4 ' THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY - MORNING. APRIL 18,v 1015. INTERESTING PEOPLE AND PLACES SNAPPED BY THE CAMERA MAN j' xri&r' ;w. --, ' S -r? v r-j All Principal Events of Week Briefly Sketched for In formation of Busy Readers European War. A REPORT that 39 British officers had been placed in a military Prison was officially confirmed at Berlin. Their Imprisonment is In re taliation for the treatment accorded .German submarine prisoners n Eng land, it was stated. How the French liner Niagara, carry ins 740 passengers, escaped being sunk by a German submarine, was told by officers of the vessel at New York upon arriving: from French ports. 'That Frits Braatz. a naturalised American, together with four other men, was taken off the Holland-Amerl-'can Uner Ryndam by a British cruiser in ,th English channel is the report of Braats' wife, who arrived at New f1ork on the Ryndam. Germany ha protested through' the United States against the treatment accorded by England to captured crews of German aubmarines. no! erring io nrmsn cnarges mat the Germans failed to rescue those abandoned . vessels sunk by German divers, Von Jagow said: "Tha inference that rescues were intentionally neg lected can be denied with horror." In his weekly report' made public by the war office. Field Marshal Sir John French declared that the situation alone the British front remained un changed. . - At Armentieres the British succeeded in exploding a mine which killed 20 Germans. President Wilson personally directed preparation of the note in answer- to .the attack on America's neutrality voiced by Count Von Bernstorff, the German ambassador. The first thing the president wants to learn is the source Of the memorandum. 'The Karlsruh is still on top of t ha ocean -not at the bottom," was the statement of Captain Thierfeldt of the German criuser Kron Prins "Wilhelm at Norfolk, in denying rumors that the famous German commerce raider had been destroyed by the Brit ish. - ;r - The commander of the German con verted cruiser Kroa Prinr Wilhelm wired Assistant Secretary of the Treas ury Peters to state the .government's intention so he may dry dock the Wil helm for inspection. - The German then will ask for a definite period of time lor -which . to complete repairs. For the first tim rlnce the of fensive wa launched in the St Mlhlel Tegion the communique from the war office made no mention of the opera tions. . It was merely announced that calm prevailed. - The ministry of marina refused to comment- upon - the : report reaching London that French aviators had bom barded Hamburg. The detailed official ctatement . covering aerial activities failed to mention the reported feat. - Muelhausen, the southernmost - Ger man stronghold . on the Rhine, and Habstein were subjected to bombard ment by six French aviators, accord ing to Paris advices. Although under heavy fire the daring Frenchmen es caped unscathed. German aviators have dropped bombs upon the Belgian towns of Poperinghe, Hazebrouck and Kossel, occupied by he British. The extent of the damage inflicted is not known. The French report that allied avia tors dropped 150 bombs upon the rail way station at Bruges was officially denied.. Only 11 bombs were dropped. It was stated, and no damage was done. That his orders are not to take any person not accustomed to living on a submarine aboard his vessel was the official explanation .of the commander of the submarine which sunk the liner Falaba for his failure to rescue the struggling passengers of the ship. The Dutch steamer Katwijk, 2000 tons, was torpedoed off Noorhander lightship, according to dispatches re ceived at Amsterdam by the Central News Agency. All members of the crew were saved. Reports printed in England that the government intended introducing a bill in the Reichstag extending the age limit of military service to above 45 years were officially denied at Berlin. "Germany," the denial said, "still has large numbers of men under 45 avail able for military service." American cotton valued at $65,000 was destroyed in a fire on the Man chester docks today. A gain by the French of nearly a mile after sharp fighting southwest of Colmar In upper Alsace, was announced by the French war office. Fighting along the St. Mihiel wedge is also mentioned but it would indi cate that the Germans are on the of fensive in Lepretre forest. The most furious fighting is reported there. Sev eral German attacks were repulsed, it is announced. At Orvillers the French heavy ar tillery completely wrecked a line of German : trenches. In the Argonne 100 yards of trenches were captured by the French at Fontaine-aux-Charles, it was declared. determined assaults are being di rected ' upon the hill in Alsace known as Schnepfenritenkopf. . This position dominates the region about it for miles and efforts are being made by the French to drive the Germans out. Only isolated attacks have been made by the French between the Meuse and Moselle rivers during the past 24 hours, the German war office an nounced. Assault near- Maroheville and in Lepretre forest were beaten off. The Germans maintained their posi tions near Maronville, Hartsmann weilerkopf, despite French attacks, it was stated. The situation on the east ern front was declared unchanged, - German air scouts dropped bombs on towns 31 miles distant from Lon don. v.- - Austrian reports claim the greatest battle in the history of the world was fought when the Russian advances were checked. They say 3,500,000 men were engaged.- .. , Dr. M. JU Young, one of the oldest surgeons in the United States, and member : of the . Alma Mater Medical society of Chicago, says young Ameri- I cans will be needed to replenish the 1 St. Michiel, the nose of the famous wedge in the German lines, on which the French conducted an attack recently. (Photograph by courtesy press department Eastman Kodak Co.) 2 With what is practically the same sort of an. organization as represents a country in the time of peace, and occupying the embassy building; owned by the country, the Carranza faction is seem ingly in command of Mexican affairs In the United States. Seated, from left to right, are: Luis A. Poredo, Elisedo Arredondo (head of the agency), and Luis Antin. Standing, from left to right are: Daniel Dillon, Jose M. Arredondo, Oscar E. Duplan and Santiago Garcia. (Photograph by Harris & Ewing.) 3 A wounded Serbian soldier attacked by typhus fever and" unable to proceed farther on his jour ney. This is not an unusual eight under the existing circumstances in Serbia. (Photograph by International News Service.) 4 The White House baby and his mother. This photograph was taken at the Wflliamstown, Mass., home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bowes Sayre, and shows Mrs. Sayre, the daughter of President Wilson, and her son, Francis B. Jr. (Photograph by International News Service.) 5 The Mexican embassy in Washington, occupied by representatives of Carranza. (Photograph by Harris & Ewing.) J population of Europe after the war ends. i General News. CHIEF TWO GUNS WHITE CALF of the Blackf oot Indian - tribe, walked from the Palace of Varied Industries at the Panama-Pacific ex position with a dazed look on his face, after talking on the transcontinental telephone line. A slight earthquake of three sec onds duration was felt on Point Loma, A freak thunderstorm hit Pomona, Cal. Hail fell, thunder crashed and lightning flashed vividly. Telephones popped like firecrackers and the power on the Pacific Electric line all the way from Los Angeles to San Bernardino went off suddenly and tied up all traffic. Henry B. Hall, a taxicab driver, who fell from a third story window of a hotel at Stockton, died after surviving 46 hours with a broken neck. . He was 22 years of age. Hall fell from a narrow ledge while attempting to wash a window. Less than 18 hours after her mar riage on her deathbed to Dr. Francis E. Reynolds, Mrs. Mary D. Murphy, one of the most prominent business women of Alameda county, died at her home in Oakland. That Raymond Swoboda, spy sus pect, asked permission to ' take five gallons of gasoline aboard the liner La Touralne before that vessel sailed for Havre on the voyage during which she caught fire, was the statement at New York of Paul Faguet. general manager of the French line. Cardinals Gibbons. ' Farley. and O'Connell, accompanied by a large num ber of bishop and other high digni taries of the church, arrived at Wash ington to attend the silver jubilee cele bration in honor of the founding of the Catholic university in America. Their house at Martinez, Cal., wrecked by bomb explosions, for the second time within less than a year, A Cardinalli and four members of his family escaped death by a narrow mar gin. The explosion followed receipt of threatening letters demanding money. Secretary of the Navy Daniel re ceived a telegram from . Charles C. Moore, president of the Panama-Pacific International exposition, thanking him for the personal and official interest displayed in the affair of the ex position. " Joseph E. Willard, American am bassador to Spain, arrived at London from Madrid and paid his respects to Ambassador Page. En .route to Washington, where he will confer with President Wilson on the government railroad in Alaska, Dr. Leonard 8. Sugard, former Surgeon on the northwest mounted police and heavy Alaskan land owner, arrived in San Francisco from Citefida, Alaska. . The celebration of the fiftieth anni versary of the last battle of the Civil war was a feature of the Columbus Home Coming" at Columbus, -Ga. On the night of April 16, 1885, Brevet Ma jor General- Emory Upton, at the head of six companies of the Third Iowa cavalry, led the : assault on Columbus. - Commemorating - the fiftieth anni versary of the death of Lincoln, Presi dent Wilson ordered all flags on fed eral buildings to be. placed at half mast. . , Gertrude Atherton, the famous Cali fornia novelist, passed a comfortable day and -physicians announced late that her early recovery is expected." The novelist is a patient at St. Luke's hos pital at New York, where she is suf fering with pneumonia. - A commission to investigate the causes of unemployment of men and women was created by the city -council of Los Angeles. Appointments to the commission were made , to jtnayor Rose. Rockefeller contends that this coun ty has no authority to tax millions of dollars of stocks and bonds which are listed, in other states. At the begin ning of proceeding to force payment. Rockefeller abandoned his Cleveland residence and moved to Tarry town, N. Y. f : - , ' ..-'At a dinner of the city Committee of One Hundred; and Seven, which led the fusion municipal campaign last fall. Mayor Mitchell and other city of ficials elected on the fusion ticket told they have kept campaign pledges. Norman Hapgood. chairman, presided. Manufacturer: of cotton piece goods protested against proposed freight rate increase, at the interstate commerce commission's hearing in . the "western advance ' rate" case Tat Chicago. - Minus any Billy Sunday but brim ming over with : enthusiasm, a big re vival of New York churches was launched. One hundred ministers are in charge. The first meeting was a union communion service at the Park Avenue church. Flags were at half mast at the Panama-Pacific exposition in commemora tion of the fiftieth anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's death. The daily dress parade of the United States marines was omitted from the regular program. With addresses by Governor Johnson, Mayor Rolph and President C. C. Moore of the Panama-Pacific exposition, the sixtieth annual convention of... the American Association of Passenger Traffic Officers opened the civic audi torium. . Joe Zajac, bound over to the super ior court for an attempt to kill Frank A. Siebert and, his housekeeper, Jean ette Thomas, at Pasadena. Cal, was taken to the county jail to await trial. The shooting followed repeated efforts on the part of Zajac to collect $55 for wages. K. T. G. Matthews, general passenger agent of the Missouri Pacific, with headquarters at Kansas City. Mo., .is suffering from severe injuries at the Central Emergency hospital at San Francisco as the result of a collision between a large touring car and a Jit ney bus. Police authorities of Philadelphia be lieve that the curtailment Of the drug supply, brought about by the Harri son anti-narcotic law, will be a power ful factor in eradicating the wave of crime which ha reigned during the last year. - Since the law went into effect, according to Superintendent of Police Robinson, there ha been a noted decrease in the number of robberies and other crimes. 1 - The community center theory ideal ized by progressive 1 educators, has passed the experimental state in Osseo. Wis. Thi city is to have a municipal opera house, an art gallery, a moving picture theatre, a public library and a gymnasium, according to plans just launched by citizens. Hundred of bodies of early Phila delphia settlers will be exhumed within a few tlay, when work is begun to construct a public highway through old St. Mary's cemetery. The cemetery has been abandoned and the city has no records-of the persons buried. . While the ultimate consumer merrily pay 25 cents a ton extra for hi hard coal, "the drama of the Pennsylvania anthracite coal tax law is slowly but expensively being enacted in the Key stone state. The action has been de veloping for over a year and a half. Legal and Criminal. -' EVIDENTLY .suffering from some strange drug and her mind, a per fect blank, a beautiful, expensively garbed woman, wearing jewels valued at several hundred dollars, was brought into the receiving hospital at Oakland, Cal., and given treatment for poison ing. Practically all hope for George K. Darling, the Los Angelea teal estate man, who was shot five times on Mon day by his brother-in-law, Donald H. Thanel of San Francisco, was given up." A Mexican named Bielrua is ex pected momentarily to die in the coun ty hospital at" Santa Ana as a result of wounds received when he was shot by Joseph H. Metzger, teller of the First National bank. Metzger awoke early and found the Mexican in bis room. Grabbing a gun he fired and wounded the intruder. Arguments , on the legality of the indictment charging Chief of Police Sebastian and Earl Rogers, his attor ney, with attempting to influence the grand Jury, occupied Presiding Judge Wood's court at Los Angel- Declaring that she had worked 15 edness of his family, and that he cer tainly must have been Insane when he committed the act, the trial of Joseph Lococo, who shot and killed George W. Gray, rich quarryman. started before Superior Judge Griffin, at San Fran cisco. Cross examination of Patrick Kear ney, chief ; witness for the state in the murder trial of Joseph Lococo, was productive of hot clashes between De fense Counsel Nate Coghlan and Dep uty District Attorney Berry. Lococo killed George Gray, his employer, at San Francisco. The specifications and directions for the court martial. of Lieutenant rC L. Hill. Chief Machinist Thomas O Don nell and Chief , "Water Tender Wr I. Appleby of the cruiser ban Diego, ac cused of responsibility for an explosion which killed nine men on that vessel recently, arrived at Mare island. A letter purporting to be a confes sion bv a: F. Higglns, one of the prin cipal witnesses against Chief of Police Sebastian. : has been presented ror ud mission to the grand Jury. The let ter purports to be a confession hat the writer waa hired to discredit Se bastian." ! Attorneys for Don Roberts, mayor of Terre Haute, Ind., convicted with 116 other politicians for conspiracy in elec tion frauds, sought a hearing on an appeal for. the convicted official, filing a writ of error in the court of appeals. While guests at the fashionable Hp tol Rreen were at dinner. John Mor ris. 30. killed Otto Fescbner. 26, in to 16 hours a day from tne time sne h beffient of tne hotel at Pasadena, was 14 to 26 year, old. Mrs. Clara' rajri .mnloved at the i I r ...Cnvarnnr nf vi. '-' " ' : - ... - Mauntler. niece . of ex-Governor of Pennsylvania, John K. Tener, president of the National BaseDau league, toia the Illinois legilatlv commission that the proposed eight hour law for women would be a curse. The United States supreme court re jected the claim of the Southern Pa cific Railway company against the United State for $56,269.2CT in connec tion with alleged free service per formed under the old subsidies laws. ' Superior Judge Fred Wood of Ama dor county, will preside at the trial of Chief of Police , Sebastian and Mrs. Lillie Pratt, who are charged with con tributing to the delinquency of Edith Serkln. 17. The trial will begin to morrow.' ' - ; Upon the promise of attorneys for the defendant that an examination of his mental state would be made within 24 hours, the tase against Frederick Winstanley, who was charged with at tempting to kill bis wifej was dropped, at Los Angeles. Joseph S. Myers, wealthy real es tate operator, accused by Miss Agnes Bendegard of child stealing, waa ar raigned in police court at Oakland. Cat. By consent of both sides, Judge" Smith set May 4 as the date of the pre liminary examination,. With his attorney making the state ment that he wa driven to hi deed by hungerand the misery and wretch-1 hotel. " Morris struck Feschner with a sharp instrument and escaped. Strong appeals for a new trial for Glen Wfttiand C. T. Oxnam. each in a different state penitentiary under the penalty of death for the murder of Millionaire W. M. Alexander at Los Angeles, were made before the supreme court by Attorney Clyde E. Cat e. and George A. Hooper. Charging conspiracy Jn connection with her recent suit against former As sistant District Attorney James Os borne, whom she accused of illegal in timacy with her, the United States grand jury- indicted Mis Rae Tanzer. The woman' attorney. David Slade and Maxwell Slade, and Detective Al fred McCullagh, were also indicted for conspiracy,.- Mexican Situation. ' General !Funton, reporting to the war department from Brownsville, said that showers of bullets fell on the American side of the Rio Grande dur ing yesterday' fighting ajt Matamoras, but no one: wa injured. . Branding General Huerta. now In New York, "a murderer and modern Nero." R. ia. Gonzale. constitutional Mexican consul In San Diego', and 120 member of the' Francisco I. Madero club, a constitutionalist organization, sent telegrams to President Wilson de manding the arrest of jtlie ex-dictator that he may be punished by the "fu ture legitimate government of Mexico." Texas Begins New War on Illiteracy .1 X;rlaltur Fama Law CompeUln 1 - cnooi Mwnatocf o vuum tween Seven and 13 Tear of Age. Austin, Texas, April 17. Texas has fired the first shot rft illiteracy In the "solid south" by paSMlng a com pulsory school attendance law. Texa, the least Illiterate state in the south, Is tlll the thirty-seventh state in the Union in degree. Of. literacy. Follow ing her lead. It lar .expected-other com monwealth be1w the Mason and Dixon line will "adv-, t compulsory edu cation, j The Texas legrltufe, Just ad journed, enacted a law to compel the attendance at school of every child over seven years Of age at least six month every yearjuntll the age f 12 is reached. But the bill does not o Into effect iintJfc" September 1916 and for the neat tbr year the maximum of six month,!!, t: enforceable. No child or 12 year" over tan b com pel led to atlffiif ool if he has com pleted the four sradie and hi as sistance is need in the home. While the law may not compare fav- orably with stricter measure in'north em slate it in innsldflred r fair be ginning for a state so long steeped In child labor and -illiteracy. The advo cate of the measure in the 1915 leg islature were confident the law would be Improved in future upsslons. It wil bitterly fought In both branches cf thi legislature, : New Uglithoiiae I'romtsed. Seattle, Wash., April J7. To he built at a cost of $000,000, wrk on the nw government lighthouse j at Cape St. Ellas. Alaska, will begin on May 1, ac cording to announcement here today. The new lighthouse will be located on Kayak Island' and will be built on a shelf 52 feet above sea level. A three mantle lamp with a lens of 180,000 candlepower and a range of 15'4 nau tical mile is to be Installed. A big fog signal and dwellings for three keepers will be other feature of the lighthouse station. j BMiiaiiiHrgc?. ' inmaii" nu'" j " v.w n ii i i I - - it.. - Oo Hani Booka on Pawaia, Tri-Vtrk, etc., cntrre. Patents procured ikronrk MannocC. teceir fra amlc in the Scicallfio Aatrtcaa. MUNN CO.. 693 V BU.. N. T. WASiEflCTOJI OFFICE: C27 F Si, WaaUatf, 0. C