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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1914)
j --I THE OREGON DAILY - JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY, , EVENING, OCTOBER 304 1914. ilAN ROYALTY IS v TAKING ACTIVE PART 70 I'S jiAre you a father? ' p - ,4 Archdukes Are at the Front .f-rrl? you have, and they need overcoats, take them info rVMOYER'S ' 5 '.Sharing Dangers, Hard y-ships With the Troops, V . . - w. i DUCHESSES ARE NURSING i Tbos Who Hlth or Touth Don ' Wot Permit of Activ Tlg-hting Arm Training Katrrs. vercoat .Sa.ll ! - ? : AUSTF - BIG CROPS AND. VACANT ACRES CALL LANDLESS MEN J '" -' . . ' ; . NfJA 1 CONTEST 1 A.- Half-P i 1 IP V Uy Alire Holie. VW-nna, via Home. Out. 6. (By mall to New York.) Sharing all tins hard ship experienced liy any common bqI dler or ordinary nurse, every member of Hie AiiHtrtan liiij'trjnl faintly Is taking an uctive. part In the Kuro pan war. ' Arrhduke Frederick ,1h at the head of the commanding tttaffto which dl vlsJon Archduke Charles ; Krancla Jq epll also helonRB. 1 '.' Archduke Joseph Ferdinand was In command of Ja regim;nt In General Auffenburg'a army early In the war, but has nine been given an inde pendent regiment. Archduke I'eter Ferdinand is fight ing ttt the liead of his division under Oeneral Auffenhurg. Archdukis Leopold Halvadore is in-p-ctor general of artillery: Archduke t'liarles Albert belongs to the cavalry xtaff. 4 Arcbduke Joseph commands an in fantry division. Archduke Krancln Salvadore Is an Inspector of volunteers. He. is aided by Archduke Kugene. whone health does not allow him to participate in actual field fighting. Between them they liava developed several array corps. i Archduke MaXlmilan. who, only 19 years old, lack s the necessary experi ence for a field command, is receiv ing -practical instruction preparatory to going to the front. Arcbduchespes Maria Theresa, Ma ria Josepha and Isabella Maria are nerving as nurses and have even been upon the battlefield. Archduchess Au gusta Is working in a hospital in Budapest. NOTES OF THE WAR Would liny Off France. T-ondon. Oct. ,30. A Chronicle Taris dispatch ;aid Germany had offered Francis IVtetz, the neighboring part of Lorraine and perhaps some of Alsace, to make peace, but that France had refused. 1 British Destroyer Hit. London. Oct. 30.- The admiralty an nounced Lieutenant Wanton and a gun crew of eight on the destroyer Falcon and a sailor on the cruiser Bel ligerent were killed off the Belgian coast hy German shells, besides sev eral wounded. German Colony Taken. Bordeaux, Oct. 30. -Word was re ceived from General Pobell, French commander of the invaders in German Equatorial West Africa, that Edoa, an Important town on the Halanga, had 'been captured by the Franco - British forces. Ijouls of llattenburg Resigns. London, Oct. 30. Being of German I birth, though a naturalized Briton, I Prince Louis of Battenburg was' - so I much criticised that he resigned 'as U A lorfl nf t h nrtmlrnltv arA it f reported Baron Fisher would succeed him. Jemtcliug's Ixs 84 Men. Tokio, Oct. 30. The official state ment was made that two officers and M men perished when the German cruiser Kmdcn sank the Russian cruiser Jemtchug in I'enang harbor. Report Crown Prince Wounded. Home, Oct. 30. The German crown prince was again reported wounded wnue directing the attack on Verdun. SOUTHEAST EUROPE IS EXPECTED TO JOIN IN WAR AGAINST TURKS (Continued from Page One.) Albania, would be quite in keeping wmu mc ianiea condition of at A Table Beer to be used in the best homes. - , ., - of Heppner, Or., and his Morrow county exhibit at the Land Products show. I 4 I 1 d I m over will outfit two hovs at the nrice of onlv one ittood, sturdy overcoats, right from Moyer's regubir NMlfci. 1 ' 'Id! , oyer s got too many overcoats. I 'They've been $3.45, $3.95, $4.35, $5.00, $6.00, $6.f0, Mem now; at Half Price ! When you see it in our ad, it's SO! Third and Oak Street Store Only '3 I Si: - 3C Mayor W. W. Smead Back of the attractive display of soil-grown products exhibited by, Mor row county at the Manufacturers' and Land Products Show is a great virgin territory of ?025 square miles in the north central part of Oregon a terri tory where land Is cheap and in need of only man to till it. The soil volcanic ash for the most part Is rich; the resources of the county varied, the climate is sucrh that almonds, wheat and timber grow within a radius of a few miles of each other. In the booth Mayor Smead of Hepp- ner, who is in charge, shows a hun dred different kinds of vegetables and scores of fruits, the products of Mor row county's bottom lands, where dark loam, rich in humus, makes squashes ripen at 100 pounds and produces be tween 100 and 200 bushels of potatoes to the acres, and other root crops in proportion. From these bottom lands come, too, the forage crops alfalfa, clover, vetch, timothy and corn. The apples, big and rosy, which are on display, are the products of door yards only, because Morrow county has no commercial orchards, although she has proved her right to them. Stretching across the back portion of the exhibit are long glass tubes filled with wheat. They are samples from the grain zone in the middle and western portions of the county, a dis trict where 160,000 acres of wheat is grown, and a crop of J, 500, 000 bushels is garnered each summer. The prin cipal varieties are "fortyfold," "Orer gon club" and "bluestem." and the cost of tillage and harvest averages $5.85 per acre. Wheat from Morrow has captured first prize at the world's fair in Chicago, the Pan-American fair at Buffalo and our own Lewis and Clark exposition in Portland. In one corner of the display is a sack of wool. It occupies an exceed ingly Inconspicuous place in the booth, but the wool and sheep business In the county Is one of its principal wealth producing sources. Out in the grazing districts wide stretches of rolling hills are 175,000 sheep. The wool production alone aggregates 2.000,000 pounds each year. The Me rino stock predominates. In those grazing districts and in the mountains are bands of cattle also, blooded stock, which yield a fortune, while in the lowlands are hogs and poultry. In the mountains is timber and lum bering mills. In brief, there stands behind the Morrow county exhibit 1.680. 000 acres of land, of which 1,250, 000 acres are tillable; a district rich, in fairs in the southeast at present. Roumania has from the first been considered friendly to the allies, but Bulgaria was at the" outset supposed to be pro-German. Russian influence is understood to have won the Bul garians over to the allies, however. and it was the general Impression in official circles here that they would be with the latter, and espe cially opposed to the Turks. It is, nevertheless, a fact that the Roumanian royal family will do Its best to keep that country neutral at least, since the present king, ke his late father, is German in his sym pathies. German Bombs Deadly. No official confirmation had been received today of the Daily Mail's re port that a German submarine had attacked the British" battleship Ven arable and been sunk off the Belgian coast. The story that a first class British battleship, unnamed, had been de stroyed by a mine, also remained a mere rumor. There is, however, definite confirma tion of accounts of German bomb drop ping by aeroplanes at Bethune and Dunkirk. According, to the Mail, 19 women were killed and 40 injured at Bethune, while at Dunkirk a woman and a child were said to have perished. Frorn Petrograd came claims of a complete Russian vistory over the Germans west of the Vistula. Latest accounts, from South .Africa Indicated that the rebel Boer forces were breaking into small bands and scattering throughout the country evi dently with a view to a guerilla campaign. suit of Glover's plan to intimidate the Aurora editor is a heavy loss of votes for Hawley. Glover's letter has been used extensively in the cam paign. - ' is brewed with this ia mind. A prod uct of the purest i ngr edient s and minimum amount of alcohol. PHONE YOUR GROCER Portland Brewing my Italy Expected to Join. Paris, Oct. 30. Turkey's action in joining the Germans and Austrians in arms was believed here today to be certain to drag Italy into the war on the Anylo-Franco-Russlan allies' side. Representatives of the French for eign office were reported to have gone to Rome already, and it was under stood a momentous conference was in progress there. High officials declared the sultan's entrance info hostilitie's meant that Germany realized the Teutons could not win alone on both their eastern and western frontiers. The Turks, experts said, could put from 700,000 to 900,000 men into the field. DR. J. C. SMITH HAS MADE BIG GAINS IN COUNTY OF MARION (Continued from Page One.) poused the cause of Hollister and llalph Glover, who is private secretary to Congressman Hawley and has been here for months managing his cam paign, wrote to business men of Au- server for Hawley by threatening him "Wets" Hear Cantrell. with a loss of business. Hood River, Or., Oct. 30. A mass One of the business men took the meeting of the "wets' held in the letter, tc- the editor of the Observer, Monroe Opera house Wednesday night and the latter answered the Hawley was attended by only 23 persons. The threat by redoubling his efforts to meeting was addressed by Mr. Can defeat the congressman. The net re- I trell of Portland. resources, where development is just beginning and where the landless man can buy at a rate varying irom n to $50 an acre. I Warm 4ke hsSti room with the glowing; neat of the JL PtRrE SMI iM TION EATER Mother and children need t for the bath father for his morn ing shave.' Dealers everywhere Writ, for feoAJaf. "Wmrmth in Cold Cormtrm. ' ' Standard 03 Compasy (Ca&TormiaJ Portland Fast On Service t -n I ( Time jiY OREGOII Nv X ELECTRIC nJ RAILWAY a 0 wiiumirrt RoirrYi conclusion that he would not or could not curb legislative extravagance and would be entirely under the control pf his advisers. Chamberlain sentiment is strong in every section of the county, and it Is certain that he will get the largest majority in Marlon county he has ever received. Throughout the county the action of Booth's managers in forcing him on tfte Republican party is denounced by. the progressive ele ment of the party. Booth's support has dwindled since the facts regard ing his acquirement of vast timber holdings in Oregon and close connec tion with the predatory interests were laid bare. Editor "Stood Pat." Congressman W. C.. Hawley la back here to attempt to stem the stampede of Republican voters of this district to Fred Hollister, The- desperation to which he ha be..-n driven ; Is shown by an. incident at Aurora.- The Ob server, a Republican ' newspaper,' es- UPrlOit ; ' - ' " ' - : ; : ; 1 . " ; -n VOTE -tfv II lv W W IM VS. I . Paid advertisement by Joseph T. Hinkle, Hermistort; Or. I II I ' .. -HI , .... IV : - - - . . JIL LAND PRODUCTS SHOW OPEN SUNDAY GRAND SACRED CONCERT WEEK-END VISITORS INVITED Reduced fares apply5 from Willamette Valley Points on the OREGON ELECTRIC RAILWAY Tickets sold Oct. 31, Nov. 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14 2-day limit NORTH BANK ROAD POINTS Special fares and dates of sale may be obtained of agents of the S. P. & S. Ry. PORTLAND TICKET OFFICES 10th and Stark Jefferson-St. Station North Bank Station 10th and Morrison 5th and Stark HE MAO? 1 Yes! Sir Gilbert Parker I I GOING EAST? On Your Next Trip Try the ORIENTAL LIMITED Via the GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY Leaves Portland Daily-7:25 P. M. Through standard and tourist sleeping cars to St. Paul and Minne apolis in 59 hours, Chicago 72 hours. Compartment Observation Car Unexcelled Dining Car Service Electric Lighted -Vacuum Cleaned Afternoon Tea Served Free No better service anywhere. Tickets and Sleeping Car Reservations at City Ticket Office, 348 Washington Street (Morgan Building) and at Depot, 11th and Hoyt Sts. H. DICKSON C P. & T. A. 111 Telephones Marshall 3071 A-2286 COAST LINE SERVICE Portland to Tacoma, Seattle, Vancouver, B. C, and v Intermediate Points. 10 A. M. 5:00 P. M. 12:30 Midnight 5:00 P. M. train carries through Standard Sleeper ; r ' Portland to .Vancouver, B. C. :. . . k Wo! ta Hen&n ta f.' 5 V I : , Ridder The Kaiser Rish r Wrong? The Deadlock in France By Captain Paul Beck, U. S. A. The Battle of the Pacific By Arthur I. Street WB1 California Drag U.S. Into War? Which Western States WiUfco Dry? r3 1? War or No War, The Expositions a Sir Gilbert Parker, Herman Ridder, PeterJKyrie, Grant Carpenter, E. Alexander Powell, dwrd Hurlbut, Thomas Dreier and others, all in i NOVEMBER ON SALE AT ALL NEWS STANDS - A '.-" -V