THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX. PORTLAND. JULY 28, 1912, CAMERA CATCHES INTERESTING CURRENT NEWS EVENTS Photographic Glimpses of Various Notables, Who Have Recently Stepped Into the Limelight of World-Wide Publicity, by Reason of Their . Accomplishments, Taken at Close Range. 8 H:fei4t -.frv-- :4 k atewHsl HntflL - - ( , 0)) .....- ..- .43 orr 1 5,- ... . 4 v- i-z wmShr Mill 'ill lit 4 'i I fac I its - - p-rf EW TORIC. July 27. (Special.) The 35-foot motor boat Detroit left New York recently with Commodore Thomas Fleming; Day in charge, bound for St. Petersburg;. Rus sia, via Queenstown. The Detroit has a crew of four men, including Day. They expect to make England in 21 days, which would take 14 days off the present record, made in 1904. After reaching- England, tne Detroit will pro ceed up the Enplish Channel, through the North and Baltic Seas, and after touching at various ports, will sail straight for St. Petersburg, where the boat will be sold. The little craft Is 35 feet long, has feet S inches beam, and draws S feet 6 Inches. She is equipped with & two-cylinder, 16-horse-power Scrlpps engine. Her average speed is seven miles an hour. Grahame-White and his bride, who waa Miss Dorothy Taylor, of New Tork, are enjoying their honeymoon making flights in their aeroplane built for two. They have flown across the English Channel and have sailed over France, Belgium and England. The bride is well known in society. She is an ex cellent swimmer. Grahame-White is well known in this country, where he has taken part in aviation meets. In sne of his flights he circled the Statue af Liberty in New York Harbor. The strike of the longshoremen and seamen around New York is getting graver dally, and serious riots have oc curred. The steamship and railroad companies are busy hiring1 strike breakers, and have established head quarters at various places on West itreet for this purpose. Should the strike continue, it will mean a food tie-up. Already there is a scarcity of meats, fruits, vegetables and bread, raused by the strike. Some of the big liners will In all probability have to all with strike-breakers instead of :helr regular crews. Mrs. James Speyer and Mrs. Cornelius C Cuyler departed recently for Europe on the Hamburg-American liner Amer ica. Mrs. Speyer was accompanied by her husband. They intend to spend un months abroad in Germany and France. Mrs. Cnyler is well known so rlallv in New York. Mrs. Speyer Is toted for her philanthropic work. There are no prettier children among oyalty than the children of the King ind Queen of Italy. Princess Yolanda. he eldest child, is the beauty of the amily. She has perfect skin, a wealth jf black hair, a massrve Greek fore aead, perfect features, and eyes that typify the purest traditions of Italian beauty. Crown Prince Humbert, Italy's1 future King, is a determined self-willed boy. full of boyish spirits, and boyish fun. In his mischievous pranks, he is aided and abetted by little Princess Mafalda, who though not 10 years old, is more than a handful for her govern esses and other attendants. The fourth child, little Uiovanna, is not yet out of the nursery. She is carefully looked after by the Queen herself. The Italian royal family Is a thoroughly happy one, and might serve as a model to many In the humbler ranks of life. The Princess Yolanda was born June 1, 1901: the Princess Mafalda Novembr 19, 1902; Prince Umberto, Heir Apparent, September 15. 1904, and the Princess Giovanna was born November 13, 1907. A new device, for first aid to the in jured on the field of battle, is the French military x-ray ambulance. The ambulance is fitted with x-ray ap paratus. This apparatus will prove in valuable in caring for the wounded, as negatives that have been exposed to injured parts will show the exact state of the injuries. This will not only en able attendants to treat the patient In- POOR BARRED FROM CITY BATHS BY RICH WHO MONOPOLIZE POOLS New York Alderman Seeking Way to Bar All Except Tenement Classes Daily Passenger Traffic of Gotham Equals Population, According to Figures of Public Service Commission. BY LI.OTD P. LONERGAN. EW YORK, July 27. (Special.) The municipal baths, which were supposed to be able to solve the Coney Island bathing problem, have failed utterly in their purpose. Now the city fathers are struggling with the matter, but whether they can do anything or not remains to be seen. The city provides ocean bathing fa cilities for 10 cents, the idea being that in this way one of the burdens of the poor would be done away with. Now the denlsens of the tenements are complaining that they do not get a chance to cool off, because "auto par ties' monopolise all the accommoda tions. Identification" la I'rged. Investigation goes to prove that there Is more or less truth In this con tention. Many well-dressed men and women daily spend their dimes for mu nicipal bath tickets, and under exist ing regulations there is no legal way whereby they can be barred. Hundreds of them are on hand every day, es pecially on Sundays, and many of them have their own autos. One aldermanic suggestion is that would-be bathers be 'identified," that " wWTO It? Vv-i,'iWii', t W . V'KC .LI telligently and effectively, where tin-I enters and thus afford more ready re der the old methods guess work largely lief to the sufferer, but in :iany cases is, that they be compelled to have cards from pastors or certain charita ble organisations. Whether this would work out in practice is another mat ter. It cannot be denied, however, that the "auto bathers" have practically killed what was intended as an en couragement to the poor to. bathe in the ocean. The municipal bathhouses only ac commodate 8000 bathers daily, or about three persons out of every 100 in a holiday crowd. The owners of pri vate establishments declare that the city's competition has not affected them to any extent and prove it on Sundays and holidays by charging as high as 2 for a room and suit. Army to Attack w York. Grim war will reign all over West chester County and far down in the Bronx next month, when "a hostile army" will try to capture New York. Twenty thousand men. Including reg ulars and National Guardsmen, will participate, and for the first time in the history of warfare in America aeroplanes will be used. The attack will be under the lead ership of an officer to be selected by Brigadier-General Tasker H. Bliss. Brigadier-General Frederick A. Smith will command the defending army. In the war game it is assumed that the American fleet has been defeated by the enemy's fleet in the Atlantic and that, under convoy or a victorious fleet, a body of hostile troops has landed in Connecticut. An American army, hurriedly mobilized in New Eng land, of regulars and militia, has been hurled against the enemy, but decis ively beaten. At this Juncture another defending army appears, with orders to make a last stand to save New York City. Tho enemy's natural programme after its landing, is to cut off communication between Boston and the West, stop New York City's water supply, iso late the city and capture it. Hartford, Conn., has been selected as the strat egic point of vantage, and the defend ing army will make its stand there. Brigadier-General Bliss will act as umpire, in the important theoretical bat tle. He will decide after the battle has been fought whether New York la to be thrown open to a victorious in vading army, or whether the Invaders are to be looked upon as & defeated army, subject to capture before it can return to its ships. The heretofore popular bar of a it will prevent injuries for life, as the result of improper treatment. The x ray ambulance is to be used in the Morocco campaign. The damage sustained by the Bat tleship New Hampshire in her recent collision with the Fall River Line steamer Commonwealth, was found, upon examination in the" dry dock of the Brooklyn Navy Yard, to be very Bowery hotel has -been closed because a man who never drank a drop of liquor in his life no longer goes there. The place In question is the liquor section of the Occidental Hotel, long recognized as the down-town head Quarters of "Big Tim" Sullivan, State Senator and theatrical magnate. For many years the mere presence of Senator Sullivan in the neignoor hood Insured a good business to the cafe, but now he has moved up town, and the section that once knew him so well no longer sees him. Because of this the place has been doing a losing business or late, and tne new managers have decided to close It. The change of the Occidental, by the way, is only another sign of the decadence of the Bowery, which Is rapidly losing the picturesqueness that once made it famous in song and story. Lemon Alen Want Hot Weather. Lemon importers who say that this has been the most disastrous season in history, are praying for continued hdt weather, hoping that thereby they may be able to recoup their losses. The speculative movement began in the Spring with reports that the Cali fornia crop of lemons had been des troyed by the freezing weather. Heavy orders were rushed to Italy and by the time the consignments began to arrive it was discovered that Califor nia was still in the ring and that the reports of a short crop had been ex aggerated. To add to the woes of the lemon men the late Spring kept down the consumption. Hot weather sent up the prices and the highest figures of the season were realized last week. The Importers are now estimating that New York will great. It will cost about $40,000 to repair the hole stove in her stern. A court of inquiry was convened on the New Hampshire July J5, to fix the re sponsibility for the collision. From left to right, as shown in the picture, they are Captain E. Capehart, Captain W. S. Benson and Rear Admiral B. A. Fiske. The court is engaged in in vestigating every feature of the disas ter and will make its final report to the Navy Department. Every precaution is being taken by the federal health officials to prevent need for its consumption and to supply interior markets, from 50,000 to 75,000 boxes each week, and not more than 75 percent of this supply is in sight now. If the hot weather continues, it Is figured, a good part of the early season's losses may be made up. NIcolI To Sleep Ont of Doors. DeLancey Nicoll, the lawyer, has set a new style by arranging for an open air sleeping pavilion on the roof of his town house, No, 23 East Thirty ninth street. Plans for the improve ment have been filed by Architect Charles Volz, who estimates that the cost will be in the neighborhood of $1000. Mr. Nicoll does not explain why he wants to sleep out of doors, but probably he figures that it would be more comfortable on sultry nights. New York's daily passenger traffic now equals the city s population,, ac cording to figures made public by the Public Service Commission, which is great on statistics. The figures show that the total for a recent month were 143,502.305. a dally average of 4,783.410. The census of 1910 gave the city a population of 414,766,883. The increase in the num ber of passengers carried over the same month a year ago was 7,579,404. The surface lines lead the list with a total of 46,299.183. The Brooklyn el evated lines were the next In popu larity, with 37,510,631. The subway is In third place with 28,328,803, closely followed by the Manhattan "L" lines, which carried 26,335.989. The Hudson Tube, a comparatively new mode of transportation, carried 5,027,699 passen gers. In the grounds surrounding thej the bubonic plague from getting into this country. Experiments for fight ing the dread disease are now being conducted at Quarantine. New York harbor. One of the upper views shows doctors attached to the station, in cu lating a guinea ,pig with bubonic plague germs. As one of the most sensatlve of animals, the guinea pig is an extremely good culture medium, and officers itself readily to bacteriological investigation. In another view, doctors are seen dissecting nats, killed by fum igation on incoming ships from port where bubonic plague Is feared. Rockefeller Institute at Sixty-sixth street and avenue A 84 boys and girls are afforded an opport"-"- to observe plants growing in a water tank. This farm garden in the city is Irresistible to the youngsters, and they swarm around the pool. The site for the garden and tank was placed at the disposal of the Na tional Plant. Flower and Fruit Guild by Mr. Rockefeller, and here in the shadow of the large gray Institute on the hill the children of the tene ments are making experiments and dis coveries of their own. In the morning a dozen or so little dnes work in their gr"'-- and about the tank, and all day some of the 84 are busy under the direction of Miss Anna Walsh. "There are children here," said Miss Walsh, "who had never before heard of a turtle. To them it is a mystery how the turtles can llv in th water and not drown. They know that fish can live in water, but that is different, be cause fish do not have legs. They do not understand how anything that has legs can survive in the tank. But they are learning rapidly. Do you know that only two of the 84 children knew that plants ever grow in water? They had never heard of a water lily, and not un til the end of the week, when they saw that the plants did not die, could I convince some of them that they , could really grow. One of the boys even went so far as to get a ruler and with it every morning measure a cer tain plant. Not until It measured a fraction of an Inch more would he ba lleve that it was not artificial."