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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1920)
JHE MORNING OREGONIAX, MOXDAT, AUGUST 9, 1920 MINISTER PORTRAYS M STEAMER DOUGLAS MENTAL JDURNEYIWB tM . WRECKED IN RIVER Three Calvanistic Points No Longer Preached. DR. McELVEEN IS SPEAKER Vessel Strikes Rock Near Rock Island Rapids. CREW'S ESCAPE NARROW! iPastor of Kirst Congregational Home After Six Weeks' Absence in Zast. Dr. William T. McElveen, pastor of the First Congregational church, oc cupied his pulpit yesterday after an absence from the city of six weeks. Dr. McElveen went east to be one of the speakers at the Plymouth centen nial celebration conducted by the Congregational denomination in Bos ton during June. He later visited Philadelphia, New York and Evans ton, 111. During- each Sunday away he preached. On the return trip he spent several days in Glacier .park. In his morning; sermon yesterday he said: Truth is larger than any denom ination's expression of it. It. -4s the dead man who never turns over. It is a dead mind that never revises its opinions." His topic was "How Far Have We Mentally Journeyed From the Creed al Positions of the Pilgrims of 1620?" He went on to say: -Our Pilgrim ancestors were Calvinists. They preached the five points of Calvinism. These five points were: The sov ereignty of God, the total depravity of human nature, the salvation of the elect, regeneration by the Holy. Spirit and the perseverence of the saints. The first three of these five points are not preached today in intelligent pulpits. " "Indeed, the modern minister re gards the first three of the five points of Calvinism as caricatures of Chris tianity. The outstanding fact about God is not that he is a sovereign, but that he is a savior. Jesus describes God not in the terms of a royal court, but in the terms of a loving home. Jetius calls Ood not a king but our father. Jesus never called any man an incorrigible. He believed more in the divinity than in the depravity of human nature. He spoke ever in terms of-hope to the most wayward. He regarded the Jewish idea that some were elected to be saved and others were predestined to'be damned as a libel on the grace of God. The only idea that Calvinism preached that we moderns believe 1b that of the necessity and possibility of re Mr. McElveen lectures on Thursday night on "The Recent Congregational Council in Boston." MAX IS COMPARED TO CLAM Indolence Does- Xot Bring Success, Declares Rev. Mr. Benmett, The Price of Success work was the subject on which Rev. George H. Bennett of the Patton Methodist church spoke yesterday morning. He said: "Labor is the price of success. God dignified it when he created the world. Our endowment with a phy sical nature presupposes toil to sup ply our needs; our mental powers presuppose study and invention; and our moral powers .presuppose our struggle with evil in attaining strength and beauty of character. Only the shallow-pate, the snob and parasite ever scorn labor. They prove their worthlessness by living on the toil of others. Rugged -strength, knowledge and virtue are evolved from the treadmill of work. "Laws of labor teach us our de pendence on a higher power, for we must heed laws of seed time and har vtni. Krowui anc. ucifty, vvurn anu play. These are laws of God. Who ever best understands these laws and best keeps them finds labor's best re wards. The divine plan runs in the channel of law through all progress. The wise will discern it. Violation of that plan spells defeat. God's law are dependable. Work has lis re ward, so we learn lessons In self reliance. "Chronic complalners ere alway tinder a cloud, they are always mis understood, or unappreciated, o alighted. They have laggard hands, barren minds, sterile souls and ston hearts. They have missed God's plan Work for the common weal woul save them. The Bhiftlcss man is lik a clam with apologies to the clam Birds and beasts range firmament, field and forest, for food and rejec many things as food; but the clam lies In the mud, feeding on whateve moving tides may bring. It ranks n higher because fed by the grea ocean. it is still a clam. Atid thoug the church of 2000 years" sanctit may roll waves of holy precept ove the shiftless man and the school flood his life with opportunities, he still lies in the mud of indolence a men tal and moral clam." 'LIFE'S BIG FIGHT" IS TOPIC Rev. Russell 15 rou slier Preaches Last Sermon at White Temple. Rev. Russell Brougher, who In two years will be graduated from the Rochester Theological seminary, preached yesterday for the last time this summer in the pulpit of the White Temple. His father. Dr. J. Whltcomb Brougher, former pastor Of the church, now with the Low An geles White Temple, will preach the remaining bundays of this month Since the resignation of Dr. W. H Waldo from the Portland White Tem ple the church has heen without a permanent pastor and during the month of August Dr. Brougher and his son have accepted the preaehln; responsibilities. Dr. Brougher is ex pected to arrive in Oreron the latter 0 a) ' . :-l i 7.:" V Mary Miles M inter In scene from the Romance," scheduled to open Water Rushes in so Rapidly Men in Engine Room Scarcely Get Away; Loss Estimated $500 0. WENATCHEE, Wash., Aug. 8. (Special.) The steamer Douglas struck a hidden rock In the Columbia river between Rock Island rapids and 280 miles north of ban Francisco. for United Kingdom; at 11:30 A. "M. Slwmer City of Topeka, for Coos Bay. Eureka and San Francisco. Arrived at and left up at 2 P. M. Steamer Bichconcal. from San Francisco via Se attle. Arrived at 6 and left up at T:30 P. M. steamer Captain A. F. Lucas, from San Pedro. Sailed at 7 P. M. Steamer Rose City, for San Francisco. SAN FRANCISCO. Aur 8 Arrived at 6 A. M. Steamer Atlas and barge 03, from Portland. ABERDEKN. Am. 8. Arrived Steamer Daley CJadsby, from Astoria. TACOMA. Wash.. Am. 8. Sailed Ad miral Evans, for Alaska poru. U. S. Xaval Radio Reports. (AH positions reported at 8 P. M. yes terday unices otherwise) indicated.) ' WEST HIMROD. Besttle for Yokohama. 364 miles' from Cap Flattery at 8 P. M., August - RICHMOND, towinr bim 95. Seattle for San Francisco. 85 miles from Seattle. POMONA. Seattle for San Francisco. 3.14 miles from San Francisco at 8 P. M. August 7. C. A. SMITH. San Francises for Coos Bay. 230 miles north of San Francisco. HARTWOOD. Grave Harbor for San Francisco. 1760 miles from San Francisco. JOHANNA SMITH. Coos Bay for San Francisco, 259 miles north of San Francisco. YOSEMITE. San Francisco for Seattle. 4 miles north of Blunts reef. AVALON, Raymond for San Francisco, SANTIJUUI FIRE CHEEKED OXE XEW FOREST BLAZE IS REPORTED IX DISTRICT. John Pox Jr. storyt "A Cumberland to day on the Majestic screen. TODAY'S FILM FEATURES. , Liberty Doris May and Doug las MacLean, "Let's Be Fash ionable." Peoples Blllie Burke, "Away Goes Prudence"; "Trailed by Three." Rivoli Bessie Barriscale, "Life's Twist." Columbia H o b a r t Bosworth, "Below the Surface." Majestic Mary Miles Minter, "A Cumberland Romance." Star Will Roges, "Jes" Call Me Jim." Circle James Oliver Curwood's "The Courage of Marge O'Doone." Globe Anita Stewart, "Mary Regan." Priest rapids last night and was wrecked, sinking to the bottom of the river. The Douglas was coming down the river to Portland. Captain Mil ler saw the rock and steered to one side, missing it with the bow of the btiat, "out the force of the current. running 10 to 12 miles an hour. swung the stern of the vessel over. The men in the engine room barely escaped drowning as the boat filled miles west of Los Angeles; 8 SAN DIEQO, Belllngham for San Pedro. 1JS miles north, of San Francisco. WEST HEPBURN. Manila for San Fran cisco. 400 miles from San Francisco. WILLAMETTE. San Francisco for San Pedro. B0 miles west of San Pedro. ASUNCION. San Pedro for Richmond. 140 miles from Richmond. PRESIDENT. Wilmington for San Fran cisco, 220 miles south of San Francisco. t-L, EEGU.DO. San Pedro for Richmond. 290 miles south of Richmond. VIN ATA, San Pedro for Honolulu, 1009 P. M., Aug- the crew got ashore in a small boat, o,, -; f" ,', . The Douglas is 65 feet long, 22 foot NILKS. for th orient 23aa miles west team and &Vi loot aralt, with, luu tons or Honolulu. A LOVE idyll of the Cumberland mountaineers by Johji Fox Jr.. which was published under the title A Mountain Europa," has been adapt ed for the screen, and under the new itle, "A Cumberland Romance," will come to the Majestic theater today Mary Miles Minter is the star, while prominent persons in the supporting cast are Monte Blue, John Bowers, Guy Oliver and Martha Mattox. Charles Maigne, who will be remem bered for "The Fighting Chance" and The Copperhead," wrote the scenario and directed the picture, which is ia to show the finest work that the star. Miss Minter, has ever done. Feminine motion-picture stars sel dom can resist the temptation to show off half a million dollars' worth of gowns. Jewels and furs in every picture. Even when they play the role of a poor little slum girl they manage to show the clothes by show- ng dreams or themselves in. gor geous array. But Miss Minter. said to be the highest paid star of her age in the world, and reputed to possess marvelous clothes, has used rare re straint in portraying her role of a poor little mountaineer girl in A Cumberland Romance." She does not wear a single Paris frock in the en tire picture, not even in a vision, be cause, said she, a poor little mountain girl would not be likely to dream about fineries which .she had never even seen. Without smart clothes however. Miss Minter has made a beautiful and appealing figure of Easter," the girl of the wild Cum berland mountains, daughter of moonshiner, sweetheart of a stalwart mountain preacher who reminds one of the famous Sergeant York, the preacher - soldier who attracted so much notoriety last year. Screen Gossip. Miss Dorothy Davenport, contralto, Is appearing as soloist at the Rivoli theater this week. Her voice is the rare, true contralto quality and range, with abundant power for grand opera. She sings with exceptional ease. She has been before the i---llc ever since she was a little girl, although she has not appeared frequently in later years. In the meantime she has per fected hir art by constant application and close stady. Miss Davenport is singing the aria from Samson and De lilah, "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice," and gives for encores several popular semi-classics, such as "At Dawning," "Absent" and "I Lo,ve You Truly." Bayard Veiller has completed his first original story for Metro. It is a melodrama and will be called "He Tried to Be King." In addition to acting as director of the Metro scen ario department, Mr. Veiller is to write five original stories a year. The title to his second story will be "To Catch a Th'ef," which will be a drama of the underworld, while the third will be "Twice One is Two," which is a comedy. Charles Edward Russell, sociologist, economist and Journalist, is to write photodramas for Benjamin B. Hamp ton. Mr. Russell will deal with that great new phase of American life women in politics. William Desmond Taylor, the noted Lasky director, played the leading role in Vitagraph's "Captain Alvarez." Since then he has been behind the camera and has directed Mary Pick- ford, Mary Miles Minter and Ethel Clayton. He is now engajed in direct ing "The uurnace at the Lasky studio in Los Ai jeles. Alta Allen is the name of one of tr- very latest stars. She was "dis covered" dancing in the "Foll es" in a hotel in San Francisco and soon will make her bow to fans in the first five-reel production made under the Sunshine Comedy brand. She is 17 years old and was born in Dundee, Scotland. . Eddie Polo, the Los Angeles serial star, accompanied by members of his company, recently visited Denver- for the sole purposes of obtaining a clr- cus scene for his current production, "The King of the Circus." The Rob inson Shows, then exhibiting in Colo rado's metropolis, was Polo's goal. Eva Novak, TJniversal's' new star. described as "blond, beautiful, sweet. lovely and adorable." In her first starring vehicle, "Kate Plus Ten she is the leader and the brainB of gang of super-crooks. Jane Novak is Eva's3 sister. Street trams. public buildings, parks, etc., of Monaco have been "shot" for the use of Erich 'von Stro heim in his current production, "Fool ish Wives." Monaco figures promi nently In the story. capacity. This is the second attempt made to navigate the Columbia river from Wenatchee to Portland, the first be ing successful two years ago when Captain Miller took the Nespelem through the rapids. The Douglas is believed to be total loss, the value of the boat being estimated at $5000. The Douglas was built in Wenat chee ten years ago for service be tween here and Oroville. It negoti ateif Rock Island rapids safely, which was supposed to be the most danger ous part of the- voyage. Captain Mil- EVERETT. Port Allen for San Fran cisco. 780 miles from San Francisco. DERBYLIXE. Manila for San Francisco. 2847 miles west of Se.n Francisco. BRAVECOL'ER. San Francisco for Ma nila. 1717 miles west of Honolulu. WEST CAPE. Honolulu for the orient. 1549 miles west of Honolulu. HATHAWAY. Yokohama for San Fran cisco. 2050 miles wet of Honolulu. uiwukth, San Pedro for Honolulu. 610 miles from Honolulu. COLOMBIA, the orient for San Fran cisco. 923 miles from San Francisco. WAUKEGAN'. ManlTa for New York. 961 miles west of Honolulu; noon, August 7. KLAMATH. San Francisco for San Pe dro. 85 miles south of San Francisco. LYMAN' STEWART. San iuls for Van- Two Old Fires Are Put Out; More Alarms Expected as Result ot Lightning Storm in Hills. ALBANY. Or.. Aug. 8. (Special.) The big forest fire about six miles northeast of Fish lake, between th Big Meadows and Duffy lake, was not maKing serious progress toaay. re ports from lookouts to C. C. Hall, su pervtsor of the Santiam national for est here, -.indicated that the fire fight ers were holding it within Its present limits. No reports have been received as to the exact extent of this fire. One new firs was reported today in the vicinity of Soap Grass mountain, south of the Mountain house and on the old Wil lamette valley and Cascade mountain wagon road about 16 miles east of Cascadla. It was a small fire. Two of the smaller fires which were burning yesterday were reported out today. Including the new fire re ported, four were burning in the San tiam national forest. The fire near Duffy lake was the only one which had attained serious proportions, how ever. It was believed all of the others could be stopped before they got large. roaay was the first time this year when smoke of forest fires has been noticeable in the valley. There were electrical storms In ths mountains both this forenoon and this afternoon, so it is probable new fires will be re ported soon because of the lightning. ROSEBURG. Or.. Aur. 8. rSne clal.) Lookouts in the Umpqua for est tonight reported that electric storms had started five small fires, all of which were under control. A heavy rain began falling tonight throughout the forest and aided in keeping the fires under control. No report was received concerning the fire burning yesterday on the Jackson and Douglas county line in the section known as Cow creek can yon. A large number of fire fight ers were dispatched yesterday to fight the blaze. ler left here with the Douglas about couver. 602 miles from Vancouver. & o clock Saturday afternoon and hoped to reach Portland Tuesday. Six Sea Tugs Are Sold. WASHINGTON, Aug. S. Sales of six seagoing tugs for $i04,000 were announced yesterday by the shipping board. Three hundred dancers will par ticipate in a ballroom scene which will be one of the outstanding fea tures of Prlscllla Dean's current pro duction, "Outside the Law. Pacific Coast Shipping Notes. SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. 8. (Special.) Officers and members ot ths crew of th ill-fated sailing ship Charles E. Moody of the Northwestern Fisheries company, which was destroyed by fire recently while lying at the company's cannery in Nak- neck. Bristol bay. Alaska, will reach Se attle next Wednesday from the north. aboard the Alaska Steamship company's liner Victoria. Coming from Newport News via San Francisco, ths shipping board steamship Eastern Victor arrived in Seattle in the night to load cargo for Black sea ports. The Thorndyke-Trenholme company of Seattle is managing agent of the ship. She will complete her Black sea cargo in Vancouver. Turbine driven and of greater tonnage than any' other vessel that has yet in vaded the Pacific flying the Holt house flag, the British steamship Achilles, one of the latest additions to ths Blue funnel fleet, will reach Seattle toward the end of the year, according to Captain K. R. Francis, master of the steamship Tyn dareus of the Blue funnel line, now in port alter a voyage from the orient. Captaw n . H. Curtis, marine superln tendent of Williams, Dimond & Co., of San Francisco, was in Seattle today ranging for the loading ot the steamship Red Hook, built In Tacoma and owned by the Todd Shipyards corporation. Captain Curtis said the Red Hook had been char- tered from ths Todd interests by Williams. Dimond Sl. Co.. and will load 330 tons of box shooks in Tacoma and t3 tons at the Lander-street terminal of the port com mission in Seattle, for Honolulu, fur. nislied by the Matson Navigation com pany. G. P. Bordeaux, one of the veteran ex perts of the port commission, has resigned agent or the big Spokane-street ter. minal, effective August 15, to become man ager of the employment bureau and hall of the Seattle Waterfront Employers' Union. It was announced today. He will succeed Captain A. A. Paysee as head of the employment bureau and hall. Captain Paysee retiring to form other connections. ASTORIA. Or.. Aug. 8. (Special.) Laden with lumber from St. Helens, the steam schooner Multnomah sailed at 7 this morning for San Francisco. The tank steamer Richconcal arrived at 1 this afternoon from California with carffo of fuel oil for Portland. The steamer Kastern ocean wltn wheat LURL1NE, San Francisco for Honolulu. 241 miles west of San Francisco. SILVER HEEL. San Francisco for Eng. land, leaving San Francisco. WALONWAN. 200 miles north of San Francisco. POMONA. Seattle for 6an Francisco. 96 miles from San Francisco, SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 8. (Special.) The new freighter Rotarlan. Captain Nel son, adjusted compasses, went over the measured trial eouirse and got to sea. all within a few hours today. The steamer, dispatched by Swayns ac Hoyt. has a part cargo from hero for South American ports ana win call at Vancouver to finish load. ing. Ths CrowVeys today reported ths rals ing of the power schooner Wavelet, which sank alongside the wharf at Livingston street In ths Oakland estury. Derrick barge No. 63 did the work. Ths Wavelet bad a load of metal scrap when shs de. elded to take a rest on the mud. The shipping board steamer City of Omaha from Yokohama, and the Union freighter Waitemata for Sydney steamed today laden with Ksners.1 morchsndlK. Ths Lnlon Oil company's barge Ersklne M. r'neips, with so.oov Barrels of oil. and the same company's tanker Whittler, with o.ooo barrels, cams in today from Port San Luis. The Japanese freighter Hague Maru ir rived today -from New Orleans. W. F. HERRIN. Monterey for Portland 040 miles from Monterey. STORM KINO. tug. with drvdoek Don toon In tow. Port Angeles for San Fran. Cisco. 342 miles north of San Francisco. GOVERNOR. Seattle for San Francisco. 20 miles south of Cape Blanco. MULTNOMAH. btrHelens for San Fran cisco. 92 miles south of the Columbia river. ARG i LL, Port San Luis for Seattle. 403 miles from Seattle. QUEEN. San Francisco for Seattle. 470 miles from Seattle. LIBERTY MINQUIS. Portland for San Pedro, 153 miles south of the Columbia river. EASTERN EXPORTER. Seattle for Sn Francisco, 450 miles north of San Francisco. E. H. MEYER, Grays Harbor for San Pedro. 12 miles south of Grays Harbor. EASTERN OCEAN, Portland for Eu rope, via Port San Luis, off Cape Mears. RICHCONCAL. Seattle, for Portland 20 miles from Portland. OLEUM. Port San Luis for Portland. 2o miles from Astoria. CITY OF TOPEKA. Portland for Coos Bay, 78 miles south of Columbia river. Cooker NDTIFICnTIOH IS TODAY FRAXKLIX D. ROOSEVELT PRE PARES FOR CEREJIOXY. 8:. 17 A. 8:27 P. Tides at Astoria Monday. High. Low. M...K5 feet!2:43 A. M 0.4 foot M...8 2 feet2:10 P. M 3.2 feet Nazlmova is now the proud posses sor of a Japanese kimono. .ie gift of 1 from Foreland sailed at 2:30 today for Inouye Masao. the foremost stage actor in Japan. Masao brought the kimono from Japan especially for the j Russian actress. When he returns to Japan It will be as a screen star, as he has signed with a Japanese com pany to make pictures in Japan. For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years part of this week and his son will leave this week for Los Angeles and later for the Rochester Theological seminary. Hussell Brougher's subject yesterday morning was -Life's Big Kight." "The biggest devil a man will ever have to fla-ht is fodnd inside of himself," he said. "When Ood gave Adam and Eve a .chance to enjoy everything ex cept one thing, they decided tney a have that one tning also, a ney cnose their own way in preference to God's way. Life has been a game of 'fol low the leader' ever since, every iei low wants to do as he pleases. "Selfishness is the root of all sin. If I had the power to take the sin of selfishness out of every man's heart he would grow Into a perfect man and know what real happiness is. "There is a universal cry for hap niness. There is Just one thing that robs man of happiness and that is sin. It does not make much ditrer enco what name you may give to the special vice you are struggling with all evil comes from the same root a sinful heart. "If a man doesn't turn to Jesus Christ and be forgiven for his own selfishness and let the spirit of Christ come in to take the place of that which Is selfish he will never master this evil." . BIBLE IS. HELD UNSURPASSED given additional sacredness to the pages of holy wrlc "Th delineations of character given by Shakespeare are nothing short of sublime. His dramas fur nish a wonderful mirror of human life. But the dramatist is outranked by the Bible. Man is there reflected In all his majesty and meanness too. You see him in his natural setting without any posing or aid of artifi- Clalties. The vice portrayed you de test and the virtue you admire. "But the spiritual values of the Bible exceed all others. It Is to us no fetish or book of magic. It is rather a record of soul history, show ing man's spiritual development. book of saving grace, containing the light of immortal life. It gives us man's best thoughts of God and shows how the divine expresses itself in the human. It is there man discovers himself as he comes Into contact with him who is the savior of the world." Always bear the Bignatura j tionai cnurcn wii n 7r , S?7J? Edward Constant s of QZa&&C&dt . Prent-day value of the . I went on to say that "it is Cuticura Soap Complexions Are Healthy Se0.Olntnnt.TslsB.Zse.verywhtre ForsattipTei sudreM: Csttear Lbrten,C?pt.X. Melean.M&M. For breakfast try toast with olive oil instead of butter imported Pompeian Olive Oil Holy Writ In First Rank of Litera ture, Avers Rot. Mr. Constant. In preaching his Sunday morning Bermon at the Highland Congrega tional church on "Man and the Bible, showed the Bible and sometimes Alleged that 'the Bible is the religion of Protestants. While that is not true," continues Rev. Mr. Constant, "It is true that the Bible is our great religious classic, a collection ot writ ings proving to be inspired because thev are inspirational. "As literature it takes front rank. It is nothing; less than 'a well of Knurlish undefiled. Kvecy .student recogrniaes the literary qualities of the scriptures. The vigor, directness and rhyhtmical beauty found there are unsurpassed in the realm of letters. "No other book has filled so large a place in life or is so democratic and none has been so hallowed by as sociations. The fact that it has been the book of our fathers and the vade mecura of the wisest and best has WORSHIP 0EGLLXE lEPLORED Dr. Stansfleld Declares Holy Day Has Become Holiday. Dr. Joshua Stansfield, pastor of the First Methodist Kpiscopal church. took as his topic yesterday morning, 'Waiting Upon God." He. said in part: "To live the life that is really worthy, man must walk in the lipht and live in the strength of the divine Human life cannot be at its best with out God. Human wisdom and strength alone are inadequate to some of the exigencies of life. Moral deterioration and weakness are inevitable without God. "Here Is the real worth ot worship, the divine renewal of life; higher vision, nobler strength. Without this good life will decline and falL "One of the saddest and most omi nous facts in the Christian world today is the decline of worship and religious living. Even the grand children of the Puritans are now turn ing the Lord's day into recreation. The holy day has become a holiday, The ordinances of worship and re Hrlon are not felt to be a necessity by many. Even in Scotland and Eng land as wen as in America there is a noted decline of worship. As Ions as 30 years ago Gladstone of Eng land noted the alarming increase of what he called the 'oncers those who attended church but once on the Lord's day, but today the 'oncers and the 'noncers are a majority in the enrolled membership and families of most Protestant churches." Panama for orders. The steamer The Angeles, carrying wheat from Portland, sailed at 11 last night for Leltii. Scotland. Carrying freight and passengers from Portland and Astoria, the steamer City of Topka sailed at 10 today for San Francisco, via way ports. The steamer Rose City, carrying freight and passengers from Astoria and Portland, tailed at e:3U toniant tor Ban rancisco. The schooner Ecola with lumber from Portland vailed at & this afternoon for Sydney. The tank steamer uieum is aue rrom California with oiL for Astoria and Port land. The steam schooner Daisy is due from San Francisco and goes to St. Helens to load lumber. On account of a thick fog outside, th tug Hercules with a Benson log raft In tow. did not sail today for San liego. Shs expects to leave tomorrow. PORT TOWX8END, Wash.. Aug. g. (Special.) Bringing a big general cargo of oriental products, the United States shipping board steamer Cross Keys ar rived this morning irom Singapore and way ports. The larger portion will bs transshipped to points in the east. Carrying lo.uuu tons or riour loaded at Tacoma. the steamer Haymoa sailed today for Liverpool via New York. This is the second of the four big cargoes to be taken from Puget sound for the grain corpora tion. It was originally Intended to load the Haymon at Portland, but while en route from San Francisco her orders were changed, sending her to Tacoma. Arier discharging" 4ii,uiu Darreis ot on at Seattle, the tanker Richconcal sailed last night for Portland, wnere shs will discharge 20,000 bmrreis and then. -will pro ceed to Port San IjUib. The motorshlp Berlund. one or the larg est vessels of her kind afloat. Is en route to Puget sound and is expected to arrive the latter part of ths present month. She is bringing several big shipments of freizht from Europe. Several hundred tons of freight has been assembled at Seattle lor ner ouiwara voyage. an is in ine service of the Norway Pacific Steamship company. The Snoqualmie. the largest wooden steamer afloat, arrived here last night from Union Bay, B. C, where she went to fill her bunkers, after completing her lumber cargo at Mukilteo for Sydney. W hile- at the coaling port the entire engin room crew, with the exception of the en gineers, quit ths vessel, not even taking their belongings. The engineers brought the vessel here. Captain Kngelbrecht went up the sound today to secure a new crsw for the engineers. The Enoqualmle will be detained here until Monday night se curing the required men. Columbia River Bar Report. NORTH HEAD, Aug. 8. Conditions at the mouth of the river at 5 P. M. : Sea. smooth; wind, north, 14 miles; weather, cloudy. Jtm HlU'g Frier! Dead. ST. PAUL, Minn. Aug. 8. D. C. Sheppard, 92, friend and business as sociate of the late J. J. Hill, arfd for more than 60 years a builder of rail roads, died at his home here last night after a long Illness. Committee on Arrangements Lays Plans to Accommodate 10,000 Persons. HYDE PARK, N. T., Aug. 8. Franklin D. Roosevelt arrived tonight from Dayton. O.. after attending the notification ceremonies of Governor Cox. to prepare for his own notifies tion tomorrow. The exercises will take place at Sprlngwood, the Roose velt estate, at 3 P. M. Hyde Park and Poughkeepsie are in holiday aress. Secretary DanieTs. Governor Smith Chairman George White of the derm. cratic national committee: W. G. Mc Adoo and William C. Redfield are among prominent democrats to attend. - The committee on arrangements has planned to accommodate 10.000 per sons. Mr. Roosevelt will speak from the front veranda of his home. His speech of acceptance is the shortest of the principal candidates of the two major parties. Henry Morgenthau Jr. chairman of the local committee on arrangements, will introduce Mr, White, who will introduce Homer S, Curamjngs, chairman of the committee appointed to officially notify Mr. Roosevelt. The nominee will then de liver his address. Mr. Roosevelt plans to sro to New York Tuesday noon and confer with party leaders before starting his western tour. He will arrive in Chi cago Wednesday and open his tour there that evening. From Chicago he goes to the Pacific coast and back speaking in 15 states. He plans to return to New York in September. Tentative plans have been made fo a second western trip, including ad dresses in Kansas, Colorado. New Mex ico and southern California. COX HYPOCRITE, CHARGE INDICTMENT MADE BY FARM ER-L.VBOR NOMINEE. DAILY METEOROLOGICAL REPORT. PORTLAND, Aug. 8. Maximum temper ature, degrees; minimum. 65 decrees. River reading at 8 A. M.. 8.7 feet; change In last '24 hours. 0.2 foot fall. Total rainfall (5 P. M. to 5 P. M. ). none; total rainfall since September 1, 1910, 3.V51 inches; nor mal rainfall since September 1, 1919. 44. 2 inches; deficiency of rainfall since September 1. 191t, 9.1t Inches. Sunrise. 5.02 A. M.; sunset. 7:81 P. M. Total sun shine August 8. 1 hours, 40 minutes; possi ble sunshine, 14 hours 'Ju minutes. Moon set, 2:33 P. M. Barometer (reduced to sea-level at 5 P. M., 29.77 inches. Rela tive humidity at 6 A. M., 6G per cent: at noon, 48 per cent; at 5 P. M.. 48 per cent. THE WEATHER. STATIONS. Wind Movements of Vessels. PORTLAND, Aug. 8. Sailed at 4 A. M. Steamer Eastern Ocean. for United Kingdom; at 10 A. M. Steamer Rose City, for San Francisco. Arrived at 11 P. M. Steamer Richconcal, from San Francisco via Seattle. SEATTLE, Wash.. Aug. . Arrived Cross Keys, f rotr Sin gmpore ; Ci ty of Se attle, from southeastern Alaska; Nome City, from San Francisco; Brook dale, from Honolulu. Sailed Richmond, for San Francisco; Santa Ana, for southeastern Alaska; Hor ace jC Baxter, for San Francisco. A8TORTA. Aug. . Sailed at (1:30 A. M. Steamer Multnomah, for Ban Francisco. Sailed at Z P. M. Steamer The Angeles. Baker Boise Calgary Chicago .... Denver ...... Des Moines. Eureka .... Galveston . . Helena .... Juneaut Kansas City L. Angeles.. MarshTieia 58 50 oudy ..tO.OO'lO'NWJCIear DA'O.OctlOj W Clear SS 0.00'. . N'E Clear 84 0.14;1VS IPt. cloudy Still). 01, 14 NE iPt. cloudy rt 0.00 . . X Clear 62 "0.001. .IN IClear 84U.00. ,S jCloudy HO O.oo:. .IKE IClear 4S!r,o.oft . . Ise (Cloudy OJIO.OOIOSE IPt. clo R4 0.00!.. SV Clear HA'A 111). .IXWTtAiiflv Mrdfnrd ...Itf 14 0.00.14 SW Cloudy Minneapolis I. ..I 7S-.0 . 02. . .IS IPt, cloudy New Orleans!... K20.7B..IS Pt. cloudy New York. .1. . . Srt 0.0 IS sw IClear N-nritf Head) SO TxX 0 .00! 1 4! N 'Cloufly iii4 U.il': ciouay 90 o.oo. .'S iciouoy s.s n.oolioiX CT'Cloudy 94.0.00: . .iNWiCloudy 92 0.00 10 S IClear S2 0.20il4 eE Cloudy 92 o.OO,. .E Cloudy 7fl O.OOi . .! W ! Clear 2lO.OOi20'PvV IClear S2 O.O0,. ,iNB IPt. cloudy 5 U.t'", . . I . . ..it louay 94iO.OO..E ICloudy fl 82 O.OOI.. fx ICioudy 52i 6i 0.00; . .'SW Clear 40 r2'0.0S;..lXE ICloudy 6S) 12'0.00!. ,!W ICloudy ..( P2IO.OOI. ,S IClear . .1 94 O.OO: . . IS (Clear fi4t 90 0. 001.. f ICloudv Phoenix Pocatello ..I Portland . .. Roseburg Sacrsmento St. Louis.... Salt Lake. San Diego. . S. Francisco Seattle .... SitkaT Spokane Tacoma Tatoosh lad . Valdesf - Walla Walla Washington Winnipeg Yakima 58 1 . Pressure jHzSk. n Come Out of the Kitchen No longer do you need to spend half the hot day in a hot kitchen preparing meals. The Sechriat Pressure Cooker cooks a three-pound roast in 35 minutes and makes even the cheapest cuts tender and delicious. It cooks a chicken dinner in, 30 minutes, navy beans in 30 minutes and vegetables in 1 0 or 15 minutes. The principle is simple. Water boils at 2 1 2 der grees and you cannot make it hotter. Most foods contain water, so all heat above 2 1 2 degrees passes off in the form of stream. With this limited heat you must c&ok navy beaps four or five hours. The Sechrist Cooker is steam tight. It permits up to twenty-five pounds of pressure. No heat escapes in the form of steam and you get over 260 degrees of heat, which cooks the navy beans in 30 minuses and other foods in one-third the usual time. . Cans 80 Quarts in 10 Hours The Sechrist Cooker gives you the canning method used by big canning factories and recommended by government canning bulletins. The fruit is canned in the jar and is unbroken by handling. . The full, plump beauty of the fruit is retained, and when opened in mid-winter it is as fresh and Savory as when first gathered. The method is so rapid that with the ten-quart cooker you can put up 80 quarts of fruit in ten hours, or can vegetables in one-third the time " usually required. The Sechrist Cooker 5s mo do of heavy rolled plate, alumi nuij An accurate safety valve prevents excess pressure. Th-, cooker has straight sides and a flat bottom so desirsble foi Vanning:. Inset pans enable you to cook a whole meal at once. Look for the name "SECHRIST" on the dial of the steam gauge. Ask for free booklet with recipes. On Sale at Leading Stores THE ALBERT SECHRIST MFG. CO., Denver. Cot- 11 Parley Clirlstensen Avers Presen European Situation Will Scrap Treaty of Versailles. NASHVILLE. Tenn., Aug:. 8. Par. ey . Christensen. nominee of th Farmers" labor party for presiden a statement tonight declared promise of four more years of SVil Boniao hyprocrisy is all I can fret ou of the speech of acceptance of Gov ernor Cox. "The cox speech, he added, "com pletes the conspiracy by the repub lican and democratic bosses to biin the people to their real interests by setting up the dead league of nations as the paramount issue. "I predict that the present critical European - situation will result in what amounts to a new peace confer ence that will scrap the treaty of Versailles. The league of nations has never functioned and never will. Kurope knows this and realizes now most acutely the necessity for a new agreement a peace based on the solid foundation of international jus tice and honest statesmanship and not on rhetorical generalizations by erudite hypocrites. "Smug hypocrisy is the dominant note in the governor's statement of acceptance, just as transparent bun combe is the outstanding characteris tics of his republican opponent's utterances." Sechrist Pressure Cooker Demonstration At our store or at your own home. Phone Main 642 for one of our demonstrators to call upon you. The Pressure Cooker Sales Co. 191 Fourth St. With F. S. Lang Mfg. Co. " ifl tin MiTiiiinMTr Lambs club. Liggett was said to have told tbe police. Leggett was unable to account for Slavtn's Injuries and, according to the police, said he and Slavin had inter vened in a fight between McGraw and an actor at the Lambs club. CIRCUS HERE KEXT WEEK Announcement of Arrival Today Iade Erroneously It Is Stated. The John Robinson circus will show in Portland Monday and Tuesday. Au gust IS and 17. instead of today aijd tomorrow as- was erroneously an nounced in the Sunday Oregonian. The advertising car of the circus arrived in Portland last night and those in charge Btated that the snow would not arrive for a week. tA. M. today. Ing day. P. M. report of preced- ACTOR SERIOUSLY HURT Injury to Companion of McGraw on Walk Hoine Is Mystery. NEW YORK. Aug. 8. John C. Slavin, actor. 1b in a hospital suffer ing from a fractured skull after hav ing fallen unconscious near the home of John J. McGraw, manager of the New York Giants. Winfield Leggett, retired naval of- Landslidc Catches Freight Train. HELENA. Mont., Aug. 8. Fourteen cars of a freight train on the Northern Pacific were caught in a landslide at Bradley station, west of Helena and this side of Garrison, at about 7:30 o'clock this evening. 3 Rifled as Train Hits Auto, EAST LIVERPOOL. O.. Aug. 8. Five men were instantly killed and another died later when a Pennsyl vania passenger train struck an auto, mobile in which they were riding in Salem. O.. near here, tonight. LATE Death only a matter" of short time; Don't wait until pains and aches becoma incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking GOLD MEDAL FORECASTS. Portland and vicinity Cnsettled weather; Muth westerly winds. Oregon and Whinirton Unsettled weather with thunder storms In mountains; mnrlrate southwesterly winds. Idaho Unsettled weather with thunder f'Cer. and Slavin had accompanied Mc .lorm. VAm'. Meteorolusut. Graw home early today from U. Th world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles th National Remedy of Holland sine 1696. Guaranteed. Three sizes, all druggists. lok far tk nam CU Medal est avarr fcwa l mmd accept at Isahsliai A Wonderful Medicine TRY this approved rem edy. Just the tonic for nervousness, sleeplessness, depressed feeling, loss of appetite, digestive troubles, brain fag, or slow recovery from influenza and kindred ailments. A tonic, alterative and diuretic for blood and nerve disorders. SCMtctl ray Back. Phone your want ads to The Ori man. Main 7070, Automatic 56U-if."