! 4,400 SUBSCRIBES TODAY'S (22,000 READEBS) DAILY Only Circulation In Balem Guar anteed by the, Audit Bureau of Circulations. FULL LEASED TO DISPATCHES SPECIAL WILLAMETTE VAL LEY NEWS BEE VICE WEA f FCowoMUE ! 'skirts r r Oregon: Tonight and Friday prob ably fair; gentle winds, mostly southerly. : f A- y .4 - m i f 1 1 FORTIETH YEAR NO. 272 SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1917 llAWJ uO BTATVOH-fTVH (TENTS PETRSRAD IS INFLfeONE tTflTS Battles In Streets Continue According Advices From Danish Capital LONDON OPTIMISTIC OVER LATEST NEWS Another Contradictory Report Says Kerensky Is Being Driven Out Stockholm, Nov, 15. Petrograd was reported to be in flames in a report which reached here today. No details of the fire were given. It was assumed here, however, that with forces of the Bolsheviki and provision al govornmen still reported clashing in tho Capital's streets, tthe flames lmd been started by intent or by shel At the last word from Petrograd, tho provisional- government was reported practically in control of. the city. London View Optimistic London, Nov. 15. The Bolsheviki adventure in government is all- but ended, as London read the meager Kus- ian newg to"day. There was no dirtct word from Petrograd, but cumulative ovidence seemed to point to the provis ional government's gradual return to jnwer in the capital. As Russian observers .here saw the situation, the nation's salvation now depends on the elomentg'composing the Minimalist, radical, bourjjeoise, peas ant. and Cossack parties and the co-operative unions. The last named includo a third of the total population of Rus sia. - It was .believed here that when the provisional forces do regain complete power the Minimalists and tne '-radical Vailn parties would unite on a cabinet which would adopt a vigorous military and foreign policy. Whatever government emerges, th chief problem for immediate and press" ing settlement would seem some solu tion of the present economic crisis Means must be adopted to increase the production of food. As Russians here saw it, tho provis ional government must uproot . the seeds of anarchy sown by German prop .agandists and rajjical fanatics and then follow up with a restatement of war aims. 1 According to indirect word from Pe trograd, arrangements have been made to convene tho constitutional assembly as soon as possible. On all side here emphasis was laid on the fact that Russia has -nothing to fear from the prominent part tho Ccs packs, are taking in putting down the iiolsheviki revolt. The Cossacks from their earliest history have been com munistic in their ideas and intensely democratic. Say Kerensky Defeated Copenhagen, Nov. 15. The Bolshe viki revolutionists have Jreeonquered Gatchina and the Kerensky troops are retiring to the south, according to dis patches received here today from ilel eingfors. The Bolsheviki forces, it was de clared, are attempting to cut off the retreating govertment soldiers. ; Engineers to E-ussia A Pacific Port, Nov. 15- Unitel btstcs army engineers in command of (Continued on Pace Two.) ABE MARTIN STUBBORN FIGHT ALL ALONG FRONT OF ITALIAN ARMY - ' Austrians -Hewing Way by Inches Inrough Mountains of Trentino ITALY'S OFFICIAL REPORT SAYS LINE HELD FAST Submarine Sinkings Lowest Last Week of Any Since War Begun GERMANS AGAIN BEATEN London, Nov. 15 The second heavy German counter attack in three days againstl newly won British positions north of Passchendaele was completely repulsed yesterday ufternoon, Field Marshal Haig reported this afternoon- Tho German attack came af: ter greatly increased enemy ar tillery fire. ". By Webb Miller (United Press Staff Correspondent) London, Nov. 15. Over a total front of fifty miles the great battlo which may decide the fate of Northern Italy was developing today. German and Austrian troops are test nig tno streugtli of the l-iavo river line at six different points, according to riome dispatches. They are pouring a tremendous and concentrated artillery fire again the Italian defenders. At four places tho enemy apparently had obtained a foot hold, - ' - -- Austrians from the Trentino region now at Asiago are literally slipping for ward over the Alps by inches, suffering terrible casualties from the stubborn Italian defense. It is this menace of a turning move ment on the northern end of. the great line that was regarded here' today as of most gravity iu the Italian situation. Every inch the Austrians drive forward nere increases the danger to the rear of the Piave river line. On the right wing of the fifty mile line the Germans were today within fifteen miles of Venice. lighting was in progress in the Vac cina marshes. At Gallio the Austrians with 6,000 troops, were trying to slip behind the main body of defenders. - j The strength of tne Italian resistance n tins fateful cattle was evidenced in scores of details reported today. Of 44 armored cars sent out to harrass the enemy, only 28 returned. "ONWARD WITH GOD" REVISED LIST OF THE AMERICAN LOSSES 1 H GERMAN TRENCH One More Wounded Than Was First Reported According to Latest Advices ENGLISHMAN f BRHIGS HESSAGETffWOIERS INTHIS COONIfiY Tells Federation Convention How Labor Stood by Gov ernment In War I tia. SA II I ,-' ..mi " 7Spf Italians Hold Fast. Home, Aov. lo. Italian troops are holding fast on the Piave river line. "fresh enemy attempts to cross the river were frustrated," todav s war office statement asserted. "Units which have already crossed are closely shut iu around the Zenson loop, which is under our artillery fire. "Around Mount Tomatico our ad- anced posts withdrew, after resistance to points already decided, tho war of fice continued. x Mount Tomatico is about three miles nearlv duo soutn of ieltre. "At Quero pass the enemy's attack was paralyzed by our resistance. (Oue ro pass is on the I'lave, seven miles below ieltre.) 'The enemy was repulsed at Melett, Davanti, Mount 1'iara, Mount Castelgo- berna. also 1 rizoni and on tne conflu ence of the Brenta-Cismon rivers. The same was true between the C'ismon and Piava." (AH the points mentioned are on the northern, or left wing of the Italian lines." Germans Report Advance. Berlin, via London, Xov. 15. Around Fonzano and Feltre we are advancing south, fighting and in contact with the enemy," declared today' official state ment of the Italian war theatre. "There is nothing new to report on the lower Piave." Divers Get Only One. London, Nov. 15.- England ' satis faction with the official report showing the low mark reached in Germany's submarine warfare was tempered today by question of whether a contributing cause might not be a plan is Berlin to change the zone of U boat opefationa. One suggestion was that not only were the allies improving the work of their anti-submarine campaign, but that Germany bad recalled her U-boats pos sibly to make a change in the submar ine program. The week a official sinkings showed only one merchantman of more than 16(lO tons destroyed and onlv five be- Ever notice "how some fellers disap-1 low that tonnage, pear when th' time comes t ' quit ar-j Washington, Nov. 15. Three Ameri cans were killed, eleven wounded and eleven missing in the first German raid on an American trench salient Novem ber 3, according to a revised official II af m a it a viiKl i n nrlotr "on umuu uultaj-u iuuni , - . . 1 nnn irAnrin -,A n it t T.l. tt:ii In addition to those already report- sen7thY Bri i t ed, the casualties included one lieuten- gross. ant and five privates among the wound- The patriotic moves of the English ed. The original announcement stated !wor.king'ncn ;0,uld n.ot b? too highly (Buffalo, N. Yy. Nov. 15. How or ganized labor throughout Great Bri tain has battled in the cause of world wido democracy, both in the trench and in no less important industrial ser vice at home, was told to the doleeates of the " American Federation of Labor FEMALE LW.W ARE RELEASED FROM JAIL AT WASHINGTON Five Are Still In Jail and Four of Them Are Hunger Strikers GEEAT DARK WAY. . New York, Nov. 15. New York's "great dark way" will be shown at 11 o'clock tonight, when all tho big electric adver tising signs along Broadway are extinguished. To save coal, the lights will burn only between 7:45 and 11 p. m. OHIO STILL WET Oolumbus, O., Nor. 14. With official returns from all 88 Ohio counties in the secretary of state's office late yesterday, . the wet majority in the prohibi tion vote was 1,137. The total vote was: Wet 52,727; dry 522,590. ' RAILVAYMOI HOT TO STRIKE NOV BECAUSTOF WAR Head cf Brotherhood Ex presses Complete Failh la President Wilson Former Secretary Foster , Dies at Advanced Age Washington, Nov. 15. Former Secre tary of State John H. Foster, father-in-law of Secretary of State Lansing, died here today after a long illness. He served in the Harrison administra tion and was regarded as one of the foremost international law authorities of his time. Foster was born In Pike county, In diana, in 1836. After distinguished ser vice in the Civil war he edited a paper In Evansville, Ind., of which city he was later posimasrer. lie served as am- whethor he thought the president's pot- i.i ni-i. vi 111 I, I, liirn l (.111. 4VttS91 uiiu iaa a factor in several treaties. The body will be shipped to Evansville, Jnd., for LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEERS WILL REMAIN LOYAL General OpirJsn Prevalent That Both Sides Will Ap peal to Wilson Cleveland, Or., Nov. 15.rr-" There is not going to be a railroad strike don't even imagine it for a minute." With tBat statement, W. G. Lee, president of the Brotherhood of Bail-r way Trainmen, which is voting on a demand for increased wages, register ed toda-" his faith in President Wil son 's policy. Lee was asked by the United Press burial. five were wounded. The new names are: First Lieutenant William H. Mc Laughlin, Coltec, Ark. Private William P. Grigsby, Mrs. Liz zie Grigsby, 1278 Willow Avenue, Louis ville, Ky., mother. Grigsby was formerly reported miss ing. Private Louis A. Defier, box 40G route 6, Sullivan, Jnd. Private Paul W. Fann, Sarona, Wis. Private - George Wesley, emergency address Miss Margaret Welch, Dayton, Ky. Private Lester C. Smith, Concord, N. C. praised, he said, stating that after the declaration of war there were so many of them trying to 'enlist the govern ment requested unions to exert their influence to keep the men in civilian life at the shipyards, factories nnd mu nition plants. He told of tho feelina of unres.t nnd (discontent that showed itself in the English and Scotch shops during the early months of the warj of the inves tigations by commissions as to their causes and the better understanding that finally resulted in speeding up production until the government has felt the necessity of stepping in to restrain the speeding up process per Private Dewey D. Kern, previously Imitted by organized labor to win the listed missine. has been accounted fori war. and is not hurt. M Additions to the list of missing are: Private Clyde I. Grlmsley, Stockton, ass. Private Hoyt D. Decker, Vincennes, ind. The name given as Private Keck- on, unidentified, previously on the miss ing l.at, does not appear on the revised list. The war department's statement says that all the wounded are doing well. Admiral in Conference. London, Nov. 15. Admiral Benson, chief of the United States navy board and a member of the American mission, has been actively conferring with Brit ish navy officials, according to an ad miralty announcement today. Among those with whom he has been in con sultation are the first lord of the ad- Speaking of. the United States en trance into the war, Hill said: "You are with us now and we shall win." Will Demand Justice Buffalo, N. Y., Nov. 15. If employ ers in munition plants and shipyards make unjust demands on the workers, nothing can be done by the American Federation of Labor to settle strikes. President Samuel Gompers said today. 'I cannot set an arbitrary rule of settlement for such strikes," he said, ana u i uid l eouia not enforce it Washington, Nov. 15. After 57 hours hunger-strike, two women's party pick ets were released from the district jail today. They reported Miss Boss Winslow "clothes striking," refusing to wear prison garb. She is wrapped in a prison blanket and confined to her cot bj weakness caused by forcible feeding, ac cording to Miss Gertrude Crocker, Chi cago, and Miss Gladys Greiner, Balti more, the released picketers, Of five suffragettes still in the jail, four are hunger striking, including Miss Alice Paul and Miss Winslow. Miss kato Heffelfinger, Shamokin, Pa., has bee on a hunger strike seventy hours, it was stated. Miss Crocker charged the jail officials with denying her a change of underclothing during her iio days term, Thirty suffragettes are in Occoquan workhouso today. Most of these will ap pear in police court tomorrow to re ceive' additional sentence for a second picketing offenso. Two Escaped Convicts Captured at Troutdale Portland, Or., Nov. 15. John Majors and Puul Hunt, of the party of six convicts who escaped from a state prison camp near Salem ten days ago, were caught near Troutdale early to day by Multnomah county deputy sher iffs. They were placed in the county jail here until guards from the peniten tiary arrive to take them to Salem. Four of the escaped convicts have now been captured. The two caught to day are negroes. Jesse Taylor, another negro who es caped was with the two arrested men, but escaped. The men were graooea Conditions C&nsinir thf trilr mi,at Ka considered and their settlement must ! as .thcy wcre bout to climb aboard a hinge on co-operation of all the parties j traln- involved. Wo will do all we can to co-ODerate with the government. My sentiments in mis matter are tlie same as those ex pressed bv President Wilson when he gumf The' attitude o th' tightwad briefly stated is this, "Why. should I Jielp win th' war when I didn't start Calais Bombarded. Paris, Nov. 15. Calais was violently (Continued on Page Two.) aiiou are m urn lora or rne ae.- .rwL- 'n,- -: .- . miralty, Kir fcrie Tieddes, and Sir John ! f dera.ti on " Jellicoe, first sea lord, the statement said. The admiralty declared that close eo-i operation by tne two navies was im proving the submarine situation. federation The Central Labor Union of Greater New York today had pendinz before the federation convention a resolution Hunt and Majors said they had lived on potatoes and corn stolen from fields. erican Federation of Labor is prepar ing to argc the government, as a war measure, to take a positive stand ajainst tho "open .shop" and to in sist upon the employment of union men wherever possible, on government work, it was learned from committee General And Three Bonn. American Field Headquarters, France, ov. ia. t or patriotic response to Am- least forty New York delegates wall rnc wu wr uKnirrB, me iHuiuv oi , rignt any effort to break ud the He- iA.ijvH uriiriai oiutrrt lieurjy nuiua a , Drew xrades. to suspend unions which continue to "fairmen and federation leaders nere send delegates to th United Hebrew!11"" afternoon. Trades of New York. This body repre- Tne men believe such a concession is senU 500,00 unionists, many of wbomiiue. organized labor in return for its oaif.cd to a seceding organization. At i KU " tnwr tug war wurp.. record. First, there is the general himself. Then two sons, botTi captains, one a West Peinter and the other a former militia lientenant. A third son has just enlisted, according to word received by (Continued on pae two.) Delegates were pleased today at the situation at Watertown and Squantum, Mass-, whore union nnion heads or dered strikers back to work and the government stepped in. Against Open Shop Buffalo, N. Y., Nov. 15 The Am- BIG SHIPS FROM ORIENT. San Francisco, Nov. 13. Nine Nip pon Yusen Kaisha liners which have been Tunning from the Orient to surope have been replaced with smaller ves sels and ordered into the Seattle-Orient run, according to word received here today from New York. It is a move to increase trans-Pacific tonnage, Rumored Mrs. Failings Brother Is Alive Portland, Or., Nov. 15. Will Arthur Barrett, long thought dead, brother of the late Mrs. Xarifa J. Failing, bobs up to claim his sister's half million dollar estate, now tho objpet of a. bit ter fight in the courts. Persistent rumor here today has it that Arthur Barrett is now in San Francisco and will soon appear in Port land to take a hand in the contest. Dr. W. Tyler Smith, claiming to be a cousin, is attempting to break Mrs, over the railroads. ' ' I wouldn 't want to gamble that doesn't, " he replied. Lee again asserted that the train men are entitled to a "full stomach." And yon know as well as I that the railroads won 't grant them with out increased revenues." This led to the inforence that Lee expects the deadlock which President Wilson spoko of in his letter to tho chairman of the United States board of mediation and conciliation when ho mentioned the "possibility of beinjf obliged to take unusual measures to cperate tho Tailroads.'' Lee nailed as a "pipe dream" tho suggestion that tho president miRht draft tho railway employes and force" them to work at army wages. "We have talked to the "president her estate to Thomas N. Strong and & L. Mead, life long friends and advisers. ACQUITTED OF MURDER. Failing's will, which left the bulk of . "i""? De BKlu-. "ut wou,u n . afnfA mhaf .anronnAl 1 9 ..if 1 ha president gave- " There is no law for such action," said Lee. "The government's policy points the other way. The whole trend has been to raise existing wages of necessary employes when the govern ment sans' their 'unstinted co-operation to win the war." Lee again pointod tc England's rail way dictatorship, sanctioned- by both tho railroads and the employes, which. meant bigger profits and higher wash es. . "And let no one question the patriot ism or the railway trainmen," deelnr- Coleville, Wash., Nov. 15. Mrs. Margarot Hanshaw, -age 17, wife of Albert Hanshaw, today stands acquit ted of the charge of -killing Alex Strickler and his son, Alex Strickler, Jr. The jury was out 20 minutes. "Shoot, kid, shoot," young Hanshaw yelled at his child-wife as the Strick lers, waving clubs and an axe, started across the floor toward her. Mrs. Han-shaw, expert with a gun, fired twice. Both men died. ' (Continued on page three) AMERICAN BOYS GET GERMANS IN TRAP AND PUT THEM TO FLIGHT By J. W. Pegler striking him dead. (United Press Staff Correspondent) j A mixed Franco-American patrol was American Field Headquarters, France, slipping over no man 's land in the usual Nov. 15. More Americans have been rcconnaisance undertaken each night, killed and wounded in brisk fighting One alert member of the party caught which has broken out along tho sector the sound of an approaching enemy de they are holding against the Germans. tachmcnt. With a few whispered words, A few more men, addition to those the Americans and French divided into who fell in tho recent German raid, have two sections, flopping down voilently in. been killed and wounded as a result of shell holes. There they waited until th heavy shelling of their trenches by Germans were well into the ambuscade. Boche artillery, it was learned today. ! The Sammies and Poilus let loose. Tho Tho American artillery is responding Germans even though they outnumber to the German fire, and the exchanges ed their assailants turned tail and ran. of the guns arc increasing constantly. yelling furiously as they bobbed up and Sniping is also increasing. One Amen- uown on me pornmarKea irregularities can has fallen victim of a German snip- of no man's land. They only waited long er. Sammies have been potting at the enough to pick up their dead comrades, Germans, but the toll they have taken and drag along their wounded, is not known. I Clearing weather during the last fewr Tho exact extent of the latest Amcr- days has brought along an enlivening or ican casualties has not yet been an- artillerying. On a recent evening the nounced from headquarters. It is known, Germans suddenly began furious shell however, that one German shell hitting ing of one small sector, concentrating squarely in the American trench, wound- their fire and speeding it up until it ed several. was a continuous roar. The Germans are known to have lost 1 The American artillery has been do one dead and two wounded during the ing considerable starring of its own, recent activity. countering the German Bhell fire in such Ambushed Patrol. , spienaia issnion as io eiicii iae praiso A small number of French and Amer- of a certain French general. ican soldiers patrolling no man's land ambushed a German patrol of far super ior strength and, shooting from shell holes, pnt the Boches to rout. Battle activity is increasing in all branches oi trenches afong the sector occupied by the Americans. Oregon Troops Given Future Dssipatisns Washington, Kov. 15. TTnder a plan With the cessation of heavy rains announced Tuesday by the war dep&rt- the Germans began hurrying up their ment for designating Oregon troops in. heretof ire desultory gun nre. ine amer-, mim service, the Third Orego icans took up the challenge in kind. rr.;.j The exchange waxed to a point of high j supplement. "L i"" intensity on several days. It was liter-. district or oiumoia lmaniry, is now ally a baptism of fire for tne earn- the 152nd infantry in tne jL.ignty-rss mies. infantrv briirade. The Orezoa field ar- With the increase in artillerying came I batteries, A and B, are now par fire from the front trenches and of of the 147th field artillery in the Bix snipers on both sides. There is no way ty-sixth artillery brigade; and the thre of telling the score achieved by the separate squadrons of Oregon cavalry American marksmen. - The Germans are part of the HSth field artillery ia caught one Sammy, a sniper 'i bullet 'tho bixty-Bixth artillery brigade,