! " VOL. L VIII NO. 17,950. PORTLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1918. PRICE FIVE CENTS. PLANES SPIN, DIVE, BURN; AVIATORS DIE NEW JERSEY CADET FALLS 2000 FEET AFTER FIRE IX AIR. U-BOAT TOLL 58 TRESPASSER TAKEN AFTER LONG CHASE FORGE OF GERMAN SASH FACTORY IS BURNED TO GROUND DEAD AND DRIVE IS WEAKER EX -CONVICT SURPRISED APARTMENT - HOUSE. IvACTZ MAMlACTllUX; COM PANY'S LOSS 25,000. 11 SHIPS Mil U-BOAT VICTIMS AMERICA!! BLOWS, HURL BACK HIS MISS G Sinkings Cover Period of Ten Days, DESTROYER SAVES VESSEL Submarine Making Attack on Radioleine Rounted by . U. S. War Ships. TWO DIVERS OPERATING Activities of More Than One Under-Sea Craft Now Seems Proved. ' CAPE MAY, N. J., June 4. Firing was heard off Cape May this' after noon and again about 8 o'clock tonight. Small boats containing women and children were reported to have been seen this afternoon several miles off shore by an aviator Airplanes tonight were flying low over the mouth of Delaware Bay. LEWES, Del., June 4. Firing was heard off the Delaware Cape tonight, but the cause of it could not be learned. WASHINGTON, June 4-Enemy submarines were still ' operating off the American coast today. A French tank steamer, the Radioleine, first trans-Atlantic craft to be attacked by the raiders, was rescued from destruc tion at 9:30 o'clock this morning by an American destroyer 65 miles off the Maryland coast. Schooners Found Sinking. The same destroyer found the coast ing schooner Edward !R. Baird, Jr., sinking after having been bombed in the same vicinity, making seven schooners and four steamers known officially to have been sunk by the raiders in the course of 10 days. : Announcement by the Navy Depart ment of these facts late tonight dis closed that the raid in American ' waters had not ended with yesterday's tala of destruction, upsetting the the ory that the raiders probably were speeding homeward. Coast Patrols Close In. , Coast patrol vessels had not acted on the theory. They now are closing in from all directions on the scene of the raiders' last exploit, scouring the sea for further trace of enemy U-boats as they come. Secretary Daniels directed tonight that brief reports from the destroyer be made public. The destroyer her self, with two survivors from the Baird, a 279-ton craft hailing from Wilmington, Del., was still hunting for the enemy. Official Announcement Made. The announcement which naval of ficers said contained all the depart ment knew about today's activities of the raiders, follows: "The Navy Department has received a dispatch from a United States de stroyer that at 9 :30 o'clock this morn ing she interrupted an attack by an enemy submarine on the French steamer Radioliene about 65 miles off the Maryland coast. The destroyer also took on board two men from the Edward Baird, Jr., which was bombed and sinking. "A later report was received stating that he Radioliene had arrived at an Atlantic port." Two Submarines Active. Reports from survivors who were aboard the vessels also established the fact that during the day at least two submarines have been at work in American waters. They are the U-37 and the U-151 and a report to the Navy Department shows that one of them at least had stores to last ber three months. The official list of vessels sunk by the U-boats as given out tonight by the Navy Department included 6even schooners and four steamers. The statement follows: List of Sunken Ships Given Out. "The latest reports received by the Navy Department indicate that the following vessels have been sunk as a result of enemy submarine activity off this coast:' "Schooner Edna, 325 tons. "Schooner Hattie Dunn, 436 tons (Concluded on Page 2, Column 4.) Craft Graze Each Other 200 Feet In Atr and .Spinning Dive Is Futal; Lieutenant Is Victim. MONTGOMERY, June 4. Aviation Ca det George O. Mills, of Jersey City, N. J., was killed late today, when his plane caught fire and fell 2000 feet near Taylor Field. . SAN DIEGO, Cal.. June 4. Civilian Inspector Stanley Coyle. 27 years old. of Coudersport. Pa., was killed, and Flying Cadet Elwyn Chapman. 26. of Brookline, Mass., was badly Injured to day, when the airplane in which they were flying grazed another machine about 200 feet above Rockwell Field, North Island, and fell in a spinning nose dive to the ground. SAN ANTONIO, Tex.. June 4 Second Lieutenant Joseph John O'Mally, aged 26, of Albany, Mo., was instantly killed here today when his , airplaae went into a tail spin and could not be righted. A companion, whose name was not disclosed by the authorities, escaped unjjurt. O'Mally was flying at an altitude of several hundred feet, but was too near to earth to straighten out his plane from the spin before it crashed to the ground. He was a student at Brooks Field and his death was the first fatality among the men at that camp and the eighteenth death among fliers at San Antonio camps. Before entering the aviation service O'Mally was a student at the Colorado School of Mines. HOUSTON, Texas., June 4. Private John Earner, of Philadelphia, was killed and Lieutenant Elmer N. May slightly injured today at Ellington Field, when their airplane became un manageable in the air and crashed to the ground. TEUTON U-BOAT ANSWERED American Yards Turn Out 2 6 3,571 Tons In Past Month. WASHINGTON, June 4. On the heels of the German submarine raid in the North Atlantic the Shipping Board an nounced tonight that production of new vessels in May was the greatest of any month in the history of the Na tion. There were completed and deliv ered to the Shipping Board 44 ships, totaling 263,571 tons, three times the output for January and twice .that of February. . " Production for the first five months of the year is well along toward 1,000, 000 tons, .which officials expect to be passed this month. Production in the United Kingdom to May 1 was a total of 659,420 tons. The British output for May has not yet been received here. Total American deliveries since last September have been 170 ships of 1,112, 897 tons. TROOPS NEEDED IN RUSSIA Ex-President Tart Vould Curtail German. Resources Abroad. CEDAR RAPIDS, la., June 4. It will be necessary for the United States not only to send an army to the western front, declared former President "Will iam H.Taft. in an address here tonight, but this country also will be obliged to send an army into Russia. Mr. Taft spoke here under the auspices of the Red Cross. "We must send an army to Russia soon," said Mr. Taft. "We must pre vent Germany from developing all the man-power and the mineral and agri cultural resources of Russia to enable her to carry on this war." The purpose of Germany, he declared. had been made plain by her conduct in Russia. Every -allied nation now realizes that it must be a war to the death. FRITZ RADER SENTENCED Wealthy Father Will Spend Money to Save Son From Prison. BAKER. Or., June 4. (Special.) Fritz Rader. convicted at Canyon City last evening for the killing of E. E. McCue, near Long Creek earlv this Spring, was today sentenced by Judge Biggs to the Penitentiary for a term of 6 to 16 years and fined $1000. His father, rated as the wealthiest man in Grant County, employed the best legal talent available and will spend money unstintedly to Save his son from a prison term, notice of ap peal to the Supreme Court being given. Kader killed McCue after a quarrel relative to pasture land owned by the Raders and used by McCue. He pleaded self-defense, claiming he shot only when McCue attacked him. WIFE-BEATER DODGES LASH Women Favor Imprisonment to Cor. poral Punishment. SAN FRANCISCO, June 4. Four women, asked by a police judge here to decide whether a convicted wife beater should be whipped or lmpris oned, today decided against the lash. Yesterday, Mike Nikitin was con victed on a charge of wife beating. Judge Morris Oppenheim recalled that an old statute permitted whipping I such cases, and asked four women, al social workers, who happened to be in court, to decide whether Nikitin should be whipped or jailed. Today the women declined to recom mend the corporal punishment. Th judge said he would make the penalty imprisonment only. Casualties Confined to Steamship Carolina. LIFE BOATS REACH PORTS 4 Atlantic Coast Cities Prepare for Any Emergency. DISPLAY LIGHTS PUT OUT N Vnrk Trll.- rnmn.llnn Tn. I forms Metropolis That Signals Will Tell of Coming or Enemy Aircraft. NEW YORK, June 4. The toll of dead and missing from the raid of German submarines against shipping off the American coast apparently stood tonight at h. all from the team ship Carolina, of the New York and Porto Rico line. Sixteen of this number are known to have perished when one of the ship's boats capsized in a storm Sun day night after the vessel had been sunk. The fate of the others Is not known, but it is hoped fchey have been picked up by a passing ship and will yet reach shore safely. Officials of the company have placed he number of passengers aboard the Carolina when she was attacked 125 miles off Sandy Hook at 220 and the rew at 130, making 330 in all. Captain Barbour, of the Carolina, reported to the company today that he was on board the schooner Evan I. Douglas with 150 passengers and 94 f the crew. The schooner is being towed to this port by a tug and is ex pected to arrive tomorrow morning. A boat containing 28 survivors, 21 passengers and 7 of the crew arrived at Atlantic City thi3 afternoon. Another lifeboat with 10 passengers and nine members" of the crew arrived at Lewes, Del., with the report that 16 of the 35 who had started from the hip had lost their lives in the storm Sunday night. If the company's figures as to the number' aboard the ill-starred liner are correct, .this leaves 42 unaccounted for. That number might have been crowded nto one lifeboat. The only possible clew to their fate was found in the fact that an empty boat, marked with the name of the Carolina, was picked up at sea by a British steamship which arrived here today. It had every evidence of having been riddled by gunfire. It may have carried the passengers and sailors who still are missing. Another ship was added to the list of victims of the U-boats when the American schooner Edward R. Baird Jr., was found in a sinking condition off the Maryland coast after having been bombed. The Navy Department reported that a destroyer naa gone into action against a submarine which was attack (Continued on Page 2, Column 2.) NOW WATCH -e-5k l Sl yf . j 1 J j James Fitzgerald Fractures Wrist In .Jumping From Window. Prison Record Is Found. In his attempt- to escape from Patrolman Spivey, James ' Fitzgerald, au ex-convict, jumped from the second story of tha Jefferson Apantments, 305 Jefferson street, yesterday after noon and was captured after a chase of several blocks In South Portland. Fitzgerald was found in the room, of Mrs. E. Farrow, in charge of the apart ments, when she unlocked hep door. Mrs. Farrow called for help. L. E. Shute came to her rescue, and the two held Fitzgerald prisoner until Patrolman Splvev arrived. When the officer stepped into the hall to call the police patrol, Fltz- I gerald ran to the window and Jumped to the sidewalk. He suffered a fnac Ltured wrist in the fall. Fitzgerald had a bunch of skeleton keys, and It is believed that he may be Implicated in the numerous apartment-house robberies that have been committed during the past few days. A- charge of tresDassina: has been lodged against him.' According to the records at the po lice station, Fitzgerald, . alias John MacLln. was arrested In Portland In October, 1915. Fitzgerald was sen tenced to serve -a year In the County Jail for larceny. He made his escape from Kelly Butte in March, 1916, and later was arrested in Milwaukee. Wis. He was'brought. back to Portland and completed his sentence. Previously he served time at San Quentin Penitentiary for burglary. 13 IOWA SOLDIERS SLAIN Members of Rainbow Division Killed v In Action May 2 7. DES MOINES. Ia.. June 4. Thirteen Iowa soldiers. Including five from Du buque, three from Mason City, two from Des Moines, two from Winterset and one from Red Oak, were killed in action in France May 27, according to official notices received by relatives tonight.' Captain E. O. Fluer, Des Moines, and Lieutenant C. R. Green, Winterset, are among the number. All are of the Rainbow division. TAX BILLS ALL MAILED Failure to Receive Notice Does Not Exempt From Payment. WASHINGTON. June 4. Bills for in come and excess profits taxes have been mailed by all revenue collectors, thu revenue bureau announced today, and payment must be made on or be fore June IS. - - Failure to receive a notice does not exempt a person from payment. BRITISH WOMEN TO FLY Labor Minister Expresses Confi dence in Feminine Aviators. LONDON, June 4. Employment of women as aviators is intended by the British government, George H. Roberts, Labor Minister, declared in a -speech at Sheffield. The Minister said he believed women would make good aviators. TI7E NAVY FILL ITS RECRUITING QUOTA French Improve Posi- tions on Front. EARLY HUN GAIN NULLIFIED Teutonic Hordes Driven Over Marne by Yankees. BOCHE CAPTURES PERNANT ProRress of Germans Between Alsne and' Olse Blocked; Americans Sweep Enemy Back to North of Neullly. PAH1S, June 4. A very appreciable slackening of the German effort is noted In the announcement of the French War Orfice tonight. The French positions at certain points have been Improved, and a German attack, which at first made some progress, was later repulsed. V Energetic resistance of the French troops between the Oise and the Alsne last night blocked all progress of the Germans, it was announced. The battle continued with the utmost violence between the Alsne and the Ourcq throughout the night, and the Germans captured Pernant at the cost of heavy losses. The French also yielded a- little ground farther south. German advanced forces which at tempted to penetrate Neullly wood were checked by the Americans, who. In a dashing counter attack, swept the enemy back north of the wood. Germans Drlren Baric. On the Marne front French and American troops drove back German forces which had crossed the river and took. 100 prisoners. Between the Marne and the Ourcq the Germans advanced at one point, capturing the village of Keullly-la-Poterie. 1 miles north of Chateau Thierry. WITH THE FRENCH ARMT IN FRANCE. June 4. (By the Associated Press.) The Germans were unable to score further gains In their. efforts to reach Villers-Cotterets yesterday. In spite of a struggle of a most severe nature, while around Chateau Thierry counter attacks by the allies have im proved the situation. Allies Win Small Advantage. The struggle yesterday along the whole battle line was very severe, but generally resulted In favor of the allies, whose power of resistance is growing rapidly with the arrival of reserves. The hardest fighting occurred be tween the Aisne and the Olse for the possession of Choisy hilf to the west of Cuts. The allied troops there covered themselves with glory in repeated at tacks, which were finally successful. In the vicinity of Troenes. accompa nied by a battalion of Chaussers. cav alrymen, in the course of a counter at tack, recaptured a slice of territory 2000 yards in depth. Farther east, in the neighborhood of (Continued on Pans Column 3.) Do.o n Residences in Vicinity of West Side Plant SaeU by Hard Work Of Firemen. Fire, which started in a sawdust Pile adjoining the enslne-room of the Kautx Manufacturing Company at Twenty-sixth and XU-olai streets, wwept through the plant and yards at 1 1 :L'0 last night. leaving them a mass of charred and bta kencd ruins, entail ing what Is estimated as a $25,000 Iosk partly covered by insurance. Only the efforts of the combined West Side tire department saved the dozen resi dences surrounding the mill. A boxcar backed Into a near-by sid ing proved a great aid to the men tliihtinsr the tire. The car served as a protection frowi the scorching heat and enabled them to play their hoses on the flames with telling effect. Fifteen minutes after the blaze was well under way four homes directly across the road from the burning building were smoking and partly afire. At this Juncture the firefighters turned their attention to the houses and pre vented further spread of the conflagra tion. When the alarm first came into po lice headquarters great fears were held that the fire was in one of the adja cent shipyards. As a result Captain Inskeep ordered e-ery man but the desk sergeant to the scene. Later the patrolmen, proved of invaluable aid to the firemen in checking the crowd and running the lines, which were a consid erable distance from all of the hydrants used. The Kautx Manufacturing Company Is given over entirely to the production of sash and doors and showcases. This fact necessitated the use of kiln-dried lumber, and it was in this material in which the flames gained headway. Roofe of houses near the fire were burned. AMERICAN AVIATORS SAVED Hydro-Airplane Disabled and Sinks After Men Are Rescued. NANTCCKET. Mass.. June 4. Two American aviators. Ensign .Roleau and Mechanic Harrington, were" brought to port today bv the patrol boat Sadie, which had rescued them from their dis abled hydro-airplane, adrift 10 mile southeast of Sankaty Head, at the east end of the island. The machine sank soon after the two men were taken off. They had been forced by. engine trouble, to alight on the water yesterday. PRINCE VON BUCHAU KILLED General s Commanding Bavarian Division on Marne. WASHINGTON. June 4. A diplomatic dispatch from Switzerland today says that Prince von Buchau. the command ing General of a Bavarian division. has been killed in the fighting on the Marne. ' INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTER DAY'S Maximum temperature. 87 degree; minimum 5d decrees. TODAY'S Fair; not so warm; westerly winds. moderate . r-Itoal. Survivors from various ships arrive la port Pace 8. L-bnat raid tends to clear mystery of Sixteen who escaped from Carolina perish in storm at sea. rase 2. All U. S. coastwise ships In Atlantic safe. Pace 3. Textl survivors say U-boat raiders polite as oanuiia. race ;:. Eleven American ships known sunk In re cent u-ooat raids, rag 1. Human toll or U-boat raids stands at SS dead and missing. Page 1. War. Force of Hun drive wanes. Page 1. Americans hurl back Hum. Page 1. American engineers work miracles In bat' tie-scarred France. Page o. Gigantic German conspiracy that brought on war exposed by leading figure In steel Industry. Page 5. Supreme War Council Issues optimistic state ment, fage tf. DomeAtir. Airplanes spin. dive, burn and several avia tors die. Page 1. Ex-Vice President Fairbanks dead. Page 4. Early strike of telegraphers seems Inevit able. Page 4. New York ready for air raids. Page 12. Pacific Northwest, i Washington granger defends Xon-Partlaana. Page 13. Mr. Spence target of granae forces. Page 13. Sports. Ruth drives In third homer In three consec utive days. Paga 14. nigh-clasa games due In Shipbuilders' League Sunday. Page 14. 17. of O. football proapects bright. Page 14. Fate of International League In balance. ays Mm. ri 14. Tennis tournament attracts wide attention. Page 4. Commercial and Marine. Buying of valley wool by speculators will be stopped. Fsge 18. Fruit crop conditions in Northwest are an even. Page 19. Wide advances - registered In Wall-street market. Page 11V Kiernan Kern shipyards to expand. Page 13. Portland and Vicinity, Official count of county vote complete. Paga 7. Idlers accept Jobs to escape arreat. Page 20. Ensign I'pshaw. Portland youth, now in charge of recruiting here. Page V. Daytime darkness next Saturday will be Stygian. Page )3. Oregon state Drainage Association meet Page a. Count of vote cast for county officers offi cially completed. Page 7. New draft registration on today. Paga 11. Kx-convlet captured after chase. Page 1. Alt asked to help war savings stamp drive. Page 13. J. l Day heads County Republican Commit tee. Page 12. World Reconstruction" topie of stirring ad dress. Page 12. Portland to handle Idaho wool. Page 12. Fash and door factory fire entails (25.000 loss. Page 1. Weather report, data and forecast- Page 13. U, S, Troops Take Brilliant Part in Battle. YANKEES WIN AT 3 POINTS Germans Routed Out of Neullly Wood When U. S. Boys Charge Invaders. BOCHE BEATEN ON MARNE Franco-American Troops De feat Teutons and Capture a Hundred Prisoners. WITH THE AMERICAN TROOPS IN riCARDY, June 4. (By the As sociated Tress.) American troops co operating: with the French west of Chateau Thierry, north of the Marne, the nearest and most critical point to Paris reached by the enemy, have brilliantly checked the onrushing Ger mans, beaten off repeated attacks and inflicted severe" losses, but adding: to the glory of American history. The troops began to arrive on the battle front on Saturday and par ticipated in the fighting almost imme diately. They not only repulsed the Germans at every point at which they were engaged, but took prisoners, without having any prisoners taken in turn by the Germans. Yankee Gunners Effective. The work of the American machine gunners was particularly noteworthy. There was at least one instance where an entire attacking party was wiped out." There were instances of the stiffest of hand-to-hand fighting, and in this the Americans acquitted themselves in a manner which won the greatest praise from their French comrades. The most determined attack against the Americans occurred last night. Preceded by a heavy bombardment, the Germans came in waves. They penetrated the American trenches, but were quickly ejected, leaving many dead. Two earlier attacks Monday and three Sunday had the same result. PARIS, June 4. American troops, swinging into the battle along the front of the new German drive, have hurled back the enemy at three dif ferent points, according to official an nouncement here today. The Ameri can forces are acting in close co-opera tion with the French. On the western side of the Cham pagne salient Americans stopped the Teutonic advance dead near Neuilly wood, and in a magnificent counter at tack threw the enemy back north of the wood. Huns Hurled Back. On the Marne front, to the south, American troops, in conjunction with the French, swept the Germans back across the river, which the enemy' had succeeded in crossing. The action took place above Jaulgonne. An enemy battalion which had effected the crossing of the Marne sustained heavy losses under the fire of the French-American force. One hundred Germans were taken prisoner and the footbridge used to cross the river was destroyed. American machine gunners on May 31 took an active part in the defense of Chateau Thierry,, which was menaced by the Germans. Machine Guns Stop Boches. Scarcely had the Americans alighted from their motor lorries when, they were ordered into Chateau Thierry with a battalion of French Colonial troops. The Americans immediately organized their defenses and by rapid action and excellent shooting caused the approaching -enemy to nesitate. The northern half of the town of Chateau Thierry was finally captured by the Germans.. The southern half of the town, lying on the left bank of the River Marne, still is firmly held by the entente allied forces. WASHINGTON, June 4. A terse announcement is made in General Pershing's evening communique of the actions announced today by the French War Office, in which Americans, by a brilliant counter attack, repulsed the Germans near Chateau Thierry, and French and American troops Concluded OU l'Mat Cuiuuto . 1GT1 106.2