Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1914)
12 TIIE MORNING OTTEGONIAN, TUESDAY, MAT 2, 1914. LINER HOERDE HERE Hamburg-American Vessel Has Cargo From Orient. VISIT IS CRAFT'S FIRST Trip Is Made From Yokohama to Victoria in 1 7 1-2 Days, Although. . Cirrler Is 13 Tears Old and Rated' as 1 0-Knot Cratt. Although 13 years old and not rated nbove a 10-knot vessel, the Hamburg American liner Hoerde made a straight run from Yokohama to Victoria In 17 days. Captain O. Hensen reported that phe did not make the great circle route. The steamer arrived here early yester day and began discharging 1700 tons of cargo in the afternoon. In the list of freight are 19,000 pieces of Philippine hardwood, 1500 bags of rice, 2.0 packages of tea, 70 bags of coffee. 6000 bags of peanuts, azu Dales of gunnies, 25 barrels of cottonseed oil and consignments of Chinese poreclain and merchandise, a shipment of tin and miscellaneous commodities. The Hoerde is-one of two trunk types e float, the other being the Dordmund, and both were named after German ports where ore loaded In Norway was discharging for smelting. When the ore trade was given up by the com pany the vessels were fitted with 'tween decks and assigned to regular freight trades. Appearance Hoerde'n First. It Is the first appearance of the Hoerde here, though her skipper is no stranger, having sailed as chief officer on the Numantia, of the same fleet. when she was under charter to the Portland & Asiatic in 1904. The vessel has a dead-weight capacity of 7800 tons. Besides being a master now Captain Hensen returns with a Crown cross pinned to the lapel of his coat, a pres ent from Emperor William in token of bravery displayed in Hongkong harbor when Captain Hensen, then a chief of ficer, made trips from a small boat to a wreck and rescued therefrom 12 Chinese. Their vessel had been caught In a typhoon. With a log line made fast to his body Captain Hensen jumped from the small boat and swam to the Chinese, getting them to safety, one at a time. He was also decorated by the Chinese Empire and presented with a small sword of gold, and a German lifesaving society also gave him a medal. Chief Officer Here First Time. Chief Officer Ragalski is here on his pioneer trip and with him is a prized mocking bird purchased at Calcutta, which he thinks la an exceptional specimen. The engineers of the Hoerde are the possesors of several glass tanks filled with Japanese fish, gold fish being the most common, but there are two known as lionhead fish, because of their large heads. Their backs and sides are gold and like many other 'Japanese varieties they have two tails. As run ning water is required for each tank the stateroom In which they are carried resembles an aquarium. MHJTIA TO GET FE3DERAL AID Navy Department to Assist State In I Maintaining Crew. Preparatory to the Oregon Naval Militia being taken under the control of the Federal Government, as provided for In the naval militia act passed by Congress in February, an inspection is to be held tonight aboard the cruiser Boston by Lieutenant Smith, U. S. N., who serves here as the representative of the Navy Department, as well as being In charge of the regular Navy recruiting station. Later an Inspection Is to be con ducted, at which the question of Fed eral control will be placed before the men and a report made to the Secre tary of the Navy. On his acceptance the organization will be alloted certain funds that will be used, together with allowances from the state for clothing, subsistence. . transportation and inci dentals, and probably bring about an Increase in the number of regular Navy men stationed here to look after the Boston and assist in training the mili tiamen. M VXY OWEItS VIOLATE DAW Custom-House Force Gathers In i Tardy Ones on Colombia. Complaints numbering 65 were filed yesterday with Collector of Customs Burke by Chief Inspector McGrath, who returned from a trip of inspection from Portland to Astoria and then up the Columbia as far as McGowan's cannery and back to this city. The journey was made aboard the custom-house launch 1L W. Scott, which even went to sea for a short time and inspected fishing boats on the bar. Mr. McGrath says about 200 boats were inspected on the trip, and those reported were charged with all manner of delinquencies from not having life preservers to being without fire ex tinguishers and other equipment. Some boats were caught fishing without drifting lights. It is intended to make euch unannounced trips at intervals, so boatowners on the lower river will bear the regulations in mind, as do those in Portland harbor. QUIXAnT DOSES FADSE KEEL Crowd of Ship Carpenters Make , i Speedy Itepair Job on Vessel. Following a survey of the hull of the Portland-Alaska steamer Quinault on drydock yesterday it was announced that 126 feet of her false keel had been carried away when she struck a rock leaving Moira Sound, while on her way from Portland to Skagway on her last .u.yi.K3. iiu oiner damage resulted according to Captain Wilson, super tendent for the Dodge interests, who personally examined the hull. A force of 30 men was employed to get out a new false keel to be scarfed Into place and the vessel will be low ered Into the water tonight or early tomorrow. She sails Thursday night lor Skagway and way ports, inaugur ating the new schedule, which provides for the departure of a vessel every Thursday. 6AMBIA CARGO OX SAXOXIA Accident to Diner Results In Xo Harm to Portland Shipments. No cargo consigned to Portland or other Pacific Coast firms was dam aged aboard the Hamburg-American liner Sambla when she struck a rock off Shado Island, near Hongkong, recently a. cablegram to that effect having reached Frits Klrchhoff, Portland agent for the fleet, yesterday. The liner Saxonia, due here July 24 and herself about repaired after having grounded on the other side, is to load the Sambia's cargo for delivery here. DRAMATIC SOPRANO TO FILL MAJESTIC ENGAGEMENT. ' ' ff ' ' ' MADAME LOTTA ASIIBV OTHICK. . Madame Lotta Ashby Othick, a dramatic soprano, will begin a sing ing engagement at the Majestic Theater next Thursday. Madame Othick, who has sung at this theater before, will, no doubt, receive a hearty welcome from her admirers. She will succeed Miss Betty Anderson, who will leave shortly for Butte, Mont , , Calcutta, Hongkong and Manila cargo will be sent via Tsingtau. The Sax onia loads there the middle of this month. No information was received at the Portland office of Frank Waterhouse & Co. yesterday giving further details of the return of the Royal Mail liner Radnorshire, which put into Port Townsend Sunday short of fuel. She sailed from the Columbia River at 8:50 P. M., May 22, and was to pro ceed direct to the other side, but re ports are that she encountered - such baffling head winds that her bunker supply ran down so It was not deemed best to continue without replenishing her fuel. ASTORIA IS RELIEF DAtTVCII Columbia Starts Work on Postoffice Bar' Improvement Today. As dredges of the Port of Portland Commission will not be engaged far from the harbor the next few weeks, the launch Astoria, used as a tender to the dredge Columbia, will replace he Harbor Patrol launch soon while it is given the annual overhauling. After ward she will be substituted for the launch Marie, a harbor tender, while it Is overhauled. . The dredge Columbia tows from the public drydock this morning to Post office Bar, where she betrins a cut to widen the channel there that is re garded as one of the most important improvements to be undertaken on the channel to the sea. The dredge Wil lamette Is to be assigned there to as sist in the work as soon as she fin ishes above the Hawthorne-avenue bridge. Digging there was expected to be ended by today, but a mass of sunken logs and smaller drift has hampered the big machine and she will Drobablv be there the remainder of the week. xne .Portland finishes a fill at Mu nicipal Dock No. 2 today and would have ended her labors there vesterdav but for the fact more material was asked to be delivered by the Commis sion or 1-udiic uocks. NORTH HEAD LIGHT CHANGED Loss of Rosencrans Causes Fixed White Light to Be Abandoned. Aiming to perfect lighted aids to navigation when dependence is placed on a particular mark that is not gen erally regarded as up to the standard, or o located as to be confusing, the Bureau of Navigation has ordered the fixed white light at North Head changed to an occultiner or flashlne- light, which was done last night. Here- arter the light will operate with two seconds' eclipse, six seconds'- light, two seconds' eclipse and 20 seconds' light. The substitution of the flashing llsrht Is a result of the wreck of the Asso ciated oik tank steamer Rosecrans, which went on Peacock Spit January 7, 1913, and it was reported by one of three survivors of her crew that North Head light had been mistaken for the Columbia River light vessel. For that reason Henry L. Beck, Inspector of the Seventeenth Lighthouse District, recommended that a change be made, though mariners have pondered since how the two lights could have been confused. Mr. Beck asks that masters of vessels bound in and out of the river report to him how they find the flashing light and whether, in their opinion, it is satisfactory. NORTHWESTER BESETS BEAR Liner Brings Big Crowd Into Sun shine Belt of Northwest Leaving California under clear skies 325 cabin passengers aboard the steam er Bear, "bulldog" of the San Fran cisco & Portland line, were prepared for Summer weather on the Coast, only to be disappbinted by Neptune, who sent a strong westerly swell to hamper me uears neaaway, while brisk north west winds raced against her and the sky was overcast. But on entering the broad Columbia yesterdav all was changed for bright, clear conditions. The same long westerly swell did not decrease the list of seasick ones. Ihe steamer had numerous Dassen- gers bound here on vacations and in anotaer month there will be a resume of the southward rush by Oregonians on pleasure bent. In the way of cargo she carried 1700 tons and In the lot were & cars of oranges and four cars of lemons. E. B. Labbe, wife and daughter and Miss M. H. McDonald, sister of Mrs. Labbe, were in one party arriving. E. B. Gaze, a well-known Portlander, was also a passenger. While in port an upper house will be built on the Bear aft of the bridge, four additional staterooms being pro vided, three being for officers and wireless men and the fourth for the wireless plant. The same work is to be done on the Beaver. LIGHT TANKERS TO ' BERTHS Oil Companies to Utilize Night for Loading Ships. Masters of tank steamers operating to Portland from California are com menting on the latest move of their owners in establishing powerful searchlights at loading points so ves sels arriving at night can be docked without delay. The first is being erect, ed at Point Richmond. San Francisco Bay. by the Standard Oil Company and will have a capacity of 60,000-candle-power. The Associated Oil Company and Union OH Company are said to be con sidering a similar step. The Standard tower will be 135 feet high. News From Oregon Forts.' COOS BAY, Or., June 1. (Special.) The steam schooner Redondo arrived today from San Diego and San Fran cisco with freight and passengers. The steam schooner Mayfair arrived this morning at 7:50 for a cargo of lumber for the San Francisco market. BANDON, Or June 1. (SpeclaJ.) The steam schooner Grace Dollar reached here this afternoon from San Francisco and will load lumber for California points. ASTORIA. Or., June 1. (Special.) The steamers Bear and Roanoke ar rived this morning from San Francisco with large freight and passenger lists. The steamer Rose City sailed this evening for the Bay City. The steam schooner Shoshone ar rived today from San Francisco and went to Rainier to load lumber. The lumber laden schooner Mlndoro will probably be towed to sea tomor row en route for Callao. She 'was to have sailed Sunday, but has been de layed on account of repairs to her don key boiler. The tank steamer Roma arrived this evening from California with a cargo of oil for Portland. The teamer Paraiso with cargo for Portland arrived this afternoon from San Francisco, via Coos Bay. Columbia River Steadily Falls. VANCOUVER. Wash.. June 1. fSne ciaL) Though the weather has been warm for several days, with a tempera ture of 86 today, the Columbia River has fallen to 16.2 feet, a drop of .6 of a root une water continues to fall and the indications are that it will not rise mucn more this season. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. Looking Usually Means Deciding Sale of a Houseful of New Used Pianos at Down-in-the-Sub-cellar Prices Makes Broadway and Alder a Busy Place. Only $45 for good-toned old-style Pianos. $95 for really good ones and $145 for slightly used really worth while pianos. Pay us a little to show good faith; a $5 bill sufficient; then arrange the balance as best suits your convenience. PLAYER PIANOS DRASTICALLY CUT. TOO. We now offer Player Pianos at prices that cannot be duplicated else where; $290 now buys an Apollo Player; $325 buys a used Weber Piano, and $650 a most elegant Weber Pianola Piano ever seen here, while for $335, $345, $418, $435 and $624 you can now secure player pianos that regularly sell for more than twice the money in this or any other city. Free Music Rolls included. MOST . PROMINENT MAKES IN CLUDED. A hurried trip through this big es tablishment (four floors devoted to musical instrument selling, the largest and most varied stock of everything musical on the Pacific Coast) will Quickly convince even the most dis criminating musician of the quality of the pianos now offered in this sale. TELEPHONE OR WRITE Out-of-town buyers should write or telephone for descriptive list and numbers. Any instrument sent sub ject to examination and free trial upon receipt of deposit of amount stated in this advertisement. The de posit will be cheerfully refunded if the instrument is not found satisfac tory. This sale will be continued until every instrument is Bold.- Remember, jvery instrument is fully guaranteed. and at these low prices all should find buyers quickly. A FREE-USE PLAN. During this sale we issue a special two-years' exchange agreement. We accept any instrument at sale prices toward payment of one of our fine new Chickerings or the Autopiano oi other of the many numerous makes we carry, actually giving every pur chaser now two years' free use of any piano offered in this sacrifice sale. A purchaser is bound to prove satisfied, because every instrument is guaranteed and no transaction is con sidered closed unless it means satis faction to the buyer. The sale is now busily in progress. Eilers, the nation's largest and most progressive retailers, Eilers Bldg., Alder street at Broadway. Alaska. Salled-Steamera Helena, for Nome. St. Columbia River Bar Report. NORTIT ITEAD. .Tun A l.TnTnimnn . V. - utti- a.t ij t. ciouay: oar. einooth: wind. northwest, 12 miles. Name. Roanoke. Breakwater. Bear Alliance. .. ., Beaver. ..... Yucatan. .... Rose City. .. Nlme. Breakwater. . Willamette.., Tamalpais. .. Harvard. .... Paraiso. ... .. Roanoke. . Yale Bear Alliance. Date . .. .In port ....In port ...In port ....June 0 ...June a J une 7 11 Date. . June 2 ..June . .June June June , .June June June Steamer Schedule. CUB TO ARRIVE. From . San Diego. .. Coos Bay ...... .ia Angeles. ...... .Eureka . Ivoa Angeles. . ......fan Dleiro ...... X,oa Angeles ..... .J une XTVB TO DEPART, ' For Coos Bay. . , . .Los Angeles. , lxs Angeles. , . S. F. to A.. .Coos Bay.... San Diego. . . , S. F. to L. A . .LiOS Antelu. . . .V.04JM I .... f""-"""' ....... ..oan jjiego June Beaver Los Angeles June nose tjity as Angeles June 16 aLBWHAfl OKlhiXTAL, SERVICE. ame. From Date. Oea of Ruth ven.... London ln port r-1 i L . .1 am burg. ....... In port - -, ' ......... vuuoo ..........j une lv oambla -Hamburs June 80 Carnarvonshire. .. .London Jul 7 Andalusia Hamburg JuhJ 2"i CFerdLaelea Hamburg Jul 3(1 Seovla Hamburg Ao( 2V Aleeia Hamburg .Sept S3 Name. For Dat. Den of Ruthven. . . .London .June B r..i tiamourg June 8 ... . ........... .nam Durg.. ..... . June 1 u Glenlochy London.. I.July 6 Sambla Jiamburg July s Carnarvonshire. ...London. I Au 5 nalHS,la- . Hamburg Auil 24 C. i erd Laeisz Hamburg Aug! 28 Sevl Hamburg I., sepu it ALASKAN SERVICE. Kama. For Date. J. B. Stetson Skagway June 11 Quinault Skagwav J,.if Z inoa.L. wand....sawy:::::::: Ju. Due for Inspection. Certificates of inspection expire on the following vessels as indicated: ijnaine. Portland June Vanguard Astoria June R""1- Portland. . . . . . .. . June Wenonah Portland Il.JunS Triumph Portland ju" gowonV .Portland juna Gerald C Portland JJ Oneonta ..prii..j ."HB T. J. Potter Portland'..'.::".:: juSe J5 C. Minslnger. . . ... Portland. . . . . . . . ; j Une 1 7 Movements of Vessels. rVKN?- J"ne V Arrived Steamers ' x-1 tin cus co ana ban Pedro- fro" San Francisco; Roanoke: f Jim w Kin- " "i""L? Hoerde. from Rose City." for Vi "b sTn Cisco: steamer W. a. Prt ?. r. 30 A- J1 Steamer Roanoke, from ff5no5lelTi.a4.lL3 "nd it 'up Cisco and San Pedro a,V.h.?? ra"" and left up at noon, steamer Shoshone, from I? Vanp'SCw Ar'Ved a'4:30 left uS Vr.i.'.T' M. Steamer Paraiso. from San Francisco. Arrived at 4 P. M st.J Koma, from San Pedro. Sailed at 8 p. M. " aui- i reuro via San ricmg, june l. Arrived at 8 A. ?.-;Steain DaI,,y- "n Portland. Arrived JV:r'eam.,er celilo and Yellow- ashore at Lime Point, f uTf oT" afer ' SaUed Saturday night Steamer n;i. .1- illa lan d- . " n ,T?.,-L-:r Arrived Steamer Am- steamer'."" 1" rf.'-Brltlsh "J"80- h June 1 Arrived Steam "h'P Henry T. Scott, from Tacoma. Mei DOlim A Inns. 1 a a - L.FVni,, ,"- '17T1"'',C otearaers r .iwii, VJ L LJUllll. II, . K,-a,W Diane, from Seattle. ' Arenas, May 29. Arrived Steam- pVonJ-r. . - ,m New York, for San V"i KSr West for Ban Francco T K BV r f. Arrived steamer -r.ro xiaroor ana Ban Fran- Can Francisco, June 1. Arrived tfim er. Nann Smith, f rorn Coo. BaV? l"?' oeatue; u. c. LIndauer. from Gravs Harbor; Daisy, from Columbia RiveV- Yei- low. ton. rvrm t..ila.j. .er' IB1 torla. ' ,-em. "ora As- Los Angeles. June 1. Arrived Steamer. Nehalem. Temple K. Dorr, from oTiy, 3ar Portl.nd irm Balboa: Shasta." from Seattle. Wash., June 1. Arrived ers Humboldt, from SoutheVsVern Alaska President, Nebraskan. Ry.de,' fmaullt' from San Francisco; Argyll, from ifo'": Marconi AVlreless Reports.. (All positions reported at 8 F. M. Jose 1 ujuiiTect uinerwuiw aeignaiea. Steamer Buck. Port San Lula for Everett. 21 miles from Everett. St. Helens. SeartlA for fit. ffl-nalB 9K miles went of Seattle. Klamath, Everett for Tacoma, five miles south of AIki Point. senator, bcatUe for Nome, off Dungeness. Sueedwell. Kan PrannlaM frti- Kan IJ.j n off Hueneme. ' Desabla. South Amer'if-A tnr Pftrf San T .. 1. 80 miles south San Luis. Oleum. Port San I.ni. for Ran P,dm tft miles south San Pedro. psenus, Antofogasta for San Franclaco, 95 miles south San Pedro. Mazatlan. San Francisco for Aherdenn. 14 miles north St. George's Reef. Hooper, with oil barge Kuuanu In tow, eight miles north Cape Blanco. Multnomah. San Francisco for Portland, 25 miles north -Northwest Seal Rock. Adeline Smith, Coos Bay for San Fran cisco, three miles north Coauille River- Asuncion. San Francisco lor AherilK.n l!t miles south Cape Hears. Hubbard. San Perl rn for riniv, TToi-hn. 40 miles south Astoria. Lansine. Port s m n T.til. fnr c im-no! 67r miles north San Francisco. Carlos, San Francisco for Columbia River 37 miles north Cape AraKO. Watson. San Franci.cio for ReatM is miles north Columbia River. Chatham, San Francisco for Tacoma 62 miles north Columbia River. Xorwood. San Francisco for Grays Har bor. 13 miles north Heceta Head. Richmond, San Francisco for Seattle, 440 miles north San Francisco. Georgian, San Francisco for Seattle, DO miles south Tatoosh. Bessie Dollar. Seattle for Otaru. 200 miles west Cape Flattery. W. S. Porter, Portland for San Francisco, 358 miles north of San Francisco. Rose City. Portland for San Francisco, three miles south Columbia River. Catania. Tacoma for San Francisco. 42 miles north of San Francisco. Honolulan, Hllo for San Francisco, 108 miles from San Francisco. j Yale. San Francisco for San Pedro. ds-mmA ' iseuu i uiiil ai tr. im Congress, San Francisco for San Pedro, 12 miles south of Piceon Point- Portland, Portland for San Francisco, 80 miles west of San Francisco. Fenwlck. San Pedro for Astoria, 45 miles uwrui vl Ban r rancisco. Celilo. San Francisco for San Pedro, 25 linn luuin di ou.u. l rancisco. Falcon. Port Harford for' San Francisco, six miles orth of Point Montara. Hanalel, San Pedro for San Francisco, off ruuu our. Santa Rita. Port Harford for San Fran cisco, 46 miles south of lightship. Manoa, Honolulu for San Francisco, 814 miles from San Francisco. W'hlttler. Port Harford for Oleum. 130 miles south or ban t rancisco. Marine Xotes. To load more lumber the Grace, liner Santa Clara shifts today from Llnnton to the North Pacific mill. On the last of the Inward cargo of tne fciamrjurgr-American liner Hoerde being- discharged at North Bank dock she will be fumigated. The vessel was fumigated previous to her departure rrom Hamburg:. San Pedro Is the destination of the steamer Tamalpals, which sails tomor row with 675,000 feet of lumber and a number of passengers. After discharging 43.110 barrels of fuel oil and 160 drums of distillate the steamer W. S. Porter, of the Associated fleet, sailed yesterday for Monterey. .Four-tenths of an Inch fall In the Willamette here was recorded yester day, the stream standing 15.7 feet above zero. District Forecaster Beals says it will fall slowly for three or lour days. It Is Intended to tow the damn (red Government dredge CoL P. S. Michle to Astoria ft)r repairs, probably leaving uu uay tomorrow, ssne was struck by the steamer A. M. Simpson and may ob out oi service a month. -i a i Liao ui tne in i lines are rp. ported to nave applied to the Harbo Commission at San Francisco for dock space for the new steamers Great Northern and Northern Pacific and in dicated a preference for berths in the vicinity of Pier 7, north of the Ferry building. San Francisco advices are that .Bal four, Guthrie & Co. took the British steamer Invervle for wheat at Sis 3d. At the same rate the British steamer Angola is said to have been fixed for wheat for September loading. DAILY MKXlvOKO LOGICAL REPORT. PORTLAND, June 1. Maximum temper ature, 74 degrees; minimum, 6tt degrees. River reading at 8 A. M.. 15.7 feet; change in last 4 hours. 0.4 foot fall. Total rainfall (5 P. M. to 0 P. M.l. none; total rainfall since September 1, 1913. 87.37 Inches; nor mal rainfall since September 1, 42.22 Inches deficiency of rainfall since September 1, 1913. 4.S5 Inches. Total sunshine June 1, IS hours, 81 minutes; possible sunshine, 13 hours, 31 minutes. Barometer (reduced to sea-level) at 5 P. M., 2U.74 inches. THE WEATHER. fcTAVlONS. A Hint on Travel Money Ask anj experienced traveler: "What travel money is most convenient?' ' The typical answer will be: "American Express Travelers Cheques. They are thoroughly known abroad. You can spend them as you do a 4l0-bill at home." Back of our Travel ers Cheques is our great foreign financial de- Eartment with central -ranches in 16 European cities. American Express TRAVELERS CHEQUES - fA Baker .......... Boise Boston Calgary ......... Chirago ........ Colfax Denver Des Moines Duluth Eureka ........ Galveston Helena ........ Jacksonville .... Kansas City.... Klamath Falls.. Los Angeles.... Marshfield Walla Walla Washington .... Winnipeg ...... Aieaiora Montreal New Orleans.... New York North Head North Yakima. . Pendleton , Phoenix ........ Pocatello Portland Roseburg ...... Sacramento .... St. Louis St. Paul Salt Lake San Francisco... San Francisco... Spokane Tacoma Tatoosh Island.. 740.OO. .1. ... 8410. 00f 4N 78 0.00 10!SW S00.00 8N 63:0.28 12 N 820.00 . . 6S:0.18 4!NE 80 0.00 8;E 74;0.00 lo'sw B4O.02,lO'N 78,0.00 6'S 80,0.00 12 S 8S 0.no 8'SE 80 O.J2 10 B 82,0.00! 72 0.00 00 0.001 8'0.O0 86 0.00 84.0.O0 880.00 4'8W 8:s 6 NW eiNE 6nw 12 SW 12'XW OS O.OO 12 N 9410. OO 6'S 74 O.OO IS' W 66 0.OO 12'NW 82 0.04l4lNW U2I0.0O 4!W 80:0.02) S B 84 O.OO 14IS 74iO.OO 8'S 76;o.oo 76O.O0 84'0.01 76;O.00 70 0.04 6;X 14S 8 NE 6 SB S.SE BB'O.OO 12 W 7N'0.OO 8'SW 76 0.001 6 NE 74I0.OO 6'W S4,0.00 16S Ttale ol weal tiei Cloudy Rain Clear . Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Pt. cloudy Pt. cloudy Pt. cloudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy ft. cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Clear Pt. cloudy Pt. cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Kaln Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear ear Clear Cloudy Clear (Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy uouar Clear Cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS. The pressure Is moderately high over the i.ii'pippi ann uno vallevs and A Rose Miracle A Marion County Clergyman, using his open yard as a laboratory, has pollcnized hundreds of cultivated and wild brier roses, securing over 28,000 rose seeds, from which he has grown many hybrids that will astonish the most expert rose breeders. He has produced hardy hybrids of remarkable beauty from wild brier roses; he has improved even the Ameri can Beauty by crossing it with the Bardou Job, getting a maroon brown with a ver milion center. From his 640 best seed lings more wonders are expected. His new roses and plants will be exhibited during the coming Rose Festival and also at the Panama-Pacific Exposition next Summer, but why wait a year, or even a few days, when you can get the facts TOMORROW In the article A. Maker of New Roses BY JESSE A. CURREY In This Week's Issue of Z2T? COUNTRY GENTLEMAN Five Cents the Copy, of AH News Agents On Sale Thursday. Or $1.5 a Year by Mail Direct, or Through Any Authorized Subscription Agent. Our Distributing Agent is J. K. Havely, 269 Taylor St. Portland, Or. THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Lakes Region; in other sections the pressure Is low and more or less unsettled weather conditions obtain. Except in the Atlantic Ptates, along the pacific Coast, in the Northern Plains States, upper Mississippi Valley and Canada, precipitation has oc curred in most sections in the last 114 hours. The rainfall was heavy in Colorado and Kansas and thundor storms were re ported from North Yakima, Kallspell. Mo dena, Denver. Oklahoma City, Kansas City Boston and Tampa. The weather is cooler in Eastern Washington, Interior Oregon. Idaho. Northwestern Montana. Northern Colorado, Illinois, the Ohio Valley and New England. It is correspondingly wanner in Manitoba and New Mexico. The conditions are favorable for generally fair weather Tuesday In Western Oregon and Western Washington, and for showers and thunder storms east of the Cascade Mountains. Generally westerly winds will obtain. FORECASTS: Portland and vicinity Probably fair; westerly winds. Oregon and Washington Generally fair west, showers and thunder storms east por tion; winds moetly westerly. Idaho Showers and thunder storms. THEODORE F DRAKE. Acting District Forecaster. FISHERMEN OBEYING LAWS Two Officials Make .Inspection Cruise Along; Lower River. ASTORIA. Or., June 1. (Special.) That the lower river fishermen are observing- the fishing; laws, as well as the rules of navigation, is reported by nepuxy rmn warden Larson and Cus toms Inspector Haddix after a cruise. They report that not a fisherman In the entire district placed his nets In the water before 6 o'clock last night, and during the evening each had the proper liRhts displayed. In the Clatskanie River they say they saw seven log rafts directly in the Iiath of navigation and neither had a light displayed. They say they will report this fact to the proper authorities. HOTEL HAMMEL PURCHASED Bert R. Westbrook Takes Over Al bany's Six-Storj- Hostelry. ALBANY, Or., June 1. (Special.) Bert It. "Westbrook today became pro prietor of the Hotel Hammel, Albany's six-story hostelry, and changed its name to Hotel Albany. Westbrook, for the past two years, has been proprietor of the St. Francis Hotel, another leading local hotel, and will now manage both hostelrles. Westbrook bought the furnishings of the hotel and the lease of the building from J. B. Thompson, who bought out J. C. Hammel five weeks ago. Mr. Thompson retains his Interest In the Hammel Hotel Company, the cor- poration wnicn owns the hulldlnar. , . . ,,,, ,.,iimii wnicn owns me nulldlnar. Rose Festiva I Or egoniaes Will be the most interesting and complete issues ever published. You vnl want to send these copies to your friends. Six Complete Issues, Including Postage, 20c (Tuesday, Juna 9, to Sunday, June 14, Inclusive.) yame ; Street Town State i : 2 , 3 , 4-. , , 6 ; 6 , 7... 8....J 9 10 n 11 12 THE OREOONIAN, Portland, Or. Gentlemen: Enclosed find for which mail The Rose Festival Ore-onian from Tuesday, June 9, to Sunday, June 14, inclusive, to each of the above. from (Eacleae 20 scats for caek siame,) Luis; Northwestern, Ixom Southwestern