TIIE MORNING OREGONIAX, MONDAY, MAY 6. 1918. CONCRETE SHIPS TO "OLDEST MAX IN THE NAVY" AND HIS GRANDSON. Start today to buy War Savings Stamps An excellent investment and a patriotic duty BE RAPIDLY BUIL Shipyards in Georgia, South Carolina and Florida Will . Launch Many Vessels. 10,000,000 TONS NEEDED r Saccesa of Big 0-Ton Stone Freighter, Which Mide Trial Trip at San Francisco Ycaterdaj, Convince CoTtrnmenl I. BT HENRT M. II TDE. CHICAJO. May i. (Special.) The steel and concrete ship Faith, a iooo ton freighter, marh tbe largest con Crete ship ever built, failed today from a Paetfie port on bar maiden trip. w at Brantwlck, Ga.. and at Jacksonville. 'la.. private shipyards are. beta raabed to completion. Kach of tbem baa a contract Iran the Oov- ernment for the construction of con prate and ateel ablps ef ISO tone. At Wilmington, N. C. a tblrd yard la un der way. It la be in built by tbe Shlp- plnc Board, and will, aa aoon aa com plated, atart on the construction of teel and concrete ships. Meanwhile tbe shipping" situation re main the saoat critical In alt tbe war preparations of tbe Government. The tataat report from the War De partment la that 1. 000. 09 Americana are expected ea the flchtlnc line by January I. 1)19. It will take at leaat ie.eoe.ee tons of shipping- In constant service to transport and maintain an army of that else. Charles U. Schwab, chief of the ship ping programme, la whose drlrlng pow er every American baa great confl dence. saya that the Shipping Board aspects to launch 1.000.O4O tons in 11I. To make P the difference it will take every to a of additional shipping tbat can be obtained from any source. Tbe chief claim made for concrete rips as opposed to ateel ships. Is that tbey can be turned out la less tban half of tbe time required for the latter. Or.ce a yard Is established, concrete ship of large slae can be launched la from.Se to days. R. J. WIr. chief of the concrete con struction department of tbe fhlpplng Board who started aa a skeptic, baa been convinced, aa the result of long Investigations, that concrete ships on axy scale are practically certain of s ureses Tbe opinion of Mr. Wler Is backed by that of many of the most eminent steel, aa well as concrete, engineers In the country. J. V. Powell, bead of the ship building interests of tbe Beth lehem 8teel Comoany. and Charles JI Schwabs Mrbt-band man In tbe ship building Industry, was asked before the tvenate committee whether be fhnneht the feuildinr nf concrete ihinf I worth trying on a big and serious! scale. -Te:- declared Mr. FowelL "Try everything. Give concrete i thorough test, don't overlook one bet. T V i , ' -" : I . I , A Photo copyright by Committee on Public Information. Left. Caetea V. Lewe. ) Tears Old. Wa Balloted at Kaasaa City, Ma, la 1917. Right. Adolph L Uwt, TT Years Old) h served la the iVavy Froa 1M1 to 1H3. Adolph I Lowe, who la sure he la the oldest man serving In the Navy. called on Secretary Daniels a few days ago, and was warmly welcomed by be bead of tbe Jfavy Department. He left tne service nail a century ago. ftee aArvlnar (hrnuvh the Civil War. and re-entered aa rarnenter'a tnata on .May 21. IS IT. BIG SHIP JUSTIFIES -NAME Trial Trip of Concrete Vrwl Faith Prove Suercf ul. ' AV FRANCISCO. Way I. The steam er faith, tbe largest concrete ship In the world, built by the San Francisco Shipbuilding Company, was given a sue easeful trial trip here today, averaging more than 11 knots an hour In Its four passages over the official trial coarse, Navigators had expected the vessel's engines to develop an average speed of Is knots an hour. Experta and shipbuilders who were a the vessel expressed themselves as being highly pleased with ita perform act. Captain Richard E. Connell. la command of tbe Faith, said the test was satisfactory. Weather conditions were perfect. The test laated four hour a The Falth'a electric and steam steer ing gear, according to those who were oa the vessel, worked exceptionally wen. The Faith's engines were Installed In 44 days. This. It was said, established av record here, the previous record being C These engines are known aa triple expansion, reciprocating, marine steam engines, and are designed especially for ocean travel. Tbey are situated la the stern of the vessel in order that valu able cargo space will not be takea up with any excess of driving gear. The success of the trip put into op eration the plans for three more con crete beats, each larger than the Faith, to built here by the same company aa fast as the material becomes avail able. The Faith has already been chartered for her first voyage. KYLE AGAIN IN PEKING AMXJUCAX. LO.tO CAPTIVE, LITTLE WORSE rOR KXPERIEXCE. mile Bale) fas Coat Bears WHaeea Very .vanew Camps frees J Chlaeae BaadHa. PEKIXti Sunday, April Jt By the Associated Press. -George A. Kyle, of Portland. Or., the American engineer released last week after having been held captive by Chinese bandits for 11 days, haa returned to Peking little the worse for his experience. A bullet bole la the shoulder of his coat bears wit ness to his narrow escape when tbe bandits fired on hint at 1 paces on the day of his capture. The Amerlran'a release was effected by Charles D. Tenney. Chinese Secre tary of tbe American Legation, and r C Hitchcock, of tbe Sterne-Carey Rail way at Canal Company. In conjunction with tbe Chinese General Chang and the Catholic mission. No ransom was raid, but General Chang guaranteed tbe leaders places on his bodyguard. Mr. Kyle told the correspondent that be had been well treated by the bandita while be waa kept secreted In the vari ous villages. Tbe long nlgbt marches were tbe rooet trying experiences, be said. Mrs. George A. Kyle, of the Imperial Arms apartments, yesterday received a brief cable message from the Klems Carey Canal Company, through the American legstloa at Peking, announc ing that Mr. Kyle bad been released. The additional Information contained la the dispatch to The Oregoniaa was read with relief by Mrs. Kyle, who is anxiously awaiting direct word from her husband. RISH IN DOUR 100 Conscription- Edict "Makes Tense Situation in Island. WILD RUMORS CIRCULATED Report That Treasury Note Would .Be Xo Good After War Cause Immediate Hoarding of Silver In Monster District. DUBLIN. May . By the Associated Press. 1 Although Ireland Is quieter than before, the announcement of con crlDtlon there Is still causing great tension of public feeling and much dls cusslon of future prospects. The appointment as chief secretary for Ireland of Edward Shortt, radical and home ruler, followed oy tne ap onlntment of William Archer Redmond, member of Parliament for East Tyrone aa Intelligence officer on Lord French's trr. created for a tew aays ine im pression tbat the government had aban doned its intention of enforcing con mrlntlon. It Is. however.' generally realised that the policy of the government is two fold, and that US aeciarauone renam ing home rule and conscription stand equally firm. Unlike the Sinn Feiners, who take the view that the Irish should Ignore the offer of home rule and remain per manently away from Parliament, the absence of tbe Nationalists Is tem Dorarv and the prevailing opinion among them Is that they should return for the second reading of the home rule bill and elate their decision upon t. In fact, the union of the National ists and Sinn Feiners is limited to the Question of conscription. Several wild rumors have been active. One bad It that treasury notes hsre had been issued aa a war expedient and would he usslesa after the war. Tbe story was believed, especially In Nun ster. where the people changed their notes for silver, which they hoarded. The result waa that there was serious dislocation of business, the employers finding difficulty In getting money to pay tbelr workmen, while the stores had to give credit for goods. Tbe silver shortsge affected the Dub lin traders' banks today. Even the postofflces were unable to supply hanga for notes. Thirty chests of liver arrived to relieve the stress. Kavv Death Rate Lowest on Itecord. WASHINOTOV. May I. Incomplete reports received by Surgeon-General Ttrmlafat chief of the NiTT Medtrml Corps, tadioated that the death rate for I Record. Chronicle. Times. Dispatch and Hernia aaeo to oiviae ino neia. men the Times and -Herald were combined Chicago Newspaper History Full of Mergers. ' . Instead ef Seven. Two Jearaals New Serve Meralag Field. (Home Interesting additional farts la re tard te the recent merer ef tbe Oilc.se Htrald vfitb the examiner, and la regard to events leading ap to the mercer, are given in tbe following special dispatch, seat est ef Chicago): CHICAOO. May 1. Chicago, which only a few yeara ago read aeven morn ing newapapers all at the same time, will have to get along with Just two when It sits down to breakfast tomor row ths Tribuns and the Herald-Examiner. For the Herald, in the fourth merger In which it has been an In gredient, today was combined with the Hearst morning paper. Chicago need to have twice as many morning sheets aa evening papers. Today Just the re verse Is true. Morning newspaper history here since 19i) has been one long atory of combinations. The Tribune. Inter-Ocean, aa the Times-Herald In, merger No, Tbat left six. Later on the Times-Herald was com btned with the old Record under the name of the Record-Herald in merger No. 2. That left five. Shortly thereafter the Examiner was started, restoring the total to six. But the suspension of the old Dispatch, fol lowed In a few years' by the dropping out of thr- Chronicle, cut the total to four. For a time the morning and evening sheets split ths field, four to. four. Then. In the Spring of 1914. the Inter- Ocean and the Record-Herald' were united In merger No. S under the name of tha Herald and under the editorship of James Keeley. who left the Tribune to found the new venture. That left three Today Keeley'a Herald was absorbed by Hearst's Examiner in merger No. 4 That leaves Juat two. And through all the mergers the name "Herald" has been the only one to survive. The Times, the Record and the Inter Ocean with which it was amalgamated at different times are all but forgotten. For four years the Herald haa been a loatng venture. Reports in business circles place the annual deficit at (300, 000. Mr. Keeley, the retiring editor, la to go abroad to spend three months mak tng Investigations for twd European countries and upon his return may be come editor of the Herald-Examiner. The new merged paper will be Issued from the Hearst building, under the present editorship of Arthur Brisbane, and the old Herald plant on Washing ton will be sold. KARELIA TO BE LET ALONE Finns Allege Conquest of Country- Is Not Contemplated. STOCKHOLM. May i. The Finns do not contemplate the conquest of Karelia, according to the Helslngfors correspondent of the Svenska Dag blatt, who haa sent the following tele gram: T can report authoritatively that no Finnish action for conquest of Rus sian Karelia can be expected, since Germany will not support such a plan. Meanwhile, a movement haa been set afoot by the Inhabitants of Karelia to inatltute a plebiscite regarding the question of Joining Finland, and If a majority should favor It Germany might be Inclined to support - their demands." Karelia is a region In the northwest of Russia embracing the southeast cor ner of Finland and Including parte of the governments of Petrograd, Oloneta and Archangel and bordering to the northeast of the White Sea. The Kare Hans belong to the Finnish stock. the Victrola brings this superb music The exquisitely beautiful interpreta tions of the world's greatest singers and instrumentalists. - To name these artists the artists who make records exclusively for the Victrola is to name practically all the great artists Who are entertaining the public today. Among the great singers Caruso, Alda, Culp, de Gogorza, De Luca, Farrar, Galli-Curci, Gluck, Homer, Martinelli, McCormack, Melba, Schumann-Heink, Scotti. 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Victor Records and Victor Machines are scientifically coordinated and synchronized ia. flSffi I the processes of manufacture, and their use, one with tbe other, ia absolutely essential to a perfect reproduction. j New Victor Records danwn ijj3jj "Victrola'' is ths EliUtercd Trademark of ths Victor Talking Machine Company dralgnrtinc the products oi this Compter only. j J PRESS PEEVES GERMAN BEfEXTtOW REFUSES TO ADMIT BRITISH ARB CHIVALROUS. for a longr time to come. But when he does go hpme, what then? "As we sow, we shall reap, and if we sow well today we know that when he goes home he will sow the seeds of everlasting; concord." CREEL TO BE INVESTIGATED Publisher 'Will Look Into Work of Public Information Committee. WASHINGTON. May S. Frank P. Glass, president of tbe American News paper Publishers Association, has ac cepted the invitation of George Creel o send a committee representing the ssoclstlon to Washington to inquire nto the work belnr done by the com mittee on public information, of which Mr. Creel is chairman. In a letter addressed to Mr. Creel, Mr. Glass declared that he waa Ira- pressed that "there should be a more thorough knowledge on the, part of the public of your committee's function nd work, ana mat ne waa convinced that "such a knowledge would be most beneficial to the country and especially to the newspapers." Heaora Recently Accorded Fantoas Teatonlc "Ace" at Burial Declared te Be . Self-Ad vertisemeat. AMSTERDAM, May S. Count. Re ventlow. In an article headed "British Chivalry and Self-Advertisement" in the Deutsche Tagea Zeltung, complains that the German press recently went so far aa to admit tbat tne Jtsrman sometimes are chivalrous to an enemy. This he considers insufferable. The Count is incensed particularly because the German papers expressed alarttlnn with h In whlth the famous German airman. Captain xsaron von nicninuivu was hviicu w the British and aays: "We cannot accept these so-called honors aa sincere. It ia all an adver tlsement-' Our enemies forget to tell us what enormous sums they received for bringing down Rlchthofen. All members of the flying corps who buried our hero are nothing but war profiteers. orpaj ihwbiwi iiwi tm uc.iu r. lor I i the week ending April 17 waa the low. 1 est la the tiistory of the -Navy. J I Butte Plasterers on Strike. BUTTE. Mont. May S. The strike of Butte plasterers is partly tying up building construction. The men de mand an Increase in wages from $S tq $ per day as demanded by the plumb ers' union, whloh is also oa strike. SOLDIERS' HOME PROPOSED Stratford, Shakespeare's Birthplace, May Honse Americans. LONDON. May . The Weekly Dis patch today featured an editorial urg ing the establishment at Stratford of a central "home" for American soldiers on leave. , "In the heart of England." says the paper, "there is a spot hallowed forever In the hearts of all who speak the Eng lish tongue, namely. Stratford, tbe birthplace of Shakespeare. Is there any reason why a rest homtr for the American soldier on leave should not be in this spot? . "The American soldier does not want merely to see our towns, but our his torical monuments. To him. as to the British soldier, there Is no place like home. Let us give him a worthy one. He is here to help us; he. may be, here DIVER MENACE HELD LESS Franklin Roosevelt Says American Fleet Ia Doing Good Work. NEW YORK, May 6. While the U-boat menace has not been eliminated Its danger should decrease from now on, asserted Franklin D. Roosevelt, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, in an address here last night. "Our fleet is patrolling the North and South Atlantic," he said, "and all we can say (a that we have reached such a point that the U-boat danger ought to decrease from this time on, the opening of the Spring fishing season. Astoria Fishermen Fined. ASTORIA. Or, May 6. (Special) Lars Brecke and Samuel Hill were found guilty in Justice Court Saturday afternoon on a charge of violating the state law by having fresh salmon In their possession during the closed fish lng season. Each was fined $50 and 5 costs. The men were arrested the morning of May 1. several hours before i if ! i YOU will fiiidihe progressive, helpful service offered - by this pioneer bank useful in the managing of your personal and business affairs. It is one of the advantages of making this your banking home. LADD & TILTON BANK Oldest in the Northwest aaMiMstIi"sej arnowAi. at scavsp sssaSYrrsMsTfl Washington at Third Read The Oresronian classified ads. HOTEL PERKINS FIFTH AJVD WASHINGTON STKfa:UT PORTLAND. OREGON. 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