THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 8, 1916. V IniinnPT rftTiiiiTPn SHIPBUILDING ACM DUUbtl tdllmAltd TRIMMING WILL 8E STARTED THIS WEEK City Commissioners to Form Basis for Levying the Taxes for the Year. SCENES AT THREE OF THE BUSY SHIPYARDS ON THE WILLAMETTE RIVER WILLAMETTE RIVER5 :' Hum of Industry Covers Num ber of Yards and Workers . Are All Kept Busy Now. 1900 MEN ARE EMPLOYED STORMY TIME LOOMING m Hew ThmIi, Both Wooden and Steel, Are Beginning to Take Shape; Haw Plants Are Contemplated. rs Borne Opposition to Spending $60,000 on the Karqnam Gulch PlaygTonnd Project Has Already BeYeloped. 13 UPON COLUMBIA AND . . In no place on the Pacific coast will one find a greater or more pronounced hum of Industry than In the shipbutld- - Ing yards along the Willamette and Columbia rivers. 1 In eight ship yard between Astoria r and Mllwaukle l'JOO men are turning toit wooden or steel vessels. At the Northwest Steel company, In South Portland, 630 men are bust - turning out seven steamers for Nor- weglan buyers. The first vessel, the Liatirltz Kloster, Is rapidly assuming ; her frame. The floors are In and : nearly half of the frames. She Is to be . lfllinchfft carlv In T:inii!irv " ' Alongside tills vessel, a seco-id. the .' T'tp M'llm' lu t .....I I..... r 1 H I in j , ,,- ,i riti llilU I v ' I I a men ., beginning to rise. She w'll be ready for latinrhtug In a few months after hr sinter hin. thm T.nnrltr Ivlnsler ' Within 30 days the keels for two more vessels will be laid down and then the v woncing force of the NoNrthweSt Steel company will be doubled, between ", , 1400 and 1500 men being employed. m lb .nsaxxiEy rranaraii Just south of the Northwest Steel company the dredger Willamette la - filling the site on which the Heath Shipbuilding company Is to be located. , . Pile drivers are also at work preparing the ways. The keel for the first vessel Will be laid within 30 days. . ' At Linnton, at the plant of the Co- lumbU Krigineerlng works, the keel for the first vessel for M. T. Snyder of New Orleans Is out and will be placed v within the next few day a. Model mould -, loft, saw slud and office have been constructed and a plank roadway lead - to the Clark & Wilson mill adjacent. , where the timbers for the vessels to be' constructed are to be turned out. Across the river, at the Peninsula f ( v ' ........ a . I . V . . . ' 1 1 p. . i . v.. t 1 ia In frame, and by Tuesday the seal . , Ing will be complete. No. 2 Is almost In frame, only the bow frames remain Ins before the sealing will be started. Plant Za Wow Busy. The Standifer - Olarkson plant at North F'ortland harbor Is also busy. ' . The first vessel Is almost in frame, ovr 00 frames having: already been placed. A pile driver will commence Monday prepailnK t.!ie ways for the ' second Libby, McNeil & l.lbby motor ' ; ahip. Tbe down river mills are also busy. At t. Helens the St. Helens Shipbuild ing company launched the niotorship Ruby for Captain Wrlghtson of Mobile .... yeaterday and will immediately lay the keel for a vessel for the California ft Oregon dumber company of brook- Ings, Cal.. In the ways wnere the Ruby has stood for the past few months. Tbe motorshlp Allard is In course of construction, the planking on her m - main deck now being laid. The motor V . ahlp City df St. Helen Is roniplote us !. - far as her square frames go and seal ring will commence shortly. ...t tlie Astoria yarls of the Mc i :. Kachern - Stundlfer - (,'la.rkson company if.. J four ships are liulldintf. The first will ." ' be launched October 28 and No. 2 and No. 3 30 and liO days later, respect ively. No 4 Is In frame and the sealing la going on. The Wilson Brothers yard at As- r, tona is biho well along on wo steam ers for the McCorinlck Lumber com pany. "Frcew-up" at Tent. t . Trent, Or.. Oct. 7. Trent experienced the heaviest freeze, for so early in the reason, for jears, Tuesday night. Pumps were froxe.n and Ice was nearly . an Inch thick In some places. Much . damage was done the late gardens. My! But This Is Some Complexion! Why Stuart's Calcium Wafers Ban. ih Pimples, Blackheads and All Blemishes of Skin Troubles. Trial Facksge Mailed Free. Try Stuart's Calcium Wafers for a- few days and note what your friends say. All those horrid pim ples and blackheads, those fiver spots and blotchea. the rash and 3 MWMSSV 14. M - redness of ecsema, all are- gone and a.! new skin of fine texture has come to brighten your days. One may tw bright, pretty, smart and viva clous and yet all of these valuable qualities are lost behind a repul sive . skin, broken out with evidence of Impure blood. Get It out of your system as you surely can with Stuart's Calcium Wafers. They, con tain the great wonder, calcium sul- Jhlde. the most searching and ef actlve blood purifier known. You. can find Stuarts' Calcium Wafers on sale at any druc store. t cents a box. But if you wish to try them first, oend coupon below to a free trial package. You will certainly be surprised and delighted with : their successful action In the kin. - Free Trial Coupon , " T, A. Stuart Oo., 333 fftoart BIO., Marshall, Hlolu Send me at once by return mall, a free trial package of Stuart's Calcium Wafers. Name 4, , " ' -..'.vOv,.!.'., i" ' Street SU aVriv'Vi ..... stats . ., 1 4 AW .versus I'pper left hand, shaping timbers for tlie first motorship at the Co lumbia Engineering t'o. plant at I jinn ton; right, the yards of the Northwest Steel Co.; on the left is shown tlie floors and frames of the Norwegian steamer Lauritz Kloster rising, while on the right is the keel of the second steamer, the Peter Wiley. Lower row, the yard of the Peninsula Shipbuilding Co.; on this left the hull of the No. 2 vessel with only the bow fraines left for place ment, and on the right tlie No. l ship, on which the work of sealing will be completed Tuesday. STATE CONTROL EXPECTED TO RE E Steps Ta,ken to Ascertain Act ual Needs of State Institu tions for Next' Biennium. Salem Or . Oct. 7. The state r.oard of control started today the work of ascertaining- the actual needs of the 10 state institutions, for which the superintendents have sub mitted tentative estimates calling for appropriations of a total of 12, n3,015, for the biennium of 1917-1918. This Is an increase of $416,491.93 over the appropriations maJ? by the legis lature for the 1915-1916 biennium. Only one institution, the Eastern Oregon hospital for the Insane, calls for an appropriation less than that plven two years ago. Outs Are Expected. Members of the board of control do not feel like asking the state legisla ture to do what will be impossible, and the estimates of the superintend ents will be liberally slashed. It Is expected, before beinft finally fixed as the budgets to be presented to members of the legislature. The appropriations a&ked by the superintendents are as follows: Western Oregon State hospital. $7S0,134; last biennium, 1664,356.16. Eastern Oregon State hospital, $269,260; last biennium. $308,159.25. por State Prison. Prison, $253,000; last biennium, $40' 994 83 "Tuberculosis hospital. $115,426.50; last biennium, $56,277.82. Soldiers' Home, $90,830; last blen nlum $37,072.75. Feeble Minded Home, $291,460; last biennium. $144,961. Training school for girls, $78,850; last biennium, $33,600. Training school for boys, $96,009; last biennium, $65,275. Deaf school, $60,435; last biennium, $55,534. Blind school. $37,321.04; last bien nium, $28,213 80. Forest Fires Are Threatening Homes Town of Olr on prcaa Island, San 7vaa, Menaced t7 Blase Tnat Has Been Burni&r for Says. Belllngham, Wash., Oct. 7. (U. P.) -Forest fires, fanned by high winds. aro threatening homes In several parts of Whatcom county. The town of Olga on Or cab Island In Ban Juan is men aced by a fire which has been burning for several days. Another fire is rag ing across the bay from Deer Harbor. Hundreds of volunteers are combating the flames. State Timber Burns. Port Angeles. Wash., Oct. 7. (U. P.) -A forest fire in the Lake Crescent district threatens to destroy $1,000,000 worth of state timber, some of the finest In Washington, according to a message from Forest Ranger Chris, Morgenroth at Piedmont today. He says 60 men and a complete equipment are needed to stay the progress of de struction. The flames are advancing on a three mile front. Timber Cut to Start. South Bend. Wash.. Oct. 7. Freeman Albright, pioneer merchant and logger of Pacific county, left here today for Bandera. Wash., where he will oversee tbe cutting of 50,000,000 feet of fir and cedar for the Spring Logging com party, of which he Is a member. This cut, says Mr. Albrtjht, la probably only the beginning of a cut of 200,000,000 feet more timber In the territory ad jacent to the operations of the Spring Logging company. Machinerv in charge of T. A. Soule, who will be woods -superintendent, lett this city BOARD DUG APPROPRIATIONS Anursaag xpr tn new. camp.- s Mrs. Painton's Father Expires Suddenly John T. Goddin, Veteran Real Estate Sealar of Richmond. V., Victim of Heart Failure. Richmond, Va., Oct. 7. Stricken with a heart attack while coing down town to his office In a buggry this morn ing, John T. Goddin. veteran real en tate agent and father of Mrs.Charles A. Painton. 524 East Sixteenth street, north Irvington, Portland, Or., fell head foremost out of the side of the vehicle and was dead when picked up. L ntil the arrival or a doctor it was thought that he Jiad been killed by the fall. Worry over'the condition of his Invalid wife, who was to have undergone a surgical operation todav. is believed to have been partly re sponsible for his sudden and tragic end. Mr. Goddin has been In the real estate business here for nearly a half century. He was a confederate vet eran. News of his death proved uch a fhock to his wife that the surgeons decided to defer the operation. Mr. Goddin was known In Portland. having visited his daughter In this city for several summers past. His daugh ter, .Mrs. Painton. is the wife of Charles A. Painton, manager of the Kaola company, cocoanut nil refiners. New League at South Bend. South Bend. Wash.. Oct. 7. Af a banauet in which 70 men and women of various political faiths took part, a Woodrow Wilson Independent league was organized to take active part m the coming presidential campaign. Robert C. Saunders of Seattle was the principal speaker of the evening. Sev eral former Republicans and many former Progressives took part and signed a declaration of faith in the president. J. R. McArdle, principal of the South Bend high school, was chosen president of the league; Ken neth Leach, former Progressive, was elected secretary-treasurer, and Mayor Charles A, Coulter of South Bend vice- president. GUARDSMAN HONORED FOR FAITHFUL WORK Edward C. "Wiesen danger. Edward C. Wiesendanger was a member cK Company E, Third Infan try, Oregon National Guard, for 20 years, completing -this service . ' on August 10, IS 18, when with the regi ment at the Mexican border. v With his honorable discharge Nras conferred a gold medal from the state of Oregon for honest and faithful service. Attfust 3. 1915, he was promoted to sergeant in his company. For a number of years he .has been assistant armorer at the Armory -In this city and Is known to all the of ficers and members of the companies stationed In "this city. .Sergeant Wies sendanger resided at 1103 Berkeley street - In - tbl city. v . v .i&ci ' i iii mi him i iii iiKjiiwimiiw.rJ JJiM. Mi? i 1 a jmyvy f Truck's Load Shifts, Driver Shot Into Air Peculiar Accident In Lumber Tard at Xenton Besulta in Kan Receiving Painful Injuries. C. Ratke was steering: a two-wheeled truck loaded with lumber through the yard of the National Tank & Pipe com pany at Kenton yesterday afternoon. Horses hitched to the front were pull ing the truck and. Ratke was on the rear end, steering. Ratke started to turn a corner when the load of lumber suddenly shifted forward on the two-wheeled truck. With a see-saw effect the front end of the truck went down and the rear end, holding Ratke, went up. Ratke was thrown 12 feet Into the air and fell to the ground, striking on a rail road rail. His left hip was broken. The Ambulance Service company tcok him to Kt. Vincent's hospital. He is 60 years old and lives at 179 Drum mond street. Voted for Lincoln To Cast Ballot Again V John Burke, Who Has Wever Missed a Presidential Election, Qualifies at the Registration Office. Although he voted for Abraham Lincoln in 1860, and has voted in every presidential election since then, John Burke, 77 years old, almost missed getting his name on the registration books this year because he did not have in his possession the naturaliza tion papers taken out by his father more than 60 years ago. Three days ago he was denied the right to register, but he happens to be a neighbor of Sheriff Hurlburt, who brought Aim to the courthouse yester day and told the registration clerk he would vouch for the old man being entitled to vote. So his name was listed with the other voters of the eountv. I When a child Burke came to this country with his father, from Galway, Ireland, in 1839, and has lived here ever since. His home is at 1161 Fran ces avenue. Yakima Valuations Cut. North Yakima, Wash., Oct. 7. The board of county commissioners for Yakima county completed their final review of the budget yesterday and pared another $5000, from the totals. A total of H 7.000 has been cut from the budget. Property valuations in Yakima county have been cut nearly $4,500,000 by the county assessor. The exact fig ure is $4,492,000 as shown by figures compiled in ttie assessor's office where the seggregation has just been com pleted. The tax rates are certain to be higher than last year unless the budget allowances are c,ut proportion ately. Road Meeting at AVenatchee. Wenatchee, Wash., Oct. 7. Repre sentatives of six counties tn central Washington will meet here on October 10 to map out plans for concerted ac tion on the proposed West Columbia highway between Kllensburg and We- natcnee, wnich would tie up the two ends of the Sunset highway, which now stops at those cities. The counties that will send repre sentatives are Lincoln, Okanogan, Grant, Douglas, Kittitas and Chelan. All but Grant county strongly favor tne proposed route, and that county Is divided In sentiment. The Old Adage. "A stitch in time saves nine." It It better t have your fuel supply la In good ceaano than to wait twill fuel is abort and deliwry t difficult. Reliable fuel dealer are today Uvtl ia Xhe Journal' 'i'repajr jfor YVlater" feature, . ... . .' V in- It V 1 J Sn iiijjfe - . . SHORT STORY COURSE AT OPENING LECTURE People Turned Away Last Night at Opening of Mrs. Parsons' Series, After 170 chairs had been placed in room II of the Central library last night, and filled, the standing "rogon was next occupied. Then the doorway and the hallway for six feet back of it became blocked, and after that people came only to go away again. All this was for the opening lecture in the short story course to be given this fall and winter by Mrs. Mabel Holmes Parsons, professor of English at the University of Oregon. Mrs. Par sons' course is one of five given by her in Portland this fall and winter, and one of 18 under auspices of the state university extension division. Portland Eager to Learn. The Portland hunger for coarses both aesthetic and practical threatens to overtax the university's resources. SUNNYSIDE LODGE WILL BE GIVEN FLAG Photo by BuahoeU. . Junius Wright. Sunnyside lodge. No. 163, A. F. and A. M., will hold a special session in the auditorium of the Masonic Temple next Thursday night on the occasion Jf the presentation of the American fjag to the lodge. Junto Wright, master of Sunnyside lodge, will pre side. Many .prominent and eminent Masons will be in attendance from dif ferent lodges In this city. Sojourning brothers are cordially Invited. Rev. Arthur H. Nichols, a veteran of the Civil war and a well known member of the Grand Army of the Republic, will be flag-bearer. Frank S. Grant will deliver a recitation. ReV. Frank J. Lovehmd" will make the presentation address.: . PACKED h' I 4 , 44 M lfVK 3V7j ; N Nf!- - TT r.x. 1! 0 lfeJr I) oweuaf AoXV In some of the architectural courses in which enrollment of a half dozen was looked for, classes of 20 to 30 create an equipment problem. The north gallery on the third floor of the library is to remain open for the prac tical work of the university's exten sion students in architectural courses. In her class tn the teaching of Eng lish yesterday morning, a course pri marily for Portland teachers, Mrs. Par sons had 140. The Portland students of Mrs. Parsons alone will, in the ag gregate, number about 500. Most of them are of university status and a surprisingly large percentage already hold degrees. Modeling- Class Vszt Week. Next week at the Central library university classes will be conducted In life and modellng.archltectural design, graphic statistics and descriptive ge ometry, clinical child psychology and literary appreciation of the drama. Specific announcements will be made later in the newspapers and on the library bulletin boards. " Credit Men Have Coarse. The Portland Association of Credit Men, working in conjunction with the university, has arranged a lecture course for the coming winter. The first lecture will be at the Central li brary in the Story Hour room, next Wednesday evening on "The Relation of the Credit Man to Business" and "Causes of Business Failures." D. Wal ter Morton, dean of the commercial department of the university of Ore eon, will be the speaker. The second lecture will be held Oc tober 25 on "Laws of Credit and Col lection." This lecture will be delivered "by one of the leading attorneys of this city. Other lectures will be ' held: No vember 8 and 22, December 6, Janu ary 10 and 24, February 14 and 28, March 14 and 28, Apr.il 11 and 25. Railroad Official On Missionary Trip William McMurray, General Passeng-er Acent of the O-W. a fc V. Co., Will Depart for the East. Bound on a missionary errand in the Interests of the northwest, William McMurray, general passenger agent of the O-W. R. & N. Co., will t-tart for the east this morning. He iias two primary objectives attendance upon the Transcontinental Passenger asso ciation's meeting at Chicago October 12 and participating' in the American Traffic Officers' association conference at New York, October 17 and 18. He will take occasion, however, to visit every tourist agency between Chicago and the Atlantic seaboard to spread the gospel f Oregon, Washington and the entire northwest country as a mecca for the pleasure seeker. Mr. McMurray expects also to call upon all the principal railway traffic officers of New England to encourage their personal visitations to the wsst. He will return by way of Buf falo, Detroit and Chicago. Los Angeles Office Reports on Voters Ixs Angeles, Cal., Oct 7. (P. N. S.) When registration for the presiden tial election in November closes to night at midnight, Thomas McAIeer, registrar of voters, estimated the to tal registration for the city and county this year will be about 360,000. Colorado Coal Production Increases Denver' Ctolo, Oct. 7. (I. N. S.) The war prosperity . is causing coal production tn Colorado to leap sud denly. Figures for the first seven months of tbe year show 6,2.58,481 tons were knlned, an Increase of 1.253, HO over the sams period a year before. , I' SSS Convicted Man Has Privilege of Choosing XeTla Shapiro May Oo to Penitentiary Or Subject Himself to Sterilisation, j Court Announces. Chicago, Oct. 7 (U. P.) Legal precedents were upset today when j Judge Marcus Kavanaugh of the superior court, offered Levin Shapiro, 65, the alternative of submitting to iin operation for sterilization and be ing released or of going to the pen itentiary on an Indeterminate sen tence which to a man of Shapiro's years would probably mean death. Shapiro was given until Saturday to make his choice and was assured tile operation would be performed by the btst surgeons on the staffs of the Cook County hospital if he chose that alter native. Shapiro was convicted of attacking a small girl. He returned to the county jail without expressing a choice. Illinois has no law providing for sterilization. French Carry Lines 1200 Yards Ahead Paris, Oct. 7. (U. P.I A brilliant assault by French infantry today car ried the French lines 1200 yards north east of Morval, it was officially an nounced tonight. Four hundred prison ers, including 10 officers, and 15 ma chine guns were captured. ins The Lownen of Our Rent Has an Important Bear ing on th Prices of Our FURNITURE It's a factor as significant as the recognised qual ity of our lines. Both command the earnest con sideration of the purchaser of the worthy in Furni ture, Floor Coverings and Interior Decorations. We are confident that this will be most apparent to those who view our selections. The following and many other such pieces should interest: Lip-Edge Solid Mahogany Muffin Stand, $9.75. Solid Mahogany Tip-Top Table, round 23-inch top, $12.00. Solid Mahogany Martha Washington Sewing Table, $16.75. Solid Mahogany Nest of Four Tables, largest 18x28 inches, $22.50. Solid Mahogany Tea Wagon, $25.00. Solid Mahogany Drop-Leaf Table, oval top, 34x42 inches, $22.50. J. G. MACK & CO. Furniture and Interior Decorations FIFTH ST., Between OAK and PINE MIIIIIIIIIIIIII.IIIIIIIlllllllllllHllinillllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimilllH TJ '"" ttt in gifc ii Rupture Cured with a good trust that is properly fitted. We are experts at fitting trusses and have them at 1.50 and up. The Seeley-Sper-matic Shield appliance, for which we' arc the exclusive agents, usually closes the opening in 10 days. Satisfaction and fit guaranteed or money back.' Laue-Davis Drug Co. TRUSS EXPERTS Third and Yamhill The c ity commissioners expert to be gin the work of trimming the 1917 mu nicipal budRet estimate! this week an4 complete the tak within two weeks. They have until November 20, however, in which to finish their work and-iflp-prove the estimates. The city tax levy will be based on these approved esti mates. last year a committee representing business and civic organizations as sisted in trimming the budget but the council has not yet decided whether to appoint a committee this year or do the work alone. Stormy Session Predicted. I! Is predicted that the hudget m'i sions will be Homewhut stormy in much as Rome of the uminlsslonei -t have Included items In their estlmnt' -s which they consider necessary and ai to make a fight for. One of the ltenia in the estimates over which a fight will probably t waged Is $60,000 for the establishment of a park arid playground in Manjuain'j gulch in South Portland. Some opposi tion has already developed to Includ ing this amount In this year's lev... South Portland residents and several organizations are advocating the appro priation. An item of $23,000 for a immiripMl paving repair plant probably will brti5 about considerable discussion. Several efforts have heein made In the ..past tn establish such a plant but they Iihvo proved futile. Streets Heed Bepalxs. Commissioner Dleck ays that many miles of streets will be In need of re pair this year and that It will be econ omy for the city to Jinike repairs itself rather than contract for the work. Mayor Albee has Included several thousands of dollars for the repair nnd rebuilding of fire stations and the pur chase of motor equipment to dlsphu o horse-drawn apparatus. Two of thn Items are for rebuilding the headquar ters station at Fourth end Yamhill and the station at Sixteenth and Whsii lngton etreets. The mayor has also Included an Item of $27,000 for the establishment of the first unit of the proposed municipal detention home for women near Trotrt dale but It is probable that the ma jority of the commissioners will givo this little consideration. Agriculturists have succeeded In raising a brown cotton in Kgytit that Is stronger than any heretofore pro duced there. nr nr -"rr ttt- Sts Portland, Oregon I r