8 STEEL SHIPBUILDING HERE PROMISES TO BE VAST INDUSTRY Each Part Shaped at Northwest Company Plant by Huge Machines That Work With Amazing Accuracy Project May Grow to Involve $30,000,000 Annually. 1 II 6 s- I S " ii Jilt' a sn i- saiis' a 2sri?s;5i?jvw., t 'jr' 1' S.;: 3 .df 7csJoiifJv'ty'ts -fO Tons STEEL, shipbuilding- is a new Indus try for Portland that will, when In full swing-, contribute vessels with a valuation that will surpass the sum represented by the entire grain crop of the territory draining into Portland. The titanic magnitude of the scheme that Portland has Just entered can be best grasped by a visit to the yards of the Northwest Steel Company, at the foot of Sherman street. The indus trial side of shipbuilding, with its sub stantial share in boosting Portland's payroll and employing thousands of workmen who otherwise might be idle, la immense and will reward scrutiny. The actual construction of the steel ships, three of which are now under way, with others contemplated, has in terested hundreds of spectators and merits explanation. All of the steel used in the construc tion of the ships is received at the yards of the Northwest Steel Company rolled.- None of the pieces are shaped or punched. This work is done in the company shops that cover some four acres of ground. 4000 Tons Received Monthly. The steel comes from all over the United States, from those steel mills that offer the best price for the partic ular pieces needed. The steel comes ln all sizes and lengths and thicknesses, according to what is needed for the ship's construction. It comes at the late of 4000 tons a month. It is loaded onto cars at the steel mills and un loaded from those cars at the ship building yards of the Northwest Steel Company. The steel racked according to size and length. Each piece bears a mark that acquaints the workman what part of the ship the finished piece of steel will occupy. While the steel is being racked the workmen have an oppor tunity to check the pieecs to discover CHRISTMAS SPIRIT INVADES WORKING GIRLS' HOMES CHRISTMAS is coming and you ought to see the bright young faces about the Maude B. Booth Home for AVorking Girls, at 12 East Seventh street. They aren't Just think ing of themselves and about whether or not they will have a merry time during the holidays. They sit about and read evenings and sew and each lassie keeps her own little secret about what she's making for Christmas. But what is an open secret about the house is the little tots' Christmas tree at the Larrabee Day Nursery, next door, which is every year decorated by the girls of Booth Home, of whom there are usually 40. Maude B. Booth Home is a cozy, homelike place. Its matron, Mrs. Jennie White, reminds one of the old fashioned mother, with good advice always ready and kindness and sym pathy beaming in her face. She is the girls' confidante in all their undertak ings. They go to her and from her they get Just the sort of comfort that they need. Rooms Are Cheerful. The rooms are cheerful and pennants and pictures, odds and ends and nov elties transform the sleeping rooms into as cheery a place as any college girl enjoys. There's a piano in the big living-room and comfortable big chairs and tables and books. There th girls entertain their guests until 10 o'clock. The dining-room downstairs is clean and bright. Everything about the place, from the tubs and ironing boards downstairs for the girls' con venience to the big living-room, with its many books, bespeaks the preserva tion of the ideal home atmosphere. Tho girls receive room and board at the home for $3 a week and many are kept without charge until they can find em ployment. Many of the girls have been there for a long time and some have gone out of the home working for tho Vol unteers of America. No girls is al lowed to stay at the home unless she Is good and refined enough to obey tho rules. They are not obliged to come, but aro welcome to services each morn ing and at other times. Only good foods find their way to the table at Booth Home. Good, nu tritious, home-cooked stuff, and all of ttio best sort. Inside the Larrabee Day Nursery are the rosiest of little cheeks, bright eyes and smiling, red-lipped babies little ones whose mothers must work and cannot be home to care for them. Soma of tho children are kept free of charge, others who are able pay a few cents a day for tho care of tho little ones. Miss May Mifcheil is the guardian angel of tho baby homo. She cares for tho little ones, smooths the snowy cribs, tells K I .1 possible errors in making up. the order. From the" racks the steel is taken to the shops, where It is bent Into the proper shape and punched in prepara tion to be placed in the ship. The steel is handled by cranes oper ating with steam locomotives upon fixed tracks. Girder Bent In Farmer, Steel girders that need bending are taken to a furnace, where an Intense heat Is maintained. The long pieces of steel, some of them 40 feet or more, are put in the furnace and heated to that temperature that allows workmen with sledges to hammer them into the proper shape. If the steel needs to be rolled into half or quarter circles It is taken to a huge rolling machine. This machine resembles the rollers on a wash ringer. The upper roller weighs over 40 tons and is capable of prodigious exercise. It bends a huge steel plate into the proper curve with remarkable celerity and accuracy. When the material is ready for use in the ship it is placed at the head of the ship and transported to its place In the vessel. Aerial cranes and other mechanical devices are used in great numbers in the transportation of material around the yards and everywhere is electricity and steam exerting its energy. Hmvj Machines Shape Material. Numerous kinds of heavy machines are necessary for the fabricating of the material from its plain shape to its final size, shape and condition. One of the heaviest of the machines is the punching machine. It has the capac ity for approximately 35 holes per minute and those -'holes are punched uironn piates or steel all the way x. rut r " f i I . i I i i It k 4 I - i t - . . , - . - i I 7C 7tcj rwS5SZSx 1 ; . . V"" n 1 ; THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, P0RT1LAND, XOYEMBER 2C. 101G. - ss i 7k: I - s 7 W L L1 71if trig dtaref&m C?ctfs- ss' T from three-eighths of an inch to an Inch In thickness. After the holes are punched they are enlarged to receive the rivets from a steel drill that bores its way through the heavy metal. When the plates, girders, angles and bars are all fabricated the rest of the work is a matter of assemblying and riveting. The keel of the ship is the first steel that Is laid. Then comes the skeleton of steel for the double bottom, or that I rt of the ship where the oil is stored. The oil tank extends the entire length of the ship and has a capacity of 1100 tons of fuel oil. or enough to carry the - r v it. 4" IL ?"1 M- WIK?yi ' 1 .-- ..... - . 1 " III .tvVC?- 1 1 I 'I i r T f vessel within a steaming radius of 10, 000 miles. The lower and upper deck skeleton and the floors are laid after the skele ton for the double bottom and then the plates are riveted to the skeleton. Riveting; Is Interesting; Work. One of the most interesting of the details of the ship's construction is tho part the rivets furnish. In one of the steel ships now being built by the Northwest Steel Company approximate ly 1.000.000 rivets are used. The ship is 424 feet long, with a beam of 54 feet and has a gross tonnage of 9000 tons. J I s .: 1. . -.wv-j.v'-v. v 4 - '1 I wT -lilt mm-- 1 K rr4 av Sr. 4 5' 'A Ssirt tort o'tSi' StjiJ. The aggregate weight of those 1,00,000 rivets is approximately 200 tons. All of the rivets are made In the shops within the confines of the ship yards. They are moulded with ons machine that eats long redhot round steel bars and spits forth a steady vol ume of rivets. This machine works 6tolidly and with precision. By no means a smull part of ship construction is the erection of ways, where hundreds of thousands of feet of all sizes of timbers are used. When the shipyard is running to the capacity of its present orders there will be seven of these ways and the shipyard ' f.. ? I 1 3 - " - - ad V p. 1 WtZZtKev t vac est -s. will cover an area of more than 14 acres. The shops alone cover approxi mately four acres and all of that area is under substantial roof. Pattern Room Vital I nit. Where tho burden of responsibility lies for the correct construction of the ships is in the pattern 'room where each part of the ship Is laid out on the floor and a pattern in wood made of it. The pattern loom is Just half the length of the ship. It admits of the laying out of practically half of the ship's members at one time. Here skilled engineers and designers are busy with scale and pencil, laying out designs from which the carpenters fashion the patterns. The patterns in their turn are sent to the machine shops and are used by the machinists in bending the angles to the right dimension and plac ing the rivets in the proper place. There is a remarkable co-ordination of work characterizing the entire plant. Kr.ch "gang" Is doing his own particular duties and appears to be working in a detached sort of way. yet wholly interested in the fabrication of tha entire ship. At present, there are employed in the Northwest SStrel Company's yards ap proximately 650 men. The number Is Increasing steadily as new ways will soon be erected to receive the skele tons of other ships. Most of the labor is hired from local fields. A few skilled mechanics are imported from other states or countries, but the percentage of such is small. Steel Rolled in American Mills. Practically all of the steel is rolled in American mills, tnotigh now and then an order Is placed with a Swedish firm, because that firm is able to beat the little folk stories and shows them games. Quite another feature of the work of the Volunteers of America is the pris on A'ork. Major Jeesie P. Starks is In charge of the prison relief worlt or both Wanhlnjrton and Oregon. Port land boasts one of the Hope Halls for the reformation of the discharged pris oners. There are only a few in th? country. But through the Hope Halls have passed thousands of men to new er, brighter lives and clean moral hab its. They stand as a bulwark afralnBt the old associates who try to draw down the returning exile. The men paroled from both Walla Walla and Salem come to or thronch. Portland's Hope Hall. Five hundred men belonjr to the Volunteer Prison League of America from Walla Wall and 200 from Palem. Major Starxs visits Walla Walla about twice a month. 8he Is assisted by Adjutant Nellie Starks and Staff Captain Ida M. Krujr. Besides these thfnjrs. the Volunteers of America have also a relief bureau, from which they Work for the poor and the unemployed. Public Library Notes. THE technical room of the Public Library reports the following- Important new books received: American Civil Knr'ner'a Pocket Book." eflltd bv Man field Merrlman and others, third edition, lbltt. In thla third edition la added the new section la on river anl harbor works, which contains 14$ pucea. many of the sections bj Ing revised in ordr to supply Ut-f icu-ncl-s ar.d ktep the volumt up to dau In all 1 Jo pagti liave bt-n added to this second edit fun. "Dictionary of Textiles. by Louis Har muth. ""Thia vol time la the result of seven and one half ea rs of co-U-ctlns; and compiling In connec Hon -with the artuat work of ths author on the Daily Trade Record and Wom en's Wear. In all, er btiouo urmn are defined. It contains many names of fabrics now obsolete and all those in present use In French, Engllfh and German tfXtlles; al so for the first tlin the South and Central American republics with thtir markets have been cov-red. The more Important chem icals used in manufacturing and finishing textiles are Included. An extensive bibli ography adds greatly to the vtiiue of the book." "Waterworks Handbook." compiled by A. I. Fllnn. K. ti. Weston and C. L. Bo gcrt. IVHi. 'The materials for this book have ben accumulated by the compilers in the course of thlr practice In various branches of waterworks engineering. The uer is as sumed to have uome familiarity with mathe matics, hydraulics, t lie natural sciences and waterworks construction, operation and maintenance, and to possess ordinary mathe matlcMl tab. The book is intended for the waterworks engineer and superintendent the dt-fcigi-er. constructor, operator and in spector." Another Important and new handbook Is "Mechanical KnKineers' Handbook." edited by Lionel S. Murks. 1916. This Is based upon the Hutte and is the work of CO specialists. Their co-operation it n9 7-' . in 4. I it ti Jrr-T'; the price made by the American man ufacturer. All of the handling apparatus to bo used by the ships is local machinery, he brass is furnished by the Oregon Brass Works and Smith & Watson and Hesse. Martin Company furnish most of the handling machinery and cast ings. Although nt present the Northwest Steel Company is doing most of tha steel shipbuilding, the Willamette Iron & Steel Company, the Columbia ltlver Shipbuilding Corporation and the Al bina Engine & Machine Works will soon be ready to receive their steel for the construction of more ships. According to J. It. Bowles, of the Northwest Steel Company, one of the biggest features of the shipbuilding industry is the industrial beuefits tha city derives therefrom. Industry ev to Portland. "Steel shipbuilding." said Mr. Bowles rec'ntly, "is an entirely new industry for Portland. Wolf & Zwicker many years ego built steel ships but they were very small. "When all of the yards get under way they will have a capacity of two steel ships a month and will employ "ouo to lu.floo men in nil the industries allied to tho ship construction. "Their capacity will mean a money valuation of trom two to two and a half million dollars a month, or ap proximately $30,000,000 a year, a valua tion greater than that of the trjtire grain crop of this rcgiun." Besides the Immense amount of cap ital and labor involved in the con struction 'f steel vessels, a number of yards along the Columbia River aro building wooden vessels. has proved of great value In securing greater accuracy and in ensuring thnt the subject matter do-s not embody polrly the prartUe of one ln.ii vldtinl but is truly representative.' Editor In prvface. The p.-riollcal department offers several macajtlnev of interest to nurw-s. These are primarily for the trained nurse, but often Include articles of interest to motiuTi. to s-ial workers and ull Int.-r. t.-d In public h-alth. The "'Public Health Nurse Quarter ly' of July. hn an interesting article on health insurance, a subject now in debate In the hiKh tie hoo's a'.I o r the statf. The "Am rlran Jourral of Nursing" for Novem ber prints an artl?l TraMnc th sources and Hunting the spread of Infantile Paraly sis." Tli" "Pacifii oast .lourr.al of Nn ra ins. belnir h'al. 1 of special intTt. The, 'ModVrn Hospital" ha plans and equipment for hospitals and ai;. srti'-ies on eif are work, nursing, hospital 1 Herat ur-. etc. The TrVd.-rul Is-rve Hoard has recently Included the Public I.lhrarv In its mailing list for the Federal Reserve Mullet in. To a- this publication apply to the reference department. The September edition of the Bankers Kn cloperil Is- received, and la also In tha reterence department. The first volt' me of And raa "Insurance Guide and Handb.mk." covering life insur ance, is another recent acquisition. It Is an English work, and its object la to form a. uslul manual, not too t eon n teal, for in surant agents and a textbook for students prepnrlng fpr the English examinations. 'Hooks to bur for Cnrlstmas gifts" Is a suggestion off red by the Pubiic Library in tr.e following llet. Copies of these books may be seen In the circulation room in the case near the door. They may be ordered from the local book dealers or direct from the publishers Addretft-s will be furnished at the library. These r suitable fnr adult readers: For thoso who enjoy biography: "The Mn Jesus" (Austin. I. "The American" L.ee Bradford ), "I nion Portraits" Bradford "Woodrow Wilson, the Man and His Work" (Ford). "On the Trail of Stevenson" (Ham I'ton), "Otntlemen Hovers' (I'owtlH, "Mu-si-i.ins of TouaV f Holland. "I-ife and Let tem of John Hay Tha vr). For readers of history: "History of Mexico i Bancroft ). "Kxpanslon and Con flict" rvdd. "Amerlenn niplomaeV Fish "Paris R. born" .:ibbons. "Historical M -terles" (Lang), "Mediaeval and Modera I imes' ( Uohtnson. for pliilosiphers : There Anything; N w t'nder the Sun" (HjorkmanV "Kssaya In So.il Justice" f Carver i. 'Modern I'hll osophers" tHoeffdlng), Bioogy and Social Problems" Parker), "A Beginner's Psy choloey" Tltchener. For the student of politics: "The Kunorran Anarchy' ttfkmon, "Ormary of Today' Fullerton. "Thi Forks of the Road fOUi den , "Arlstrtomry and Jutii e" f More 'frif t and Mastery" tL4ppmann ), Income' (Na ring . For church and social workers: "Safe gimrds for city Youth at Work and at Play' Bowen. "Street-land" 4 Davis), "Manual of Play" tForbush) "Black Sheep' .Macken-xl-. "In the Hollow of His Hand (Trlnel. "House on Henry Ptreet" Wald), "American Municipal Progress" 4 Zubllu . For educators: "The College Student and His problems' (Can field ). "'mp and Out -in Activities" (Cheleyi, "What Is it to Ha Kducated" i Henderson ). For bu sine s men : "PusInes.F a Profes sion" fj'randclsi. "Leadership" Hrent, "Kxpnrtftic to I At In America" (Fllsingeri, "How to Manage an Office." "The Efficient Secretary" Spencer). llsh Prose and Verse from B-owulf to Stiver son" i Pancoast . "Pocket Mar. ual of Rules of Order" (Roberts). "Who's Who la America." "World Almanac. For gardeners: "Backyard Farmer (Holte). "Th Garden nine book" (Hol.nd). Fng:sh PleRjfiire Gardens" Vlehols "Beautiful Gardens In America" i She i ton "Landscape Gardening Hook" Tabor. For tra v eiers : Let ters from America" fit rooks), "Heart of Europe"' (Cram), "Two T-eira in the Forbidden City" (Princess Der Ling) "In Vacation America (Rhodes). "Through Glacier park" (Rinehaxt). 1