curious coincidence, the setting ot t li e scene was that ot a thousand such . in American and Canadian lumber1 imps even down to the log house. We i were just out of shell range of the Ger man guns, though the British artillery were talking all the time. A the men came down the hillside through tail pine trees, it did not take long for one who has visited most of the states of the I'nited States to despite the mad and fatigue, from which of the world's con- leach olher like school boys. All aie in i pleasant and happy relation with their Canadian and British officers which makes for good fighting and does not derogate from strict discipline. (Continued on page flirce.) HOM.J-E. WDCRSON VI IWlBJfcOV MORE ACTIVITY REPORTED TODAY ON WEST FRONT 1 Germans Say Their Raids Were Mainly Success fully Carried Out FRENCH POST TAKEN ALSO MUCH BOOTY! French Aviator Has Brought j Apparently Bridge Is In Hope Down Twenty - Seventh less Tangle at Present German Aeroplane Berlin, via Sayvillo wireless, .Ian. 25. Successful operations of German recomiitering and thrusting detach ments on the western front were re ported in today's official statement, which also detailed a temporary in- rense in fiehtiue activity, n rt i II jami mine inrowing in Artois and be- tween the A acre and AiSne fronts. "'There were r ennnoitering dot: clashes of re- the fore statement u Bae and field of position! said, "Southeast o northwest of Saxon thrusting French trendies ussiiin and ts entered ned after violent fighting wit fficer and thirty prisoners and 'By dashing, pluc min.-. lint, recon-1 noiteriug soldier: infantry reserve lauoverianl in overwhelming times their strength numerically, and orougiiT. oac.K tins torce witn one chine gun into their own Duo.. ,. German Attacks Repulsed. Pctrograd, Jan. 25. Repulse of Ger man attacks near the Tirul swamp and forcing back vt their columns there, but success of a German counter at tack, pressing back Russian forces one third of a mile along the southeast course of the river Aa, was described in today's official statement. ''North of Shmarden and also near the northwestern corner of Tirul 'ZV : T; ' , enemy after attempting to attack, was driven back to his entrenchments." Bnngs Down Twenty-Sevlen. Paris, Jan. 25. Lieutenant (fuyne - liter brought down his twenty-seventh German aeroplane today his second in .......... ' I - I. .... 4 , ... I ...I., forty-eight hours -the war office an- nounced. The Official report also detailed an utisiierosstul surnrise attemiit. liv (ier- mans south of Berrybac, in which the : enemy lost heavily. Russian Fort Captured. Tjrtl;,, ma 1, I 25. Capture of Russian fort posi-j j tioug of more than, six miles extent, wfth 14 officers, 1,700 ranks and 13 1 j machine guns, was announced by the : German official statement today from Prince Leopold's trout of the river Aa (I'igi on hot h sector.) dc Greek Situation. Park, Jan. 25. The chamber of deputies met ill secret sessi in this afternoon to discuss the Greek "Situa tion. The Match is Off Milwaukee, Wis., Jan. : Rich; Mitchell's bout with Johnny Kllbane, s.-heduled to go ten rounds February 8, nt Cleveland, is off, it became knov.e here today, because of a broken knuckle in Mitchell's right paw. The Milkan kee tighter will be out of the game six weeks at least. He has offered Ci fight Kilbane at any place under al most any conditions after his hand heals, his manager, Billy Mitchell mo! torlav. ,jBinimi KhH ill map TreVieh AS VIEWED BY CARTOONIST t'HO. mO0KTm l- r w ,,,, .I. MAUTU HI ,1 WUlllll W STAT6 THE M JvnuiN KI .1, 'CONCRETE BRIDGE OR NOTHING SAYS POLK COUNTY JUDGE Kirkpatrick Declares That He Will Consider No Other Material JUDGE BUSHEY WOULD TAKE ENGINEER'S PLANS Time "Salem can settle the bridge site to please itself, but as far as the Polk county court is concerned, it will be a concrete bridge. That is what Polk county wants and that is what the coun ty court stands for," said Judge Kirk- pa trick this morninir. at the meeting of two' county courts. Views of Judge Bit-hey Judge liushey said, "We put it up to the state highway commission as to the type of bridge, and they decided the only thing to do was to build a Bteel bridge and this court stands for a steel bridge. If there is any other reason why the bridge should lie at any other site than Center street, I would like to know. However, this court has never decide,! ,1 ef i it i telv mi ntiv true nt j 1 1 we want is ll hn.ee lenvv enoutrh ;0r all traffic. ' State Commission Roasted succeeded j Judge Kirkpatrick opined that neith post three I or himself nor the Polk county people I were married to the state highway mission. "J do not agree with the state highway commission, nor do the people of Polk county. We oppose a Bteel bridge. The Southern Pacific and oilier railroads are building concrete bridges. The highway commissioners are steel bridge architects and know nothing about cement bridges, said the coun ty judge of Polk county. "We do fav or a steel bridge encased in cement, am! we believe wi!h Mr. Ptircell, back ed by such bridge builders as Mr. Youne and Mr. Benson, that our opin ion is right. Polk county doesn't care i about the site. If there is anv delay, it will he on the type. We are instruct f(( H,i(.k fl)1. , 't,emcnt bridge and W(. )hink ()f Ilotnill (,lsi,. - - What the R. R. Will Do v (. Dwk,8bch 0f the Commercial 'elub said Judge Kirkpatrick should be I thanked for his frank expression of the ! situation. Chis. A. Park, chairman of the com mittee that conferred with assistant Manager Dyer of the S. 1'. in I'ortland yesterday, said that all that Mr. Dyer i wanted was for the two county courts j io goi. mi'i'iiii "i mm i ;j i u i milium mi (the bridge as an assurance that it would UV mini iin nuun un iiuni-i ui-. i u iu- meantime, Mr. Dyer was willing that the city of Salem should begin at oiu-e the building of the 800 feet of approach necessary on the Polk county side and also the work of planaing, but that the railroad would not give permission for the use of the bridge until the two county courts had signed a contract for the building of the new bridge. The railroad would also require an indem nity bond against suits for damage. Oflcfialn were in Doubt It dewdope.l that the railroad offi cials were slightly in doubt as to whether the county courts would get together, and did not want to get into an arrangement for their bridge until there was something definite in sight i-.iguieeii rauntuB was roe am iiinu im the use of the Southern Pacific bridge. The Southern Pacific agreed to make no charge for the use of the bridge. As Salem and Marion county will have lo put up the 12,000 to 010,000 expense of planking and building the Polk coun ty approach, it is possible that a small (Continued on page three.)- WADE WORD FROM MISSING Bend, Or., Jan. 25. Scrawl ed on a shingle found in an abandoned cabin near Eittle Kniigrant creek, the following message today told what bad happened to Paul Fiske. Ben Cutler and Jim Bennett, miss ing for months. "Some time in November, 1916, three of us got lost in an awful storm. We have had nothing to eat for two days. We found this cabin, stayed here one night God, we are hungry. Tomorrow we will try to go straight south. We should hit some place ono man can 't go much farther. By one more dny we will be goners. We have got guns, but can find noth ing to shoot." Four stockmen from Suplee, plunging through the snow along frozen Emigrant creek, found the death note when they entered the shack, seeking ref uge from a blizzard. There were no other tracks of the lost men. L French Woman Kills Babe Because Father Was Ger man Soldier Paris, Jan. 22. Josephine Barthel emv, age 20 years, killed her baby. To day she Stood acquitted of the crime by a jury of f renchmen and applaud ed b her compatriots, The reason was that Josephine's bn- bv had a German father. "That is why 1 killed it," she told the jury. Her story was one of many which have been heard in France--of girls at tacked by German soldiers and of un welcome babies. Josephine Barthcle my's lawyers appealed to the jury which tried her for infaticido with the idea "would you condemn this girl for stifling life, of a child of one of those who killed France's sons and violated France's daughters f ' ' It was recalled today in connection with Josephine's vindication that the French government has re-established the "cradle of shadows," which be fore separation of church and state in France in 1902, was a feature of every Wnvent, This was a cradle placed just outside the convont with a bell attached. Mothers might leave their children there, ring the bell and then disappear, certain that the nuns would rescue the child and bring it up. It is tho government, now, however, that guarantees the support of child and the cradle is placed near the town hall. LOS ANGELES GIRL'S Nell Harvey Is Victim and Harlan Winter Is Under Arrest Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 25.-M',ss Nell llarv'ev ? Ewtcr, d.l., was found dead wrlytoday at. the Lconide hotel on South Main street, in a bed covered with blood. A short lime later Harlan ,T. Winter, motion picture actor, was , J detained as a suspect, but he insists tin woman a death was due to u nemnrrn age. Winters saVS be is a son Of form er District Attorney of New York. ..11 autopsy wi termine whether ie oertui uied to de atll was due In ac cident or murder. Winter and Miss Harvey registered at the hotel Tuesduy as Mr. and Mrs. A. .1. garland of Sacramento. Since then, the woman has not been out of the room. Early today a diaiurtJanc la the apartment occupied by the coup! awakened a man in an adjoining room, belligerents, if any of them choose to who says he beard Winter say "Oh, Ignore them. It is only from neutral .Nellie, I knew this would happen." Hu states that effective sanction can bo later heard the man leave. ' given to them." The lodger told the landlord, and Continuing, Bonar Law declared tb when the police were summoned, the Germans at the outset of tho war woman was found dying. Her face andj"Kwepl aside " such barriers of law and the bed weie covered with blood, the cited prescnl Belgian deportations, nose appeared to be broken, and there " ,s lu.K been done," he added, were other indications ot violence. 1 woman died within a few minutes. Halt an iiuur liner uiuici ivns mi rested ill another hotel. He was thinly clad and evidently ran all the way from the Leonid to the other hotel. Arriv ing, he told a friend that the woman he was to have married had just died from a hemorrhage and asked his advice. The friend called the police. Winter was on the verge of collapse when taken by the police. By the. time he iciiehed the police station he was talking incoherently. The police later ascertained that the diad woman was the divorced wile of r 11 Exeter, Cal., man, and was also known as Mrs. Harvey. She played lu moving companies here at various limes She was SB years old. When found, the woman was nude and lying fucc downward on the bed, (Continued on page two.) IIP E FOR PEACE IS ABANDONED FOR THE PRESENT Opinion Is General That Great Offensive Will Again Be Launched WHEN OUTCOME IS KNOWN I PEACE MAY BE DISCUSSED Bonar Law Says Wilson's Aim and Great Britain's the Same By Robert 3. Bender. (I'nited Press staff correspondent ) Washington, Jan. 25. Official senti ment in Washington is that a great spring offensive will prove to be the tumingf point in international peace maneuvers. The president, and his very close ad visers who arc sitting in with him on all his peace plans -still remain as secre tive as ever; but among other high of fielala who know the minds of thosi former few, the opinion is a near cer tainty that the president himself be lieves one more great effort will bi made by one or both sides before the first actual step toward a real pcacs goal is taken. And, regardless of responses direct or otherwise from belligerent govern ments ou President Wilson's remarkable) address to the senate Monday, many diplomats here agree in the belief that the goal of peace will not be in sight until after a gigantic effort they feel ia coming in the spring. They say news from the front showa preliminary plans for such a drive now are in full swing. Within six weeks all details for thia campaign will be completed. Belief in firm here that the entente nations will insist upon awaiting the outcome be fore peace Is possible. Summing up the moves of the last month, however, it is believed President Wilson has laid a real groundwork for peace after the drive. lie has outlined what this country stunds for, what, arrangements he be lieves should be made for making a peine lasting, what, he believes thia country will do toward joining in m not form of "international sanction" to preserve future peace after both aides have exerted their greatest effort of (he war this spring. His advisers believe he has created a situation which will make it difficult for either side to insist upon continu ing the war after the results of the spring campaign are definitely deter mine.!. BONAR LAW SAYS WILSON'S AIM SAME AS BRITAIN'S London, Jan. 25. "President Wil sons speech nils this aim lo gain nut , mil secure peace for the future. rhil is out aim, and our only aim." I'liis was tlie phrase from Chancellor of the Exchequer Bouur Law's speech last night that was regarded hero to day as England's official answer to the American suggestions. Editorial com- 1 ""'"' regarded it as a sufficient answer, 1 tik-i with Bonar Laws reminder to Ln.ted States that America has a share of responsibility .n the past and I !'r,'s;'lt.- . . I Ills W lloie s ll i i,J c 1 l is not on "u- strocl question for the future," Bonar Law declared. "It is a question of life mid deatii now. In judging whether that result can be secured by hi meta- - ! o.is, it is impossible lor Us to forget tha - past, For generations humane men, 11 g I will among all nations, have striven by The Hague convention, by peace conferences and by all other means, to mitigate the horrors of war. When war comes by what means can. these barriers, built up against barbar-i.-iii. be made el'tertivct "That cannot be preserved by tha "i' ' 1 1 iml no neutral power has been nolo ; t0 No neutral power, indeed, 1 page three.) THE WEATHER c (Continued on BASKET BALM Oregon: Tonight and Friday fair southwest, til tiled probably rain northwest, rain or snow east portion; southerly windau